Alfred Russel Wallace: Letters and Reminiscences, Vol. 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 332 pages of information about Alfred Russel Wallace.

Alfred Russel Wallace: Letters and Reminiscences, Vol. 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 332 pages of information about Alfred Russel Wallace.

ALFRED R. WALLACE.

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TO MR. J.W.  MARSHALL

Parkstone, Dorset.  March 6, 1894.

My dear Marshall,—­We were very much grieved to hear of your sad loss in a letter from Violet.  Pray accept our sincere sympathy for Mrs. Marshall and yourself.

Death makes us feel, in a way nothing else can do, the mystery of the universe.  Last autumn I lost my sister, and she was the only relative I have been with at the last.  For the moment it seems unnatural and incredible that the living self with its special idiosyncrasies you have known so long can have left the body, still more unnatural that it should (as so many now believe) have utterly ceased to exist and become nothingness!

With all my belief in, and knowledge of, Spiritualism, I have, however, occasional qualms of doubt, the remnants of my original deeply ingrained scepticism; but my reason goes to support the psychical and spiritualistic phenomena in telling me that there must be a hereafter for us all....—­Believe me yours very sincerely,

ALFRED R. WALLACE.

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TO DR. EDWIN SMITH

Parkstone, Dorset.  October 19, 1899.

Dear Sir,—­I know nothing of London mediums now.  Nine-tenths of the alleged frauds in mediums arise from the ignorance of the sitters.  The only way to gain any real knowledge of spiritualistic phenomena is to follow the course pursued in all science—­study the elements before going to the higher branches.  To expect proof of materialisation before being satisfied of the reality of such simpler phenomena as raps, movements of various objects, etc. etc., is as if a person began chemistry by trying to analyse the more complex vegetable products before he knew the composition of water and the simplest salts.

If you want to know anything about Spiritualism you should experiment yourself with a select party of earnest inquirers—­personal friends.  When you have thus satisfied yourself of the existence of a considerable range of the physical phenomena and of many of the obscurities and difficulties of the inquiry, you may use the services of public mediums, without the certainty of imputing every little apparent suspicious circumstance to trickery, since you will have seen similar suspicious facts in your private circle where you knew there was no trickery.  You will find rules for forming private circles in some issues of Light.  You can get them from the office of Light.—­Yours very truly,

ALFRED R. WALLACE.

* * * * *

PROF.  BARRETT TO A.R.  WALLACE

6 De Vesci Terrace, Kingstown, Co.  Dublin.  November 3, 1905.

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Alfred Russel Wallace: Letters and Reminiscences, Vol. 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.