Secret Book of Black Magic PDF
Secret Book of Black Magic PDF
Secret Book of Black Magic PDF
OP
SUCH AS
New Yoek:
HURST & CO., PUBLISHERS,
122 Nassau Stkest,
antiquity and turned the calcium light of truth upon the scat-
lect.
But it must not be supposed that this book deals mainly with
ideas and beliefs. Many practical, useful money-making Arts
are fully described, and the proper manner in which to practice
The AuTBoiL
THE BLACK ART.
SORCERY AND WITCHCRAFT.
death. Men doe commonly hate and spit at the damnifying sor-
IS BORCERT AXD WITCHCRAFT.
third, the sea and wind grow mighty, stormy, and tempestuous.
This, he adds, that wo have reported concerning the Laplan-
ders, does not in fact belong to them, but to the Finlanders of
Norwav, because no other writers mention it, and because the
Laplanders live in and iuland country. However, the method
" They deliver a small rope with three
of selling winds is tbis :
knots upon it, with this caution, that when they loose the first
they shall have a good wind; if the second, a stronger; if the
third, such a storm will arise that they can neither see how to
:
direct the sliip nnd ftvoid rocks, or so much ns stand upon lb©
decks, or handle the tackling." The same is admitted by King
James in his Dsemonology, p. 117.
The following passage is from Scot's Discovery, p. 33: '* No
one endued with common sense but w ill deny that the elements
are obedient to witches and at their commandment, or that they
may, send rafn, hail, tempests, thunder, light-
at their pleasure,
ning, when an old doting w oman, casteth a flint
she, being but
stone over her left shoulder towards the west, or hurleth a little
sea-sand up into the dement, or wetteih a brccm^piigin water
and sprinkleth the ame in the
s air; or diggeth a pit in the earth,
and, putting water therein, stirreth it about with her finger; or
boileth hog's bristles; or layeth sticks across upon a bank "wher©
never a drop of water is; or bury eth sage till it be rotten: all
which things are confessed by witches, and affirmed by writers
to be the means that witches use to move extraordinary tempests
and rain."
Ignorance," says Osboume; in his Advice to his Son, 8vo.
Oxf. 1CC6, reports of witches that they are unable to hurt till
steal all the butter next summer. On May-day they liill all
hares they find among their cattle, supi-)osing them the old wo-
men who have designs on the butter. They imagine the butter
may be recovered if they take some of the thatch hang-
60 stolen
ing over the door and burn it.
man in black to sign a contract to become his both soul and body.
On the conclusion of the agreement he gives her a piece of
money, and causes her to write her name and make her mark on
a slip of parchment with her own blood. Sometimes, also, on
this occasion, the witch uses the ceremony of putting one hand
to the sole of her foot, and the other to the crown of her head.
On departing, he delivers to her an imp or familiar. The fam-
iliar, in the shape of a cat or a kitten, a mole, millerfly, or some
teat, sometimes like a ble wish spot: and I myself have seen it
There had been abunt the time of Lord Verulam no small stir
concerning v.-;t jhcraft. "Ten Jensen, " says Dr. Percy, "has
left us a uitch song \vLich ccntnins nn rxtract from the various
goat, about whom severrd dr.ncrs and mr.gic ceremonies are per-
formed. Before the assembly breaks up, the witches are all said
soncEnr ASD mrciicnAFZ
a waxen image wUh hair like ihat of the imfortunate earl, found in
his chamber, reduced every suspicion of certainty."
not prove sufficient, as it would often force the cork out with a
loud noise, like that of a pistol, and cast the contents of the
bottle to a considerable height. Bewitched i^ersons were said
SOnCERT AXD WITCIICEAFT. 17
from Louisbnrgli there lives a girl who, until a few days ago,
was suspected of being a witcb. In order to cure ber of tbe
neighbor actually put bar into a creed balf-fiUed
Avitcbcraft, a
with wood and shavings, and bung ber above a fire setting tbo
sbavings in a blaze. Fortunately for tbe child and himself
she was not injured, and it is said that tbe gift of sorcery has
been taken away from ber. At all events, tbe intelligent
neighbors aver that she is not half so wiich-like in ber appear-
—
ance since she was singed." luterness Courier, Times, Dec. —
8, 1845.]
In ancient times even tbe pleasures of tbe chase were
checked by the superstitions concerning witchcraft. Thu-,
in Scott's Discovery, p. 152: "That naver hunters nor their
dogs may be bewircbed, they cleave an oaken branch, and
both they and t :eir dogs pass over it,"
Warner, in bis Topographical Remarks relating to tbe South-
western Paris of Hampshire, 1793, i. 241, mtntioning Mary
Dore, the "parochial witch of Beaulieu," who died about half
a century since, saj's :
'*
Her spells were chiefly used for
purposes of self-extrication in situations of danger; and I bavo
conversed with a rustic whose father had seen tlie old bidy con-
vert herself more than once into the form of a bare, or cat,
when likely to be appreliended in wood-stealing, to wliiob sho
was somewhat adv.icted." Butler, in Lis Hudibras, II. iii. 149,
Ba>s,speaking of tbe witch-finder, that of witches some be banged
and the right hand of her in a lane or field while passing her,
;
had bewitched him, who was behind her two sisters, and put
his hand upon her, which his father perceiving, immediately
scratched her face and drew blood from her. The youth then cried
out that he was well." Blow at Modern Sadducism, 12mo. 1668,
p. 148,
This curious doctri:.»e is very fully investigated in Hathaway's
trial, published in the State Trials. The following passage is in
Arise Evan's Echo to the Voice from Heaven, 1632, p. 34 ''I
;
had heard some say that, when a witch l^ad power over one to
afflict him, if he could but draw one drop of the wiich's blood, the
the house where herba betonica is sown is free from all mis-
chiefs," <S:c.
thumb to the left toe, and the left thumb to the right toe. In
t Butler, in his Hudibras, part I. c. iii. 1. 343, alludes to this
trial
" He that gets her by heart must say her
The back way, like a witch's prayer."
this stale she was cast into a pond or ri\'er, in wliicli, if guilty,
use.l in tho trial of witches, says, "the one is, tho llnding of
their markc and trying ihe insensihleness thereof."
In the Gent. Mag. for Feb. 1759, xxix. 93, we read "One :
thatch, you must wet and sprinkle it over with the x^atient's water,
and likewise with white salt then let it burn cr smoke through a
;
trivet or tho framo of a skillet you must bury the ashes that
;
way which the susi^ected witch liveth. 'Tis best done either at
the change, full, or quarters of the moon ; or otherwise, when
the witch's bigniUcator is in square or opposition to the moon.
But if the witch's house be tiled, then take a tile from over the
door, heat him red hot, put salt into the patient's water, and
dash it upon the red-hot tile, until it be consumed, and let it
smoak through a trivet or frame of a skillet as aforesaid. 2.
Another way is to get two new horseshoes, heat one of them red
hot and quench him in the patient's urine then immediately ;
nail him on the inside of the threshold of the door with three
nails, the heelbeing upv.-ards; then, having the patients urino, set
it over the and set a trivet over it put into it three horse-
fire, ;
nails and a little white salt. Then heat the other horseshoe red
hot, and quench hioi several times in the urine, and so let it
boil and waste until all bo consumed do this three times, and :
the new, full, or quarters of the moon, but more especially when
the moon is in square or opposition to the planet which doth
personate the witch, to let the patient blood, and while the
blood is warm put a little white salt into it, then let it burn and
pectecl person, about wliQse waist was fastened a cord, tlie enda
of -wliicU were held on tlio banks of a river, by two men, in
being auiazad, replied little then he put his hand up her coats
;
and pulled out the pin, settling her aside as a guilty person and
a child of the devil. By this sort of evidence, one wizard and
fourteen witches wero tried and convicted at the assizes, and
afterwards executed. Their names are recorded in tho parish
register of St. Andrew's. See Brand's history of Newcastle-up-
on-Tyne.
Nash, in his History of Worcestershire, iL 38, tells us that,
" 14th May, 1G60, four persons accused of witchcraft were
brought from Kidderminster to Worcester Gaol, one "Widow
Ilobinson, and her two daughters, and a man. The eldest
daughter was accused of saving that, if they had not been
SOnCEUY AXD WlTCnCEAFT. 25
tliongli he now doth come, yet he shall not live long, hwi shall
die as ill a death as they and that they Avould have made corn
;
not sink, but swam aloft. The man had live teats, the woman
three, and the eldest daughter one. "When they went to search
the women none wore visible one advised to lay them on their
;
backs and keep open their mouths, and then they would ap-
pear and so they presently appeared in sight.
;
Acre, London, that, in the year 171G, Mrs. Hicks, and her
daughter, aged nine years, were hanged in Huntingdon for
witchcraft, for selling their souls to the devil, tormenting and
destroying their neighbors, by making them vomit pins, raising
a storui, so that a ship was almost lost, by pulling off her stock-
ings, and making a lather of soap.
By the severe laws once in force against witches, to the dis-
grace of humanity, numbers of innocent persons, dis-
great
tressed with poverty and age, were brought to violent and
untimely ends. By the 33 Henry VIIL c. viii. the law adjudged
all Yv'itchcraft and Sorcery to be felony without benefit of
Earl of Kutland, and causing his death also, for most barbar-
;
preventing by their diabolical arts, the said earl and his countess
from having any more children. They were tried at the Lent As-
Henry Hobart, Lord Chief Justice of the Common
sizes before Sir
Pleas, and Edward Bromley, one of the Barons of the
Sir
Exchequer, and cast by the evidence of their own confessions.
To effect the death of Lord Henry "there was a glove of the
said Lord Henry buried in the ground, and as that glove did
rot and waste, so did the liver of the said lord rot and waste."
The spirit employed on the occasion, called Butterkin, appears
not to have had the same power over the lives of Lord Francis and
Lady Katherine. Margaret Flower confessed that she had
•* two familiar spirit.s sucking on her, the one white, the other
black-spotted. The white sucked under her left breast, the
black-spotted," &c. "When she first them, she
entertained
promised them her soul, and they covenanted to do all things
which she commanded them.
In the Diary of Bobert Birrell, preserved in Fragments of
Scottish History, 4to. Edinb., 1708, are inserted some curious
memorials of persons suffering death for witchcraft in S'jotland.
" 1591, 25 of Junii, Enphane M'Kalzen ves brunt for vitchcrafte.
1529. The last of Februarii, Bichard Grahamo wes brunt at ye
Crosse of Edinburghe, tor vitchcrafte and sorcery. 1593. The
19 of May, Katherine Muirhead brunt for vitchcrafte, quha con-
fest Bundrie poynts therof. 1G03. The 21 of Julii, James Beid
brunt for consulting and useing with Sathan and witches, and
quha wes notably knawin to be ane counsellor with witches.
1605. July 24th day, Henrie Lowrie brunt on the Castel Hill,
for witchcrafte done and committed be him in Kyle, in the par-
ochin." The following is from the Gent. Mag. for 1775, xlv.
601 "Nov. 15. Nine old women were burnt at Kalisk, in
:
her until she died. Nevertheless, before her coming to see her
and her embracing of her, took as weill with the spaining and
rested as weill as any bairne could doe. 5. That she is of ane
evill bruttc and fame, and so was her mother before her." The
event is not recorded. Ibid. ix. 74, parish of Erskine, is a re-
ference to Arnot's Collection ( f Criminrd Trials for an account
of Eargarran AYitches. ILid. xii..l97, parish of Kirriemuir,
tlie
was lately converted into a reservoir for the mills on the Gairie ;
a much better use than, if we may judge from the name, the
superstition of our ancestors led them to apply it,"
IbiJ. xiv, 372, parish of Mid Calder, county of Edinburgh :
ever house a cat died, all the family shaved their eyebrows. No
favorite lap-dog among the moderns had received such posthu-
mous honors. Diodorus Siculus relates that a Eoman happen-
ing accidentally to kill a cat, the mob immediately gathered
about the house where he was, and neither the entreaties of
some principle men sent by the king, not the fear of the
Romans, with whom the Egyptians were then negotiating •
peace, could save the man's life.
following the said cat was conveyed into the midst of the sea
by all these witches sailing iu their riddles or cieves, as is
aforesaid, and £o left the said cat hcforo the town of Leith,
in Scotland tLis done, their did arise cuch a tempest in the
;
sea as a greater Lath not been seen which tempest was the
;
* This Docter Fian was register of the devil, and sundry times
* * * * * 0
*******
pulverized very fine, place it in a pot, well covered, with olive
oil ; leave it thus for nine days then rub the iron,
; steel, &c.,
with this oil and rust will never attack it.
—
To SOFTEN Glass. Take equal parts of burned lead and
crystal, break them upon a stone, put them in a crucible and
means.
********
melt them together
To SOLDER ALL
you can do whatever you like by this
;
test pots over a slow fire, which augments until the whole
becomes of a red heat and melts together. After allowing it to
get cold again, reduce it to powder and, when anything ia to
FASCINATION OF WITCHES.
FASCINATION OF WITCHES.
I have no doiibt but that this expression originated in the
poi^ular superstition concerning an evil, that is an enchanting
heiDitcldng eye. In confirmation of this I must cite the follow-
ing passage from Scot's Discovery, p. 291 " Many writers
:
"The Irishmen affirm that not only their children, but their
cattle, are (as they call it) eye-hiiien, when they fall suddenly
sick."
In Vox Dei, or the great Duty of Self-Eeflection upon a Man's
own Wayes, by N. Wanley, M. A. and minister of the Gospel at
Beeby, in Leicestershire, 1G58, p. 85, the author, speaking of
St. Paul's having said that he was, touching the righteousnesse
FASCINATION OF WITCHES. 35
which the evil is, and the coal he turned upon him, as it is termed,
that person feels as if the coal was placed upon his heart, and
has often been seen to put his hand to his breast, exclaiming,
"Oh !" Nay, more ; he is unable to move so long as the coal is
held down with the tongs,— and has no more power over that
house.
In Heron's Journey through Part of Scotland, ii. 228, we
read : "Cattle are subject to be injured by what is called an
evil eye, for some persons are supposed to have naturally a blast-
ing power in their eyes, with which they injure whatever offends
or is hopelessly desired by them. Witches and warlocks are
also much disposed to wreak their malignity on cattle."
"Charms," the writer adds, " are the cheif remedies applied for
86 FASCINATION OF WITCRES.
much salt as can be lifted upon the sixpence is put into a table-
spoonful of water, and melted the sixpence is then put into
;
the solution, and the soles of the feet and the palms of the
hands of the patient are moistened three times with the salt
water it is then tasted three times, and the patient afterwards
;
'scored aboon the breath,' that is, by the operator dipping tho
forefinger into the salt water, and drawing it along the brow.
When this is done the contents of the spoon are thrown behind,
and right over the fire, the thrower saying at the same time,
* Lord preserve us frae a' scathe If recovery follow this, thero
!
'
of an evil eye."]
Volney, in his travels in Egypt and Syria, i. 246, says
"The ignorant mothers of many of the modern Egyptians,
whose hollow eyes, pale faces, swollen bellies, and meagre ex-
tremities make them seem as if they had not long to live, be-
lieve this to be the effect of the evil eye of some envious person,
who has bewitched them ; and this ancient prejudice is still
general in Turkey."
" Nothing," says Mr. Dallaway, in his Account of Cojx-
TOAD STONE. S7
TOAD STONE.
To the toad-stone Shakespeare alludes in the following b«an-
tiful similo :
88 TOAD STONR
the rj'ght and perfect stone or not. Holde the stone before a
tode, so that he may see it ;
it be a right and true
and, if
stone, the tode will leap towarde it, and make as though he
would snatch it. He envieth so much that man should have
that stone.
From a physical manuscript in quarto, of the date of 1475,
formely in the collection of Mr. Herbert, of Cheshunt, now in
my library, I transcribe the following charm against witch-
craft :
— "Here ys acharme for wyked Wych.
In nomine Patris,
et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, Amen.
Per Yirtutem Domini sint
medicina mei pia Cruxijiet passio Christi^. Vulnera quinque
Domini sint medicina meit^. Virgo Maria mihi succurre, et
defende ab omni maligno demonio, et ab omni maligno spiritu :
Amen, ifi Marcus i{i Matheus ifi Lucas i{i Johannes mihi suc-
currite et defendite, Amen. iSjf Omnipotens sempiterna Deus,
hunc N. famulum tuum hoc breve scriptum super se portantem
prospere salvet dormiendo, vigilando, potando, et precipue
Bompniando, ab omni maligno demonio, eciam ab omni maligno
'
spiritu iji.
morning rathe, light it, and hold it so as it may drop upon and
between the horns and ears of the beast, saying, In nomine '
Patris et Filii,' &c., and burn the beast a little between the
horns on the ears with the same wax and that which is left ;
denied more safely than her petetions for butter, milke, and
small becre and a great ladies or queens name may be less
;
mightie. Tetragramaton."
40 SOROEllER A YD MAGICIAN,
"
in one common centre.'
The and an enchanter,
difference between a conjuror, a witch,
according to Minshew, in his dictionarj', is as follows: "The
conjuror seemeth by jorairs and invocations of God's powerful
names, to compel the divell to say or doe what he commandeth
him. The witch dealeth rather by a friendly and voluntarie
conference or agreement between him and her and the divell or
familar, to have his or her turn served, in lieu or stead of blood
or other gift offered unto liim, especially of his or her soule.
And both these differ from inchanters or sorcerers, because the
former two have personal conference with the divell, and th«
other meddles but with medicines and ceremonial formeg of
words called charmes, without apparition."
Reginald Scot, in his Discourse on Devi lis and spirits, p. 72,
tells as that, with regard to conjurors, "The circles by which
42 SORCERER AND MAGICIAN.
"They always observe the time of the moon before they set
their figure, and when they have set their figure and spread their
circle, first exorcise the wine and water which they sprinkle on
says, fts large as an orange, set in silver with a cross at the top,
and round about engraved the names oi" the angels Raphael,
Gabriel, and Uriel. A delineation of another is engraved in
the frontispiece to Awbrey's Miscellanies. This mode of in-
quiry was practised by Dr. Dee, the celebrated mathematician.
His speculator was named Kelly. From him, and others practis-
ing this art, we have a long muster-roll of the infernal host, their
different natures, tempers, and appearances. Dr. Reginald
Scot has given us a list of some of the chiefs of these devils or
spirits. These sorcerers, or magicians, do not always employ
their art to do mischief but, on the contrary, frequently exert
;
GHOSTS, OR APPAEITIONS.
not hold him in his bed, she would go too, and walk after him
till day, though she saw nothing; but his little dog was so well
three times; after which it will, in a low and hollow voice, de-
clare its satisfaction at being spoken to, and desire the party ad-
dressing it not to be afraid, for it will do him no harm. This
being premised, it commonly enters its narrative, which being
completed, and its requests or commands given, with injunct-
ions that they be immediately executed, it vanishes away, fre-
its being a safer prison than any other nearer at hand; though
52 GHOSTS, on APPAEITIONS.
" '
To the Rev. Mr. Eichard Bentley, at my Lord Bishop of
"Worcester's House in Park Street, in Westminister, London.
"Sir,
'
—
When I was in London, April last, I fully intended
to have waited upon you again, as I said, but a cold and lame-
ness seized me next day; the cold took away my voice, and the
other my power of walking, so I presently took coach for Oxford.
I am much your debtor, and in particular for your good inten-
tions in relation to Mr. D., though that, as it has proved, would
GHOSTS, OR APPARITIONS. 53
story I had from two persons, who each had it from the author,
and yet their accounts somewhat varied, and passing through
more mouths has varied much more; therefore I got a friend to
bring me the author at a chamber, where I wrote it down from
the author's mouth; after which I read it to him, and gave him
another copy; he said he could swear to the truth of it, as far as
he is concerned. He is the curate of Warblington,
Batchelour
of Arts of Trinity College, in Oxford, about six years standing
in the University; I hear no ill report of his behaviour here. He
is now gone to his curacy; he has promised to send up thehanda
of the tenants and his man, who is a smith by trade, and the
farmer's men, as far as they are concerned. Mr. Brereton, the
rector, would have him say nothing of the story, for that he can
get no tenant, though he has offered the house for ten pounds a
year less. Mr. P. the former incumbent, whom the apparition
represented, was a man of a very ill report, supposed to have
got children of his maid, and to have murthered them; but I
advised the curate to SfcV nothing himself of this last part of P.,
but leave that to the parishioners, who knew him. Those who
knew this P., say he had exactly such a gown, and that he used
to whistle.
* " '
Yours, J. Caswell.'
" I desire you not to suffer any copy of this to be taken, lest
some Mercui'y news-teller should print it, till the curate had
sent up the testimony of others and self.
H. H. Dec. 15, 1695.
b«ing in the kitchen, and having raked up the fire, took a candl^
54 GHOSTS, OR APPARITIOXS.
in one hand, and the child in the other arm, and turning about
saw one in a black gown walking through the room, and thence
out of the door into the orchard. Upon this the maid, hasting
up stairs, having recovered but two steps, cried out; on which
the master and mistress ran down, found the candle in her hand,
she grasping the child about neck with the other arm.
its She
told them the reason would not thatnight
of her crying out; she
tarry in the house, but removed to another belonging to one
Henry Salter, farmer; where she cried out all the night from
the terror she was in, and she could not be persuaded to go any
more to the house upon any terms.
On the morrow (i. e. Tuesday), the tenant's wife came to
me, lodging then at Havant, to desire my advice, and have con-
sult with some friends about it; I told lier I thought it was a
flam, and that they had a mind to abuse Mr, Brereton the rec-
tor, whose house it was; she desired me to come up; I told her
he was ready to drop down with fear. Then I told him I per-
ceived he was afraid, and I would prevent its coming, and re-
peated Baralipton, &c., then he recovered his spirits pretty well,
and we left the room and went down into the kitchen, where we
were before, and sate up there the remaining part of the night,
and had no manner of disturbance.
" Thursday night the tenant and I lay together in one room
and the man in another room, and he saw something walk along
in a black gown and place itself agr.inst a window, and there
stood for some time, and then walked off. Friday morning the
man relating this, I asked him why he did not call me, and I
GHOSTS, OR APPARITIONS. 55
told him thought that was a trick or flam he told me the reason
I ;
why he did not call me was, that he was not able to speak or
move. Friday night we lay as before, and Saturday night, and
had no disturbance either of the nights.
Sunday night I lay by myself in one room (not that where
the man saw the apparition), and the tenant and his man in one
bed in another room; and betwixt twelve and two the man heard
something walk in their room at the bed's foot, and whistling
very well; at last it came to the bed's side, drew the curtain and
looked on them; after some time it moved off; then the man
called to me, desired me to come, for that there was something
in the room went about whistling. I asked him whether he had
any light or could strike one, he told me no; then I leapt out of
bed, and, not staying to put on my clothes, went out of my
room and along a gallery to the door, which I found locked or
bolted; I desired him to unlock the door, for that I could not
get in; then he got out of bed and opened the door, which was
near, and went immediately to bed again. I went in three or
four steps, and, it being a moonshine night, I saw the appar-
ition move from the bed's side, and claj) up against the wall that
divided their room and mine. I went and stood directly against
it within my arm's length of it, and asked it, in the name of God,
my hand, and still it was in the same place. Till now I had not the
least fear, and even now had very little; then I adjured it to tell
me what it was. When I had said those words, it, keeping its
back against the wall, moved gently along towards the door. I
followed it, and it, going out at the door, turned its back to-
ward me. It went a little along the gallery. I followed it a
little into the gallery, and it disappeared, where there was no
I
58 DIVINATION.
DIVINATION.
DIVINING ROD.
been of very ancient date, and was tried with Homer's poem as
well as Virgil's. They who applied to this kind of oracle were
said to try the sortes Ilomericce, or sories Virgiliance.
King Charles the First is said to have tried this method of
learning his fate, and to have found the oracle but too certain.
Dr. Johnson, in his Life of Cowley, suspects that great poet
to have been tinctured with this superstition, and to have con-
sulted the Virgilian lots on the great occasion of the Scottish
treaty,and that he gave credit to the answer of the oracle.
Dr. Ferrand, in his Love Melancholy, 1610, p. 177, mentions
the " kinde of divination by (he opening of a hooke at all adventures;
and this was called the Vale)dmian chance, and by some sories
Virgiliance; of which the Emperor Adrian was wont to make
very much use." He adds, " I shall omit to speak here of as-
tragalomancy, that wae done with huckle bones; ceromancy, and
all other such like fooleries."
Dr. Nathaniel Home, in his Daemonologie, ]650, p. 81, says:
"For sorcery, properly so called, viz. divination by lotts, it is
too much apparent how it abounds. For lusory lots, the state
groans under the losse by them, to the ruine of many men and
families; as the churches lament under the sins by them and ;
from the Pagans, and the Psalter or Bible was substituted to the
poems of Homer and Virgil. From the fourth to the fourteenth
century, these sories sanciorum, as they are styled, were repeat-
edly condemned by the decrees of councils, and repeatedly
practised by kings, bishops, and saints.
accident. But why she could not as well divine of whose flocke
it was, as the other secret, when I have more skill in osteoman-
ite, I will tell you." He refers to Girald. Itin. i. cap. 11. Han-
way, in his Travels into Persia, vol. 1. p. 177, tells us, that in
that country too they have a kind of divination by the bone of
a sheep.
64
missed so to have done; for herein you see Jupiter in the as-
cendant in sextile aspect of the sun; and the moon, who is lady
of the horoscope, and governess of the hour in which she weighed
anchor, is applying ad triuum Veneris. She returned to Lon-
don again very well laden, in three weeks' time, to the great
content as well as advantage of the owner."
Henry, is his History of Great Britain, iii. 575, speaking of
astrology, tells us: " Nor did this passion for penetrating into
futurity prevail onlyamong the common people, but also among
persons of the highest ranke and greatest learning. All our
kings, and many of our earls and great barons, had their astrol-
ogers, who resided in their families, and were consulted by
them in all undertakings of great importance." The great man,
ha observes, ibid. chap. iv. p. 4.03, kept these " to cast the hor-
DIVISA TlOy BY FIG URES ASTROLOGICAL. 65
oscopes of his cliil Jren, discover the success of his designs, and
the public events that were to happen. " Their predictions,"
he adis, *'
were couched in very general and artful terms." In
another part of his history, however, Dr. Henry sajs: '* Astrol-
ogy, though ridiculous and delusive in itself, hath been the best
friend of the excellent and useful science of astronomy."
Zouch, in his edition of Walton's Livos, 179G, p. 131, note,
says,mentioning Queen Mary's reign: "Judicial astrology was
much in use long after this time. Its predictions were received
with reverential awe; and men even of the most enlightened
understandings were inclined to believe that the conjunctions
and oppositions of the planets had no little influence in the af-
fairs of the world. Even the excellent Joseph Mede disdained
not to apply himself to the study of astrology." Astrology is
ridiculed in a masterly manner in Shakespeare's King Lear, act
i. sc. 8.
ONYCHOMANCY, OB ONYMANOY,
DIVINATION BY TKE FINGEK-NAILS.
as that spots on the top of the nails signify things past, in the
middle things present, and, at the bottom, events to come.
That white specks presage our felicity, blue ones our misfor-
tunes that those in the nail of the thumb have significations
;
the thief, naming all the persons you suspect. On naming the
suddenly round about.
real thisf, the sieve will turn
Eeginald Scot, in his Discovery, p. 283, tells us that "Popish
priests, as the Chaldeans used the divination by sieve and
sheers for the detection of theft, do practice with a psalter and
key fastened upon the forty-ninth psalm, to discover a thief,
and when the names of the suspected persons are orderly put
into the pipe of the key, at the reading of these words of the
63 DIVJXATIOKS BY OXIOXS AXD FAGGOTS.
psalm, '
If tliou sawest a tliief thou didst consent unto him,* tlio
book will wagg and fall out of tlie fingers of them that hold it,
and he whose name remaineth in the key must be the thief." I
must here observe that Scot has mistaken the psalm it isthd ;
and being held between the two forefingers of two persons, will
turn round after some w'ords said: as, if one desires to find out
a thief, a certain verse taken out of a psalm is to be repeated,
and those who are suspected nominated, and if they are guilty,
the book and key will turn, else not."
'*
In these same dayes young wanton gyrles, that meete for mar-
riage be,
Doe search to know the names of them that shall their hus-
bands bee.
Four onyons, five, or eight, they take, and make in every one
Such names as they do fancie most, and best to think upon.
Thus neere the chimney them they set, and that same onyon
then
That doth sproute, doth surely beare the name of their
firste
good man.
Their husbande's nature eke they seeke to know, and all his
guise,
TVhenas the sunne hath, -hid himselfe, and left the starrie
skies,
DIVIKATIOXS BY A QBEEN IVIE LEAF. 69
DIVINATION BY IXOTVEBa
of the subject. He
is not aware, and is unwilling, at first, to
other ladies with her still keeping their hands upon her, and in
nearly all cases she finds it. This is accomplished by the un-
conscious muscular tension of the two ladies who know where
the object is, acting upon the person of the lady who is seeking
it.
and guess-work, she will, after a few trials, get hold of the pre-
cise ol ject hidden, or locality thought of. Yrhen the operator
and subject are connected by the methods practised by i3rown.
76 THE ART OF MISD BEADIXG.
gested that the young lady should be brought into the room
and placed in a position with her face toward the north; that
the gentleman should then place his fingers upon her shoulder,
ftfl before; that she should turn immediately to the right facing
TEE ART OF MUD BEADIXG: 77
in fact, so quick were her motions that it was with the greatest
difficulty that the gentleman could keep pace with the young
lady's movements."
I have seen a performer— who, though one of the pioneers in
this art, is far less skillful than many with whom I have experi-
menteJ — take a hat from the head of a gentleman in a small
private circle, and carry it across the room and put it on the head
of another gentleman; take a book or any other object from one
person to another; or go in succession to different pictures hang-
ing on the wall, and x^erform- other feats of a similar character,
while simply taking hold of the wrist of the subject. In the ex-
periment described by Mr. Grimes the subject placed three fin-
gers of his right hand on the shoulder of the operator. Note the
fact that in all these experiments direction and locality are all that
the miud-reader finds; the quality of the object found, or indeed
whether it be a movable object at all, or merely a limited local-
ity, as a figure in the carpet or on the wall, is not known to the
reader can never find even the hcalitrj on which the subject's
mind is concentrated; he can only find the direction where the
locality is. Mind-readers never tell what an object is, nor can
they describe its color or appearance; locality, and nothing more
definite than locality, is all they find. The object hidden may
be a coin or a corn-cob, a pin or a pen-holder, an elephant's
tusk or a diamonnd-pin— it is all the same. Again, where con-
nection of the operator with the subject is made by a wire, bo
arranged that mass-motion cannot be communicated, and the
subject concentrates his mind ever so steadily, the operator does
just what he would do by pure chance, and no more. This I
have proved repeatedly with good subjects and expert perform-
ers
2. The subject can successfully deceive the operator in various
Trays — of all, by using muscular tension in the wrong di-
first
Buliject to the arm of tho third party, and through the arm of
the third party to the operator.
5. Two, Ihree or more snljects, who agree on the locality to
be thought apply their hands to the body of the operator in
of,
that Miss Bridgm.in recognized bis brother, whom she had not
met for a year, by the touch of the hand alone
Every physician recognizes the fact of this difference of sus-
ceptibility lo touch;and in the diagnosis of certain conditions
of disease, much depends on the tadus erudlius. I am not sure
whether this delicacy of perception, by which muscle-reading
is accomplished, is the ordinary sense of touch, tbat of contact,
or of some of the special modifications of this sense. It is to
physiologists and students of diseases of the nervous system a
well-known fact that there are several varieties of sensibility— to
touch, to temperature, to pressure or weight,and to pain- -which,
possibly, represent different rates or modes of vibration of the
nerve-force.
The proportion of persons who can succeed in muscle-read-
ing, by the methods here described, is likewise a natural subject
of inquirj'. Judging from the fact that out of the comparitively
few who have made any efforts in this direction, a large number
have succeeded after very little practice, and some few, who have
given the matter close attention, have acquired great j)roficiency,
it is i)robable that the majority of people of either sex, between
the ages of fifteen and fifty, could attain, if they chose to labor
for it, with suitable practice, a certain grade of skill as muscle-
readers, provided, of course, good subje cts were experimented
with. It is estimated that about one in five or ten persons can
be put into the mesmeric trance by the ordinary processes; and,
under extraordinary circumstances, while under great excite-
ment, and by different causes, every one is liable to be thrown
into certain stages or forms of trance; the capacity for the trance-
state is not exceptional; it is not the peculiar property of a few
individuals— it belongs to the human race; similarly with the
capacity for muscle-reading.
The age at which this delicacy of touch is most marked is an
inquiry of interest; experience, up to date, would show that the
very old are not good muscle-readers. I have never known of
one under fifteen years of age to study this subject; although it
is conceivable that bright children, younger than that age, might
have sufficient power of attention to acquire th© art, certainly if
maton. I have used the phrase "involuntary lifo "to cover all
close to it; and " Cold " when he wanders far from it.
! Some
of the apparent successes with the wire-test may be thus ex-
plained.
In regard to all the public exhibitions of muscle-readers, it
should be considered that the excitement and eclat of the occa-
sion contribute not a little to the success of the operator; the
•ubjects grow enthusiastic— are partly entranced, it may bo
83 AlCnEMT.
TZANSrilUTATION OF METALS—ALCHEMY.
Alchkmy was the most important branch of natural magic; it
had for its aim the transmutation of metals, that is the conver-
sion of the baser metals into solid, virgin gold.
To attain this end, the alchemists sought as well to discover
the powder of prcjection," as they termed it, which, thrown
*•
color, its nature, nor its efifects? This water is spirits of wine,
or better. Water of Life {Aqua Viice), and this name befits it for
it causes us to live a long time."
Nicholas Flamel is the most illustrious of all those to whom
has been attributed discovery of the philosopher's stone. A
writing master and engraver, Nicholas Flamel succeeded in ob-
taining the most colossal fortune of his daj-, so that, oftentimes,
the king came to tap the money chest of the artisan. He erected
the famous Tower of Saint Jacques, from the bell of which, in a
subsequent century, rang the signal for commencing the Mas-
sacre of St. Bartholomew, and enriched the church with magnifi-
cent donations. He carried his luxury to such a degree as to
enact, during his lifetime, a mausoleum for Pernella, his wife,
and himself, covered with bas reliefs, in which alchemists in a
later day pretended to have discovered the various operations
indicated for the correct accomplishment of the Great Work.
Flamel himself declared that he had discovered the philoso-
pher's stone, still, according to the historian, La Martiuiere, his
riches had a less marvellous origin.
Flamel, according to this version, had been called as a writing
master to make out an inventory of some goods to be sold at
auction, and among the articles he discovered a little manuscript
book, written in part in Hebrew and in part in some unknown
characters which he purchased for three sous.
Several days afterwards Flamel and Pernella made a pilgrim-
age to the Church of Saint Jacques de- Galice. While returning
they encountered a Jewish rabbi, whom they accosted. Flamel
showed his book to the labbi, who, having read it, informed
him that it contained the veritable rules for making the philoso-
90 ALCEEJ^fT.
"In the name of God, take a denier of fine gold, three deniers
of silver, melt them together, throw in ten deniers of saturne,
which is the true mediator, do not keep them long melted, but
throw in, as soon as possible, an ingot, which you have placed
in subtile filings, then mix with them a philosophic egg, herme-
tically sealed, and then consign them to the secret furnace. The
ASTJROLOGT. •1
ASTBOLOGY.
ASTROLOGY, 93
HOBOSCOPES.
Astrologers divide the zodiac into twelve hours, each one cor-
responding to one of the twelve signs. The character and
destiny varies according to the place of the sun in the heavens at
the moment of birth.
A man born beneath this sign will frame many projects and
execute none; he will love study and the sciences. He will be
very fortunate in love.
The woman will be tall and good looking, much loved, and
will have a great memory, and acquire the art of pleasing.
ASTROLOGY.
The man born beneath this sign will be wise and prudent;
manner will cause him to be beloved by every-
his agreeable
body. He be unfortunate in his household.
will
The woman be devoted to dancing; she will marry young
will
and render her husband happy.
in his enterprises.
The woman will be aimable, coquettish and very unfortunate
in her old age.
One daj', not long ago, (he jewelers of Paris were in a high
state of excitement,and justly so, for the news had reached
them from lae Academy of Sciences that two chemists, MM. E.
Fremy and Fell, had discovered a process for the manuf.:cturo
by the pound of certain kinds of precious stones ranking in
value next to the diamond, and frequently commanding still
larger prices than the hitter— namely, the ruby, the sapphire,
and the most precious of all, the Oriental emerald. At first the
Parisian jewelers consoled themselves with the thought that the
genuine stones would always be preferred to the artificial ones,
but the excitement increased when it became known that 'MIL
Fremy and Feil did not propose to imitate precious stones, but
that iheir productions would be perfectly equal to the natural
ARTIFICIAL PRECIOUS ST0y£3. 97
ahvays been what they are now, and which may change their
form, but never their peculiar nature. Not so with precious
stones, most of which, and especially those that are most highly
prized, are of very lowly origin indeed. In the eyes of tho
chemist the ruby, the sapphire, the topaz, etc., are simply modi-
fications of one siibstance (alumina), which, as clay, forms tho
greater portion of the earth's crust; and the diamond, which is
the prince of all precious stones, issimply pure crystallized
carbon, and so allied to charcoal, lampblack,etc. Other highly
esteemed precious stones, such as the emerald, the aqua-marina,
and chrysoberyl, on the one hand, and the hyacinth, on tho
other, contain "earths" chemically related to argillaceous earth
— name! 3% the former consists of beryl-earth, and the latter of
zirconia; but these earths in themselves are neither rare nor
precious, so that in some countries the streets are paved with the
irapurer brothers of the emerald. The same is true of all other
precious stones, including pearls ;in the main they are formed
of substances ot no value whatever, and to be found everywhere,
such as agillaceous earth, silicic acid, fluor-spar, boracic acid,
lime, magnesia, etc, Their only superiority consists in the fact
tkat tho common substance in them Las reached an extraordi-
98 ARTIFICIAL PRECIOUS STONES.
when Simon was borne aloft through the air in a winged chariot
in the sight of the emperor, the united prayers of the apostles
Peter and Paul, prevailing over the demoniacal agencies that
sustained him, brought him precipitately to the ground.
Nothing is more common than to hear it asserted that these
are subjects which any person of ordinary intelligence can in-
vestigate for himself. But the chemist and the physicist would
most assuredly demur to any such assumption in regard to a
chemical or physical inquiry the physiologist and geologist
;
at a distance from it ;
no effect M'oiild follow
while, conversely,
their close proximity to one of these trees when they believed
themselves to be at a distance from any of them. Further, the
commissioners reported that, although some cures mij^ht be*
wrought by the mesmeric treatment, it was not without danger,
since the convulsions excited were often violent and exceed-
ingly apt to spread, especially among men feeble in body and
weak in mind, and almost universally among women and they';
ceeding leciure, the only secure basis for our belief on any sub-
ject is the confirmation afforded to external testimony by our
sense of the inherent probability of the fact testified to; so that,
as has been well remarked, "evidence tendered in support of
what new must correspond in strength with the degree of its
is
and thus that if the attracting object were forcibly drawn away,
not only the hand, but the wliole body of the "sensitive" was
dragged after it. Another set of facts was adduced to prove the
special relation of odyle to terrestrial magnetism— namely, that
many "sensitives" cannot sleep in beds which lie across the
magnetic meridian; a position at right angles to it being to some
quite intolerable.
Von Keichenbach's doctrine came before the British publio
under the authority of the late Dr. Gregory, the Professor of
Chemistry in the University of Edinburgh who went so far as;
them of any form or color that Mr. Braid chose to Dame. And
when desired to place his hand upon one of the poles, and to
fix his attention for a brief period upon it, the peremptory as-
surance that he could not detach it w as sufficient to hold it there
with such tenacity that I saw Mr. Braid drag him round the
room in a way that reminded me of George Cruikshanlc's amus-
ing illustration of the German fairy-story of "The Golden
Goose." The attraction was dissolved by Mr. Braid's loud,
cheery "All right, man," which brought the subject back to his
normal condition, as suddenly as the attraction of a powerful
electro-magnet for a heavy mass of iron ceases when the circuit
is broken.
Now the phenomena of the "biological" condition seem to me
of peculiar significance, in relation to a large class of those
which are claimed as manifestations of a supposed "spiritual"
agency. When
number of persons of that "concentrative and
a
imaginative turn of mind" which predisposes them to the "bio-
logical" conditionsit for a couple of hours (especially if in the
I have now to show you that the like expectancy can also pro-
duce movements of \arious kinds, through the instrumentality
of the nervo-rauscular apparatus, without the least conscious-
ness on the part of its subject of his being himself the instru-
ment of their performance; a physiological fact which is the key
to the whole mystery of table-turning and table-talking. I very
well remember the prevalence in my schoolboy days of a belief
that, when a ring, a button, or any other small body, suspended
by a string over the end of the finger, was brought near the out-
side or inside of a glass tumbler, it would strike the hour of the
day against its surface; and the experiment certainly succeeded
in the hands of several of my schoolfellows, who tried it in all
good faith, getting up in the middle of the night to test it, in
entire ignorance, as they declared, of the real time. But, as
was pointed out by M. Chevreul, who investigated this subject
in a truly scientific spirit more than forty years ago, it is impos-
sible by any voluntary effort to keep the hand absolutely still
for a length of time in the position required; an involuntary
tremulousness is always observable in the suspended body, and
if the attention be fixed on it with the expectation that its vibra-
tions will take a definite direction, they are very likely to do so.
But their persistence in that direction is found to last only so
long as they are guided by the sight of the operator, at once and
entirely losing their constancy if he closes or turns away his
eyes. Thus it became obvious that, in the striking of the hour,
the influence which determines the number of strokes is really
the knowledge or suspicion present to the mind of the operator,
which involuntarily and unconsciously directs the action of his
muscles; and the same rationale was applied by M. Chevreul to
other cases in which this pendule explorateur (the use of which
can be traced back to a very remote date), has been appealed to
for answers to questions of very diverse character.
When, liowever, "Odyle" came to the front, and the world
of curious but unscientific inquirers was again "possessed" by
the idea of an unknown and mysterious agency, capable of
manifesting itself in an unlimited variety of ways, the pendule
exploraieur was brought into vogue, under the name of odometer^
by Dr. Herbert Mayo, who investigated its action with a gr«at
116 MESMERISM, ODTLISM, TABLE-TURKING, ETC.
them away, and let some one else watch the oscillations under
the conditions you have specified, and record their results you ;
will find, if I do not mistake, that they will then show an entire
want of the constancy you have hitherto observed." His next
letter informed me that such proved to be the case; so that he
tad come entirely to agree with me as to the dependence of the
previous uniformity of his results on his own expectancj'.
A very amusing «rpose of the mystery of the •' magnetometer"
resulted from its application by Dr. Madden, an homoeopathic
physician at Brighton, to test the virtues of his " globules," as
to which he had, of course, some performed conclusions of his
own. The results of his first experiments entirely corresponded
with his ideas of what they ought to be; for when a globule of
one medicine was taken into his disengaged hand, the sus-
pended ball oscillated longitudinally and when this globule
;
and, in some of the cases which seem to have stood this test, it
INTEODUCTOEY.
of the saints are resorted to, to receive the same kind of revela-
tions for curing diseases." The Queen of Navarre, while l3'ing at
Metz, at the point of death, described the battle of Jarnac in every
minute particular; told of her sons victory; the death of the
Prince of Conde, and the enemy's flight; all of which was soon
afterwards confirmed. This instance of clairvoyant vision is as
well attested as that of Emanuel Swedenborg, who saw a city
burning, while eighty miles distant, and described the progress of
the fire to the surrounding by-standers. Cardanus, in 1501, per-
formed man}' great cures by fascination. He could go into the
state at will and could wake when he chose, and while in the
state cured himself of slight attacks of the gout, prescribed reme-
dies, saw objects at a great distance, and foretold future events
with correctness. For all this he was imprisoned as a sorcerer at
Bologna, though he only claimed that nature had endowed him
thus strangely. In 1679, William Maxwell, an Englishman, laid
down propositions similar to those afterwards promulgated by
Mesmer. In the seventeenth century, there appeared in England
a Dr. Streper Levret, an Irish gentleman, and also Valentine
;
use of them for the afflicted. After a while, a Dr. Haygarth made
an imitation "Tractor" of wood, and cured a rheumatic patient
with its use, and then he proclaimed that the whole matter was
the result of imagination, and every body believed him. However,
there was no denying the fact that cures were effected, which set
thinking men to work at experimenting, and as one theory after
another was exploded, fact was added to fact, and the truth of the
science was gradually brought to light, through patience and per-
severance.
127
THE PEACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
" Natare hears bat one kind of questions— they are experiments. H«f
answer is phenomena."— Liebig.
CHAPTER FIRST.
FACTS FOR THE UNBELIEVERS.
In presenting this little work to the public we feel that
we arc supplying a wjint tliat lias been lung felt by those
who have niade a study of the subject of Animal Mag-
netism, or Mesmerism, as it is commonly called. Hereto-
fore it has been necessary to buy a groat deal of b )ok in
order to get a small amount of practical infortnatiou on
the subject under consideration, and it is to obviate this
diflSculty that this work has been written and sent forth
on its mission.
We will first direct our attention to those individuals
who have no faith in Mesmerism, and believe it all a hum-
bug because so unreasonable. Dear friends, will yru be
so kind as to explain how it is that electricity, one of the
most subtile elements in nature, is capable of producing
such stupendous results ? It dashes tlie tall oak to splint-
ers here, fires a house there, destroys life, both vegetable
and animal, and yet man has bridled it, and has made
it the world's messenger. You know these things arc
true, for you have seen and heard but can you explain
;
Planchette at work.
very li.Li htly np')n it, in a short lime the connection will be
established and it will begin 1o move, carry iig the fingers
with ir. Great care must be taken not to influence the
motion of th-j " plancliettu" in the least by any muscular
action of the fingers. At first the m »V(Miients will be in-
definite, in curves and eircles, but after a while it will
begin to write ''yes" and " no" in answer to leading ques-
tions. In tiic course of repeated trials, answers of all
kinds Will be rec( ived, both s(a'ious, solemn, and trnthftil.
For some persons "plunchettc" will not move at all; for
131
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
others of peculiar organization it will move freely in from
one t) twenty minutes. Sometimes, if several will place
their fingers on it at once, it will move readily for them,
although it relusea to make any motion lor any of ihem
6ini>ly.M my persons have received wonderfnl revelations
from the liitle tripod. We have known it to write out
answers in accordance with the mental dictation of a by-
stander. The operators, who were asking the questions,
were much chagrined at the apparently irrelevant answers,
but were compelled to acknf)wle'l^e the joke when the by-
slander explained how he. had brought his will power to
bear in making " planchette" answer as he desired.
We wdl leave this phase of magnetic phenomena and
return to everyday matters ngiin. The power of the
human eye over the brute creation is undoubtedly the re-
sult, in part at least, of a mesmeric influence. You can
h irdiy get a dog to look you in the eye for more than a few
seconds, if you fix your gaze st'^adfastly in return. If you
are in danger of being bitten by a dog at any time, keep
cool if 3^>ii can, and look resolnt»*ly in the eyes of tlie
brute, and bring all your powers of concentration to bear
in willing him to keep away from 3'ou. M
my dogs will
turn away and walk off on being treated tliiis, but. nov7
and then yon will come across a cur who is only Mibject to
the intluence while your eye^ arc (ixed upon him ; tne mo-
ment the gaze is withdrawn the brute is ready to advance
again.
It is said by many who prof(3ss to have the power to
ch arm away diseases by a j irgon of incantations, t'aat
they dare not give tln-ir information to those of opposite
sex, for in s doing ihey will lose th power themstdves.
> )
This is quite trne, f(jr wlien they b.'lieve they hive lost
their pow<'r, their confiilence is gone, iin
l they can do but
little or nothing. But let t-u«*h persons un lerstand the
prineiph's of mes ne ism, and th y will fi id tint their
" peeping and mntte ing" is cniir. ly superfluous and may
be dispensed with. The peculiar pcsychoiogicul powers of
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRVOYAirr.
the lover who woos liis fair one, ami the rnotiier who
Foothes hi'F fretful iiif tnt all, all unf^onscionsly hring lo
;
CnAPTER SECOND.
OPERATOR AXD SUBJECT — CONDITION'S.
It is of the .areatest impo* tance that the moRmcvizin|i^
opera'or shou'd be a heahiiy person, ])os-cssing" "a sound
mind in a honnd body." This is vrry cs.-entiiii, from the
fact that the nervous flu d which passes I'lom the system
of the operator into that <f the snbj ct niesmen'zcd
Bhould be derived from a healthy somce, lest the snbj- ct
be injured by tlic reception of a diseased nervuus Ihi d ;
nlso for another reason, tiiat if the (tperator is in p« or
health he weakens iiis own s\stfm still more by ma;^net-
izin;^ during a time ot phys'c d indisi osition.
The ()peraior slionid be of tint aL'^e when in rnlire pos-
BCPsion of the highest powers of bodily energy and mentul
activity, neiiher of j'onihlul immaturity r of aged de-
crepitude. The Btreng h of both mind aiid body should be
that of confirmed manhood or womanhood, in rder to
<
CHAPTER THIRD.
%
MODES OF OPERATION.
We ahall now des cribe very minutely the mode of
brin^Mns^ n person into ihe mesmn-ic .state. Lot the
oper.itor an<l subject seat thcns -Ives fxca to faco, thtj sub-
ject being seat<nl a little lower than the op-n-ator to enable
him to work with greater ease.* The knees of the subject
may be placed between t'loso of tho operator, or, in the
case of a lady Ku!)ject, atone side ;
any position m ly bo
assume! which will lighten the labor of the mesmerist
when making the pisses. Now suppo-tia^ yourself to be
the operator, y »u will tiki the left hand of your subject
in your ri^^ht, and his right hand in your left, placing the
ball of your thumb in th center of the upper part of tlio
5
palm of his hand near where ic j »ins the wrist, and near
the root of the thumb ; the subject h d.ling his p ilnis up-
ward while your thumbs arj in t'.ie position described and
your fiuijers clasped over the backs of his hands. Each of
reach the shoulders, when* you let t ieni ve.^t again a few
moments ; theu pass ou down the bre^ist, resting them a
moment on the stomach, and continuing the pass till you
reach the knees, where you will cease unless you can con*
14/^
THE PRACTICAL CLAIKVOTANT.
renienlly lengthen the pa«s until you rcacli the feet of the
•nbjcct. Make sever <1 of llie>e long passes and then fol-
low with other passc:*, commencing at ihc head as bcforo
connect one ban with tho hubject's and make passes with
I
CHAPTER FOURTH.
ELECTRICAL PSYCHOLOGY.
place his eyes on your own as soon as yon take his hand.
With a fixed determination to inlluencc him, return his
gazij a haltminute or irore. Then tell him to lose liis «
eyes, and when he has done so, press the eyelids down
gently wi h your finders, usin;;- the hand whi< h is fn c.
Now place this hand on the top of his head, letting the
1^ THE PRACTICAL CLAIUVOTANT.
thumb rest on lii.s foreliead* just aliovc llic nose, bearings
partially downwards, slill Kccpinp^ 3'onr other tliumb on llio
ULNAR NERVK. K(<wtell liim 111 tlic Miost resoliitc maiiiicr,
**You cannot open yovr eyes." ]f \a should su( cc( d, try him
two or ihr< o lin es n ore, vcpsing his lids down as hefoic.
|
shown. If you can hold your sul jeet's eyes closed by ihc
modes just mentioned, or if yon can contnd Ihe action of
the lids to a considerable extent, ihen tell him lo clasp his
liands togother t ghtly on his head or across his knee, and
then say, " You can't separate thenj." To the inlinite sur-
prise of almost everybody, he will be able to do so only
wiih f^rcat difficulty, or hot at all. Let him he seat( d, and
taking hold of the chair, firmly say, " You can't rise." He
will remain seated in spile of all his efforts. Give him a stick
to lioldand you can prevent him from letting it fall, though
he may strive his best to do so. You can prevent his walk-
ing ii single step. Yon can arrest h s voice in the middle
of a sentence, and he will vainly strive for utterance. In
short, his muscular efforts in any way you
yon can control
desire, by simply speaking your commands in a resolute
tone, and keeping your mind firmly on the work. Care
must be taken not to let the subject injure himself by over-
exertions. AYc once caused a subj<!Ct to strain his back,
while trying to lilt a single chair, which, light as it was,
he could not move an inch. Freqn(3ntly you will succeed
better by making a few passes ovt r the arms, hands, or
fingers, before giving a command, observing to make the
slr»»ke in the direcnon of the extremities. You may not
be able to control the subjf'ct to any gi eater extent than
already described but if he is very imprrssible you can
;
place you wish. You can place your knife in his band and
make it feel j-o hot th >t be will drop it in pain. You can
mak(^ bim nurse a pillow as if it were a little babe, an —
amusing cxperinu nt when an old bachelor is t'le subject.
You can c.insc bim lo shed tc^ai's over the prostrate ttody
of so ne one of the au lience previously informed, by telling
iiim be bcho'ds the de.td lornr of sume ne ir and dear unc.
Yon mav give him a j>lass of water to drink, and if you
tc him it was strong drink he wi-ll stagger like a drnnkcu
1
man. If any of th(; auduMicc try to joke iii ti, he will show
an apiness of reply and a brdli;incy of rcpaitce far beyond
bis ability in the < rdinaiy st.«te. The subject's aegermay
be atoired till be beci)mcs almost dangerous to tiiose
whom be lancies to be bis enemies. Be carelnl in cxperi-
nu nt ng not to ake the changes too abrupt, lest the nerv-
ous systc of the subject be sh;ikeu.
ii Never end the
series f experiments with anyihii g of an unpleasant char-
(
acter if _)ou do, the subject w)ll feel badly for hours
;
CHAPTER FIFTn.
DANGERS TO BE AVOIDED.
We now c^^mc to speak of the dangei s of animal maof*
ncti>rn, boiliimaginary ;ind real. The lirst tlioui^lit wliich
enters Ihc minds ot* a majority of persons, \vli< n tli' y arc
n)ado to realize the trutli of mcsmedsn), is, that it may
become an a.i;cnt of great power for cvd in iha bands of
bad njcn. But it is a fact, wiiii li all observing inesmerists
have noticed, that the moral liicnlties pi ty important
pait in the sncccssfnl cxereise of the ma^Mietic power. Wo
r<dy on the word of eminent wiiters on the subject, and
also tlie testimony <.f nnmeions operatoi-s, that wlien m<^n
n»ake a l'a<l nsi; of tl)o power lliey possess magnetically,
they finally loose ihat power eniiiely. Cases of this kind
arc on record ; and further, that wh'Mi once the power is
lost, it is lost forever. The same law governs the mental
man that governs the pliysical man as the abnse of the
;
The mind of the Kubj(3et feels that the op.-rator is not n ally
meaning to lead him into harai, and In^ governs hims- lf
accordingly. But the m- ment an operator is influenced by
byd m dives he ses Control of his subject, and the sub-
1
wliile, on the otlier liand, the operator will find his own
Bystcrn improving" at ihc expense of the unwise subject.
The h:i(\ ollects of lettin.s;' children sleep wiJi the old and
inlirm is an example of like chai actor. Do not impress it
on tlie mind of a magnetized subject that you cannot
awaken him, or else you may lind tiiut you will not. be able
to briti;^ him out of tlie si ate ; as liie subject will then
contiol liimseU", and will not wake till he gets ready.
S.)inetiines you will be truuMed a Utile by the influence of
the minds of the bystanders, who have, ignor.intly or o her-
wise, put tl'emsclves iu communie:ition with the subject l>y
handling him too freely or by fixing their gaze and atten-
tion upon him loo intently. A few words to the snbjfct,
instructing him to obey you alone, and to ward off ou side
interference, will set matters right again. Attempt no
dangerous experiments with a siibjoet. Remember that
the impressions m:ide on his mind are seemingly real to
him, and the shock or scare y(n\ may produce will be
likely to cling to him when awakened. We once caused a
subject to weep over what he supposed to be the dead body
of his father; and then, as the audience were seriously
affected, we brout^ht him into a natural state and dismissed
(he asfecmbly. But the young man who was the subject,
told us jifierward, tliat the saddening influences affjcted him
considerably tlie next day. Jr^o, you see, one cannot be too
cautious. Let all changes be gradual, and let the last cx-
perim nt be of a cheer! ul natuie. Av'oid drunkards, for
though they are generally subjected with ease, they are
hard to w.iken, and are likely to deceive you by making
you believe that they are iKJt in the least unde-r the influ-
ence, when, in reality, they are completely mesnierized.
We would advise you to steer clear of tliose who may have
a predisposiiion to insanit3', or who may be subject to
organic disease of the heart. It is best to be on the safe
side when you mesuierize Ibr the purpose of try ng experi-
ments. If the subject t^hows any convulsive action when
you arc making the passes, breathe gently on top of Lis
153
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRYOYANT.
lica^lnnd down to tlic back of liis nccV. Sometimes it is
well to breathe on the part Mflccted. Slioiild the Bubject
show any difficul y in breathin.G:, m:iko a few dispcrsivo
passes over the chest, and tlic breaihinij will become nat-
X54
THE PEACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
her, desirino: her to be converted— to resi;^-n Ijersclf
—
giving lip all and Ihc result m ly be that she is thrown
into a cataieptic state, called "trance," and that withont
any thought of such a resnlt on the part of tlie preacher.
Now, if the preacher or auy other person, will put himself
in communication with the individual who is in the
"trance," by nutans of the median nerve and hand on the
head, and use the means described lor demesmcrizing, the
CHAPTER SIXTH.
MEDICAL USE OF MESMERISM.
that your sul ject is made free from all fear, and you will
be absolutely astonished at ^^jurself, and the only trouble
will be that you will be annoyed by tiie springing up of a
neighborhood practice for ihe treatmeut of simple diseases.
—
CHAPTER SEVENTH,
PUBLIC LECTURING.
great success. Afh r all arc sealed again, yon will explain
the following experiment to tlie audience, and then make
one or two trials of it. Let all the assembly close their
eyes t'ghlly for lialf a minute or m- re. During that tin»e
fix your mind (irmly on tlie who'e assembly, wi.ling their
c\es to remain closed. Then tell them that they cannot
0|)cn their e^'cs. Perhaps two or three in the crowd will
be able to do t^o — (Duds
s:iys about one in twenty live on
an average), liosc who cmnot open their eyes will be
'i
hands tightly together over his head, across his knees, and
around {I cane, stren-^thening ;\our influence by a few
passes over his hands before telling him lh »t he cannot
separate them. Do not let him injure himself when try-
ing, in vail), to lift clntirs, sticks of wood, etc.
Now let him li')ld a knife ti^hily between his thumb and
fing^er and tell him he cannot drop it to save his lifa
—
his rehitive bei oiue a corpse, and lu; will slu d tears as it'
the vision were a reality. Th n tell him ih t ii is a case
ol catah psy, ;tnd proceed to waken the supposed dead per-
son. Win n y(.nr subject's spirits are res oted, inviic iiim
to take sonn? recreation to g —
untinjr, lor instance.
» I Get
him to c dl the elopes n set them alter a labb.l then to
; 1 ;
tious as an Indian.
While hutitin;:-, a thnnder-slorm comes up, and hn seeks
shelter. The thunde r continues, and 30U tell him it is not
thunder, you arc incl ncd to thiidc. " No, look over on
that hill It is cannon tiring.
! There are the slndis bur.-t-
—
ing there is going to be a battle. 'J'h<yare fu :ng this
way. Look out Dodge the big ones. There c» me ti c
!
163
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
paj»scs to (1< open your influence over llic subject's head
and body, aud ovvr tlic arm.
Yi u \v\ \ find that the limb may be' punctured with a
nc('(!lo, or i)iiKh( (l severely, witiiout attracting the least
attention. Givo him ;i li ilo water, and t< 11 liim it is an
opiiite, a- d will produce the mo-t deli<;htfiil dreams. Y(iU
can let him take a j(;iirn('y to sec distant irieiids — vis"t the
jei;ioi 8 ol r;»r;idirc ai d htc un^'cls :Jiid de:id relatives
look into the inrcnml r< g Ons —
ti avcl in loieigii clim< a —or
anything l8C you wish. You can strengthe!i the im res-
<
" mes:j!( rism," ofier them f r sa!e ;if not, then «riv(? tho
open in eveiy ti.ing-. Act withoui coi c< :dmen», not on!^^
f()r your individu 1 wcllare, but lor the wel arc <<f a science
which is beg- nning to claim the at.euiion of many of the
leading scientific men of the day.
CHAPTER EIGHTH.
PECULIAR CASES.
in the deaf and dumb state, and upon asking hi-n what
day it was, he named the very day on which lie f. ll into
this lemarkable C(mdition. He had no recollecti«ui of being
dei*f and dumb, and was astonished at our inquiries."
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRYOYANT.
Dr Underbill, in his work on Mcsmcriam, mentions a
case which happened lit a party of yonng fo'ks af.er .-orne
nesvspiper artic'e was read on this new subje t. No one
prt sent had any knowlo Ige of liic subjccL or was ready
to own any belief in the matter. A yomig lad}' propose d
to Mr. B to make a trial on her. He did so succL'ssfuily,
and afierward.s, ai^ain and a'j^ain, put her t) slci p and
brought her out of it successfully. Suddenly tlierc came
a change. Slie went to sleep without U s m-mipulationa
and contrary to his uisli or desire, and no one cnuld wake
licr but himself. " It harrassfd my life our, and no one
can imagine my anxiety," suid ha to me. *' She to'd me
she had c 'mmenced a letter to her parents, in whicli slie
Ihongiit sho would dfjscribe the case. The moment I lixed
'
The n xt day c imo a m"8s igc dt^elarin^- that she wouhl d "e
if h«j did n..t return. This compelled him to return. He
wrote East for information what to do, and was advised
to nie.smerize her as deeply as he could and ask her. illc
obeyed, and she tol him tiiat he must mesnKM ize her as
1
ion-*. Alier
I had conversid a few minutes. I said: *l
would have him magMn tized.' To which his fatiier repl cd,
'
I don l believe in it at :dl,'and the m ithiu* ad'Icd, If y<»u *
will put jne to slei p, I'll believe, and ni»t witl.'out.' I re-
plied, *! Would try it; it may do gO'd and can do no
harm.' During ih s conversation m;ide a ft-w passes in
I
front of the ch id, ch efly v/iih ou'r hand, and without any
par icular concen ration of tbo min or wdl, and mostly i
'
Wliat is its color'? Wrll, sir, a kind of liglit brown/
*
ill any case, will the activity of the organ J now took
out my wa'cli, um'. lioMing llie dial towards myself and
above the line vision, his eyes being cl.)8ed and his
of liis
'
Eig lit o'clock, si'; whcli was exactly the time by the
watch, lhon«;h by the dock in the rooin it wms lift* en
minnt h fa-ti r. 1 now left him for an hour and w. nt back
to Mr. Llal 's, giving h in leave to converse (mly with his
father On my return lonnd him in the same istutc. lie
1
but when that day came he liad several. One day alter
that Sabbath he cam to^iis mother, much aj^itited and ap-
-
ove him, and soon he passed into the iiifNineric sleep, and
•
CHAPTER NINTH.
WELL- ATTESTED WONDERS.
MooRE, in his " Use of the Body in Relation to the Mind,"
Bays: "There is another form of supersensnons vision, for
the existence of which we can scarcely di -cover sufBoic^ht
reason, unless to intimate an un<leveloped faculty, which,
in another state, may be proper to nann?. The natme and
character of this strange endowment will be best expressed
in the language of one who believed himself to be possessed
of it. Ileinrich Z-Jchokke, a man remarkable f^r the ex-
tent of bis iiouorublc labors as a statesman and an author,
171
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
solemnly writes ilic following passrigc in Iiis an^obiogra-
pliy: It has happened to luc Fonicliines, on my first inret-
'
over \hii bru'e creation, w(! pi( sent the lollowing xiract <
the wigwam, until the doctor's stick would leave hia hand
THE PTIACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
nutie thiid<ing' ])i rtion of the coiiiiiii:n ty. and then the
denj()n>tra i.-ns oi adually d rninished in mngniiude. Be-
liev n,u: trmly, av Ih all due re^pect to lhu>e ciimch ineni-
l)' rs who hoiicstly d Her fn ni ns, that iiiagiietism was at
the I ('ttoni f the wlmle afla r in ihis c:ise, we d( termined
<
to test the inaiter for our own individual sat s'action. i^o,
CnAPTER TEXm
8ELF-M.AG S ETISM. — CLAIRV( (YAXCE.
Wf. will concbub' by giving explicit directions how to
—
mcsmci ize one's self th'* stmngest thing of all. Let tlic
operator pla« c th(? subject rpoii a chair or so'a wliere ho
can rest cut rely at eas<». Then tin; sub ject w II close th
(•y« s ai d remain oitirely pa-si vo in mind and comp'e:ely
relax* d in body, without st rring in t!ie leas'. he opera- 'I
17D
THE PRACTICAL CLAIRVOYANT.
likoly to witness cl n'rvoyant mani Temptations, we will p^ivc
a few hints liow to instruct ilio subjects who show a dis-
position to hccorne clairvoyant.
Do not iillovv tlicni to he biased by yoni mind, bnt teach
them to sec 5ibs(Mit thin<^s, placesand persona, independent
of wliat may be in ynur thoughts as operator. When a
suljc'Ct bc;;ii!S to "sec thinj^s wilii his eyes «lmt," pbice a
band tg'c over his eyes (if you wish to make a sure test),
and let some one of the audience place a pocket knife in
the clairvoyant's hand. Tiicn, if half a dozen bystanders,
including the owner of tlic kni''e, whf) presented if, will
stand near the clairvoyant, ha will lake the hand of each
om.' at a time, and give t!i(^ knife to the person whom ho
detects ns ihc owner. He will be able to read words
placed against his foiehf^ad ;
to describe pictures by run-
ning iiis lint;('rs over them; to give tiie contents of distant
rooms witii which lie is not acquainted; to describe distant
places he has never seen, and even give the thoughti of
persons present.
If the Hubject looks to you for answers he will speak
ihc impressions deiived from your thonghts ; but if he
holds hijuself indepvnd n^, and is nf)t led by the mind of
any one pre>ent, he will, if a good subj cf, disclose reve-
lations whicli will sislonish and even alaini the audience.
Those clairvoyants vvlro.read i\u* solution of quesiiona
in the minds of others are called dependent clairvoyanU
tho-e who a'O not iuflu(3nced b}*" surroundings arc inde-
pewienl dairvjyant.^, and ai(; by tar the most reliiible ; but
nothing is sure when; outside mental influence may so
easily prodn. e a false impression on the subject's mind.
It is an easy thing to send a subject on a mental jour-
ney to a dis ant friend, or to the realms above, or the re-
gions beneath, if you tell hit!j to go while in a mesmeric
slumber, and the incidents of liis travel will appear real
to hiin. To tin? !nind of an ignorant person it would seem
he h;is really made the trip in spirit, but it is very
plain hat he is menially subordinate to the operator who
I
g^ivcs him the first impulse, and ihen leaves hiiu to linisb
ISO THE PRACTICAL CLAIP.VOYANT.
181
MADAM LENOEMAND'S
Fortune-Teller and Dream-Book.
FORTUNE-TELLING TABLETS,
AS USED BY THE EGYPTIAN MAGI, OK ASTE0L0GEE3. A METHOD —
OF TELLING- FORTUNES SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS.
EULE.—The person whose fortune is to be told is to prick with
a pin, or other sharp point, on any letter they choose i.i the lirst
Tablet, but by chance (with the eyes shut) ii the best way to do it
then refer to the second Tablet, to the letter, under which is a par-
ticular magical figure, and has reference to the Oracle in the two
following pages, and which will determine the fortune of the inquii*er.
Tablet No. 1.
A C D
Z F X L N A
P N 0 C D L Q
YRSTEHGL
KVWTSVANM
CDPORBWXACH
BIXFGSBHLK
WVUOFTSVD
L M X A B W Z
B B L ]\I 0 N
Q S Y
ABC
Tablet Xo. 2.
25 15 5
D E F G H I
U IG G 13 7 18
K L M N O P Q
8 17 1 9 10 22 3
R S T V U W
12 23 19 2 21 4
X Y Z
20 21 11
FOETUNE-TELLER AND DREAM-BOOK,
children, and good old age. To a lady, the faithfulness of her lover,
and a speedy marriage
3. Very good fortune, sudden prosperity, great respect from high
personages, and a letter bringing important news.
7. This number, to a woman, is wonderful in showing, if single,
a handsome, rich, and constant husband and if married, a faith- ;
ful partner, and who must be of a good family, as she must know
she has married above her condition. To a man, the same.
8. This is a general good sign, and your present expectations will
be fulfilled, and you have some on the anvil.
9. If a married man or woman draws this, if under fifty, let them
not despair of a young family. To the single, very sudden mar-
riage.
10. A friend has crossed the sea, and will bring home some riches,
by which the parties will be much benefited.
12. An uncommon number, belonging to scriptural signs, and
shows the party have success in all their undertaliings.
will
15. No doubt but the chooser is very poor, and thought insig-
nificant ; but let his friends assist him or her, as they are much
favored.
16. A very sudden journey, with a pleasant fellow-traveler, and
the result of the journey will be generally beneficial to your family.
18. A sudden acquaintance witli the opposite sex, which will be
opposed but the party should persevere, as it will be to his or
;
her advantage.
21. A letter of importance will an'ive, announcing the death of
a relation for whom you have no very great rs^*pect, but who has
left you a legacy.
22. Be very prudent in your conduct, as this number is very pre-
carious, and much depends on yourself it is generally good. ;
BAD FORTUNE.
2. Shows the
loss of a friend, bad success at law, loss of money,
imfaithfulness of lovers, and a bad partner.
4. A letter announcing the loss of money.
5. The man who draws this number, let him examine his mol(?s,
and he will find, I linow, more about liim than he imagines.
6. Very bad success you may expect generally not to succeed
;
13. "You want to borrow money, and you hope you will have it
but j^ou will be deceived.
14. The old man you have depended upon is going to be married,
and will have a child.
17. You have mixed with this company, and pretend to despise
our tablets, but you rely much upon them, and you may depend on
it that you will be brought to disgrace.
19. Look well to those who owe you money, if ever so little a ;
ing to its length towards the outside of the fore finger, you may
judge if the person will live long, as the longer the line the longer
the life.
If the Line of Death is short, and runs even, without being
broken or divided, it shows that the person will enjoy a good
length of days, and not be subject lo many maladies; but if it is
interrupted, it evidently shows that the person's life will be en-
dangered by illne^ss. If this line ends abrablly, and with a broad
point, it shows that the person will die suddenly i£ it goes olf in
;
lines take their rise from the tail cl: the Girdle, and lead towards
the head of the Line of Fortune, tlie i)er5on will be amorous in his
old age, and, according to the situation cf the transverse lines,
will be successful or unfortunate i.i his amours; if the Line of
Fortune runs smooth, broad, and clear, the person will enjoy
afilaence through life, and be prosperous in all his undertakings
if it is intersected by short lines at the beginning, near the fore
finger, it denotes that the person was poor, or at least with a
small capital; if these lines occur towards the middle, at either
end, he will be prosperous in the first and last of life, but meet
—;
185
FORTUNE-TELLER AND DREAM-BOOK.
with disappointments at raid-age if the cross lines occur at the
;
extremity, and not before, lie will die poor and distressed. If
transverse lines, crossed by others, pass from the Line of Life to
the Line o£ Fortune, the person vv'ill be engaged in quarrels and
broils, or lawsuits and disunion with his neighbors.
If the hollow palm of the hand, which some call the Plain of
Mars, is full of cross lines, running into each other, the person
will bo of a humorsome, uneven, and testy temper, jealous and
hasty, quarrelsome and lighting, and endeavoring to set others by
the ears; he will meet with very frequent misfortunes, and bear
them very uneasily whereas, if the hollow or palm of the hand
;
has none but the unavoidable lines, that is to say, those that must
unavoidably pass through it, he will bo of a sweet and amiable dis-
position, full of sensibility, gratitude, and love, faithful benevo-
lent, and kind and, though subject to crosses, losses, and disap-
;
pointments, will bear them with a:i oven and agreeable temper
from this part chielly it is recommended to persons to choose their
companions for life, cither for friendship or marriage.
The mount or ]jall oi the thumb bears a peculiar analogy to the
events of a person's liic, with respect to disputes, quarrels, and
lawsuits if tliis moimt has m.any long, stniight lines, reaching
;
from the thumb to the Lino of Life, they show that the i)erson will
have several personal encounters, either with hands, clubs, pistols,
or swords but if the lines are curved or crooked, they indicate
;
the second week. Moles of any sort arc ominous of evil in the
—
early part of life. Fourth week So many important turns of fate
—
as there are spots. Fifth week So many lovers. Sixth week
So many important journeys. Seventh week Moles on the arms—
indicate prosperity. Eightiiweek — So many perils. Ninth week
— So many intrigues. Tenth week — So
legacies. many
Eleventh
week — So many children. Twelfth week — So many opportunities
of good. Thirteenth week — Same as the Fourteenth week
first.
—So many voyages to sea. Fifteenth week— So many journeys by
——A
The seventh. Do not tell your dreams on this day, for much
depends on concealing them if sickness befalls you on this day,
;
you will soon recover the child born will live long, but have many
;
troubles.
The eighth day, the dreams will come to pass, and it is a very
prosperous dn,y.
The ninth day differs very little from the former; the child born
this day will arrive at great riches and honor.
The tenth day is likely to be fatal those who fall sick will rarely
;
recover but the child born on this day will live long, and be a
;
great traveler.
The eleventh is a good day to be married, or commence a jour-
ney. A child born at this age of the moon will be healthy, hand-
some, and of a good constitution, with a particular mole on his
lorehead. If a female, will be remarkable for wisdom.
On the twelfth day, the child born will meet every affection, but
be of a bad temper. This is a very unlucky day, particularly to
those falling sick.
A child born on the thirteenth day will be unfortunate both in
temper and estate though a good day for marriages, or to find
;
things which have been lost. Persons imprisoned this day will
soon have their liberty.
A child whoso nativity is on the fourteenth day, will die as a
traitor. An excellent day to ask a favor. Take physic on this
day.
The fifteenth day is very unfortunate. A good day to find any-
thing that is lost.
The child born on the sixteenth day will bo unmannerly and un-
fortunate. Buy and sell on this day. Dreams portend luck on this
day,
The seventeenth of the moon, a child to be born on, shows it
will be foolish. You may take physic, let blood, or contract busi-
ness on this day.
The eighteenth day is fortunate, both for male and female, bom
on it.
A nativity on the nineteenth day, the child will be wise ana urtu-
OU3, and will arrive at great honors.
Your dreams portend good on the twentieth day of the moon
though a child born on that day will be dishonest.
A child born the twenty-first day will be of so unhappy a dispo-
sition, that, let him look to the sword of justice, perhaps "black
with murder, sacrilege, and crimes." An unhappy fatality attends
this day.
On the twenty-second day, the child that is born will purchase
a good estate he will be handsome, religious, and well beloved.
;
188
FOBTTJNE-TELLER AND DBEAM-BOOK.
ungoveniablo temper, a groat traveler, but will die miserable.
Good day to be married, or commence business.
On the twenty-fourth day, the child born will achieve many he-
roic actions, and will be much admired for them.
Thj c'lild born on the twenty-flfth day will be very wicked, and
meet wdth many dangerj. It is a very unfortunate day, and
threatens vexation.
On the twenty-sixth day, the child bc:n shall be very amiable;
if a male, will meet but an indifferent state in the world if a ;
on your left side with your head as low as possible, then repeat the
following verse three times :
blown, and as bright a red as you. can get pluck it between the ;
hours of three and four in the morning, taking cu,rc to have no wit-
ness of the transaction convey it to you chamber, and hold it
;
•
over the smoke about live minutes, and yon will see it have a won-
derful effect on the flower. Before the rose gets the least cool,
clap it in a sheet of writing-paper, on which is written your own
name and that of the young man you love best; also the date of
the year, and the name of the morning star that has the ascend-
ency at that time fold it up and seal it neatly with three separate
;
seals, then run and bury the parcel at the foot of the tree from
which you gathered the flower; liere let it remain untouched till
the Gth of July take it up at midnight, go to bed and place it under
;
your pillow, and you will have a singular and most eventful dream
before morning or, at least before your usual time of rising. You
;
may keep the rose under 3-our head three nights without spoiling
the charm when you have done with the rose and paper be sure
;
to burn them.
Cupid's Nosegay. —
On the first niqrht of the new moon in July,
take a red rose, a white rose, a yellow flower, a blue one, a sprig
of rue and rosemary, and nine blades of long grass bind all to- ;
gether with a lock of your own hair kill a white pigeon, sprinkle
;
the nosegay with the blood from the heart, and some common salt
wrap the flowers in a white handkerchief, and lay it under your
head, on the pillow, when you go to rest; and, before morning,
you will see j-our fate as clear as if you had your nativity cast by
the best Astrologer in the world not only in respect to love, lovers,
;
The Xine Jic^s.— Got nine small keys they must all bo your own
;
by begging or purchase (borrowing will not do, nor must you tell
what you want them for) plait a three-plaited band of your own
;
hair, and tie them together, fastening the ends with nine knots,
fasten them with one of your garters to your left wrist on going to
bed, and bind the other garter round your head then say ;
—
The Ring and O'.ive-hranch. Buy a ring, it matters not it being
gold, 80 as it has the semblance of a wedding-ring, and it is best
to try this charm on your own birthday. Pay for your ring with
some small bill for, whatever change you receive, you must f.ive
;
to the lirst begger you meet in the street and if no one asks alms
;
of you, give it to some poor person for you need not, alas go far
; !
before you find one to whom your charity will be acceptable care- ;
fully note what they say in return, such as "God bless you," or
wishing you luck and prosperity, as is usual. When you get home,
write it down on a sheet of paper, at each of four corners and, in ;
the middle, put the two first letters of your name, your age, and
the letters of the planets then reigning as morning and evening
stars get a branch of olive and fasten the ring on the stalk with
;
till the ninth hour of the night then repair to the next churchyard
;
and bury the charm in the grave of a young man who died unmar-
ried ; and while you are so doing, repeat the letters of your own
191
FOETUNE-TELLER AND DEEAM-BOOK.
CJhristian name three times backwards return liome, and keep as
;
silent and quiet as possible till you go to bed, which must be before
eleven put a light in your chimney, or some safe place and, be-
; ;
beware of prostitution.
—
The Witches' Chain. Let three young women join in making a
long chain, about a yard will do, of Christmas, juniper, and mistle-
toe berries and at tlie end of every link put an oak acorn. Exactly
;
out of the keyhole and hand it over the chimney-piece have a good ;
fire, and place in the midst of it a long thinnish log of wood, well
sprinkled with oil, salt, and fresh mould then wrap the chain round
;
it, each maiden having an equal share in the business then sit ;
down, and on your left knee let each fair one have a prayer-book
opened at the matrimonial service. Just as the last acorn is burned,
the future husband will cross the room each one will see her own
;
it next your heart, and thus wear it till bed-time then place it in
;
your left-hand glove, and lay it under your head. If you dream of
gold, diamonds, or any costly gems, your lover is true, and means
what he says if of white linen, you will lose him by death and
; ;
wards, but compose yourself to sleep, and thirst will cause you
to dream which joined to a strange bed, will have a true effect.
;
To See —
a Future Husbavd. On Midsummer-eve, just after sunset,
three, five, or seven young women are to go into a garden, in which
there Id no other person, and each to gather a sprig of red sago, and
then, going into a room by themselves, set a stool in the middle of
tho room, and on it a clean basin full of rose-water, in which the
!
192
FORTUNE-TELLEE AND DREAM-BOOK.
sprigs of sage nro to bo put, and, tying a line across the room, on
one side of the stool, each woman is to hang on it a clean shift,
turning the v. ron;^ side outwards then all are to sit down in a row,
;
with butter and Gu::ar, and make them up into small pills, of which
exactly nine must be taken on going to bed and according to her ;
193
FORTUNE-TELLER AND DREAM-BOOK.
—
The Lover's Charm. To be tried on any Wednesday or Friday,
throughout the year, Friday in Passion AVeek always excepted, as
no charm or spell must bo tried. It is an offense against the Greek
churcli (or indeed any Christian one) and always proves unfortur
natc to a person so doing and under this head we also record the
;
fifty- two Babbaths, Ash Wednesday, and the eve of St. Jude.
The Charm.— This must be tried alone, and with profound
secrecy, between the hours of nine and twelve at night, neither —
sooner nor later. Take a v/hite dove, and kill it take out the ;
heart and liver, and roast it until you can powder it on a piece of
white paper mix one teaspoonful of this witii a drachm of dragon's
;
blood, put them in half a gill of Cyprus wine, and drink it on going
to bed previously mix the blood that flows from the bird with
;
wheaten flower, into a cake of the form of a heart, prick it with the
first letters of your name, and the form of a Maltese cross
Which is thus designed leave the cake baking over the fire, as it
;
PHYSIOGNOMY
OB, THE AET OP DISCOVEKING A PEKSON'S DISPOSITION BY THEIR
FEATURES.
That the form of the features display the disposition of the soul,
and may be demonstrated by the principles of philosophy, is ob-
vious to every person of the least reflection. It is impossible for
man to feel any passion, without the countenance sympathizing
with the sensation, so as exactly to express the internal emotion.
That passion, therefore, which is predominant in the human char-
acter, being the most frequently excited, must, by repetition, ex-
press the prevailing disposition on the countenance. And as every
person has a temper peculiar to himself, that temper must impress
on the visage such signs as display, to a discriminate observer,
the particular passion or temperament, which distinguishes every
human being from the rest of his fellow creatures.
The face that is plump, round, and ruddy, denotes the person
to bo of an agreeable temper, and deserving friendship, as well as
faithful in love and the man, though sometimes in an unguarded
;
moment may be led astray, yet he soon returns, and proves more
affectionate than before.
The face that is smooth and even, with well-proportioned fea-
tures, shows the person to be of a good disposition, but somewhat
inclined to suspicion, yet of an agreeable conversation, and strongly
addicted to the delights of love.
A face whose cheek-bones stick out, with thin jaws, is of a rest-
less disposition, fretful, and always foreboding evil, v^ithout any
plausible reason and more disposed than capable of enjoying the
;
Dleasures of love.
If the forehead is large, round, and smooth, it denotes the man
or woman to be of an open, generous temper, and will be extremely
good-natured his love for the fair one whom he selects will be
;
the man will be violent, and very cautious of his own reputation,
as well as that of his mistress he Vv ill get many children, v/hom
;
will beat them with the utmost severity, and v/ill not be easily
prevailed on to forgive them.
If there is a hollow across the forehead, in the middlo^ of man or
woman, with a ridge, as of flesh, above, and another Ijelow, the
man will be a good scholar, and the woman great in whatever oc-
;
and they will have but few children, and those at very distant
—
periods perhaps three, four, sometimes seven yeirs, between
every two they will meet with many crosses, but will bear them
;
but will take every opportunity to prejudice the person will have ;
weak, and will trouble themselves but little about the conse-
quences that may result from their proceedings they will seldom ;
have above one or two children, and will not live to an advanced
age.
The eye that is large, full, prominent, and clear, denotes a man
or woman to be ingenuous and without deceit of an even, agree-;
A B 0 1
D E F G H I
1 2 5 6 7 8 9
K L M N \
0 P E S
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
T U X Y Z J V Hi Hu
100 200 300 400 500 600
'
700 800 900
FORTUNE-TELLER AND DREAM-BOOK. 197
J 600 J 600 E 80
E 5 A 1 0 50
A 1 C 3 U 200
N 40 Q 70 S 90
U 200 S 90
646 E 5 E 5
A
S
—90
969
U
1
200
716
646 Jean.
969 Jacques.
716 Eousseau.
2331 Total.
Of this total of 2331, we
cut off the 2,000, leaving 331, which, on
reference to the table of significations, reads as follows Belief,
: —
faith, and philosophy, for 300 love of glory, virtue, for 31 giving
; ;
could be divided into 100, 70, and 9. Care must be taken to add
up the lines of figures correctly, as the slightest mistake will, of
course, entirely change the whole meaning.
FORTUNE-TELLING
BY THE GROUNDS IN A TEA OR COFFEE CUP.
Pour the grounds of tea or coffee into a white cup shake them ;
well about, so as to spread them over the surface reverse the cup
;
;
— if a letter can be discovered near it, that will be the initial of the
name of the future spouse. If the ring is in the clear part of the
cup, it foretells a happy union if clouds are about it, the contrary
;
that they are not to be trusted but at the bottom, that they are se-
;
cret enemies. The lily, at the top of the cup, foretells a happy
marriage at the bottom, anger. A letter signifies news if in the
; ;
token that your fortune is in its blossom, and only requires care
to bring to maturity it surrounded by dots, riches.
; Mountains
signify either friends or enemies, according to their situation.
The sun, moon, and stars, denote happiness and success. The
clouds, happiness or misfortune, according as they are bright cr
dark. Birds are good omens, but quadrupeds with the exception—
—
of the dog foretell trouble and difficulties. Fish imply good
news from across the water. A triangle portends an unexpected
legacy a single straight line, a journey.
; The figure of a man in-
dicates a speedy visitor if the arm is outstretched, a present;
;
FOETUNE-TELLEE AND DEEAM-BOOK.
when the figure is very distinct, it shows that the person expected
will be of dark complexion, and vice versa. A crown near a cross
indicates a large fortune, resulting from a death. Flowers are
signs of joy, happiness, and peaceful life. A heart surrounded by
dots signifies joy, occasioned by the receipt of money; with a
ring near it, approaching marriage.
How to Bead Your Fortune by the White of an Egg. — Break a new-
laid egg, and, carefully separating the yolk from the white, drop
the latter into a large tumbler half full of water place this, un-;
covered, in some dry place, and let it remain untouched for four-
and-twenty hours, by which time the white of the egg will have
—
formed itself into various figures rounds, squares, ovals, ani-
—
mals, trees, crosses, etc. which are to be interpreted in the same
manner as those formed by the coffee-grounds. Of course, the
more whites there are in the glass, the more figures there will be.
This is a very pretty experiment, and much practiced by the
young Scotch maidens, who, however, believe it to have more effi-
cacy when tried on either Midsummer Eve or Hallowe'en (31st Oc-
tober).
—
To Choose a Husband by the Hair. Black. Stout and healthy,—
but apt to be cross and surly if very black and smooth, and a
;
large quantity, will be found where he fixes his attachment, not ad-
dicted to lewdness, make a good husband, and take care of his fami-
ly but if short and curly, will be of an unsettled temper, given to
;
BY DICE;
or, easy way to find out what is going to happen.
(Fob these little Messengers of Fate tell with wonderful facility
tOBTTJNE-TELLER AND DItEAM-BOOK. 301
Have ready three dice, but try your first question with a single
one, the next with two, and the third with three. This may be
done three times over at one sitting, making in all nine questions,
and their suitable answers, but no more for the dice then turn
;
fatal, and of evil tendenc" to the holder, and only serve to con-
fuse the truth.
—
One. A letter or paper of great importance.
Two. — A long journey from which you will benefit.
Three.— A surprise, and causes a strange bed.
Four. — You will soon meet with ingratitude.
Five. — A new lover, but not the right one yet.
Six. — Unexpected money, and prosperity before you.
industrious, and that will bring you sure gain and perseverance
;
and Tuesdays are best for women, Sundays and Mondays for men.
There are three months in a year in which it is not reckoned
fortunate to enter on a new house or sign a lease those arc April,
;
July, and November; neither is the 11th of any month good for
such projects.
Let women be careful what they transact in the thirty-first year
of their life, for it is to all females a year of importance, whether
they are married or single some great change will await them,
;
marriage, the 7th, 9th, and 12th requesting favors, 14th, 15th,
;
and 17th, but beware the 16th and 21st to answer letters, if pos-
;
sible choose an odd day of the moon to travel on land, choose the
;
increase of the moon and to embark on the ocean, choose the de-
;
cline.
March a fortunate month for beginning a new building and
is ;
colors let her dress be as white as possible, except ghe boa widow,
;
then let her choose some pleasant color, but beware of green and
yellow.
To meet a funeral as you are going to church to tie the nuptial
knot, betokens the death of your first child in its infancy.
— —
—
piness and no matter how numerous or how accompanied are
: —
rarely or never of bad augury. Next come "Hearts," which
usually signify joy, liberality, or good temper; "Diamonds," on
the contrary, denote delay, quarrels, and annoyance and ;
— —
"Spades" the worst suit of all grief, sickness, and loss of
money.
We are, of course, speaking generally, as, in many cases, the
position of cards entirely changes their signification their indi- —
vidual and relative meaning being often widely different Thus,
for example, the King of Hearts, the Nine of Hearts, and the Nine
—
of Clubs, respectively signify a liberal man, joy, and success in
love; but change their position, by placing the King between the
two Nines, and you would read that a man, then rich and happy,
would be ere long consigned to a prison !
—
Knave of Clubs. A clever and enterprising young man if re- ;
trifling present.
Eight of Clubs. — A dark person's affections, which, returned, if
will be the cause of great prosperity reversed, those of a fool, and
;
disappointment.
Queen of IIeaets. — A mild, amiable woman; reversed, has
been crossed in love.
Knave of Hearts. — A gay young bachelor, who dreams only
of pleasure reversed, a discontented military man.
;
ing chagrin.
Eight of Hearts. — A fair person's affections reversed, indif-
;
licious woman.
Knave op Spades. — A dark, ill-bred young man reversed, he ;
doubtful.
Two — A partnership in business; reversed, a dissolu-
Kings. if
tion of the same. Sometimes this only denotes friendly projects.
Four Queens. — Company, society one or more reversed de-
;
dal, or deceit.
Two Queens. — A meeting between friends reversed, poverty, ;
low person.
—
Two Knaves. Evil intentions reversed, danger.
Tens. — Great
;
imprudence.
—
Two Nines. A little gain reversed, trifling losses at cards.
— ;
or relative.
Three Eights. — Thoughts of marriage; reversed, folly, flirta-
tion.
Two Eights. — A brief love-dream; reversed, small pleasures •
and trifling pains.
Four Sevens. — Intrigues among servants or low people, threats,
snares,and disputes reversed, that their malice will be impotent
; ,
harm, and that the punishment will fall on themselves.
!:o
—
Three Sevens. Sickness, premature old age; reversed, slight
and brief indisposition.
—
Two Sevens. Levity reversed, regret.
;
however, will soon enable the learner to form these mystic letters
into words, and words into phrases in other language, to assemble
;
i:hese cards together, and read the events, past and to come, their
pictured faces pretend to reveal.
There are several ways of doing this but we will give them all,
;
acting for yourself or another person), taking care to use the left
hand. That done, turn them up by threes, and every time you find
—
in these triplets two of the same suit such as two Hearts, two Clubs,
etc.— withdraw the highest card and place it on the table before
you. If the triplet should chance to be all of the same suit, the
highest card is still to be the only one \rithdrawn but should it con-
;
sist of three of the samz v:due but dlffertnt suits, such as three Kings,
etc., they are to be all appropriated. We will suppose that, after
having turned up the cards tiiree by three, you have been able to
withdrav/ six, leaving twenty-six, which you shuffle and cut, and
again turn up by threes, acting precisely as you did before, until
you have obtained either thirteen, fifteen, or seventeen cards. Kecol-
lect that the number must always be uneven, and that the card
representing the person for whom the essay is made must make
one of it. Even if the requisite thirteen, fifteen, or seventeen have
been obtained, and this one has not made its appearance, the op-
eration must be recommenced. Let us suppose the person whose
fortune is being read to be a lady, represented by the Queen of
Hearts, and that fifteen cards have been obtained and laid out
—
in the form of a half circle in the order thc}^ were drawn, viz., the
Seven of Clubs, the Ten of Diamonds, the Seven of Hearts, the
Knave of Clubs, the King of Diamonds, the Nine of Diamonds, the
Ten of Hearts, the Queen of Spades, the Eight of Hearts, the Knave
of Diamonds, the Queen of Hearts, the Nine of Clubs, the Seven of
Spades, the Ace of Clubs, and the Eight of Spades. Having con-
sidered your cards, you will find among them two Queens, two
Knaves, two tens, three sevens, two eights, and two nines you are,
;
"You will receive from him some very joyful tidings he besides,
;
nounces some great happiness in store for you, and complete ful-
fillment of your wiskes. Knave of Diamonds and Nine of Dia-
—
monds Although this happy result will be delayed for a time,
through some fair young man, not famed for liis delicacy. Eight
—
of Hearts and Ten of Hearts Love, joy, and triumph. The Queen
of Spades, who remains alone, is the widov/ who is endeavoring to
injure you, and who finds herself abandoned by all her friends !"
Now gather up the cards you have been using, shuffle^and cut
them with tlie left hand, and proceed to make them into three
packs by dealing one to the left, one in the middle, and one to the
right; a fourth is laid aside to form "a surprise. Then continue
'
to deal the cards to each of the three packs in turn, until their
number is exhausted, when it will be found that the left-hand and
middle packs contain each five cards, whilst the one on the right
hand consists of only four.
Now ask the person consulting you to select one of the three
— : : — —a
209
FOBTUNE-TELLER AND DREAM-BOOK.
packs. Wo will suppose this to be the middle one, and that the
cards comprising it are the Knave of Diamonds, the King of Dia-
monds, the Seven of Spades, the Qaeen of Spades, and the Seven
of Clubs. These, by roGollccting oar previous instructions regard-
ing the individual and relative signification of the cards, are easily
interpreted as follows
*'
—
The Knave of Clubs A fair young man, possessed of no deli-
cacy of feeling, who seeks to injure the King of Diamonds— —
fair man in uniform — —
Seven of Spades and will succeed in causing
—
him some annoyance the Queen of Spades at the instigation of —
— —
a spiteful woinan Seven of Clubs but by means of a small sum
of money matters will be finally easily arranged."
Next take up the lert-ha:id pack, which is "for the house," the —
former one ha\ ing been for tlie lady herself. Supposing it to con-
sist of the Queen of Hearts, the Knave of CIu'ds, the Eight of
Hearts, the Nino of Diamonds, and the Ace of Clubs, they would
read thus
—
" Queen of Hearts The lady whoso fortune is being told is, or
—
soon will be, in a house Xnavo of Clubs where she will meet —
—
with a dark young man, v/ho Eight of HcarLs vvdll entreat her —
assistance to for.vard his interests with a fair girl Nine of Dia- —
—
monds lie having met with delays and disappointment Aco of —
—
Clubs but a letter v.nll arrive announcing the possession of money,
which willremove all dilTiculties."
The thir pack is "for those who did not expect it," and will bo
I
compose of four cards let us say the Ten of Hearts, Nino of Clubs,
I ;
the Seven of Plearts, the Knave of Clubs, and the Queen of Spades,
are to bo thus interpreted :
—
"Seven of Hearts Pleasant thoughts and friendly intentions
—
Knave of Clubs of a dark young man Queen of Spades rela- — —
tive to a malicious dark woman, or widow, who will cause him
much unhappiness."
No. 2. Dealing ihe Cards hy Sevens. — After having shuffled the
—
having made its appearance. Your t .velve e r-ls being n )vv spie id
out before you in the order in which they have como to hand, you
may begin to e>;plain them as described in the manner of dealing
—
the cards in t'.irtei, always bearing in mind both their individual
and relative signification. Thus, you first couat the cards by
sevens, beginning with the one representing the person for whom
you are acting, going from right to left. Then take the two cards
at either extremity of the line or half circle, and unite them, and
afterward form the three heaps or packs and "the surprise" pre-
cisely as we have before described. Indeed, the only difference
betwf^e 1 the two methods is the manner in which the cards are
oLtaine 1.
Ko. 3. Dealing the Cards hy Fifteens. — After having well shuffled
and cut the cards, or, as we have before said, had them cut, deal
them out in two packs, containing sixteen cards in each. Desire
the per:On consulting jou. to choose one of them; lay aside the
first card, to form "the surprise;" turn up the other fifteen, and
range them in a half circle before you, going from left to right,
plaeing them in the order in which they come to hand, and taking
care to re nark whether the one representing the person for whom
ycu are acting be among them. If not, the cards must be all
gathere I up, shuffled, cut, and dealt as before, and this must be
repeate I until the missing card makes its appearance in the pack
chosen by the person it represents. Now proceed to explain them
— first, by interpreting the meaning of any pairs, triplets, or quar-
tettes among them then by counting them in sevens, {Toing from
;
right to left, and beginning with the card representing the person
consul iag you and, lastly, by taking the car'^Is at either extremity
;
of the line and pairing them. This Ijeing done, gather up the fif-
teen cards, shuffle, cut, and deal them so as to form three packs
of each five cards. From each of these three packs withdraw the
topmost card, a-id place them on the one laid aside to form "the
surprise," thus forming four packs of four cards each.
— — —
Desire the person for whom you are acting to choose one of
these packs "for herself," or "himself," as the case may be.
Turn it up, and sjiread out the four cards it contains, from left to
right, e::plaii.inpj their individual and relative signification. Next
proeee Ii-i like manner with the pack on your left hand, which will
be "for t ie house;" then the third one, "for those who do not
expect it;" and lastly, " the surprise."
in. order to render our meaning perfectly clear, we will give
another example. Let us suppose that the pack for the person
consulting you is comj^osed of the Knave of Hearts, the Ace of
Diamonds, the Queen of Clubs, and the Eight of Spades reversed.
By the aid of the list of meanings we have given, it will be easy to
interpret them as follows :
—
"The Knave of Hearts is a gay young bachelor the Ace of Dia-
—
monds who has written, or will very soon write, a letter the —
— —
Queen of Clubs to a dark woman Eight of Spades reversed to —
make proposals to her, which will not be accepted."
On looking back to the list of significations, it will be found to
run thus :
—
Knave of Heaets. A gay young bachelor, who thinks only of
pleasure.
Ace of Diamonds. — A letter, soon to be received.
Queen of Clubs. — An affectionate woman, but quick tempered
and touchy.
EiGKT OF Spades. — If reversed, a marriage broken off, or offer
refused.
It will chus ])e seen that each card forms, as it were, a phrase,
from an p.ssemblage of which nothing but a little practice is re-
quired CO for^fi complete sentences. Of this we Vv'ill give a further
example, by interpreting the signification of the three other packs
— " For the house," "for those who do not expect it," and "the
surpribe." The first of these, "for the house," we will suppose to
consist of the Queen of Hearts, the Knave of Spades reversed, the
Ace of Clubs, and the Nine of Diamonds, which reads thus :
—
r mainder twenty-one i:i all —
are to ho again shuffled and cut.
T at done, liy the topmost car l on one side to fo:m " ihe sur-
pr:se," and range the remaining twenty before you, in the order in
which they come to hand. Then look whether t'le car.l repre-
senting the person consulting you be among them if net, one :
of them reverse !, quarrels with some low person the three Tens, ;
improper conduct.
You now begin to explain the cards, commencing with the first
on the left, the Queen of Diamonds: "The Queen of Dia-
viz.,
monds is a mischief-making, underbred woman the King of —
—
Clubs endeavoring to win the affections of a worthy and estima-
bleman— —
Ten of Hearts over whose scruples she will triumph
—
Ace of Spades the affair will make some noise Queen of Hearts —
—
reversed and greatly distress a charming fair woman who loves
— —
him Seven of Spades but her grief will not be of long duration.
—
Knave of Diamonds An unfaithful servant Ten of Clubs will — —
make away with a considerable sum of money King of Spades —
—
and will be brought to trial Ei^ht of Diamonds but saved from —
punishment through a woman's agency. King of Hearts a fair —
man of liberal disposition—Nine of Clubs— will receive a larg«
—
— —
sum of money Knave of Spades reversed which will expose him
to the malice of a dark j'outh of coarse manners. Seven of
— —
Hearts Pleasant thoughts, followed by Ten of Spades .rreat —
— —
chagrin King of Diamonds await a man in uniform, vsJ.o is (he
— —
perso i consuting mc Ace of Diamo:ids but a letter he will speedily
— —
receive Seven of Clubs containing a small sum of moncj'
— —
Nine of Hearts will restore his good spirits Ace of Clubs
which will be further augmented by some good news." Nov/ turn
—
up "the surprise" which we will suppose to prove the Ace of
—
Hearts "a card that predicts great happiness, caused by a love-i
letter, but which making up the four Aces, shows that his sudden
joy will be followed by great misfortunes."
Now gather up the cards, shuffle, cut, and form into three packs,
at the first deal laying one aside to form "the surprise." By the
time they are all dealt out, it will be found that the two first
packets are each composed of seven cards, whilst the third con-
tains only six.
Desire the person consulting you to select one of these, take- it
up, and spread out the cards from left to right, explaining them as
before described.
Gather up the cards again, shuffle, cut, form into three packs
(dealing one card to the surprise), and proceed as before. Repeat
the whole operation once more then take up the three cards
;
withdraw the highest card of the two. When you have come to
the end of the pack, gather up all the cards except those you have
withdrawn; shuffle, cut, and again turn up by threes. Repeat this
operation until you have obtained fifteen cards, which must then
bo spread out before you, from left to right, in the order in which
they come to hand.
:
from each other, that it may be some time before the tidings
arrive.
The three Tens denote that the conduct of the person consulting
the cards has not been always strictly correct. The two Knaves
are enemies, and the three Sevens predict an illness caused by
them.
You now begin to count five cards, beginning with the Queen of
Clubs, who represents the person consulting you. The fifth card^^
being the Seven of Clubs, announces that the lady will soon re-
ceive a small sum of money. The next fifth card proving to be
the Ace of Clubs, signifi.es that this money will be accompanied
with very joyful tidings. Next comes the Ace ci Spades, prom-
ising complete success to any projects undertaken by the person
consulting the cards then the Ace of Hearts, followed at the
;
—
"A gay young bachelor is preparing to take a journey Ace of
—
Spades and Queen of Clubs which will bring him to the presence
of the lady consulting the cards, and cause her preat joy. Seven
—
of Diamonds and Eight of Hearts Scandal talked about a fair
—
young girl. Seven of Spades and Ten of Hearts Great joy
: —
—
" Ace of Diamonds A letter will be shortly received Seven of —
—
Clubs announcing the arrival of a small sum of money Ten of —
—
Hearts and containing some very joyful tidings."
The second pack, for "the house," containing the King of
Spades, the Nine of Hearts, and the Knave of Spades :
—
" The Eight of Hearts The love affairs of a fair young girl will
— —
oblige the Queen of Clubs the person consulting the cards Ten —
—
of Diamonds to take a journey."
The fifth pack, for "the surprise," consists of the Seven of
Spades and the Ten of Spades, meaning :
— —
"Seven of Spades Slight trouble Ten of Spades caused by —
—
Bome person's imprisonment the card of consolation. Seven of
—
Diamonds which will turn out to have been a mere report."
Present, Pasf, —
and Future. The person wishing to try her fortune
in this manner (we will suppose her to be a young, fair person,
represented by the Eight of Hearts), must well shufile, and cut
with the left hand, the pack of thirty-two cards after which she ;
must lay aside the topmost and undermost cards, to form the sur-
—
;
:
and the one on the right hand, the Future. She must commence
with the Past," which we will suppose to contain these ten cards
'
'
The King of Clubs, the Ace of Spades, the Knave of Diamonds, the
Nine of Diamonds, the Ace of Hearts, the linave of Hearts, the
Queen of Hearts, the King of Spades, the Knave of Clubs, and the
King of Hearts.
She would rem.ark that picture-cards predominating was a
favorable sign, also that the presence of three Kings proved that
powerful persons were interesiirg themselves in her ailairs. The
three Knaves, however, warn her to beware of false friends, and
the Nine of Diamonds predicts some great annoyance overcome by
some good and amiable person represented by the Queen of Hearts.
The two Aces also give notice of a plot. Taking the cards in the
order they lay, the explanation would run thus :
—
" The King of Clubs— A frank, open-hearted man Ace of Spades
— —
fond of gaj-ety and pleasure, is disliked by Knave of Diamonds
— — —
a young man in uniform Nine of Diamonds who seeks to
— —
injure him. The Ace of Hearts A love-letter Knave of Hearts
—
from a gay young bachelor to a fair, amiable woman Queen of
— — —
Hearts causes King of Spades a lawyer to endeavor to injure
— —
a clever Knave of Clubs enterprising young man, who is saved
—
from him by— King of Hearts a good and powerful man. Never-
theless, as the Knave of Clubs is placed between two similar
cards, he has run great risk of being imprisoned through the
machinations of his enemy."
The second parcel, "the Present," containing the Ten of Dia-
monds, the Nine of Spades, the Eight of Spades, the Queen of
Diamonds, the Queen of Clubs, the Eight of Hearts, the Seven of
Spades, the Ten of Spades, the Eight of' Diamonds, signifies :
—
"The Ten of Diamonds A voyage or journey, at that moment
— —
taking place Nine of Spades caused by the death or dangerous
illness of some one— —
Eight of Spades whose state will occasion
— —
great grief Queen of Diamonds to a fair woman. The Queen
of Clubs — An affectionate woman seeks to console — Eight of
Hearts — a fair young who the person making the essaj'
girl, is
Seven of Spades —who has secret griefs — Ten of Spades — causing
her many tears — Queen of Spades —these are occasioned by the
conduct of either a dark woman or a widow, who — Eight of Dia-
monds — her rival."
is
The third packet of cards, "the Future," we will suppose to
contain the Eight of Clubs, the Ten of Clubs, the Seven of Dia-
monds, the Ten of Hearts, the Seven of Clubs, the Nine of Heaits,
—
"In the first place, the largo number of small cards foretells
success in enterprises, although the presence of three Sevens pre-
dicts an illness. —
The Eight of Clubs a dark young girl Ten of —
— —
Clubs is about to inherit a large fortune Seven of Diamonds
—
but her satirical disposition will destroy Ten of Hearts nil her —
—
happiness. Seven of Clubs A little money and Nine of Hearts —
— — —
much 305' Ace of Hearts will be announced to the person
—
making the essay by a letter, and Knave of Spades a wild young —
— —
man Seven of Hearts will be overjoyed at receiving Nine of —
—
Clubs some unexpected tidings. The cards of surprise viz., —
—
the King of Diamonds and the Ace of Clubs predict that a letter
will be received from some military man, and that it will contain
money."
Hymen's Loitery. — Let each one present deposit any sum agreed
on, but of course some trifle; put a complete pack of fifty-two
cards, well shuffled, in a bag or reticule. Let the party stand in a
circle, and, the bag being handed around, each draw three cards.
Pairs of any are favorable omens of some good fortune about to
occur to the party, and gets back from the pool the sum that each
agreed to pay. The king of hearts is here made the god of love,
and claims double, and gives a, faithful swain to the fair one who
has the good fortune to draw him if Yenus, the queen of hearts,
;
is with him, it is the conquering prize, and clears the pool fives ;
and nines are reckoned crosses and misfortunes, and pay a forfeit
of the sum agreed on to the pool, beside the usual stipend at each
new game three nines at one draw shows the lady v/ill be an old
;
all ages men have been self-tcrmentors, the bad omens fill a cata-
logue infinitely more extensive than that of the good. An exten-
sive set of omens has been taken from what first happens to one,
or what animal or person one meets first in the morning, or at the
—
commencement of an undertaking the first-foot, as it is called.
218 FORTUNE-TELLER AND DREAM-BOOK.
To stumble has universally been held to presage misfortune.
Some semblance of a reason might be found for this belief, inas-
much as stumbling may be supposed to indicate that that self-pos-
session and conscious courage, which arc in themselves half a vic-
—
tory over circumstances, are lacking the Vv'antof them, therefore,
being hrJf a defeat but in most cases the interpretation seems al-
;
that from 9 to 10 o'clock in the morning, being 17A per cent, above.
From 10 A. M. to 3 P. M. the deaths are less numerous, being 16
per cent, below the average, the hour before noon being the most
fatal. From 3 o'clock P .M. to 7 P. M., the deaths rise to 5 per
cent, above the average, and then fall from that hour to 11 P. M.,
averaging G per cent, below the mean. During the hours from 9
to 11 o'clock in the evening there i*s a minimum of G per cent, be-
low the average. Thus the least mortality is during midday hours
— namely, from 10 to 3 o'clock the greatest during early morning
;
f
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