Telepathist Precious Stone Gazing Element 3

By Guest Author On July 21, 2009 Under How To Find Happiness

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W.T. Stead, the eminent English investigator of psychic phenomena, has written as follows regarding the phenomena of crystal-gazing: “There are a few persons who cannot look into an ordinary globular bottle without seeing pictures form themselves without any effort or will on their part, in the crystal globe. Crystal-gazing seems to be the least dangerous and most uncomplicated of everything forms of experimenting. You basically look into a crystal globe the size of a five-shilling piece, or a water-bottle which is chock-full of clear water, and which is placed so that as well much light does not fall upon it, and then plainly look at it. You make no incantations, and engage in no mumbo-jumbo business; you straightforwardly look at it for two or three minutes, taking care not to tire yourself, winking whilst much when you please, but fixing your thought upon whatever you wish to see. Then, if you have the faculty, the glass will cloud over with a milky mist, and in the centre the image is gradually precipitated in barely the same way while a photograph forms on the sensitive plate.”

The same authority relates the following remarkable experiment with the crystal: “Miss X., upon looking into the crystal on two occasions when a test, to catch a glimpse of if she could see me as she was particular miles off, saw not me, but a various friend of mine on every occasion. She had never seen either of my friends before, but swiftly identified them both on seeing them afterward at my office. On one of the evenings on which we experimented in the vain attempts to photograph a ‘double,’ I dined with Madam C. and her friend at a neighboring restaurant. As she glanced at the water-bottle, Madam C. saw a picture beginning to form, and, looking at it from curiosity, described with considerable detail an elderly gentleman whom she had never seen before, and whom I did not in the least recognize from her description at the moment. Three hours afterward, when the seance was over, Madam C., entered the room and recognized Mr. Elliott, of Messrs. Elliott & Fry, as the gentleman whom she had seen and described in the water-bottle at the restaurant. On another occasion the picture was less agreeable; it was an old man lying dead in bed with some one weeping at his feet; but who it was, or what it related to, no one knew.”

Andrew Lang, another prominent investigator of psychic phenomena, gives the following remarkable experiment in crystal-gazing: “I had given a glass ball to a young lady, Miss Baillie, who had scarcely any accomplishment with it. She lent it to Miss Leslie, who saw a large, square, old-fashioned red sofa covered with muslin (which she, afterward found in the next country-house she visited). Miss Baillie’s brother, a young athlete, laughed at these experiments, took the ball into his study, and came back looking ‘gey gash.’ He admitted that he had seen a vision—somebody he knew, under a lamp. He said that he would discover during the week whether or not he had seen right. This was at 5:30 on a Sunday afternoon. On Tuesday, Mr. Baillie was at a dance in a town forty miles from his home, and met a Miss Preston. ‘On Sunday,’ he said, ‘about half-past-five, you were sitting under a standard lamp, in a dress I never saw you wear, a blue blouse with lace over the shoulders, pouring out tea for a man in blue serge, whose back was toward me, so that I only saw the tip of his mustache.’ ‘Why, the blinds must have been up,’ said Miss Preston. ‘I was at Dulby,’ said Mr. Baillie, and he undeniably was.”

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