[Gutenberg 43237] • The Spirit Land

[Gutenberg 43237] • The Spirit Land
Authors
Emmons, Samuel B.
Publisher
General Books
Tags
occultism -- early works to 1900 , spiritualism
ISBN
9781151074706
Date
2009-12-25T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.26 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 36 times

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1857. Excerpt: ... stars, as have been proclaimed to the world by some of the second advent preachers, have been observed by learned astronomers and men of science. CHAPTER XV. INTERCOURSE WITH DEPARTED SPIRITS. In no age, says a popular writer, has the world been destitute of those who professed, by some instrumentality or. other, to hold intercourse with departed spirits. Neither has any age been without its reputed spectres, ghosts, or apparitions. The high priest of the Buddhist and Hindoo temples, in former times, when arrayed in the consecrated garments for the festivals, wore a round knob, about the size of a large pendent drop of a chandelier, suspended from his neck by a chain of great value and of dazzling brilliancy. It was through the agency of this crystal that he was supposed to hold communion with the spirit or spirits to whom he and his followers accorded devotion and made intercessions; and the glass, acting as did the famed oracle of Delphi, gave orders and commands, and settled all great questions that might be submitted to its spiritual master. The priest, although he might be a pattern of purity, and the quintessence of all that was good, having, however, the sin of being in years, and not able, perhaps, to hide from the spirit inhabiting the crystal all the transactions of his youth, could not hold a direct communication with it. To arrange this, a certain number of boys, and sometimes, in some of the temples, young damsels, were retained, who, having never mixed with the world, could not be supposed to be in any way contaminated by its vices. These alone were said to be capable of beholding the spirit when he chose to make his appearance in the divining glass, and interpreting to and fro the questions put and answers received. Although it was not ever...