Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, Volume 1

Couverture
Society for Psychical Research., 1884
 

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Page 14 - you ever, when in good health and completely awake, had a vivid impression of seeing, or being touched by, a human being, or of hearing a voice or sound which suggested a human presence, when no one was there?
Page 227 - without pretending to answer for the certainty of the facts or propriety of the reasonings contained in the several papers so published, which must rest on the credit or judgment of their respective authors."*
Page 427 - to answer for the certainty of the facts or propriety of the reasonings contained in the several papers so published, which must
Page 454 - That, in particular, the Shrine at Adyar, through which letters purporting to come from Mahatmas were received, was elaborately arranged with a view to the secret insertion of letters and other objects through a sliding panel at the back, and regularly used for this purpose by Madame Blavatsky or her agents. That
Page 379 - see by the description given of it in the paper how the event corresponded with my dream. My niece was born in Australia, and I never saw her. Please return the paper at thy convenience. Considering that our night is their day, I must have been in sympathy with the sufferers at the time of the accident, on the
Page 213 - as quickly as if it had been thrown. When it reached the ceiling it fell plump and smashed. I called Dr. Lloyd's attention to it, and we all saw it. No one was near it, and I don't know how it happened. I stayed about ten minutes more, but saw nothing
Page 331 - I beheld the figure of an old and very valued friend whom I knew to be in England. He appeared as if most eager to speak to me, and I addressed him with, " Good gracious ! how did you come here ?" So clear was the figure, that I noted every detail of his dress, even to three onyx shirt studs
Page 14 - death of some person known to you (about whom you were not anxious at the time), which dream you marked as an exceptionally vivid one, and of which the distressing impression lasted for as long as an hour after you rose in the morning
Page 328 - view from my position. She was in a mauve dress. I got up to meet her,, though much astonished as I believed her to be at Tenby. As I rose, my mother said," Who is that ?" not (I think) seeing anyone herself, but seeing that I did. I exclaimed,
Page 363 - November, 1884. When I was a child I had many remarkable experiences of a psychical nature, which I remember to have looked upon as ordinary and natural at the time. On one occasion (I am unable to fix the date, but I must have been about

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