CHAPTER II
THE MARVELLOUS AND THE SUPERNATURAL
7. If the belief in spirits and in their manifestations were an isolated exception,
the product of a theory, it might, with some show of reason, be attributed to illusion;
but how is it that we find this belief in vigour among all peoples, ancient and modern,
as well as in the writings recognised as sacred in all known religions? It is, say some
critics, because man, in all ages, has sought the marvellous. But what then, is the
marvellous ? -That which is supernatural. - How do you define the supernatural ?-That
which is contrary to the laws of nature.-Ah! you are, then, sufficiently acquainted with
those laws to assign a limit to their action? If so, prove to us that the existence of
spirits, and their manifestations, are contrary to the laws of nature; prove they are not,
and can not be, a result of natural law. Examine the doctrine of the spiritists, and see
whether its chain of reasoning has not all the character of an admirable Jaw, solving all
the problems that human philosophies have been unable to solve up to the present day?
Thought is one of the attributes of a spirit; the possibility of acting upon matter,
of impressing the senses, and, as a natural consequence, of transmitting its thought, has
its origin in the soul's physiological constitution, if we may so express it; there is, then,
in this alleged fact, nothing supernatural, nothing marvellous. For a man who is dead to
revive corporeally, for his scattered members to reunite to reform his body, would
certainly be something marvellous, supernatural, fantastic; something that would
indeed be a veritable derogation from His own laws that God could only accomplish by
a miracle: but we find nothing of the sort in the teachings of spiritism.
8. Nevertheless, there are persons who say : "You, on your side, admit that a
spirit can raise a table and retain it in space; is not that contrary to one of nature's laws,
viz., the law of gravitation?" Yes, contrary to that law as commonly understood; but do
you suppose that nature has revealed to us all its secrets? Before experiment had shown
us the ascensional force of certain gases, who could have imagined that a heavy
machine, bearing several men, could triumph over the force of attraction, and would not
the assertion of such a possibility have appeared incredible? If a man had proposed, a
century ago, to send a despatch five hundred leagues, and to receive an answer to it, in
the course of a few minutes, he would have passed for a madman; if he had done it, he
would have been declared to have the devil at his beck and call, for, in those days, it
was only the devil who could travel so quickly. Why, then, may there not be some
fluid, as yet unknown to us, possessing the property, under certain circumstances, of
counterbalancing the action of density, as hydrogen counterbalances the weight of a
balloon? This suggestion, we would remark in passing, is only a comparison, and not
an assimilation, arid is brought forward solely to show, by analogy, that the fact
assumed is not physically impossible. It is, in truth, precisely when the learned, in their
observation of these phenomena, have endeavoured to proceed by the road of
assimilation, that they have gone astray. In reality, the fact exists, and all tile negation
in the world cannot get rid of it, for denying is not disproving; in our eyes, there is
nothing supernatural about it, and this is all we have to say of it for the present.
9. "If the fact be proved," some may say, "we accept it as such ; we even accept
the cause which you assign to it, viz., that of an unknown fluid; but what proves the
intervention of spirits? That would indeed be marvellous; that would be supernatural!"
To meet this objection, we should have to enter upon a demonstration that
would be out of place in the present book, and that would, in fact, be a work of
supererogation, since the action of disincarnate spirits, as the cause of the phenomena in
question, is affirmed in every branch of its teachings. Nevertheless, to sum up these in
a few words, we will say that they are founded, in theory, on this principle, viz., that
every intelligent effect must have an intelligent cause, and, in practice, on the fact that
the phenomena called spiritist having given proofs of the action of intelligence, must
have their cause in something outside of matter; that this intelligence, not proceeding
from those who are present at the sitting,-a point fully proved by experience,-must be
extraneous to the sitters, and that, as no active agent is visible, this intelligence must be
that of some invisible being. It is, then, through repeated observation that we have
arrived at the certainty that this invisible being, to which the name of "spirit" has been
given, is nothing else than the soul of one who has lived in the body, one whom death
has deprived of his gross, visible envelope, leaving him with an ethereal envelope
invisible to us in its normal state.
The existence of invisible beings once proved, their power over matter results
from the very nature of their fluidic envelope; and the action of this power is intelligent,
because, at death, those invisible beings only lost their body, but retained their
intelligence, which is, in fact, their essence. The existence of spirits is therefore no
preconceived theory, no mere hypothesis, invented to explain certain facts; it is a result
of experience and of observation, and is the natural consequence of the existence of the
soul: to deny their existence is to deny the soul and its attributes. If any one thinks he
can give a more rational explanation of the phenomena in question, let him do so,
taking care, however, to give a rational explanation of all the facts of the case ; and,
when this has been done, we can discuss the merits of both sides of the question.
10. In the eyes of those who regard matter as the sole power in nature,
everything which cannot be explained by the
laws of matter is marvellous or supernatural; and with such, the marvellous is only
another word for superstition. With such minds religion, being founded on the
existence of an immaterial principle, is but a tissue of superstitions ; few dare to assert
this openly, but many say it in whispers, and think they save appearances by conceding
that religion is necessary for the people, and for keeping children in order. To such we
would submit the following dilemma; either the religious principle is true, or it is false ;
if it be true, it is true for all men, if it be false, it can no more be useful to the ignorant
than to the wise.
11. Those who attack spiritism as being "marvellous," really play into the hands
of the materialist, since, by denying all extra-material effects, they virtually deny the
existence of the soul. Go to the bottom of their thought, examine the tendency of what
they assert, and it will generally be found that they reason from materialistic principles,
implied, if not openly asserted. Under cover of their pretended rationality, their denial
is but the logical consequence of their premiss; they reject all that naturally follows
from the soul's existence, because they do not really believe in that existence: for, not
admitting the cause, how can they logically admit its effects? Hence they are fettered
by a preconceived opinion which unfits them for judging soundly with respect to
spiritism, since their starting-point is the negation of all that is not material. For
ourselves, as we admit the consequences that flow from the existence of the soul, it
follows, as a matter of course, that we have accepted the facts qualified as "marvellous
;" but it does not therefore follow that we are the champion of every dreamer, of every
fancy, of all the eccentricities put forth by builders of theories. Those who could so far
misunderstand us can know very little of spiritism; but our adversaries do not look at
the matter so closely, and the duty of understanding what they are talking about is too
often the thing they care least for. According to them, whatever is " marvellous " is
absurd ; and, as spiritism is grounded on facts which appear to them to be "marvellous,"
they jump to the conclusion that spiritism is absurd. Regarding their verdict as being
without appeal, they think they have brought out an irrefutable argument when, after
having paraded the histories of the convulsionaries of Saint Medard, the fanatics of the
Cevennes, and the nuns of Loudun, they point to facts of trickery which no one contests
; but are such histories the gospel of spiritism ? Have spiritists ever denied that
charlatans have imitated some of the facts of spirit-manifestation from love of lucre,
that some pretended manifestations have been the creation of an overexcited
imagination, or that fanaticism has dealt largely in exaggeration? Spiritism is no more
answerable for the extravagancies that may have been committed in its name, than is
true science for the abuses of ignorant pretenders, or true religion for the excesses of the
fanatic. Many critics only judge of spiritism by the fairy tales and popular legends
which are, in fact, its fictions ; as well might they judge of history by historical
romance.
12. According to the most elementary rules of logic, it is necessary to
understand a question before discussing it for the critic's verdict is of no value unless
founded on a complete knowledge of his subject ; in that case, and in that alone, his
opinion, even if erroneous, may be worthy of consideration but what is it worth in a
matter of which he is ignorant ? The true critic should give proof, not only of erudition,
but of thorough knowledge of the subject of which he treats, of sound judgement, and
unquestionable impartiality ; otherwise we might as 'veil be guided by the opinion of
the first organ-grinder we meet with who should take upon himself to criticise Rossini,
or that of any mere copyist who might think fit to censure Raphael.
13. Spiritism, then, does not accept all facts reputed to be marvellous or
supernatural; so far from doing this, it demonstrates the impossibility of a great number
of such, and the absurdity of certain beliefs which constitute, strictly speaking, "
superstition." It is true that, in what it does admit, there are things which, to the
incredulous, appear to belong to the domain of the marvellous, in other words,
of what they regard as superstition; but, let them at least confine themselves to the
discussion of these, for, in regard to the others, the spiritist has nothing to say, and the
sceptic, in denouncing them to us, would be only "carrying coals to Newcastle." Those
who attack us, in regard to abuses which we ourselves repudiate, prove their own
ignorance of the matter in question ; and their argumentation is simply thrown away. "
lout where," cry some of our opponents, " does the belief of Spiritists stop ?" Read, and
mark; and you will know. No knowledge is acquired without time and study ; and
spiritism, which involves the profoundest questions of philosophy and of social order,
which deals at the same time with the physical man and with the moral man, is in itself
a science, a philosophy, which can no more be apprehended in a few hours than any
other. For those who are not content to rest on the surface, the study of such a subject
is a question, not of hours, but of months and of years. Of what value, then, can be the
opinion of those who arrogate to themselves the right of pronouncing judgement upon
it, because they have witnessed one or two experiments, undertaken, perhaps, rather as
an amusement than as a matter of serious inquiry? Such persons will doubtless affirm
that they have not the leisure necessary for such a study; but, when people have not
time to inform themselves correctly about any matter, they should refrain from talking
about it, and especially from committing themselves to any opinion in regard to it and
the higher their position in the world of science, the less excusable are they when they
talk about what they do not understand.
14. We sum up our preceding remarks in the following propositions: -
1st. All spiritist-phenomena imply, as their principle, the existence of the soul,
its survival of the body, and the manifestations which result therefrom.
2d. These phenomena, occurring in virtue of natural law, are neither
"marvellous" nor "supernatural," in the ordinary sense of those words.
3d. Many facts are only reputed to be "supernatural" because their cause is
unknown; spiritism, by assigning to them a cause, brings them within the domain of
natural phenomena.
4th. Among the facts commonly called "supernatural," there are many which
spiritism shows to be impossible, and which it therefore relegates into the category of
superstitions.
5th. Although spiritism recognises a foundation of truth in many popular beliefs,
it by no means accepts all the fantastic stories created by the imagination.
6th. To judge of spiritism by pretended facts, the reality of which it does not
admit, is to give proof of ignorance, and to deprive such judgement of all weight.
7th. The explanation of the causes of facts acknowledged by spiritism, and the
ascertainment of their moral consequences, constitute a new science and a new
philosophy, requiring serious, persevering, and careful study.
8th. Spiritism can only be conclusively disproved by one who should have
thoroughly studied it and sounded its deepest mysteries with the patient perseverance of
a conscientious observer; one as well versed in every branch of the subject as the most
ardent of its adherents; one acquainted with all the facts of the case, and with every
argument that could be opposed to him, and which he must refute, not by denials, but
by arguments still more conclusive; one, in short, who can give, of admitted facts, a
more rational explanation than is given by spiritism. But such a critic has yet to be
discovered.
15. We have, in the foregoing argument, pronounced the word miracle; a short
observation on this subject will not be out of place in a chapter treating of the
"marvellous."
The word miracle, in its primitive acceptation, and by its etymology, signifies
something extraordinary, something admirable or wonderful; but this word, like many
others, has lost its original meaning, and has come to be understood, in common
parlance, as an ad of the Divine power, contrary to the known laws of nature. This is,
in fact, its usual acceptation ; and it is no longer applied. to common things which surprise us and of
which the cause is unknown, except as a metaphor. It is not our intention to examine,
in this place, whether God may see fit, under certain circumstances, to act in opposition
to the laws established by Himself; our object is solely to show that spirit-phenomena,
extraordinary as they are, derogate in no degree from those laws, that they have no
"miraculous" character, and are not even "marvellous" or "supernatural." A miracle
cannot be explained ; spirit-phenomena, on the contrary, explain themselves, and in the
most rational manner ; they are, therefore, not miracles, but simply effects which occur
in virtue of general laws. A miracle has quite another character; it is something
unusual, isolated. If a fact can be made to recur, so to say, at will, and through different
people, that fact is no miracle.
Science works miracles daily in the eyes of the ignorant. In former times, any
man who knew more than his neighbours passed for a sorcerer, and, as people then
believed that all unusual knowledge came from the devil, they generally burned him;
but now that we have become so much more civilised, we content ourselves with
consigning such a one to the madhouse.
For a man who is really dead, as we remarked above, to be recalled to life by
Divine intervention, would be a veritable miracle, because it would be contrary to the
laws of nature. But if the man's death were only apparent, if there were still within him
some remains of latent vitality, and if a physician, or a magnetiser, should intervene and
restore him to life, it would be, to men of science, a natural phenomenon; but, in the
eyes of the ignorant vulgar, it would pass for a miracle, and its author would either be
stoned by the mob, or venerated by it, according to circumstances. If, in some rural
district, a natural philosopher, with the aid of an electrical machine, should strike down
a tree, as though by lightning, the new Prometheus would certainly be regarded as being
armed with diabolical power (and here let us remark, in passing, that old Prometheus
would seem to have got the start of Franklin); but the arresting of the movement of the sun, or rather of the
earth, by Joshua, would indeed be a miracle, for we know of no magnetiser sufficiently
powerful to accomplish such a prodigy. Of all the spirit phenomena one of the most
extraordinary, without doubt, is that of direct writing, demonstrating, as it does, the
power of the occult intelligences by whom it is effected; but it is no more miraculous
than any of the other phenomena due to the action of those invisible agents, because the
occult beings who people space are one of the powers of nature, and exercise an
incessant action on the material world, as well as on the moral world.
Spiritism, by enlightening us in regard to this power, gives us a key to a host of
things hitherto unexplained, and that are inexplicable by any other theory; things which,
in the olden times, have passed for prodigies. Spiritism, like magnetism, reveals to us a
law, the effects of which, if not wholly unknown, have been hitherto imperfectly
understood; a law of which, while its effects were known, the world was ignorant, and
the ignorance of which engendered superstition. This law being known, the marvellous
disappears ; and phenomena, formerly regarded as miraculous or super natural, are
brought into the category of natural things. Spiritists no more perform miracles by
making a table to rap, or the so-called dead to write, than does the physician when he
restores a sick man to health, or the electrician, when he produces artificial lightning.
Whoever should pretend to perform miracles by the aid of spiritism would prove
himself an ignoramus or a charlatan by the mere fact of such a pretension.
16. Spirit-phenomena, like magnetic phenomena, before their cause is known,
may well pass for prodigies ; and those who, imagining themselves to have a monopoly
of reason and common sense, refuse to admit the possibility of anything they do not
understand, have naturally made these reputed prodigies the object of their raillery.
And since religion asserts various facts of a similar character, those who thus scoff at
the one, not unfrequently disbelieve the other. But spiritism, giving a rational
explanation of many of the facts formerly held by science to be impossible, comes to the aid of
religion, by proving the possibility or certain occurrences which are not the less
extraordinary for not being miraculous, and in regard to which we see that God is not
less great, nor less powerful, for not having violated His own laws. What discussions
have been excited by the levitations of St Cupertin! Yet the suspension in the air of
heavy bodies is a fact explained by spirit-laws; and Mr Home and other mediums
known to us have frequently repeated the phenomenon manifested by St Cupertin. This
phenomenon, therefore, is now included within the order of natural occurrences.
17. Among the facts of spiritism, we must give a prominent place to apparitions,
because they are of such frequent occurrence. That of La Salette, which sets the clergy
themselves at loggerheads, is no new thing for us. We cannot affirm that the fact
asserted really took place, because we have no sufficient proof of its having done so;
but we regard it as possible, because thousands of recent facts of a similar character are
known to us, and because we can perfectly explain how such a phenomenon might take
place. Let the reader only refer to the theory that we give, further on, concerning
apparitions, and he will see that the phenomenon referred to is as simple and as
probable as are a great number of other physical phenomena which are only regarded as
prodigies because no key has yet been found to them. The identity of the personage said
to have been seen at La Salette is another question; for that identity is by no means
proved. We simply aver that such an apparition may have presented itself; more than
this we are not competent to allege, and we leave every one free to form his own
judgement. Spiritism has not to occupy itself with the matter. All we say is, that tile
facts of spiritism reveal to us new laws, and give us the key to a multitude of things
which used to be considered supernatural; and that, as many things, which used to pass
for miraculous, find a logical solution in spiritism, we need be in no haste to deny what
we do not understand.
Spirit-phenomena are sometimes contested because they
appear to contradict known laws, and people therefore cannot see how they are to be
accounted for. Give them a rational explanation of these things, and their doubt ceases.
Explanation is the true means of conviction; and we constantly see those who have
never witnessed any spirit-phenomena as fully convinced of the reality of those
phenomena as we are ourselves, because they have read, and have comprehended their
possibility. Were we to believe nothing that we had not beheld with our own eyes, the
sum of our convictions would be reduced to a minimum.