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    Footnotes - Page 2

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    "telepathy"--is a current explanation of the dreams in which knowledge is obtained that exists in the mind of another person, and of the delusion by virtue of which one person sees another who is perhaps dying, or in some other crisis, at a distance. The idea is popular. A poor Highland woman wrote to her son in Glasgow: "Don't be thinking too much of us, or I shall be seeing you some evening in the byre". This is a simple expression of the hypothesis of "telepathy" or "mental telegraphy".

    {31} Perhaps among such papers as the Casket Letters, exhibited to the Commission at Westminster, and "tabled" before the Scotch Privy Council.

    {35a} To Joseph himself she bequeathed the ruby tortoise given to her by his brother. Probably the diamonds were not Rizzio's gift.

    {35b} Boismont was a distinguished physician and "Mad Doctor," or "Alienist". He was also a Christian, and opposed a tendency, not uncommon in his time, as in ours, to regard all "hallucinations" as a proof of mental disease in the "hallucinated".

    {39a} S.P.R., v., 324.

    {39b} Ibid., 324.

    {42} Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, vol. v., pp. 324, 325.

    {43} Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. xi., p. 495.

    {45a} Signed by Mr. Cooper and the Duchess of Hamilton.

    {45b} See Galton, Inquiries into Human Faculty, p. 91.

    {48} Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. xi., p. 522.

    {50} The case was reported in the Herald (Dubuque) for 12th February, 1891. It was confirmed by Mr. Hoffman, by Mr. George Brown and by Miss Conley, examined by the Rev. Mr. Crum, of Dubuque.--Proceedings, S.P.R., viii., 200-205. Pat Conley, too, corroborated, and had no theory of explanation. That the girl knew beforehand of the dollars is conceivable, but she did not know of the change of clothes.

    {56a} Told by the nobleman in question to the author.

    {56b} The author knows some eight cases among his friends of a solitary meaningless hallucination like this.

    {58} As to the fact of such visions, I have so often seen crystal gazing, and heard the pictures described by persons whose word I could not doubt, men and women of unblemished character, free from superstition, that I am obliged to believe in the fact as a real though hallucinatory experience. Mr. Clodd attributes it to disorder of the liver. If no more were needed I could "scry" famously!

    {60a} Facts attested and signed by Mr. Baillie and Miss Preston.

    {60b} Story told to me by both my friends and the secretary.

    {62} Memoires, v., 120. Paris, 1829.

    {66} Readers curious in crystal-gazing will find an interesting sketch of the history of the practice, with many modern instances, in Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. v., p. 486, by "Miss X.". There are also experiments by Lord Stanhope and Dr. Gregory
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