CHAPTER III
INTELLIGENT MANIFESTATIONS
65. In all that we have just passed in review, it must be admitted that there is
nothing to prove the intervention of any occult intelligence, nothing that might not be
explained by the supposition of a magnetic or electric current, or the sole action of
some known or unknown fluid. Such was, in fact, the first explanation suggested in
regard to these phenomena, and it seemed to be a very reasonable one. But new facts
soon showed its insufficiency, for these new facts gave proof of intelligence; and, as
every intelligent effect must have an intelligent cause, it became evident, that, even
admitting the action of electricity or any other fluid, the action of some intelligent agent
must also be admitted. But what was this intelligent agent? -What was the nature of the
intelligence whose co-operation in the production of these phenomena had now become
evident?
66. For a phenomenon to prove the action of intelligence, it is not necessary that
it should be eloquent, witty, or even wise; it is sufficient that it should give evidence of
free and voluntary action, expressive of intention, and transmitting or replying to a
thought. If we see a weathercock turned by the wind, we know that it obeys only a
mechanical impulsion; but if; in these movements, we detected any thing that appeared
to be intentional, anything in the nature of signals, - for example, if it turned quickly or
slowly, to the right or to the left, at our command,-we should be forced to acknowledge,
not that the weathercock was intelligent, but that it was submitted to the action of an intelligence. And this was
the conclusion forced upon observers by the movement of the tables.
67. We have seen that a table may move, raise itself up, and strike on the floor,
under the influence of one or more mediums. The first evidence of intelligence that
was remarked, in connection with these movements, was the fact that they were
obedient to the command of the operators: thus, without changing its place, a table
would raise, alternately, one or other of its legs, as required, or would strike the floor
with it a determinate number of times, in answer to a question. At other times, the
table, without being touched by any of the persons present, would move about the room
of itself; turning to the right or the left, backwards or forwards, and executing various
other movements, at their order.
68. By means of the raps of which we have spoken, manifestations still more
clearly indicative of intelligence were obtained. Sounds were produced like the beat of
the drum, like file and platoon firing, like a cannonade; now the grating of a saw would
be heard, and anon, the blows of a hammer; or the raps would imitate the movement of
well-known airs, or beat time to tunes sung, or played, by the experimenters. People
then began to see that, as some occult intelligence was evidently at work, it ought to be
able to reply to questions susceptible of being answered by a given number of raps or
tiltings, previously agreed upon, as meaning yes, or "no." * This was accordingly done;
and, from the rudimentary attempts at conversation which were all that could be made
through those monosyllabic signs, people soon went on to the use of the alphabet,
recited by one of the sitters, the unseen intelligence indicating, by a rap or tilt, the letter
of the word or phrase to be communicated. Messages and statements, often of
considerable length and of most interesting character, were thus obtained.
69. The experience of tens of thousands of persons, in every country, left no
doubt as to the reality and intelligence of these communications; but this intelligence
was generally supposed to be that of the medium, the questioner, or the persons
composing the circle in which they were obtained. When it was ascertained that the
raps were not made by the medium, it was suggested that they must be made by his
thought; but the idea of intelligence reflecting itself; so to say, in a piece of wood, of
thought producing raps and motions in a table, was felt to be an explanation even more
astounding than the phenomena themselves, and the latter speedily showed it to be
inadmissible. For, as previously stated, the communications were often directly
opposed to the opinions and sympathies of the medium, or beyond the grasp of his
intellectual faculties, and were sometimes conveyed in a language of which the medium
was ignorant, or referred to matters unknown to the whole party. Such instances have
now become so numerous that almost all of those who have had even a slight
experience of spirit-communications could probably adduce a great number of them.
We will cite, in this place, only one instance of the character now alluded to; a fact that
was related to us by one of the persons who witnessed its occurrence.
70. On board a ship of the Imperial French Navy, stationed in Chinese waters,
every soul, from the officers to the cabin boys, had taken up the amusement of "talking
with tables." One day, it occurred to some of them to address the spirit of a former
lieutenant of the same vessel, who had died two years before. He responded, and, after
several communications which struck them all with astonishment, he gave the
following message by raps "I beseech you to pay at once, to the Captain, the sum of-
(mention mg the amount), that I owe to him. I am sorry that it was not in my power to
repay it before I died." No one on board knew anything of the matter; the Captain
himself had forgotten the debt thus alluded to, and which was a very trifling one ; but, on searching
his account-book, he found a mention of a loan made by him to this lieutenant, the
amount being exactly as stated by the table. Of whose "thought," we would ask, was
the knowledge thus displayed a "reflexion ?
71. The employment of the letters of the alphabet, though a very important step
in advance, was still but a slow and roundabout method of communication; but it
nevertheless soon came into general use, and many highly interesting revelations
concerning the invisible world were thus obtained. But the spirits themselves speedily
suggested other means of communication, and, by their directions, the practice of
writing was next brought into use.
The first written communications were obtained by attaching a pencil to the foot
of a toy-table, placed upon a sheet of paper. The table, set in motion by the influence of
a medium, began by tracing letters, then words and phrases. This method was
successively simplified, first, by making use of light baskets, boxes made of cardboard,
and planchettes; and next, by finding that these objects were mere pencil-holders, and
might all be dispensed with, and the pencil held the usual way, in the hand, which,
moved and guided by an involuntary impulsion, was made to write, without the
concurrence either of the will or of the thought of the medium. Thenceforth,
communication was held as freely with the world of spirits as with people in the flesh.
We shall discuss the different methods of communication, explaining them in
detail, in another part of the present work; we have only wished, in this rapid sketch, to
record the succession of facts which have gradually led up to a recognition of the
intervention of unseen intelligences, otherwise called "spirits," in the production of the
phenomena we are considering.