Inferences from Haunted Houses and Haunted Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 45 pages of information about Inferences from Haunted Houses and Haunted Men.

Inferences from Haunted Houses and Haunted Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 45 pages of information about Inferences from Haunted Houses and Haunted Men.

It is, however, less than 200 yards from a road along the Tay, that river running parallel to its front to the southward of it.

Rights of way from the north-west pass north of the house, and there were some empty lodges there; these might afford shelter to the persons of strong hypnotic power who chose to play the ghost.  The continuity of the noises at night would be thus facilitated.  The house belonged to the grand-nephew of a retired Indian major.  It is apparently suggested that the major’s relations with a young housekeeper were suspicious.  The two and a native Indian servant are buried in the kirkyard at L——­; presumably Logierait.

The haunted house is, as was said, at Ballechin in Perthshire; and it may be noted that to Perthshire Esdaile, the famous Calcutta hypnotist and physician, retired; but that he was unable to effect with the Perthshire people the marvellous cures he had brought about in India.  Perhaps the Indian servant may have attracted the attention of some base imitator of the honourable Esdaile.  It may be noted that an officer of rank, whose family were friends and not very distant neighbours in the south of England of the late Rev. Lord Sydney Godolphin Osborne, experienced some singular phenomena.  Lord Sydney was a great hypnotist, and cured, or believed he cured, many cases of epilepsy.  The officer in question suffered at times from a tickling in his face, which annoyed him very much; it seemed to be more on the cheeks than in the corners behind the nostrils.

The connection with hypnotism is seen in the next case.  A much younger man, a captain in the Indian army, who had attended many spiritist seances, suffered much the same sort of tickling annoyance.  Both were perfectly sane, and were doubtless persecuted.  They were intelligent, capable people.  A friend informs the writer that when some years ago he visited a fortune-teller of the Mrs. Piper class in London, he had a cold trickling up his feet, doubtless from hypnotism, to help thought reading.

The tickling of the face is the result of a more or less vain attempt to reach the ear or eye.  It will be felt by people driving whose ear and eye would otherwise be affected.  People sleeping in an exposed place may suffer more, as the fixed recumbent position makes them obnoxious to attack, as was previously remarked.  The hyperaesthesia spreads in a slight degree round the eye.

The nature of the eye is hardly understood yet; it is quite possible that subconscious pictures pass before us like a cinematograph, enforcing or enforced by our thoughts.  It has been remarked that thought is a species of self-hypnotism.  Hypnotism may only make these pictures more distinct and modify them by degrees.  In the attempt to inflict a picture on the eye, only the dark image of it may be seen.  The writer believes that this means failure to affect the mind.  Binet and Fere mention the dark after-shadow.

The extremest direct effect of hypnotism upon the eye, mechanically speaking, is doubtless scarcely more than the shock of thistledown wafted against it by a gentle breeze.  It appears to affect the corners of the eye; the electric film is perhaps divided by the approach over the skin to another and damper tissue.  But hyperaesthesia sometimes spreads to the upper cheek.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Inferences from Haunted Houses and Haunted Men from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.