Ghost Land - Emma Hardinge Britten
Ghost Land - Emma Hardinge Britten
Ghost Land - Emma Hardinge Britten
GHOST LAND.
Contents
PART 1. 8
AUTHORS PREFACE. 9
INTRODUCTION. 13
CHAPTER I 20
CHAPTER II. 31
CHAPTER III. 40
CHAPTER IV. 53
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER V. 62
CHAPTER VI. 74
CHAPTER VII. 99
GHOST LAND.
THE HUMAN LIFE -- THE UNIVERSE OF SHINING
TRUTHS AND SPIRITUAL ENTITIES. 134
CHAPTER X. 146
GHOST LAND.
SWALLOWED UP IN THE SPIRIT OF PROFESSOR
VON MARX. 206
PART II 238
238
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DAWNING LIGHT -- THE BROTHERHOOD --
SUBTERRANEAN REVELATIONS -- THE SECRET
TEMPLE -- THE BYGA -- THE YOGEE AND THE
SAINTED IRDHI -- THE PRINCE OF PEACE. 266
GHOST LAND.
OCCULT POWER -- THE PLOT OF THE
ENCHANTRESS TO EXECUTE HER THREATS. 339
GHOST LAND.
PART 1.
9
GHOST LAND.
AUTHORS PREFACE.
Before the subjoined papers are submitted to the critical reader, the
author desires most emphatically to protest against their being ranked in
the same category of literature as his recently published volume on "Art
Magic."
The only claim that the author can advance for the present work is that
of strict veracity. Although the same reasons that induced him to withhold
his name when it was first produced prevail with him today, all the
incidents narrated have been faithfully set down with the strictest regard to
truth as far as the present volume carries the history forward.
To the author himself the details of his life convey in retrospection the
most important lessons, but their value to the world is entirely dependent
upon their actuality. As a mere tale of fiction far more interesting subjects
could doubtless have been found in any sensational novel or newspaper
romance; but if the narratives herein detailed faithfully represent the mystic
action of mind upon mind, the fearful phenomenon of obsession, the
possibility of an actual life transfer, and the interposition of beings in
human affairs whose existence supplies the missing link which connects
10
GHOST LAND.
the realm of animate and inanimate nature, then is this work, however
crude in style or imperfect in philosophical deduction, a most important
and noteworthy one.
GHOST LAND.
illogical example of their own materialistic opponents, find it easier to
deny altogether than to elucidate. No one has more faithfully, humbly, and
reverently sought for truth wherever it may be found than the author of
"Ghost Land;" yet he is fain to confess the table-tipping and trance-
inspiring spirits of America and England have not, to his blundering
apprehension, covered the whole ground of the experiences which he has
ventured to detail in this volume. When he adds that an additional score of
years' experiences still more wonderful and occult yet remain to be
accounted for, and that during his wide wanderings over the world he has
encountered hundreds of individuals who have an array of equally occult
testimony to render, the illuminee of the modern spiritual movement may
forgive him if he ventures to question whether there may not be some few
things, scenes, and persons more in the spiritual universe than their seven
spheres of purely human intelligence can account for.
The author could have wished that his esteemed editor has dispensed
with the chapters interpolated by their mutual and highly valued friend,
"John Cavendish Dudley," not that any portion of this gentleman's writings
are lacking in that strict fidelity to truth which has been the ruling genius of
the entire work, whilst in style and interest they far surpass the attempts of
a foreigner to express his ideas in an unfamiliar language; but the author
has marked with deep regret the many eulogistic allusions to himself with
which Mr. Dudley's diary is seasoned; and whilst he knows they are
dictated in all sincerity by a too partial friend, he feels the association with
auto- biographical sketches will subject him to a charge of vanity which is
equally repulsive to his habits of thought and action. On this point he has
no other excuse to offer than the all-potential will of his editor. Mrs.
Hardinge Britten alleges that the diary of Mr. Dudley was given to her in
the same unconditional spirit as the "Ghost Land" papers; also, that it was
not until she came to examine the MSS. separately that she discovered how
intimately they were related and how impossible it would have been to
continue the narrative after the eleventh chapter without the assistance of
Mr. Dudley's journal.
When Mrs. Hardinge Britten further added I will to I wish, the author of
"Art Magic," himself the strongest possible pleader for the omnipotence of
will, found all his arguments on the per contra of the question silenced.
With a final allegation that though the style of composition is all too
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faulty, the details are a faithful representation of facts known to and
witnessed by many most honorable persons in the present generation, the
author gives his work to the winds of public opinion. Blow hot or cold as
they will, they only represent the source from whence they come, but
cannot make or mar the work they ban or bless.
13
GHOST LAND.
INTRODUCTION.
The following series of papers was first prepared for the press in 1872,
when a few ladies and gentlemen interested in the cause of Spiritualism,
and believing its interests would be promoted by the publication of a high-
toned periodical, agreed to sustain me in the production of "The Western
Star," a magazine issued expressly to meet the above design. As soon as I
had decided upon the expediency of this undertaking I applied to several
European friends from whom I deemed I might obtain literary assistance of
the highest value, and contributions which would be more fresh to my
American readers than those of the writers on this side of the Atlantic.
The foremost and perhaps the most urgent applications I made were
addressed to two gentlemen from whose friendship for me and their talent
as writers I anticipated the most favorable results. I knew that both had
enjoyed rare opportunities of research into the realms of spiritual existence.
GHOST LAND.
reserve from the public eye. The cordial response which I obtained from
these well-tried and valued friends was accompanied, however, with some
restrictions, the most important of which was the positive charge to
withhold their names, also to arrange their MSS. under such veiled
expressions as would effectually conceal their identity. Both gentlemen
were aware that their personalities would be recognized by their own
immediate circle of acquaintances should the narratives ever fall into such
hands; but whilst they were most willing to oblige me, and deemed their
remarkable experiences might benefit and instruct many a spiritualistic
reader, the protested strongly against subjecting themselves to the rude
criticism and cold infidelic sneers of an unsympathetic world.
"I would not wear my heart upon my sleeve for daws to peck at," said
my English friend, in the words of the immortal bard of Avon; whist the
Chevalier de B. urged private and personal reasons still more stringent. To
mask the identity of my authors then, and even maintain a strict incognito
for all those associated with them, became the conditions upon which the
terms of my editorship in these papers were founded.
GHOST LAND.
As I proceeded with my work, I found that the MSS. would be wholly
incomplete without that of Mr. Dudley, and as I had the good fortune to be
in possession of the latter's journal, I selected from it such chapters relating
to the Chevalier as supplied the hiatus in question, and enabled me to form
a consecutive narrative of that gentlemen's singular and eventful career.
Although I have been and shall be again, induced from the force of
circumstances to mask the noble sentiments of the Chevalier de B in my
own peculiarities of style, I have in vain labored to persuade him to place
his works in other hands or avail himself of a less prononcee style of
compilation. Had I not devoted myself to this work it would never have
been accomplished, and that thought has been my chief recompense for the
slander and misrepresentation that has been cast on my share of the
publication. Although my friend's courtesy has induced him to treat these
misrepresentations lightly, and even to allege that he felt honored in
hearing the authorship of his works attributed to me, such a slander upon
him, no less than the wrong done to my veracity and the character for
straightforward candor which I deemed my life had earned, has been the
worst stab my enemies could have inflicted upon me, and calls for this
explanation concerning the necessary share which I have had in
characterizing the Chevalier de B's writings.
GHOST LAND.
number of "The Western Star."
I have some reason to believe this view would not be displeasing to the
author himself, who, although compelled to write under the effiatus of the
same power that obliges the "sibyl to vaticinate" even when she is not
believed in, still feels sensitively opposed to parading his peculiar and
often most painful personal experiences before a hard, unkind, and
unsympathetic world. I, on the contrary, have a deep and religious interest
in urging the exact truth of these experiences, and as I have been mainly
instrumental in inducing my friend to narrate them, I would gladly, most
gladly, add the lustre of a far more authoritative name than my own to the
solemn assurance that they are all literal transcripts of history, and that
they ought to be studied and classified by every philosophic thinker as
amongst the rarest and most important psychological facts on record.
GHOST LAND.
been repeatedly made in reference to the articles of Mr. Dudley, entitled
"Amongst the Spirits." In a word, the high appreciation accorded to those
two serials made me often regret that leisure and opportunity were not
afforded me for their publication in separate and continuous forms.
It was some three years after the suspension of "The Western Star" that
my esteemed friend, the Chevalier de B., made a second visit to the United
States, travelling, as was his custom, in a private and unostentatious
manner under the incognito, and employing his time in the observation and
study of those spiritualistic facts which it has been the main object of his
life to gather up. It was then that I learned from him that two works, the
scheme of which he had often laid out in project to me, were nearly
completed; and as he was unable to undertake the fatigue and master the
harassing details of their publication, he offered to present me with the
MSS., although he wished that their production should be deferred for a
stated period.
One of the MSS. thus intrusted to me was "Art Magic." It was written,
like "Ghost Land," partly in French and partly rendered into English, for
the sake of aiding me in its translation. Much of the language I found
capable of representing the author's ideas without any alteration; but the
whole work struck me as so important, sublime, and beautiful that I urged
upon my friend its immediate production without waiting for further
contingencies.
GHOST LAND.
sensitive author to rise superior to all human opinion, by showing him that
which the editor had long since understood, namely, that there is always a
certain amount of journalistic criticism which can be bought or sold,
according to the purchaser's disposition or means of payment; another class
from which praise would be dishonor; still another, who never waste time
one way or the other on any subject that is not a marketable commodity
and likely to pay well; and a fourth class, but one alas! greatly in the
minority, who can and will recognize truth and beauty wherever they find
it: and to this class "Art Magic" has indeed been "the gem of Spiritualistic
effort of this and every other generation."
All this the author has had to learn. That he was not entirely ignorant of
the crucible through which his work would have had to pass had it been
published for "the masses" instead of the few, he himself proved, as I find
in a letter addressed to me on this very subject the following
complimentary expressions of opinion concerning the "great public":
GHOST LAND.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER I
INTERESTING SPIRITUAL MYSTERIES AND
EXPERIENCES.
Had I been a mere spectator of the scenes detailed, I could have easily
reduced them to narrative form, but as in most instances I was either the
"medium" through whom the phenomena worthy of record transpired, or
their interest was derived from their association with a consecutive history,
I found I must either relinquish the design of contributing my experiences
to the world, or consent to the repulsive task of identifying them with one
who has sufficient reason to shrink from publicity, and sighs for nothing so
much as the peaceful retirement which should precede the last farewell to
earth. As my own desires have been completely overruled by one whose
wishes I gladly prefer to my own, I find myself either obliged to identify
my Spiritualistic experiences with a fictitious personage, or accept the
repulsive alternative of adding to the many characters I have been
compelled to act out on the stage of life's tragic drama the unwelcome one
of an autobiographer.
GHOST LAND.
narratives in particular, as pointing the way on a new path of discovery,
and one wherein the eternal interests of the race are concerned, are simply
degraded by fictional contrivances. Even the too common tendency to
exaggerate the marvels of Spiritualistic phenomena should be carefully
avoided, for the sake of arriving at the heart of truths so important and
unfamiliar as those which relate to the spiritual side of man's nature.
It is with these reverential views of truth that I enter upon the task of
narrating my singular and exceptional experiences. The only departure I
have permitted myself to make from the line of stern and ungarbled fact is
in relation to my own identity and that of the persons associated with me.
My reasons for suppressing my real name, and in every possible way
veiling the identity of those connected with me, are imperative, and fully
understood would be fully appreciated. In all other respects I am about to
enter upon a candid history of myself, so far as I am connected with the
incidents I am required to detail.
Before his departure for the East my father had married a beautiful
Italian lady, and as he resolved to maintain his Hungarian title and estates,
barren as they were, for the benefit of his children, he left his eldest son,
my only brother, in Austria, for education, in the charge of near relatives. I
was born on the soil of Hindoostan shortly after my parents arrived there,
and as my eldest brother died when I was about ten years of age, I was sent
to Europe to take his place, receive a European education, and become
formally installed into the empty dignity, title, and heirship of our
Hungarian estates. As my poor father tenaciously adhered to these
shadowy dignities for his children, even though he despised and rejected
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them for himself, I was accustomed from early childhood to hear myself
addressed as the Chevalier de B_____, and taught to believe, when my
brother died, I had become the heir of a noble house, the prerogatives of
which I have never realized, except in the form of the same wrong,
oppression, and political tyranny which made my father an alien and a
professed subject of a foreign power.
"Louis, my boy, how would you like to have some dreams that you
could remember, and go places in your sleep from which you should return
and give accounts of?"
GHOST LAND.
be thought worthy to know. "Flattered by this confidence, and more than
usually thrilled by the strange shivering which always seemed to follow the
touch of the professor's hand, I suffered myself to be led on until I reached
with him the fourth story of a large house in a very quiet part of the city,
where I was speedily introduced into an apartment of spacious dimensions,
parted off by screens and curtains into many subdivisions, and half filled
with an assemblage of gentlemen, several of whom, to my surprise, I
recognized as belonging to the college, some to neighboring literary
institutions, and two others as members of one of the princely families of
Germany.
There was an air of mystery and caution attending our entrance into this
place and my subsequent introduction to the company, which inclined me
to believe that this was a meeting of one of those secret societies that,
young as I was, I knew to have been strictly forbidden by the government;
hence the idea that I was making one of an illegal gathering impressed me
with a sentiment of fear and a restless desire to be gone. Apparently these
unexpressed feelings were understood by my teacher, for he addressed me
in a low voice, assuring me that I was in the society of gentlemen of honor
and respectability, that my presence there had only been solicited to assist
them in certain philosophical experiments they were conducting, and that I
should find cause to congratulate myself that I had been so highly favored
as to be inducted into their association.
Whilst he spoke the professor laid his hand on my head, and continued
to hold it there, at first with a seemingly slight and accidental pressure; but
ere he had concluded his address, the weight of that hand appeared to me to
increase to an almost unendurable extent. Like a mountain bearing down
upon my shoulders, columns of fiery, cloud-like matter seemed to stream
from the professor's fingers, enter my whole being, and finally crush me
beneath their terrific force into a state where resistance, appeal, or even
speech was impossible. A vague feeling that death was upon me filled my
bewildered brain, and a sensation of an undefinable yearning to escape
from a certain thraldom in which I believe myself to be held, oppressed me
with agonizing force. At length it seemed as if this intense longing for
liberation was gratified. I stood, and seemed to myself to stand, free of the
professor's crushing hand, free of my body, free of every clog or chain but
an invisible and yet tangible cord, which connected me with the form I had
worn, but which now, like a garment I had put off, lay sleeping in an easy
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chair beneath me. As for my real self, I stood balanced in the air, as I
thought at first, about four feet above and a little on one side of my
slumbering mortal envelope; presently, however, I perceived that I was
treading on a beautiful crystalline form of matter, pure and transparent, and
hard as a diamond, but sparkling, bright, luminous and ethereal. There was
a wonderful atmosphere, too, surrounding me on all sides. Above and
about me, it was discernable as a radiant, sparkling mist, enclosing my
form, piercing the walls and ceiling, and permitting my vision to take an
almost illimitable area of space, including the city, fields, plains,
mountains and scenery, together with the firmament above my head,
spangled with stars, and irradiated by the soft beams of the tranquil moon.
All this vast realm of perception opened up before me in despite of the
enclosing walls, ceiling, and other obstacles of matter, which surrounded
me. These were obstacles no more. I saw through them as if they had
been thin air; and what is more I knew I could not only pass through them
with perfect ease, but that any piece of ponderable matter in the apartment,
the very furniture itself, if it were only brought into the solvent of the
radiant fire mist that surrounded me, would dissolve and become, like me
and like my atmosphere, so soluble that it could pass, just as I could,
through everything material. I saw, or seemed to see, that I was now all
force; that I was soul loosed from the body save by the invisible cord
which connected me with it; also, that I was in the realm of soul, the soul
of matter; and that as my soul and the soul-realm in which I had now
entered, was the real force which kept matter together, I could just as easily
break the atoms apart and pass through them as one can put a solid body
into the midst of water or air.
GHOST LAND.
mists, or as I have since learned to call them “photospheres," I could
correctly discern the character, motives, and past lives of these individuals.
There was another revelation impressed upon me at that time, and one,
which subsequent experiences have quickened into stupendous depths of
consciousness. It was this: I saw, as I have before stated, upon my
companions, in distinct and vivid characters, the events of their past lives
and the motives which had prompted them to their acts. Now it became to
me clear as sunlight that one set of motives were wrong, and another right;
and that one set of actions (those prompted by wrong motives, I mean)
produced horrible deformities and loathsome appearances on the
photosphere, whilst the other set of actions (prompted by the motives
which I at once detected as right) seemed to illuminate the soul aura with
indescribable brightness, and cast a halo of such beauty and radiance over
the whole being, that one old man in particular, who was of a singularly
uncomely and withered appearance as a mortal, shone, as a soul, in the
light of his noble life and glorious emanations, like a perfect angel. I could
now write a folio volume on the interior disclosures which are revealed to
the soul's eye, and which are hidden away or unknown to the bodily senses.
26
GHOST LAND.
I cannot pause upon them now, though I think it would be well if we would
write many books on this subject, provided men would read and believe
them. In that case, I feel confident, human beings would shrink back
aghast and terror-stricken from crime, or even from bad thoughts, so
hideous do they show upon the soul, and so full of torment and pain does
the photosphere become that is charged with evil. I saw in one very fine
gentleman's photosphere the representation of all sorts of the most foul and
disgusting reptiles. These images seemed to form, as it were, out of his
misty emanations, whilst upon his soul I perceived sores and frightful
marks that convinced me he was not only a libertine and a sensualist, but a
man imbued with many base and repulsive traits of character.
What I saw that night made me afraid of crime, afraid to cherish bad
thoughts or harbor bad motives, and with all my faults and shortcomings in
after life, I have never forgotten, or ceased to try and live out, the awful
lessons of warning I then learned. I must here state that what may have
taken me some fifteen minutes or more to write, flashed upon my
perception nearly all at once, and its comprehension, in much fuller detail
than I have here given, could not have occupied more than a few seconds
of time to arrive at.
I had not been long free from the fetters of my sleeping body and the
professor's magical hand, when he bent down over my form and said:
"Louis, I will you to remember all that transpires in the mesmeric sleep;
also, I desire that you should speak and relate to us, as far as you can, all
that you now see and hear."
In an instant the wish of my childish life, the one incessant yearning that
possessed my waking hours, returned to me, namely, the desire to behold
my dearly loved mother, from whom I had been separated for the past two
27
GHOST LAND.
years. With the flash of my mother's image across my mind, I seemed to be
transported swiftly across an immense waste of waters, to behold a great
city, where strange looking buildings were discernable, and where huge
domes, covered with brilliant metals, flashed in a burning, tropical sun.
Whirled through space, a thousand new and wondrous sights gleamed a
moment before my eyes, then vanished. Then I found myself standing
beneath the shade of a group of tall palm-trees, gazing upon a beautiful
lady who lay stretched upon a couch, shaded by the broad verandah of a
stately bungalow, whilst half a dozen dusky figures, robed in white, with
bands of gold around their bare arms and ankles, waved immense fans over
her, and seemed to be busy in ministering to her refreshment. "Mother,
mother!" I cried, extending my arms towards the well-known image of the
being dearest to me on earth. As I spoke, I could see that my voice caused
no vibration in the air that surrounded my mother's couch; still the
impression produced by my earnest will affected her. I saw a light play
around her head, which, strange to relate, assumed my exact form, shape
and attitude, only that it was a singularly petite miniature resemblance. As
it flickered over the sensorium, she raised her eyes from her book, and
fixing them upon the exact point in space where I stood, murmured, in a
voice that seemed indescribably distant, "My Louis! my poor, far-away,
deserted child! would I could see thee now."
I caught his voice saying in stern tones: "Do not interfere, Herr
Eschenmayer. I do not wish him to see his mother, and the tidings he could
bring from her would not interest us."
Some one replied; for I felt that the professor listened, though for some
cause unknown to me then, I could not hear any voice but his. Again he
spoke and said: "I wish him to visit our society at Hamburg, and bring us
some intelligence of what they are doing there." As the words were
uttered, I saw for one brief second of time my mother's form, the couch
whereon she lay, the verandah, bungalow, and all the objects that
surrounded her, turn upside-down, like forms seen in a reversed mirror,
and then the whole scene changed. Cities, villages, roads, mountains,
valleys, oceans, flitted before my gaze, crowding up their representation
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GHOST LAND.
in a large and splendidly furnished chamber, not unlike the one I had
entered with the professor.
I perceived that I was at Hamburgh, in the house of the Baron von S.,
and that he and a party of gentlemen were seated around a table on which
were drinking cups, each filled with some hot, ruby-colored liquid, from
which a fragrant, herb-like odor was exhaled. Several crystal globes were
on the table, also some plates of dark, shining surfaces, together with a
number of open books, some in print, others in MSS., and others again
whose pages were covered with characters of an antique form, and highly
illuminated. As I entered, or seemed borne into this apartment, a voice
exclaimed: "A messenger from Herr von Marx is here, a 'flying soul,' one
who will carry the promised word to our circle in B."
"Let me speak with him," broke in a voice of singularly sweet tone and
accent; and thereupon I became able to fix my perceptive sense so clearly
on this last speaker that I fully realized who and what he was, and how
situated. I observed that he stood immediately beneath a large mirror
suspended against the wall, and set in a circular frame covered with strange
and cabalistic looking characters. A dark velvet curtain was undrawn and
parted on either side of the mirror, and in or on, I cannot tell which, its
black and highly polished surface, I saw a miniature form of a being robed
in starry garments, with a glittering crown on its head, long tresses of
golden hair, shining as sunbeams, streaming down its shoulders, and a face
of the most unparalleled loveliness my eyes had then or have ever since
beheld. I cannot tell whether this creature or image was designed to
represent a male or female. I did not then know and may not now say
whether it was an animate or inanimate being. It seemed to be living, and
its beautiful lips moved as if speaking, and its strangely-gleaming, sad eyes
were fixed with an expression of pity upon me.
Several voices, with the tones of little children, though I saw none
present, said, in a clear, choral accent: "The crowned angel speaks. Listen!
The lips of the figure in the mirror then seemed to move. A long beam of
light extended from them to the fine, noble-looking youth of about
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eighteen who stood beneath the mirror, and who pronounced, in the voice I
had last heard, these words:
"Tell Felix von Marx he and his companions are searching in vain.
They spend their time in idle efforts to confirm a myth, and will only reap
the bitter fruits of disappointment and mockery. The soul of man is
compounded from the aromal life of elementary spirits, and, like the
founders and authors of its being, only sustains an individualized life so
long as the vehicle of the soul holds together and remains intact. If the
spirits of the elements, stars, and worlds have been unable during countless
ages to discover the secret of eternal being, shall such a mere vaporous
compound of their exhaled essence as the soul of man achieve the aim
denied to them? Go to, presumptuous ones! Life is a transitory condition
of combinations, death a final state of dissolution. Being is an eternal
alternation between these changes, and individuality is the privilege of the
soul once only in eternity. Look upon my earthly companion! look well,
and describe him, so that the employers who have sent you shall know that
the crowned angel has spoken."
I looked as directed, and noticed that the young man who spoke, or
seemed to speak, in rhythmic harmony with the image in the mirror, wore a
fantastic masquerade dress, different from all the other persons present. He
on his part seemed moved with the desire that those around him should
become aware of my presence, as he was. Then I noticed his eyes looked
intelligently into mine, as if they saw and recognized me; but the gaze of
all the rest of the company met mine as if they looked on vacancy. They
could not see me.
"Flying soul, said the youth, authoritatively addressing me, "can you not
give us the usual signal?" Instantly I remarked that dim shadowy forms,
like half erased photographic images, were fixed in the air and about the
apartment, and I saw that they were forms composed of the essence of
souls that, like mine, had visited the chamber, and like mine had left their
tracery behind. With the pictures thus presented, however, I understood
the nature of the signals they had given, and what was now demanded of
me. I willed instinctively a strong breath or life essence to pass from
myself to the young man, also I noticed that his photosphere was of the
same rosy tint as Professor von Marx's.
I saw the blue vapor from my form exhale like a cloud by my will,
commingle with his photosphere, and precipitate itself towards his finger-
ends, feet, hair, beard, and eyelashes. He laid his hand on a small tripod of
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different kinds of metal which stood near him, and, by the direction of my
will, five showers of the life essence were discharged from his fingers,
sounding like clear, distinct detonations through the apartment.
All present started, and one voice remarked: "The messenger has been
here!"
"And gone!" added the youth, when instantly I sunk into blank
unconsciousness.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER II.
On the night of what I may call my initiation into the society associated
with Professor von Marx, that gentleman informed me, on our way to our
lodgings, that the unconscious condition into which I had fallen after my
spiritual visit to Hamburgh was occasioned by the lack of force necessary to
sustain my system to the close of the séance.
GHOST LAND.
Professor von Marx was not only a member of that society described so
graphically by Jung Stilling in vision, but he also belonged to several others,
all of which were more or less addicted to the practices of animal and mineral
magnetism. The particular association to which I was first introduced
constituted the German branch of a very ancient order, the name and
distinctive characteristics of which neither I nor any other human being is
privileged to mention, or even indicate more fully than I shall do in the
following statements.
Many learned men, and patient students into life's profoundest mysteries,
had transmitted from generation to generation the result of their investigations
and the opinions deduced from their experiments. This society, which I shall
call for distinction's sake, the "Berlin Brotherhood," conserving the
experiences of their predecessors, had evolved the following elements of
philosophy: They believed that every fragment of matter in the universe
represented a corresponding atom of spiritual existence; that this realm of
spiritual being was the essence, force, and real substance of the material; but
that both inevitably dissolve together, both being resolved back into their
component parts in the chemical change called death.
They acknowledge that the realm of spiritual being was ordinarily invisible
to the material, and only known through its effects, being the active and
controlling principle of matter; but they had discovered, by repeated
experiments, that spiritual forms could become visible to the material under
certain conditions, the most favorable of which were somnambulism procured
through the magnetic sleep. This state, they had found, could be induced
some times by drugs, vapors, and aromal essences; sometimes by spells, as
through music, intently staring into crystals, the eyes of snakes, running
water, or other glittering substances; occasionally by intoxication caused by
dancing, spinning around, or distracting clamors; but the best and most
efficacious method of exalting the spirit into the superior world and putting
the body to sleep was, as they had proved, through animal magnetism. They
taught that in the realms of spiritual existence were beings who composed the
fragmentary and unorganized parts of humanity, as well as beings of higher
orders than humanity. Thus, as man was composed of earthly substances,
vegetable tissues, mineral, atmospheric, and watery elements, so all these had
realms of spiritual existences, perfectly in harmony with their peculiar quality
and functions. Hence, they alleged there were earthy spirits; spirits of the
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GHOST LAND.
flood, the fire, the air; spirits of various animals; spirits of plant life, in all its
varieties; spirits of the atmosphere; and planetary spirits, without limit or
number. The spirits of the planets and higher worlds than earth took rank far
above any of those that dwelt upon or in its interior. These spirits were more
powerful, wise, and far-seeing than the earth spirits, whilst their term of
existence was also more extended in point of time; but to no spirit did the
Brotherhood attribute the privilege of immortality, and least of all to the
fleeting and composite essence which formed the vital principle of man.
Assuming that, as man's soul was composed of all the elements which were
represented in the construction of his body, so his spirit was, as a whole, far
superior to the spirits of earth, water, plants, minerals, etc., to hold
communion with them, however, was deemed by the Brotherhood legitimate
and necessary to those who would obtain a full understanding of the special
departments of nature in which these embryotic existences were to be found.
Thus they invoke their presence by magical rites, and sought to obtain control
over them, for the purpose of wresting from them the complete understanding
of and power over the secrets of nature. Whilst I found, by repeated
conversations with my new associates, that every one of them emphatically
denied the continued existence of the soul after death, they still believed that
the soul's essence became progressed by entering into organic forms, and thus
that our essences, though not our individualities, were taken up by higher
organisms than man's, and ultimately formed portions of that exalted race of
beings who ruled the fate of nations, and from time to time communicated
with the soul of man as planetary spirits. They taught that the elementary
spirits, like the soul essence of man, were dissipated by the action of death,
but, like that soul essence, became progressed by existence in forms, and were
taken up by higher organisms, and ultimately helped to make up the spirit of
man.
Strange and even fantastic as the belief sketched above may appear to the
skeptic, materialist, or Spiritualist, permit me to assure all these differential
classes of thinkers that these views have a far wider acceptance than the bare
facts of history or biography would lead mankind to believe.
GHOST LAND.
nature. The society to which I was introduced by Professor von Marx was not
the only one which cherished these views. In Arabia, India, Asia Minor,
Hungary, Bohemia, Italy, France, Sweden and Great Britain, secret societies
exist where these beliefs are accepted, and some of the experiences I am about
to relate occurred in the great Babylon of materialism, London, during a visit
which I made with Professor von Marx to England.
"I neither seek nor covet wealth. I love precious stones for their beauty and
magnetic virtues, but money, as a mere possession, I despise. Were I as
mercenary in my disposition as I am powerful in the means of gaining wealth,
I could be richer than Croesus, and command a longer purse than Fortunatus."
"Is it not strange, my master," I replied, "that the specialty of your physical
nature--namely, the power of attracting riches, as you allege--should not find
a corresponding desire in your soul?"
"Good singers, great musicians, and even poets, painters, and sculptors,
rarely estimate their gifts as highly as the world that enjoys them, They are
ever dissatisfied with themselves, and unless the world praises, applauds, and
recompenses them they find but little or no interior reward from the mere
exercise of their faculty. And thus it is with all Nature's gifts. Abundance of
strength in the physical departments of our being rarely accompanies unusual
vigor of thought or profundity of intellect; muscle and brain seldom hold
companionship; and so the magnetic attractions which draw unto my
35
GHOST LAND.
physique the metallic treasures of the earth fail to find any response in the
magnetic attractions of my spirit, whereas, were I so constituted as to lack the
force which attracts the service of the spirits of the metals, my soul would feel
and yearn for a supply of the deficiency in a constant aspiration for money
and treasure."
And that is why (as I then believed) Professor von Marx was rich, but did
not care for the value of his wealth, whilst so many millions, who do not
possess in their organisms that peculiar mineral quality which, as the
Brotherhood taught, was necessary to attract wealth, pine for its possession,
yet spend their lives vainly in its pursuit.
They believed (and with good reason) that the spiritual essence in man
called soul is susceptible of acting a part independent, to some extent, of the
body; that when the body is entranced, or subsides into perfect rest beneath
the action of the mesmeric sleep, the spirit, becoming liberated from its
control, acquires highly exalted functions, amongst which are the powers of
traversing space, and beholding objects through the lucidity of spiritual light.
Professor von Marx had detected, through certain signs familiar to good
mesmerists, that I was a subject for magnetic experiments.
GHOST LAND.
apparitions, hauntings, and supernaturalism in general.
The fact that the "atmospheric spirit" often lingered around the earth after
the death of the body, and could be seen, heard, and felt, did not militate
against their theory that immortality was a fiction and that the soul died with
the body. "It was merely the atmospheric spirit; a shadowy remnant of the
soul," they said, "which had ever been seen or manifested in the realm of
ghost land; and this was not a permanent, intelligent existence, but merely a
temporary relic of the broken organism, like the perfume which lingers about
the spot where the flower has been." By repeated and patient experiments
with their magnetic subjects, they found that they could send the "double" or
"atmospheric spirit" abroad in the somnambulic sleep, and that it could be
seen, heard, and felt precisely like the spectres that were claimed to have been
manifested in tales of the supernatural.
GHOST LAND.
feelings of others; and as we were all bound by the most solemn oaths of
secrecy, there was little or no chance that a solution to any of the mysteries
that originated in our circle could escape from its charmed precincts. I am
now writing at a period of nearly half a century after the following
occurrences; there will be no impropriety, therefore, in my recalling to any
individual who may chance to retain a recollection of the event, the scandal
that prevailed about fifty years ago in a town in Russia, concerning a
nobleman much given to the study of occult arts, who was alleged to have put
to death a young country girl whom he had subjected for some months to his
magical experiments, and that for the purpose of proving whether her
atmospheric spirit, violently thrust out of the body in the vigor of vitality,
could not continue hovering around the scene of death, and make
manifestations palpable to the sense of sight and sound. The popular rumor
concerning this barbarous sacrifice was that the nobleman in question had
seduced the unhappy peasant girl, and, after having periled her immortal soul
by his magical arts, he had ruthlessly destroyed her body for fear she should
betray him.
Certain it was that the gentlemen in question was charged with murder,
tried and acquitted, just as it was supposed any other powerful nobleman in
his place would have been. The results, however, were that strange and
horrible disturbances took place in his castle. The affrighted domestics
alleged that the spirit of the victim held possession of her destroyer's dwelling,
and night after night her wild shrieks and blood-stained form, flying through
gallery and corridor, "made night hideous," and startled the surrounding
peasantry from slumber. Rumor added that the ghost, spectre, or
"atmospheric spirit," whatever it might be, was not laid for years, and that the
adept who had resorted to such terrible methods of gratifying his insatiate
thirst for occult knowledge paid a tremendous penalty for what he had sought.
Tortured with the horrible phantom he had evoked, his mind succumbed, and
became a mere wreck. At the time when I commenced my experiences with
the Brotherhood, this man, who had once been an honored member of their
society, was confined as a hopeless lunatic, whilst his castle and estates were
abandoned by his heirs to the possession of the dread haunter and the
destructive spirit of neglect and dilapidation.
GHOST LAND.
this means, whilst his suffering body slumbered tranquilly, I returned to our
"sanctuary" with his spirit; and from the records of that night's proceedings, I
extract the following minutes of what transpired. He whose office I am not
permitted by my honor to name, I shall call "Grand Master," and he thus
questioned what was always called on these occasions the "flying soul" of the
maniac:
Grand Master--Did you kill the body of A.M.? Answer truly.
F.S.--To ascertain if the atmospheric spirit, being full of life, could remain
with me. I killed her by a sudden blow, so as to let all the life out at once, and
I drew out the spirit from the dead form by mesmeric passes.
F.S.--I did.
F.S.--Exactly like the body, only it wore an aspect of horror and appeal
terrible to behold.
G.M.--Did the spirit stay with you, and how long? Did it obey you, and act
intelligently, or did it act a merely automatic part?
F.S.--Mortals, know that there is no death! I did not kill A.M. I only broke
up the temple in which her soul dwelt. That soul is immortal, and cannot die.
I found this out the moment after it had left the body, after it had left the body,
for it looked upon me, spoke to me, and reproached me. O, God of heaven,
saints and angels, pity me! It spoke to me as intelligently, but far, far more
potentially than ever it had done in earthly being. It was not dead. It could
not die; it never will die, and so it told me at once; but ah, me, miserable!
when I sank down aghast and struck with ineffable horror, as the spirit
approached me, into a deep swoon, I entered the land of immortal souls.
There I saw many people whom I had thought dead, but who were all still
living. There, too, I saw the still living and radiantly glorious soul of my old
pastor, Michael H---. Sternly but sorrowfully he told me I had committed a
great and irreparable crime; that all crime was unpardonable, and could only
be wiped out by personal, and not by vicarious atonement, as he had falsely
taught whist on earth; that my only means of atonement was suffering, and
that in kind, or in connection with my dreadful crime; that, as the poor victim
would be engaged during the term of her earthly life (broken short by my act)
39
GHOST LAND.
in working it out in an earthly sphere, so her magnetism, actually attracted, as
I had deemed, to the spot where her life had been taken, would continue to
haunt me, and repeat in vision the last dread act of murder until her life
essence should melt away, and her spirit become free to quit the earth, and
progress, as she would do, to higher spheres. Sometimes, this stern teacher
informed me, I should see the real living soul of my victim, and then it would
be as a pitying angel striving to help me; but still oftener I should see only the
"spectre," and this would always appear as in the death-moment, an avenging
form, partly conjured up from my own memory, and partly from the magnetic
aura of my victim, and always taking the shape and circumstances of my
dreadful crime. Mortals, there is much more to tell you of the awful realms
beyond the grave, and the solemn connection between life and death, but
more I dare not speak. Human beings will soon learn it for themselves; for
the souls of the immortals are preparing to bridge over the gulf of death, and
men and spirits will yet cross and recross it. Meantime ye are the blind
leading the blind; deceiving yourselves with a vain philosophy, and deceiving
all to whom ye teach it. There is no Death! I must be gone. Hark, I am
called."
It would seem that the body was disturbed in its somnambulism, and the
soul recalled; but we could have gained nothing by prolonging this interview,
for evidently that soul had returned in its lucid intervals to the ancient and
false philosophy in which it had in childhood been instructed, namely, the
mythical belief in its immortality
“The spirits of lunatics can be evoked and always speak and think
rationally when freed from the disordered body; but we note that they most
commonly go back to the rudimental periods of their existence, and generally
insist on the popular myth of immortality.
“perhaps they are en rapport with the prevailing opinions of men, and are
thus psychologized into repeating accepted ideas. There is nothing, however,
to be gained from this experiment.”
40
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER III.
She was beautiful, fair, and fragile-looking as a water lily; gentle, timid,
and shrinking as a fawn; and though residing with her stern, unloving uncle
in the college buildings, and fulfilling for him the duties of a house keeper,
41
GHOST LAND.
few of the other residents ever saw her except in transitory, passing
glances, and none of the members of the university, save one, enjoyed the
privilege of any direct personal intercourse with her. That solitary and
highly favored individual was myself.
Not one of them, that I can remember, ever manifested any genial
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GHOST LAND.
qualities or seemed to delight in social exercises. They were profound,
philosophic, isolated men, pursuing from mere necessity, or as a cloak to
the stupendous secrets of their existence, some scientific occupation, yet in
their innermost natures lost to earth and its sweet humanities; living
amongst men, but partaking neither of their vices nor their virtues.
If the knowledge I had purchased was indeed a reality, there were times
when I deemed it was neither good nor lawful for man to possess it. I
often envied the peaceful unconsciousness of the outer world, and would
gladly have gone back to the simple faith of my childhood, and then have
closed my eyes in eternal sleep sooner than awaken to the terrible unrest
which had possessed me since I had crossed the safe boundaries of the
visible, and entered upon the illimitable wastes of the invisible.
And now, methought, Constance, the fair, gentle, and loving hearted
orphan, Constance, who so yearned for affection that she was content in
her isolation to cling even to a young boy like me, was to become their
victim; be inducted into the cold, unearthly realms of half-formed spiritual
existences; lose all her precious womanly attributes, and with fixed, wild
glances piercing the invisible, stare away from the faces of her fellow-
mortals to the grotesque lineaments of goblins, the forms of sylphs, and the
horrible rudiments of imperfect being that fill the realms of space,
mercifully hidden from the eyes of ordinary mortals. Constance, I knew,
longed for this knowledge, and whether prompted by the suggestions of her
remorseless relative, or fired with the sphere of influence which he
projected from his resolved mind, I could not tell; certain it was that she
had obtained some clew to the pursuits in which I was engaged, and was
perpetually plying me with questions and attempts to elicit information
concerning them.
GHOST LAND.
held by the brothers, I saw Professor Muller cross the college grounds,
supporting on his arm the closely-veiled and ethereal form of Constance. I
saw them enter a coach, which was waiting for them at the gate, and
running hastily in their track, I heard the professor direct the driver to set
them down in that remote quarter of the town where the meetings of the
Brotherhood were held.
"Where I shall some day meet you, my young paladin--in the land of
light, for an entrance to which my soul has yearned ever since I could look
up from the chill world of materialism, and feel that it must be vitalized
and fired by a world of Spiritualism. Yes, Louis, I know now the secrets of
your nightly wanderings--and I, too, can traverse space. I, too, can
commune with the soul of things, and in enfranchised liberty the inner self
of Constance can roam the spheres of infinity and pierce the secrets of
eternity."
GHOST LAND.
could not share the thoughts which some years of experience had forced
upon me as convictions; but, ah me! why should I have wished to hasten
the eclaircissement? It came soon enough, or rather, too soon, too soon! I
was never present at the séances in which Constance took part, nor were
any of the other “lucid subjects" known to me, hence I never knew what
transpired. The Brothers had many phases of spiritual communion among
them, and though, thanks to the indulgent care of my teacher, I learned
more than any of the other "sensitives" were permitted to know during
their terms of initiation, I was aware that there were vast theatres of
transcendental knowledge to be traversed, into which few if any mortals
had been as yet fully inducted.
As months glided on, I found most certainly that the spirit of this poor
victim had been trained tom become a "flying soul," and was, at most of
the séances she attended, liberated for some purposes which I could only
guess at.
Whatever these were, they soon began to affect her health and spirits.
She pined away like a flower deprived of light and air. Frailer and more
ethereal grew that slight, sylph-like form; more wan and hollow waxed the
once tinted cheek and lips day by day.
Her large, blue eyes became sunken and hollow, and her curling locks of
pale gold seemed like a coronet of sunbeams, already entwined to circle the
brow of an eternal sleeper. At every séance she attended, her spirit,
attenuating like a thread of long-drawn light, invariably floated away, as its
first and most powerful attraction, to whatever place I happened to be in;
sometimes poring over my books in my quiet little chamber; sometimes
dreamily watching the ripples of the dancing fountain which played in the
college square; not unfrequently wandering in the arcades of the thick
woods that skirted the town; and at times stretched on the grass, watching,
45
GHOST LAND.
but never entering into, the merry sports of the youths of my own age, with
whom, as companions, I had lost all sympathy. At home or abroad, alone
or in the midst of a crowd, wherever I chanced to be, when the
enfranchised soul of the beautiful Constance broke its prison bonds and
went free, save for the magnetic spell of her operators, it invariably sought
me out, and like a wreath of pale, sunlit mist, floated some two feet above
the ground in bodily form and presentment before me. Accustomed to the
phenomenon of the "double goer," this phantom neither surprised nor
disturbed me. My spiritual experiences enabled me to perceive that during
the few moment that the spirit of the "sensitive" was passing into the
magnetic sleep, and before her magnetizers had yet full control of her, the
instinctive attractions of her nature drew her to the boy whom she had
already discovered to be her worshipper, the only being, perhaps, to whom
she was drawn by the ties of affection, with which her loving nature was
replete. All this I knew, and should have rejoiced in had not the phantom
of the victim presented unmistakable tokens of being a sacrifice, and that
an unpitied one, to the dark magians with whom she was so fatally
associated.
One evening, when we had been strolling out together, and had sat on a
lone hill side, watching the sinking sun setting in gorgeous, many-colored
glory over the outstretched gardens, meadows and plains beneath,
Constance broke a long silence by exclaiming in low yet passionate tones:
"Louis, you think the men who have entrapped us, both body and soul, in
their foul, magical meshes, are good and pure, even if they are cold and
ungenial in their devotion to their awful studies. Louis, you are mistaken.
I bear witness to you as the last, and perhaps the only act by which I may
ever serve you on earth, that some of them are impious, inhuman, and, oh,
46
GHOST LAND.
heaven, how monstrously impure!"
"Do not interrupt me, Louis. I am injured past all reparation. You may
be snatched from the vortex which pollutes the body and blasts the soul;
but for me, oh, would the end were to come!"
I threw myself at the feet of the beautiful lady, protesting I would die to
save her. For her sake, to do her good or even to pleasure her, I would
crush the whole nest of magicians, as I would do so many wasps. I would
kill them, denounce them to the authorities--anything, everything she bid
me do. All I asked was to be permitted to save her.
To this wild rhapsody the low tone of the gentle Constance only
responded in stifled whispers, entreating me to be still, calm, patient, and
to be assured that neither I nor any other living creature could be of the
slightest assistance to her. "I have seen the end," she added, when she had
succeeded in calming me, "and I know that, impatient as I am for its
coming, it will not be long delayed. I shall enter into the realms of light
and glory, for these dreadful men have only abused my helpless spirit so
long as it is imprisoned in my weak body and its connecting forces; they
have not touched its integrity, nor can they maintain their hold upon it one
instant after it has severed the chain which binds the immortal to the
mortal. When that is broken I shall be free and happy."
"Constance!" I cried, "is it then given to you to know what new form
you will inhabit? Surely one so good and true and beautiful can become
nothing less than a radiant planetary spirit!"
"I shall be the same Constance I ever was" she replied, solemnly. "I am
an immortal spirit now, although bound in material chains still more
terrible to the power of yon base, bad men."
"Forever and forever, Louis, I shall be ever the same. I have seen
worlds of being those magians cannot ascend to--worlds of bright,
resurrected human souls upon whom death has had no power save to
dissolve the earthly chains that held them in tenements of clay. I have seen
the soul world; I have seen that it is imperishable. Louis, there are in these
47
GHOST LAND.
grasses beneath out feet spiritual essences that never die. In my moments
of happiest lucidity, that is--and here a strong shudder shook her frame--
when I could escape from my tormentors and the world of demons
amongst whom they delight to roam, then, Louis, my soul winged through
space and pierced into brighter interior than they have ever realized, aye,
even into the real soul of the universe, not the mere magnetic envelope
which binds spirit and body together. Louis, in the first or inner recesses
of nature is the realm of force, comprising light, heat, magnetism, life,
nerve, aura, essence, and all the imponderables that make up motion, for
motion is force, composed of many subdivisible parts. Here inhere those
worlds of half-formed, embryonic existences with which out tormentors
hold intercourse. They are the spiritual parts of matter, and supply to
matter the qualities of force; but they are all embryonic, all transitory, and
only partially intelligent existences. Nothing which is imperfect is
permanent, hence these imperfect elementary spirits have no real or
permanent existence; they are fragments of being--organs, but not
organisms--and until they are combined into the organism of manhood,
they can outwork no real individuality, hence they perish--die, that we may
gather up their progressed atoms, and incarnate their separate organs as the
complete organism of man."
"Constance, you speak with assurance. How know you this--not from
the Brotherhood?"
"The Brotherhood, Louis! Why, they are but groping through the thick
darkness of the material world and just penetrating the realms of force.
"I tell you those realms are only peopled with shadows, ghosts,
phantoms.
"The hand is not the body, the eye is not the head; neither are
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GHOST LAND.
the thin vapory essences that constitute the separate organs of which the
world of force is composed, the soul. Mark me, Louis! Priests dream of
the existence of soul worlds, the Brotherhood of the beings in the world of
force. The priests call the elementary spirits of the mid-region mere
creations of human fancy and superstition. The Brothers charge the same
hallucination upon the priests. Both are partly right and partly wrong, for
the actual experiences of the soul will prove that beings exist of both
natures, and that both realms are verities; only the elementary spirits in the
realms of force are like the earth, perishable and transitory, and the
perfected spirits in the realm of soul are immortal, and never die. Louis, I
have seen and conversed with both, and I know I do not dream. Here,
miserable that I am, I am bound to earth; my soul is imprisoned by the
chains of force; I am compelled to minister to the insatiate curiosity of the
spirits who cannot ascend beyond those mid-regions, and oh! the horror of
that bondage would have bereft my soul of reason, had it not been
redeemed by foregleams of the more holy and exalted destiny reserved for
the soul in the blest sphere of immortality. Dear boy, ask me no more,
press me no further. My sweet brother, dearly, fondly loved by Constance!
when I am an enfranchised spirit, I will come to thee, and prove my words
by the very presence of an arisen, immortal soul. Remember!"
I understood that this recession of her spirit was from no decrease of the
experiments, whatever they might be, that she suffered, nor yet from any
cessation of her attraction to myself, but the bonds of earth were loosening,
the vital forces waning, and I knew that the pale phantom was losing the
earthly essence necessary to become visible even in the atmosphere of
invisible forces. My beautiful saint would soon be taken from me, my
earthly idol would be shattered; and oh! were it possible to believe her
words, and think that she could still live in a brighter and better state of
being, I might have been comforted; but driven from this anchor of hope
by the emphatic teachings of the Brotherhood and their spirits, I beheld my
earth angel melting away into blank annihilation, with an anguish that
admitted of no alleviation, a pain at my heart almost insupportable.
I had been away for some months in England, pursuing studies of which
I shall speak more presently. Professor von Marx had been my companion,
and we had just returned, when one night, as I was about to retire to rest,
49
GHOST LAND.
and proceeded to draw the curtain which shaded my window, something
seemed to rise outside the casement, which intercepted the light of the
moon. The house in which I dwelt was on the borders of a beautiful lake,
and too high above it to allow of any stray passenger climbing up to my
casement. There was no boat on the waters, no foothold between them and
the terrace, which was far below my window. I had been gazing out for
some time on the placid lake, illumined by the broad path of light shed
over it by the full moon, and I knew that no living creature was near or
could gain access to my apartment; and yet there, standing on air against
the casement, and intercepting the rays that streamed on either side of her
on the mosaic floor of my chamber, stood the gracious and radiant form of
Constance Muller.
Radiant, shining, and glorious she now appeared, her sweet eyes looking
full of penetrating intelligence into mine, her sweet smile directed towards
me, and a motion of her hand like the action of a salute, indicating that the
apparition saw and recognized me, and was all beaming with interest and
intelligence. By a process which was not ordinary motion, the lovely
phantom seemed to glide through the window and appear suddenly within
a few feet of the couch, to which, on first appearance, I had staggered back.
Slightly bending forward, as if to arrest my attention, though without the
least movement of the lips, her voice reached my ear, saying: "I am free,
happy, and immortal." Swiftly as she had appeared, the apparition
vanished, and in its place I beheld the visionary semblance of the old-
fashioned room in the college building occupied by Constance Muller. On
a couch, which I well knew, lay the form of the once beautiful tenant, pale,
ghastly, dead! The form was partly covered over with a sheet, but where
the white dressing-robe she wore was open at the throat I observed clearly
and distinctly two black, livid spots, like the marks of a thumb and finger.
The face was distorted, the eyes staring, and I saw she had been
murdered.
GHOST LAND.
worn around her neck, lying on the ground as if it had been dropped there.
If there was any meaning in this vision, it would appear that this object
was the point aimed at, for I no sooner had beheld it and the exact position
in which it lay than the whole phantasmagoria passed away, and once more
the shining image of a living and celestially beautiful Constance stood
before me.
Again the air seemed to syllable forth the words: "I am free, happy and
immortal," and "I have kept my promise," when again, but this time far
more gradually, the angelic vision melted out, leaving the pattern of the
mosaic on the floor, gilded only by the bright moonbeam, and the diamond
panes of the casement, shadowed only by the white jasmine that was
trained over the house.
Moonlight reigned supreme, the shadow was gone; but ah me! it had
been the shadow of an eternity of sunbeams. Never did I realize such a
profound gloom, such an insufferably thick atmosphere, such "darkness
made visible," as the absence of this radiant creature left behind. Whilst
she stayed it seemed as if sorrow, evil, or suffering had never had an
existence; life and being throughout was a mighty ecstasy: and now she
had taken all the joy and sunlight out of the world, and that--forever.
He did not seem to doubt but that Constance Muller was dead. He made
no remarks upon the appearances, which I passionately declared, inferred
that she had suffered death by violence. To all this he simply said: "We
shall see," but when I strove to convince him that the apparition of a soul
after death, and that with all the signs of life and tokens of intelligence,
must prove a continued existence, he seemed roused to his usual tone of
dogmatic assertion. He repeated what he had often insisted upon before--
namely, that the life emanations called "soul" did often subsist for a short
period after death, and appear as an organic form, but he still maintained
that was no proof of immortality, since such essences soon disintegrated,
and became as scattered and inorganic as the body they had once inhabited.
When I urged the words I had heard from the beautiful phantom, he
insisted they were the reflections of my own thoughts, associated with the
appearance of one who believed in idle superstitions, and to my plea that
the dress of pure, glistening white in which the figure was arrayed could be
51
GHOST LAND.
no reflex of my mind, whilst the buoyant happiness that sparkled on her
angelic face bore little or no resemblance to the sad, faded original, he
replied that as the essence was pure and unalloyed by the earthy, so when I
beheld the essence actually disengaged from the earthy, I should see it
clothed in an image of its own beauty, light and purity. I was silenced, but
not convinced. Two days after Professor von Marx stood with me
knocking at Herr Muller's chamber door. The professor himself opened it,
and anticipated all we might have to say by informing us, gravely, that he
had been unfortunate enough to lose his niece "by a sudden attack of putrid
fever," which had compelled her speedy interment, the ceremony of which
he had been just attending.
"I had her harp, desk, books and other matters which might have been
rendered unsalable by the contagion of the fever, removed, replied Herr
von Muller, with a slight shade of confusion in his manner. "I did not want
a crowd of persons hovering around the sufferer in her dying moments,
hence I had the apartment cleared in an early stage of her disease."
"Is there nothing my young friend could procure from this much
venerated spot?" persisted my crafty ally.
"I do not well know," replied the other, completely thrown off his guard;
"but if you desire it, you can step in and inspect the apartment."
Following the two strangely matched associates into the desolate shrine
from which the saint had been removed, I gazed around only to see a
perfect facsimile of the scene I had beheld in vision. It was evident the
quick, furtive glances of Professor von Marx were directed towards the
same end as my own. Suddenly he stopped before a dark picture hanging
on the wall, and standing in a line between me and Herr Muller, directed
52
GHOST LAND.
his attention to something which he pretended to call remarkable in the
painting, thus giving me the opportunity to cross the room hastily, draw out
a couch in the corner, and gather up from behind it a black ribbon and gold
locket, which had lain there apparently unnoticed till then. Professor von
Marx never lost sight of me for an instant, and no sooner saw me secrete
my treasure in my bosom than he said abruptly: "Come, Louis I don't like
the atmosphere of the place. Herr Muller is right; the contagion of death
lingers around; there is nothing left here now that you can desire to have.
Let us go."
Before we parted for the night the professor asked me if I had ever seen
or heard of Zwingler, the Bohemian.
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER IV.
ZWINGLER-HOW TO TRACK A
MURDERER.
FULFILLMENT OF A PROMISE --
REMARKABLE PSYCHOMETRIC OR
CLAIRVOYANT FEATS -- TRACING A
CRIMINAL BY THE NECKTIE HE WORE
WHILE COMMITTING THE CRIME.
To fulfill the promise which my teacher had made me of visiting
Zwingler, we mounted several flights of stairs in an old house in Sophien
Stradt, and at last reached a landing upon which many persons were
congregated about and around an open door, through which I was led by
Professor von Marx into a large apartment, shabbily furnished, and half
filled with loungers, amongst whom I recognized more than one official of
the constabulary force of the city.
GHOST LAND.
turning to me, said calmly: "Louis this is Zwingler."
"Adept!" (to Zwingler) "a pupil of mine, for whose benefit I wish you to
recite some little fragments of your experience;" then, seating himself upon
the table from which the Bohemian had dismounted, and motioning me to
a stool by his side, he proceeded, addressing the notary, to whom he had
slightly nodded, "Well, Herr Reinhardt, what new discoveries has our
lively little sleuth-hound been making?"
"Oh, nothing out of the common line, professor," replied the other, in a
grave official drawl. "We've caught the murderer of Frau Ebstein; that's
all."
"That's all?" cried the Bohemian, with a tone and gesture of almost
frantic excitement. "That's all, is it?" Slave of the dull earth and the duller
prison watch and ward! All is it, to traverse nearly two hundred miles of
ground, cross three rivers, plunge through marshes, scale mountain heights,
pierce the forest, sink through the cavern's depths, and toss on the roaring
rapids of the terrific Schwartz cataract; and still never lose--no, not for a
single moment--the scent of an invisible and unknown mortal, whom these
eyes had never beheld, whom these hands had never touched, and whom
no sign, no symbol, no token in the realms of earthly existence could be
found, except by me, Zwingler!"
As he spoke, he beat his breast, and elevated his glittering black eye to
the heavens in an attitude of half-ecstatic frenzy.
GHOST LAND.
which were specially in the line of his duty, "an Unknown, whether male
or female also unknown, but supposed to be the former on account of
blood-stained footprints, marks of a large thumb and finger on neck of the
deceased, and the torn neckerchief, evidently a man's, part of which was
clutched in the fingers of said deceased, and part of which was found
beneath the couch, saturated with gore, and rent, as if in a violent struggle."
"Yes, yes, I will tell," he cried. "I always do. When did I ever fail?
Answer me that, prince of the air; answer me!"
GHOST LAND.
man had been there. They shuddered, and said to one another: 'Zwingler!'
and then to me: 'He has been and gone.' I knew it; but the way he had
taken was still pointed by the black line. I know what you were going to
say, professor; I see your thought. You want to know if I see the line I
speak of with my eyes, my very eyes, or my soul's eyes. I reply: 'With
both.' My soul feels the line, and it draws me on, and seems like a cord
dragging at the object I hold, and pulling me in the direction I must take to
arrive at the owner of that object. Sometimes I seem to see the line, and
then I do not feel it pull, but it never leaves one sense or the other--sight or
feeling--until I abandon the object or find the person to whom it has
belonged. Well, sirs, thus it led me on, day and night, never suffering me
to get out of his track. It guided me through several villages and some
towns, and whenever it was the thickest and most palpable, there he had
stopped to take rest or refreshment, and there I said: 'Such and such a man
has been here', and they answered with a shudder: 'Zwingler! he has come
and gone.'
"I rested sometimes, but ever on the ground--the ground he had trodden;
and then the black, vapory cord seemed to coil up all around me like a
misty garment. I tried to rest once on a bed he had occupied, but oh,
heaven! All the scene of the murderer, and was actually doing the deed
over again. I fled from the place, and should have lost the track had I not
returned to it again, and started afresh from that house.
"To one like me professor, that house will always be haunted; that is,
until the murderer's shade melts away from it; and it will do so in time. I
answer your thought again, you see, professor. It was near midnight, some
time—I cannot tell how long--after I had started, that the black cord began
to thicken and spread, and at length to assume the shape of a man.
"It trembled and quivered, and at first was only the indistinct outline of a
man, but presently it grew more and more dense, and now behold! It was
the ghost of the Dutch serving-man in full, walking just so far before me,
above the ground one foot, and ever looking over its shoulder at something
coming after it. That man went to a great many places in the town I was
now hunting through, for the ghost was at every street-corner and in every
alley, and lurking in all the dark lanes and by-streets; and though I knew he
must be close at hand, by the density of the ghost, still he had wandered
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GHOST LAND.
and wandered, and lurked about in so many places that I should have
become confused had not both senses been suddenly appealed to at once. I
saw him, and at last I felt him. I felt him, as it were, tugging at the
handkerchief in my hand, and striving--O holy martyrs, how he strove!-- to
get it away from me.
"Ay! and the strangest fact of all this is, gentlemen," broke in the grave
notary, unable to keep silence any longer, "that this wretch had changed his
dress ever so many times, and when this wonderful Bohemian here tracked
him to his lair, he was disguised that none but the Devil, or perhaps his
particular ally, Zwingler, could have found him out."
GHOST LAND.
detected more criminals in this way than all the constabulary in Germany.
Give him but a garment, a lock of hair, or even a rag that has come in
contact with a living organism, and he will track out its owner with a
fidelity unmatched by the best bloodhound that ever ran." Then addressing
the Bohemian, he said aloud: "Glorious Zwingler! as wise as you are
gifted, tell my foolish young son here what you mean by a soul. He is
eager to learn of you what soul really is." "Soul is the life, my prince; you
know that," replied Zwingler, half daunted, as he always seemed to be
when addressing Professor von Marx.
"You think, then, soul is just the life principle and nothing more: that
which keeps the man alive; is that so?"
"Is the air a substance, the wind a substance? You cannot see or feel
either until they come into contact with some other substance, and when
they do, although invisible, you know they are something. The soul is
finer than air, thinner and more ethereal than wind, and only some souls as
fine and pure as mine can sense it. But when a Marx can sense the air, and
feels the wind, a Zwingler can sense the soul and feel the substance."
"Does not the body appear too, if you look for it? Surely it does not all
fade away at once, but decays and corrupts and at last disappears. No
doubt soul and body both wear away, fade out, and melt into their original
elements when they become separated, as at death. No doubt, too, some
can see only the body, and some, like Zwingler, can see the soul as well
but both live only when they are together, and die when they are apart;"
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then contracting his singularly mobile features into a frown of impatience,
he cried, irritably: "But why torment me, and make me talk about things
which only you great professors understand? I hate to think of death! I
loathe it! I--I--fear it! I wish I could live forever!" He was about to dart
away, when Professor von Marx laid a hand gently on his arm; the
Bohemian stood as if transfixed, and muttered submissively: "What more
would you have of me, great professor?"
"Only to accept this slight token of my young friend's gratitude for your
instructive narrative, adept," replied the professor; and as he spoke, Herr
von Marx suddenly snatched from me the locket and ribbon of poor
Constance, which I held as he had desired during the interview in my right
hand, and which he now as suddenly placed in Zwingler's.
"What think you of the death, or rather the murder, of Constance Muller,
my master?"
GHOST LAND.
science. Enough, once and forever, of this. What think you of Zwingler?"
GHOST LAND.
What followed, or how long I may have remained unconscious of life and
being, after this vision, I know not; but my first recognition of passing
events was the sound of Herr von Marx's voice speaking through the thick
darkness of night which had fallen upon us, saying: "Louis, are you awake?
Surely, I must have had a long sleep, for the night has stolen upon me
unawares."
The janitor at this moment entered with lights, and placed them on a
sideboard. The professor, rising from his seat, took one of the lamps, and
advancing to the table held it over the open Bible, at the same time
exclaiming in a voice of singular agitation: "Who has marked these
passages?"
I advanced, looked over his shoulder, and saw him remove the ribbon
and locket, only to disclose several deep black lines, drawn as if with
Indian ink, beneath the following words, in different parts of the fifteenth
chapter of the First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians:
"Behold I show you a mystery; we shall not all sleep; but we shall be
changed."
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER V.
MAGIC IN ENGLAND--JOHN
CAVENDISH DUDLEY.
OCCULTISM -- THE LETTER --
SHADOWS OF FATE - -THE
SUPERMUNDANE BELIEFS –
BOHEMIAN WONDER -- AMONG THE
MAGICIANS -- THE INNER LIGHT --
CURATIVE AND PROPHETIC POWERS.
Before I had completed my educational term in Europe, I had the
misfortune to lose my good father; but immediately after his death I
received letters from my mother and out Hindoo connections, directing me
to enter upon a course of study in a certain military school in England,
where I was to fit myself for following my father's profession of arms in
India.
Although I was greatly averse to this course, and would have preferred
any other occupation rather than that of a soldier, I found the arrangements
for my continuance in Europe were made contingent upon my compliance
with these directions, and I had become so warmly attached to Professor
von Marx, and his affection for me had become such an indispensable
element in my existence, that I was willing to avail myself of any
opportunity that would enable me to remain near him, if not absolutely so
much in his society as formerly.
GHOST LAND.
professorship at B---- had been accepted rather as a means of diverting
attention from the more occult pursuits he delighted in, than from any
necessity on his part to occupy himself in scholastic duties.
GHOST LAND.
wheels of mind vibrated and swung to and fro, searching for the sustaining
power on which to anchor.
I can now discern the secret of this mystic spell, although I do not know
that I have ever had the opportunity of observing a case in which one soul
had acquired over another an equal amount of control. The magnetic life
of Professor von Marx had been infused into my system until I was part of
himself; his strong and persuasive will had pierced my very brain, until it
had found a lodgement in the innermost seat of intelligence.
I do not know to this day how far the Professor realized his magical
power over me. He knew that I read his thoughts like an open page. He
was able to conceal or reveal his will to me at pleasure, and without a word
spoken. I knew when he willed to shut his thoughts from me, and at such
times I was a blank.
When there was no such mental wall erected between us, all was as clear
and lucid to me as if he were myself. I prepared myself to walk or ride
with him, came and went as he wished, and all without a word spoken or a
gesture made.
Professor von Marx was, I now know, fondly attached to me, and, I
think, pitied my fearful subjection to his will even whilst he enjoyed its
triumphant exercise.
This true gentleman was gravely courteous to the female sex, but never
seemed to realize the slightest attraction towards them as companions. He
understood them, as indeed he understood every one he approached; but
though he never conversed with me on the subject, I perceived that he
viewed the yielding and intuitive characteristics of the female mind with
lofty contempt, and his intense and all-absorbing devotion to the peculiar
studies he had adopted made him coldly indifferent to the attractions of
female beauty. Eminently handsome in person, and polished though cold
in manner, he might have commanded the adoration of even the fairest in
any land. Why I alone, of all the human family, ever seemed to move his
stoical heart to the least emotion can only be accounted for on the
hypothesis that there was something of a reciprocal action in the magnetic
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GHOST LAND.
process which had so wonderfully bound me to him, and that in the
absorption of his magnetic influence on my part, he voluntarily received in
exchange influences from the elemental life which he displaced in my
organism. Magnetizers not unfrequently imbibe some of the qualities of
disease, or even the psychological tendencies of their patients, and call it
sympathy.
Dark, blighting, and inauspicious was the day when first Professor von
Marx and myself established ourselves in an old-fashioned, time-worn
mansion, a portion of which we were to rent during our stay in London.
The fire blazed in the grate, and the mellow light of softly gleaming lamps
lent a cheering lustre to the scene, however, as we sat, on the first evening
of our arrival, in company with two guests to whom we had dispatched
letters of introduction, and who had hastened to welcome us, at the earliest
possible moment, to the British metropolis.
GHOST LAND.
esteemed friend of his boyhood, Felix von Marx, and he could scarcely be
persuaded that the professor was immovable in his resolution to retain a
private home for himself and his adopted son, as he called me, during our
stay in England, and only to make occasional visits from thence to the
houses of friends.
Mr. Dudley and his companion, Sir James M----, were very enthusiastic
in their description of the wonderful séances they enjoyed amongst the
occultists of Great Britain. They surprised us by citing the names of a
great many persons highly distinguished both in the ranks of fashion and
literature, who were members of the British branch of an association to
which Professor von Marx had been elected an honorary member, and to
which they both belonged. They assured us the professor's high renown as
an adept of the most remarkable power, and mine as the famous
somnambulist of the Berlin Brotherhood, had already preceded us, and our
arrival was looked forward to with the utmost impatience by the students
of occultism in Great Britain.
They expected much of us, too, because they were led to believe the
German mind was more than ordinarily capable of analyzing the unseen,
and mastering the mysteries of the imponderable. A few hours'
conversation with these gentlemen, however, convinced us that in point of
varied experience, their magical information was not quite equal to our
own, though they had visited Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, and
almost every part of Scandinavia, carefully acquainting themselves with
the wild legendary lore of those regions, and taking part in many of their
singular ceremonies of spiritual invocation.
Moreover, our friends had arrived at the opinion that certain localities
and climatic influences were favorable or otherwise to the development of
these innate occult endowments.
67
GHOST LAND.
Experience had shown them that mountainous regions or highly rarified
atmospheres constituted the best physical conditions for the evolvement of
magical powers, and they therefore argued that the great prevalence of
supermundane beliefs and legendary lore in those latitudes arises from the
fact that intercourse with the interior realms of being is the universal
experience of the people, not that they are more ignorant or superstitious
than other races. Mr. Dudley had brought to England with him a schaman,
or priest, of a certain district in Russia, where he had given extraordinary
evidences of his powers. This man's custom was to array himself in a robe
of state, trimmed with the finest furs and loaded with precious stones,
amongst which clear crystals were the most esteemed.
In this costume, with head, arms and feet bare, the schaman would
proceed to beat a magical drum, made after a peculiar fashion, and adorned
with a variety of symbolical and fantastic paintings.
His body, meantime, would sway to and fro, spin around, and finally be
elevated and even suspended several feet in the air, by a power wholly
unknown to the witnesses. His cries and gesticulations were frightful, and
the whole scene of "manticism" would end by the performer's sinking on
the earth in a rigid cataleptic state, during which he spoke oracular
sentences, or gave answers to questions with a voice which seemed to
proceed from the air some feet above his prostrate form. During my stay
in England I was present at several experimental performances with this
schaman, and though he could unquestionably predict the future and
describe correctly distant places and persons, Professor von Marx and
myself were both disappointed in the results which we expected to proceed
from his very elaborate modes of inducting the "mantic" frenzy. Mr.
Dudley accounted for the inferiority of his protege's powers by stating that
the atmosphere was prejudicial to his peculiar temperament, and though he
had striven to surround him with favorable conditions, it was obvious he
needed the specialties of his native soil and climate for the complete
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GHOST LAND.
evolvement of the phenomena he had been accustomed to exhibit.
There were several other personages, all imported from northern lands,
through whom our new friends attempted to conduct experiments; but it
seemed that in each case the powers for which these weird people had been
distinguished, had either diminished or utterly failed them when taken
away from the influence of their home surroundings. The islander from
Skye had only beheld one vision since he had quitted his native shores, and
that was the scene of a shipwreck, in which, as he affirmed, he was
destined to perish, and for which reason he had steadily refused to return
home, although his gifts as a seer were now suspended. It is a curious fact,
and worthy of record, that this Skye man, having been placed in service as
a gardener, was arrested for theft, convicted, sentenced to transportation,
and after having been removed to the convict ship, finally perished in a
gale, during which the ship, with all her hapless load of crime and
suffering, was lost.
We, that is, my master and myself, saw little or nothing amongst the
"magicians" whom our new friends had taken such trouble to surround
themselves with, that equalled the experiences of our Teutonic associates,
but our opportunities for enlarging our sphere of observation strengthened
our belief in the following items of spiritual philosophy: First, that there
are individuals who possess by nature all the prophetical, clairvoyant, and
otherwise supermundane powers which are only to be evoked in different
organisms by magical rites or magnetic processes.
69
GHOST LAND.
Next, we found another and still larger class, who seemed externally to
have no extraordinary endowments of a spiritual nature, yet in whom the
most wonderful powers of inner light, curative virtue, and prophetic vision
could be awakened through artificial means, the most potent of which were
the inhalation of mephitic vapors, pungent essences, or narcotics; the
action of clamourous noise or soothing music; the process of looking into
glittering stones and crystals; excessive and violent action, especially in a
circular direction; and lastly, through the exhalations proceeding from the
warm blood of animated beings. All these influences, together with an
array of forms, rites, and ceremonials which involve mental action and
captivate the senses, I now affirm to constitute the art of ancient magic, and
I moreover believe that wherever these processes are systematically
resorted to, they will, in more or less force, according to the susceptibility
of the subject, evoke all those occult powers known as ecstacy,
somnambulism, clairvoyance, the gift of prophecy, healing, etc.
GHOST LAND.
condition was the delight and apparent relief which the sufferers
represented themselves as experiencing when blows, violent enough, as it
would seem, to have crushed them bone by bone, were administered to
them. At the tomb of the Abbe Paris, and amongst the frenzied patients of
Morzine, the most pathetic appeals would be made that sturdy, powerful
men would pound and beat their bodies with huge mallets, and the cries of
"Heavier yet, good brother! Heavier yet, for the love of heaven!" were
amongst the words that were most constantly uttered.
Of the Arabian fire-eaters and Hindoo ecstatics, I shall have more to say
hereafter; for the present I close this long and discursive chapter with a few
passages of explanation concerning the existence of magical practices and
magical experiments in stern, gloomy, matter-of-fact old England.
Nearly all the English gentlemen to whom Professor von Marx had
letters of introduction were members of secret societies, and, with one
exception, pursued their studies in the direction of magic, deeming they
could ultimately resolve the nature and use of all occult powers into a
scientific system, analogous to the magical art as practiced in the days of
antiquity. The one exception which I refer to is an order that owes nothing
of its working or existence to this age or time. Its actual nature is only
recognized, spoken, or thought of as a dream, a memory of the past,
evoked like a phantom from the realms of tradition or myth; yet as surely
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GHOST LAND.
as there is a spirit in man, is there in the world a spiritual, though nameless
and almost unknown association of men, drawn together by the bonds of
soul, associated by those interior links which never fade or perish,
belonging to all times, places, and nations alike. Few can attain to the
inner light of these spiritually associated brethren, or apprehend the
significance of their order; enough that it is, has been, and will be, until all
men are spiritualized enough to partake of its exalted dispensations. Some
members of this sublime Brotherhood were in session in England, and their
presence it was which really sent thither my master and myself, at the time
of which I write.
That there should exist within the very heart of rationalism and Christian
piety, England, more than one secret society addicted to magical practices
and superstitious rites, but above all, that the highest order of mystics in
the world should be uttering its potent spells in the midst of the great
modern Babylon, dedicated to the worship of mammon and pauperism, is a
statement so startling and original that I expect few but the initiated into its
actualities to credit me, and many of my readers, especially good, honest,
matter-of-fact English people themselves, to denounce me as a lunatic or a
modern Munchausen. I can only say, I write of that which I know, and of
what many esteemed and reputable citizens, in their private experiences,
know likewise; and if good, honest, matter-of-fact English people would
only remember there might be realms of being both higher and lower than
man's, links of connection and mutual understanding throughout the
universe, and some few things more in heaven and earth than they (worthy
folk) dream of in their philosophy, the magicians of England would not
feel compelled, for their credit and honor's sake, to make their societies
secret ones.
As it was, the clairvoyants, seers, and weird subjects whom the societies
procured for their experiments were generally employed in families, shops,
or some simple ways of business, which effectually concealed their real
characters. The magical experiments were conducted with the strictest
reserve and caution; and it is only since the advent of Modern Spiritualism,
with its remarkable and widespread commonplaces in wonderful things.
That the world has begun to discover that spiritual facts and experiences in
Great Britain are several years older than the movement of the last quarter
of a century.
It was some few weeks after our arrival in London, and one night
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GHOST LAND.
just as I was taking leave of my dear master for the night, that the
following conversation ensued between us:
"You shall know more; know--aye, even the absolute, soon, my Louis,"
rejoined the professor, with a deeper glow on his cheek and a more brilliant
flash of his star-like eyes than I had ever seen before; then, after a strange,
long pause, in which he seemed fixed and abstracted like one entranced, he
drew a letter from his bosom, glanced at it, and heaved a sigh so deep that
it almost amounted to a wail. That letter he turned over several times in his
hand, gazing now on the large seal, which closed it, now on the direction,
which was in his own bold writing, and marked simply, "To my Louis."
The painful sigh, the first and only token of deep emotion I had ever heard
from this man, was repeated several times; at length he placed the letter in
my hands, saying with an air of singular solemnity: "Keep this in the most
secret repository you have, and never open it until a voice, the most
authoritative to you on earth, shall say, 'The time has come. Open and
read!'
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GHOST LAND.
"Good night, Louis. Your experiences as a mystic in England are now
about to commence."
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER VI.
MAGICIANS AND SPIRIT MEDIUMS.
INVOCATIONS – ELEMENTARIES –
PLANETARIES -- MIRRORS AND
CRYSTALS – KOBOLDS – FAIRIES --
SPIRITUALISM AS FOUND IN SCOTCH
HIGHLANDS.
GHOST LAND.
The methods of the great majority of the magians I was now introduced
to may be briefly summed up as follows: Their first aim was to secure the
services of such an one as they could discover to be a good natural
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GHOST LAND.
magician--one whom the spiritists of to-day would call "a good
clairvoyant" or medium," and we Teutons style "a seer." This prerequisite
obtained and the society in session, they proceeded to form a circle on the
ground, prepared after the fashion prescribed by Cornelius Agrippa or
some of the medieval mystics. They formed their book of spirits on the
same approved patterns, and carefully conformed to every item of the
magical ritual or other formulae declared to have been derived from the
magians of Egypt and Chaldea and practiced by such renowned mystics as
Thos. Aquinas, Albertus Magnus, Nostradamus, Count St. Germain, etc. I
found the practices of different societies varied but little, and consisted
chiefly in a due observance of days, hours, times, and seasons, planetary,
solar, and lunar phases. Much reliance was placed on the fumigations said
to be appropriate to different days of the week, months and seasons; in a
word, our English associates had carefully studied the formulae of magic
as taught in the writings of Oriental and classical authorities, and faithfully
endeavored to practicalize the directions laid down, as far as the usages of
modern society permitted.
To those who are unfamiliar with the occult subjects I am now treating
of, let me say with all candor, I have faithfully devoted many years to the
study of spiritual mysteries; and both in my own person and that of my
numerous associates of many lands have endeavored, by the aid of all the
light I could obtain, whether derived from ancient or modern sources, to
discover what were the most effective methods of communing with the
invisible world and penetrating into the actualities of other realms of being
than those of mortality. The sum of all, to my apprehension, is that man, to
obtain this boon, must be born a natural magician, or in more familiar
phase, "a good spirit medium." Also that clairvoyance, clairaudience,
seership, and all those spiritual gifts by which human beings can attain the
privilege of communion with spirits, consist in certain organic specialties
of constitution, naturally appertaining to some individuals, and latent in
others, though susceptible of unfoldment by modes of culture. I believe
that forms, rites, and invocatory processes, fumigations, spells--in a word,
the science and practice of magic, may be applied as means to aid in this
communion, and are especially potent in enabling the operators to exercise
control over lower orders of spirits than themselves; but I affirm that they
are inoperative to open up the communion as a primary means, and that
without the services of a good seer, clairvoyant, or spirit medium, magical
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rites alone cannot succeed in evolving spiritual phenomena. This I soon
found to have been the general experience of our new associates in
England. All their magical formulae were subordinate in use to the one
grand desideratum of a good natural magician. Professor von Marx once
questioned, in his cold, sarcastic way: What was the use of magical
ceremonies at all, so long as they could not effect any results without the
required medium? and having secured this great desideratum, would not
his or her presence render the rites unnecessary? Our friends generally
denied this position, however, alleging that magical rites were the means of
culturing and unfolding spiritual gifts; also that they were essential to the
orderly intercourse with spirits, and enabled mortals to command them
instead of being commanded by them.
"I conjure and confirm upon you, strong, potent, and holy angels, in the
name of the most dreadful Adonai, the God of Israel, and by the name of
all the angels serving in the second host before Tetra, that great, strong,
and powerful angel, and by the name of his star, and by the name of the
seal, which is sealed by God most mighty and honorable, and by all things
before spoken. I conjure thee Raphael, the great angel who art ruler of the
fourth day, that for me thou wilt labor and fulfill all my petitions according
to my will and desire in my cause and business."
"Therefore, come ye! come ye, Serapiel, spirit of the air, ruling on the
fourth day! Angel of the southwest wind, come ye, come ye! Adonai
commandeth. Sadai commandeth--the most high and dreadful king of
kings, whose power no creature is able to resist. Sadai be unto you most
dreadful, unless ye obey and forthwith appear before this circle; and let
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miserable ruin and fire unquenchable remain with ye, unless ye forthwith
obey. Therefore, come ye! in the awful name Tetragrammaton. Why
tarriest thou? Hasten! Hasten! Hasten! Adonai, the most high, Sadai, king
of kings commands!" etc., etc.
These words, lofty and sounding as they seem, can convey only the
faintest idea of the fiery zeal and urgent ecstacy with which the Invocants
were accustomed to pronounce them.
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purpose, operated upon the inanimate objects around us, and served as
instruments for the achievement of marvelous phenomena. I know
Professor von Marx and myself were never present at magical seances
without obtaining results of a Spiritualistic character. I believe we both
furnished the pabulum by which spirits could come into contact with
matter; but whether the wonderful phenomena we witnessed were the
result of direct foreign intervention or the exercise of our own spiritual
faculties, even Professor von Marx could not always determine.
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hence they naturally resorted to mischief, torment, and deceit, as their
protection against the superior powers of man, and except in a few
instances of communion with the higher realms of "nature spirits," I never
knew good, happiness, peace of mind, or virtuous inspiration result from
these intercommunings. If to know the universe of being, and the nature
and immensity of the existences that people it, be the object sought, the
search is legitimate to the philosopher; but efforts to attain these
communings stimulated by mere curiosity, a desire to obtain wealth,
discover hidden treasures, gain power over the elements, and subdue
enemies, although often measurably successful, invariably bring unrest,
disappointment, and ultimate evil to the seeker, and I would earnestly warn
mankind against the attempt, stimulated, as before suggested, by purely
selfish motives.
I have had many pleasant interviews with the harmless and innocent
spirits of the mines, and those who preside over and correspond to the air,
fire, and atmosphere. Although rarely identified by mortals, and shy of
holding direct communication with them, these classes of elementaries are
still noble and exalted in their natures, constantly engaged in directing and
inspiring students in the nature sciences, indeed they are so intimately
related to human destiny that we breathe in their influence with every
noble thought, and attract them, as sparks of intellectual fire, with every
aspiration we cherish for scientific knowledge.
His methods were inspired by far loftier aims and regulated by much
more pious aspirations than those of most other English magians. The
seers, of whom Lord Vivian's society numbered several, conducted their
experiments through the mirror and crystal, and the young ladies especially
who attended these interesting seances, were particularly happy in
attracting pure and noble planetary spirits in response to their call. On one
occasion I attended a seance in London, when a mirror was to be presented
to a fair young girl, whose acquaintance I made about twenty years before
the date of my present writing.
The seance of which I am about to speak took place several years later
than the period at which I first visited London, and I am anticipating the
events of that time in referring to it; but as I may not have an opportunity
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of mentioning it again, and the scene in question has exercised a most
potential influence upon all the succeeding years of my life, I shall plead
guilty to the anachronism or recording its details in this place.
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approach of discord, slander, or enmity, she would assume a grimace
impossible to describe, but still graphically significant to a seer. Death,
this hideous ghoul portended by opening wide her cavernous jaws and
presenting within them a miniature resemblance of some victim whom she
affected to devour. This ghastly image always appeared to me objective,
life-like and real. I have faced it in the street, in my chamber, in the midst
of the gayest assemblages, in royal salons, and quiet solitude.
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depth of sadness, pity, and sorrow, which conveyed a whole history of
prophetic meaning.
Between these figures was displayed an open book, upon the pages of
which both the seeress and myself read two words. The lady informed me
she had seen these spirits before, had been told that they were planetary
spirits, the guardians of a mirror belonging to a friend whom she
occasionally visited, and that the book which they thus presented was one
which for ages they had been endeavoring to inspire some earthly scribe to
write. She added: "These spirits seemed, when first I saw them at my
friend, Mr. H.'s, to beseech me to write that book; but it now appears as if
they had transferred their plea to you, and I cannot but think the vision is
significant of the prophecy that you are destined to write it." "If so, then,"
I replied, "the first image is not meaningless, for the spirit of malignity as
surely prophesies slander and malice in connection with what is to follow,
as the beautiful legionaries of the stars prophesy that either you or I, or
perhaps both, will become their scribe."
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master, extending a long, lean, skinny arm, as if about to clutch him, and
gazing upon him with those distended jaws which to my shuddering
apprehension prophesied the approach of death. My master at the moment
seemed to be lost in profound abstraction. With folded arms he sat looking
vacantly into the dim distance, his thoughts evidently centered on scenes
far remote from his present surroundings. It was in this moment of
abstraction, and in the absence of the intense and concentrated influence he
was accustomed to throw around me, that I seemed to awake as with a
sudden start from dreaming to reality, and piercing the mist of self-woven
mystery in which he chose to enshroud himself and hide the realities of his
being from me, I perceived a truth which he had not before permitted to
dawn on my consciousness. He was unhappy, and his appearance
betokened to my newly-opened vision the signs of physical decay and the
fever of deep unrest. The pang of fear and anguish which thrilled through
my frame touched his. He recovered from his state of abstraction with a
slight shiver, turned an anxious, inquisitive glance upon me, rose, laid his
hand lovingly upon my shoulder, and instantly cause the clouds of reserve
once more to roll down between us. The spectre vanished. Professor von
Marx resumed his seat, carelessly waved his hand to recall me from the
magnetic state, remarking:"Enough, my Louis; you are weary." To the
external eye all was as calm and serene as ever, and our relations to each
other had not in the least degree altered; interiorly, however, I had received
a revelation which not even the will of this all-powerful controller could
obliterate, and with this cherished independent secret stored away in my
soul, arose the determination to effect a change in our circumstances.
Under the pretence that the air of the metropolis affected me unfavorably, I
induced my beloved friend to set out with me on a tour through North
Britain, purposing amidst the breezy hills and in the pure atmosphere of
Scotland and Wales, to obtain that rest and renovation for him, which he
fondly deemed I needed for myself.
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memorable scenes, and only pause to record one illustration of spiritual
interposition, in connection with events, which are still well remembered at
the place where they occurred. Professor von Marx's reputation as a man
of letters, and the report that he was accompanied by one of the seers of the
renowned "Berlin Brotherhood," procured us far more hospitable attention
in our quiet rambles than we desired to attract. On one occasion we were
so earnestly entreated to become the guests of a nobleman whose estate lay
in the heart of the wild Trosachs, that we felt unable, without positive
discourtesy, to resist his urgent invitation that we would remain with him
for a few days.
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landscape to the eyes of my companions, to me the air was thick with
visions. I beheld flying armies, dying heroes, captive princes, persecuted
martyrs, and all the weird phantasmagoria of life in its stormiest and most
unresting moods. And these visions must not be classed as the result of a
more overheated imagination or creative fancy. The spectral forms of the
long ago are indelibly fixed in the "astral light," which is the spiritual
atmosphere of the universe, and what seer can pass amidst those scenes
where these thronging phantoms most abound, without perceiving, through
the rifts and rents of matter, the myriads of forms which hang on the
gallery walls in an imperishable world of spiritual entities? Nothing that
ever has been is lost to the vision of the seer; nothing that now is, can be
hidden from his piercing gaze; nothing that shall be is wholly veiled from
his prophetic glances. Involuntarily, though perhaps shudderingly, he finds
his spiritual eyes are open, and he is compelled to gaze upon the innermost
of life's awful mystery whether he will or no. No hand, not even that of his
own tired spirit, can draw the curtain between his vision and that of the
solemn scenes inscribed by the actors in life's wild drama upon the
indestructible page of the astral light. Nature in her external loveliness
afforded me but half-revealed glimpses of her meaning in each scene I
looked upon. It was the array of phantom images that came trooping up
before my soul's eyes, filling each spot with the living, dying, dead; with
fierce battle-scenes, romances, intrigues; with all the stirring events, in
short, which make up the wild legend of Scottish history, that I beheld,
loading my spirit with the fatal burden of involuntary seership, filling my
heart with anguish for the woes of poor humanity, and isolating me alike
from human sympathy and human companionship.
Lost as I was in the absorption of this fatal gift of second sight, I could
rarely contribute much to the entertainment of my companions. Professor
von Marx was scarcely more sociable, for he was divided in his wish to
gratify our host and his friends with his fluent strain of conversation, and
his anxiety to watch the waves of thought which rolled in upon my soul,
the full details of which he could master without the interchange of a single
word between us, when he willed to do so. Meantime there was a
markedly restless manner in our host and his friends, which could not
escape the keen perception of the professor. They seemed to fence around
some subject, which they were equally desirous yet unwilling to introduce.
At length they asked abruptly what Professor von Marx thought of the
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nature of obsession-- whether he had ever had any experience in that
direction; and if, as he openly taught, the obsessing power did not proceed
from the undeveloped spirits of human beings, how he would account for
the strictly human tendencies (evil though they might be) manifested in the
conduct of the obsessed. Professor von Marx replied that he believed,
though he could not prove the fact, that the obsessing power was to be
traced to the elementaries. He claimed that these beings exist on every
grade of the ladder, which reaches from the lowest depths of inorganic
matter to the highest stages of organized being; that many of the kingdoms
of elemental existence were near enough to man to share his thoughts and
inspire him with their own ideas. Meantime, he argued, in many notable
cases of obsession, familiar enough to those who have studied the subject,
a large proportion of the control seemed to influence its unfortunate
victims to the commission of acts strangely in accordance with animal
natures.
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picture of rural peace and tranquility. It was just as these village houses
came into view, and whilst we were passing through the last portion of a
very rugged defile, that my horse, which was somewhat in advance of the
rest, became actually unmanageable, rearing, snorting, and plunging with
all the signs of frantic terror.
The more dim and shadowy the outer world grew to my sense of sight,
the more real and horrible became the objects revealed to my interior
senses. The air, the earth, the waters, appeared to be thick with grotesque
and hideous semblances of half man, half beast. Creeping, crawling,
flying, and leaping things, of all shapes and sizes, held goblin carnival
around me. The outer world was receding, and I passed into a veritable
realm of demons. I scarcely dare even now recall the full horrors of this
vision, nor should I have attributed to it any objective reality had I not
witnessed the terror of the poor horses, and connected the whole scene
with subsequent incidents. I was aroused from this palsy of horror by the
voice of Professor von Marx, whose tones, though modulated almost to a
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whisper, so as to reach my ear alone, sounded like thunder, as he
murmured: "Louis, Louis! rouse yourself, or you will let the demons of hell
get possession of you!" My strength and composure returned with the
touch of my master's powerful hand. Even my poor horse owned the spell
of his resistless influence; for I found it standing, with drooping head, and
sides flecked with foam, and at my side; and though trembling violently, it
was no longer restive or intractable. "You have forgotten your Eastern
training, methinks,” said the professor half reproachfully, as I looked at my
poor steed. "No training will avail here,” I replied in the same tone.
"Through this accursed spot I will not attempt to lead this suffering
creature."
That night, after retiring to rest, the same vague sense of terror that
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had beset me in the glen at the moment of my involuntary entrancement
again took possession of me, and again seemed to threaten magnetic
control as hateful to my feelings as it was strange and unusual. I felt that
an unknown presence filled my apartment, and a nameless horror threw its
chilling influence over every nerve. I had frequently visited the realms of
the elementaries at the command of the Berlin Brotherhood or my dear
master. In the service of these adepts I had penetrated, clairvoyantly, the
interior of the earth's crust, its rocks, caverns, mines, oceans, rivers, forests,
and atmospheres. My all-potential master had taught me how to summon
and control elementary existences, as well as to penetrate the realms they
inhabited. In all departments of Nature, my wandering spirit had explored,
and communed with the countless spheres of graduated being that peopled
the interior of Nature's wonderful and teeming laboratories. Whilst I was
sustained by the potency of Professor von Marx's magnetism, and
maintained my relations of a superior being towards these elementaries,
they could neither control nor distress me; but now, by the effect of some
strong magnetic influence, of which I had not been forewarned, the
mysterious dwellers of the innermost had overpowered and almost
mastered me. Arrayed against me, in unconquerable force, these malignant
beings had now subdued me with a facility as new as strange in my
experience. Even the fear with which they oppressed me I felt to be
dangerous; and conscious that a mustering of these evil genii was even
now pervading the suffocating air of my apartment, I arose hastily, dressed
myself, and determined to seek Professor von Marx's apartment.
Just as I had gained the door which led into the corridor I was
intercepted by a gigantic form, which seemed to loom up in the semi-
darkness of my chamber as if it had arisen from the ground, and at the
same moment a strong arm drove me back, and laid me, prostrate and
breathless, on a couch near by. Being more astonished than frightened by
this sudden apparition, I turned my gaze steadily upon it, and was able to
master all the minutiae of its appearance.
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of smoke or mist. It seemed, too, as if an atmosphere less dense than itself
surrounded it, and occasionally emitted a luminous radiance through the
apartment.
I looked around, and could distinctly trace, aye, even read, the brass
tablets on the walls, the inscriptions on many an ancient monument, and
note various forms of marble statuary, some broken and defaced by time,
others in a fine state of preservation. I saw no organ or instrument of
music within the fane, but there were finely carved stalls and a magnificent
pulpit, the steps of which I perceived had been worn by the traces of many
feet in by-gone ages. A splendid railing parted off the altar or communion-
table from the body of the church, and behind it stood three men in black
dresses, such as I learned afterwards were worn by ministers of the Scotch
Kirk. Before the screen or railing, kneeling in long rows on the steps and
ground, was a crowd of women and children clad in the ordinary dress of
the poorer classes of the land; behind these again, and filling up the entire
body of the church, was a crowd of earnest, sorrowful-looking men, who
seemed to be regarding the kneeling figures with the deep sympathy of
interested kindred. It appeared to me as if this vast concourse was gathered
together to witness some ecclesiastical ceremony in which the kneeling
women and children played the part of penitents. One of the ministers
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appeared to be addressing them in a style of stern exhortation, though I
could not hear the words he spoke. At length I felt the approach of a new
presence. A sound came soughing through the air like the rush of heavy
wings. I could feel the wind stir the hair on my temples, when the same
demon crew rushed by that I had seen in the glen a few hours before.
There they were in swarms and myriads, dreadful-looking shapes, with
gleaming eyes and faces distorted with the wild joy of their frantic revel.
In an instant the whole host of demons swooped down on the kneeling
crowd, and vanished, immersed as it seemed, in the bodies of their victims.
I saw them no more, but in their places the women and children assumed
the attitudes of the fiends that possessed them. They sprang up with
whoops, yells, and shrieks of perfect frenzy. Some rolled on the ground,
foaming at the mouth, others beat their breasts and tore their hair, uttering
piteous cries and choking sobs; some stood erect, with clasped hands and
upturned eyes, in silent prayer; and others danced around them, uttering
mocking execrations that made the blood of every listener curdle.
Little children began to scale the walls and columns, run along the giddy
heights of window-sills, and suspend themselves, coiled up like squirrels or
monkeys, on cornice, roof, or pinnacle.
The scene, shocking and loathsome as it was, I knew and felt to be a real
picture; and so feeling, I looked with ever-deepening interest to discover
from whence the deliverance would come. Yet come indeed it did, and
thus it was: Whilst the ministers shouted forth their prayers and exorcisms,
mingling up passages of Scripture and fierce cries for civic help in strange
jumble to which no one listened; whilst the excited friends and kindred of
the possessed rushed from one to the other in the vain endeavor to subdue
them into modest behavior by tears and supplications, in the midst of this
pandemonium, another phase of the phantom scene transpired. I saw two
fair and gracious beings float into the midst of the demon revel, clad in
robes of glistening white, and leading by the hand a young man, in whom I
at once recognized the exact presentment of myself. The dress of this
wraith, although resembling the one I then wore, was still remarkable from
the fact that it seemed to be composed of some glittering substance, from
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which the streams of light radiated in every direction, enveloping the
phantom in an aura of wonderful brightness. As these figures appeared
upon the scene, the disturbance instantly ceased. The cries died away; the
children dropped down from their fantastic perches, and crept to their
mothers' arms; every one subsided into the attitude of repose, and as if an
enchanted wand had been waved over the wild revel, a deep, holy calm
seemed to have been diffused on all around.
Whilst I was gazing in delight upon this happy change, I noticed that a
strange blue mist began to rise from the forms of the obsessed. At first it
appeared to be a mere thread-like vapor, but gradually it extended in
volume until it filled the church, and in the midst of its rolling waves I saw
the forms of the elementaries shooting up in the air with the same wild
shrieks, hisses, and grimaces with which they had borne down on their
victims. Upwards and outwards they soared, an obscene host, before
whose approach the walls, ceiling, and windows seemed to melt away, or
become soluble, permitting the dark shapes to pass through as if they had
been air; and they sped, screaming and gibbering, into the heavy-laden
atmosphere, where they were at last lost in masses of rolling clouds.
GHOST LAND.
distant, chiming voice murmuring as if from afar off: "He giveth His
beloved sleep."
It was nearly noon before I felt able to join my host and his friends on
the following day.
My dear master, with his usual kind solicitude, paid me an early visit,
and listened to a detailed account of my previous night's vision. On this, as
on every other occasion when I related to him my extra-mundane
experiences, he never wounded my by doubt or denial of my statements.
Many points of my narrative drew from him instructive and philosophical
comments, and when I had concluded, he informed me that we were
expected to accompany our host to the villages he had designed to pass
through on the previous night, and he further intimated that he somewhat
anticipated I should find a commentary upon my previous night's vision in
the proposed excursion.
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monuments on the walls and floor; the same carved stalls and pulpit; the
high Gothic windows of stained glass, casting their many-colored
reflections of saints and apostles on the checkered marble aisle below.
There, too, was the same gilded screen parting off the communion-table
from the body of the church. Behind this dividing line stood the three
ministerial men, in black, that I had seen in my vision. They each held
open Bibles in their hands, and were occupied, like their phantom
presentments, in hurling exorcisms, prayers, passages of Scripture, and
wrathful denunciations against a frenzied mob of women and children,
who with sobs, shrieks, wails, fierce laughter, wild oaths, and frantic
gesticulations, were enacting in its hideous details, the exact counterpart of
the scene I had beheld in vision twelve hours before.
I moved silently through the maddened groups, and they fell at my feet,
clasping and kissing my hands, addressing me as "The angel of
deliverance," and hailing me as the "sent of God."
I do not recollect that I spoke in words, but I thought pity for these
sufferers, and sent up thanks to an unknown God that they were to be free
from their tormentors. I know that the same flight of demons that I had
witnessed in vision rose through the groined arches and Gothic roof of the
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church; and when my part was done, and the stilled multitude, like rebuked
children, subsided into their places, hushed, quiet, and prayerful, I, too,
stood aside, moved by the angel presence that attended me, and just as I
expected, Professor von Marx and his friends came forward and took my
place.
The cure now was suddenly wrought in their midst, however beneficial
its results, could not fail to suggest the same weird influence. Of this the
laird we were visiting was perfectly aware. He hastened, therefore, to
whisper in the ears of some of the church officials, who had been amazed
witnesses of the scene, that we were celebrated German doctors; that our
cures were effected by means of concealed but very potent drugs; and that,
as warm Lutherans, they might rely upon our methods being strictly
orthodox and in accordance with the doctrines of ecclesiastical practice.
About four months ago, a young girl in the parish, who had always been
more or less the subject of strange dreams, visions, and tendencies to
epilepsy, became suddenly frightened by what she insisted upon declaring
to be the apparition of "six fairy people," who came into her chamber
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through the window, and after performing sundry pranks in her presence,
laid their hands one after another upon her mouth, and declared that she
should not again taste food until she came forth at midnight, to dance with
the fairy people. After this strange narrative, the girl began to pine away,
refused food, and for several weeks lived entirely without any sustenance;
fits of deep somnolency attacked her; and to use her parents' simple
phraseology, "She began to die while she yet lived." All at once she
revived from this lethargic state, and at the recommendation of a neighbor,
she and three girls of her acquaintance stole forth one night at the full of
the moon to keep tryst with the mysterious "good people," who a month
before had invited her to one of their midnight gatherings. Without
deeming it worth while to repeat the wild tale of glamour the romantic
adventuress brought back from their midnight escapade, it is enough to
relate that from that time forth they began to manifest all the signs of
obsession, the excess of which has been described in the foregoing pages.
Unfortunately, their aberrations were not limited to themselves. At first
their little brothers and sisters, next their mothers, and finally, scores of
young people and females of their acquaintance, fell under the same
dreadful ban, even the domestic animals associated with them seemed to
share their fatal propensities; they ran wild, changed their natures, and in
some instances, died beneath the effect of the spell. Priests and mediciners
exerted their powers in vain. The fell disease only increased in proportion
to the efforts made to quell it; and finally our host, fearing that the
superstitions of the country people, once aroused, would induce them to
lay violent hands upon some helpless persons suspected of being
instrumental in promoting the witch mania, and hearing of our projected
tour to the north, determined to try if genuine spirit power would not do for
his afflicted neighbors what material science and superstitious piety had
failed to effect. He confessed, in fact, that he had pressed his hospitality
upon us as much in the hope that our occult knowledge might devise
means of relieving the district as in admiration of Professor von Marx's
high reputation and standing in a certain society to which he belonged.
The result was achieved with even more success than had been
anticipated. Our host had purposely drawn us towards the scene of the
visitation on the first day of our arrival, but without informing us of the
real motives which prompted him. The effect of our near proximity to the
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possessed village upon our unfortunate horses baffled him at first, and
made him fearful of trying further experiments, especially when, during the
night which followed our visit to the glen, he was informed by his grooms
that the horse I had ridden during the day had actually died of fright. "I
prayed," said the good old man, "to the Father of spirits to send his angel to
guide us through this wilderness of terror. Long and earnestly did I pray,
and when the grey of the morning came, I fell asleep from sheer
exhaustion, and dreamed I saw myself and you, my friends, leading the
Israelites of old through an awful wilderness, but I saw moreover, that we
were guided by a pillar of cloud, which move before us, and by this I knew
that my prayers were answered, and that the angel of deliverance was at
hand." Some months later we heard from our venerable friend that no
signs of the demon fever had ever reappeared in his district, and that none
of his young clanswomen had again seen fairies or stolen forth by
moonlight to attend their midnight revels.
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CHAPTER VII.
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which he justly entitles "The Devils of Morzine." Whether this caption be
regarded as referring to the unhappy victims or the power that controlled
them, it is certainly a most appropriate definition of the condition in which
hundreds of hapless persons appeared during the reign of the demoniac
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fever which infested Morzine for several years.
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this mobility of representation is designed, they assure us, to signify certain
passions or states of spiritual growth and development.
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say, the visions narrated in the previous chapter have been faithfully
described, and their results conform so closely to the experiences of a vast
number of seers, who have like myself, witnessed the underlying causes
for obsession, the source of which is in the invisible world, that I have no
shadow of a doubt in my own mind concerning the exact nature of the
influence at work in the case I have related. The theory of ancient magians
and medieval mystics will be found in harmony with those of the
Brotherhood from whom I first derived my opinions concerning the
existence of the elementaries; and as I have before dwelt upon this subject,
I shall simply add in this place that whilst I now believe the undeveloped
spirits of humanity are actively engaged in stimulating every scene of
human folly and error which re-enacts their own misspent lives, I am still
assured such occasions offer opportunities for the intervention of the lower
orders of elementaries. I conceive, moreover, that those beings exert a
more constant and important influence upon humanity than we have
dreamed of in our narrow philosophy, and that the demonstrations of this
momentous truth will form the next phase of spiritual revelation to this
generation.
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sidereal heavens will show. Yet more potential by far than the merely
mathematical astronomer can perceive, are the influences which solar,
planetary, and astral conjunctions exercise upon the receptive earth. We
must also glance at the opinion, which the study of astrology combined
with astronomy inclines us to arrive at, which is, that all diseases, mental,
moral, or physical, that bear upon man in the form of epidemics are
produced in the first instance by malignant conjunctions of the bodies in
space in relation to the earth. Tides of atmosphere, especially equatorial
currents, are the carriers and distributors of these malignant influences.
Hence arises the war spirit, which so often marches from land to land in
regular tidal waves. In the same line of atmospheric influences are borne
the subtile elements of criminal propensities, popular opinions, fashions,
tastes, customs, an epidemic of genius, mechanical skill, physical
susceptibility to certain diseases and all manner of plagues. One
susceptible organism is first attacked; then by the force of sympathy in
mental, and contagion in the physical states, a whole community or district
succumbs, until the prevailing influence is fully spent, when a reaction sets
in. I have cited the experience of Professor von Marx and myself in the
Scotch obsession chiefly to show how available the all-potential force of
spiritual and animal magnetism may become in such affections, and how
much more rapidly epidemic disorders, especially of the nervous or
Spiritualistic character, might yield to such influences than to the ordinary
methods of cure. In my own case I attribute the marvelous effect produced
upon the demoniacs by my presence, to the operation of the beautiful
planetary spirits who poured their divine influence upon a human multitude
through the instrumentality of a human medium. Professor von Marx's
influence was more direct and physically potential, for he infused his own
powerful and healthful magnetism upon the afflicted ones by direct
contact. I doubt if every case of obsession could not be thus instantly and
effectually cured, could the right elements of spiritual and human
magnetism both be brought to bear upon the subject.
GHOST LAND.
was visible, I beheld with open spiritual eyes an enormous column of black
vapor hanging in seething, murky folds, horizontally extended and
stretching for miles across the infected districts of the city. Curious to
ascertain the nature of this columnar mass I gave myself up to the magnetic
efflatus, and presently perceived that the column was composed of millions
and tens of millions of living creatures generated in the atmosphere by a
certain potent but malignant conjunction of the earth and stars. I realized
that this conjunction had converted the unparticled matter of the
atmosphere into particled and fully organic conditions, and though the
organisms thus produced were far too attenuated to come within range of
any instruments yet known to science, they were and are perpetually in
course of formation, and when operating under malignant planetary and
astral influences, they impressed, as in the instance under consideration, a
diseased and pernicious influence on the atmosphere through which they
were swept, and wherever they were borne they left their tracery behind in
the form of pestilence.
I can scarcely hope to be believed by those who have not had the same
opportunities of observation and analysis as myself, but for the truth's sake
I will here leave a record behind, which may be accepted and understood in
future generations even if rejected now.
It was during the prevalence of the great cholera plague to which I refer
that I was invited by a few gentlemen, who were in sympathy with my
mystical studies, to join them in a select party, the aim of which was to
make astronomical experiments under peculiarly favorable circumstances.
I do not feel at liberty to mention the names of those who graced our little
gathering; it is enough to state that they were all distinguished for their
scientific attainments. At a certain period of the night we adjourned to an
observatory, where we were to enjoy the rare privilege of making
observations through an immense telescope, constructed under the
direction of Lord Rosse. When my turn arrived for viewing the heavens
through this wonderful piece of mechanism, I confess I beheld a sight for
which a long time held me breathless. At first I saw only the glorious face
of the spangled firmament, with that sense of mingled awe and reverence
which never forsakes the mind of the most accustomed observer when he
exchanges the view of the black vault of midnight, with its thinly-scattered
field of distant lamps checkering the heavens, for the gorgeous mass of
divine pyrotechnics which burst upon the sight through the dazzling
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revealments of the magic telescope. Breathless, transfigured, whirled away
from a cold, dim, cloudy world to a land--not of fairies or angels, but of
gods and demigods--to skies burning and blazing with millions of suns,
double suns, star roads, and empyrean walls, in which the bricks and
mortar are sparkling suns and glowing systems, miracle of miracles! I hold
my breath and tremble as I think, for the sight never grows old nor familiar
to me, and every time I have thus gazed, it has only been to find the awe
and wonder deepen.
GHOST LAND.
occasion I at first alluded to, I became so fixed with astonishment and
doubt, that I should not have mentioned what I saw had not the figure
returned and from the side where it had disappeared I beheld it slowly,
gradually, unmistakably float by the object-glass with even more
distinctness than at first. This second time I could perceive as
unequivocally as if I had been gazing at my own reflection in a mirror, the
straight, aquiline cast of features, the compressed lip, and stern expression
of the face, the large, glittering eye, fixed like a star upon the earth
beneath, and long lashes, like a fringe of beams, falling upon the side of
the face. A vast curtain of streaming hair floated back from the head, and
its arrangement seemed to imply that the form was moving at an
inconceivably rapid rate through a strong current of opposing winds.
When I had fully, unquestionably satisfied myself that what I had seen was
a reality, I withdrew from the instrument, then requested one of the
company present to examine my pulse and report on its action. "Moderate
and firm," was the reply, given in a tone of curious inquiry; "but you look
somewhat pale, Chevalier. May we not know what has occurred to disturb
you?" Without answering, I proceeded carefully examine the glass, and to
scrutinize all its parts and surroundings, with a view of endeavoring to find
some outside cause for what I must else have deemed a hallucination.
I was perfectly familiar with the use, capacity, and arrangement of the
telescope, and as neither within nor without the instrument, nor yet in the
aspect of the cloudless sky could I find the least possible solution to my
difficulty, I determined to resolve the occurrence into the convenient word
I have just used, and set the matter down as hallucination. But my friends
were not so easily satisfied. Some of them were personally acquainted
with me, and fancied they perceived in my manner a thread of interest,
which they were not disposed to drop. At last, one of them, an old and
very venerable scientist, whose opinions I had long been accustomed to
regard with respect, looking steadily in my face, asked in deep and earnest
tone: "Will you not tell us if you have seen anything unusual? We beg you
to do so, Monsieur, and have our own reasons for the query." Thus
adjured, but still with some hesitation, I answered that I had certainly
thought I had seen the outlines of a human face, and that twice, crossing
the object-glass of the telescope.
GHOST LAND.
my companions at this remark. Without a word of comment, however, the
one whose guest I had the honor to be, stepped to a cabinet in the
observatory where he kept his memoranda, and drawing forth a package,
he thus addressed me: "What you may have seen to-night, Chevalier, I am
not yet informed of, but as something remarkable appears to have struck
you in the observation you have just made, we are willing to place
ourselves at your mercy, and provided you will reciprocate the confidence
we repose in you, we will herewith submit to you some memoranda which
will convince you some of us at least, have beheld other bodies in space
than suns and planets." Before my honored entertainer could proceed
further, I narrated to him as exactly as I could, the nature of what I had
seen, and then confessed I was too doubtful of my own powers of
observation to set down such a phenomenon as an actuality unless I could
obtain corroborative evidence of its truth. "Receive it, then, my friend,"
cried my host, in such deep agitation that his hand trembled violently as he
unfolded his memoranda, and raising his eyes to heaven, gleaming through
an irrepressible moisture, he murmured in deep emotion: "Good God! then
it must be true."
I dare not recall verbatim the wording of the notes I then heard read, as
they were so mixed up with details of astronomical data, which have since
become public property, that the recital might serve to do that which I then
solemnly promised to avoid, namely, whilst publishing the circumstances I
then heard of, for the benefit of those who might put faith in them,
carefully to suppress the names of the parties who furnished me with the
information. My friends then (five in number on the occasion referred to)
assured me that during the past six months, whilst conducting their
observations at that place, and by the aid of that as well as two other
telescopes of inferior power, they had, all on several occasions, seen
human faces of gigantic proportions floating by the object-glass of their
telescopes, in almost the same fashion and with the same peculiarities of
form and expression as the one I had just described. One gentleman added
that he had seen three of these faces on one night, passing one after the
other, their transit occupying, with slight intervals between them, nearly
half an hour. For many successive weeks this party had stationed
themselves at distant places, at given periods of time, and determined to
watch for several consecutive nights and see if the same phenomenon
could or would appear to more than one observer at a time. The
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GHOST LAND.
memoranda which record the results of this experiment were indeed most
startling. Take the following extracts:
GHOST LAND.
determined to avail myself of a final observation with one of the most
superb instruments ever constructed. For many hours my exhaustive watch
was unsuccessful; but just as I was about to take my leave of the
enchanting fields of fiery blossoms that lay outstretched before me, two
faces of the same size and expression, the one slightly in advance of, and
measurably shading the other, sailed slowly, very slowly into view. They
passed on with such an unappreciable, gentle motion that I could almost
have imagined they were stationary for some seconds of time. Their
appearance so completely surprised me at the moment when I was about to
retire that I omitted to take note of the time they occupied in passing. The
companion who shared my watch had pointed his glass a little more to the
east than mine, and I had but time to murmur an injunction for him to
change it as the figures came into view. He saw them, however, just as
they were passing out of the field of vision, and exclaimed, with a perfect
shout of astonishment: "by heavens! there are two of them!"
Some years after this memorable night I received a letter from one of
my associates in this weird secret, according to me the permission I sought,
namely, to publish the circumstances I have related thus far, but carefully
to withhold the witnesses' names. In answer to my query whether my
correspondent had again the tremendous phantom of the skies, he replied in
the negative, adding: "Call me superstitious or what you will; the whole
history lays us open to ourselves and to each other, to such wild
suggestions and inconceivable possibilities, that no hypothesis can seem so
improbable as that we should all be correct. I will venture to hint to you,
one of us, you know, that I have somehow always connected the
apparitions in question with the prevalence of the cholera. It was
immediately in advance of this pestilence, and during the time when it
raged, that we all saw them. Since that period we have never again beheld
them, that is, none of us who now remain on earth.
"These appearances ceased with the pestilence, and came with it. Could
they have been the veritable destroying angels, think you? You, who are a
mystic, should be able to answer me. I, with all my materialism, am so
terribly shaken when I recall the terrific reality, that I endeavor to banish
its remembrance whenever it recurs to me."
Again, I have anticipated the experiences of later years, and been guilty
of wandering from the line of narrative, which the march of events
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GHOST LAND.
prescribes. I feel as if I should attempt, too, to render the explanations of
the forgoing circumstances, which my astronomical friends looked to me
to supply them with, but looked, as the reader may do, in vain.
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER VIII.
"Come, Louis! let us leave all this. I am tired for you--tired of seeing
you exhausted in body and mind to please insatiable marvel-seekers; tired
of beholding every nerve kept on the stretch, and a young life ebbing away
to feed the curiosity of those who little know or heed that they are looking
into the realms of the invisible through the telescope of your weary eyes.
Come, my Louis! we will leave these festive scenes, where your very being
furnishes forth the feast, to go and regale ourselves upon the fair face of
Nature." Thus spoke Professor von Marx as I lay on a couch where I had
sunk in sheer exhaustion some hours before, worn out indeed both in body
and mind with the repeated seances, undertaken to gratify the numerous
kind entertainers who besought us to "come and take rest" at their
hospitable mansions in some charming retreat, which they converted into a
scene of fashionable saturnalia, where crowds of visitors were invited to
meet and stare, and not uncommonly to sneer also, "the great German
occultist and his young somnambulist, who were so very wonderful and so
very entertaining, and all that sort of thing."
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Thoroughly sick of being lionized, and solicited, the professor to talk
philosophy and put fine ladies into becoming trances, and I to raise up
Undines and Sylphs, and predict which would be the winning horse at the
next "Derby," I joyfully obeyed the behest of my dear master to depart
with him that evening on "urgent business," which would compel us to
decline all further invitations, and leave the world of fashion for parts
unknown.
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We did not travel very far at first, for I was too thoroughly depleted to
endure the fatigue of a long journey anywhere. Professor von Marx either
desired me to realize practically, or else had to learn the lesson himself,
that the aims for which spiritual forces are employed determine in a great
measure the recuperative powers of the body that is there vehicle. So long
as I was occupied as the seer of the noble professor, and the high-toned and
powerful adepts with whom I had been constantly associated on the
Continent, my soul was fed with intellectual inspiration, and my physique
was vitalized by life-giving magnetism. I frequently passed whole days
without food, whilst engaged in these sessions, yet I never experienced the
slightest sense of fatigue, weariness or hunger.
Their sole aspiration was to discover and gauge the forces of the unseen
universe and penetrate into the profoundest of Nature's mysteries. They
were often cold, hard, stern, and remorseless in the pursuit of knowledge,
but in the presence the minds of their seers could not fail to grow and
expand into lofty aspirations and soar away above the frivolities and petty
aims in which most young people are educated.
Of all their seers, too, I believed they loved me the most. Combined
with their indomitable purpose of wresting from Nature her secrets at any
cost, there was a special gentleness and appreciative respect in their
dealings with me, which made the bond between us unusually kind and
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sympathetic, and thus I was kept completely isolated, I might say sacredly
reserved for the most exalted purposes of research and aspirational effort.
GHOST LAND.
unfrequented spots we could find, Professor von Marx and I determined to
make a tour through the lake district of Cumberland. Whilst we were
lingering in this enchanting region, we were induced to make a detour of
several miles from our projected route, for the purpose of visiting the
humble dwelling of one Frances Jones, an abnormal personage, known in
that district as the "Welsh fasting girl." This case, which had attained
considerable celebrity, presented most of the general features which
accompany protracted fasting, namely, long-continued fits of somnolence
and occasional intervals of remarkable lucidity, during which the girl
delivered trance addresses of wonderful beauty and exhibited striking
powers of clairvoyance and prevision. Professor von Marx was not
prompted to make this visit by the motives of vulgar curiosity which
attracted crowds of persons to the residence of this phenomenon. He knew
how long I could myself subsist without material sustenance; he had
witnessed the extraordinary effects of renewed life and vitality I had
exhibited by sleeping for some time on beds of fresh flowers or sweet-
scented herbs; above all, he had frequently seen me maintained a
protracted fast of several days, without experiencing hunger or weakness,
by simply placing me in the magnetic condition at stated periods, and
surrounding me with a strong circle of powerful magnetizers.
We found our subject sitting upright in bed, with her eyes firmly closed,
and her form and face by no means emaciated, though somewhat pallid
from her frequent isolation from the light, which at times affected her
unfavorably. Just as we arrived she was "in one of her fits," as her rustic
parents informed us; that is to say, in one of those crises or periods of her
disorder when she was impelled to utter her singularly beautiful
improvisations, one of which she was pouring forth in a strain of
remarkable eloquence to a crowd of gaping country folks as we entered the
cottage. Directly Professor von Marx crossed the threshold the girl
stopped speaking, and beckoning to him with an authoritative air, took his
hand, laid it on her head, and with looks of ecstacy which transfigured her
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face into an almost angelic expression, murmured: "Great master, you are
welcome! Speak, and I will answer you."
Question. Tell me truly, is it Frances Jones or the spirit of another who
addresses me?
Answer. I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the
way of the Lord!
Q. Whose voice cries?
A. Him that crieth now as of old.
Q. You call yourself John the Baptist, then?
A. Thou sayest it.
Q. Who and what is the Messiah you predicate?
A. The outpouring of the Spirit on all flesh; and behold (pointing her
finger at me) even there, is one of the prophets of the new dispensation.
Thou knowest it, and he can tell thee all thou hast come here to inquire.
Q. Not all; I wish to hear from your own lips a description of your case.
A. Ask him; he knoweth.
Q. By what means are you sustained in life?
A. I am fed by the angels, and live on angel's food; I hunger not, neither
do I thirst.
Q. You speak now as Frances Jones; where is the spirit who first
addressed me?
A. He moves these utterances and inspires these answers.
Q. Was he a man or an angel?
A. If I should answer thee thou wouldst not believe me. Thou art of the
sect of Sadducees, who say there is no spirit or angel. I cast not my pearls
before swine.
The professor here smiled at me significantly, but continuing to address
the patient, he rejoined:
Q. Can I do you any good by the touch of my hand?
A. Thou hast done all that was required of thee; the closed gate is
unlocked by thy hand, and in due course of time the angels of restored
health will reopen it and walk in. Now depart in peace. Thy seer will tell
thee the rest.
At this point the invalid sank back upon her pillow with a slight
convulsion, which, passing rapidly away, left her features calm, pale, and
tranquil, when her ordinary deep sleep fell upon her, and her parents
assured us it might be many hours ere she would reawaken. Before we
quitted the cottage I informed my master what I had clairvoyantly
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perceived in this case, namely, that a partial paralysis had attacked first the
great solar plexus, then extended throughout the ganglionic system, finally
impinging in the same partial way upon the cerebro-spinal nerves. The
medulla and cerebellum were more powerfully affected than the cerebrum,
and the pneumagastric nerve was more completely paralyzed than any
other of the cranial system. I observed that the process of evaporation and
absorption remained untouched, and acted with their usual force; hence,
she could receive such nourishment as imponderable elements afforded
her, and her assertion that she partook of angel's food was not altogether
irrational.
GHOST LAND.
faculty of trance-speaking and clairvoyance ceased with her recovery, in a
word, spirits found no more vehicle for the reception of their influence, and
her own normal activity furnished no longer the conditions for abnormal
control. I have since witnessed many cases of long-protracted fasting,
accompanied by somnolent states and periodical conditions of
clairvoyance, and I very much doubt if the physical causes would not be
found in every instance measurably the same, had scientists the same
opportunities for analyzing the obscure realms of causation as clairvoyance
afforded me.
It was a few days after our visit to the "Welsh fasting girl" that Professor
von Marx and I, sitting in the porch of a rustic inn-door, observed a tall and
stately female approaching us, attired in the humble peasant garb, with the
scarlet cloak and hood which distinguishes that singular class of vagrants
known as "gypsies." Dressed as we were, simply in sportsmen's costume
and lodgers at an humble wayside public house, we did not expect to
attract the attention of those shrewd wanderers whose favors are most
liberally tendered to the wealthy; but our new visitor evidently deemed she
was in the right track when she approached us, for she advanced with an air
so decided that we felt as if we were fairly captured before she had spoken
a word. Fixing her lustrous black eyes with the most piercing expression
upon me, she asked in a sweet voice, and with a far more polished mode of
expression than ordinary, if I did not want my fortune told. "See what you
can find out for my father first," I replied laughingly, pointing to the
professor, who sat by my side. "He is no father of yours, senor,: said the
girl decidedly, "nor does he come from the same land, or own one drop of
the blue blood that flows in your veins."
Now, if there ever were two human beings, who, without the slightest tie
of consanguinity between them, closely resembled each other, those two
persons were Professor von Marx and myself. We were constantly taken
for father and son by those who first met us; and whether from our peculiar
interior relations to each other, or because Nature had formed us out of the
same mold, I know not, but certain it is that it would have required some
direct evidence to the contrary, to convince any stranger that we were not
what we called each other, namely, father and son. As such we had been
known in our rural wanderings of the last few weeks, and in those
characters we had charged the single groom who attended us, to
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represent us at the inns where we stayed.
Professor von Marx was in one of satirical, if not gay moods, and
snatching the little hand with which she was waving him off, he exclaimed:
"What, not one word, my pretty Gitana? not if I cross this hand of yours
with gold instead of silver?"
"Not for the wealth of the Indies!" she cried, in a harsh, frightened tone,
as she fiercely drew her hand away. Then, as the color died on her flushed
cheek, and the wild expression of her dark eyes became subdued before his
resistless glance, she murmured in a beseeching tone: "Master of spirits,
spare me! I dare not speak now."
"Enough, enough!" he replied, waving her off and throwing into her
hand several pieces of silver, which she as hastily pushed back. "You are
wiser in holding your tongue, Gitana, than you are in losing it; but take
your money-- nay, I command you!" The girl slowly and reluctantly
dropped the money into a bag at her side, and was turning away, when the
professor recalled her in a half-laughing tone, by saying: "We shall see you
again, my fair Zingara; we are coming to board with you a while. What is
your name, my princess?"
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GHOST LAND.
"Juanita," replied the gypsy, in a low, humble tone.
"I thought so," rejoined my master. "Well, good-by for the present! We
shall soon meet again."
The gypsy turned submissively away without a word, and that night, in
obedience to my wayward father's will, we left our groom and baggage at
the inn, and the professor, carrying a small valise in hand, led me, by an
instinct peculiar to himself, over moss and fell, moorland waste, and
through mountain passes, until we had traversed a distance of nearly seven
miles, and at length, a little before midnight, we came in sight of the lonely
field where outstretched tents marked an extensive gypsy encampment.
Juanita, who was indeed the veritable queen or leader of the tribe which
we were about to visit, seemed, by the same instinct that had guided us, to
be fully prepared for our coming. She had ordered two tents to be got
ready for us, and already our savory supper smoked upon the wooden
platters laid out for our entertainment. The red fires were smouldering in
dotted heaps over the wild heath; a few lanterns still burned at intervals on
the crossed sticks that upheld them. Most of the encampment were asleep,
but the beautiful Juanita welcomed us as expected guests, with that natural
grace which belongs to the dispenser of hospitality everywhere. Professor
von Marx took her aside and spoke a few earnest words, to which she
listened with a downcast and reluctant manner. He then gave her money,
which she received in the same subdued way, although at first she
strenuously endeavored to return it. When the interview closed, she waited
on us at supper with the grace and condescension of a captive princess, and
showed us to our tents, in which beds of fragrant heather, covered with the
skins of deer, were already prepared for us. My tent, I observed, was
adorned with bouquets of sweet wild flowers, the professor's with some
curious skins and a few stuffed lizards and reptiles.
GHOST LAND.
way I can hope to keep you upon the earth as long as you ought to remain."
My master's expectations of benefit to an overtaxed frame were speedily
realized. Deep and unbroken slumbers visited me under the greenwood
tree, such as I had not known for many years. Relieved from the artificial
restraints of conventional life, and subject to the rough but appetizing fare
of these wanderers, I became positively rugged, and delighted my watchful
and anxious companion by the length of my daily rambles and the keen
enjoyment with which I entered, for the time being, into the rough sports of
my entertainers.
GHOST LAND.
in some respects, were stolidly ignorant and indifferent concerning their
origin or national existence.
Juanita was one of those rare and exceptional beings whose appearance
amongst such hordes, serves to stamp them with an air of romance and
throw around their name and fame those captivations of ideality which
have rendered them so celebrated in poetry, music, and romantic literature.
Juanita was the reigning queen of a large tribe composed partly of Spanish
and partly of English gypsies, over all of whom she, a Spaniard by birth
and descendant of a former king of the tribe, ruled with undisputed sway.
She was but twenty- five years of age, beautiful as a poet's dream,
impulsive, passionate, poetical, and proud, with a natural tone of
refinement and sensibility in her nature, come from whence it may, which
would have graced an Andalusian princess.
GHOST LAND.
romping with the little ones, playing at rough sports with the boys, cards
with the English gypsies, whom of course he always allowed to beat him,
and making himself generally delightful to young and old, and such an
astonishment in my eyes, that he would often burst into a fit of
uncontrollable merriment as he caught my looks of amazement at his
thorough transfiguration.
I was not less popular with these ragamuffins than my plastic master, for
besides being the chosen friend of their proud and authoritative ruler, I
sang them songs which I will venture to affirm obtained more rapturous
encores and genuine applause than ever greeted a prima donna assoluta.
Besides my volks lied and Italian canzonets, Juanita and the Spanish
gypsies made sweet music with their guitars and lutes, and some of the
English girls sang glees with a simplicity and sweetness that was
wonderfully touching in this moon and star- lit auditorium.
One old crone of the English tribe, whose forte was story-telling, and
who varied our evening camp-fire amusements by legends which would
have done honor to Munchausen, traced back for me the history of her
people to one of the Pharaohs. She also detailed graphic accounts of some
of her former states of existence, she being, like the others of her
compeers, a decided "reincarnationist," and finally gave me to understand
that though she then performed the humble duty of tending the gigantic
cauldron from whose savory steams the promise of a real gypsy feast was
to be derived, she well remembered the time when she was "one of the
highly trusted officers of a certain mighty Pharaoh, by whose orders the
great pyramid of Egypt had been erected, under her supervision."
There can be no doubt that their nomadic lives and constant intercourse
with Nature in her ever-varying moods, are all aids in unfolding the
interior perceptions of these dwellers in tents; still their are vestiges of
Oriental tendencies in their fervid imaginations, allegorical modes of
expression, some of their customs and religious beliefs, which plead
strongly for an inheritance derived from the far East in many successive
generations. Their language, too, although containing whole vocabularies
of slang phrases and thieves' jargon, still partakes of the Sanskrit character,
and there are some words which I found to be pure and unadulterated
Sanskrit. A vague traditionary belief exists amongst them all that they
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originally came from the East, were a once "mighty people," but had
become degraded people. I am more and more inclined to the opinion that
they came from one of those low and oppressed castes of India which were
driven forth and scattered upon the face of the earth under Mohammedan
rule and oppression.
The most accomplished amongst them were astrologers, and I found that
their calculations and methods were purely Chaldaic. Juanita was as well
skilled in this art as any person, save one, I ever met with. That one was a
distinguished Arabian physician, a member of the "Berlin Brotherhood," an
admirable astronomer and mathematician; in fact, he was professor of
astronomy at the scene of my boyhood's studies, and from him I learned
the Chaldaic method of calculating the stars, one that had never been
published to the world, and was only imparted under certain conditions to
adepts. Yet here in the wilds of Cumberland I found it substantially known
and practiced by a poor Gitana, who could neither read nor write. "See,
senor mio," she would cry, "I can not tell you how I know these things, but
I will show you." She would then find a flat stone or smooth piece of
wood, add chalk thereon maps of the heavens, dividing the stars by lines
and connecting them in squares and figures with an accuracy which
perfectly bewildered me. Substantially I repeat, her method was that of
Arabian philosopher, and yet this untaught girl worked out with her fingers
and piles of pebbles a scheme that she could have obtained only from
Chaldaic sources, and those of the most occult and secret nature. Juanita
informed me she had derived her knowledge from her father, like herself a
ruler in his tribe, and that he again had obtained it by direct succession
from a long line of ancestors.
"Now, Nita," I said, "tell me the names of the stars you have figured out
here, and then, show them to me on the heavens;" for I wished to see if this
was mere routine work, or whether the girl really understood what she had
drawn. Fixing her dark eyes on the shining field of light above our heads
she began, in a high strain of poetical imagery, to describe the famous
legend of the astronomical religion, pointing out correctly every
constellation of which she spoke, but to my utter amazement giving to
those shining bodies, not the ordinary astronomical names, but their
cabalistic titles and history, and reciting some of the myths in this
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connection that I have never seen anywhere detailed, except in the ancient
"Zohar" or "Book of Light." More and more perplexed by this sibyl's
strange lore, I endeavored by every means I could devise, to ascertain how
she had gained her extraordinary knowledge. I found then, what I had
before suspected, that the gypsies were not, as has been generally
supposed, conformists to the religion of any country in which they chanced
to sojourn, but that with all their slang habits and reprobate style of life,
they were genuine fire worshipers, and cherished amongst them the Sabaen
system with the real ardor of Parsees. More than this I could not learn; but
as Nita would go into ecstacies over certain stars which she delighted to
liken to my eyes, ending by christening me her "star-beam," I determined
to change the conversation by inviting her to teach me the art of palmistry-
-"that art, you know, Nita, by which we first became acquainted," I said.
"Palmistry!" replied the girl, with a scornful laugh; "there is no such thing
as palmistry in the sense you mean it, senor; we don't really tell fortunes by
the lines of the hand. See, she added, snatching impulsively at my hand
and pointing to its undefined lines, "you have no lines here, like working
people. Such a hand tells nothing, save of the menials that work for you.
No, no, senor; it was your eyes that told me all your sad, wild history.
When I look at the stars they tell me a thousand times more than those
charts of my fathers; so it is when I look at your eyes. There I read your
history, your soul, your mind; past, present, future--all linger in those dark
depths so plainly, so clearly, that I could see, did I dare to gaze long
enough--ay! see the day when the earth will grow cold and chill because
the lustre of your life will be quenched out of it."
GHOST LAND.
thrill through my fingers just as if I could feel out the words which tell the
tale. This, too, is the way Marianna and Louise (alluding to two other
sibyls of her tribe) tell fortunes, senor mio. Mother Elsie is blind, you
know, yet she tells better than all of us, and she tells everything by the
touch, and sometimes when she lays her withered hand on a stranger's head
or a lady's dress, or even touches the glove or handkerchief that an inquirer
has touched, she knows just as much as if the whole story were read out
from a book. Don't you know this is true, senor?"
"Quite so, Juanita. I have tested this Mother Elsie, as you say, and she
can tell very wonderful truths; but still you have not told me how Mother
Elsie can do this, or hoe you can read my life in my eyes or feel it in my
hand. That is what I wish to know, Juanita."
GHOST LAND.
possession of such knowledge involves scientific attainments, not natural
endowments; and from whence they derived their information except, as
Juanita insisted, by inheritance from their ancestors, I was at a loss to
discover.
The poor girl had no more to tell that was evident. She was beautiful,
intelligent, and highly gifted beyond any one that I have ever met amongst
her class. Transplanted into a fairer soil, she might have graced the royalty
of a nation instead of a tribe of vagabonds; but she was a Zingara, and the
laws of fate, which bound her to her destiny, were as absolute as those,
which had set the ineffaceable mark upon the first fratricide. During the
fortnight we spent amongst her people, I learned one trait concerning them
which merits more consideration than is usually allotted to it. The
Gypsies, as a race, are everywhere acknowledged to be irrepressible
thieves, and their approach in any neighborhood has proverbially been
recognized as the signal for drawing bolts and bars against their inroads.
Some of their biographers have even gone so far as to assert that they live
entirely by plunder, and that their assumption of practicing itinerant trades
and fortune-telling, are only so many pretenses to facilitate their access to
the houses or pockets of the wealthy. Whilst emphatically disclaiming the
character of an apologist for this distinguishing feature of gypsy life, I
must be allowed to urge that the people in their innermost natures regard
themselves as Ismaelites, and the whole human family as their natural
enemies. They conceive themselves to be in some way outcast from their
nation, land, inheritance, or place amongst them. Regarding mankind ever
as their oppressors, they deemed they are as much justified in plundering
from the rich and highly favored of earth, as God's chosen people of old
deemed themselves righteously employed in spoiling the Egyptians. I
learned this questionable piece of morality through the unlimited
confidence reposed in me by the fair Juanita, who was better informed of
her people's secret opinions, they were in reality unquestioned articles of
faith with them, as much so as gratitude is towards those who favor or
oblige them.
GHOST LAND.
bars mankind can use with the gypsy folk," said one of their old patriarchs,
in enlarging upon this subject; and in truth they gave us a practical proof of
their good faith, for though Professor von Marx and I had brought with us
some few toilet appendages of value, and left these, like our money,
wholly unguarded in our tents, often scattering small coin amongst the
children with tempting profusion, we never found a single article touched
or a penny abstracted; more than this, we had occasion to send several
times to the servant we had left at our inn, and though the external
appearance of some of our messengers would have furnished a ready
passport to any jail in the land, and our groom, according to order,
frequently left them in tempting situations for petty plunder, we never
found them fail in the strictest fidelity to their trust, or guilty of committing
the slightest act of peculation whilst thus engaged in a confident capacity.
The evening at length arrived when our gypsy life was to terminate.
When all was done, many mutual kindness exchanged, and many slight
presents forced upon the youngest and oldest of the tribe, the hardest task
of all—at least for me--still remained. No word of our intention to depart
immediately, had ben spoken to the fair queen, whose stately form I
silently pointed out to Professor von Marx as she lingered by the river-side,
some half-mile distant from us, gathering the wild flowers with which she
had been accustomed to adorn my tent. "Well, what of her? asked the
professor brusquely. Somewhat confused by this direct question, I
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ventured to suggest, in a low voice, that it might be as well to take
advantage of her preoccupation, and depart without further leave-taking.
"I think not," I answered, with some hesitation. "But why this haste,
father? Could we not wait till to-morrow?"
"The bullet is not yet forged, my father, that can harm my life. My hour
is not come."
"To destroy those whose lives are deemed invincible with baser
missiles." I replied, carelessly. "I have no fear; but how did you learn there
was such a murderous plot on foot, father?"
"Oh, by using my eyes and ears, and listening to the voice of a certain
little bird called reason. But come! we lose time. I give you one half-hour
to make your adieux-- and then for a swift horse and a midnight ride!"
A few minutes more and I was by the side of Juanita, of whom, during
this conversation I had never lost sight, as she gathered flowers by the river
half a mile off. No one had been near her nor did she change her attitude
until I reached her, when, stooping to address her as she sat in a mossy
stone, she murmured in her sweet, sad tone: "Juanita will sing no more
siren songs in the ear of Star-beam. The hour has come when he must go,
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and the gypsy queen will speed his departure, not oppose it." The
professors very words! but how on earth could she have heard them at half
a mile's distance? Then raising herself from the ground and slowly turning
to gaze on the figure of my master, who still stood on the hillside and in
plain view, she said, with a stern pride peculiar to her lofty moods: O,
cold-hearted, insolent man of the world! Dost thou then think that the
gypsy would turn to sting the hand that has fostered him? Dost thou know
the wanderer so little as to deem that under the shadow of his own tent he
would murder in treachery and cold blood, the guest he has broken bread
with?"
"How is this, Juanita?" I said gravely. "Do you then know that I am in
danger from some of your people, and you have not warned me of it?"
"Danger!" cried the girl, fixing her full, fearless eyes upon me, with an
indescribable expression of mingled tenderness and reproach. "You, senor,
in danger? Know you not," she added, sinking her voice again almost to a
whisper, "that you bear a charmed life, and that the bullet is not yet forged
which can harm you? Your hour is not come. Nevertheless I am not
unmindful of what is around us; but oh!" she cried, her voice raised to a
pitch of enthusiasm and her cheek deepening to the richest crimson,
"Juanita has thrown around her Star-beam a spell from which every danger
will fall away, and every bullet will turn back harmless, save to him who
speeds it against thee. My people may pursue the sunbeams that have
dazzled their poor eyes, accustomed only to look upon the humble light of
the glow-worm; they may with insensate envy of a beauty and nobility they
can never attain to, hunt for thee after thou hast left behind the boundaries
which even our rude hospitalities make sacred and which would shelter
thee from harm, shouldst thou stay amongst us forever; but my spell
extends farther than that--farther than the bullets of envy can ever reach;
and thou mayest go on thy way harmless forever from any wrong that
Juanita or her people can work thee."
Poor Juanita! I left her with a path in life to tread the more lonely and
desolate, because the sun had shone across it, for once, all too brightly; a
destiny the more unendurable because glimpses of a better lot had flashed
like streaks of lightning before the eyes that would look on their brightness
no more.
GHOST LAND.
accident befell us. We were wandering on the shores of a beautiful lake,
and had halted to rest beneath the shelter of an overhanging precipice,
where rugged projections shielded us from the afternoon sun. Just as we
had placed ourselves in reclining position against the rocks, an immense
mass from the portion above and beyond our heads, was suddenly
dislodged, and fell with a tremendous crash on the pebbly shore, burying
itself with enormous force to a considerable depth in the loose ground at
our very feet, and enclosing us in a narrow chasm between itself and the
rocks against which we leaned. Simultaneously with this astounding
descent, a shower of bullets was launched against us, which, being
intercepted by the descending mass, dashed upon it in every direction. At
the same moment the discharge of several rifles rang in our ears.
The whole of these motions were so coincident one with the other that
foe some time we were unable to separate and arrange each in its proper
order. When we had succeeded in extricating ourselves from our newly-
formed prison and took note of the different points of our situation, we
found the following series of striking coincidences. The rock above us had
no doubt been long upheld in a very threatening position. Had we not
retreated beneath the alcove to which it formed a sort of roof, at a certain
moment, it must have crushed us to death, as we should then infallibly
have been standing in the immediate line of its descent. There in fact, we
had remained up to the minute before it fell, when the inviting character of
the nook induced us to retreat within this pleasant shade. Yet again, it was
evident from a comparison of the rifle-sounds that we had heard, and the
shower of bullets would have found their lodgement in our recumbent
forms. That they were aimed against us was unmistakable from the fact
that nothing but the intervening rock separated them from us, and their
flight could only have been directed at the same instant, or possibly one
second earlier than the fall of the rock, seeing that the bullets reached its
sides and surface at the same moment that it touched the sand.
"And the rock thrown down by those of our guardian angels," I added.
"Or the 'atmospheric spirit' of the fair gypsy queen, per chance,"
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said the professor, smiling; "for see! here are the traces of her subjects'
work," gathering up and showing me a handful of the flattened bullets,
which were made of pure silver.
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER IX.
I love to recall these wanderings, for they constituted the happiest period
of my life, and they form, even now, the oasis in a stormy wilderness,
around which the most cherished memories linger.
GHOST LAND.
mineral or vegetable life. Under the wondrous achromatic glass of
spiritual sight, the life of the universe became revealed to me, and I found
there was not a blade of grass or a grain of sand, any more than a crawling
worm or mighty man, that was not vitalized by an element which to the
sense of sight resembled flame, and which in operation was life, with its
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varied graduations of power, eliminating motion and vital heat. How
gloriously beautiful creation appeared to me under the transfiguring light
of clairvoyance! I ceased to wonder that the ancient seer was a fire-
worshiper, beholding in all luminous bodies the deific principle, and in the
sun, as the center of life, light, and heat, the god of earth, to which his
knowledge of the universe was limited.
I could at that time have readily made charts in which the universe of
created forms, organic and inorganic, each in its place in the scale of being,
could have been ranged under their distinctive shades of color, their
corresponding odors, and the density or rarity of each substance as defined
by touch. Let me add that touch, like sound, was often composite in its
impressions, all things in creation being so liable to come into contact, and
all things that collide leaving upon each other an appreciable taint of each
one's peculiar qualities. It is thus that the psychometrist is able to realize
so correctly the characteristics which have surrounded or come into contact
with any object under examination. The airs which sweep over the face of
the rock, charge it with the characteristics of all the elements that are in the
atmosphere, but organic life, and human life in particular, as the highest,
most potential, and comprehensive of all elements, inheres most
powerfully to the inanimate objects it comes in contact with, hence, after
some weeks devoted to the culture of my sense of touch, I found I could
correctly analyze the characteristics of every human being that had recently
passed through any room or scene I chose to examine, determine to a
certainty the mental, moral, and physical status of any individual whose
glove, handkerchief, etc., was presented to me, in a word, "psychometrize"
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all things in nature, and by the sense of touch alone realize their hidden
qualities or most secret potencies.
"You would scarcely believe, sir, that yon forlorn old man was once a
gentleman, and quite wealthy. He had a large family of extravagant sons
and nephews, upon whom he spent his means so liberally that he reduced
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himself to abject poverty on their account. He was so good to the poor,
too, sir--ay, and he is so still--that when he gets a shilling he cannot keep it.
He runs errands now for many a gentleman who has sat as his table, and
who would provide better for him if he did not lavish all that is given him
on others. He should not be in rags, for he often has decent clothes given
him, but he will strip them off his back to give to a poor neighbor, and go
in rags that he may still help his dissipated and profligate family.
How many sweet airs from the unknown paradises of the human soul
have swept across my spiritual senses in this manner, bringing to light
hidden virtues the world knows not of, and--alas for the percontra!--how
many foul and noisome exhalations have warned me from the sphere of
perfumed fops and jeweled dames, whose attractive exteriors concealed the
rank weeds of vice and baser passions! I have met in my career with
several persons who partook of this faculty of discovering character by the
sense of smell--one dear friend in particular, who suffered so keenly from
the involuntary revelations this subtile gift occasioned, that she besought
her spirit guides to quench the power, and remove from her a source of
interior perception that rendered her daily intercourse with her fellow-
mortals at times unendurable.
When we are known for what we are, not for what we seem, in the realm
of spiritual truth and revelation, we shall find the number of every living
creature, and in that mysterious figure we shall discover the peculiar color,
sound, smell, and touch which appertains to each, and recognize that all
and each are revelations which contain the whole in the part; also we shall
learn that the color of the odic light which lingers in the photosphere of
every human being, the perfume which the soul exhales, the mystery of the
impression conveyed by the touch of the hand, and the tone which vibrates
through the air in which we move or breathe, are all exact revelations of
what we are and who we are; that all these things are known to the angels,
and can measurably be felt, if not clearly defined, by every sensitive whose
spiritual perceptions are more or less unfolded.
GHOST LAND.
me. One there is who will read these lines understandingly, and to her
deep, pitying sympathies I appeal, with the agonizing cry of "Not yet! not
yet! Let me linger a while ere the flaming sword drives me forth from the
paradise of my vanished youth and early gleams of life-rest."
Happy days, and hours of divine entrancement! How I love to roll the
misty veil of fading memory back, and gaze again on your sunlit pictures,
the bright realities of which are fled, all fled forever!
A few days after his departure my dear father wrote me word that he
wished me to join him in London, as he was likely to be detained longer
than he had anticipated, and could not endure to have me absent from him.
I was staying at a very remote village, distant many miles from the
railroad, which there was no means of reaching except by a stage or private
conveyance.
GHOST LAND.
a final ramble in the beautiful scenery of the neighborhood.
Towards evening, some three hours before that fixed for my departure, I
sat down on the banks of a winding stream, broken by rapids and miniature
cascades, to watch the glory of the approaching sunset.
On the opposite side of the river was a high bluff of rocks which shut
out the land view in that direction, but away to the west, hill and plain,
valley and moorland, were beginning to be bathed in a flood of crimson
and purple radiance reflected from the glowing sky. Whilst my whole soul
was imbued with the soothing tranquility of this lovely scene, there
suddenly crept over me a shuddering chill, an indefinable sense of dread,
which completely obscured the surrounding landscape and impressed me
with sensations of unaccountable fear and loneliness.
I closed my eyes and leaned back against the trunk of the tree beneath
which I was sitting, when a whirr as of rushing wings sounded in the air,
and the hag whom I had so often beheld as the precursor of evil tidings,
flashed before my eyes, and with a mocking, gibing expression, terrible,
hateful, fearful to behold, swooped close against my face, and then as
suddenly swept on and was gone. In a few moments this well-accustomed
yet ever-terrible apparition was succeeded by a thought which pressed
upon me with overpowering urgency. The letter which had given me some
months before, seemed to rise up to my mind in a form so vivid that the
impulse became irresistible to draw it forth from the lining of my vest,
where I had placed it for special safety, and, holding it in my hand, turn it
over and over again, with a sentiment of deep and newly-born interest. At
this moment it seemed to me that I heard a chorus of voices in every
imaginable tone, crying: "Read your letter! Read-- your--letter--letter!
Read! Read! Read!" I knew it was imagination, and yet those voices
sounded very real in my ears. Some of them were hoarse and rough, others
shrill and piercing, faint, near, distant yet close. I was under the influence
of a spell, and determined I would break it. I was about to replace the
letter in my vest when, in the midst of those weird voices so uncertain in
their origin, one I never could mistake, one whose tones were the echo of
my life's deepest meaning, even the voice of my dear adopted father,
repeated my name, calling to me evidently from the high bluff on the
opposite side of the river.
GHOST LAND.
to his again reiterated sharp cry of "Louis, Louis! Look up!" I beheld
Professor von Marx standing on the very edge of the rock, and leaning over
its rugged sides toward me. In equal astonishment and delight I responded:
"Dearest father! is that you? Have you then come to fetch me?" Then
rising hurriedly I looked about to see in what part of the narrow river I
could find a ford so as to cross and join him, but again I was arrested by
the voice of the professor distinctly pronouncing these words: "Open and
read your letter! The voice most authoritative to you on earth commands
you. At once! Now."
GHOST LAND.
mystery and unrest which destroys my own peace and almost wrecks my
senses. To think that I have guided your young feet into the wild and
awful solitudes of unlighted gloom in which I am lost myself is now my
bitterest thought, my keenest pang of self-reproach. But Louis, spark of
sunlight! the only one that now sheds warmth or light upon a starved and
imprisoned nature, to you at least, I can and will make reparation. Even
whilst I write I know that the end is for me fast approaching. Louis, I am
dying; and whether death be the sleep that knows no waking, no return, the
worm of slow decay, or something I cannot comprehend of continued life
and consciousness, know it soon I must and will. Think not I shall hasten
the time of this tremendous unfoldment by the coward's act of rushing from
this life, or shaking off the mortal coil so hard to bear. No, I scorn self-
murder, nor will I commit any act of rash impatience.
"In one sense alone can I speed the great denouement, and that is in
acting out to you my intended reparation. Louis, I will give my life to you.
I am now engaged in constantly projecting, by the power of my will, the
life and force by which I am, in magnetic tides upon you.
"I know it is in the power of the adept to part with these living waves
and send them ebbing to the shores of another's life at will.
"In this mysterious transfer my life can become yours, my being can
incorporate itself with yours, and the effects will be seen and felt when I
am gone, in the increased power and prime of your noble manhood and the
enlarged capacity of your unfolded spiritual nature. My strength shall
supplement your gentleness; my powerful manhood shall uphold your
dependent youth; my commanding force shall inspire your attractive
beauty; and this great and wonderful work is on the very eve of
accomplishment. The wool of destiny is nearly spun. Day by day I keep
the force of my will so exercised upon you that you cannot, shall not see
the fading process of my life's transfer to you, or note how thin and
attenuated the cord becomes which binds the wandering spirit to the dying
form.
"In the hour when the last process of transfer is to be made my body will
be far away from you. I shall leave you a while alone, so that your glance
of tender pleading may not recall me to the life I loathe, or stay my
fluttering spirit on the shores of the mystic ocean in whose silent waves it
must sink forever or rise to swell thy young life's barque with the freight of
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my new-born soul and its resurrected powers.
"I shall leave thee during the process of the mighty wrench, my darling;
then shall I gather up the broken threads of life, weave them into one
mighty chain of purpose, and throw the last links around thy neck, my
Louis, to anchor there my liberated soul. Louis, I die that you may live.
To you I give the fires of parting life, to you dispense the spirit's mystic
breathings. If I live again, or the essence of my soul is not all dissipated
into viewless ether, it will be as a part of you. I will my life to you, whilst
yet I can send it forth in living fires to illuminate the temple of your spirit.
I will to you whatever may be left of the smouldering flame when the
breath of the destroyer shall have put it out for me. Perchance that dying
flame may yet retain some spark of consciousness, which, added to your
own, shall vitalize your frame, give double manhood to your character,
clear from your spirit's eyes the scales of earth, lift up your soul to loftier
heights than mortal ever reached before, and raises you above those
groveling elementary spheres in which we have been doomed to wander, to
the shining realms of sunlike nature, in which the cause of causes must
inhere. On earth farewell, my loved one! When these lines have met thine
eyes thy father will be no more. Either thy soul or mine must be united in
the mystic bonds of a dual life, or else the fires of mine will be
extinguished in eternal darkness. One with thee or nothing!
FELIX VON MARX."
The letter dropped from my palsied hand. Grief, fear, doubt, and
confusion filled my distracted brain. The sudden perception of my beloved
friend's failing health, that glimpse of his real condition which a moment of
abstraction on his part had permitted me to catch when we were last in
London, that glimpse of a possibility too dreadful for me even to dwell
upon, yet that which had induced me to urge this country tour--all this
recurred to my mind like a torrent overleaping its barriers and rushing in
upon an overwhelmed plain with resistless force. At length stole over me
the stupendous reality that this beloved friend, this more than father, the
master of my life and being, was no more. By this time, even at the
moment when I held that awful letter in my hand, he must be dead-- or
rather gone, gone forever! and oh, for what cause! Dead that I might live!
What new and horrible mystery was involved in this confused and wild
idea of a life transfer? At another time this one thought alone would have
swallowed up all others, and compelled me to turn upon myself with
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loathing and aversion--living whilst he was dead! living because he was
dead!--but now all my visions of the occult were swallowed up in one
tremendous reality of my irreparable loss. Struck, stunned, helpless as I
felt, I buried my face in my hands, cast myself frantically down on the
grass, and gave vent to the anguish of a breaking heart in choking sobs and
scalding tears. In the midst of my frenzied grief it was no surprise to me to
feel a gentle touch on my shoulder and a caressing arm thrown around my
neck. The capacity for new emotion was dead within me, and the heavens
might have been shaken down to earth without awakening one sentiment of
surprise or adding to the intensity of my feeling. Yet I heard again his
voice, the voice dearest to me in creation; I felt again his touch, the touch
of those lips through which my own life breathings seemed to have
exhaled. That touch was surely on my cheek, and I heard him murmur in
such accents as recalled his hours of deepest tenderness: "One with thee
forever! Weep no more, my Louis. There is no death!" Mechanically I
raised my streaming eyes to gaze upon the speaker. A flash, a radiant
stream of light, the vision of those dark, lustrous eyes fixed for a second
only on me, looking into my soul; then a radiant fire-mist seemed to hover
around me; a blazing star shot up from the earth on which I knelt, sped
meteor-like through the sunlit air, paling the glory of the western sky, then
vanished in the heavens and left me--alone!
Upspringing from the cold, dark earth, the sunlight gone, and a rayless
night now closing fast around me, I sped to our empty cottage. I knew he
was not there. He had not been there--I knew that, too. He would never
come again, there or anywhere.
A moment's pause to think out where I was, and then I was on the road
to London. Oh, that weary road, that endless night, and the next long,
weary day! Changes there were to make and hours to be sped away--oh!
would they never end?
Somewhere upon that endless desert road I left my youth and boyhood--
left them behind forever, and as once more I entered gray old London, I
returned a man, matured in a few short hours of anguish into untimely
manhood.
The streets were cold and empty, the night had begun to fall, and the
dim, pale lights served only, as it seemed, to show me what a strange and
sickening void had overspread the once gay city.
I made my way to what had once been our home, but the familiar faces
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of the domestics who admitted me had grown strange and altered in my
eyes. I asked no questions, spoke no words, and none addressed me. I
think now, though I scarcely knew it then, that some one said, in a low and
pitying tone: "It is the poor young Chevalier. How could he have known
it?"
Mechanically I ran up the stairs, stood before the door of our common
sitting- room, and turned the lock; but I retreated without entering, for I
knew he was not there. I moved on to another door, and now with
throbbing heart and finger pressed on my hushed lip, softly, softly I trod.
Stealthily I entered- -entered like one who feared to disturb a sleeper. I
knew my step would never wake him more; he slept the sleep that knows
no waking. Something like a prayer stole through my bewildered brain,
"Would God I were sleeping with him!" Professor von Marx was dead.
He lay all cold and white, with burning lamps at the marble brow and
stirless feet, pale white flowers on the paler hands, and a frozen stillness
everywhere. Professor von Marx was dead; and yet a still small voice, in
the well-remembered accents of the speechless dead, rung through the hush
and gloom of that solemn place, and seemed to murmur: "One with thee
forever! Weep no more, my Louis. There is no death!"
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CHAPTER X.
GHOST LAND.
very life, my more than self, the inspiration that had made me--anything! I
had been in the presence of death many times before, and despite all the
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lessons of the Brothers, tending to render me callous to the sight, it had
always affected me painfully, depressing me physically, and filling my
mind with a sense of blank mystery which derived no satisfaction from the
doctrines of annihilation insisted on by my philosophic associates; but
when the subject of these revulsive emotions was my more than father, O,
heaven! as I look back now on the dumb anguish of that terrible hour, the
hour I passed in such awful stillness and mystery with the best beloved of
my life, I pity myself, and could almost weep for the miserable being, then
too deeply sunk in despair to weep for himself. But at length that dreadful
hour of silent watching ended; with its close, two fixed ideas took
possession of my mind: The first was that Professor von Marx was no
more--utterly, irretrievably dead and gone, and gone forever; the next, that
I, too, must die, for life without him would not be wretchedness merely, to
me it seemed an impossibility.
Accustomed to act upon rapid flashes of thought, the future with all its
bearings seemed mapped out before me the moment I roused myself to quit
the chamber of death. My Spiritualistic readers may question why I did
not derive hope and comfort from the vision which had, in the semblance
and tones of my beloved friend himself, apprised me of his disease. In
answer, I could not at that time derive either hope or consolation from such
a visitation. Facts make their impression on the mind in proportion to its
tendencies and receptivity for special ideas. My mind had been bent into
materialistic forms of belief. I had been constantly censured for indulging
in any of the "vagaries" of religious aspiration; taught to regard
immortality as the attribute of the elements only, and the apparitions of the
dead, like those of the living spirit, as magnetic emanations from the body,
which might subsist for a brief period after death, but which could
maintain no continuous being when once the body became broken up by
the process of natural disintegration. Even the many flashes of wondrous
light, irradiated as they were, too, with intelligence, which had appeared to
me in the semblance of the beautiful Constance, I had been taught to regard
as subjective images only, projections from my own fervid imagination,
taking shape in the "astral light," where the impressions of all things that
ever had been, remained imperishably fixed. This was my creed at the
time when I silently stole down the stairs leading from the death-chamber,
and passed out into the quiet street. It was deep night in London. A pale
spring moon shone fitfully through the rifts and rents of a stormy sky. The
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air was chill and blighting, and my neglected attire was not calculated to
protect me against the damp, chill winds which moaned around me. I was
all alone on earth, for though dim memories of friends and kindred flitted
through my mind, they were all shut out by the one engrossing thought of
him. A vague idea possessed me that some one on earth might be sorry for
my loss and miss me; but I could not centralize this idea on any one in
particular, save on him, and he was gone.
GHOST LAND.
to deem that any possessions could be aught to me when he was gone?
Gone! Ay! that was the word that put all questioning to rest forever.
On I sped--past the quiet rows of houses and through the silent streets;
on through miles of dreary suburbs, where the ugliness of waste places and
half- built roads became softened in the gloom of midnight; on through
lanes and fields--I scarce knew where, yet by an instinct that seemed to
propel my eager steps, I pursued my way until I had left the city and all its
hateful wilderness of slumbering life behind, and penetrated to the woods
that skirted the north of London. I believe I was traversing one of those
suburban districts known as Hampstead or Highgate. I had been driven
there some months before, and was greatly attracted by the beauty and
retirement of those woody heights, which at the time I write of, nearly
thirty years ago, were almost in the country.
I had no idea of the distance I must traverse to reach that spot, or the
direction in which I should go, yet I wished to be there; and ere the deep
pall of night yielded to the gray dawn of morning, I had attained my goal,
and sinking on the ground beneath the shadow of a deep and almost
pathless wood, I felt as if I had arrived at my last earthly home. Being
unaccustomed to steady walking for any great distance, the excessive
fatigue I had undergone, no less than the stunned condition which
succeeded to the anguish of the preceding hours, induced a deep sleep,
from which I did not awaken till the sun was high in the heavens, so high
indeed, that I perceived the day must be far advanced.
Unlike most persons who awake from the first sleep that succeeds some
mighty sorrow to a gradual consciousness of the truth, I awoke at once to
the mental spot from which I had sunk to sleep. There might have been but
one intervening second between the great agony with which I lay down and
rose again, to take up the burden just where I had dropped it.
Instinctively noting the features of the place where I had sought shelter,
I perceived it was not the deep retirement I desired to find. The woods
were thick 'tis true, but they resembled more a grove of trees whose
pleasant shade might attract suburban loungers to my retreat than a lonely
spot where a hunted hare might die in peace. That was no place for me;
and quick as the thought occurred, the action followed on it. I started from
the ground, and determined to make my way yet farther on--on to a safer
solitude, one where no wandering foot of man might track me. I arose
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stiff, weak and weary. At first I could scarcely drag my tired limbs from
the spot where I had lain; but as I moved, I gained elasticity of limb, and
strengthened by my will and feverish purpose, i walked on for several
hours, walked on in fact, till night again overtook me. I passed through
many pleasant places, country roads, and shady lanes. I left behind me
handsome villas, nestling cottages, and homes where happy people seemed
to dwell, where children's voices and merry village tones resounded
through the air. I passed them all, like a spectre as I was, shrinking from
sight, sound, or companionship. The very echo of a human voice drove me
away.
Some wretched tramps in fluttering rags, with lean and hungry faces,
passed me on the road, and looked wistfully into my face. An old and
white-haired man, with very threadbare clothes, was tottering on amongst
them, and fixed on me a pleading glance. One human feeling still
remained within my sacred heart, prompting me to throw my purse
amongst them. How glad they seemed! How I hastened on with wavering
steps to escape from their noisy thanks! Did they know that the youth "so
young, so rich, so handsome," looked upon them so old, so poor, so
hideous in their rags and poverty, and sighed to think he was not one
amongst them? Undoubtedly they belonged to each other. There were
fathers, sons, and brothers there perhaps; friends at the least they must be.
But who and what was I? Father, brother, friend--all, all were gone for me.
On, on I sped--on till night again overtook me. On the banks of a deep
and sullen river I reached a thick and extensive wood. Pushing my way
through the tangled underwood, a few steps brought me to a deep and
rugged dell, whose gloomy depths seemed as if they had been traversed by
human feet. The solitude and utter desolation of this wild haunt were all I
sought.
Here I would stop and wait for the destroyer. Another long, long night,
but not as before a restful one. Aching in every limb and racked with
feverish thirst, I spent that weary night in pain unutterable. The morning
came, and with it a new and strange sensation. The gnawing pangs of
hunger now beset me. It was two days and nights since I had tasted a
morsel of food, and this sensation of racking hunger was something new
and urgent. I knew it was a part of the programme, a scene in the drama I
had set myself to enact; but I had not considered, for indeed I did not
know, how painful it would prove.
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As the sensation deepened, my spirit seemed to pass out in the old
familiar way and take note of many distant scenes, but only of those where
hungry people were. I saw none but those who were hungry, because I
suppose I was attracted to no others. I saw beggars, little children, old men
and women; poor laborers who had nothing to eat, and would not have till
a long day's work was done. All were hungry, sad, and sullen. I saw those
English work- houses where the wretched inmates were always hungry,
besides a great many little children who looked eagerly and longingly into
the shops where provisions were kept. Many a little, emaciated, pale
creature I saw crying for bread; and besides these, my unresting spirit
seemed drawn as by a spell to the interior of wretched huts, up to the
roofless garrets, and down into noisome cellars, where miserable people
lingered--people of both sexes and all ages; but all were, like me, so very
hungry! All of them had little or nothing to eat; and the multitudes I saw
thus, seemed to me to be more in number than I had deemed of the whole
human race. It was a ghastly yet wonderful sight this, and awful to know
that in one vast, rich and mighty city were hungry wretches enough to
constitute a nation.
Presently I began to speculate upon the different effects which this one
great pang produced on different people. Some of those whom I gazed
upon were merely restless, then fretful, irritable, angry, sullen, savage; all
these were stages in the great woe, but only the first stages. The next was a
fierce, wild craving, and after that the natures of these hungry ones became
wild and brutal, whilst all the nervous force of the system concentrated
about the epigastrium, and then they were all hunger, just as I was all
despair. Kindness, pity, shame, honesty, and virtue--all were merged in the
intolerable sense of urgent hunger; but this was an advanced stage of the
pang, and was very terrible to witness.
GHOST LAND.
secretions flowed in tidal currents to the salivary glands and gastric
follicles, and if there was nothing to act upon, they began to dry up and
become inflamed, and this it was that produced that gnawing sense of pain
which attended the first stages of hunger, and communicated to the nerves
an intense degree of irritability. In the next stage I perceived that the
mucous membrane lining the digestive apparatus was in a measure
consuming itself; also I saw how the entire force of the nervous system
mustered to the point of suffering, and manifested sympathy with the
epigastric regions.
GHOST LAND.
cerebellum, necessarily prompted the appetite to revenge, destructiveness,
acquisitiveness, and all the lower animal instincts.
Would that every legislator in the lands of civilization could have shared
the perceptions of my wandering spirit in those dreary hours of suffering!
Surely one great change would ensue in the laws of nations, making it a
crime in legislation to permit any human being in the realm to go hungry,
whilst for any citizen to die of starvation should be a blot sufficient to
expunge the land where it occurred from the list of civilized nationalities. I
think it must have been towards the sixth or seventh day of my terrible
probation that the character of my wanderings changed. I had lost count of
time, and being racked by intolerable thirst, I thought I might assuage that
dreadful craving, and yet not prolong much my hours of torture. I made
out then, to stagger to the edge of the river, and by dipping boughs of the
trees into the water, and laying my burning head upon them or applying
them to my lips, I found the fearful sense of thirst in some measure allayed.
It was so soothing to bathe my hands and thus in the cool river that I lay
down very close to it, and but for fear some one might find and recognize
the poor remains floating on its surface, gladly would I have made it my
winding-sheet, and thus have ended the awful struggle at once. Firm to my
proposed plan, however, I contented myself with the luxury of the dripping
boughs, and when I found sleep overtaking me, I crept back again to the
shelter of the secluded dell. I believe there were several heavy storms of
rain and hail, drenching the ground and adding racking pains to my fast
stiffening limbs, but my resolve never failed, though physical tortures
began to increase upon me. A time came, however, when these terrible
pangs became subdued, indeed at times I almost forgot them; besides, let
me add, the sense of hunger I endured, unlike that which afflicted the poor,
was voluntarily incurred. I bore my sufferings willingly, because I did so
in hope of release from still greater misery. The sentiments of rage, envy,
indignation, and bitterness, which would add such additional anguish to the
pains of hunger in the starving poor, were not present in my case; on the
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contrary, every pang that racked me was a response to my insatiate
yearning to die and be at rest.
But I have said there came another change, and this it was. With the last
minimum of my strength I had collected and surrounded myself with
dripping boughs dragged through the cool river, and on these and my
handkerchief, steeped in water and pressed to my parched lips, I laid
myself down in the deepest recess of the wood I could find, to take my last,
long sleep. Then it was that a sweet and restful sense of dying stole over
me. Bright and wonderful visions, too, gleamed before my eyes. In every
department of being I saw the spirits of nature. With involuntary lucidity I
gazed down into the earth beneath me, and beheld whole countries people
with grotesque forms, half spiritual and half material, resembling in some
respects the animal and human kingdom, but still they were all rudimental,
embryotic, and only half-formed. I saw the soul world of earths, clays,
metals, minerals, and plants. In those realms were beings of all shapes,
sizes, and degrees of intelligence, yet all were living and sentient.
Everywhere gleamed the sparks of intelligence, the germs of soul, semi-
spiritual natures, clothed with semi-material bodies corresponding to the
varieties of the mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdoms, with all their
infinite grades of being. Some of these spirits of nature were shining and
beautiful, like the gems and metals; some coarse and unlovely, like the
earths and roots; all were endowed with some special gift corresponding to
the plane of being which they represented. In moistening my hands and
face with the dripping boughs I seemed to be brought into rapport with the
countless myriads of watery spirits, and throughout all departments of
elemental life, recognized a sort of caricature representation of the births,
deaths, kindreds, families, associations, and wars that pervaded the human
family. Later on in time, though how long I never knew, I saw sweet and
lovely lands filled with a sweet and lovely people mirrored in the shining
air and nestling amidst the flowers and grasses; in fact the air became
translucent to me. I saw immense realms filling up the spaces of our gross
atmosphere, which were permeated with a wonderful number of countries,
each formed of finer and more subliminated vapors, gases, aromal essences
and ethers than the other. In some of these realms, the flowers, bloom, and
essences of earth, became spiritual emanations, which crystallized into far
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rarer and more beautiful flowers, blossoms, and airs than any which earth
could display.
The lower strata of these aerial regions were filled with very small,
sometimes grotesque, but generally beautiful people. Some of them were
no taller than the daisies and buttercups of the field, some were as high as
the bushes, and some towered up to the tops of the forest trees. Most of
them were fragrant, flower-loving, merry beings, whose incessant habit of
singing, dancing, leaping, and sporting in sunbeams, filled me with joy.
Many of these were short-lived races bubbling up with the ecstacy of a life
which began and ended with the power of the sunbeam; others lived long
vegetable lives of many centuries, haunting the woods, groves and forests,
and seemed especially interested in all that belonged to sylvan lives and
pursuits. I again repeat that all these elementary tribes were divided off
into different strata of atmosphere, or inhabited different parts of earth,
filling every space from the center to the circumference, where new
planetary existences commenced. All were endowed with varying degrees
of intelligence, special gifts, powers, and graduated tones of life and
purpose, and all appeared to me first as a spark, spear, tongue, or globe of
light, pale, ruddy, blue, violet, or of different shades of the primal hues,
and all at length assumed the forms of pigmies, giants, plants, animals, or
embryotic men, according to the particular grade they occupied in the scale
of creation, or the tribe, species, and kingdom to which they corresponded.
GHOST LAND.
glittering seas, rivers, fountains, lakes and streams, all dancing in the
radiance of many-colored illuminations from the internal element of
molten light. I beheld forests, groves, hills, vales, high mountains, and
unfathomable caves and dells, all crystallized out of living light, all
imprisoning prismatic rays, not of one, but of countless shades of color.
In lower air were sailing cars and airy ships, carrying the rejoicing
people of these sunny realms from point to point in space, whilst some
were floating by their own resistless wills, upheld by a perfect knowledge
of the laws of locomotion and atmosphere. Thus they swam, sank,
ascended and sustained themselves on waves of air like happy birds, and
oh, what a gracious race, what a nobly created form of life they revealed to
me! Tall and elastic, sunny-haired, blue-eyed, with slender, majestic
forms, vast, globe-like heads, and lovely, placid faces, all attired in robes
of snowy white, azure, or sun hue. Their cities were divided off by white,
smooth roads and shady trees, and a wealth of flowers that made the senses
ache to inhale their perfume. Vast palaces of art and science were there
devoted to the study of the universe, not in part, but all.
GHOST LAND.
practice, and food was the simple gathering-in of rare and precious plants,
and herbs, and fruits that grew by nature where the beings of nature might
demand them. Oh, what a glory it was to live upon this happy, happy orb--
to be a child of the gracious sun! I thought by only looking on this radiant
world all sorrow vanished, and its very memory would never come again.
Before the vision closed I perceived that for millions of miles in space,
beyond the surface of the sun-world, were glittering zones and belts of
many- colored radiance, forming a hazy rainbow, a photosphere of
sparkling fire-mist visible to the eye of spirit alone, all crowded up with
lands and worlds and spheres peopled with happy angel spirits of the sun.
But ah me! I veil my presumptuous eyes as I dream again of these
heavenly regions and thoughts, thoughts like scintillations from the mind
of Deity, fill up my throbbing soul as the memory of this wondrous world
of heaven and heavenly bliss recur to me now. The awful glory vanished,
and when the gorgeous panorama faded, I knew where the light of our
poor, dull planet's daybeams came from. I saw that the magnetic oceans
flowing from this radiant sun sphere, combining with our earthly
magnetism, created by mutual saturation that freight of heat and light,
motion, and all imponderable force, the sum of which was life. I saw that
the light and heat and life which permeates all being, is evolved by
galvanic action generated between the photospheres of the parent mass,
and circumferential satellites. Hence at those points which in the
revolutions of time are turned from the central orb, no galvanic action is
proceeding; the result is lack of action, lack of galvanic force, hence
darkness, night. Life per se is motion, motion is light and heat. Light and
heat are magnetism; and this causes the action and reaction ensuing
between the negative photosphere of the earth, and the positive
photospheres of the sun. This simple scheme, so like a schoolboy's lesson,
pervades all the billions upon billions of marching and countermarching
worlds, bodies in space, and all that in them is, in the boundless universe.
GHOST LAND.
spiritual presence. This time, however, I fancied I heard a peal of very
distant bells, such bells as ring out from some great city in majestic strains
of joy and gladness; very distant, and subdued by distance to the sweetest
tones, melting almost to echoes; still they rang in my dull and heavy ear.
Then came a more distinct sound, like the rushing of mighty wings, and
then, though my eyes were closed, I could see through their heavy lids,
vast sheets of corruscating light, darting like gigantic fans over the entire
quarter of the heavens which lay to the North.
"I am he whom the task of guiding thy spirit through the first stages of
the universe has been intrusted. Lean on me, beloved one; and now for a
season, rest and sleep be thine! In the hours that shall be, when thou livest
again and art thyself alone, call on me, thy guardian spirit--and Metron,
Spirit of the North, will ever answer."
Did I speak? Did I answer then? I know not. If I did the words
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must surely have been: O Constance, let me die and be at rest forever!"*
* Nearly the whole of the foregoing and succeeding chapters were rendered into
English by the author himself, and although submitted to the Editor for correction,
have been left untouched, the Editor finding it difficult to modify the author's
peculiar style of constructing sentences, without marring their intention.--Ed. G.L.
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CHAPTER XI.
GHOST LAND.
up to the realms of never-setting sunlight, up above mountain heights,
where glittering domes and towers and palaces are flashing in bright,
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prismatic, many-colored rays, and spanned by a thousand arching
rainbows.
To look down far, far beneath, and see white cities and long bright
roads, embowered in spicy groves and waving trees, and outstretched,
flowery plains, all full of busy, happy, lovely, beings, radiant with joy and
life. Still to speed on, borne on in an airy car whose swift and rocking
motion stirs the pulse, quickens the breath, and makes the wild heart leap
for very gladness! On, till you reach the lovely, lovely land far higher than
the highest thought can measure, far off in space, forever removed from
earth and night and gloom; the land where home is, and home the spot you
most desire to reach; the place you long for, wait for, where all you love
wait for you. Oh, glorious ride! Oh, life of a thousand years pressed into
one sweet hour! And such was my awakening, such my flight through
space, such the rest a tired spirit and broken heart encountered. Vain
would be the effort to speak of things and scenes and modes of life for
which earth has no language, mortal being no parallel. Some few points
alone of this better land I may describe in human speech. Let me recall
them. Music! Every motion there has its own sound, and when vast
numbers of tones combine in harmony--and all is harmony there, no
discord--that combination forms music. Hence music is speech and sound;
but when it is designed to represent ideas, recite a history, tell a tale, or
explain the marvels of creation, masses of symphonic music are
performed; and as each tone is in itself an idea, every separate tone has a
special meaning, and the whole combined form a language in which the
highest glories of the universe can be revealed. There is no music in
heaven without a real meaning; hence the listener or performer finds in
music volumes of ideas.
GHOST LAND.
clustered, to which all their divergent wanderings tended back again.
Home was the place where all my special tastes found expression, where I
might stay, rest, grow, exchange glad greetings with all who sought or
loved me--a place to think in until I grew ready for another advance. Every
spirit has a home, a center of love, rest, and ingathering of new powers and
forces, a place where all one has loved, admired, most wished or longed
for, takes shape, and becomes embodied in the soul's surroundings.
In another scene I may not fully speak of, I learned that our souls and all
their faculties are magnetic tractors, drawing to themselves only such
corresponding things and persons as assimilate with them. If the faculties
are all engrossed by unselfish love, loving friends will answer. If the spirit
reaches out for beauty, light, or special knowledge, the answer comes in
kind, and surrounds the soul with beings and associations kindred with its
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yearnings. Base passions, vicious habits, and criminal propensities find no
responding satisfaction in spirit land. They are all outgrowths of earth and
earthy things, and cast the soul down to those lower depths that permeate
the earth and chain it to the scene of its affections. In spirit land, ideas are
all incarnate, and become realities and living things. Nothing is lost in the
universe. All that ever has been, can be, shall be, are garnered up in the
ever-present laboratories of being. Glorious privilege it is to roam through
the endless corridors of time, and still to find an eternity beyond to grow
in! The spheres! what may they mean? What mortal tongue or pen can
fitly speak of them? Ideas are spheres. There are ten thousand million
spheres, all rounded into complete worlds, and all are the habitations of
those who cherish the special idea which rules the sphere.
The spheres are not permanent, but the temporary homes of those who
pass through them. They are the garners into which are gathered up the
sheaves of earth, there to rest and gain experience, until they become
distributed and amalgamated into the bread of life. There are spheres of
love, where tender natures cling to one another, until they are drawn by
higher, broader aspirations, into broader planes of thought. There are
spheres of every shade of mental light, ideality, thought, and knowledge;
spheres of special grades of goodness, intellect, and wisdom. In all and
each is a special need of happiness, but also in all and each are prevailing
impulses to branch out farther, press on, and grow, so that every soul
partaking of the special characteristics of every sphere in turn, may glean
and gather in at last the good of all, and thus become a perfected spirit.
I saw the concentered scheme of the whole solar system with earth and
its zone and belts of spirit spheres, countless in number, various in
attribute. Myriads of rare and splendid beings sped through the spaces,
piercing the grosser spheres invisibly to all but their own grade of being.
Myriads of duller, grosser beings lived in these spheres, unconscious that
they were permeated by radiant worlds, all thronged with glorious life, too
fine for them to view. Each living creature was surrounded and enclosed
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by the atmosphere to which he belonged, and this restrained his vision to
the special sphere in which he dwelt. Yet the finer realms of being could
view at will the grosser; for now I found the secret of will: 'Tis knowledge
put into practice, and the knowledge of the highest is power, and power is
will. Thus is supreme will resident alone with the Unknowable, the Being
who knows all. In these spheres that so lock and interlace with another, I
saw that the lowest and nearest earth were dull, coarse, barren spheres,
dreary and unlovely, where dark and unlovely beings wandered to and fro,
seeking the rest and satisfaction earth alone could give them. No homes
were there, no flowers, no bloom, no friendly gatherings, no songs or
music; the hard, cold natures of the wretched dwellers gave off no light, no
beauty, harmony, or love; yet all felt impelled, obliged to toil. Toil was the
genius of the place, yet whatever labors were performed, became
instrumental in digging up the spirit, and breaking the clods of hard and
wicked natures.
Every occupation seemed to come perforce and must be done, yet all
seemed destined to help re-make the nature, open up new ideas, new
sources of thought, and impel the hapless laborers to aspire after better
things and higher states. I saw the flitting lamps of spirit hearts, bright
missionary angels, who filled these leaden spheres with their gracious
influence, and yet though often felt, were unseen by the dull-eyed
inhabitants, except as stars or gleams of shimmering radiance. Ah me! I
fain would linger on the awful, grand, and wise economy of being, but the
seal of mortal life is on my lips and on the minds of those I write for; who
but the death-angel can break it? I hasten to the conclusion of my own
brief pilgrimage. My noble father, my gentle, loving Constance, and hosts
of the dead of earth, the angels of a better life, were around me.
GHOST LAND.
The spheres I had seen were not all of earth, though countless to me in
number. Myriads there were within the earth itself, where lingered bound
and captive, vicious spirits, the ignorant, dull, idle, and criminal, who had
not done with earth and who must learn, perhaps for ages, all that belonged
to their human duties, ere they could pass the threshold, and enter on the
life of the upper spheres; and yet beyond again, below, beneath the earth,
inhered an anti-state of mortal being, vast realms where dwelt the spirits of
nature. Here were millions of ascending grades of life, ranging from the
vital principle of growth in the rude stone, to the shining spirits of the fire
and air, who only waited to pass through the last stages of progressive life
and death ere they should gravitate to earth and inherit mortal bodies and
immortal souls. Crowds of aspiring spirits filled these realms, who were
not men, but who looked to man in inspirational dreams and trances as to
the angel which led and called them upwards.
GHOST LAND.
magnetism of one so very, very near to him, almost himself in fact, would
be released from the lower elemental spheres, and resuming its life
functions through my mortal body would shake off the old errors, strike
out into new paths of light, rise to its natural home in spirit-life, and,
looking through the windows of my soul's eyes perceive the glorious truth
of spiritual immortality. My spirit should be the ladder on which his soul
should rise from the elementary spheres through earth again to his home in
the better land. This was to be my destiny and his.
I saw it all and cried: "Speed, angels, speed me back to earth again!
Haste! help me to release the imprisoned soul of him I love so dearly!"
But this was not all. I learned that I, too, had been robbed of my soul's
manhood that I had not lived my own life, but that of my erring friend. His
spirit had usurped the rights of mine; his will had superseded mine and left
my soul a mere nonentity.
I felt an unbidden tear steal down my cheek whilst I bowed my head and
murmured: "Thy will, not mine, be done." I knew that will was good. I
had seen the glory, goodness, wisdom of the scheme, the perfect order in
disorder, the good which sorrow brings, the triumph over evil, wrong, and
death.
I knew God lived and reigned. I felt his bounteous hand and all-
sustaining presence upholding every creature he has made, though their
blind eyes cannot perceive his tracks. I knew that I could trust his eternal
wisdom, and when the darkness should thicken around me, the thunders
peal, and my blinded eyes could discover naught but ruin, he would be
strong to save. The angels bade me take for my life's watchword, God
understands, and I knew it was so. And now the fading lights of the
spiritual sun receded from my view; the joy-bells rang more faintly; the
crashing symphonies of heavenly music resounded in dim echoes; gray
mists, descending thicker, faster, deepened into night, and closed around
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me. The stars came out above my head, as descending still, I floated down
through the murky atmosphere of earth, upborne in the arms of loving
spirit friends, and cheered by their whispered promise, "Ever with thee!"
At length I reached this cold, dull, lonely orb; arrived at last on earth.
They bore me to the solitary wood, the dreadful dell of mortal agony.
Torches flitted through the darkness of the night, and at length, half
concealed by trees and underbrush, I saw a rigid, pale, distorted form, a
scarcely living creature, on which some kind and tender beings lavished
human cares, and gentle eyes were raining tears of pity. At first I turned
from the spectacle with loathing, but even then a voice, though far and
distant, reached my ear, whose appealing tones cried: "Help, Louis! Louis,
Help!" It was his unresting soul that pleaded. That cry broke forth from
his imprisoned spirit and wailed through the sad night air in accents of
wildest anguish. I paused no longer. I know not how, save that I acted by
a mighty effort of resistless will, but in one instant I ceased to be a freed
and rejoicing spirit. Minutes of dull forgetfulness succeeded, then keen
pangs awoke me; the gates of life rolled back amidst my sobs and sighs, to
let the spirit in, and gentle voices murmured: "He lives! Thank heaven, he
lives! and we are yet in time to save him."
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CHAPTER XII.
Neither the Chevalier nor Mr. Dudley have been very exact in the order
of chronological data. The editor, however, being quite familiar with the
narrative, is enabled from personal knowledge to state that the extract from
Mr. Dudley's diary with which the following chapter commences, refers to
the period when Professor von Marx and his pupil first visited England
together, and antedates by several months the catastrophe narrated in the
last chapter but one.--Ed. Ghost Land.]
March 10, 18--. Good news for the occultists of Great Britain! Just
what we wanted, in fact, and that is, the infusion of a new element into our
effete, lifeless ranks. Although not one of us half digested the good things
we have been receiving for years, we have long been on the tiptoe of
expectation, waiting for something new. Well, unless my expectations are
strangely disappointed, we shall have just the dish of excitement our blase
palates have been hungering for; for lo! I shall have the welcome task of
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announcing at the Orphic Circle, of which I am the recording secretary, the
advent of the great Professor Felix von Marx, the Cornelius Agrippa and
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Nostradamus of the nineteenth century, accompanied, too, by a peerless
somnambulist, one whom the Illuminee of Germany exalt as the rarest and
most gifted seer in the world.
I don't very well like the tone of von Marx's letter though, for he
declines to accept of my hospitality, old and dear as are the ties of
friendship that bind us; nor yet he adds, will he consent to parade the gifts
of his Seer before the craving wonderseekers of England. The boy, he
says, is tired, and needs entire cessation from magnetic influences, besides
they are coming to London, as he assures me, chiefly to find out what we
can show them; to determine what progress we have made in the black or
white art, as the case may be, and learn whether the Teutons are not
surpassed in magical lore by the countrymen of Roger Bacon, Dee, and
Kelly. Well, no matter what they come for, I for one, feel my heart leap
with joy at the prospect of clasping hands once more with my dear and
well-tried friend, Felix von Marx. Let me recall the circumstances of our
early intimacy. At the university of W----, Marx and I were sworn chums.
We had but one heart, one purse, and one lesson between us. The heart
was our joint-stock property; the purse was mine, the lesson his, for he did
all my learning for me. What a bright and glorious scholar he was! Took
all the prizes, and never had any rivals; I suppose because nobody dared to
compete with him. What he ever found to take a fancy to in such a dunce
as me, unless indeed it was my unbounded admiration for him, I never
could understand; but I suppose we loved each other on the principle of
positive and negative agreement; certain it is we were never apart, not even
in the tremendous mysteries in which von Marx had been initiated before I
knew him, and which he, like a true friend as he was, determined I should
share with him when we became such constant associates. Heavens! what
awful things we did at that K---- association. If but half our doings had
been known to the jealous German government--our fly-by-night
excursions, our Asmodeus inspections of any house or castle we chose to
enter spiritually, our Polter Geist performances, sending our spirits out to
knock about the pots and kettles of old fraus and pelt their pretty frauleins
with rosebuds and spiritually written billet-doux! methinks we students of
the occult, in secret session in our upper room at W----, would have been
deemed fitter subjects for fine and imprisonment than many a political
plotter or distinguished conspirator, hosts of whom were constantly under
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arrest, whilst we continued to cut up our capers unmolested and
unsuspected.
My father appreciated the force of my logic. The case was stated to the
professor, who, as an act of friendship, felt bound to sacrifice himself. His
salary, fixed at double the worth of his professorship, his ragged college
gown and cap exchanged for a neat suit of Khamschatka dog, behold us
smoking cheroots and plotting occult seances at our elegant quarters in the
Grand Square of St. Petersburg.
I had always loved the mysterious, doted on ghost stories, and though I
shrank away with inexpressible terror at the idea of their realization, I ever
returned to their study again, and cared for nothing so much as the wild,
the weird, and the wonderful.
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Now, if ever there was a born Adept, with all the natural qualifications
for a magnetizer, biologist, healer, astrologer, in a word, for a master of
spirits and spiritual things, that Adept was Felix von Marx. As to me, my
occult powers were my natural inheritance. My sainted mother, then in
heaven, had been a seeress, my honored sire, still on earth, was a devoted
student of astrology. Coward as I was--I am bound to own it--in the ghost
seeing line, I never could get out of that line, I never could get out of that
involuntary and much dreaded accomplishment. When quite a little lad, I
was regularly worried with ghosts. My father spent the autumn months
generally at a fine old castle he owned in the north of England, and there
these phantoms took such an extraordinary fancy to me that they walked
with me, talked with me, met me in every gallery and corridor, made me
come and go, fetch and carry just as if I had been a young sexton, and
naturally belonged to the dead. I saw, moreover, sprites and fairies by the
score; heard the mermaids sing and the tritons whistle; in a word, there
never was a boy more admirably adapted to be a good magnetic subject,
never an operator more completely au fait at putting me through the
spiritual kingdom than Felix. Of course we gravitated together as naturally
as the magnet and its armature, and though, now I was in office and had
attained to the dignity of a diplomatist, I declined to be put to sleep like a
fractious child or sent out of my body as a Polter Geist to scare honest
peasants out of their wits with throwing stones and making noises
invisibly, my love for the practices of mesmerism and magic only
increased with my years and the fine opportunities which association with
my accomplished secretary afforded me. I found Professor von Marx had
made immense strides in occult knowledge whilst I had been wasting my
time in learning the arts of impolite dissipation at Oxford. He had visited
the East, where he was born, and had there picked up so many awful scraps
of magic lore that I began to be almost afraid of him.
Whilst we were deep in our plans for the prosecution of occult study,
however, I suddenly realized the truth of that excellent proverb, "Man
proposes and God disposes," in the very awkward fact of my falling
desperately in love. The object of this unexpected awakening, was a
charming young widow, the relict of a certain old German Margrave, the
Prince de K----, who had left his fair fortune, by virtue of which double
accomplishments madame, the princess, became the cynosure of all eyes,
and the target at which every bachelor in the land aimed his arrows. Of
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course I should have had little expectation of carrying off such a prize,
with so many odds against me, had not the lady conceived a very agreeable
plan of perfecting herself in the Russian language. She was visiting for the
season at the house of some very distinguished relatives of her late
husband's in St. Petersburg, and having frequently met us in the diplomatic
circles, and noticed, as she courteously observed, the immense facility with
which I acquired the throat-splitting language of the country under the
admirable tutelage of my secretary, she inquired in the most insinuating
manner whether my studies could not be conducted in her salon, by which
arrangement she could have the advantage of participating in them. I was
enchanted. To me the whole thing was plain. The princess had in this
delicate way, hinted at her wish to enjoy my society untrammeled by the
frivolous crowd who usually surrounded us, and thus I should be able to
get the start of all my rivals, and lay siege to the fair widow's heart at my
leisure.
GHOST LAND.
princess. The result of this outbreak was a polite request on her Highness's
part that I would discontinue my visits in the future. I was in despair. I
would instantly go mad, hang, drown, shoot, or freeze myself to death; I
would cut somebody's throat, exterminate the human race, and by way of
preliminary, I smoked ten cigars and wrote the princess a series of letters
once and hour for three days. Each missive ended, like the cigars, in
smoke. At length and just as I had made up my mind to confide in von
Marx and urge him to plead for me, that gentleman called me into his
apartment, lighted a cigar, begged me to do the same, and then, putting a
letter into my hands, asked me to read it and tell him what I thought of that.
What I thought of that, indeed! Great heavens! what should that be but a
deliberate offer of herself, her name, fame, fortune, etc., etc., from the
Princess K---- to Professor Felix von Marx! Rage and astonishment
choked my utterance at first, whilst prudence and self-respect urged me to
keep my own counsel at last. Recovering my composure, I began to
congratulate my friend on his good luck. Of course I was glad, I was
delighted, I should dance at his wedding furiously; in a word, I was "only
too happy," I said, "to see him so very happy." But as I spoke, with a
sardonic grin worthy of a demon, I could not help remarking that my friend
appeared most particularly unhappy. With a comical mixture of discontent
and perplexity, he declared he could not imagine what the deuce the
woman could want him for, but the worst of it was he didn't know how he
was to get out of it.
"But I don't want the woman, nor her beauty nor her fortune either,"
replied the cynic.
"But, my dear fellow," I rejoined, warming with the idea that my idol
was to be slighted and insulted by being called "a woman," you can't treat a
lady of her exalted rank and character in that way. You must have her, you
ought to have her, you shall have her, or--I'll know the reason why."
I saw I must change my tack. Professor von Marx was just then the
handsomest young fellow I had ever looked upon. Tall and finely formed,
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any Grecian sculptor would have laid violent hands upon him for a model.
With what I had so often heard the ladies describe as "those lovely black,
curling, waving locks," tossed carelessly over a noble brow; a pair of large,
splendid dark eyes, that went right through everything, especially that
frailest of all things, a woman's heart; with a classic mouth, fine teeth, and
what every female authority declared to be "such a duck of a moustache,
and such a love of a pair of whiskers," but above all, with a sort of
indescribable, Oriental, magical kind of spell-like way about him that
nobody seemed able to resist; who could compete with him? On the other
hand, how could I, a slim, genteel youth, with narrow shoulders and a
stoop, blue eyes and a cough, a small crop of straw-colored hair on my face
and an equally slender allowance on my head, the latter of a stubborn
character, too, which no frizeur had ever been able to twist into curl--how
could such an one enter the lists with a von Marx and hope for success?
Oh, if my father had only been an Arabian sheik, or my mother an Eastern
Sultana, there might have been a chance for me! But as it was, and with
the fatal experience of the princess's choice between a poor Adonis and a
rich gawky--as I in my humility deemed myself--I saw there was no chance
for me in the future, unless I got von Marx married right out of hand.
Besides, I loved the dear fellow in one way as much as I adored the
faithless fair one in another way, and the only balm my wounded spirit
could receive was to see them united. This done, I would seek an early
grave, and--"die in peace." How I managed it I cannot tell--whether by
coaxing, scolding, or fairly badgering my friend into the match, I know
not. Certain it is, I did succeed; and after laying out before Felix all the
opportunities he would enjoy of following up his favorite pursuits as the
husband of the rich and fashionable Princess K----, I finally saw the knot
tied by the chaplain of the embassy, and Professor von Marx and his
illustrious bride departing for one of her charming castles on the Rhine, at
which spot I promised to join them as soon as I could get released from my
now irksome official duties.
It was three years before I was able to redeem this promise, and when I
did, it was in company with the dear and lovely lady who had discernment
enough to discover in the slim, genteel youth, whose many disadvantages I
had so humbly pitted against the splendid von Marx, the dear companion
by whose life-long love every other female image has been displaced,
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always excepting the admiration I share for her, with three fair duplicates
of herself, who now call me their loving father.
When I and my beloved bride reached H----, and I had placed her to rest
in the pleasant apartments provided for us, I hurried off to the castle where
my servants had learned the Princess von Marx was then residing. Great
was my chagrin to find neither my friend nor his lady at home. Her
Highness was out at the hunt, the domestics told me, and the professor--
they didn't know, but they thought I should find him at the neighboring
college. "At the college!" I repeated. "That is odd. What could he be
doing there?" They didn't know, but they believed he was there, if not,
they didn't know where he would be.
GHOST LAND.
and appearance, I could only take his hand and stammer out: "How is all
this, Felix? Let us sit down and talk it all over like old times, you know."
And talk it over we did, and for a few hours the dear old times seemed
to come back to my friend's wounded spirit.
It was an old story von Marx told me--the story of a marriage which was
not made in heaven, and wherein the hapless couple were yoked, not
mated. The Princess was a gay, frivolous butterfly, utterly incapable of
appreciating any thing in her talented husband except his remarkably
handsome person. He was a stern, devoted student of the occult, who
found neither sympathy nor companionship in his fashionable wife; thus
before six months had worn away, both had bitterly repented--the one her
infatuation, the other, the astonishing facility with which he had suffered
himself to be "entrapped."
Such was the sum of a history which occupied in the relation many
hours of the night. I heard it with great pain, not only on my friend's
account, but on that of my wife also. The princess and herself had been
schoolmates. Educated at the same convent in France, they had conceived
a girlish affection for each other, and I knew my dear companion, with the
zeal of her warm, loving nature, would be sure to take her friend's part in
the impending dispute.
GHOST LAND.
common with each other to be reconciled about.
This was the last communication the ill-assorted pair ever held, the
professor having, as he has since assured me, never heard of or sought to
inquire for his lady again. The princess is still, as I hear, a gay habitue of
many an European court; the professor, one of the most celebrated writers
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and lectures on metaphysics of which the age can boast. Openly, he
devotes himself to the duties of a professorship at the university of B----,
but privately, he has addicted himself to the incessant study and practice of
occult arts, in which, throughout the secret societies of the East, Germany,
France, and Continental Europe generally, he is acknowledge to be one of
the most skillful and powerful adepts that ever lived.
This child, he once wrote me word, was born, the very day on which his
idolized Ernest, then only two years and a half old, died. "Born one hour
after the tragic event, this child," he added, "strange to say, resembles me
so closely in appearance, that every master and student in the university
remarks upon the likeness. Day by day this weird resemblance increases,
and if the dreams of the reincarnationists had any foundation in truth, it
might have been supposed that the spirit of my precious Ernest had passed
into the form of the infant born in a far distant land at the self-same fateful
hour that my Ernest died. I know these are worse than idle dreams; still I
have pleased myself at times by indulging in them, just as a weary man of
the world might take up at some odd hour a fairy tale and linger over the
page of fiction which once constituted his childhood's delight"*
*Since the editor of these papers has become intimately acquainted with
the Chevalier de B---- she has frequently heard discussed, the extra
ordinary resemblances between him and his adopted father, named in these
writings "Professor von Marx." A fine portrait of Professor von Marx is to
be seen in a certain Germanic collection of oil paintings, in which it is
almost impossible to trace any dissimilarity between that and a portrait of
the Chevalier be B at the same age, save in point of costume. This
remarkable resemblance has been frequently cited to the editor and the
author also, in confirmation of the re-incarnationists' theory that the soul of
the dead child Ernest had passed into the new-born form of the Chevalier,
the period between the decease and the birth being only one hour, and the
parties, though originally strangers to each other, having been so singularly
brought together in later years. The author has requested the editor to
record here his utter disbelief in this theory, or indeed in the doctrine of re-
incarnation at all. He himself is a firm believer in the existence of special
types of physique prevailing throughout all the kingdoms of nature. He
conceives that he and his adopted father belonged to the same peculiar type
of being, and that the resemblance first instituted in the architecture of
Nature, was deepened to a perfect fac-simile by the formative process of
magnetization during a period of many years, also by the strength of the
attachment subsisting between the parties, which tended to mould even the
expression of their features into similarity.
GHOST LAND.
marriage, and paternity have never been revealed to his protege, to whom,
as he claims, he can veil or disclose his mind just as he pleases. Despite
this boy's high birth, his family have, it appears, consented to his adoption
by the great and learned Professor von Marx; and this then is the prodigy,
whom the professor declares to be the finest seer and the most perfect
ecstatic upon earth, and whom I hope soon to welcome as my honored
guest.
My dear wife and our three charming girls are not, I regret to say, in
sympathy with my spiritualistic pursuits; in fact, they profess to be quite
scandalized at the idea of their beloved husband and father being a
"magician," a practicer of the "black art," a regular Zamiel or Ashmodi. As
to my two boys, they are such a rough-and-tumble pair of young
profanities that I don't dare to trust them with any higher ideas on
Spiritualistic subjects that a mild ghost story or two about Christmas or
New Year. Take it on the whole, however, my happy household are all
agreed to disagree. My magical pursuits moreover, are all conducted in
other scenes than my own home, and whatever friends I do introduce there,
are ever warmly welcomed by my wife and children. Professor von Marx
is of course, well known to my wife, though not altogether her special
favorite. With true womanly feeling she espoused the female side of the
matrimonial dispute; nevertheless she was in the habit of saying to me
privately, that any woman who was bold enough to offer herself in
marriage, deserved just whatever treatment she might receive; so, take it
for all in all, she didn't know that the fault was wholly on the professor's
side.
March 29. The long-looked-for guests have arrived, and I have just
returned from my visit of welcome to them.
The changes which years have wrought in my friend Felix von Marx,
seem to have intensified rather than altered his marked characteristics. In
form and face he is still superb, but his manners are even colder, more
resolute and self- centered than in the days of yore, when I and all around
him bent before his indomitable will. His friendship for me still remains
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undiminished, but the yielding points of his nature seem to be called forth
by his protege, to whom his manner always becomes softened when he
either speaks to or even looks towards him. My long and curious study of
mesmeric subjects, natural somnambulists, sensitives, etc., has been
fruitful of a rich and strange experience, and inspired me with much
curiosity concerning the young man for whom Professor von Marx and the
German mystics generally, make such high claims. How, then, can I
permit my pen to record my first impressions of this paragon, and own that
I was disappointed in him? Yet such is an actual fact. Perhaps I placed my
expectations of personal gratification too high; but to me, he is
unapproachable; I am troubled in his presence, troubled even when I think
of him, and yet I am lowered in my own estimation for being so. In
external appearance he so wonderfully resembles his adopted father, that it
would be difficult for strangers to believe there were no ties of relationship
between them; the only perceptible differences in these gentlemen are in
respect to age and the fact that all the sterner features of Professor von
Marx's expressions are softened in his ward by an excessive sensitiveness.
GHOST LAND.
request. He evidently understood and obeyed the least thought in the
professor's mind, and on more than one occasion turned towards him, and
by silent looks replied to his unspoken thoughts. Through the same
extraordinary process of soul intercourse, the professor would fix his
questioning eyes upon his ward, and obtain an answer without one syllable
being interchanged between them. I have often seen and wondered at the
remarkable rapport which existed between my own mesmerized subjects
and myself. I have seen still more positive evidences of pure, mental
transfer between the Lucides of the celebrated Baron Dupotet, MM. Billot,
Delleuze, and Cahagnet, also with a number of my English associates,
whose honored names I withhold in view of my anonymous style of
writing; but I never beheld any system of soul intercourse so perfect as that
which existed between these unrelated Teutons, nor so complete an adept
in mind-reading as this young Chevalier.
The professor, who seemed more at home and like his old self when his
sprite was gone, laughed outright at my confusion, and cried cheerily:
"Never mind, John! Louis knew just as well as you did that you wished
him at the deuce, so of course he retired; but don't let that worry you, old
fellow. The fact is, this boys feels rather than sees or hears what is going
on around him; but now tell me candidly, what do you think of him?
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Once again I began to stammer in that ridiculous way of mine, when my
thoughts are a long way off and want collecting, but the professor saved
me all further trouble by giving me such a complete word-picture of what I
had actually thought in the Chevalier's presence that I started up fairly
aghast, and cried: "Come, come, Felix, this will never do! It is bad enough
to be obliged to say many things we don't always think, but when we only
think things and don't say them, and yet have them all said for us in this
remorseless way, 'pon my life! I don't know what is to become of us.
Felix, I am getting to be fairly afraid of both you and that weird friend of
yours."
"Well," replied von Marx, coolly, "if you will venture upon the
enchanted isle, and place yourself at the mercy of a Prospero and Ariel,
why you must take the consequences but come now, John, let us talk as of
old, and somewhat more to the purpose. You have had great experience as
a magnetizer since we met, conversed with many of the best and most
philosophic of Mesmer's followers, both here and on the Continent, besides
enjoying the opportunity of analyzing the idiosyncracies of some hundreds
of 'sensitives.' Tell me, then, what do you think of them as a class?"
"Felix," I replied, "I will answer you in the words of Geiblitz, that fine
old writer on mental philosophy, whose works you and I used to pore over
so constantly at W----, and whose description of this very class I was so
enamoured with that I committed several pages to memory. Geiblitz says:
"Now, as copper and zinc would not form a galvanic battery if the acid
which consumes the metals acted on both alike, neither would the thunder
roll or the lightnings flash if the two clouds that met in mid-air were equal
in force and polarity, one with the other, so would there be no exhibition of
soul galvanism, or mental lightnings, if the body in which they shone was
all equilibrium, and the person was well composed and evenly balanced.
Methinks all history shows us that the ecstatic or seer must be an
inharmonious being. Something ails him which disturbs his balance or sets
the measure of equilibrium at odds, before he can admit another mind to
govern him.
"'Thus it was with the great fabulist, Aesop, who was an idiot in all
things but the strong point of allegorical composition which, to my mind,
was pure inspiration. So also Robert Nixon, the Cheshire prophet, who
was also foolish, yet subject to that high inspiration which prophesied
through his lips. Again, with Chetwynd, the fool of the great Saxon
monarch, and many others, who, although so silly as to be marked with the
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fool's cap and bells, yet when the spirit spoke through them, did give
utterance to prophecy and wiser things than most other men. And if the
intellect be well composed, then must we look to find a lack of balance
amongst the moral qualities; for example, Cagliostro and Kelly, both being
great seers and governors of spiritual things, were yet knaves. Bohemians,
Gypsies, and Zingari are all thieves and cheats, yet they know the future
better than many wise men, and can see farther with their soul's eyes than
most men with their telescopes.' In short, Felix," I continued, seeing that
my quotations were beginning to be more dangerous than apt, "you and I at
a very early period of our investigations, came to the conclusion that fine
sensitives or high magnetic subjects must be unevenly balanced or lack
equilibrium somewhere. They must be either fools like Nixon, and
therefore good subjects for the control of others, knaves like the
Bohemians, and in constant rapport with the elementaries, or sick
sensitives like St. Bridgetta, St, Catherine, and other saints of great
renown, who float in air, bore the stigmata, prophesied, read every mind,
and --and--were, in a word, so highly endowed with Spiritualistic gifts."
"Felix," I said, looking steadily into my friend's troubled eyes, "tell me;
is it normal or healthful life for one human being to live upon the
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magnetism of another? I know it can be done, but is it the sweet and
natural order of creation?"
"No, John," replied my friend, sadly, "it is not, and I have often felt it
was not. But when do we enter upon any new and untried path and see the
end from the beginning? When do we determine how far we may drift
before necessity or some strong impulse forces us to stop? I commenced
magnetizing this adopted child of mine, first, for the sake of continuing my
experiments, then because I and the Berlin Brotherhood found in him rare
and unusual combination of splendid powers. We all know that the most
passive mentality, or that which in ordinary life would be mere imbecility,
often supplies the best, because the most unsoiled tablet for the inscription
of a foreign mental power. We have also proved that the same aromal life
principle which clusters in excess about the cerebellum, and makes its
subject sensual, acquisitive, or destructive, furnishes in many instances the
potency by which the elementaries and earthy spirits can control mortals;
hence we so frequently see fools and knaves endowed with those spiritual
gifts which plead for the intervention of the daemons, but here we have an
exception to all such experiences. Here is a being of the noblest and least
guileful character that ever lived, and yet so intellectually bright, that he
acquires knowledge with magical intuition. Ere he had been our subject
long, I am well convinced if our society had been one of the fanatical kind
that were likely to be entangled in religious absurdities, we should have
exalted this boy into a new Messiah, hailed him as a tenth incarnation of
Vishnu or a modern Buddha.
"Many a time when the life had nearly ebbed away, and the thread
which bound him to mortality became so attenuated that my earth-dimmed
eyes could scarcely discover it, by a mighty wrench of my will, by the
throbbing of my whole heart's love poured out upon him, and the vials of
my own life drained to supply his, I have succeeded in dragging him back
to me, keeping him alive, and seeing him grow into a spiritual, physical,
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and intellectual beauty that knows no peer on earth. John, do you
remember the story of the German student, Frankenstein? He made a
monster, I an angel. His was the story of a myth, mine that of a scientific
truth. Is there no gain to the cause of science in the success of my singular
experiment?" The strange man paused, wrought up to the most intense
pitch of emotion, and gazing at me with an almost imploring expression,
asked: "have I not cause to love him, John?"
"Aye," I replied, with equal emotion, "you cannot fail to do so; still you
have not answered my question, Is such a life as his normal, healthful,
right?"
GHOST LAND.
interesting young foreign guest, but now, whew! before I had quitted the
presence of this young mystic or could shake off the remembrance of his
soul-haunting, far-away-looking dark eyes, I came to the conclusion I
might as well expect the north star or one of the Pleiades to come down
and woo the Rosies and Sophies of fashionable life as this unearthly
Chevalier de B---. With my old habit of putting my reflections into shape,
I mentally exclaimed as I passed down stairs: "I'll wager that this young
fellow has got a spirit bride somewhere off in one of the planets. Perhaps
he might deign to chant a sonnet to a Sylph or serenade an Undine but as to
his falling in love with any of the pretty butterflies that call me dear papa
or darling old uncle. pshaw! I'll go and put all the girls on their guard
against him, or else they will be throwing away their hearts upon a streak
of moonlight."
"Have no fear of that, senor; your butterflies are all safe from me," said
the sweet voice and soft Italian accent of the Chevalier, close to my ear.
GHOST LAND.
must be born again, conceived in sorrow and born through great anguish,
before I can be really the man my too fond father deems me. To be a man I
must be endowed with the passions of one--with vices as well as virtues,
and criminal as well as noble tendencies. As yet, the humanity which
makes a full-grown soul is lacking in me, and I am not good, because I am
not bad; not virtuous, pure, or noble, because I have no opposite
propensities to rise above. My poor father has not created an angel, only
endowed this frail form with a spiritual essence which yet lacks parts and
passions. But, O dear sir! the hour approaches when I shall be born again
through the maternity of great sorrow. In that hour I shall stand in direst
need of a human friend and helper; will you not be that friend? The world
of spirit pleads with you for me, their child and servant."
GHOST LAND.
rushed to the only door in the room, and found it locked on the inside just
as I had left it.
And thus began our campaign with the Prospero and Ariel of the
nineteenth century, Felix von Marx and his adopted son, the Chevalier de
B---.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XIII.
GHOST LAND.
that they find the means of making, through those very persons who were
formerly our somnambulists, seers, and mesmeric subjects.
May not this be the secret of the young Chevalier's wonderful and
abnormal surroundings? He and his father claim that all we see and hear is
the work of the elementaries who they command, and the planetary angels
who attend upon them and signal to them through this youth's trances and
the professor's magical power over spirits.
February 25. Letters have been received from Professor von Marx. He
is coming back to London for a few days, and sends me word he wishes to
join our next meeting of the Orphic Society on Friday night. How did he
know we had called a special seance for Friday night? but pshaw! why did
I question? He knows everything, and what he doesn't know the Chevalier
can tell him. No matter, he will be dearly welcome to us all. He leaves his
son in the North, he writes me word, rusticating in a quiet village for the
benefit of his health. Of course they won't stay long apart; however, I will
now go to his lodgings and find out when to expect him.
March 3. Professor von Marx has now been with us nearly a week. He
attended one seance at the Orphic Circle on the evening of his arrival, and
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by desire of our guardian spirits, we are to have another session to-night.
Great results are promised us, but I scarce know why, there is a singular
depression on my spirits, and one which seems in a measure to affect our
whole society. Let us hope that to-night's seance will serve to disperse the
clouds.
GHOST LAND.
Von Marx acknowledged the disturbing effect of the Chevalier's absence
upon his mind, but added in a tone of stern self- reproach, that it was ever a
failing in the true adept to cherish human affection, and that the intense
emotion which was expended on personal interests, always marred the
procedures of deliberate science.
We had some interesting visions in the mirror, but the crystal spirits
could not obtain force enough to appear. At the usual hour, when our
"Rulers" were accustomed to give us some spontaneous phenomena by
way of climax to our meeting, we asked through our best lucide present
Mll. Estelle, if the Chevalier de B--- could not visit us. Starting hastily
from his seat, and speaking in violation of our usual order, the professor
exclaimed: "No, no! I would not have it so--that is--I beg pardon of all
present, but I would prefer to waive this visit."
GHOST LAND.
Chevalier had often thus spiritually visited and communicated with us
before, we attributed his present entrancement to the professor's failure in
fulfilling the conditions of evocation. Yet we all beheld him plainly, and
sympathized with the professor as he bent over his adopted son's form with
apparent sentiments of rapt interest and admiration.
"Waken him!" whispered Sir Peter S----. "We would speak with him."
"Not for worlds!" murmured the professor, extending his arms towards
the vision. "He will waken all too soon. Sleep on, my Louis, and--
farewell!"
GHOST LAND.
phantoms, sounds, and motions which appealed to unaccustomed
witnesses; came upon us with all the awful paraphernalia of magical
surroundings, and at a period when our hearts were possessed with an
overwhelming dread of revelations from the world of spiritual existence.
The Spiritualists now meet in jolly parties, and hail their spiritual visitants
with fun and frolic, hence the very same manifestations which custom has
invested with the prestige of a fashionable amusement were, in the time of
which I write, surrounded with a halo of preternatural light, borrowed in
part from the occult reputation of supernaturalism, but still more colored
by the stupendous interests and heartfelt sympathies which were awakened
in our spiritual seances. Bear with me, then, my readers, whilst I relate to
you a scene whose weird horrors would now be received calmly and with
the same meed of applause which you would bestow on a successful
operatic performance, but which, at the time of its occurrence since has
sufficed to efface its terrible memories.
Let me recite the narrative from the ordinary extracts in my diary, which
read as follows:
One hour passed away after the opening of the session, but Professor
von Marx did not appear. At 10 p.m. our Lucides, without a word
exchanged, and as if by a concert of action, rose and assumed their places
at the four quarters of the lodge as if we were not in open but secret
session. All four were deeply entranced. Soon after this movement, they
sang a sweet and exquisite improvisation, at the close of which they joined
in a well-known hymn, their fine voices attuned to such a pure and rich
harmony, that every heart present felt its resistless spell. It was not until
the singers had ceased, that we perceived, by the dim light of the four alter
lamps, Professor von Marx was amongst us. He had entered noiselessly
and unseen by any one; in fact, how he had entered was a mystery, the
seance being conducted with doors locked and guarded. The professor had
not taken his usual place amongst the members, but stationed himself in
one of the seats assigned to visitors, although there were none admitted
that evening.
Before we had time to greet him or remark upon the suddenness of his
appearance, he addressed us, in a singular, far-off tone of voice, which
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GHOST LAND.
affected every listener with an indescribable sense of awe. His words
were, as far as I can remember, to this effect: "My time is short, my power
to address you limited. My beloved one is in fearful peril. Summon him
not, nor inquire his fate for nine days. When that time expires, I will come
again and direct you what to do. I have fearfully wronged him, and it is for
you, John Dudley, to help me make reparation. I have tampered all too
presumptuously with the sacred forces of a human soul, and ere I can find
peace or rest, I must redeem my error. Aid me!" He paused, yet a spell
was on us all so strong, that not a creature moved or a voice replied.
Whilst I sat in my place staring vacantly at the spot from whence the
"atmospheric spirit"--as we deemed the apparition to have been--had
disappeared, one of our lucides, in her natural tone, said hurriedly, shaking
me by the arm at the same time: "Mr. Dudley, Mr. Dudley, arouse
yourself! That was no 'flying soul,' but Professor von Marx's spirit. For
heaven's sake, He is dead! I feel sure he is dead, and the poor young
Chevalier is abandoned."
March 6. Yes, Professor von Marx is dead! Our circle broke up and
dispersed immediately after the scene last recorded, and accompanied by
our president, the venerable Lord V----, I hastened off to the professor's
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GHOST LAND.
lodgings, which were at a considerable distance from my residence, in fact,
close down by the river side. It occupied some time before my servants
could be summoned, my carriage brought around, and Lord V---- and
myself set down at the old mansion which my friend had selected as the
retreat of himself and his adopted son.
It was near midnight then, when we reached the house, but we found the
domestics all up and in the utmost perplexity and consternation. The
professor had desired to be called at six o'clock that evening to dress for
dinner, but when his valet reached him in fulfillment of his orders, he
found him cold and rigid, as if he had been dead some hours. Medical aid
had been summoned in vain. The proprietor of the house had despatched
messengers to me, but as I had been dining out, and was subsequently
engaged at our lodge, I could not be found, and there was no means of
apprising me of the fact save through the extraordinary apparition which
we had so recently witnessed. "Apoplexy," heart disease," etc., etc., these
were the medical verdicts on a case which none could understand and no
science account for.
GHOST LAND.
am filled with the deepest anxiety on his account, and long to tender him
the consolations of friendship and sympathy. More difficulties yet beset
me. Professor von Marx has left his entire property to his adopted son, and
named me as his guardian and trustee. His will is clear and lucid, and was
evidently made for the hour, suiting so well the present crisis that it would
seem as if he had foreseen and provided for the very moment of his
decease.
March 11. No tidings yet of the Chevalier, and the singular emphasis
with which the apparition demanded a nine days' suspension of all inquiry,
paralyzes any attempt on my part to discover what has become of him, yet
my business advisers urge me to seek out the young heir without loss of
time, and my best friends begin to wonder why I take no steps in this
direction. Urgent advice and suggestions to "act promptly" pour in upon
me from all quarters, and even my servants are regarding me with furtive
and suspicious glances. I suppose every one will soon begin to set me
down as crazy--an opinion that I shall not, I fear, be very undeserving of,
unless something occurs to relieve my mind from the terrible anxiety that
now possesses it. The hardest task I have yet had to encounter is to resist
the pleadings of my dear wife and children, who constantly urge me to
institute inquiries for the missing heir, whom, they persist in believing, has
been "made away with, through the same magical arts that have (as they
allege) destroyed the unfortunate professor. It would be in vain for me to
attempt combatting such an opinion, absurd as it appears; equally
impossible for me to explain why I am determined to commence no search
until after the nine days have expired.
We have called two special meetings of the Orphic Circle, but alas! the
visions seem to be closed. Our somnambules are themselves so much
disturbed and their minds so agitated by the prevailing excitement, that
they are unable to come into those conditions of passivity necessary to
procure reliable visions. They all seem to concur in the opinion, however,
that the Chevalier is still living, and destined, as they predict, to grow out
of his present semi-earthly condition and attain to a high and noble
manhood.
March 15. This night completes the prescribed season of inactivity, and
at 10 p.m. the Orphic Circle will meet to advise with, whatever powers
may be pleased to attend us, upon the necessary steps to be taken for the
discovery of our unfortunate young friend. Amidst all manner of
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GHOST LAND.
annoyances, estranged looks, covert reproaches, and open rebukes, I have
faithfully adhered to the commands of the mysterious phantom and
abstained from all attempts to discover the Chevalier's retreat. I only know
that he left his country retirement and appeared at his former residence in
London. At neither place have any tidings been heard of him since; and
his unaccountable absence from the funeral of his adopted father, which we
delayed until yesterday, leaves us no longer a shadow of hope that he will
voluntarily appear amongst us.
To-night, the ninth since the apparition of Professor von Marx at our
circle, must decide how far we can look for help from the invisible world;
if that fails us, to-morrow's dawn will see me surrounded with every
instrumentality that human effort can afford, to make our search
successful.
Many days have elapsed since I made my last entry, but the events that
have crowded so thickly upon me have prevented my fulfillment of that
which has now become to me a solemn life duty, namely, to record as
plainly and truthfully as language can set forth the facts of spiritual
intervention in human affairs, and to draw the mysterious and awful veil
which has hitherto shrouded those realms of passion and influence, from
which the invisible springs of human action mainly proceed.
Around the central altar we now perceived that the crystals were
beginning to be covered by bright coruscations of sparkling light. With
sensations of unwonted awe and breathless interest, we noticed also, that
small tongues of flame and globes of pale light loomed through the
darkness at different parts of the hall, sailing around, and gradually
disappearing near the altar. At length we observed that the whole
apartment was becoming lighter and lighter.From whatever source the
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GHOST LAND.
illumination proceeded, it completely overpowered the light of the braziers,
until it gradually filled the whole place with a soft, hazy twilight. Then it
was that we discovered around the central altar, a circle of crouching, dark
forms, who, with veiled heads and misty robes, seemed to be supported on
seats faintly outlined, and stretching away, row after row and circle after
circle, until they reached from the first or inner circle, up to the remotest
portion of the roof, completely filling our vast lodge-room and ascending
as it seemed even beyond the roof, in the form of an ancient Roman
amphitheatre. This spectral company, although clearly outlined in the
mysterious twilight of the room, obscured but did not conceal the other
persons or material objects present, which shone through them as if they
had been merely shadows.
I find on comparing notes with the other members of the circle, the
appearance I have thus briefly described were realized by all pretty much
alike. Let it be remembered, however, that what I have attempted to depict
in cold, matter- of-fact language, can never be thoroughly realized except
by the awe-struck witnesses, nor could any word-painting, however vivid,
do justice to the tremendous and harrowing impressions produced on every
mind by the presence of this immense company of formless, nameless
shadows. I might live for centuries ere the memory of that solemn and
terrific scene could be obliterated I might behold death and carnage, the red
battle-field, or mortal catastrophe in its direst form, yet nothing could ever
equal the insupportable horror of the phantom gathering. I recall it now,
with sentiments of dismay which no time has served to diminish.
Presently, in the midst of the awful stillness, there came a sudden
movement amongst the spectral forms; with one accord they all rose to
their feet, and as they did so, a soughing, sighing sound, filled the
apartment, like the uprising of a vast multitude, accompanied by the
rushing of a mighty wind. It was evident that something or somebody had
come into their midst, whom these shrouded phantoms rose to receive.
During what ensued, they all remained erect and motionless, yet still dimly
visible in the peculiar and unearthly glare that illumined the lodge. Then,
without perceiving any other form or realizing who spoke, except from the
tone and substance of what follows, a voice, which all present recognized
as that of Felix von Marx, speaking from the circle of braziers which
surrounded the central altar, addressed us thus: "My Louis is dead; he lies
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GHOST LAND.
in the wood by the side of the river on the road to which I will direct you
through Estelle, and from whence you, John Dudley, must bring him to
your home. Take him to your heart, and do your duty by him as a man, a
friend, a father. Your course towards him will be inspired, and all your
actions guided by those who have his soul in charge. They will give you
the daily bread of wisdom so long as he tarries with you. In the life that
has passed for him, for me, I have greatly wronged him--filed his soul with
mine, clothed his spirit in my own, consumed, absorbed, and killed him.
His spirit has fled in yearning after mine, but during the dread hour of
mortal death, the Father of Spirits has permitted his angels to repair the
mighty wrong, allowed his soul to gain another birth, struggle into a new
life, attain another being; moulded anew by pain and anguish, the crushed
germ of his new-born soul has been revived by pitying angels. The body
sleeps now, but the spirit hovers near, upborne in the hands of ministering
spirits, who weave afresh the vital cord that binds him to mortal life, and
when you have rescued the suffering frame from its grassy death-bed, the
reunion of the new-born soul with its earthly tenement will be effected.
Rescued to be a revelator in the new dispensation, spared to take his place
as a builder in the temple of the new religion, his real life-work must begin
under your fatherhood, John Dudley; and the Lord and Master of life, the
Father of all, do so to you, and more also, as you do to him, my victim, and
my child. Now speed away, and hasten! hasten!"
The voice ceased, or rather the last accents seemed to die off in a
prolonged and singular wail, hushed by the soughing sound before
described, as if the vast concourse of moving phantoms were about to
resume their crouching attitudes, but no, they sank down, down, with a
long, subsiding sigh, until they melted into the ground beneath our feet.
The lights streamed up from the braziers; the veils of separation and
banners that floated from the walls stirred and waved as if moved by a
strong wind; sweet odors streamed for a moment through the room; a few
distant chords of music rang through the air, then all was still, and
everything resumed its place and aspect, as if the whole past scene had
been nothing but an unquiet dream.
By the time the hour of midnight had sounded from the city clocks,
Estelle, our best clairvoyant, Lord V----, and myself were seated in my
barouche, with four of my best horses in harness. The night was wild and
threatening. Heavy banks of clouds from time to time obscured the moon
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GHOST LAND.
and cast their murky shadows across the path which our flying horses
traversed. Our clairvoyant, in a deep magnetic trance, directed our path at
every turn in the road. I myself sat on the box and drove, Estelle being
placed by my side, two outriders following, to render such service as we
might require. We traversed Hampstead Heath, and guided ever by our
admirable somnambulist, we struck off several times from the direct road,
until towards morning, after five hour's ride, pursued without pause or
interruption, we reached the banks of a deep and sullen river, and began to
near the outskirts of an extensive wood.
GHOST LAND.
Speculation was idle; pity gave place to rapid action, sympathy and grief
to quick resolve. Raising the dead form, for such it appeared to be, in my
arms, with Lord V----'s help I carried him from the dreary wood to the
carriage, and ere noon of the day which was just then dawning, I placed
him beneath the shelter of my roof. I brought back to my anxious wife and
children a sad and piteous spectacle 'tis true, a mere skeleton, with scarcely
a shadow of the brilliant grace and beauty that had once distinguished him;
but I knew the invisible powers that had rescued him could restore the life
they had so miraculously saved. I knew that the future called him, and the
hand of waiting destiny could raise him from the very bier. I was neither
surprised nor excited, therefore, when the physicians I had summoned,
reported that the faint flutterings of the still throbbing heart, gave promise
that my cares and anxiety would yet be rewarded, and Professor von
Marx's solemn trust of fatherhood had not been bequeathed to me in vain.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XIV.
On the sad day when I brought the wasted form of their favorite to rest
for a while beneath my roof, my wife insisted upon his being given up to
her tender care. The time came at last, however, when this gentle nurse, no
less than all his other attendants, myself included, began to regard his
convalescence with a mixture of equal astonishment and perplexity.
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GHOST LAND.
We could not disguise from ourselves the startling fact, that the
unfortunate Chevalier, whilst regaining his usual composure and lucidity of
manner, had obviously lost sight of his own identity. That his external
appearance should long retain traces of the terrible sufferings he had
undergone was naturally to be expected; but the look of mature age which
overspread his haggard face and worn form, did not pass away with
returning strength.
Although little more than twenty years of age, he might have been taken
for a man of forty. His voice, naturally sweet and melodious, assumed a
deeper tone, and his accent, strongly marked by his mother's native Italian,
now betrayed the same German intonation peculiar to his adopted father's.
Day by day some fresh token of a wandering mind, fixing itself into the
very self- same grooves of identity that had distinguished Professor von
Marx, became more and more strikingly apparent. He would frequently
perplex his kind nurses by entreating them to tell him where Louis was,
and why he had deserted his unfortunate father now that he was so weak
and helpless. At times he would startle me with the same supplication,
always addressing me as his "dear old friend, John," and speaking of
himself as if he had bee the real Felix von Marx. Sometimes he would ask
whether there was no letter yet from Louis, and speculate, with an anxiety
distressing to witness, on the causes which prevented his hearing from him.
GHOST LAND.
professor's peculiar traits of character, but his entire renunciation of all
ideas and habits which had formerly distinguished himself. The
Chevalier's accomplishment in and love of music gave place to the
professor's indifference, amounting to dislike of the art. Even the sweet
voices of my daughters, which the young man had been accustomed to
join, and listen to with rapt delight, now displeased him, and he would
hastily quit the room when they began to sing. He would accompany us in
riding or driving as far as his feeble strength permitted, but he shrank away
with dislike, almost fear, from the presence of strangers or visitors, and
desired only to spend his time in solitude and deep abstraction. He
frequently spoke of his intention to go and seek Louis, but he seemed
unable to fix his mind upon a permanent idea, and was easily persuaded
that the same week or two since he had been taken ill, was all that had
elapsed, and that Louis was coming home to-morrow or next day. As if to
compensate for me the deep anxiety I suffered on my poor ward's account,
a change arose in the feelings of my family which brought me unmitigated
satisfaction.
GHOST LAND.
philosophy began to be discussed in the servants' hall, it turned out, as the
housekeeper had said, that strange knockings and odd motions of furniture,
had been noticed all over the house. Some of the servants attributed the
trouble to the goblins that their master and Professor von Marx had been so
busy in raising; others, to the work of the late professor's ghost; but all
agreed to refer the whole matter to Lady Emily L--- -, my wife's sister, a
staid widow lady, now on a visit amongst us, and one whose strong sense
constituted her a high authority in such occult difficulties. When Lady
Emily heard the various statements concerning the disturbances now
prevalent, she did not, as had been expected, deny their credibility or
rebuke the narrators for their superstitious opinions, but she quietly
informed the housekeeper and German maid, that her nieces as well as
herself had experienced the same disturbances; that she had been much
occupied in reading accounts from America on similar phenomena, and
certain tracts on the subject had explained the method by which mortals
could put themselves in safe and direct communication with these haunting
spirits; she ended by advising that her nieces and herself, assisted by the
worthy housekeeper and two of the most intelligent of the ladies' maids,
should form a circle on the improved American fashion and see what
would come of it.
At first the bold investigators nearly scared themselves into fits by their
rash experiment, for no sooner had they seated themselves on the
prescribed plan around their circle-table, than that hitherto well-bred and
inanimate article of furniture, began to leap, dance, slide, kick, and behave
in such a generally frantic manner, that the astounded sitters retreated from
it in horror, and ended by summoning a footman to carry the demoniac
piece of furniture away into parts unknown.
After recovering from the first shock of this astounding exhibition, the
pioneers returned to the charge with another table, and then another and
another. At last, finding that as soon as they put themselves in position,
every article they laid hands on behaved in the same unruly manner, they
concluded to consult some of their acquaintances who, as report alleged,
had already taken their first degrees in the mystery of spirit rappings and
were known to be holding nightly circles with immense success. From this
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GHOST LAND.
point it is unnecessary to trace the unfoldments of the great secret with
which my Blanche had come charged. Her gentle mother--at first
strenuously opposed to such terrible doings--had finally been initiated as
one of the sisters, and become classified as an excellent impressional and
seeing medium. My eldest daughter, Sophie, was the writing and drawing
medium of the band, and had already filled up several quires of foolscap
with "communications from the seventh sphere." Blanche was a tipping,
rapping, personating, singing, playing, and every other sort of medium.
Lady Emily and the housekeeper were "developing mediums," and two
German, one Spanish, and one French lady's maid, were rapping and
seeing mediums. In short, I was informed that my entire household had
become hand-and-glove with the spirit- world; that circles in our own
family, as well as in those of several of our acquaintances, were in full
headway, and that they had at length thought it fit and proper that they
should ask my permission to carry on their investigations, as well as my
advice as to their best modes of procedure.
One day, when I was more than ordinarily concerned at the increasing
hallucination of the Chevalier, I determined to ask our spirit friends what
course they would recommend me to pursue with him. It seemed to us all,
a remarkable circumstance that amongst the number and variety of spirits
that had identified themselves through our mediums, Felix von Marx had
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never manifested. I had often asked for him, but without success, and what
was still stranger, none of our spirit friends seemed able to give any
account of him. They all concurred in stating that they believed he was
"still in the earth sphere." Presenting my special request for advice to one
of our trusted spirit guides, we received the following message: "Bring the
Chevalier here." I was doubtful whether he would come; the spirits were
sure of his compliance.
GHOST LAND.
few days on special business. She gave as her town address a certain hotel
in Bond street, and it was a note addressed to her Highness at that hotel
that I had actually been engaged in writing in the morning. I had been
interrupted before I could finish my letter, and having put it in my desk
under lock and key, I had the best reason to believe no human being was
cognizant of its existence, although, as I now found to my astonishment,
there were other eyes than those of humanity on our most secret actions.
Our seance soon closed, and this was the first and last time the Chevalier
ever joined us; in fact, after he had taken his place amongst us, his entire
absence of mind rendered all that passed a complete blank to him.
The next day I drove to the hotel to which the Princess von Marx's
letters were to be directed, and on reaching it, learned to my great surprise
and gratification, that she had already arrived, although she was not
prepared to receive visitors. Sending up my card, with the pressing request
that she would favor me with an interview, I found myself admitted to the
illustrious lady's presence before I had well made up my mind how to
prefer the strange request I had to make to her. I found her Highness
composed enough to compensate for my blundering ways, so I let her rattle
on until it suddenly occurred to me I ought to have opened the interview by
condoling with her on her widowed condition. Before I had got half
through the speech I deemed it proper to make on this point, the princess
interrupted me with a grave assurance that she quite appreciated the depth
of my sympathy, but for her part, her chief concern was in the idea that
poor Felix must be such an unprogressed spirit, in fact, she could not rest
until she had learned something of what sphere he was in. Unprogressed
spirit, spheres, and all that sort of thing! What did I hear? Why, this was
the Spiritualistic dialect to which I was now becoming thoroughly
accustomed, and if my ears did not deceive me, the Princess Ernestine
must be a Spiritualist. A few leading questions soon settled that point.
The princess was a Spiritualist, an ardent one, of course--nay, she had
actually made a visit to London for the sole purpose of consulting a
celebrated American medium who had lately arrived in the city. Thus was
my way made clear for me, and my difficult mission more than half
accomplished. As delicately as I could, I explained to her the singular and
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GHOST LAND.
tenderly intimate tie which had bound her late husband to his young
protege.
When the lady had talked herself out, I at last had an opportunity of
putting in a mild suggestion. I availed myself of it, by informing her my
principal object in soliciting her interference was, with a view of finally
testing the truth of the sad proposition as to whether the young man was or
was not obsessed by the spirit of his adopted father.
As the Chevalier was not only a stranger to the person of the princess,
but had never even heard of her, it occurred to me, any intelligence that
might be manifested by bringing him suddenly into her presence, must
prove decisive of the real condition of his mind.
GHOST LAND.
themselves, provided I could only succeed in procuring the interview and
testify its results as above suggested. As the princess was perfectly willing
to accede to any arrangement that could favor the design which now
possessed her, namely, that of helping her late husband "to become a
progressed spirit," it was agreed that she should accompany me back to my
residence that very evening, so that by taking the Chevalier, as well as the
whole family by surprise, we might make any test of intelligence all the
more confirmatory.
As to the Chevalier himself, the wild glare which lit up his eyes and the
look of horror which transfigured his whole expression, fixed us all in
anxious expectation. The deep flush which at first mantled his worn cheek,
turned to a frightful pallor as he exclaimed in accents of deep agitation:
"Ernestine! Ernestine! in the name of heaven and our dead child, why have
you come hither to torment me?"
"Is it you, Felix?" the lady murmured, in low and trembling accents.
"Is it Felix von Marx?" he asked, in those tones of bitter scorn which I
had so often heard from the professor, but never before from the gentle lips
of his son. "Is this poor, shivering wreck the Felix whom you took on that
bright, fatal summer day, O Ernestine! when I sold you my peace and
liberty for a mess of pottage?" I had heard from von Marx that this very
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expression, wrung from him in one of his most acrimonious matrimonial
disputes, had been more violently resented by his lady than any other
reproach that had ever fallen from his lips. To hear it now repeated by one
who was not even in existence when it had been first uttered, and who
never by any possibility could have heard it applied in such a connection,
was so startling to myself, my wife, and the princess, that the insult it
conveyed, passed us all unnoticed; meantime the Chevalier, assuming a
more dignified and less passionate tone, now addressed the lady with grave
courtesy and begged her to retire with him for a few moments, then bowing
to me and my wife, he motioned the lady with an air of deep respect to
accompany him to the end of the terrace where he seated her, standing
leaning against the stone balustrade to the end of the interview. As they
retired, my wife, who was by this time thoroughly convinced my theory of
obsession was correct, remarked in a frightened whisper how strange it was
that throughout the whole scene the young man should have spoken in the
Russian language. Now, we were both aware that though von Marx spoke
this tongue with perfect facility, he had in vain tried to induce his son to
learn it. Its harsh, guttural tones were so distasteful to him, that he always
declared he could not study it, yet he had used it in addressing the princess,
and that with the fluency and correctness of a native. Madame von Marx
assured us also that he had maintained their protracted conversation
entirely in that language.
What the substance of that interview was we never heard. The lady
wept abundantly as it proceeded, and when at last the Chevalier bowing to
her profoundly, passed us all and retired, Madame, whom we immediately
rejoined, was so much affected, that it was some time before she could
recover her composure. She begged us not to press her for details, but
assured as "that weird stranger" had spoken to her of matters which none
beside God and her late husband could have known, and that had she not
previously been convinced of the truth of Spiritualism, the unmistakable
presence of Felix von Marx's spirit in a human body, whilst his own was
mouldering in the grave, must have converted her. We decided that it
would not be safe to subject our visitor to a renewal of these exciting
scenes, hence the princess determined not to see him again; besides, the
test which we had sought, was fully rendered, and now the only question
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that remained was what we should pursue to release the victim from his
terrible and unnatural bondage.
My good name had already been injuriously associated with vague and,
of course, utterly unfounded rumors concerning the nature of the occult
practices in which I known to be interested. Despite the extreme reticence
of my wife and daughters on the subject of our spiritual investigations, the
tidings had gone abroad that I had succeeded in perverting them from the
faith of their fathers and "inveigling" them into the absurd and
blasphemous pretensions of the new sect calling themselves Spiritualist."
The sudden death of the celebrated Professor von Marx had excited
much injurious comment, and sufficed to cast an ill odor on all who were
supposed to be engaged in the occult pursuits to which whispered rumor
attributed his mysterious demise; but the most distressing of all my
perplexities was the condition of my unhappy ward. Here was a young
foreigner of high birth, distinguished appearance, and heir to property of
which I had been left sole trustee. This gentleman had first disappeared
then reappeared under the most mysterious circumstances, and the deep
seclusion in which I was now said to hold him, served to swell the tide of
prejudice that was mustering against me. The faithful Arabian who
attended on my ward could speak no English, but my other domestics
converted even this circumstance into evil testimony, alleging that he was
stricken dumb to all but his master under the influence of a spell.
The strange sounds and sights that had of late possessed my house, and
the report that the Chevalier was obsessed by demons, were other items of
public gossip against which I found it impossible to make headway.
GHOST LAND.
and length of their visits, the deep interest they took in my private affairs.
They manifested this disposition more especially by their reiterated
inquiries for my "charming ward," and their pressing requests that Mrs.
Dudley would bring him with her to this assembly or the soiree, nay, at
times they propounded the direct question to my wife and daughters, why
the Chevalier never appeared in public any more. To all these
impertinences my poor girls could only plead their guest's ill health and his
inconsolable grief for the loss of his friend.
At length a rumor began to spread, from what source I know not, the
Professor von Marx was not really dead, but that his pupil was, and a hint
was even dropped upon the propriety of exhuming the body to ascertain its
identity.
The poor princess, shocked at the various evil reports that were in
circulation, fled away to the Continent, postponing her intention of helping
her late husband's spirit out of purgatory, until matters were more favorable
for the experiment. My dear wife and children bore up more bravely under
our various trials than I had a right to expect; still we all realized that
though the ominous words "witchcraft" and "magic" were gone out of
fashion, and we could no more become obnoxious to the sorcerer's doom
of fire and fagots, there were yet two words of scarcely less evil import
whispered against us, and these were "Spiritualism" and infidelity," whilst
the fire and fagots of public opinion might be made scarcely less scorching
than the flames of the ancient auto-da-fe.
GHOST LAND.
beings whose nature was revolting to my poor, weak humanity. My friend,
too, was dead, and in the midst of all the revealments which the weird
phenomena around me brought, I could learn no tidings of his immortal
being, except such as filled me with new horror and dismay. The dreadful
hallucination of the young Chevalier, that is, if hallucination it was, rather
than a still more fearful reality-- all this, added to my own doubts, fears,
and present struggles with public opinion, formed such an array of
calamity that, light-hearted and trusting as I generally was, I felt as if I
must soon sink beneath my burdens, unless indeed, something came to
help me endure, or relieve me from them.
GHOST LAND.
prejudice should destroy them, still united in the resolve that we would
continue to bear our cross so long as we realized that Calvary was the
footstool of Paradise.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XV.
GHOST LAND.
redeem them from the depths, and bring them into the paths he destines
their feet to tread. Meantime His providence works through human means,
and these you must employ to fulfill his designs.
"Once more the agencies of magic must be set in motion to redeem its
victims. Call together, then, the Orphic Circle, and there you will receive
the help you solicit, the guidance necessary for your future action, and the
direction we cannot give, but the spirits who govern there can."
Such was the communication rapped out to me, letter by letter, at one of
our own family seances in answer to an urgent appeal on my part for
guidance concerning my future course in connection with the Chevalier de
B---. In obedience to the suggestions of the communicating spirit, one in
whom we had all learned to repose implicit confidence, I determined to
resume my place amongst the members of the Orphic Circle at their next
regular meeting. I had not joined my companions for nearly four months,
and the announcement of my intention to do so induced them to call a
special seance at an earlier period than usual. On the night in question I
left my invalid guest in his own apartment, whither he had retired,
declining to accompany me, as he complained of an unconquerable
tendency to sleep; indeed, he had sunk into a profound slumber before I
left him, and I heard his desire to his servant not to awaken him till the
following morning.
After our lodge had been opened with the usual formulae, the scene
began to resemble that which transpired on the night of Professor von
Marx's death. There was the same uncertainty and waiting expectancy in
our minds; the same restlessness of feeling amongst our neophytes,
clairvoyants, and members. The lamps flickered and became extinguished
several times, although the indescribable feeling of awe that pervaded our
assembly induced the wardens to relight them, contrary to our custom. All
at once, sheets of lightning flashed through the room in every direction,
finally extinguishing every other light and followed by the most
tremendous peals of thunder, I think, I ever heard.
GHOST LAND.
opening of the storm without, deeming that the sensations of oppression we
had experienced might be thus naturally accounted for, but very soon the
feeling of nameless awe returned, and at length we perceived in the
incessant glare of the lightning which filled our otherwise dark lodge-room
with sheets of livid flame, a tall figure standing beside the central altar with
one foot on the lowest step. At first we were disposed to think one of our
own number had assumed this position under the efflatus of the magnetic
trance, but the repeated flashes of the electric fluid illuminating the
stranger's features, at length revealed to all present the unmistakable
similitude of Felix von Marx. We noticed, too, that the figure was arrayed
in a professor's robe, whilst the college cap, which formed a portion of the
costume, was distinctly visible, lying on the white cloth of the altar. Let
me here remark, without any wrong done to a Society many of whose
sessions and underlying principles, the members hold themselves sacredly
bound to keep secret, that the apparitions which we had been accustomed
to invoke, and those described by our seers, clairvoyants and neophytes,
were not the spirits of the dead, or at least not so regarded; hence this
unmistakable apparition, manifest to all present, and so clearly identical
with one whose mortal remains we had ourselves committed to the grave,
made a deeper and more profound impression upon us than a thousand
spectral forms of the "flying soul" or the spirits of nature, whether in or out
of the crystals and mirrors. We knew that on that night no stranger could
by any possibility have entered the hall, nor had any one been present
when the doors were locked and guarded, save the members and officers of
the Society.
Several minutes of fearful suspense elapsed, and then the truth began to
flash upon us, that the apparition of von Marx was not alone. Seated on
the ground were a circle of dark, shrouded figures, such as we had seen
some months before, only this time there was but one circle, and this
seemed to enclose the altar and surround the tall stranger on every side but
one, and in that opening, on the side of the altar opposite to von Marx,
stood a female form veiled and enveloped in a luminous white, sparkling
mist, through which we could dimly discern the outlines of her form. As
this beautiful apparition with all the other phantom surroundings became
visible, it seemed as if we, the watchers, would be turned to stone. My
blood began to freeze in my veins, my eyeballs to start from their sockets,
and a horror such as I had never believed could possess a mortal without
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GHOST LAND.
bereaving him of life, stole over me and threatened me with speedy
dissolution. Had no relief come I am certain I should have expired; and the
sensations I then felt, I was informed, were shared by most of my
companions. I have seen as well as heard much of spiritual phenomena
since that time; beheld what is called by mediums "materialized forms,"
that is, human souls clothed again in the panoply of substantial fleshy
bodies; but all these sights paled before the spiritual actuality of this
dreadful phantom band, these dead alive, through whose impalpable forms
we could see the opposite wall, the glare of the lightnings, and each other;
these beings, who diffused around them that aroma of horror, from which
our sentient humanity shrinks back; between whom and us exists an
invisible barrier, which none can pass and live. But relief came at last. A
slow and solemn strain of music filled the hall, commencing at first in soft
and distant echoes, then it grew stronger, firmer, and more distinct, until it
came amongst us, and was evidently accompanied by the soft but regular
beat of marching feet. Something then passed me by; I felt the wind of
moving bodies, and I saw my companions stir and turn their heads to look
in the line of an invisible procession, which all could feel though none
might see it. We also felt that the line of march was towards the altar. We
saw by the unceasing glare of the lightning, the crouching forms look up
and the tall stranger draw back to make way for the invisible host.
A space was cleared in front of the altar, which presently became filled
up with a dense mass, and whilst a succession of rapid flashes kept the
lodge in a continuous vivid light, we saw a bier covered with white
drapery, on which seemed to lie the sleeping form of the Chevalier de B---.
Then the female figure extended across the bier a staff wreathed with a
shining serpent. This she pointed towards the male figure, who took it
from her hand, and bent his head as if acknowledging a gift. The music
ceased, and we heard a voice issuing, as it seemed, from the spot on which
von Marx stood, although his lips moved not, nor did he appear to speak.
The voice said: "The life transfer has been made; man's work is ended,
and God's has begun. The wool of two lives is spun anew; one regains his
spiritual, the other his mortal birthright. God's will be done on earth as it is
in heaven."
Then the tone changed, and from the direction of the female form came
a voice, sweeter than ever tone of music rung in mortal ears saying:
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GHOST LAND.
"Behold, I show you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be
changed; for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised
incorruptible." If more was spoken, our deafen ears lost it, for peal after
peal of thunder shook the hall, distracting us by its crashing vibrations. A
few seconds of thick darkness prevailed, and when the next streams of
electric fire filled the hall, it was empty; at least, the phantoms had
vanished, although we felt their dread presence passing us by, pressing
against some of us the bier they carried, and heard amidst the pauses in the
heavenly artillery, the beat of the rhythmical march and the faint vibrations
of distant music, swallowed up again by peals of the rolling thunder.
Muttered exclamations of horror and the flare of matches followed. Some
one in mercy to the rest had relighted the lamps, enabling us to look at each
other's wild and haggard faces and stagger forth from that place of dread
and glamour.
For four days and nights I and my distracted family watched by the cold,
rigid, and lifeless form of our unhappy guest. No morning of awakening
life had come for him, and the physicians pronounced that the vital spark
had fled; nay, they urged, with what all who loved him felt to be indecent
haste, that the formulae of interment should proceed at once. My
mediumistic girls insisted that life still remained, and that he would revive
to thank and bless us; in fact, the grief and indignation of my wife and
loving children at the conduct of strangers around us, was only equalled by
the fear and inhumanity they displayed. The medical men shrugged their
shoulders, sneered at the tender assiduity of the poor ladies, and muttered
prophetic remarks about lunatic asylums. My dear wife sat holding the
sleeper's lifeless hand, bathing it with her tears, but like myself, felt
uncertain in what direction to yield credence.
Deep as was our concern for our cherished guest, there were other points
in our situation of an equally distressing character. During the entire four
nights and days of our sad watch, an array of terrors beset us difficult to
describe. The air, the ground, the walls, and every place and thing around
us, seemed to be charged with unearthly sounds and spontaneous motion.
Sometimes we sat listening to the pattering of little feet, or the regular beat
of a marching host. The whining tones of small animals, the rustling of
silk, flapping of wings, or a succession of low knockings, greeted us
everywhere; strange birds flew through our halls and galleries, and rushed
past us in our very chambers; indistinct forms flitted hither and thither by
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GHOST LAND.
day as well as night. At times the noises deepened to an indescribable
uproar, in which the ear found no special tone to distinguish, and then
soughed away to deep sighs, or distant moans. When neither sight nor
hearing was affected, the scene became still more ghastly and oppressive in
appeals to the sense of touch; some object would press against us, or so
disturb the air, as to cause vibrations in all things around us. Towards
evening and in the gray of dawn, we heard on each successive night, the
sound of solemn music, which would alternately advance and recede, like a
band of performers who came towards the place wherever we might
happen to be, passed through it, and then retreated from it. These strains
were not only delightful to the ear, but wonderfully soothing to our excited
minds; they seemed to convey an element of consolation and a message of
peace, very cheering to us and entirely free from the ghastly prestige of all
the other manifestations. At the earnest request of my faithful associates of
the Orphic Circle, who rallied around my afflicted family with true
fraternal kindness, we had placed the poor Chevalier on a bier, surrounded
with burning tapers, and a profusion of sweet, fresh flowers in which he so
passionately delighted. On several occasions the tapers would flicker and
go out spontaneously, but as we never left the sleeper alone, the watchers
were careful to relight the tapers at the very instant they were extinguished.
Before the fourth night had set in, several of our domestics had left us in
irrepressible terror. Those who remained, though they had grown old and
attached in our service, expressed their deepest horror of the scenes
enacting around them, but pity for our distress overcame their fears, and
provided they were permitted to move about in groups, they determined
not to forsake us. The Arabian, who had attended the young Chevalier
from early infancy, throughout this whole dread period remained unmoved.
He never left the chamber where his beloved master lay, and if we had not
brought him his daily mess of rice and other simple articles of food, he
might have starved ere he would have quitted his solemn charge.
GHOST LAND.
fastenings, and by her cheerful voice and noble example, stimulated the
timid domestics to exert themselves in guarding the house from the
possible inroad of marauders. These precautions were by no means
unnecessary. All sorts of wild reports had gone abroad concerning the
state of our distressed household. For two days the door was besieged with
curious inquirers, who sought under any pretense to gain admission, or
learn tidings of what was passing within. It would seem that the reports of
those who left us were rather discouraging to the idly curious without, for
after the first two days of our mournful watch and ward, our house was
quite deserted, and even the tradesmen who presented themselves with
goods at the servant's entrance, handed them in and fled away, with signs
of terror as marked, as if the place had been infected with some dreadful
pestilence.
My faith increased with every new trial, and at last I felt able to endure
whatever more might come, and only marvelled what the worst might be. I
must not omit to mention that there was one phenomenon which, though
calculated to inspire the most dread of all other's, filled us with sentiments
of hope and courage, for which we could not account, even to ourselves.
This was the unmistakable sound of Felix von Marx's voice, speaking from
the empty air, speaking above, around us, we knew not from whence, but
ever sounding with a tone so clearly human, kind, and encouraging, yet
firm and commanding, that all our fears vanished directly his accents met
our ears. Sometimes he uttered only the one word, "John," sometimes
"Dear John," or "I am here; fear nothing." On one occasion my little
Blanche startled our dreary hall with one of her bright, ringing peals of
laughter, her delight was so great, as she heard the full rich, well-
remembered tone crying, "Good little Blanche, well done."
On the fourth evening this consoling voice repeated many times in clear
and cheery accents, "All's well!" Towards midnight, worn out as we were
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GHOST LAND.
with a distress that knew no parallel, oppressed with long watching, the
desertion of the world without, and the increasing prevalence of the awful
disturbances within, I insisted that my dear girls should retire with their
weeping mother to rest, and that no one should watch with me that night,
but the faithful Arabian, and my Orphic Brother, Sir Thomas L----. Before
parting for the night, I dismissed my tired domestics with a short prayer
and kind benediction. I then assembled my family, including Sir Thomas
and the Arabian, in my library, which adjoined the room where the bier
was laid. There met together, I read to my sobbing listeners the beautiful
sixty-ninth Psalm, which commences thus: "Save me, O God, for the
waters are come in unto my soul." Just as I reached the pathetic words, "I
am become a stranger unto my brethren and an alien unto my mother's
children," I was struck dumb by hearing the voice of von Marx crying in
sharp, clear, distinct tones, "Louis, Louis, awake!" Instantly there was
movement in the death-chamber; a deep drawn sigh, then another and
another. Other sounds followed, echoed by the beating of every throbbing
heart; then--the sound of a footstep. It advanced nearer, nearer yet. The
half-closed door between the rooms was gently moved, then pushed open,
and the Chevalier, dressed in his ordinary costume, as we had laid him on
the bier, very pale, but moving with a firm step and erect bearing, stood in
our midst. The light of reason was in his fine eyes; the smile of
recognition on his lips. Extending to my wife and myself each, a cold
hand, which we warmly clasped to our hearts, he said in his own natural
voice and sweet Italian accent, "My dear friends, I have had a long, long
sleep. I see you thought it was to have been my last; but your wayward
Louis is not dead yet you see, and will live for many years to thank and
bless you for all your kindness."
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XVI.
MR. DUDLEY'S DIARY CONTINUED.
At the mountain's foot is the broad expanse of my own domain, the park
and grounds of my old ancestral home, and by my side, stretched like
myself on the mossy turf, is the object of my last eight months of incessant
care, the Chevalier de B---.
A greater change than that between my town residence and the seaside
home in which we now luxuriate, has come over my esteemed but singular
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guest. All of youth or youthful manners, thoughts or habits, have wholly
disappeared in him. He speaks and acts like a man of mature life, yet he is
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GHOST LAND.
not yet twenty-one years of age. Although he has become almost restored
to his ordinary share of health and strength, the cataclysms of the past have
robbed him of that vigor and elasticity which should mark his time of life
and whilst regaining the singular beauty of person which formerly
distinguished him, there is a weary air, and a sad, far-away expression in
his fine face, which never brightens into mirth or lights up with joy. He
never speaks of Professor von Marx, and whenever I chance to mention his
name, he listens with a shiver, and shrinks away from the subject with
evident distress, that I have come to regard that once dear and familiar
name as tabooed between us. The passive submission which once
distinguished his manner, has now changed to stately, dignified demeanor,
which speaks of fixed purpose and firm will. Though kind and courteous
to all, affectionate to myself and family, and deferential to the opinions of
others, there is a wall of isolation built up around him, which none can
surmount; a lonely abstraction which repels all human sympathy and
silently rejects all confidence. In the days of convalescence, I
communicated to him the details of Professor von Marx's will, his generous
bequest of his small yet sufficient fortune to him, and his desire that I
should become his guardian and trustee. He listened to the financial details
with some show of impatience, carelessly alluded to his own resources,
which he supposed were already sufficient for his simple requirements; but
he seemed too indifferent even to converse upon a topic so important to
most young men as the bequest of an independence. Somewhat piqued in
my own mind by what I could not for the life of me help considering as
ingratitude for the poor professor's fatherly care, I remarked, perhaps rather
coldly: "My dear old friend's chief sources of income were derived from
the exercise of his brilliant talents; still, the bequest of every shilling he
died possessed of, proves his desire to convince you that his affection for
you survives beyond the grave. Don't you think so?" With an expression
of anguish such as I have rarely seen upon any human countenance, the
young man gazed at me for a moment, then crying in a choking voice: "Oh,
hush! hush! if you would not kill me or drive me mad," he buried his face
in his hands, over which the tears streamed fast and thick. I was shocked
at the effect of my unkind remark and strove to atone for it by blundering
apologies, but I soon found I had unstopped with reckless hand the vials of
a grief too deep for utterance, and one which, thus renewed, bore down all
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the barriers of self-control, which the silent mourner had been laboring to
erect around him. His form shook with convulsive sobs; he threw himself
on the ground, tearing up handfuls of earth and sod, in his wild and
uncontrollable grief. I was fairly aghast, and knew not what to say or do in
such a crisis, when, for the first time for nearly five months, I was equally
startled and rejoiced to hear the low, deep tones of Felix von Marx's spirit,
murmuring clearly in my ear, "Leave him to me." I retreated, and never
again ventured on such dangerous ground, except to speak of such business
arrangements as were absolutely essential to be discussed. When I again
mentioned the topic of my guardianship, he thanked me, with many
expressions of grateful appreciation, but stated, as one that had formed a
resolution from which there could be no departure, that he should be glad
to stay with me for one year he then proposed to take his leave, having
determined to visit Madame, his mother, now his sole surviving parent in
India. I was a little taken aback at the quiet air of determination with
which this plan was announced, and asked him if he desired to spend that
intervening year in college, or some seat of learning, where he could
cultivate his wonderfully intellectual powers by study.
"No, no, no! my friend," he replied, with that nervous haste which
always seemed to possess him, when any allusions were made to his past
life. "I shall never study again, at least not in school or colleges. My
future studies must be conducted in the hard school of life, but not in
books. I cannot read! I cannot read! I shall not need to do so either." And
read he did not. I never saw him open a book whilst he remained with me,
yet his conversation upon every subject except his own past life, was
brilliant and masterly. He played and sang exquisitely, yet he never
glanced at a note of music, nor do I know when or how he had learned that
art. Except in his preparation for his military career, none of his
acquirements were of a scholastic character, yet their compass and range
was immense. He could solve a mathematical problem and speak with the
utmost correctness of geometrical proportions, yet sound him on the
methods by which he had arrived at his conclusions, and he became
confused, and said he had not studied enough to answer. He would
discourse brilliantly on geological formations and was never weary of
descanting on the grandeur of the universe, but when pressed to answer
some question of mere detail, he would gaze wildly at the questioner, and
complain that such subjects troubled him. In ancient lore, especially on the
foundations of theology, astrology, and ethnology, I have heard this
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strange being discourse by the hour. With eyes fixed on some far-distant
object, and seemingly unconscious of the interest and admiration he
excited, he would pour forth a stream of eloquence on the most occult
subjects. Color, form, tone, earth, heaven, the marvels of astronomy, the
superb architecture of the universe--everything, in short, that a long life of
profound study would have informed others of, this young man described
in words that burned into the listener's consciousness, and when the tides
of thought ceased to flow, he would stammer, stare wildly, seem worn and
exhausted, and sink back into his usual abstracted isolation. Nothing ever
seemed to distress him so much, as the attempt to find out whence he
derived his knowledge, or how he had acquired such a vast fund of
information. I have seen others of this stamp since then; trance mediums
gifted with a similar influx of inspiration, but the type was new to me when
first I saw the Chevalier de B---, nor do I ever remember any somnambulist
as highly gifted as him.
These were the very words he was speaking at the time marked in my
diary at the opening of this chapter. We had never held any seances of the
Orphic Society since the memorable night of the Chevalier's resuscitation.
The great shock we then experienced, and the cares which had since
engrossed me with my invalid ward, had determined us to adjourn until the
winter. During my young friend's convalescence all my butterfly
acquaintances had returned; congratulations poured in upon me, and my
weird reputation changed for a character of "unmixed firmness and
benevolence;" meantime, I had deemed it prudent in my intercourse with
my singular charge to avoid all allusion to his past life or occult subjects
generally. How to deal most tenderly with this fearfully sensitive nature
was my sole care, and in so doing, I utterly disregarded the advice of my
Orphic associates, namely, to take every opportunity of cultivating his
remarkable powers of clairvoyance, or, as we had now learned to term it,
mediumistic gifts. My daughters and many of their young acquaintances
still held spirit circles and I often joined them with my dear wife, when we
derived such happiness as the earth and earthly things could not bring, in
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communion with our beloved angel guardians. To the Chevalier I never
spoke of these seances. I believe he knew of their occurrence, but he never
mentioned them to me, and generally absented himself from the house
when they were in session.
Unearthly sounds had not wholly ceased, nor did the flitting forms of
unknown beings altogether disappear from our old, time-honored
residence, but these mystic sights and sounds were chiefly confined to the
apartments occupied by the Chevalier and his arab servant, and into these
charmed precincts I was the only member of the family that ever
penetrated. I know I heard thrilling, mystic voices more than once, in
conversation with my strange ward when I approached his rooms;
sometimes, too, I saw unmistakably, a beautiful, luminous female form
hovering in the moonlight when I had lingered with him alone after the
night had fallen; but as he never entered with me on the topic of the inner
life, and I would no more have dared broach it to him than I would have
trodden on a wounded foot, the subject was entirely dropped between us
until the evening that again introduces us to-- whoever my readers may
chance to be. On this occasion my guest, raising himself on his arm and
fixing his dark, luminous eyes on mine, said: "Mr. Dudley, why don't you
renew the Orphic seances with which you were so interested?"
"Why don't I renew them?" I said, taken aback by the abruptness of the
question. "Because--because--I have been engaged in other matters;
besides, you see, we are away off in the country, and our lodge is in town,
you know."
"I like your idea," I replied, "but you know we have none of our lucides
or clairvoyants within reach, nor shall we be likely to meet with them again
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till winter." "You will need none," replied the Chevalier in his far-off,
dreamy way.
I did not question him then, for I was beginning to understand this
"mystic" better and better every day. I only asked, therefore, when he
thought we might begin.
For the next six days I busied myself incessantly with gardeners,
woodsmen, and carpenters. I had a space cleared in the center of a thick
grove of pines which grew in the bottom of an amphitheatre, surrounded
on all sides but one by precipitous rocks difficult in descent. The fourth
side was bounded by a lovely little lake, on which I was accustomed to
have boats plying for the enjoyment of my family and visitors. As the lake
and the whole of the surrounding ground was on my own estate, there was
no fear of any strangers gaining access to our romantic lodge, especially
when I issued orders that no boats should ply at the time when we were in
session. As our meetings were fixed for the evening, I had lamps hung up
in the trees around the open space, and a temporary shed erected in which
to keep our instruments of music, etc.
There was but one of our London members living near me, and that was
a fine old French gentleman who might have formed a not unapt
representative of Scott's "Last Minstrel." He was a poet "improvisatore"
and divine harpist. Several of our other members were musicians, singers,
and members of an amateur madrigal club, to which in my younger days I
had myself belonged. Here, then, were all the elements required for our
seances, save always the officiating priest, about the identity of whom I at
first speculated with some anxiety. When the appointed evening arrived,
however, I at once understood that my young friend, penetrated with
gratitude for the services I and my family had been the happy instruments
of rendering him in his hours of severest trial, had determined to devote the
one year of his residence with me to the gratification of my dearest wishes-
-namely, the interpretation of the divine order of being, the profound
mysteries of nature, and the grand arcana of creation, as revealed by the
inspiration of the noblest spiritual influences, through his own entranced
lips.
For one entire year I and a chosen circle of friends were the highly
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privileged recipients of these sublime truths, conveyed to us partly in our
woody amphitheatre at N----, partly in a London lodge, which we had
fitted up expressly for these sacred meetings, from which all but an
assemblage of kindred minds were excluded.
From the first seance, I had fortunately secured the conditions by which
they could be reported. The memoranda transcribed from the
phonographic notes of one of our party, who kindly devoted himself to this
service, are still in my possession, and may one day be given to the world.
Much of the ideality they abound with has become filtered through the
utterances of other inspired media during the new dispensation, but never
have I read, heard of, or imagined a scheme of divine order so grand, so
just, complete, and beautiful in all its details, as that furnished us by the
inspiration of this highly-gifted mystic.
Looking back upon my intercourse with the Chevalier de B---, I find one
of the most noteworthy and interesting examples of abnormal power and
spiritual inspiration it has ever been my lot to encounter, but I have also
found one of the most striking evidences how far the practices of animal
magnetism and human psychology can be abused and perverted from their
true use to become an instrument of ruin, mental imbecility, and even
madness.
GHOST LAND.
pure spiritual influences and high inspiration may become, when exercised
upon a self- centered mind and freed from the intervention of powerful
human influences.
The time came at length when his highly prized ministry was to cease
amongst us, and young and old in my household, mistress and maid,
master and servant, looked sorrowfully and with heavy hearts to that to-
morrow when we should see his face no more.
The day came when I was to depart for America, my friend to India--I
on a mission hardly known to my family, scarcely acknowledged to
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myself, to search into the realities of the much-vaunted American
Spiritualistic movement by a tour through the United States that I designed
should occupy me one year; my friend to enter upon those stormy scenes
of public life which have made for him a name and fame which few would,
or ever will associate with the dreamy, unearthly mystic whom Felix von
Marx delighted to call his "moody sprite," his "well-beloved Ariel."
"God bless and keep you, and good angels have you in charge, my
Louis!" I muttered, between the spasms of nose-blowing and eyes-wiping,
as I stood waving a very damp handkerchief on the wharf from which a
splendid East Indiaman was setting sail on the day when I took leave of my
friend--he whom I would so gladly, so proudly have called my son, had
Fate so willed it."
"We meet again this day ten years hence, my kind and generous friend,"
cried the Chevalier de B---, returning the salute."
GHOST LAND.
PART II
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GHOST LAND.
PART II.
--------
GHOST LAND.
That mars thy creature;
From grief that is but passion,
From mirth that is but feigning,
From tears that bring no healing,
From wild and weak complaining,
Thine whole strength revealing,
Save, oh, save!
* The beautiful lines here quoted were selected from a spiritual journal,
entitled The Principle, and sent by the editor some years ago to the
Chevalier de B---, who has ever since adopted them as his favorite
expression of prayerful aspiration; he also deems them the most
appropriate possible prologue to the second part of his autobiography.--
ED. GHOST LAND.
241
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XVII.
AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF
THE CHEVALIER BE B---- CONTINUED –
RETROSPECT -- SCENES AND
INCIDENTS IN THE LAND OF THE
FAKIR.
GHOST LAND.
day, and the next to skulk in the shadows of political disgrace, and wander
without home or land, without where to lay a houseless head; to muster all
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the fires of life upon the altar of a vain love, and se them quenched into
dust and ashes; to heap up fame and glory, knowledge and renown, love
and triumph; pierce the mysteries of space--even to the unknowable--and
command its legionaries, climb up to heaven and steal thence the
Promethean fire, plunge into the abyss and master its hidden secrets--to do
all this, and then see the piled-up treasures fade, sink, burn, consume, grow
dim, cold--nothing- -or at least melt away into a vague memory! This may
be the sum of twenty years--the twenty years which, to recall in the
aggregate, is but a breath in time, a turning of the sand-glass, but which to
live, minute by minute, is all this and more; for all this and more, formed
the sum of my twenty years of life after I parted from the kindest, best of
friends, John Cavendish Dudley, on a London wharf, to sail away for the
burning land of Hindostan.
GHOST LAND.
the voice of an ever faithful spirit friend, murmuring in my ear, "There is
another and a better world."
Love and truth! These are the fruits which the bruised hands of
humanity can gather from the tree of spiritual life which grows in the midst
of earth- life's barren wilderness. Were it not so, I never would have
written these pages; never have opened the vest of the careless
cosmopolitan to expose to view the scarred breast that throbs beneath it;
but knowing as I do that mortal life with all its tremendous pains and
penalties becomes not only endurable, but a boon and a blessing, when
heaven is the goal, and rest and glory beckon us on, so I have determined
to pause in the midst of my wild career, and give such scattered rays of
light as I have gathered up to the world that suffers as I have done, and that
perishes as I should have done amidst life's storm and tempests, had I not
felt the grasp of a spirit hand upon my sinking form, and heard the precious
whisper of assurance staying me in the deepest trough of the stormiest sea.
Hitherto I have been compelled to make personal adventures the vehicle in
which strange spiritual experiences were to be given to the world. The
mysterious processes of animal magnetism and their silent but formative
effects for good and evil were, I know, more potentially illustrated in my
own case than any other that I could have cited.
GHOST LAND.
little more to write of myself except as an instrument for illustrating the
truths my life conserves. Henceforth I shall write only of that ghost land
which I shall soon enter, and to whose stern inquisition I shall have to
account for every talent committed to my charge. Heaven help me to
answer, "I have done thy bidding."
Looking back upon a single life, or the life of the race as revealed by
ethnological science, we cannot perceive a foot of land trodden by
humanity without a circle of luminous haze encompassing it. This haze is
not the reflection of a dark body intercepting rays of light, but is a light per
se, a radiance which proceeds from some luminous body, a beam cast from
some world or inhabitant of a world in which the ordinary rule of lights
and shadows is reversed. History, tradition, prose and poetry, religion and
even stern, dogmatic science itself, all unite to record the fact of these
luminous interventions pervading human history; and as we can no more
have an idea without a name, or a name without some idea of what it is the
signification, so we have given to the ideas which these world-wide, ages-
long, luminous interventions suggest, the names of magic, religion,
supernaturalism, and spiritism.
The last is the only truly comprehensive term that has ever been applied
in this direction, for magic is the science by which spiritism can be reduced
to an art and has been peculiar to a few epochs of time, whilst it is
measurably lost in others; religion signifies only the ideas which a special
people entertain on this universal realm of luminosity; supernaturalism
implies something outside of nature which this thing is not; hence,
spiritism alone defines what it is, because spiritism implies the science of
spirit, which is what we claim for the phenomena under consideration.
Spiritualism applies to a condition of mind and refers to spiritually-minded
people; hence, to my apprehension, the word "Spiritualism," though much
more commonly used in this connection, is a misnomer. Spiritism, or the
science of spirit, can exist without spiritists being spiritual; hence when I
write of the science which treats of spirits, I ask my readers to understand
me in the term spiritism. heaven speed the day when all spiritists may
merit the cognomen of Spiritualists now so much abused and perverted!
Spiritism alone can explain the phenomena of life and death, as well as
all the extra-mundane sounds, sights, monitions, antipathies, and
attractions which are not explicable on human hypotheses, but which have
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accompanied the race in all time, varying in character and proportion at
different periods and also under different external influences.
The intense eagerness with which the archives of the past have been
ransacked leaves this age in very wide-spread enjoyment of the most
popular Spiritualistic testimony, ancient, classical, medieval, and modern,
concerning the nature of apparitions, spiritual powers, gifts, and forces. It
might with justice be asked what any fresh writer can have to say on
subjects so exhaustively considered already, and almost the first criticism
which now greets the issue of a new Spiritualistic work is, "Pshaw! there is
nothing new here. I have known and seen all that before." In some
instances, especially in my own life experiences, there may be this
variation in the popular cry: Pshaw! that cannot be true, because I have not
seen it all before." But for both classes of readers there exists a necessity,
which is, that we should become more exacting in defining, cataloguing,
and labelling the truths we have, and placing them in more appropriate
niches than the memory or disjointed entries of any single generation can
afford; hence my present task. Follow me who will, in my attempts to
execute it.
GHOST LAND.
as man himself is. The link of connection between spirit and matter is
force, and the exhibition of force is motion in all its infinite varieties. To
sum up briefly the order of existence as it infinite varieties. To sum up
briefly the order of existence as it has been shown to me, I commence with
realms of pure spiritual life, endless in number, infinite in extent, where
spiritual essences dwell--beings without passions, vices, or virtues, the
Adams and Eves of inconceivable paradises, whose genius is innocence.
Incapable of growth or progress until they have become incarnated in
matter and individualized by experience, these spiritual essences are
attracted to material earths, where they become the germ-seed of human
souls by running an embryotic race through the elements and all the
different grades of matter.
Thus the seed of soul existence is planted in that diffused state of matter
known as gas or air; in that condition of combustion known as fire; in the
fluidic state recognized as water; in the solids called generically the earth.
It also assimilates to the separate parts of earth, such as rocks, stones,
crystals, gems, plants, herbs, flowers, trees, and all grades of the animal
kingdom; in short, through all tonal varieties of nature. In these successive
states spirits are born through the mould of a rudimental form of matter;
they grow, die, become spirits, are again attracted to earths, where they are
incarnated, by virtue of a previous progress, into a higher state of being
than they formerly occupied. Their bodies are composed of matter, it is
true, but matter in conditions so embryotic and unparticled as to be
invisible to mortal eyes, except through occasional clairvoyance; and yet
they occupy space, and live in grades of being appropriate to their stage of
progress.
These grades of being are realms which inhere in matter, permeating its
every space and particle; in fact, the life of the elementaries, as these
embryotic spirits are called, is the life principle of matter, the cause of
motion, and that force which scientists affirm to be an attribute of matter.
In hundreds of clairvoyant visits made by my spirit to the country of the
elementaries, it was given me to perceive that their collective life principle,
that which clothes their spirits, and forms their rudimental bodies, is in the
aggregate the life principle of the earth and all that composes it, or that
mysterious realm of force, which, as above stated, is erroneously supposed
to be mere attribute of matter. Again and again it has been shown me how
the germ of soul, through an infinite succession of births, lives, deaths, and
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incarnations in elementary existence, at last attains to that final spiritual
state from whence it becomes for the last time attracted to matter, and is
born into the climax of material existence, manhood. The progress of spirit
through the conditions of elementary being has been explained to me as
correspondential to the subsequent embryotic periods of human gestation.
As an elementary it progresses through the matrix of nature. As a human
being it is subject to a much shorter but perfectly analogous progress
through the matrix of human maternity. The one is necessary to the growth
and individualization of an immortal spirit; the other to the growth and
individualization of a mortal body, in which the spirit's final career through
matter is effected. The two states are so perfectly analogous that when,
after some years of clairvoyant practices amongst the Berlin Brotherhood,
Professor von Marx subjected me to a course of study in anatomy and
medicine, I was enabled to point out to him in the different stages of
growth attained by the human foetus, the most perfect analogies with
similar stages of being amongst the elementaries.
The moment the pilgrim spirit has passed through the embryotic life of
human maternity, its incarnations through matter are accomplished, and it
is born on earth with the new function of self-consciousness, or I should
more properly say, conscious individuality. Let it ever be remembered that
there is no realization known to man of the awkward and impossible word
"annihilation." No particle of matter, no function of being can become the
subject of annihilation. Self-consciousness is the function of the human
soul, and individuality is the result of self-consciousness. Can this
individuality be lost, this self-consciousness be ever quenched?
Impossible! Quoting from a lecture by Emma Hardinge Britten on this
subject, I re-echo her unanswerable argument for immortality--aye, eternal
being--when she says: "Could you alter, change, or impinge upon that
individualism which enables each human being to say I am, you find
annihilation; for self-consciousness is individuality, and individuality is the
distinguishing characteristic of human life; so when man has attained
individuality he has attained immortality, for you can no more annihilate a
function than you can an atom.
After the death of the mortal body the soul commences a fresh series of
pilgrimages, starting from the exact grade of progress it has attained
through its incarnations in matter; but its progress now is a spirit, with the
memory, individuality, and identity it has gained in its incarnations through
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the rudimental states of matter. Born at last as a soul, its new states or
series of progressions commence in the spirit spheres, where every grade
of spiritual unfoldment and future progress is amply provided for. To my
dim apprehension, and in view of my long years of wandering through
spirit spheres, where teaching spirits and blessed angels guided my soul's
ardent explorations, this brief summary of our pre-existent states explains
all that the reincarnationists have labored so sedulously to theorize upon. I
dare not touch those theories with the pen of satire or rude denial, for those
who urge them command my deep respect for their sincerity, humanity,
and love of justice; but whilst the scheme thus opened up to me explained
my soul's origin, the universal and reiterated assurances of myriads of
spirits in every stage of a progressive beyond, convinced me there was no
return to mortal birth, no retrogression in the scale of cosmic being, as a
return to material incarnations would undoubtedly be, and that all the
demands of progress, justice, and advancement are supplied by the
opportunities afforded the soul in the spheres of spiritual existence.
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XVIII.
GHOST LAND.
friends. I never joined their happy seances, nor sought to impose my
restless nature and troubled moods upon their harmonious gatherings; but
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often I hovered around them in spirit, and from thence, as well as in many
less holy scenes, have learned the methods of communing with spirits,
through the simple telegraphy induced by automatic passivity in what is
called spirit mediumship.
And yet who will sympathize with or understand me, when I own that
the apparitions of these precious beings, with all their varied and ingenious
methods of unsought, uninvoked telegraphy, could not always satisfy or
convince me of my own soul's immortality, or their continued identity
beyond a brief span of evanescent spiritual existence, a transitory state in
which that identity might be preserved for a while, to be engulfed,
swallowed up, canceled again, by the horrible necessity of running the
rounds of never ending, material existences. I apologized to myself and to
my beloved comforters for these morbid fantasies--fantasies which fled
like the shadows of night before the sunlight of their glorious presence, and
yet returned again and again to haunt me when my feverish spirit was left
to prey upon itself. That for which my soul hungered, was a grander,
broader perception of the divine scheme than I could realize from the
spheres of being absolutely known to us. I longed for a philosophy of life
here and hereafter, to perceive the finger of Deity pointing to the beyond,
beyond the grave, beyond the origin and ultimate of a single life, and I
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would far rather have been assured I should soon "sleep the sleep that
knows no waking," than to be tossed thus restlessly on an ocean of
speculation without compass, rudder, pilot, or anchor.
The spirits of those I most loved and could have trusted, conversed with
me and often manifested intelligence foreign to my own consciousness,
and such as proved the identity of the special individuals who rendered it;
but that which they communicated failed to elucidate the mysteries by
which I was surrounded. Although they were constantly demonstrating by
a thousand ingenious modes the fact that a foreign intelligence addressed
me and a halo of unceasing love and watchfulness surrounded me, their
revelations in other respects were slight and inconsequential, consisting for
the most part of petty items of information, monitions, warnings, and
prophesies, all of which I soon found to be true; yet beyond these and other
small platitudes there seemed to be no common ground of ideality between
us.
I longed, oh, how passionately I longed for something higher! but when
I pressed home my urgent pleadings for light upon my spiritual visitants,
an unaccountable weariness possessed me, and compelled me to suspend
an intercourse which seemed impossible to maintain and live. Sometimes
the terrible theory of the Berlin Brotherhood recurred to me, and I would
be almost disposed to believe, with them, that these apparitions were in
reality nothing more than "astral spirits" exhaled from the material casket
in death, but that the soul was, like the body, dissipated into the elements,
or else was taken up again in fresh forms with which its past existence
maintained no sympathetic relations. Let me add at once that these vague
and most miserable theories were sure to be refuted almost as soon as
formed, for some blessed messenger from the life beyond would present
itself immediately, and after proving how completely my thoughts had
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been scanned, give me slight but deeply significant tokens, connecting
them with the continued life individuality, and personal ministry of my
angel visitant, and leaving me, for the time being, firmly fixed in the
assurance of immortal life and love beyond the confines of the grave.
Besides the various societies for the study of occultism to which I belonged
in Europe, I became affiliated with many others during my wanderings
through the East.
Like most persons interested in the occult side of nature, I had no sooner
returned to India, where indeed, my earliest days of childhood had been
passed, than I became fascinated with the extraordinary and preternatural
powers displayed by Oriental ecstatics. Had I published these pages ten or
twenty years ago I might have acceptably filled a volume with a record of
the marvels I witnessed. As it is, every cheap periodical has become so
redolent of East Indian magic that the gamin who polishes your boots in
the streets of Paris or London, will tell you half-a-dozen snake-charming
stories in as many minutes; the smirking damsel who hands you a light for
your cigar will recite to you more tales of exhumed fakirs than she can
count Havannas in her show- case; and the frizeur who trims your beard
will descant upon the facility with which dervishes can cut off heads and
put them on again, how mango-trees can be grown in a given number of
seconds, or thieves discovered by self- locomotive cups and balls. The
public mind in Europe has been filled ad nauseum with such wonders but
whilst listening to details which I have myself beheld enacted with ever-
deepening interest, taken part in, and spent years in searching out the
producing causes of, I do not find this same glib-tongued, popular voice of
rumor giving any philosophy explanation of how these phenomena occur.
Of course we must acknowledge that their only importance is derived from
the fact that their causation is occult, and transcends the power of the most
enlightened scientists to explain. Even when referred to legerdemain as the
easiest way of disposing of a problem which science is too ignorant to
master and too proud to study out, I do not find the marvels of Oriental
spiritism reproduced on any other soil, and as I know they are in many
instances, at least, indications of the occult forces in nature, it may not be
wholly uninteresting to touch upon the methods which I myself adopted to
master the secret of their production.
My first step was to secure the services of two of the most accomplished
as well as respectable members of the fakir fraternity, and having taken all
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the available means at command to attach them to my interest, not
forgetting to separate them from each other, so as to avoid the possibility
of collusion or a systematic attempt to deceive me, I had opportunity
enough to observe many of the most astounding evidences of the power
these men possessed, as well as to analyze at leisure their claims for its
origin. In each case, as well as in numerous others, where incredible feats
of preternatural wonder were exhibited, the fakirs assured me the pitris, or
ancestral spirits, were the invisible wonder-workers.
Again and again they protested they could do nothing without the aid of
these spiritual allies. Their own agency in the work, they gave me to
understand, consisted in preparing themselves for the service of the pitris.
They alleged that the material body was only a vehicle for the invisible
soul, the spiritual or astral clothing of which was an element evidently
analogous to the "spiritual body" of the Apostle Paul, the "magnetic body"
or "life principle" of the Spirits, the "astral spirit" of the Rosicrucians, and
the "atmospheric spirit" of the Berlin Brotherhood. This element the
Hindoo and Arabian ecstatics termed Agasa, or the life-fluid. They said
that in proportion to the quantity and potency of agasa in the system, so
was the power to work marvels by the aid of spirits. Spirits, they added,
used agasa as their means of coming in contact with matter, and when it
was abundant and very powerful, the invisibles could draw it from the
bodies of the ecstatics and perform with it feats only possible to themselves
and the gods. "Mutilate the body, lop off the limbs, if you will," said the
Brahmin, whom I had also enlisted in my service as a teacher of occultism,
"and with a sufficient amount of agasa, you can instantaneously heal the
wound. Agasa is the element which keeps the atoms of matter together;
the knife or sword severs it, the fire expels it from its lodgement in those
atoms; put the agasa back to the severed or burned parts before they have
had time to fester or wither, and the parts must reunite and become whole
as before."
It is by virtue of agasa that the seed germinates in the ground and grows
up to be a tree, with leaves, fruit and flowers. Pour streams of agasa on the
seed, and you quicken in a minute what would else, with less of the life-
fluid, occupy a month to grow. Charged stones or other inanimate objects
with agasa drawn from a human body, and spirits can make such objects
move, fly, swim, or travel hither and thither at will; in short, it is through
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the power of agasa--by which I mean force, the life of things--that all the
most intelligent Hindoos with whom I studied, insisted that preternatural
marvels could be wrought, always adding, however, that pitris must assist
in the operation, first, because their spiritual bodies were all agasa, and
next, because they had a knowledge of this great living force and how to
apply it, which they could not communicate to mortals.
He proved the truth of his boast by springing upwards from the ground
which he spurned with his foot, when lo! he ascended into mid-air, and
whilst his entranced eyes were rolled upwards, and his lean, rigid arms and
thin hands were clasped in ecstacy above his head, he continued to soar
away nearly to the roof of the vast temple in which we were. I have
already alluded in the earlier chapters of this work to the methods by which
many Eastern ecstatics promoted the "mantic frenzy," such as leaping,
dancing, whirling, spinning, the use of drugs and vapors of an intoxicating
character, noise, music, and all other methods which might tend to distract
the senses and stimulate the mind to temporary mania.
GHOST LAND.
illusory light, and imagine he is visible or invisible, or performing wholly
impossible actions with wholly impossible instruments, just as he wills the
spectators to believe. Those who are most successful in this species of
illusion are not only "mediums" for spirits, and powerful psychologists, but
they have a faculty of so enclosing themselves in agasa (spiritual
atmosphere) that they can present almost any illusory appearance they
please.
GHOST LAND.
supermundane powers. Still, those who, like myself, will take the trouble
to follow his performances carefully and pay him sufficiently for the
information, will find that he is but a juggler after all, and that his
exhibitions are prompted by no higher motives than to obtain the petty
renumeration which his skill commands. Despite the fact that many of the
East Indian ecstatics prostitute their remarkable powers to the most abject
system of mendicity, thee are still a numerous class who are moved by far
higher motives, the culminating point of their incredible acts of asceticism
and self-inflicted torture being the realization of exalted religious
aspirations. As the most accomplished adepts in Oriental marvels do not
exhibit their powers for alms, except in behalf of the temple, lamasery, or
monastery to which they belong, they do not migrate into renumerative
spheres of action, like other exhibitors, and their arts acquire a certain
amount of dignity from their association with the rites of temple services.
It was under the conviction that there were spiritual forces involved in
many of the wonderful phenomena I witnessed, and that, inconsequential
as these were in the results obtained, they indicated an array of unexplored
powers yet latent in human experience, that I determined to devote one
consecutive twelve months and as much time as I could spare besides, to
the study of this subject and a thorough personal experience of its methods
of procedure. It was with this view that I abandoned my pleasant suburban
residence at Benares and took up my abode with a company of devotees in
the gloomy subterranean crypts of a vast range of ancient ruins, where the
spirit of a grand, antique faith pervaded every stone and hallowed the
scenes which were once consecrated to the loftiest and most exalted
inspiration. I am bound by honor not to reveal the methods of initiation by
which I graduated into the dignity of a "full- fledged ecstatic," under the
guidance and instruction of self-devoted, self- sacrificing men, who had
themselves attained to the mastery of the mightiest spiritual forces.
GHOST LAND.
prophetic dignity to which my ambition might have aspired. Amongst the
Brahmins, my lack of caste excluded me from priestly office, but my
superiors entreated me to remain with them, tempting me with prospects of
spiritual distinction held out to very few.
I need hardly say my purpose was achieved when I mastered the secret
of true occult power. I proved, tested, tried, and practiced it, and I know
that every element in being can be made subject to the human soul; every
achievement of spiritual or even deific power is attainable to man. All this,
and much that I am pledged not to reveal, and which in our present corrupt
and licentious condition of society, would prove a curse rather than a
blessing, and convert the earth into pandemonium rather than heaven, I
learned, proved, tried, and practiced. These experiences were not
undertaken during the occasion of my first visit to Hindostan, when the
career of military life enjoined upon me by my family and connections
enabled me to devote only a very limited amount of time to such studies;
my principal successes in these directions were achieved during a second
and more recent visit to the East, and I only anticipate that period by
alluding to the results I obtained to, however, were not cheaply or easily
acquired. It is enough at present to declare I exchanged for the comforts of
home and civilization, a life of discipline which would make most
luxurious Europeans shrink back aghast and horror-struck.
GHOST LAND.
through every ordeal like one upborne in the arms of mighty spirits, and
sustained by a power which I can never attribute to merely human effort.
All felt, though I alone knew individually the power that sustained me, and
that I was permitted to pass through such extraordinary ordeals simply to
demonstrate the triumph of spirit over matter, and the force by which the
human soul can transcend all the limitations of time and space.
Hindostan has of late years been the theme of such magnificent word
painting and glowing literary imagery, that I forbear from the attempt to
offer any addition to the innumerable accounts already extant of its
sculptures and monumental glories. Like the performances of wonder-
working fakirs and dervishes, the splendors of Elephantra, Ellora, Carli,
and Orissa have become popular themes in the mouths of literary gossips.
GHOST LAND.
every country of civilization. With throbbing heart and dazzled brain the
traveller may wander beneath the shadows of the grim idols, the darksome
caverns, the mighty banyan groves and memory-haunted forests, but the
glories and wonders of ancient India have been so thoroughly popularized
by measuring tourists and surveying explorers that any well-educated
young lady from a London or Paris seminary will tell you the exact
dimensions of the Kailasa better far than I could who have spent long days
and lonely nights wandering amidst its superb colonnades of sphinxes and
elephants.
GHOST LAND.
anchorites or priests, whose duty it was to minister in the neighboring
temples.
The moon shone full, white, and glaring over these awful solitudes,
more awful by far in the desolation which man had left, than in the pristine
grandeur of nature. It was strange to observe how tremblingly the
moonbeams lingered around the dark, cavernous mouths of crypts and
temples, but never pierced the unlighted gloom within, as if her holy light
was repelled by the mysterious secrets to which those solemn scenes were
dedicated. A thousand fanciful shapes seemed to me to press back her
flood of soft radiance, lest the light should fall on an arcanum veiled even
from the speechless witness of the lamps of heaven.
As he neared me I observed that his monastic habit and cowl proved him
to be one of those ascetics who so frequently sojourn amidst these desolate
regions, not unfrequently spending their lives within the shelter of some
lonely grotto or secluded crypt.
GHOST LAND.
believing that he, like myself, was intent upon communion with the spirit
of the scene. Desiring to afford the stranger the same uninterrupted
seclusion which I myself sought, I was retreating noiselessly into my
hermitage, when he came towards me, with a swift and sudden action, and
pausing opposite where I stood, so that the light of the moon might fall
directly on my face yet leave his in shadow, he said in a sweet and winning
tone, speaking in my favorite dialect, the Shen Tamil, "Forgive me, sir, if I
congratulate you on choosing so fair a night for a visit to this impressive
scene." Ordinarily I would have resented this unwelcome invasion on my
beloved solitude; besides it was the well-understood custom of visitors to
these deserted cities of the dead never to intrude upon the meditations of
those who must have come there for any other purpose rather than that of
social intercourse. I remembered, however, that I had left home late in the
evening, and that without finding time to assume my usual travelling dress;
hence, that my military attire, plainly enough disclosed by the broad glare
of the moonbeam, would prove that I was no ascetic, whilst my horse in
the distance showed that I was a mere transient visitor to the scene. It
struck me at once then, that it was the monk rather than the soldier, who
might be expected to feel annoyance at the presence of a stranger, and
besides this, there was something so sweet and refined in his pure accent
and winning voice that I could not refuse an exchange of courtesy with
him. Determined, however, to ascertain his right to become my associate, I
said, abruptly enough, I suppose, "My father is free of this holy city. Is he
then a dweller within its deep shadows?"
"Well, sir," he rejoined, "there is the Dharma Sala in which I have found
shelter for many a long year, when on my return from distant pilgrimages I
have yearned to indulge that universal weakness to which our poor frail
humanity is most subject, namely, the love of home."
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"Home!" I involuntarily exclaimed. "Is that hole in the mountain side
your home?"
"Even so."
"You are then--." I paused, for despite the dark shroud which enveloped
his whole form and face, there was something in the bearing of this
stranger which would not admit of questioning.
"I have no home but the camp," I answered, brusquely; "I seek none but
the grave."
"Too young in age, too old in wisdom for such an answer as that," he
replied gravely. "Listen: Home is the soul's rest, not a locality; it is the
scene where the wandering Yogee and the sainted Irdhi will find rest in the
infinite soul; it is the goal of all the self-inflicted tortures that fakirs and
lamas put upon their miserable bodies. Rest in Brahm is the aim which
enables the Bodhisattvas to extinguish the perfume of the senses, the
ecstacy of the emotions, the luxury of thought, and the sensibility of self-
recognition. Home is soul absorption in the central source of being; in
short," he added, starting, and changing the wild monotone of ecstacy into
which he seemed to be soaring, back to the simple phraseology of the
cosmopolite in which he at first addressed me, "in short, Chevalier, mask
our aims in what abstraction he will, whether we pursue love of woman or
love of God, love of gold or love of renown, the goal of our affections,
whenever we attain to it, is home, and, here or hereafter, our home will be
where our treasure is. Am I not right?"
"Pardon me, sir," I replied, without noticing his rhapsody, "you called
me by a title I am little accustomed to hear from the lips of a stranger. Do
you then know me?
"The distinguished ones of earth marvel to find that the humbler classes
look up to them as the ant regards the elephant," he answered, in a tone
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GHOST LAND.
which matched the satire of his words; "nevertheless, if it be worth your
while to know the dweller of yon Math, know me as Chundra ud Deen. To
be more in the line of your own civilization, should you condescend to
grant the request I shall presently make, call me, if you please, Byga
(mediciner); and now for my request."
He then, in the most careless and off-hand way, invited me to visit him
in his "hole," which he so pretentiously called a Math or circle of huts,
such as is devoted to the use of a spiritual teacher and his disciples, but in
the words of invitation he addressed to me, he interwove in a pointed way,
impossible for me to mistake, the watchword of an association whose
solemn bonds had set such a seal of secrecy even upon my very thoughts,
to say nothing of my lips, that I started and shivered whilst the words fell
on the listening air, as if their commonplace expression had been the
deepest blasphemy. Had a peal of thunder broken the stillness of that
breathless moonlit night, I could not have been more startled than to hear
those forbidden words. Few there are on earth who know of the existence
of such an association, fewer still who can claim fraternity with it; yet of
that few, one stood before me now that was inevitably proved. Other
words and signs were interchanged, yet we did not touch each other. It
was enough, and without further hesitancy I agreed to renew our
acquaintance at the same hour and place on the following night; and thus
we parted, he disappearing in the impenetrable gloom of a neighboring
temple, I signalling my horse to my side and preparing for a midnight ride
home to Dowletabad.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XIX.
GHOST LAND.
The moon was obscured by the driving clouds which predicated the
approach of a storm. The table-land of the amphitheatre around which
towered the red granite rocks that formed "the great religious city," was
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destitute of all signs of life or movement as I approached it. Solitude the
most profound, desolation the most complete, cast a spell upon the entire
panorama.
GHOST LAND.
of my captors was the only evidence that I had companions. Just as we
reached a certain point and when I realized that I was being forced to
descend an almost interminable stairway, the idea occurred to me that by
planting myself firmly on my feet I might at least manifest my
determination of going no farther. This poor show of resistance, however,
was instantly met by a push so violent that had I not been held by hands of
iron I should have been precipitated to whatever depths awaited me below;
then, as if to convince me of my utter helplessness, I was lifted up from the
ground, and despite the fact that my conductor carried a burden of six feet
in height with a proportionate amount of diameter, I was borne along for
some time in the grasp of this Titan as if I had been an infant. Happily, as I
deemed it, the next passage was too low and narrow to admit of such a
mode of locomotion, and I was again set on my feet, whilst the iron grasp
of one giant before and another behind me, sufficiently advised me of the
uselessness of further demonstrations on my part.
GHOST LAND.
Chaldaic history. At the small opening of the horse-shoe was a second
cavern, hewn out of the solid rock, and so designed as to form an immense
raised platform or stage, on the floor of which was spread a carpet of
grassy turf, or an imitation so finely executed that the difference could not
be detected. A pair of gigantic sphinxes supported either side of this noble
rostrum, and an immense image of the winged bull of Mineveh was
suspended, in all probability by magnetic force, in mid-air, between the
high vaulted roof and the grassy carpet beneath. The walls and ceiling of
this huge, cavernous stage, were otherwise destitute of adornment. A
golden hand held a scroll suspended over the auditorium, inscribed with a
word in Arabic which corresponds to Neophytes, whilst a similar hand and
scroll appeared over the cornice which served as proscenium to the stage,
with the Arabic inscription signifying Hierophants. Ranged in a semi-
circle midway on the platform were seven tripods supporting braziers,
from which ascended colored flames and wreaths of deliciously perfumed
vapors, whose intoxicating odors filled the temple. Behind each tripod,
seated on thrones fashioned of burnished silver, so as to represent a
glittering star, were seven dark-robed figures, whose masked faces and
shrouded forms left no opportunity of judging of their sex or semblance.
Around me, some reclining, some sitting in Oriental fashion, but all
seemingly engrossed in deep abstraction, were multitudes of men attired
mostly in European, but with some Hindoo costumes. Their faces were
concealed, however, for they all wore masks. I observed that those who
had removed the bandage from my face had invested me also with a mask,
leaving my eyes entirely free, and thus enabling me to make an
uninterrupted survey of the remarkable scene around me.
In all I gazed upon, there was no minutiae of detail; all was colossal,
distinct, magnificent, whilst every design, however vast its size, was
executed in a style of the most perfect workmanship. The light diffused
from the gorgeous planisphere of the roof was soft yet brilliant, and by an
arrangement since explained to me, large shafts were so constructed as to
communicate with the upper air and thus introduce a perfect supply of
fresh atmosphere even into the deep abysses of this subterranean chamber.
GHOST LAND.
the different fraternities to which I belonged. I have since learned, and
believe I then understood, that there was not a person present who had not
been initiated into one or more of the occult societies with which I was
myself connected. The recognition of this fact placed me at once upon a
footing of understanding with my companions and indicated the line of
conduct that was expected from me. There was, and is still, an unspoken
cipher of signals existing amongst certain brotherhoods, far more terse and
significant than speech, and this I found in practice with my new
associates. By this method I learned the special ideas upon which I was
expected to rely that night. The first was a sentiment of brotherhood
extended from one particular order to as many as would represent
humanity at large. The next was an understanding that the aim of our
gathering was the discovery of occultism and our methods of research were
to be occult likewise. Another piece of instruction was, never in the most
distant way to allude to the Society, its existence or any of its members
whom I should chance to meet in the world, the object of this prohibition
being to avoid discussion on the nature of the intelligence communicated.
I was required to reflect upon it within myself, or, if I chose to adopt its
revelations as my own opinions, to communicate them to others, not to
members of the Society; also I might allude to the existence of such an
association and describe its aims, but never reveal the names of its
members or guide strangers to the many scenes where its sessions were
held. The final charged impressed upon me was to be strictly attentive to
the proceedings, in virtue of which I fixed my eyes upon the seven masked
and robed figures on the platform, who I at first thought were simple
effigies, but as soon as the whole assembly were seated and in order, I
observed they arose, one after the other, each one making his sign of
intelligence and then resuming his seat and moveless attitude. The first
command issued in this way was for Pythagorean silence during each
session. The next required from all, Platonic submission to the order
during our connection with it. The third assured us of divine protection.
The fourth apprised me in especial, that my most secret wishes were
penetrated. The fifth (still addressed to me) promised me complete
gratification of those wishes. The sixth was a universal charge for
discretion in the use of the knowledge I was to receive, virtue in its
application, and fraternal love in its distribution. The seventh sign I am not
at liberty to explain, but I was advised by one of the masked figures near
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me that propositions for complete initiation would be given me hereafter.
During the time that these ciphers were being enacted, the entire
auditorium was becoming enveloped in gloom, so that when this part of the
proceedings ended, I found the light greatly subdued and the radiance of
the noble planisphere modified to a soft twilight, such as would be
dispensed by the moon and stars. And now my most imperfect sketch of
the fine temple and the opening scenes of the grand drama ended, let me
essay to describe those which followed.
A deep hush reigned on every side of me, a silence that could be felt
pervaded the assembly, when I perceived that the entire of the vast cavern
that formed the stage at the small opening of the horse-shoe, was melting
away. Walls, ceiling, hierophants, silver thrones, and braziers, all
vanished, and in their place I beheld illimitable wastes of what seemed at
first to be impenetrable darkness. Presently I observed there was motion,
an ever-increasing, wave- like motion, and a gradually diminishing hue in
this thick blackness, which became refined into a gray, silvery vapor, and
at last melted entirely away. Then I saw a boundless univercoelum, in
which were represented myriads of hemispheres. Above, below, around,
stretching away into endless horizons, and ascending from thence beyond
every imaginable limitation, were piled up hemisphere upon hemisphere,
densely massed yet all separate from one another, and all blazing with
systems, every system sparkling with suns, planets, comets, meteors,
moons, rings, belts, and nebulae. Millions and millions of these systems
swarmed through the spaces of the universe, yet all differed the one from
the other, whilst all moved in the same resplendent order, swinging around
some mighty and inconceivable pivotal center. And in this stupendous
scheme of harmony, every newly created cluster of fire-mist seemed as
admirably adjusted to its relative point of space in the universe as the huge
astral systems with their galaxies of suns, stars, and revolving satellites. I
saw the spaces of the universe divided up into hemispheres--hemispheres
into sidereal heavens--heavens studded with suns, forming systems of
created worlds in every stage of progression, from unparticled fire-mist to
the central sun of a perfected system.
GHOST LAND.
having direct relation to its solar centre; that its path was circular, and bent
or deflected only at its points of aphelion and perihelion; but as the
observant gaze became able to master the details of planetary motion,
unappreciable at first by reason of its inconceivable rapidity, it detected
subordinate motions, which impressed upon every flying orb the character
of an individualized life, and showed it to be endowed with an animation
of their own. These sparkling worlds swam, danced, sported, floated
upwards and darted downwards, with all the erratic mobility of zigzag
lightning. Could they be really living, sentient beings--glorious organisms
not moved upon, but breathing, burning, rejoicing lives, acting in the
inimitable procedures of fixed law? but no more so than the child who
wins its way from point to point, yet is ever turning to gather flowers and
butterflies in erratic divergence from the line of its path; no more so than
the man whose fixed destiny between the cradle and the grave is checkered
by all the turnings and windings which a mobile fancy and wandering
imagination can prompt. Could they all be living organisms, and the
immensity of the universe be filled, not with billions of manufactured
autometa, but with legions of living creatures, rushing through the orbits of
illimitable space in the joy and glory of life everlasting? Could our own
burning sun and its shining family of planetary orbs be all creatures of
parts and passions, organs and susceptibilities, with a framework of rocky
ribs and mountain bones and sinews; veins and arteries coursed by the
fluid-life of oceans and rivers; heaving lungs aerated by the breath of
winds and atmospheres; electric life evolved from the galvanic action of
metallic lodes threading their way like a gigantic nervous system through
every globe; vast reservoirs of polar force generated in the Arctic North
and Antarctic South; the brain and feet of the living creature, realms of
supply for the waste of physical life, in the relation which every satellite
sustains to its solar center, and one vast collective soul in the aggregated
mass of soul atoms that maintain a parasitical life upon the surface of every
planet? In the Apocalyptic vision now presented to my dazzled sight,
every sun, star, planet, comet, moon, every fully-formed body in space, in
short, was a living being, a body and soul--a physical form destined to
sustain a transitory material existence, composed of infinitesimal physical
beings of its own grade and order--an immortal spirit moulded and grown
through the formative element of matter, destined to survive its dissolution,
and live eternally as a perfected soul, carrying with it all the freight of soul
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GHOST LAND.
atoms which is sustained and unfolded, like the leaves and blossoms of its
own parental germ seed.
I know this thought will seem like the rhapsody of a delirious fancy to
those who have not read the universe in its occult page of unfoldment as I
have, but the time will come when the Cabala of existence shall be read as
an open page. This "madness" will then be accepted as true philosophy;
until then, the revelating angel bids me write--and I obey.
GHOST LAND.
became the memories of all that physical science could reveal, compared
with the broader, grander vistas of causation, opened up to my view, as I
penetrated into the arcanum of spiritual science. Could the dreams of the
fire-worshipper, then, have a better foundation in divine truth than the
asseverations of the theologian? asked my questioning soul.
I behold the centripetal force of the sun withdrawn from our solar
system, and planets, moons, asteroids, comets, meteors, and all the array of
embryonic elements held in solar paths fly off in ungoverned space, and
become lost in endless ruin.
I see the centrifugal force withdrawn, and the solar systems rushing to a
point, is absorbed, swallowed up in the parent mass, and the parent mass
itself becomes a mere wreck of worlds. If such are the life-giving, life-
sustaining potencies of the physical sun, what must be the correlative
action of the spiritual sun on the realm of immortal being?
If such is the actual physical relation of the sun of our system to the
world, and to the forms which it has sown in the garden of the skies, what
may we not dream of, and aspire to know, when in future ages of
progression we may ascend to the heaven of heavens, and comprehend the
mystery of God! Again I saw the universe outrolled and upon its shining
surface worlds, with all their freight of material life, vitalized by force and
inspired by spirit; and this trinity of being ranged from the gelatinous
masses that floated in ancient seas to the sparkling suns that blazed and
burned in the depths of sidereal heavens.
With each fresh phase of the vision, fresh questions rose like waves in
the surging sea of my storm-tossed mind.
To the next craving appeal for "light, more light," came stealing on my
senses the tones of this mild rebuke: "Seek not, child, to compass eternity
in a single hour of time. Be patient, and all shall be revealed, which is
good for thee to know." For many and many a night, during many
succeeding weeks of almost ecstatic life, these precious promises were kept
to me by revelations of a similar character to that which I have noted down,
and that, not in language worthy of the sublime and stupendous light that
poured in on my soul, but in the simplest, plainest phrases, I could summon
to my aid. As all language is unworthy when matched against thoughts
which speech fails to interpret, so do I employ a form of expression so
rude, that my utter powerlessness will be shown in every line I write.
Enough that the themes which an Apocalyptic angel alone could
demonstrate, were shown to me in those magnificent visions, until a
complete cosmic scheme was revealed, of which the following may be
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GHOST LAND.
named as some of the subjects treated of. World building and builders,
constitution of the solar universe. Of gods, men, spirits, angels, the fall,
growth, and reconstruction of the spirit. The realm and destiny of souls.
Light, heat, physical, astral, and spiritual light. The human soul, its
powers, possibilities, forces, and destiny. Will; occult and magical powers,
forces, and objects. The relation and influence of planetary bodies upon
each other; the human mind, the necessity of theological myths. The
permanence of being, cycles of time, cyclones of storm and sunshine in
human life, etc., etc.
Of these stupendous themes the treatment was ever grand, original, bold,
and conclusive.
GHOST LAND.
than myself; but as no mortal tongue or pen can do justice to the gorgeous
imagery with which it was our great privilege to be favored, as these mere
magazine sketches, moreover, are not the fit channels for the publication of
the glowing ideality which these visionary representations inspired, I shall
presently disclose to my readers the singular modus operandi by which the
visions of our fraternity were impressed on the recipients, and write of
them no more.
At the close of the first grand drama enacted before my eyes, I suddenly
felt the encompassing arms of strangers tying my hands and fastening thick
bandages over my face. This time I had no desire to resist the movements
of my captors; on the contrary, I rose at their touch and suffered them to
reconduct me through another series of passages, for such I had instinctive
reasons for knowing was my mode of exit, until we reached a very distant
point of the amphitheatre of mountains from that at which we had entered.
The bandages were removed as rapidly and noiselessly as they had been
adjusted; but my conductors were gone before I had fairly recovered my
sense of liberty. They left me with the mask I had worn in my hands and a
strip of paper attached to it, on which were inscribed in fine Sanskrit
characters these words: "The night after to-morrow at 12 midnight.
Chundra ud Deen."
GHOST LAND.
friends had the advantage of me at every point, but I was entirely willing to
trust them, and that night saw me a sworn brother of their order.
The whole temple was furnished with fine metallic lines, every one of
which converged to six powerful galvanic batteries attached to the silver
thrones occupied by six of the adepts. These persons, adepts in the loftiest
and most significant sense of the term, received their inspiration from the
occupant of the seventh throne, a being who, though always present, was
not always visible, although as on the first night of my attendance a
presence from the realms of supernal being was always there.
The office of the adepts was to centralize and focalize the inspiration
received. The thoughts of each were first focalized into one idea on the
rostrum, and from thence distributed to every neophyte in the auditorium.
This universal impression was produced, first, by the harmonious spirit of
accordance which pervaded the assembly; next, by the influence of strong
and concentrated psychology; and finally by the distributive power and
force of the galvanic lines extending, as before stated, from the rostrum to
every member in the auditorium.
The negative pole of this complete battery was formed by the neophytes,
the positive pole by the hierophants; and I solemnly swear, as a man
pledged only to record the truths of that higher realm of being into which I
have been permitted most reverently to look, that the whole of the
gorgeous representations enacted before my eyes during several
consecutive weeks of three sessions each week were psychological images
impressed upon the adepts by the presiding angel of our holy gathering,
and from thence distributed and transmitted mentally to the seat of
consciousness by psychology, and physically by connecting links of
electric force to every member of our vast assemblage. Let no sneering
skeptic doubt the possibility of transmitting thought even through the
physical methods here roughly indicated.
GHOST LAND.
of illusion--a term which in translation but ill represents the original idea--
is one in which every adept, ancient and modern, must become au fait if he
would succeed as an "enchanter" or a good "magician." The rationale of
magis is will or psychology; the success of psychology or the operation of
will depends upon the entire absence of intervening obstacles. Thus, if you
will a thought to reach another at any distance, long or short, your thought
will surely reach its object, provided it encounters no psychological
obstacle more potent than itself. Man possesses inherently the power to
effect any phenomenon in or upon matter that spirits can do, provided his
spiritual forces encounter no cross currents of magnetism, no opposing
lines of force. The potencies of will have been exalted, known, felt, and
practiced by the mystics, magians, seers, and prophets of all ages. Why
will ever fails to accomplish its end arises from the fact that thousands,
perhaps millions, of other will are traversing space in opposing lines and
contrary currents, and so the force of one will, which might else prove
irresistible if directed under carefully arranged conditions and suffered to
operate unhindered upon its object, becomes thwarted, and a single failure
of this kind will be immediately quoted as an illustration of the hollow
pretensions which psychologists make for the sovereign potency of will.
The association of which I have been speaking originated centuries ago, in
a keen perception, on the part of one mighty metaphysician, that the
powers and forces of the human soul might be so concentered as to imitate
the creative action, and give an actual sensuous embodiment to ideas. I
shall not here enter into the results of experiments persevered in, as I have
hinted, during centuries of time with varying success--success
proportioned to the excellence or indifference of the subjects by whom
they were conducted.
GHOST LAND.
had already become experts in the processes of mental telegraphy, which
we were enabled to practice with invariable success; but with the potential,
although still more material agency of electricity evolved from mineral
substances, we arrived at a means of energizing the subtile though variable
powers of vital magnetism, which tended to render its operation more than
ever reliable and uniform.
GHOST LAND.
the mind to the soul, and deemed that spiritual science must be the
complement to material science, and without the union of the two, the body
and soul of true knowledge could not subsist. Neophytes on first entrance,
indeed so long as it was deemed desirable, were appointed teachers, who in
private sessions rendered them all the instruction and assistance they
required. Such a teacher was assigned to me, and if I had gained no other
advantage in this admirable fraternity, I should forever feel indebted to its
leaders for procuring me the life-long friendship of Nanak Rai, the noble
Brahmin to whose learning, piety, and manhood the charge of my initiatory
studies was assigned.
GHOST LAND.
candidly present my own case in evidence of both positions.
Perhaps the highest perfection of the soul hereafter can only be attained
through a complete realization of the pathetic words, "He was a man of
sorrows." Perhaps the Magdalene shall win her way to the kingdom more
readily than the dainty lady who never sinned because she was never
tempted. In the touching legend of the Christian God's crucifixion, the
penitent thief will surely gain the Paradise which the Pharisee seeks in
vain. And yet I would have gladly lived and died a spiritual ecstatic, but
the Lord of life had willed it otherwise.
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CHAPTER XX.
Almost the happiest hours of my life were those devoted to the sessions
of the glorious Brotherhood, of whose teachings I have given a slight and
most imperfect sketch in the preceding chapter. So long as the influence of
those seances was upon me I felt as if I had been living with gods, angels,
and spirits, and as I grew more and more familiar with the sublime ideas
they opened up to me, I became reconciled to the chaotic present and
hopeful for the inevitable future. Still, I realized then, as I do now, when I
recall those ecstatic communings derived from the heaven of heavens, that
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they measurably unfitted for me earth, and rendered a return to its
spoilation and licentiousness weary and distasteful to me. Yet I knew it
was my lot to return, aye, and to take an earnest and active part in the
terrible era that impended--a dance of death more gaunt and grim than any
that had of late desolated the doomed land of the Orient. I knew, too, by
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the force of that prophetic nature which is the ban as well as blessing of its
possessor, that thee was an episode in my life to be passed through of a
totally different character to any that had preceded or could follow it, and
though these monitions could neither be banished nor modified, they did
not enable me to avoid the breakers, or steer my life's barque out of the
stormy sea that threatened to wreck it. Our holy seances had closed for the
time being. The mystic Bygas, the noble Brahmins, and the associated
brothers, many of them strangers from distant lands, must all separate and
depart each on their several ways. The bright angels who ministered
amongst us would wing their way hence to fairer though none the less
worshipful scenes. The attendant spirits would rise, by virtue of their
labors in our behalf, another round higher on the ladder of progression,
whilst the solemn crypts of the ancient temples would become silent,
deserted, given up to the desolation which falls upon everything and every
creature where life has been and life is not.
In his own country Capt. Graham was an habitue of the best society, not
only on account of his birth and connections, but also for the sake of his
amiable manners, genial disposition, and cultivated intellect. With a
remarkably handsome person, the clear blue eye and ruddy complexion of
his Highland progenitors, this young officer united qualities of mind and
physique which endeared him to all who knew him. The specialty which
first attracted him to me was his strong sympathy with my Spiritualistic
pursuits, and the fact that he was gifted with the peculiar faculty of what
the Scotch call "second sight." Having obtained a short furlough, he had
left his regiment at Allahabad in order to make a visit to the famous cave
temples at Ellora, where I was fortunate enough to meet him and become
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useful in guiding him through the intricacies of the wonderful ruins with
which I was myself familiar.
GHOST LAND.
"That all depends upon the purpose for which we employ our powers," I
replied.
"Again you grant the only position I contend for," said my friend. "then,
wherein can the wrong exist of adding to the powers with which nature has
endowed me, occult powers of a still stronger kind? that is, provided the
purpose be the same, and that I only seek to secure the affection of the
woman I love?"
"Just so."
"And you would compel her to do so, even against her will?"
"I would bend that will to my own, Chevalier; and if I could succeed, do
you deem me capable of misusing my advantage? I desire to marry a
woman whom I cannot as yet succeed in inspiring with my own devotion.
Could I do so, how would I wrong her by spending my life in ministering
to her happiness?"
"I am answered, Graham; but where does your confession lead you to?
Do you not perceive that you rule out the intervention of good spirits in the
acts under consideration? and if this be so, what class of beings do you
suppose would be attracted to your service or willing to aid in your
enchantments?"
GHOST LAND.
influence to impress the object of my affections with sentiments of
reciprocity?"
"I have."
"Entirely so.."
"Then you have simply proved what I have so often told you concerning
the conditions which may interpose to hinder the effect of psychological
impressions."
"But how can I be aware of this, or, knowing its probability, how to
prevent it?"
"You can but take your chance. We are not yet clairvoyant enough to be
masters of every situation we would experiment with. Be assured these
baffling cross magnetisms, projected from a thousand sources unknown to
us, are the causes of the many failures which occur in just such cases as
yours. Successes are most frequent when the operator is potential or
electrically positive, and the subject is passive and negative. Such is the
relation sustained by that worst and meanest of all criminals, the licentious
seducer, towards his victim. He projects his foul psychology upon a
negative and wholly unguarded subject. Those around her, probably
unsuspicious of her danger, exert no counteracting influence, no cross
magnetism to thwart his; the result is the subjection of the weak to the
strong, the passive to the negative, an angel perhaps, to a devil assuredly."
"I must accept your positions," replied Graham. "I know you have often
claimed sovereign potency for the will, and yet urged the reasons just
assigned why it is so successful in some instances, and so inoperative in
others. Be it so. I must abandon two contingent resources then--the aid of
good spirits and the exercise of psychological power; but is there nothing
left for me--no mendicaments in the realm of Nature, no spells,
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enchantments, or talismans whereby her occult power may be exerted for
my benefit? I know I shock you, my friend; you will despise if not hate ne
for these questionings, to me so importunate, to you so lowering and
contemptible. But Chevalier, remember you do not love, you never did
love, nor can you know what that name means. Oh! believe me, love is
stronger than death, more cruel than the grave. All else--wit, wisdom,
piety, learning, hope of heaven or fear of perdition, pale before the strength
of this giant passion; but I see I speak to empty air; you cannot understand
me."
"Your partiality makes you egotistical for your friend, Graham, neither
do you justly estimate the character of woman in her noblest, highest
phases. What I tell you is the truth, and though I have never yet seen her
of whom I prophesy, except in spirit, I know she is not of the class who
give men occasion to boast of their too easy conquests. The women who
are marketable commodities are only worthy of the men who buy them.
For every true man in creation there is a woman who should be, nay, who
must be and is, his angel side. One such I shall fail to win on earth, but
gain in heaven; but let us return to your last proposition, consulting
together as students of occultism, rather than as men striving to win the
affections of women by aid of impure arts. Charms, spells, and
enchantments depend for their success on the aid of spirits and
psychological impression. I have already endeavored to show you that the
spirits who could or would assist in such rites are unholy, and in obtaining
their aid you would league yourself to them in such relations that when you
become like themselves a spirit, you would find yourself bound to them in
the chains of a magnetic rapport which would be horrible to endure and
difficult to break.
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We have already considered the chance of success or failure in
psychological impression; what other art would you inquire about?"
"See this handkerchief, Graham; it was but yesterday taken from the
bazaar; what virtue inhered in its fabric as it lay exposed for sale?"
"As you say, none. But supposing you were to place it now in the hands
of a sensitive or psychometrist, you would find my character and physique,
nay, my very motives and the most secret intentions of my mind impressed
upon its every fibre, is it not so?"
GHOST LAND.
special attribute is change, and their attractions are merely temporary, soon
wearing out, and when once exhausted, never renewed. The chemical
affinity which subsists between sulphur and gold will ever be the same. It
existed ten thousand years ago, and will be as manifest ten thousand years
hence as now; but the magnetic attractions which draw the libertine to the
fair face of his victim almost invariably end in depolarization; then ensues
coldness, neglect, indifference, followed by dislike and even loathing;
hence it is that many intrigues based upon mere passional attraction, have
ended, aye, and will again, in the intense repulsion which impels the
seducer even to the murder of his victim. Believe me, it is not the idle
fantasy that the phrenologist associates the cranial organs which impel to
licentiousness and destructiveness in close proximity to each other. The
demons of lust and murder are twin brothers, and follow on each others
track, from the law of which I speak. The swing of the mental pendulum
which prompts the one carries the mind to the other extreme, and thus
accounts for the aversion which so often succeeds the excess of violent and
unbridled passion."
"Oh! secondly, is not love at all," I replied. "It is simply friendship, and
as such it may be an excellent basis of union between man and woman, far
more likely also to remain a permanent sentiment than any evanescent
passion; still,, it is not love, and those who unite upon such a foundation,
although restrained from infidelity to each other by principle, may yet
experience emotions of love for others."
GHOST LAND.
"It is soul affinity, Graham--the realization that man and woman have no
actual existence apart from each other; that they are, in fact, counterparts,
without which their separate lives are imperfect and unformed. Life is
dual, Graham, and love, true soul-love, is the bond of union which reunites
the severed parts. It exists independent of personal charms or mental
acquirements.; subsist through sickness or in health, through good or evil
report, lives on for the one beloved, dies and realizes heaven only in the
union which death may interrupt but can never sever. Divine spiritual
affinity survives death and the grave, unites the two halves of the one soul,
and in eternity perfects the dual nature of man and woman into one angel."
"Chevalier," replied my friend, "if you have not yet loved, you deserve
to; and thrice blessed will she be who can secure to herself the affection
you thus describe. That heavy sigh again! Why, you will compel me
presently to believe you are the rejected one, and I the happy lover. But
come, my Socratic and Platonic friend, you have not yet informed me what
effect I might expect from the love potions, philters, or other approved
methods of magical art, of which your famous fakirs are the expert
professors."
"My fakirs are occultists, Graham, not Vaudoo charmers, nor would
they be mine much longer if Vaudooism were amongst their practices; but
to recur to your question. I answer; though the use of certain drugs,
vapors, or other physical means might produce a temporary excitement in
the person upon whom they were exercised, nevertheless, like psychology
or other arts of enchantment, the effect is but temporary. They can
impress, but not create the will; arouse passional attraction, but not
permanent sentiment. They excite illusions, cast spells, induce impulses,
but their transitory effects are always followed by depolarization and
revulsive reaction, in which antipathy sets in as proportionally strong as the
attraction was violent."
"I see it all, " cried my poor friend. "You are a severe teacher, but I
believe a truthful one; besides, our mutual experiences assure me you are
correct. I would have risked my life and, heaven forgive me! periled my
very soul to secure the love of her I adore, but the bare possibility that she
who now tolerates me might one day learn to loathe me is too terrible to
risk. It is enough. There is no hope for me. And now, Chevalier, the very
lowest depths of my weakness having been laid open before you, let us
return to our occultism.
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GHOST LAND.
You say it is the magnetism an psychology impressed on an object
which impart to it talismanic virtue; are there, then, no natural talismans in
nature?"
"Thousands and millions, Graham, had we but the clear sight to discern
them. There are myriads of herbs and stones full of virtue to heal, gladden,
or sadden us; objects which can and do affect the senses and impress the
spirit; links of connection between the visible and invisible worlds; and
those who, with sapient self-sufficiency, scoff at these occult forces in
nature and think to extinguish faith in them by the bugbear word,
'superstition,' are themselves the dunces, rather than those who unwittingly
believe without being able to prove their belief."
"O my friend!" cried the enthusiastic young Scotchman, "why will you
not lead me into those realms of occult power?"
"Because I am not there myself, Graham," I replied. "I have as yet only
stood upon the threshold and glanced down the endless corridors of the
invisible universe. I know such things are. Some of their powers and
dangers I have tested, but only enough to warn and encourage me in yet
deeper researches."
As he spoke he drew from his vest a small package which he put into
my hand, but even as he did so he started with astonishment and dismay at
the effect his talisman produced upon me. Had the deadly Cobra stung me,
I could scarcely have experienced a pang more poignant. Something
unconquerably antagonistic to my nature was contained in that package.
The face and form of a very beautiful woman rose up before me, but the
most loathsome dwellers on the threshold of humanity that ever drove the
neophyte back from the country of the elementaries would have been more
sympathetic to me than this terrible visionary woman. Almost breathless
with emotion, I poured out to my friend a hurried description of the
portrait--for such I knew it to be--that I held in my hand, and the effect that
it produced upon me, and then the feeling of antipathy gave place to an
irrepressible passion of grief as humiliating to myself as inexplicable to my
friend.
GHOST LAND.
should be associated with such presages of sorrow and excite sentiments of
antipathy in his best friend he was at a loss to conceive.
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XXI.
Graham and myself had parted after an eleven o'clock p.m. dinner, and
high- noon coffee at twelve. Towards the sweet hour of dawning, when
both of us had retired to the spacious halls which in Europe we are
accustomed to call "bedrooms," but which in this tropical land simply
signify the place of sleep, or the scene of the day's long siesta, after the
conversation recorded in the last chapter, I sat speculating on the singular
influence which my friend's talismanic package had exerted over me; on
the wonderful calm of the holy moonlight, lighting up the sacred Ganges,
which washed the descending flight of steps that led from the terrace
outside my chamber to the river's brink; on the silver-tipped minarets,
domes, towers, and metallic ornaments of temples, pagodas, palaces, and
fanes that everywhere sparkled with mild and softened lustre in the pale
moonlight; on the mystery of the beyond; the life, the death, the everlasting
progress, perhaps the everlasting sleep, of the power by which I
speculated! Everything assumed a new idea beneath the transfiguring light
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of the soft and holy queen of heaven; every idea took a personal shape
beneath the influence of the same tranquilizing power. Suddenly I felt that
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a new presence was near me. In the vast and spacious apartment which I
occupied, the moonlight, the only lamp I permitted that night, failed to
penetrate the farthest point or deepest recesses; it only cast its radiant halo
on a circle of which I was myself the center as I lay on a divan placed
between the open glass doors which led out on the terrace overhanging the
river. I knew a fresh presence was in my apartment, though no sound of
footfall broke the stillness and no shadow as yet streamed over the polished
floor, yet it came on, threaded its way amongst the groups of statuary
scattered through the place, lingered near the tubs of orange-trees and other
tropical shrubs and plants that formed arcades on every side, and now
approached me, penetrated the circle of moonlight in which I lay, passed
noiselessly around the divan, and standing between me and the pillars
which supported the veranda without, disclosed to me the shrouded form
and cowled head of the Byga of Ellora, Chundra ud Deen.
"My father comes at last," I said, rising to receive him. "He is indeed
welcome."
The byga, for the first time during the many occasions that we had met,
extended his hand to me. He had never before touched me; nay, he had
evidently avoided such contact, nor did I wonder at it, for now I took his
hand in mine it was cold as death, and sent a chill through every fibre of
my frame.
"My son has become a brother!" said the Byga, in his sweet, low voice
and Tamul accent. "He is now an adept like Chundra. What can Ud Deen
tell him more than he knows?"
"What would you ask, Louis?" he said; and O heaven! how the
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sound of that name, grown unfamiliar in my ears, thrilled on my heart,
pronounced by that stranger!
It was forbidden to the neophytes, though not to the adepts of the Ellora
Brotherhood, to converse with each other on the teachings they received.
From this prohibition both Chundra and myself were exempt; hence, I
knew I was at liberty to press upon him many of the Spiritualistic problems
that now disturbed me. Had I not understood how perfectly the power of
transmitting thought could be practiced amongst us, I should have been
startled to find every question I designed to put anticipated and dealt with,
even where it was not fully met by my associate, ere I had framed it into
speech. In the mental contest between us I placed myself in the negative
relation to my respondent, hence for the time being he read and mastered
me. We could have reversed this position, but we could not both maintain
the same attitude towards each other. As my questionings on this occasion
refer to what I have since learned to be common problems amongst
Spiritualist, and he who, answered me did so upon sufficient authority, I
will here transcribe such portions of the dialogue that ensued as may be of
general interest to the reader. I inquired why the spirits who appeared to
me, or at times manifested proofs of their identity with my deceased
friends, could not give me more philosophy, higher intelligence, and above
all, a more perfect description of their lives in spiritual existence.
"I should require to understand the connection between my act and the
flower," I replied.
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"You are a successful soldier," he continued, "and the men under your
command have been efficient on the battle-field. Suppose I were to tell
you that for every drop of blood you have shed, or caused to be shed, one
of the blossoms engendered by your charity would fade and wither away?"
I started. "Three days ago," he resumed, "you entertained a party of friends
at your dinner- table. Supposing your real thoughts at the time had been
known, how much would your guests have enjoyed your hospitality?"
Again I felt committed. At the time of which he spoke, I had the most
intense desire to be at another place, and wished my visitors anywhere
rather than at my own table.
"And yet I speak of the actualities in which your spirit friends live,
Louis. All of which I have spoken, transpires each moment in the spirit-
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world and form the experience of the spirits that visit you. Their gardens
are planted by good deeds and destroyed by bad; their banquets are spread
and dissipated by conditions of mental growth and moral excellence; their
images, pictures, houses, cities, trees, flowers, roads, mountains, rivers,
scenery--aye! all that they have or gaze upon, are not only written over and
inscribed with their acts, thoughts, words, and characters, but are
absolutely formed, shaped, and colored by their soul emanations. They go
and come by mental power and intellectual activity only. They build and
destroy under conditions of mental and moral achievement, of which no
human speech can convey an idea. You have visited their spheres, see,
heard, and felt the truth of much that I now touch upon, and yet you are
confused, bewildered, and incredulous at what I say. You would ask, too,
is there, then, nothing real in spiritual existence? Are all things seeming
only--spirit-life but shadows? Louis, if I confuse and bewilder you in
attempting to image forth some of the conditions of spirit-life, and you
begin to doubt the reality of anything in a state of being far more real than
your own, how do you expect your spirit friends could converse intelligibly
with you, or find topics of common interest with which to converse about,
except such as belong to the earth they have left? Do you not see there is
no common ground for the interchange of thought between spirits and
mortals? Nothing would be comprehensible to you of their existence,
whilst, except for your sake, the life they have left behind has lost all
interest for them. Man knows nothing but what he has absolutely
experienced, although he may believe much more than he knows through
reading and hearsay, yet even then he cannot appreciate anything that he
has not at some time or other had connection with, or realized through
similitude or kindred knowledge. Mortals impatiently demand information
concerning spiritual existence. You might as well talk to the African
savage of telegraphy and electricity, or declare what the microscope and
telescope reveal to the aborigines of Australasia, as to ask your spirit
friends to explain to you the conditions, employments, and aspirations of
the state of being to which they have attained."
"Why this new spiritual movement which is now palpitating through the
world then, Chundra? this evidently systematic attempt of the spirit-world
to commune with mortals, which is now so spontaneously planting its
standards through every land of civilization?"
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GHOST LAND.
"Humanity must move on," he answered. "It is ordained that the world
must at length attain to a true understanding of spiritual existence, and that
the fictions of vain theological beliefs shall disappear.
"The world must grow, Louis, and Spiritualism is one of its means of
growth. Do you inquire how your bread is made? Perhaps you would
never consume another morsel if you were fully answered. Yet you grow
and are sustained by the result, let the details be what they may. This
modern movement is but the chaotic reflection of the ignorance, bigotry,
credulity, and materialism of the age. Still it is the first step towards
breaking the seals of that apocalyptic age that is even now upon us. This
step, too, is the most necessary of all that are to follow. Man will advance
nearer and nearer to the spiritual realms, the elementaries will advance
nearer to man; and all creation, moving upwards, hinges on the first step;
this inauguration of the new and breaking up of the old order. Be patient!"
GHOST LAND.
could understand me, "last month I visited a village community who were
tormented with a Bhuta (the Polter Gheist or ghost that throws; the
haunting spirit of an evil or ill-disposed mortal). The honest people
deemed the disturbances they suffered from were all caused by the spirit of
an evil woman, a reputed sorceress, who had live amongst them, but who
had been set upon and murdered by Bheels under the charge of having
bewitched their children. Directly after this wretched woman's death, their
own children were waylaid, beaten, and spit upon by invisible powers.
Their cattle, property, and houses were injured, and their clothes torn and
destroyed. Shrieks, cries, groans, and knockings filled their dwellings and
drove them nearly frantic. The poor villagers had performed faithfully all
the ceremonies of exorcism and propitiation which they deemed necessary,
but without effect; and when I visited them, the 'Headman' of the village
was in despair, and the Brahmins they had hired to perform the rites of
exorcism were despatched for a still larger and more powerful band to help
them. I saw the Bhuta clairvoyantly, and by suffering myself to enter the
somnambulistic condition I could return with her to her spiritual captivity.
"I found her in the country of the worst and most evil-minded of the
elementaries who belong to the lower conditions of earth, but she did not
know any difference between them and multitudes of wicked and degraded
human spirits who had been attracted there likewise. The habitations of
these wretched beings were in dark, desolate land. Their cities were
formed of piles of cinders, ashes, and the wrecks of worlds. Their
occupation was to fashion machinery and implements of war as models for
mortals whom they were compelled to inspire with constructive or
inventive ideas in this particular department of mechanical skill; but the
elementaries of this sphere were all too rudimental in conception to
succeed in their work. They never made anything complete; they could not
achieve a single form right, and yet they felt the influence and inspiration
of higher orders, who did succeed in modeling ideas into complete shape;
and these poor embryos would therefore keep on trying and trying until
they died, and progressed to a sphere of greater completeness and higher
power. But many amongst them, in frantic haste and passion, destroyed,
broke, and burned up their abortive models.
"I learned it had only been in a recent period of time that they had tried
to make anything, and that in future they were, the best of them, destined
to succeed inimitably. I wandered over their blighted, doleful land in many
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districts; found they delighted to attract human spirits, however evil, to
them, because it enabled them to come into closer rapport with humanity;
and though they worked mischief and rejoiced in helping human spirits to
annoy and haunt mortals, they learned much in their contact with earth, and
would ultimately improve. It seemed strange to me to see that the human
spirits who gravitated there did not understand the difference between
themselves and the elementaries, so nearly did they resemble each other.
All, alas! were stamped with the characteristics of fierce and destructive
animals, and some, although strictly human, resembled the loathsome
reptiles with whose passions they had sympathy. I was told that the
demands of earth inspire these lower worlds with inventive ideas. The
rude and half-fashioned instruments they construct are man's thoughts in
embryo; hence, when I saw these poor antitypes of humanity clumsily
trying to draw swords through ungovernable fires, and found cannon
amidst mountains of cinders piled up to the black skies, I lamented that I,
amongst others, had ever used or required for use weapons of offense and
missiles of war. If the demands of our bad passions stimulate these lower
worlds to answer us, what a mighty responsibility rests upon us, who are to
the elementaries what the realms of angelic inspiration are to us!"
"Did these wretched beings see your spirit, Louis, and how did they
receive you?"
"They could not see me, but they felt my presence, and they were
impelled to acts of worship although in rags and ruin, and knelt amidst
their wrecked world and addressed my spirit as a god. They could not
aspire to any existence higher than the soul of a pitying mortal, and my
presence amongst them was both felt and signified by spirits lights. They
wept as they prayed, and as I prayed myself, the Bhuta became inspired
and preached to them. She uttered my thoughts, though not my words--
perhaps like the world's trance mediums. I left them so, for I was recalled
to the earth, but I have heard since, that the disturbances in the haunted
village have ceased, and all is peace there again. Chundra, if mortals were
better informed concerning the condition of these 'hells,' could they not
elevate the miserable dwellers there, and thus save the race of men from
their evil influence, their promptings to wrong and mischief breathed
through the atmosphere, and the failures which humanity makes through
abortive effort?"
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GHOST LAND.
The Byga silently pointed to a pair of pistols lying on a table near me,
and my sword laid across a divan.
"A chief amongst the elementaries who correspond to the electric and
magnetic forces generated in the Arctic and Antarctic circles. These
regions form the brain and feet of the living earth, and sustain vast realms
of elementary beings who corresponds to the prevailing influence and
quality of their locale. They derive their peculiarity magnetic
temperaments from the regions they inhabit, and react upon those regions
by filling them with the immense activity of their own magnetic natures.
Metron is a prince amongst these radiant elementaries."
"Not so; he is a spirit, a tutelary spirit, even as the Eloihim of the ancient
cabalists were princes or rulers in different departments of creation. You,
as a cabalist, should understand that regions countries, nations, planets, and
even the individuals who reside upon their surfaces, are under the
guardianship of special tutelary spirits, of whom Metron, himself a
planetary angel, is a type."
GHOST LAND.
believe, and fully realize it; but that which perplexes me is the strange
fantasy that possesses me of a similarity between the radiant Metron and
that most beloved friend of my soul, Felix von Marx. Sometimes I have
half imagined Metron might be his transfigured spirit, but again I have
endeavored to banish this idea, lest it should lead me into the realms of
fanaticism and hallucination."
"In the spiritual kingdom, Death, the harvest-angel, separates the wheat
from the tares, and ranges the specialties which mark human character on
earth or conditions of progress in eternity, each in their special department
of life; each is garnered up in the place and association to which he
belongs. Felix von Marx, a profound student and adept in the mysteries of
vital magnetism, gravitates as a spirit to those spheres of thought which are
devoted to the occult in creation, but especially does he belong to the
realms of force, the magnetism or life of the universe, the all pervading
element whose grand reservoir and generating center upon this planet is
governed by the tutelary angel, Metron.
GHOST LAND.
"But Metron is the tutelary angel of the elementaries, not of human
spirits."
"Why does the presence of spirits and my efforts to converse with them
always weaken me physically," I asked, "when in intention I would spend
my life in that communion?"
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"Because spirits cannot renew intercourse with earth without borrowing
from you the life element by which they approach you and make
themselves palpable to your senses. They must rob you of physical
strength ere they can reclothe their sublimated forms in material pabulum."
"No. As men grow into spiritual light and knowledge, they will better
understand the methods of communion. This earth is full of occult forces;
trees, plants, herbs, stones, minerals, vapors, gases, and fluids are all
teeming with magnetism. To comprehend these forces, draw them forth
and apply them, was the art of the ancient magian, and will be the next
phase of science which humanity will achieve. The living forces of the
body will then be reserved, and the occult powers of nature be substituted
as a means of communing with spirits. Man will take part in that
communion, instead of being the mere passive instrument of beings whom
he does not know or understand, and this will be the period when spiritual
and physical sciences will supplement each other, instead of being, as now,
arrayed against each other by the ignorance and prejudice of man. The
communion between mortals and those spheres of human spiritual
existence that have as yet been able to manifest to mortals, is but a faint
indication of the approaches which the earth is making towards the
inauguration of a new era; a time fulfilled, a judgement passed; a dawning
day of new life, new light, new heavens, and a new earth. Occult science,
words which at present have but little meaning in the ears of men, must be
understood, studied, and mastered ere humanity can enter the temple of
spiritism, or worship in spirit and in truth that God who is a spirit."
The Byga here made a movement to go, but as he did so, he stretched
out his hand to me as before. I attempted to take it, but felt nothing, and
shrank from him in confusion, exclaiming: "Have I lost my sense of touch,
or what is this I would clasp?"
"As an adept in occult science you should know the difference between
mortal substance and the still more potential touch of force." So saying he
grasped my hand with a power that would have imprisoned me had I been
a Titan, then releasing me as suddenly, I saw the shrouded form and
cowled head gradually become transfigured. A dimness was on my eyes;
the walls, gardens, terraces, moon-lit river, and the distant city, with its
glittering domes and minarets, al seemed to be whirling around me with
frightful rapidity; the vast crystal vault of the heavens, with its sparkling
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GHOST LAND.
lamps and spangled immensity, looked so close to me that it might be
about to descend and crush me. In the midst of this awful chaos I
experienced a sensation as if I were being lifted up in the arms of some
being who was all force, and then laid tenderly on the couch from which I
had risen on the Byga's entrance.
If my readers would know what relation this vision bore to the strange
visitor whom I have named "the Byga," I am wholly unable to answer
them. I never knew who or what this mystic was. I never fully understood
why, in his atmospheres, spirits could come and go like images on the
sensitive plate of the photographer. He himself, his nature and relation to
the world of the unseen around me, have formed a part of those mysteries
which the researches of a single life or a single generation cannot master. I
have often listened with regret to statements purporting to emanate from
the inspiration of "very high spirits," which assumed to explain all the
mysteries of spiritual manifestations, and that upon the ground of material
science and secularized analogies, simply ridiculous.
GHOST LAND.
same relation to earth that life of the embryo during its period of gestation
bears to that of the infant immediately after its mortal birth--no more.
Looking back upon the scenes of my own past life, with its various acts of
spiritual intervention, I confess I can only perceive through the enclosing
mists, the white hands of angels weaving the woof of human life, and feel
the supporting arms of spirit guardians but half revealed. The longer I live
and search, and strive to gauge the infinite and eternal with finite senses
and temporal capacity, the less I find I really know, and the more
stupendous appears to become the ocean of immensity over which I must
sail before I can venture to offer any chart of the path I have followed to
those who shall come after me.
I have written truly, faithfully of the "Ghost Land" through which I have
been searching. The "Cassandras" of life are never believed in, and still
they must vaticinate. Perhaps it will be so with me. Many more will scoff
and sneer and disbelieve than strive as I have done to find the clue that
might explain my strange experiences. Flippant egotism may either deny
them altogether, or offer such silly and secular attempts at explanation as
deprive spiritual life and science of all dignity, religious grace, or holiness;
but to me it becomes more and more apparent every day that a bridge of
occult science must span the gulf between the visible and invisible worlds
ere man can venture to say he knows as he is known.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XXII.
The time was fast approaching when I had resolved I would make a
complete change in my mode of life and the sphere of its action. Eight
years had passed away since I left England, and I had grown so weary of
military life beneath the burning sun of Hindostan, that I seriously
contemplated a change of service which would enable me to return to my
own country and scenes more congenial to my early education. I did not
venture to suggest these proposed changes to my Hindoo connections, who
built largely upon my continuance amongst them, as a means of
aggrandizing their own power and improving my fortunes.
GHOST LAND.
GHOST LAND.
which truth itself will be the Bible, God the high-priest, ministering spirits
the acolytes, and occult science the connecting link between the past and
present, the spiritual and the natural world. The very few that in this
generation are fitted for affiliation with this society will be called, as I was,
without any previous knowledge of its existence; the rest of the world may
and will seek it in vain.
I had been called, I repeat, and was obliged to join its ranks, but I had to
undergo a long and painful series of probations ere I could hope to arrive at
all that that society could confer upon me. I had labored and suffered for
it, abnegated self, and given up for its sake much that renders life beautiful,
cheerful, and happy. I had given up my very body and soul to gain what I
sought, and soon, very soon, I was to be rewarded.
This was the conversation that passed between myself and my friend
Graham at our breakfast table, as we sat reading our letters on the day
which succeed the visit recorded in the last chapter. Besides the business
matters which summoned me to Calcutta, I found a strong impelling
motive in a letter just received from my esteemed friend, John Dudley, but
one which for some unexplained reason I ought to have had many months
before. By a perusal of its contents I learned that Mr. Dudley had
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succeeded to the earldom of D----, in consequence of the demise of the
intervening heirs, His elevation to the peerage was entirely unexpected,
and seemed to have had no effect in changing the hearty and affectionate
cordiality of my friend's character, nor had it, as he emphatically assured
me, wrought any alteration in the feelings of his "dear girls, except some
little astonishment at their awakening one fine morning to hear themselves
called the ladies Sophia, Edith, and Blanche." He frequently alluded to his
experiences amongst the Spiritualists of America; his unquenched
enthusiasm for "the cause," and his abiding faith that I should keep my
promise and revisit his family at the expiration of ten years from the time
of my departure. He reminded me that the ten years would soon elapse
now, adding that I should have a good excuse for returning to England,
were it only to escort back his best-beloved child, the Lady Blanche
Dudley, who, as he informed me, had been induced to accompany her aunt,
Lady Emily R----, to India for a visit of two years. Lady Emily, the Sister
of the new Countess of D----, had, in my absence, espoused her cousin, the
Viscount R----, whom I should remember, said the writer, "as a sour,
unspiritual relative" of his family, one between whom and the Dudleys no
great intimacy had ever been maintained. My friend continued thus:
"Now, Emily was just one of the best and most genial of human beings,
besides being a capital medium, which is better than all, you know. What
under the sun could induce this dear sister- in-law of mine to wed a prig of
a Scotch viscount, and a Presbyterian to boot, none can say except those
who are more versed in the mysteries of womankind than I am.
"The fact is, I suppose, poor Emily grew tired of lone widowhood, and
as my lord was appointed to a high position in India, and offered my dear
relative a handsome establishment and all the privileges of Begumship,
etc., etc., the thing was too much for the aforesaid womankind, and dear
Emmy consented to become the Viscountess R----, and depart with her
yellow-visaged spouse to India forthwith. But that isn't the whole or the
worst of it, Louis. Would you believe it? They have actually carried my
little Blanche, the 'very light of my harem' and the apple of my eye, along
with them. Of course you will wonder how such a miracle could have
come about, and to tell you the truth, I have not got over my own
astonishment in the matter, even now that she has been gone--my precious
darling! more than two months. All I can do is to tell you the way the
thing came around.
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"Emily received a splendid settlement in her marriage, and as she is not
very likely to bring her noble spouse any heirs, she, with his full consent,
offered to adopt my Blanche as her heiress, provided she were permitted to
accompany her on her two years' mission to Calcutta. You know that
Blanche was always her aunt's favorite, as she was mine and everybody
else's. Well, I don't know how they arranged it all, but they made out that
as my two boys would have the bulk of the estate, and the girls had but
little prospect beyond slim settlements, or rich marriages, of course this
offer of my lady the viscountess was far too magnificent to be slighted.
Thus they got it all settled to their satisfaction, and I verily believe had
fitted my little fairy out with all the gauzes and finery proper on such
occasions, when suddenly they bethought them of coming to ask my
consent to my darling's abstraction. Now, Louis, you know me well
enough to be aware how hard it would be for me to oppose one woman at a
time; but when I tell you they came in a band, and asked me en masse to
consent to what they had already fully made up their minds to do, you may
'guess,' as Our American cousins have it, what sort of a chance I stood
amongst them. However, I thought I would just try it on a little; so
summoning up my most potential air of authority, I stated my decided
objection to any child of mine taking up her residence amongst lions and
tigers, snake charmers and charmeresses; but before I could get out another
word-- rap, rap, rap! comes 'the spirits,' and instantly my whole band of
feminines set to work spelling out communications from what I was
informed was the spirit of a 'fakir' who had lived six thousand years ago,
and who peremptorily commanded that the Lady Blanche Dudley should
proceed forthwith to India, 'to meet her fat.'
"'Meet her fat!' I exclaimed. 'In heavens's name, why should she go so
far to meet fat? That fakir doesn't know much about my family
arrangements, I take it.'
"But no, the spirits wouldn't have it that way, either; then, after a
considerable amount of bungling, the fakir corrected his spelling, and
the sentence read thus: 'To meet her fate.'
GHOST LAND.
as soon do without; and so, to make a long story short, she sailed away last
March, Louis, and the sunlight of my life sailed with her. That's all."
Such was the substance of my old friend's letter, and though I was vexed
enough to find it ought to have been delivered to me so many months ago,
I still hoped to be in time to ascertain how far the Lady Blanche had
become reconciled to meeting "her fate" in India, or whether she might not
wish to return to her native land. Devoting the next hour to writing
explanatory letters to my old friend, and the rest of the day to my
preparations for departure, I was ready to set out that night with Graham
for Calcutta, which "City of Palaces" we reached in due time, and after
taking a cordial leave of each other, we departed to our separate
destinations.
GHOST LAND.
nabob, and the reigning queen of a certain class of fashionable society, for
that season, at Calcutta. When Graham first tendered me the scented piece
of frivolity that conveyed this invitation, I was half angry with him, and
despite the sincere regard we entertained for each other, I was somewhat
hurt that he should have so far mistaken me as to imagine that I should be
willing to spend my time in assemblies of mere fops and flirts. He knew
that I was often compelled to take part in stately ceremonials or social
gatherings, but he also knew that in my most charitable moods, I could not
regard what is popularly called "society" with toleration; how, then, could
he expect me I asked coldly, to make one of the gilded butterflies whom a
vain and ambitious woman gathered around her for the sake of exhibiting
the homage offered up at her shrine?
Poor Graham bore my reproaches very patiently, but would not yield his
point nevertheless. He said la belle Helene was, like myself, a "mystic"
and devoted "occultist;" she had long known me by reputation as a student
of her favorite sciences, and was eager to meet me; that it was no gilded
butterflies, but profound thinkers, grave reformers, and speculative
metaphysicians who were in the habit of attending her soirees. Some rank
and fashion of course, was permitted to exhibit there, but for the most part
it was to be an assembly of those whom I should acknowledge to be "the
best people in the city." Graham added, with an earnestness peculiarly
irresistible to me, his attached friend, "But it is not for the society's sake I
urge you, Chevalier, it is for my own that I plead; there will be one person
there to-night, whom I entreat you to meet, to look upon and speak to, if
for no other purpose, at least to oblige the friend who would never refuse
anything you could ask."
GHOST LAND.
Sunshine" of her doting father's home, but the graceful and distingue Lady
Blanche Dudley, somewhat grown, it is true, but still petite, slight, fragile--
ethereal perhaps, would be the better word--and beautiful; heavens! what a
wondrously beautiful creature she was! All the poet's ideals of sylphs,
undines, or fairy beings, "too fair for earth, too frail for heaven," would
have paled and grown cold, plain, and insignificant before the beauty of
this wondrous, unearthly-looking girl. I gazed at her as I would have done
at the cunning workmanship of an Apelles, a Phidias, or an Angelo. At
that time, at least, I regarded her more as a marble goddess than a very
lovely mortal. Her beauty had a touch of sadness quite unlike the Blanche
of old, and there was so much dignity in the turn of her graceful form,
veiled by masses of golden ringlets, that I stood like a worshipper of the
beautiful in art, as I have ever been, and I supposed stared at her in equal
surprise and admiration ere I had the sense or good breeding to greet her.
She was as much changed in manner as appearance, I found, for though she
met me with kindness and empressment, there was a womanly reserve and
a far-off, dreamy air of abstraction about her which completely removed
her from my memory as the merry, laughing girl I had parted with eight
years before.
Ever a dreamer, a vision arose in my mind of the many hearts that would
ache, and the many gallants that would sigh in vain for this creature of
light and ether, this peerless Undine, and that, too, in a city where the
tropic skies and burning sun kindle up warmer emotions than in any other
fashionable capitol of the known world. And this was all, absolutely all,
that I thought about the Lady Blanche Dudley during the many succeeding
months that I became her constant attendant, escorting her in her rides and
drives, waiting upon her in her uncle's stately official entertainments,
listening to her thrilling voice, sweeter than the fabled syren's, as she
accompanied herself with masterly skill on the harp; watching crowds of
adorers hovering around her, and the richest and noblest in the land
emulating each other for the honor of winning one glance from her
wonderful violet eyes. And all this I watched, and looked upon her
meanwhile as I would upon a beautiful and ingenious piece of mechanism,
or as those of my comrades who knew me best, affirmed, "like an Arctic
iceberg, reflecting back the rays of a Southern sun, but never melting
beneath them." And this fair Lady Blanche never changed the soft, white,
fleecy gauzes in which she veiled her exquisite form for any other dress,
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GHOST LAND.
and never substituted the fresh flowers and leaves which constituted her
only ornaments for the radiant jewels and burnished gold that flashed on
every side around her. Who can wonder that she moved in the midst of
India's highest magnates like a descended star of light and purity?
Who can wonder that she became the cynosure of all admiring eyes,
save mine? For her father's sake, and because I remembered how tenderly
in times gone by, the kind-hearted little one had wept in sympathy with my
strange afflictions, I devoted to her now all the spare time I had to give,
and delighted to escort her and her good-natured aunt to those scenes of
ancient art and antique splendor with which Hindostan abounds, but in
which so few of the fashionable crowds around them took the deep interest
they appeared to do.
"Are you then acquainted with this lady?" I asked of the viscountess, as
we drove to Madame Laval's residence.
"Oh, yes," replied Lady Emily, "of course we are. Helene is our
Blanche's dearest friend; in fact, they are almost inseparable; besides," she
added, lowering her tone mysteriously, "she is one of our sort, you know,
Chevalier; a mystic and a medium, and all that sort of thing, and of course,
we are delighted to cultivate her, with our present terribly materialistic
surroundings. She reads the stars, too, distils potions, and--"
"Why don't you call me Louis, as you used to do?" I asked. "Is it
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GHOST LAND.
because I am now expected to address you as Lady Blanche Dudley?"
GHOST LAND.
though mine which reminded me of nothing so much as plunging my hand
into a nest of crawling adders.
Oh, fatal gift of occult sight! Oh, ban of mortal life--that power which
pierces the veil, wisely, providentially, hung before the holy of holies in
each one's secret nature! That fatal occult sight was mine from the
moment that woman fixed her talismanic eyes upon me. That veil was
lifted instantly as I beheld her standing side by side with her obsequious
brother. Near them gleamed the snow-white, misty robes of the golden-
haired Blanche, and above their heads grinned and chattered a triad of
hideous elementaries, invisible to all but me, yet graphically revealing the
characteristics of the couple to whom they were attracted as attendant
spirits, and glowering at the unconscious Blanche like the demons of some
hideous rite, to whom she, the pure victim, was to be offered up as a
sacrifice.
Near this group stood my friend Graham, and I was fairly shocked by
the look of pain and anxiety with which he was scrutinizing me as I
endured this introduction. I have often marveled why the exercise of
spiritual insight is so seldom accompanied by the power to use it. The seer
is compelled to behold the innermost of natures all masked to others, yet
the cramping bonds of society interpose to neutralize the value of what he
discovers.
GHOST LAND.
the salon. Pleading the indisposition I really felt, I hastened to resign my
charge to him, and left the place.
It was towards the close of the same night, just as the first faint streaks
of dawning light had begun to dispel the darkness, that I awoke with an
indescribable sense of mental oppression. I felt as if all that was good and
true had abandoned me and I was left in the toils of some foul and hateful
captivity. As I started up from my pillow, determined to shake off this
terrible nightmare by exercise, I saw distinctly, standing between me and
the faintly illumined sky as it gleamed through the open glass doors of my
chamber, the figure of Madame Helene Laval--graceful, beautiful, and
commanding as a Pythoness, a veritable Medea, though but little of a
woman. In one hand she held a short curl of black hair, in the other a
square case, the nature of which I could not at first discern. Her voice,
which though deep, was singularly sweet and sympathetic, sounded a long
way off as she said: "Do not seek to fly me! I love you, have long loved
and followed you. Give me your affection or--yourself, and I will worship
you. Reject me, and I will destroy all you love best."
She then raised the square case she held in her hand, and I saw it was an
ivory miniature, a likeness of myself, that Mr. Dudley had caused to be
taken before I left England. I was not informed how this portrait was to be
disposed of, but I was under the impression that it belonged to the family
generally.
Without any definite idea of what I was going to do, I sprang from my
bed and grasped the figure I beheld by the arm, endeavoring at the same
time to seize the portrait she held. What I touched gave me the impression
of being a substance like stiff gauze, or lace inflated by air; but instantly,
beneath my hand, this substance began to recede, the figure collapsed,
shrank together, and melted down to the floor. The last portion I saw of it
was a pair of black, long, almond shaped eyes, gleaming at me with an
expression I would fain blot out from my memory forever.
GHOST LAND.
hand to my head, and discovered where a lock of hair had been cut away
from the back; but how or when was as much a mystery as how it had
come into the visionary hand where it had just been displayed.
It was about a week after this occurrence, and when I was engaged to
dine at Viscount R----'s, that on entering his drawing-room, I saw Lady
Emily standing looking out of the window with her back towards me. She
was alone. I knew her impressibility, and had but to exert my will for one
instant to place her under its psychological influence. I then caused he to
turn around, sit down on an ottoman before me, and answer the following
questions:
"Lady Emily, tell me truly, to whom was my portrait given after I left
England?"
"For whom?"
"Helene asked Blanche for it, with the expressed wish of copying it, and
Blanche, who can refuse Helene nothing, was obliged to comply."
"O heavens! that woman knows everything. She has a complete mastery
over Blanche, and can read the innermost secrets of her heart."
"And yours also, Lady Emily."
"Not so well. She has never magnetized me, but she has Blanche."
"I will try, but I am afraid of Helene. She can come and go as a spirit,
whenever and wherever she pleases."
GHOST LAND.
"Many times; coming out of Blanche's apartments."
Not an hour of the day or night passed, during which I disposed myself
to slumber, that I did not awaken to find her "atmospheric spirit" hovering
over me. Exorcism, concentrated will, all were in vain to banish this
dreadful haunting. The terrible wraith could neither touch nor magnetize
me, but she was herself so powerful an adept and so reckless in her alliance
with the most potential of elementaries, that the best I could do was to
guard myself during my waking hours against the mighty spells she used to
subdue me.
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There were means by which I could have utterly broken those spells,
and cast them back upon herself; but in this case I must have left the
unfortunate Lady Blanche an unprotected prey to the arts of this vile
woman and her bad brother; and for the sake of the innocent girl herself, no
less than in my steady friendship for her excellent father, I silently, secretly
vowed myself to her defence against her unprincipled assailants. The
problematical part of this network of evil lay in the fact that Blanche had
become completely spell-bound before my arrival in Calcutta. When I
attempted to modify her unlimited confidence in Helene, she expressed the
utmost regret and astonishment at my aversions for so charming a person,
and asked mournfully why I wished to take from her, her only friend.
"Has she told you she was your only friend, Blanche," I asked--"you,
who are surrounded, not with friends alone, but with positive
worshippers?"
"What are they all to me?" replied the poor girl, in a pleading,
bewildered tone. "One true friend is worth a legion of interested
acquaintances. Helene is true. She alone understands me. Whom else can
I trust?"
"Can you not trust me, Blanche?" I inquired, though with much
hesitation.
Flushing instantly to the hue of the crimson roses which adorned her
white dress, she answered evasively: "Helene told me before you came
hither, you would cruelly misunderstand her, and warn me against her.
She knew this by aid of those powerful spirits who surround her. She told
me, too, the hour would come when I should have no one to rely upon but
her. Is it not come now?"
There was an air of utter desolation in the accents of this young and
beautiful creature, which formed a strange contrast between the splendor of
her surroundings, the attractions which brought half a kingdom to her feet,
and the forlorn expression with which she clasped her little hands and
gazed into the far-off distance, like a hunted deer seeking for shelter.
The piteous though unspoken appeal made its way into the depths of my
heart, and would certainly have enchained me in the bonds I so much
dreaded, had not a happy alternative suggested itself. I suddenly
remembered her good father's letter, and knew how much he would at that
moment have felt indebted to me if I assumed his office, and urged upon
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the poor, bewildered girl an immediate return to his paternal care and
protection.
I knew the fearful peril in which she stood, and though I could never
make her pure and innocent nature comprehend the force of evil spells or
the actual potency of psychological arts, I succeeded in impressing her
with the dangers she incurred by subjecting herself any longer to the
possibility of a controlling influence from her friend, Helene, in favor of
her audacious brother, Paul Perrault.
I found here that I had touched a chord, to which every fibre in the
refined and high-toned lady's being instantly responded. She truly loved
Helene, but detested her brother. She perfectly understood his pretensions,
but never for one moment believed that even Helene's influence could
convert her loathing for Perrault into toleration. From this source, she said,
she expected no other result than the pain she felt in inflicting pain or her
friend. My arguments, however, proved resistless. I brought such an array
of reasons before her to show why she should return, for her father's sake,
her own, and- -alas! more potential than all--for mine, that, putting both
her hands into mine, and fixing her wonderfully lovely eyes upon me with
the devotion of a saint for a deity, she murmured: "Order my destiny as
you will; I obey." Hating myself for my resolution to send her away, yet
more resolved than ever to remove her from scenes and places where there
was not one human being worthy of her, least of all myself, I left her,
having undertaken the very difficult, very ungracious, and certainly
untruthful task of persuading her aunt and uncle that she was pining to
return to her home, wearying for the society of her own family, and must
be sent back by the very next ship that sailed.
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CHAPTER XXIII.
BLACK MAGIC OR VAUDOOISM.
A PROPOSAL OF MARRIAGE -- A
DECLINATION -- AMONG THE FAKIRS --
HOW THEY ENTRANCE SUBJECTS –
LEVITATION -- SEANCE IN A
SUBTERRANEAN TEMPLE.
GHOST LAND.
he hinted his opinion, that I was the particular obstacle in the way; in a
word, that is was for my sake that she had rejected the many desirable
offers of brilliant settlement that had been made to her.
"To her father's protection most surely," replied the viscount bitterly.
"Handsome men that can't marry ought decidedly to devote themselves to a
religious life; and beautiful young ladies that wont marry should never be
absent from the parental roof."
GHOST LAND.
back her glorious veil of golden curls from her flushed face, she exclaimed:
"Helene will cure me; she calls me even now. I know her soothing
influence."
Meantime poor Lady Emily wept and smiled and clapped her hands with
delight, and when at last the fair somnambulist returned to consciousness,
and hid her face in her aunt's arms, the latter expressed her unbounded
satisfaction that her Blanche had not lost that wonderful gift of "trance
improvisation" which had made her the star of those happy home seances
which had proceeded under her father's roof, and in which Blanche had
been the principal medium and Lady Emily one of the admiring witnesses.
GHOST LAND.
hands at parting, "Chevalier, you are right. This poor girl's place is with
her father and mother. I have been wrong to allow her to engage in these
dangerous magnetic practices; and since they cannot be broken through if
she stays here, go she must, and that with the least possible delay."
"Has not the error been in allowing one so pure, innocent, and
impressible as Blanche," I replied, "to become subjugated by the baleful
influence of Madame Laval?"
All the philosophy I had formerly urged against these practices were
reiterated in vain. He was resolved to try the effect of Vaudooism, and,
with or without me, he would visit Anine.
GHOST LAND.
were produced through the ecstacy of motion, an art he had learned in
Egypt from the famous "whirling dervishes." This fakir was a Malay, and
brother to that very Anine who had obtained a high reputation for her
success in those arts of sorcery, which more properly come under the
cognomen of "Vaudooism." I had never seen Nazir's sister, nor had I any
desire to do so; but as my little fakir was much attached to me, and
delighted to recount for my edification his sister's remarkable experiences
with her distinguished patrons and patronesses, I became unwittingly, the
repository of many singular and unsought-for confidences, amongst which
was one that I deemed might be peculiarly serviceable to my friend
Graham at this juncture.
It is enough to say that I had earned the power I possesses, and was
aided by spirits to exercise it and dispense it to my companion.
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GHOST LAND.
After passing through the outer dwelling and a succession of mean,
deserted courts, we came to a ruinous old temple, in one angle of which I
advanced to the door of a crypt, which opened from within at my signal,
and admitted us, by a descent of a few steps, into a large stone chamber,
partly hewn out of the rock. Here we found a tank and other preparations
for the performance of ancient priestly rites. Three veiled females were
sitting huddled together on a stone bench at the side of the hall and their
attire proved that they were attendants on some lady of consequence.
"Do not mind them," I said to Graham aloud. "Step as I have desired
you, and they will not see us." In proof of what I said, I led my companion
close to the group, speaking aloud as we advanced, but they neither looked
up or noticed us. We then moved on to a second door at the farther end of
the hall, which, like the first, swung open for our passage through. Beyond
this door we found the scene of operations, which was a stone chamber
similar to the first, though somewhat larger. I placed myself and my
companion at the foot of a broken peristyle, around the base of which we
found a heap of stones, on which we leaned whilst the following scene was
enacted.
GHOST LAND.
At a certain portion of the dance the whirling fakirs all paused
instantaneously, stood for a moment motionless, as if they had been turned
to stone by the touch of an enchanter's wand. They then each raised their
lean arms and pointed their forefingers at the female in the center. By this
change of posture Graham was enabled to see plainly what I already knew,
namely, that the female was Madame Helene Laval. His horror and
dismay at this discovery had nearly destroyed the rapport in which I held
him. He soon recovered himself, however, and with a muttered
exclamation resumed his place by my side.
As the fakirs continued to point their fingers at the lady, her features
assumed an expression so rapt and superb, that my admiration for the
beautiful overcame my disgust for her character, and I regarded her for the
time being with breathless interest. It is no exaggeration to say that at this
juncture, the luminous fluid which streamed from the outstretched fingers
of the fakirs, shone like tongues of flame, and so transported their deeply-
entranced subject that she tossed her arms aloft, with wild cries and
convulsive shudderings. At length she seemed to make one bound high up
in the air, when she was held suspended three feet above the ground for
several minutes. At this sight the circle of ecstatics around her uttered
fresh cries, and imitating her action by tossing their arms in the air,
prostrated themselves, with their faces on the ground, where they remained
motionless during the rest of what ensued. The Malay woman now
approached the floating figure, and extending her arms towards her with an
imperative gesture, whilst she chanted a monotonous invocation to the
spirits of the air, gradually drew her subject down to the earth, when,
taking her by the hand, she led her to a seat placed opposite the fire and
within a circle traced on the ground. From this point she commenced a
series of invocations to the spirits of the elements, during which she kept
incessantly pacing round and round, including the altar, the fire, and the
lady in her gyrating path, feeding the fire and braziers meanwhile with
essences, which continued to dispense their aromatic and pungent odors
through the chamber.
GHOST LAND.
surrounded us; the wild, almost demoniac appearance of the crouching
fakirs, and the half-frenzied mistress of the rites; but above all, the
preternatural appearance of the white-robed ecstatic, whose suspension in
air, baffling all the known laws of nature, must have been the effect of
powers unknown or incomprehensible, or else the action of invisible
beings no less terrible than the sorceress whom they aided.
All this was so new and startling to Graham that I could not feel
surprised when he--as brave a soldier as ever drew sword--stood grasping
my hand, whilst his own was as cold as death, and trembling like an aspen
leaf, as he leaned for support on my shoulder. The following words form a
rough translation of the first verse, which the sibyl chanted, as she paced
round and round in her magic circle:
Three verses addressed to the spirits of the other elements followed, but
the ardor of the language and the reckless wickedness which was implied
in them, although masked in the synthetical flow of the sweet Shen Tamil
language, will not endure translation.
GHOST LAND.
of spirits almost amounting to despair, terrible to realize, but almost
impossible to express in words. I have known many travelers in Oriental
lands, who, from motives of curiosity or special interest, have attended
such scenes, and no matter how unimpressible they may have been by
nature, I have conversed with or heard of one who did not realize
something of the same kind of desolation and abandonment of God and the
good which possessed us on this occasion.
When the invocations of the Malay woman were ended, she made a
profound Oriental salutation to Madame Laval; then crossed her arms upon
her breast, she stood like an ebony statue or an impersonation of the spirit
of darkness and thus addressed her employer:
"What more would the daughter of Indra require of her slave? Lo, she is
now fairer than Parvati in the eyes of mortals, more powerful than he of the
sacred Bull! What more does she demand?"
"Anine!" said the lady in a tone of deeper dejection than I had ever
heard her clear tones sinking to before, "Anine, I have already proved your
power upon all men but one. He whom alone I love, alone has resisted me;
nay more, I know now--oh, too well, too well!--that he actually abhors
me."
"He loves another," replied the Malay, coldly. "Is not that enough?"
"Hush, hush!" cried the lady, fiercely, "you shall not tell me that, nor do I
yet believe it. Listen to me, woman! You have a woman's heart in your
breast; that I know, despite your reckless indifference to the woes of
others. Is there nothing you can do to help me--nothing yet left to be tried,
Anine?"
Here she poured out a tale of passion so wild and fierce that again my
pen halts before the attempt to transcribe her words. Reckless and pitiful,
wicked, yet touching, as they were, they afforded terrible evidence of the
woe and wreck which human passion can make when once its stormy
power is suffered to usurp the throne of reason.
Anine replied: "Have I not confessed to thee, lady, that this master of
spirits is stronger than I? I can bring all other men to my feet, but not him.
Even now, it seems to me that his influence is upon us; this place is full of
him, and he beats down my power as if I thrashed the wind.
"Lady, I have told you there is but one way left by which you can
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GHOST LAND.
subdue him; you must hurt him--nearly kill his body before you can touch
his spirit!"
As she spoke she advanced to the space behind the altar and withdrew a
dark curtain, when we at once discovered the background of the scene. I
must confess I was less surprised than my friend, to perceive that this veil
had concealed a large, coarse, but well-executed portrait of myself, beneath
which was a waxen image, which I had no difficulty in recognizing an also
intended to represent me.
Graham started wildly as this exhibition met his eyes. For the first time,
as it would seem, the real truth flashed upon his mind; and when the lady,
with a mixture of passionate sobs, adjurations, and execration, began
apostrophizing these effigies in language that admitted of but one
interpretation, my poor friend's agitation exceeded all bounds, and would
certainly have destroyed my power to shield him from discovery, had I not
retained a strong grasp upon him.
"Let us go, Chevalier!" he murmured. "For God's sake, let us leave this
scene of shame and horror! Is this Vaudooism? Is this what I was about to
enter upon with unhallowed purpose and reckless intent? O heaven,
forgive me for my involuntary crime!"
It was useless to try and soothe him, or attempt to detain him longer in a
scene of which I well knew he had beheld enough already to effect his
perfect restoration to a sense of honor, manliness, and piety. For myself, I
knew well enough the nature of the performance that was to ensue. I knew
also that whatever it was would fall harmless upon my well-guarded spirit.
I have already intimated to my readers, that the success or strength and
potency of all magical rites lies in their psychological effect, or the power
of mind projected from one individual upon another. Permit me also to
recur to the theory so often alluded to in these pages, namely, that all the
effect of will or psychological impress depends upon its uninterrupted
action. So long as it can reach its subject without the intervention of cross-
magnetism or opposing currents it will surely succeed; but when, as in my
case, the subject is aware of the work in hand, guard against it by a
stronger will and more potential spiritual power than that of the operator,
the spell fails, the potency is overpowered, and the whole attempt is
baffled.
GHOST LAND.
themselves bound to uphold what they term "the interests of morality"--
depict their scenic effects with a view to the "triumph of virtue over vice,"
hence the Vaudoo workers' power to harm the pure and good should utterly
fail. Unhappily the physical and psychological laws of being do not
suspend their action in favor of the moral. The pure and pious share the
fate of the wicked and blasphemous in the sinking ship or burning house,
and the good and sinless parent is just as apt, if not more so, to love the bad
and sinful child as the good and pure one.
It may be asked, where, then, are our good angels, and why do they not
interpose to save us from these dark and malignant powers? I answer, they
are ever near; potential to aid and prompt to inspire us either to fly from, or
resist the evil; but that they are always successful the facts of human
history emphatically deny. Perhaps coarse, gross, and material spirits are
nearer to earth than the pure and refined. Whatever be the cause, it is as
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GHOST LAND.
idle as injurious to disregard facts for the sake of upholding a theory of
morals which is only valuable when it is proved to be practical. Our best
safeguard against evil powers and evil machinations in general, is to
cultivate a pure and innocent nature, which in itself is a repelling force
against evil. But when that pure and innocent nature has become the
subject of magnetic influence, it is imperative for us to deal no longer with
moral but magnetic laws, and these, as I have frequently alleged before, act
upon principles of their own which do not regard morals at all. We must
adopt the principles of nature as we find them, not as we deem they ought
to be nor as we in our egotism suppose they will become in deference to
our peculiar excellence, neither must we delude ourselves with the idea
that our ignorance will shield us from dangers we know nothing about. I
have heard many well- meaning people affirm they were quite safe from all
evil influences, etc., because they knew nothing about such subjects,
deeming their security lay in their ignorance.
It is for this reason that I would induce all truly philosophical thinkers to
investigate the occult, and study out in the grand lyceum of nature's laws,
the various sources of good and evil influences by which we are constantly
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GHOST LAND.
surrounded and constantly affected. Were mankind once aware of its
danger in this, as in every other direction, it would be proof against it.
The limitations of time and space forbid my enlarging upon this subject
further. It is enough to know what all mankind will sooner or later realize,
namely, that will is the sovereign potency ruling creation for good or evil;
and until we educate the race in the knowledge, use, and abuse of
psychology, we shall continue to sin and suffer, become the victims of
blind forces which are continually operating upon us whether we know it
or not, filling the lunatic asylums with subjects obsessed by evil spirits, the
propensities, and the home, with immoral men and women, laboring under
the epidemic of evil passions, infused into their natures by the very
atmosphere they breathe.
GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XXIV.
GHOST LAND.
With a view of arousing her from this lost condition, I separated some of
the flowers I had brought her and attempted to arrange them, as I had
frequently done before, with the simple fondness I should have manifested
for a cherished sister, amongst her beautiful ringlets; but for the first time
in our lives I believe, she repelled me, and shrinking from me like a
startled fawn, she waved her hand in farewell, and darted out of the
apartment, nor did she return again whilst I remained at the villa. Like all
individuals susceptible of spirit influence or psychological impressions, I
am compelled to acknowledge myself to be a creature of moods, for which
I am not always prepared to render, even to myself, any sufficient
explanation. That night I knew the impress of a strange and occult power
was upon me. An unconquerable restlessness possessed me, peopling
every lonely place with unendurable visions, yet compelling me to
withdraw from all human companionship. Towards midnight I became
weary of wandering through the gardens and over the terraces of my own
residence, and wayworn and wretched as I felt, but without any clew to
analyze or control my miserable sensations, I retired to my own chamber,
determined to try if by fastening my attention on a mass of accounts and
other details of a business character, I could conquer the occult influences
that beset me. All would not do, however. I could neither write, read, or
even sit still. Again I re-entered the gardens of the once splendid, though
now ruinous old villa I inhabited, and walked about, without aim, purpose
or relief, until I was foot-sore and weary. At length I returned to my
dozing attendants, who were waiting up for me. Almost as much
aggravated by the presence of these poor, patient drudges, as I was angry
with myself for imposing upon them, I hastily dismissed them and
prepared to retire for the night, determined to compel the sleep I longed
for, yet dreaded. When I was but half undressed, the same restless fit
returned upon me, and the same sense of nameless, formless presence
haunted me. Then, as ever in my experience, I found that when the mind is
most disturbed, the lucidity of the spirit is most obscured. One of the
earliest lessons of initiation I had to learn for the attainment of high
spiritual exaltation, was self-control and the entire subjugation of all
exciting impulses, passions, or emotions. I had been taught, and now
believe, that the highest grades of spiritual power, require for their
achievement, a life of complete abstinence, chastity, and, as before stated,
the subjugation not only of the passions, but even of the social affections,
tastes and appetites. To be the perfect master of one's self, is the first
necessary preparation for mastery over others, or the attainment of that
complete condition of mental equilibrium in which Nature, with all her
realms of occult unfoldment, becomes subject to the power of the adept.
Naturally impulsive, passionate, and emotional, I know I should never
have succeeded in attaining to the conditions of spiritual exaltation I aimed
at, had I not inherited by nature those gifts of the spirit, which I had not
passivity enough to earn by culture. Still, I had labored faithfully through
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GHOST LAND.
the probationary exercises enjoined upon me. Already I had succeeded in a
thousand self-conquests that few young men of my age could have
accomplished, and it was only at very rare intervals now, that poor fallible
human nature triumphed over the acquired stoicism of the adept. The
present occasion, however, witnessed one of those mental defeats for
which I had before paid many penalties. At length I determined that my
wisest course was not to exhaust myself any further by maintaining the
spiritual warfare that was distracting me. "let the powers of evil do their
worst," I mentally exclaimed, "I will heed them no more."
GHOST LAND.
As she passed through the open doors of my room, she walked forward
with the automatic air of a magnetized subject, until she reached the foot of
my bed, when she paused, uttered a low cry, as if she had been suddenly
struck, and sank to the ground, where she lay on the lace that shaded the
couch, like a mass of newly-fallen snow.
"In the name of heaven," I cried, choking with rage and indignation,
"what do you want here gentlemen?"
"We have come here to convince ourselves that an evil tale we have
heard of your unworthiness, Louis de B----, is no slander," said one of the
oldest of my visitors, a noble Guroo, to whom, as one of my teachers, I had
pledged myself in the most solemn vows to observe for a given time the
strictest asceticism in thought, word, and deed.
"What, sir!" I answered indignantly, "have you then the right to enter
my private apartments, intrude upon my most sacred hours of retirement,
and invade every custom of honor and good breeding in this fashion?" I
had laid the unfortunate lady on a divan as I saw the strangers at my
window, and now stood between her and the invaders.
"Louis," said the first speaker, advancing towards me mildly but firmly,
"we have been this night informed that by your arts you have lured away
an unfortunate lady from her home, and beguiled her here for her
destruction. You know the awful penalties you incur for breaking your
vows during the time you have pledged to fulfill them; but even the honor
due to our order is as nothing compared to the duty we, as your spiritual
fathers, are called upon to perform, when we attempt to save you from the
base act with which you are charged."
GHOST LAND.
Before I could appeal to him, as I knew I could successfully, for the aid
of my dreadful emergency, he glided quietly up to a group of statues
placed in a distant part of the chamber, interspersed with rose-trees and
tropical plants, and adding in his low but thrilling voice, "and here is the
enchantress." he dragged forward, seemingly by his own volition rather
than any force he used, a masked and veiled female, who had up to that
moment been concealed amongst the trees and statues. This person the
Byga led forward, obviously with no effort on his part, but with a terrible
show of reluctance and terror on hers, until he placed her in the center of
the group that clustered around me. In an instant I had dragged the veil
from her head and the mask from her face, discovering, as I was confident
I should, the deathly pale yet defiant features of Madame Helene Laval.
Had I sufficiently composed to have noted the details of the sad scene in
which I was engaged, I could not have failed to remark the extraordinary
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GHOST LAND.
palsy of fear or mental subjugation that had fallen on the once
commanding Helene. She stood with eyes glaring fury and defiance, yet
vainly striving to protest her innocence. A spell stronger than her own
overpowered her, and so long as the clasp of the shrouded Byga was on her
arm she could only glance fiercely from one to the other of those who
surrounded her without being able to utter an intelligible sentence. As to
the Brahmins, they knew and really trusted me. My kind friend Nanak Rai,
was one of their party, and my little fakir Nazir, flitted from one to another,
explaining to them who this new intruder on the scene really was, and the
arts she had practiced with his sister Anine, for the express purpose of
subduing me and injuring the poor, innocent lady.
"This is all my sister's work," cried the little fakir impetuously. "Alas!
alas! that ever the blood of Nazir Sahib should flow in the veins of so base
a Chandala! But O my fathers!" he cried, suddenly starting into a new
passion and gesticulating towards the gardens with frantic energy, "there is
still worse woe in store for the innocent ones. Hide the poor lady,
Chevalier! Hide her if you value her life! Yonder comes her proud uncle,
led on by that base-born son of a Sudra, Perrault. See where they come
with torches in search of the absent lady, whom Perrault well knows is to
be found in this fatal place. We are too late!" he added, dropping into the
background. "The enemy is upon us." He was right, for before any of us
could recover from the shock his disclosure occasioned, the Viscount R----,
accompanied by Perrault, and a nephew of his, who happened to be visiting
at the house when the absence of the unfortunate Lady Blanche was
discovered, entered the apartment from the gardens without. Lady Blanche
had, as I afterwards learned, been missing since ten o'clock that evening.
GHOST LAND.
intelligence was first communicated to the proud nobleman, the tale-bearer
had nearly lost his life for his pains, so infuriated did the viscount become
at what he deemed a shameful slander; but when Perrault has succeeded in
evading his first explosion of wrath, and reiterated again and again the
truth of his assertions, the viscount called upon his nephew, who was then
on a visit at his house, for advice and aid. It was agreed between them that
Perrault should be their prisoner, and either make good his words or pay
the penalty of their utterance. They compelled him, therefore, to enter the
carriage with them, in which they drove off, with a speed inadequate to
satisfy their frantic impatience, to my residence.
Such were the circumstances that complicated the scene of misery which
surrounded me on that fatal night. I believe it was to the preternatural
power of the Byga, and the steady, calm friendship of Nanak Rai, that I
owed the preservation of my senses throughout those trying hours;
certainly it was due to the latter's humanity and firm control over me that
Madame Helene Laval and her infamous brother escaped from my hands
with their lives. It was also to the Brahmin's force of character,
commanding presence, and clear, straight forward explanation that I owed
my own life, which the viscount was determined to sacrifice the moment
he found that the unfortunate Lady Blanche was in my chamber.
"Be still, all of you," said the good man, "and listen to the story I have to
tell." He then, in simple, earnest language, gave the sum of my fakir's
narrative; a concise but scathing description of the arts practiced by
Madame Laval, and a glowing account of myself, and my incapacity, as he
steadily affirmed, for the base part attributed to me. He dared Madame
Laval or her brother to controvert his statements; and when both of these
wretched and baffled plotters were silent, he pointed as the climax of his
evidence, to the unfortunate girl, who, still under the spell of the
somnambulic trance, lay extended on the divan where I had placed her.
Putting me gently aside as I stood by to guard her--the only poor act of
reparation I could now make--this kind and rue gentleman, who was also a
well-skilled magnetizer, took her tenderly by the hand, and set her on her
feet, still unconscious as she was, in our midst.
GHOST LAND.
her fleecy evening dress, and the fact that the hapless girl had been dragged
for more than seven long miles through a rough country during a chill
night, and amidst dangers that froze the blood to reflect upon--all these
circumstances combined, had the effect which the wise pleader expected
they would. The viscount turned aside his head, and buried his face in his
handkerchief; the good Brahmins murmured words of pity; and even the
ruthless enchantress was moved, and hid her face from the sight of her
much-wronged victim in the folds of her veil. At that moment a strange
phenomenon appeared amongst us.
I know not what may have been the experience of others. I have
frequently heard the Spiritists since then describe the beauty of the spirit
lights they have seen and the variety of the modes in which these luminous
appearances were made visible. I only know that never before or since
have I beheld any phenomenon of this kind, so directly in contact with a
mortal, never any sign of angelic presence and guardianship that produced
upon the witnesses so deep, reverent, and hallowing an influence. In the
midst of the hush which ensued as this phenomenon became perfected, the
good Brahmin said in his gentlest accents, "Blanche, my child, what brings
you here? Answer as if you were in the presence of your God."
"She is in the presence of her God, Brahmin," replied the entranced lips
of Blanche, though the voice and accent was that of another. "her spirit is
with the angels, and a stronger than her shall answer you. There is the
cause of her coming," and as she spoke, she advanced with a stately step
towards the veiled figure of Helene, who was still held firmly by one of the
Brahmins--for the Byga was gone. With an authoritative gesture she threw
back Madame Laval's veil, and then said in a deep and searching tone:
"Answer, Helene de Laval. Why have you brought hither Blanche
Dudley? By what power and for what purpose? Answer! for you are in
the presence of your God!" There was not an individual there who did not
experience a thrill of awe as that slight creature, now seemingly a tall and
stately presence, stood like an accusing angel, encircled by a halo of divine
light, confronting her evil genius.
"Speak the truth, Helene, and answer!" repeated the beautiful ecstatic
voice that made her enemy shudder.
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GHOST LAND.
"I lured her hither by my power of will," muttered the sibyl, as if each
word were wrung from her by tortures.
But Helene heard him not; she was wholly in the power of one
magnetizer, and under that spell she had no senses for any other. The hand
of the somnambulist was laid on her arm and she was enthralled.
"For what purpose?" repeated Blanche, turning with mild dignity upon
the viscount. "Can you ask? Know you not she purposed to destroy the
name and fame of her victim?"
"Let her confess it, then," said one of the Brahmins, fiercely.
"Enough has been said to right the wrong and clear the innocent,"
answered the sleeper, with inexpressible sweetness and command.
"Vengeance is mine saith the Lord, I will requite;" then releasing the arm
of Madame Laval, she clasped her own fair hands together, and raising her
eyes to heaven with an ecstatic expression impossible to describe, she
murmured, "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass
against us!"
The halo then gradually faded from her head. Nanak stretched out his
arms to receive her, as a father would have sheltered his child; then raising
her as if she had been an infant, at a sign from me he carried her through
the glass doors, and down to where the viscount's carriage waited below. It
was then that, as if moved by a burst of honest indignation which would no
longer endure repression, the fakir Nazir exclaimed: "She is a hard and
cruel woman, that!" pointing to Helene, who stood confronting us all with
an expression of the fiercest rage and hardihood.
GHOST LAND.
She went on like one in her sleep, ever straight forward, over rough
ways and smooth, whilst yon woman leaned from her carriage window,
and beckoned to her with her hand, and mocked her with her mouth, and
laughed and jeered at her. I heard her cry, 'Faster, my gay bird! Come on
faster, faster yet! I am guiding you to your bridegroom, my pretty piece of
purity, and we'll have a fine wedding before the stars are set; and many a
one shall hear how the fine Lady Blanche Dudley offered herself to an
unwilling lover, before another sun has set upon her dishonored head.'"
I dashed my hand over the fakir's mouth and bade him be silent or I
would call him to account for not rescuing her. Some of the Brahmins then
took a kind leave of me, whilst others remained to offer me service.
Leaving the detested brother and sister in their charge, and the fakir
engaged in telling his story to the viscount, I went out to seek Nanak,
whom I found standing at the carriage window, speaking in his own kind,
fatherly way, words of cheer and consolation to the now awakened lady,
who was weeping bitterly. Gently pushing him aside, I sprang into the
carriage, and taking a seat by her side, with my arms closely folded around
her, I whispered: "The day has dawned, my Blanche; the day that is to see
you leave not for your father's, but for your husband's home.
"Let your maids attire you in your simplest, whitest robe, my Blanche.
Let them smooth these poor, disordered tresses, and place them in the
sweet white flowers I will send you, and at eight o'clock to-night I will be
with you, and in the face of friends and enemies you shall have me a
husband's right to shield you henceforth from every harm that may befall
so long as you and I do stay in life on earth." A few more whispered words
of cheer and promise, and then I left her.
I saw my servants hand her in, and then bade the coachman drive her
away.
"Not so fast, sir!" I said, as I saw her brother hastening after the
carriage, which he tried to detain.
GHOST LAND.
extricate the struggling wretch from my grasp. "Let him go, I say! You
shall not steep your soul in sin for such a worm as that. Nay, I command
you by a word you must obey!"
"I'll have a reckoning with him yet," I muttered, all the Hindoo in my
veins rising against the wretch upon whom I had resolved to avenge his
own no less than his sister's villainy. At this moment the viscount and his
nephew joined the Brahmin in pleading for the poltroon's escape.
Contenting myself for the present with hurling him amongst the bushes
and rank weeds of the garden, I bade him remember, my hour of full
requital was yet to come.
That night, at eight o'clock, saw me the husband of sweet, pure, innocent
Blanche Dudley. Her haughty uncle was well satisfied, and her own loving
guileless heart leaped with the purest joy she had ever known on earth. As
to me, I bade farewell to my hopes of life amongst the stars, to the
mysteries of the occult, my dreams of spiritual exaltation, and all my
wanderings in the realms of supernal glory.
Hopes and aspirations--all were dashed to the earth, and I set myself
lovingly, tenderly to fulfill the life of new duties that honor and
compassion had thrust upon me.
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GHOST LAND.
CHAPTER XXV.
It was just nine years from the time when I parted with the excellent
friend whom I still delight to call by the familiar name of John Cavendish
Dudley, that I became the husband of his most beloved and cherished
youngest daughter. I knew that this event would fulfill the dearest wishes
of himself and his amiable wife, but when I parted from him and listened
to his pathetic lamentation that he might never hope to call me his son,
little did I think that I should return to him in the very character he so
earnestly desired me to fill.
I had planned our departure for the close of our marriage year. It was all
one to Blanche--anywhere with me. To follow the movement of my finger,
or anticipate the glance of my eye, made up the sum of her life's
occupation; yet she was no mere automatic companion. Her bright
intellect and vivid imagination might have far eclipsed her wayward
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GHOST LAND.
husband's had not her passionate admiration for him and her modest
diffidence of herself, kept her own brilliant powers of mind in abeyance.
352
GHOST LAND.
Eight months had passed away, when duties of an urgent and personal
nature demanded my presence in a distant province. My fair bride had
scarcely quitted my sight since our marriage, yet now it was impossible for
me to escape this journey, equally impossible that she should accompany
me. The hated enemies to whom, if I owed them anything but abhorrence,
I owed the precious boon of my little girl's companionship, had ever
appeared on the panorama of our lives since the momentous night
described in the last chapter; indeed, I had not even heard of them, save a
report that Madame Helene had become a devotee to a new sect of
religionists just arisen in the land, and that her scoundrel brother had
succeeded in worming himself into a good official position. The very
names of these people were tabooed in my household and amongst all who
visited us; indeed, we saw but few persons who could remind us of them,
for the circle in which my own and my Blanche's relatives moved were
closed against them. No cloud dimmed the lustre of those sweet blue eyes,
ever fixed on me with an expression of mute adoration.
No sorrow had ever stained that blooming face with one tear, since the
night when I called Blanche my own. Her uncle and aunt were very proud
of her, and constantly urged us to spend out time with them, but she loved
her husband's home better than any place on earth; and to care for the
flowers I admired, arrange my books, statues, paintings, or make the old
ruinous villa I rented, ring with the music of her delightful voice or the
thrilling chords of her plaintive harp, was happiness enough for Blanche.
She had many living pets also amongst odd birds and stray animals
whom she coaxed into companionship with her. She took great delight in
"educating" them, as she called it, and talked to them as if they understood
her. I think they did, and listened to her childish wisdom and womanly
play with as much solemn admiration as did any or all the dependents who
approached her.
But what did all this lead to? Let me turn again the pages of the only
record that remains to tell how the last act was played out. That record is
her journal, written evidently with a prophetic view of how it would some
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day be needed, and how it would become a silent witness of the tale no
human lips have ever spoken. I found it in the loneliness of a cold and
empty room from which the life had fled and the sunshine died out; when
the ringing laugh was hushed, the wonderful voice silent, and the
harpstrings run down or snapped forever. The extracts that relate to the
crisis of which I am now writing ran thus:
"Jan. 10, 18--. O mother, mother, how I wish you could see me now!
Dearest sisters, would you not almost envy me? I do believe you would,
just a little- -though all the time you would rejoice for me, for I am sure
you used to admire the 'magnificent Chevalier,' as we accustomed to call
him, almost as much as I did when he was amongst us a N----. But O my
mother and sisters! what is the admiration which you and I and every one
else must feel for my Louis, compared to the love which moves my heart,
not because he is so handsome, but because he is himself, and O heaven!
because he is so good and kind and dear to me! How could I fail to love
him? And yet i think you would laugh to see what a little creature I am,
when I take his arm and try to look dignified and keep pace with him as we
enter uncle Frederick's salon, or go to the numerous receptions we have to
attend. Louis is so tall and stately and splendid, whilst as to me, I am--no
matter what. He says I am a "little sprig of summer and winter; a snow
flake and a rose-bud in one," and only just fit to stick in his button-hole.
But ah, my mother! I wish you were near me just now. Shall I ever see
you more--ever, ever tell you how much better I have understood what
mother's love is within the last few months? I know not. Aunt Emily tells
me all young creatures, when they hover on the wonderful verge of the
new path, the path that reaches heaven through the life of a new- born
being, all tremble and shrink, and fear to enter upon that awful
responsibility, and think they cannot live to go through with the mighty
change. I have no fear; on the contrary, I have sometimes a hope, a
strange, unnatural hope perhaps; it is that my good and noble Louis, my
generous husband, who never was my lover, only my friend and protector--
that he will be released again, and become free to follow the lead of his
towering mind and lofty inspirations. I know not! I have written these
words before, and feel now as if they were not true, for I do know; I know
that in the midst of all my great joy, there is ever a strange dimness upon
me. Even when my Louis hides me away in his heart--there where I am
safest and strongest, or when I am looking up into his splendid eyes, so
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kind, so true, that everything false or unholy quails beneath them, even
then the dimness comes, comes between me and the light that sparkles in
the dark eyes of my Louis."
"Jan. 20. There is a great secret constantly pressing upon my mind and
ever urging me to confide in him; yet just as I am on the point of doing so,
I see upon his face that sad, appealing look I have before referred to, that
look which pierces my heart like the eye of Fate, and seems to plead with
me to spare him further sorrow.
"No, I have not the heart to tell him, and don't know that I shall ever be
able to do so, though I think I ought. Would I could banish the
remembrance of it! Perhaps, if I write about it, it will fade away like the
ghost of a haunting air, which only needs singing to chase it away. Yes, I
will write it down; perhaps it may some day explain away what is
mysterious when--when--I know not what. That doubt of the future again!
God's future. Why, then, should I fear it? But to my secret.
Just before I met my Louis for the first time in India, Helene, she whom
I so loved once, and alas! so tenderly think of still, that Helene who was
then so very dear to me, so kind so wise, so strong--she asked me for a
long curl of my hair. She said it would serve to bring us together at any
time, and I knew it would, for she proved it and taught me how. When I
gave her leave to cut off that curl, how I shivered, and felt as if a part of
my life had gone out from me; but I did not mind it then. She asked me
afterwards to give her a locket or something I had worn, to enclose a piece
of hair in. She was quite particular in asking for something that I had
worn, so I gave her a small gold locket that my dearest sister Edith had
given me for a keepsake when we were both children. Edith and I have
exchanged many presents since then, so I didn't mind parting with this
trifle to Helene, especially as she preferred it to all the other rich jewels I
offered her. She had her name engraved upon it, and when she had
enclosed a piece of my hair in it, she said my curl outshone the gold it was
enclosed in.
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the locket I gave her? But then again she may have lost all interest in me,
and forgot that she has such things in her possession, or, having them, the
desire to use them may-- nay, must have passed away. I am nothing to her
now, only a memory; perhaps not even that. Poor Helene! she had no
female friend except me. I do think she loved me once, and sometimes I
believe she must miss me. Oh, why could she not continue to love me
even though she did love Louis? That is nothing strange--every one must
love him; and as to her, she was so fascinating and in everything so far
superior to me, that I should never have been surprised if he had preferred
her to me."
"Feb. 12. Alas, alas! I know too well now that Helene remembers that
dreadful lock of hair. I fear me, too, she has been tempted to use it for--O
heaven! how I shudder when I think of it--last night I was gone, I know not
where. I am confident I was not sleeping, for I distinctly remember seeing
the palm-trees waving in the breeze, and listening to the midnight songs of
the boatmen as they floated down the river; and yet I was away
somewhere--away where my Louis could not reach me, away in some
terrible imprisonment, in some place where I saw the form of Helene. I
saw, too, that she wore a beautiful India muslin dress embroidered with
gold, and that she stood somewhere near me, like a priestess of Valhalla,
with her long, waving tresses of raven hair falling around her, crowned
with a wreath of bay leaves. I know this scene was not a mere dream. I
think it took place in some old temple where I have never been; but O
heaven! this may not be the end of it! Would that I had told Louis, but I
could not, I could not! Perhaps I shall have the courage to do so to-
morrow."
"Feb. 15. Louis has gone away for three weeks. Louis is gone, and the
sunlight has all gone with him. He has explained to me the urgency of the
affairs that called him hence, and I knew he ought to go, so I never
opposed him or tried to detain him. I knew I ought not to do so. He
wished me to go and stay with my aunt, who was very urgent that I should
do so; but I pleaded to be allowed to remain here in my happy, happy
home, with all my pets around me, and the tracery of my dearest love's
presence on every side of me. Oh, I could not go away! I could not leave
such a scene for my aunt's gay home, with so many visitors coming and
going all day, and nothing there of Louis except that splendid portrait of
him my uncle has had painted, just for every one that comes in to admire,
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as of course every one does. I know my kind Louis feared to hurt me by
opposing my wishes, so he consented to let me stay, but I heard him
charging my aunt so earnestly to come and see me every day, and besides
that he has filled the house with so many attendants, and left so many
persons in charge of me, that I am never alone. This would trouble me a
little if I did not perceive in it fresh evidences of his tender care. I dare not
trust myself to write anything about his absence, but it is a wonderful joy
to me to know that he will be home again in three weeks. Three weeks!
Ah me! the sun will shine upon me then, though all is so dark and desolate
now."
"Feb. 19. Heaven have mercy upon me! The worst has come at last. O
misery unutterable! Where shall I go, what shall I do to escape this awful
fate? O Louis, Louis! where are you and why can you not realize the
shipwreck and woe that has befallen your unhappy 'fairy?'
"Last night Helene called me away, dragged my spirit forth, though she
mercifully left my hapless, woeful body sleeping in my bed. Alas, alas!
what an afflicted captive soul was mine as I stood in her presence, with her
dark and dreadful brother by her side, and all around them a crowd of
awful shapes, demons, or elementaries, I know not which or what! O
cruel, remorseless woman! What have I ever done to deserve such a
dreadful doom? She mocked and taunted me, told me she could control me,
body and soul, and I felt too well she could.
"I saw my fatal lock of hair, half consumed and crisped by fire, laying
on an altar that might have been dedicated to the dark god, Juggernaut. I
knew when I was called; I knew that I must go, for I felt the sharp sting of
the burning lock upon my forehead, and ere I had time to pray, or call upon
thee, my Louis, lo! I was there, O heaven, pity me! Angels of mercy, help
me! There is still so much left of that fatal lock of hair that I know not
how many more times she may summon me, nor when, nor how, those
fiendish rites may be exercised again. I have prayed all night and day since
then, and believe I am at last a little stronger. To-day a fresh calamity has
befallen me. My uncle, who has been so very kind to me, my poor uncle,
who seems to have become so fond of me, went up the country some forty
miles on official business, and has been seized with malarious fever. My
dear, good aunt has been obliged to join him, and I have lent her my best
ayah to help her nurse him. I fear Louis would not be pleased if he knew
my nurse was gone, because she is so good, so much better a physician that
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poor, stupid Dr, S----. Why could he not see this morning how worn and
sad I was? Alas, no one knows me but Louis, and he is so far away! How
lonely and deserted this place appears to be, and oh, the dimness! it has
now become quite a thick cloud.
"I believe I could summon Louis if I were to try, and send out this
trembling soul of mine to fetch him home, but I know how fearfully
sensitive he is, and what terrible pangs he would suffer before he could
reach me. No, no! I cannot brave the consequences.
"He has been gone ten days now. A little more than another week, and
he will return. I will tell him all then, and I know he will and can save me,
at least before my time of trial comes."
"Feb. 22. Again, again! Another fearful ordeal! Last night they called
me again, and there was none to save me. Surely, surely, God has
forgotten me, and good angels have deserted me!"
"Feb.25. Oh, joy, joy! The lock of hair has been restored to me, and
now it is burned, consumed in the fire my Louis calls so sacred, and I am
saved, at least till my Louis returns, and then what power can harm me?
Still, he shall know it all, and I will write it down just as it happened, so
that he may know everything correctly. Early yesterday morning whilst I
was absorbed in lamentation, wringing my hands, and praying that heaven
would send help, who should I see crossing the veranda and stopping
opposite my couch, with low obeisances, but that dear, good, droll little
fakir, Nazir, the little sprite whom my Louis likes so well and who made
such pleasant entertainment for us when we were first married.
"I had not seen him for a long time because he has been away on a
pilgrimage, he said; but he had now returned, and brought with him a pair
of those sweet birds we call in England, 'love birds.' He brought them as a
present to me, the precious little ones! He said they were not half good
enough for me. Poor little Nazir! but I answered him that I thought it was
just like his fatherly care to bring me such a present. Then the good little
fakir asked if he could do nothing else for me; was I quite sure? no
commission that he could execute--nothing that madame could think of
which Sahib could do to beguile her loneliness? It seemed strange that he
should linger so; stranger still that just then I could think of nothing for
him to do, though I knew it would please him so much to be of use to me--
the kind heart!
"At last I remembered that fatal lock of hair. The memory of it came
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upon me like a thunder-cloud just as I was making friends with my little
birds. Then as it all came back to me, I told Nazir the whole story, and
asked him what I could do until my husband returned to help me. Good
Nazir! he is a man after all, though he is a fakir, and has a heart though he
has studied how to encase it in a crust of seeming apathy. He frowned
darkly when I mentioned Helene's name, but when I told him how they had
treated me I thought the sparks of fire emitted by his glittering black eyes
would have consumed Helene had she beheld their lurid glare.
"When all was told, he said, literally hissing between his clenched
teeth,'Madame shall have her golden lock again; the sun of my Lord's
existence shall have the shorn beam restored to her.'
"Oh, how glad I was when I heard these words! I knew that Nazir had
done more wonderful things than spiriting away a little lock of hair. At
one of my husband's dinner parties, three fakirs caused a whole set of china
to walk across the floor, and wait on each member of the company
separately; they brought jewels through the air from my aunt's dressing-
room, seven miles away, and caused my uncle's cane to leave our house,
fly through the air, I suppose, and drop down before the family, as they sat
at dinner two miles distant. Oh, I felt sure Nazir could restore my lock of
hair. Why did I not think of that before?
"Just one hour ago I went into my dressing-room, and there I saw
Granger, my English maid, standing like a statue of fright, bending over
something that lay upon the ground just inside the French window. 'Look
there, my lady,' she cried, 'what can that be on the ground?"
"I looked and saw what it was in a moment, and requested her quite
calmly to pick it up and hand it to me. It was indeed my poor lock of hair,
tumbled, soiled, and half-burned; still it was mine, and that was all I cared
for; but that was not the only thing there; by the side of the hair lay
Helene's locket! O Nazir! that was quite wrong, and far exceeded your
commission. I never meant that he should have taken that locket away.
Why, that is stealing, and a very ugly way of stealing, too! I must have the
hair taken out, and Nazir must spirit the locket back again in the same
manner that he abstracted it. I shall be perfectly miserable until it is
returned. What an error to commit! I hope he will come to-morrow and
enable me to return it before she discovers her loss. If she still perseveres
in her wicked designs against me, and finds the hair gone, as hair I know is
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a very essential part of the dreadful invocation, of course she will resort to
the little piece in the locket, and if that is missing too, I don't know what
she may think."
"Feb. 24. The whole day has passed, and that tiresome Nazir has not
made his appearance. I feel so safe and composed now that I have my lock
of hair again, that I can afford to be a little troubled about the locket. Still I
wish my good, kind little fakir would come. I cannot rest till that fatal
jewel is out of my possession. It seems to cast such an evil spell upon me
that I cannot shake off its effects. No! not though I am holding in my hand
another precious letter from the star of my existence. Sweet, fragrant is the
aroma of goodness and protective care and kindest sympathy that
breathless through these precious lines! He is coming home soon, and
says, home is where I am. Oh, thank heaven he is coming! Would he were
here now! How coldly the stars gleam upon me tonight; and I have a
strange fancy, as I look at them, that they seem to be calling me away.
This old house is full of sounds, but I never feared them till to-night.
Hark! there's another string of my poor harp gone. No, surely it is a hand
wandering amidst the strings! Can it be a hand? Perhaps it is only the
night breezes. How they sigh and moan amongst the tall palms! They
sound like the rushing winds of our own Scottish moors rather than the
balmy breathings of a tropic land. If there are spirits of the air abroad this
night, they are calling me hence, for surely I hear my name sounding
amongst the tree-tops. There it is again! Blanche, Blanche! come home!
Who is it that calls? Home is where my Louis is. Oh, will they take me
from him?...Granger has just been here to inquire whose voice were
singing in my chamber. Poor girl! how terrified she was when I could not
answer her. My people creep about the house and look so strangely upon
me. There is a mortal fear upon them all to-night, and I cannot now sustain
and cheer them as I used to do when I was a gay girl at home. How calm I
was when my Louis slept so long, that all around thought him dead but me,
and I crept up to his side and gazed upon him, and thought how beautiful
he looked. I wish I could recall the courage of those days now. Hark!
some one is pacing my chamber. Who can it be? Now the footsteps die
away, and--now some hand is on my harp again. That is not the wind;
those chords resound beneath a master's touch. O heaven! what a sad and
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mournful strain that was. Who could the player be? O spirits of the
solemn stars; bright planetary angels! You who know so well, and love my
Louis--oh, protect and guard him! And if it is thy will, Father of spirits,
return him to this sad and lonely heart of mine ere I go hence! Louis, my
Louis, star-beam of my soul! would thou wert with me now! Good-night,
dear love, good-night."
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CHAPTER XXVI.
Her diary ends with those words of tender farewell, and to me has fallen
the task of finishing up the history. I have set myself this work to do for a
special purpose, and painful as it is I must fulfill it.
Since the night when I determined to devote myself to the care and
protection of John Dudley's child, I had silently but resolutely abandoned
my pursuit of the occult, my association with the various societies with
which I had been connected, and all that formerly fascinated me and filled
my soul with spiritual light and knowledge. I felt that the new duties I had
voluntarily incurred, must not be divided with the old pursuits, and whilst I
could not overcome the bitter disappointment I felt at being thus shut out
from the realms of the unseen, in communion with which i had lived from
boyhood, I never faltered in my purpose. I knew then and still believe, that
the devotion so absolutely required to attain to the highest good in any
condition of life admits of no compromise or divided interests. To stifle
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my heart's yearnings for the spiritual in which my whole being had been
bound up, I plunged into the cares of public life, the duties of home, and
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the entertainment of my sweet bride, as if I had never known any other
aims or employments. I devoted myself, moreover, to all those
materialistic occupations with a restless and untiring energy which left me
no time to think.
I accompanied my young wife and her friends to all the various scenes
which I thought would interest them, and although I permitted my fakirs to
amuse them with feats of occult art, I never took part in them, or suffered
myself for one moment to brood over my altered career. This
abandonment of my past life's dearest aspirations cost me many a pang, but
I never thought my fairy understood this until I read her precious
confidences to herself, and that at a time when all chance of changing the
tide of her regrets was at an end.
GHOST LAND.
impossibility of their interference to alter my fate or change the purposes
of the Infinite; they reminded me that whilst they could neither make nor
mar the scheme in which the Creator had spun the woof of every living
creature's destiny on an immutable plan, they were still commissioned to
dispense in angelic ministry the strength which would enable me to bear
the shafts of affliction and the wisdom which must overrule all things for
good. They would be heard; they would enclose me in their arms of love;
and in the names of those I had known and trusted on earth I was bidden to
arise from my attitude of rebellion against the power of the spirits, and
when I bent my stubborn soul and once more leaned in submission upon
them, I was warned to depart for my home, to ride for life and death, by
day and night, not to pause or linger, but hasten to her to whom I had been
given as her earthly protector; to her whom I could not save from an
inevitable fate, though I might share it with her and help her to endure it.
Five miles from the city, a little, dusty, wayworn figure threw itself
before my horse and with much difficulty succeeded in stopping my
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headlong career. It was the fakir Nazir; he would speak, he must, he said,
speak with me, and as he leaned breathless against my panting horse, he
poured out a horrible, and almost incredible story. My wife, my fair and
gentle wife, that delicately nurtured lady who had never known any ruder
shelter than the luxurious homes of her father and husband, was in a
common prison, thrown there under charge of stealing a gold locket from
Madame Helene Laval. The shocking tale, poured our amidst tears--aye!
actually tears from those unused eyes that had never wept before--was this.
He told me how at the lady's supplication he has spirited away her fatal
lock of hair, but that finding another portion of this precious talismanic
curl was enclosed in a gold locket, and fearing that if this remained, the
base enchantress would still torment her victim, he had rashly added that
paltry jewel to the abstracted lock.
It would seem that the loss of these means to work injury, was realized
almost immediately. Madame Laval, who no doubt suspected the nature of
the arts as well as the source by which she was thus baffled, sent for a
Chulah, and by means of one of these singular and expert conjurers, a
"magic ball" was set in motion, which she was assured would travel on,
and, followed by the conjurer, never stop until it reached the place where
the lost jewel was to be found. Nazir rightly conjectured this explanation
of the mode in which it was ascertained that the lost locket was in my
house. He had met the operator, he said, who confessed to him that there
was some power which prevented his crossing my threshold, at which
point the magic ball became suddenly arrested. The fact that it was traced
thus far, however, must have been sufficient for the plotters who availed
themselves of this clew to follow out the rest of their hellish plan.
What I afterwards learned let me here state in brief. The vile brother
and sister knew I was far away from my hapless wife. They doubtless
suspected the power by which the unfortunate lady had obtained
possession of the missing locket, and convinced by their magician's art that
it was still in my house, they secretly and swiftly executed their direful
plan of vengeance.
GHOST LAND.
officials, save a set of hired, bribed, and remorseless myrmidons, knew
aught of the shameful transaction.
It was not until night of that same fatal day, the fakir added, that he, who
had been out of the city, returned to find the woe and wreck his
indiscretion had occasioned. Graham, the viscount, all my friends were
absent or not to be found till night. My servants scattered themselves in
every direction to seek for help, but none of them really understood the
facts of what had happened until Nazir returned and in frantic self-
accusation ran from place to place, rousing my friends and telling his
shocking story. Still the night had to elapse before aid and rescue could be
procured, and then,--it came too late, too late!
Presently the Viscount R----, very pale and very kind, and several of my
brother officers encountered me. I never paused to greet them, though they
surrounded me and would have kept me back. I heard many voices
speaking in tones of deep sympathy, indignation, and regret.I never
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answered them. I did not speak, I had no thought but of her—knew
nothing but her.
Back in the old ruinous house, ruins covered up with gorgeous art until
it had once shone like a fairy palace; back in the house she had so loved
and where her presence had made the palace a paradise, amidst the flowers
and bloom, the pale statues, and deep, unbroken silence; back with my
fairy bride and my dead child--alone and still and quiet, I spent that long,
long night, whilst the storm of fierce passion, prompting men to riot and
ruin, filled the streets without. The real truths which surround great
tragedies are never known to the world, but there is an element of
generosity in public sentiment, a depth of honest manliness in the human
heart, which however crowed down by the artifices and sordid cares of
civilization, can always be aroused to indignant protest by the action of
injustice or wanton cruelty. Such a sentiment seemed to have been
awakened by the impassioned utterances of my poor little fakir, who, in his
frantic anxiety to right the great wrong done to his hapless lady had again
exceeded the hounds of prudence in declaiming against the authors of the
cruel deed.
The viscount had made strenuous efforts to keep the matter secret,
fearing lest its publication in some garbled form should attach disgrace to
his noble family; in fact he caused the report to be industriously circulated,
that the lady so shamefully wronged was a domestic attached to his wife's
household, not one of his own immediate connections--an interpretation of
the tale which I believe prevails to this day in the city where this great
tragedy of my life really occurred.
It was about nine o'clock the next night that I left my house--a home no
longer--accompanied by Capt. Graham and Col. M----, a noble-hearted
gentleman, between whom and myself a warm friendship subsisted.
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We threaded our way through the lowest and most obscure part of the
city, until we gained the miserable hut which Graham and I had before
visited, the dwelling of Anine, the sister of Nazir. The door was barred
and bolted within, but at my signal Nazir himself opened it, and after
carefully fastening it again, led me on from the dwelling through several
courts and ruinous buildings, when we gained the door which I knew led
into the halls where we had witnessed the scenes of "black magic"
described in a previous chapter. We crossed the outer hall, and paused
before the entrance which led to the interior chamber. Here I stopped to
gain breath and strength enough to proceed, but whilst I leaned against the
door, I heard the voices of those I came to seek, the accursed brother and
sister who had wrought my great ruin, in angry altercation within. The
sounds of those hateful tones supplied the stimulus I needed and impelled
me at once to push open the door and enter. Crouching on the threshold
inside was Anine, awaiting our coming, according to Nazir's directions.
Perrault and his sister had, it seemed, sought temporary shelter there,
fearing to trust themselves to the rage of an excited populace in the streets.
They were both seated at a table on which refreshments were spread, but
the altar, braziers, and all the abominable paraphernalia of fetish rites, were
strewed around in disorder and neglect. The guilty pair started to their feet
as we entered, and the woman uttered a faint cry of alarm. Our plans were
already laid, however, and no time was lost in idle parley. Graham and the
fakir seized Perrault, and Col. M----, laying his hand firmly on Madame
Laval's arm, told her sternly that the least cry or attempt at resistance
would cost them both their lives. I then proceeded to cut to pieces the fatal
pictures of myself and their victim--which last they had recently hung up
beside my own--throw down and stamp upon the waxen images, and break
up or rend apart all the instruments and machinery of their vile art.
GHOST LAND.
with the utmost deliberation. When this was accomplished, I directed
Anine and the fakir to take charge of Madame Laval, towards whom I
never once trusted myself to look, nor did I speak to or notice her, although
she often addressed me in terms of supplication. I then motioned my
friends to retire to one of the large desolate courts which we had before
crossed, leading the brother and sister prisoners with us.
Baffled and hopeless, the trembling coward took the place assigned him,
exchanged a few words of formality with Graham, received from him one
of my pistols, and instantly, without waiting for the dropping of the
handkerchief, which was the signal agreed upon for firing, discharged the
weapon at me. Whether the treacherous villain's hand shook or he was but
an indifferent marksman I know not, but the shot was ill-sped and only
took effect upon my left arm.
GHOST LAND.
but not to die. Better for him if he had. After this deed of retribution, my
friends and myself quitted the accursed spot forever.
The viscount and his kind wife, to both of whom I had become very
dear, desired to have me removed to their own country seat, but though by
their provident care my once bright home had been despoiled, shut up, and
all my household dispersed, it was not to their house that I was carried.
My kind and loving friend, Nanak Rai, claimed the charge of me, and
attended only by my well-tried and faithful Arab servant Ali, I was
conveyed to his residence, where he watched and ministered to me with the
skill of a physician and the care of a tender father.
For many a long day and succeeding week, this excellent friend's
untiring efforts were exerted to snatch me from the confines of the grave.
With his remarkable skill, and under hie benign and holy influence, I
became at length restored to health alike of body and mind.
Good and gracious Father of spirits, with what deep ingratitude and
pitiful self-denial do poor mortals reject thy best blessing, when they refuse
to accept or scoff at, the precious truths of spiritual communion!
GHOST LAND.
sketched out in these pages, have pointed candidly and dispassionately to
the abuse as well as the use of the vast and wondrous powers that lay
occultly hidden away in man, and the unseen universe by which he is
surrounded. But whatever may be the dangers, terrors, and mysteries of
occultism, let suffering humanity assure itself there is ever an angel side to
this realm of being, one on which the soul may lean as the anchor let down
for its support from the hand of the Creator.
Had it not been for the power which bridged over the Lethan river that
separated me from all that I had loved on earth, health might have resumed
her sway, but reason would have fled from its shattered throne within my
mind forever. One by one I had seen the fondest, the truest, the best, all
upon whom I had anchored my warmest affections, fall by my side, vanish
from my sight, and leave me alone. With a heart full of passionate
impulses veiled by the cold exterior of disciplined asceticism, I had been
compelled to see every tie of affection snapped, every earthly hop
shipwrecked.
I had borne so much and strained at the cords of mental effort with such
fearful energy, that I know I must have become a raving lunatic if I had
turned despairing glances to the land of the hereafter, and sought in vain
there for my vanished loves and my own goal of rest.
GHOST LAND.
and my destiny, the spring of my wild aspirations has impelled me into the
profoundest realms of occultism, into the depths yawning beneath my feet,
and the heights stretching away above my head; piercing the path of the
stars and plunging into regions of mystery beyond the safe limitations of
human spiritual guidance.
I dare not pause now even to hint at what we may hope for in the better
day of spiritual communion, when its modus operandi shall be understood
by science, and its sublime revelations be received in the spirit of religious
reverence. Time and space, however, I now find have become limited in
this volume to a closing sentence.
When strength of mind and body returned to me, I left my noble friend's
peaceful dwelling with the benison of a thankful heart upon its hospitable
roof-tree. Then I stood once more on shipboard, waving farewell to groups
of the dear and warm-hearted friends who had trod with me life's rough
and rugged paths in India; and with many a "God-speed" sounding in my
ears, and many a moistened eye following the track of the ship out into the
pathless wastes of ocean, sailed away to commence a new career of
research in to the realms of spiritual existence.
373
GHOST LAND.
The reader will observe that the foregoing sketches only account for ten
years of the author's career after his departure from England, and constitute
simply one portion of the "Ghost Land" papers, the remainder of which
include an equally interesting and thrilling record extending over nearly
twenty years more of the author's eventful and varied experiences in occult
spiritism, many of which I have shared with him. As the ample
dimensions of this volume forbid further additions, I take advantage of the
epoch recorded in the last chapter to close these sketches, at least for the
present.