Page:The Naturalisation of the Supernatural.pdf/79

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Spontaneous Thought Transference
59

I was reading geology [at the time]. I was not out of health, but I was in anxiety on quite a different subject.[1]

M. T., as we have ascertained from the Register at Somerset House, died at Heaton Norris on the 14th May, 1889. Miss C. heard of the death a day or two afterwards, and fixed the exact date of her vision by an entry in a diary, referring to an incident which she remembered to have occurred on the same day as the vision. She added that she had had no other experience which impressed her so much; she had, however, a faint impression of "something like it" having occurred when she was a schoolgirl, but she cannot remember details.

In the next case all the details given are trivial, but the amount of correspondence is sufficient to make it probable that the result was not a mere happy conjecture; and, as we have seen both the original notes made by the percipient and the letter from Rome, it is certain that the facts are accurately stated; in this respect the case stands almost on the evidential level of some of the experiments quoted in the last chapter. The following is a copy, made by Mr. Piddington, the Hon. Secretary of the Society for Psychical Research, of a note written by Mrs. D. on 27th January, 1900.

No. 15. From MRS. D.

Saturday, Jan. 27, 1900. This afternoon while I was sit-
  1. Proceedings. S. P. R., vol. 3., p. 83. Miss C.'s narrative. it should be explained, was given in answer to set questions contained on one of on: "Census" forms. See below. chapter v.