About three months ago—that is to say, toward the end of May
of this year of 1900—the writer whose name appears on the
title-page received as noteworthy a letter, and packet of papers,
as it has been his lot to examine. They came from a very good
friend of mine, whose name there is no reason that I should now
conceal—Dr. Arthur Lister Browne, M.A. (Oxon.), F.R.C.P. It
happened that for two years I had been spending most of my time in
France, and as Browne had a Norfolk practice, I had not seen him
during my visits to London. Moreover, though our friendship was of
the most intimate kind, we were both atrocious correspondents: so
that only two notes passed between us during those
years.
Till, last May, there reached me the letter—and the packet—to
which I refer. The packet consisted of four note-books, quite
crowded throughout with those giddy shapes of Pitman's shorthand,
whose ensemble so resembles
startled swarms hovering in flighty poses on the wing. They were
scribbled in pencil, with little distinction between thick and thin
strokes, few vowels: so that their slow deciphering, I can assure
the reader, has been no holiday. The letter also was pencilled in
shorthand; and this letter, together with the second of the
note-books which I have deciphered (it was marked 'III.'), I now
publish.
[I must say, however, that in some five instances there will
occur sentences rather crutched by my own guess-work; and in two
instances the characters were so impossibly mystical, that I had to
abandon the passage with a head-ache. But all this will be found
immaterial to the general narrative.]
The following is Browne's letter:
'DEAR OLD SHIEL,—I have just been lying thinking of you, and
wishing that you were here to give one a last squeeze of the hand
before I—" go ": for, by all
appearance, "going" I am. Four days ago, I began to feel a soreness
in the throat, and passing by old Johnson's surgery at Selbridge,
went in and asked him to have a look at me. He muttered something
about membranous laryngitis which made me smile, but by the time I
reached home I was hoarse, and not smiling: before night I had
dyspnoca and laryngeal stridor. I at once telegraphed to London for
Morgan, and, between him and Johnson, they have been opening my
trachea, and burning my inside with chromic acid and the galvanic
cautery. The difficulty as to breathing has subsided, and it is
wonderful how little I suffer: but I am much too old a hand not to
know what's what: the bronchi are involved— too
far involved—and as a matter of absolute fact,
there isn't any hope. Morgan is still, I believe, fondly dwelling
upon the possibility of adding me to his successful-tracheotomy
statistics, but prognosis was always my strong point, and I say No.
The very small consolation of my death will be the beating of a
specialist in his own line. So we shall see.
'I have been arranging some of my affairs this morning, and
remembered these notebooks. I intended letting you have them months
ago, but my habit of putting things off, and the fact that the lady
was alive from whom I took down the words, prevented me. Now she is
dead, and as a literary man, and a student of life, you should be
interested, if you can manage to read them. You may even find them
valuable.
'I am under a little morphia at present, propped up in a nice
little state of languor, and as I am able to write without much
effort, I will tell you in the old Pitman's something about her.
Her name was Miss Mary Wilson; she was about thirty when I met her,
forty-five when she died, and I knew her intimately all those
fifteen years. Do you know anything about the philosophy of the
hypnotic trance? Well, that was the relation between us—hypnotist
and subject. She had been under another man before my time, but no
one was ever so successful with her as I. She suffered from
tic douloureux of the fifth nerve. She
had had most of her teeth drawn before I saw her, and an attempt
had been made to wrench out the nerve on the left side by the
external scission. But it made no difference: all the clocks in
hell tick-tacked in that poor woman's jaw, and it was the mercy of
Providence that ever she came across
me . My organisation was found to have
almost complete, and quite easy, control over hers, and with a few
passes I could expel her Legion.
'Well, you never saw anyone so singular in personal
appearance as my friend, Miss Wilson. Medicine-man as I am, I could
never behold her suddenly without a sensation of shock: she
suggested so inevitably what we call "the
other world," one detecting about her
some odour of the worm, with the feeling that here was rather ghost
than woman. And yet I can hardly convey to you the why of this,
except by dry details as to the contours of her lofty brow, meagre
lips, pointed chin, and ashen cheeks. She was tall and deplorably
emaciated, her whole skeleton, except the thigh-bones, being quite
visible. Her eyes were of the bluish hue of cigarette smoke, and
had in them the strangest, feeble, unearthly gaze; while at
thirty-five her paltry wisp of hair was quite white.
'She was well-to-do, and lived alone in old Wooding
Manor-house, five miles from Ash Thomas. As you know, I was
"beginning" in these parts at the time, and soon took up my
residence at the manor. She insisted that I should devote myself to
her alone; and that one patient constituted the most lucrative
practice which I ever had.
'Well, I quickly found that, in the state of trance, Miss
Wilson possessed very remarkable powers: remarkable, I mean, not,
of course, because peculiar to herself in
kind , but because they were so
constant, reliable, exact, and far-reaching, in degree. The veriest
fledgling in psychical science will now sit and discourse finically
to you about the reporting powers of the mind in its trance
state—just as though it was something quite new! This simple fact,
I assure you, which the Psychical Research Society, only after
endless investigation, admits to be scientific, has been perfectly
well known to every old crone since the Middle Ages, and, I assume,
long previously. What an unnecessary air of discovery! The
certainty that someone in trance in Manchester can tell you what is
going on in London, or in Pekin, was not, of course, left to the
acumen of an office in Fleet Street; and the society, in
establishing the fact beyond doubt for the general public, has not
gone one step toward explaining it. They have, in fact, revealed
nothing that many of us did not, with absolute assurance, know
before.
'But talking of poor Miss Wilson, I say that her powers
were remarkable , because,
though not exceptional in genre
, they were so special in quantity,—so "constant," and
"far-reaching." I believe it to be a fact that, in
general , the powers of trance manifest
themselves more particularly with regard to space, as distinct from
time: the spirit roams in the present—it travels over a plain—it
does not usually attract the
interest of observers by great ascents, or by great descents. I
fancy that is so. But Miss Wilson's gift was special to this
extent, that she travelled in every direction, and easily in all
but one, north and south, up and down, in the past, the present,
and the future.
This I discovered, not at once, but gradually. She would emit
a stream of sounds in the trance state—I can hardly call it
speech , so murmurous, yet guttural,
was the utterance, mixed with puffy breath-sounds at the languid
lips. This state was accompanied by an intense contraction of the
pupils, absence of the knee-jerk, considerable rigor, and a rapt
and arrant expression. I got into the habit of sitting long hours
at her bed-side, quite fascinated by her, trying to catch the
import of that opiate and visionary language which came puffing and
fluttering in deliberate monotone from her lips. Gradually, in the
course of months, my ear learned to detect the words; "the veil was
rent" for me also; and I was able to follow somewhat the course of
her musing and wandering spirit.
At the end of six months I heard her one day repeat some
words which were familiar to me. They were these: "Such were the
arts by which the Romans extended their conquests, and attained the
palm of victory; and the concurring testimony of different authors
enables us to describe them with precision..." I was startled: they
are part of Gibbon's "Decline and Fall," which I easily guessed
that she had never read.
I said in a stern voice: "Where are you?"
She replied, "Us are in a room, eight hundred and eleven
miles above. A man is writing. Us are reading."
I may tell you two things: first, that in trance she never
spoke of herself as "I," nor even as "we," but, for some unknown
reason, in the objective way, as
" us ": "us are," she would
say—"us will," "us went"; though, of course, she was an educated
lady, and I don't think ever lived in the West of England, where
they say "us" in that way; secondly, when wandering in the past,
she always represented herself as being "
above " (the earth?), and higher the
further back in time she went; in describing present events she
appears to have felt herself on
(the earth); while, as regards the future, she invariably
declared that " us " were so
many miles "within" (the earth).
To her excursions in this last direction, however, there
seemed to exist certain fixed limits: I say seemed, for I cannot be
sure, and only mean that, in spite of my efforts, she never, in
fact, went far in this direction. Three, four thousand "miles" were
common figures on her lips in describing her distance "above"; but
her distance "within" never got beyond sixty-three. Usually, she
would say twenty, twenty-five. She appeared, in relation to the
future, to resemble a diver in the deep sea, who, the deeper he
strives, finds a more resistant pressure, till, at no great depth,
resistance becomes prohibition, and he can no further
strive.
'I am afraid I can't go on: though I had a good deal to tell
you about this lady. During fifteen years, off and on, I sat
listening by her dim bed-side to her murmuring trances! At last my
expert ear could detect the sense of her faintest sigh. I heard the
"Decline and Fall" from beginning to end. Some of her reports were
the most frivolous nonsense: over others I have hung in a horror of
interest. Certainly, my friend, I have heard some amazing words
proceed from those wan lips of Mary Wilson. Sometimes I could hitch
her repeatedly to any scene or subject that I chose by the mere
exercise of my will; at others, the flighty waywardness of her
spirit eluded and baffled me: she resisted—she disobeyed: otherwise
I might have sent you, not four note-books, but twenty, or forty.
About the fifth year it struck me that it would be well to jot down
her more connected utterances, since I knew shorthand.
The note-book marked "I.,"
1
which seems to me the most curious, belongs to the seventh
year. Its history, like those of the other three, is this: I heard
her one afternoon murmuring in the intonation used when
reading ; the matter interested me; I
asked her where she was. She replied: "Us are forty-five miles
within: us read, and another writes"; from which I concluded that
she was some fifteen to thirty years in the future, perusing an as
yet unpublished work. After that, during some weeks, I managed to
keep her to the same subject, and finally, I fancy, won pretty well
the whole work. I believe you would find it striking, and hope you
will be able to read my notes.
'But no more of Mary Wilson now. Rather let us think a little
of A.L. Browne, F.R.C.P.!—with a breathing-tube in his trachea, and
Eternity under his pillow...' [Dr. Browne's letter then continues
on a subject of no interest here.]
[The present writer may add that Dr. Browne's prognosis of
his own case proved correct, for he passed away two days after
writing the above. My transcription of the shorthand book marked
'III.' I now proceed to give without comment, merely reminding the
reader that the words form the substance of a book or document to
be written, or to be motived (according to Miss Wilson) in that
Future, which, no less than the Past, substantively exists in the
Present—though, like the Past, we see it not. I need only add that
the title, division into paragraphs, &c., have been arbitrarily
contrived by myself for the sake of form and
convenience.]
1[This I intend to publish under the
title of 'The Last Miracle; 'II.' will bear that of 'The Lord of
the Sea'; the present book is marked 'III.' The perusal of 'IV.' I
have yet finished, but so far do not consider it suitable for
publication.]
( Here begins the
note-book marked 'III.'
)