INTRODUCTION
[ back, I,II,III,
IV,V,VI, VII,
VIII,IX,
X,XI,XII,
XIII,XIV,XV,
XVI,XVII
]
I
For new ideas new words are needed, in order to secure clearness of
language by avoiding the confusion inseparable from the employment of the
same term for expressing different meanings. The words spiritual, spiritualist,
spiritualism, have a definite acceptation; to give them a new one,
in order to apply them to the doctrine set forth by spirits, would be to
multiply the causes of amphibology, already so numerous. Strictly speaking,
Spiritualism is the opposite of Materialism; every one is
a Spiritualist who believes that there is in him something more than matter,
but it does not follow that he believes in the existence of spirits, or
in their communication with the visible world. Instead, therefore, of the
words SPIRITUAL, SPIRITUALISM, we employ to designate this latter belief,
the words, SPIRITIST, SPIRITISM, which, by their form, indicate their origin
and radical meaning, and have thus the advantage of being perfectly intelligible;
and we reserve the words spiritualism, spiritualist, for the expression
of the meaning attached to them by common acceptation. We say, then, that
the fundamental principle of the spiritist theory, or Spiritism,
is the relation of the material world with spirits, or the beings of the
invisible world; and we designate the adherents of the spiritist theory
as spiritists.
In a special sense, "The Spirits' Book" contains the
doctrine or theory of spiritism; in a general sense, it appertains
to the spiritualist school, of which it presents one of the phases.
It is for this reason that we have inscribed the words Spiritualist
Philosophy on its title-page.
II
[To the beginning]
There is another word of which it is equally necessary to define the
meaning, because it is the keystone of every system of morality, and also
because, owing to the lack of a precise definition, it has been made the
subject of innumerable controversies; we refer to the word soul.
The divergence of opinion concerning the nature of the soul is a result
of the variety of meanings attached to this word. A perfect language, in
which every idea had its own special term, would save a vast deal of discussion;
for, in that case, misunderstanding would be impossible.
Some writers define the soul as being the principle of organic life, having
no existence of its own, and ceasing with the life of the body. According
to this purely Materialistic belief, the soul is an effect, and not a cause.
Others consider the soul as being the principle of intelligence, the universal
agent, of which each being absorbs a portion. According to them, there
is, in the entire universe, only one soul, which distributes sparks of
itself among all intelligent beings during their life ; each spark, after
the death of the being it has animated, returning to the common source,
and blending again with the general whole, as brooks and rivers return
to the ocean from which they were produced. This opinion differs from the
preceding one, inasmuch as, according to the latter hypothesis, there is
in us something more than matter, something that remains in existence after
our death; but, practically, it is much as though nothing remained of us,
since, no longer possessing individuality, we should retain no consciousness
of our identity. According to this hypothesis, the universal soul is God,
and each being is a portion of the Divinity. It is a species of Pantheism.
According to others, again, the soul is a moral being, distinct, independent
of matter, and preserving its individuality after death. This acceptation
of the word soul is certainly the one most generally received; because,
under one name or another, the idea of a being that survives the body is
found as an instinctive belief, and independently of all teaching, among
all nations, whatever their degree of civilisation. This doctrine, according
to which the soul is a cause and not an effect, is that of the spiritualists.
Without discussing the value of these opinions, and considering the subject
merely under its philological aspect, we say that these three applications
of the word soul constitute three distinct ideas, each of which demands
a different term. "Soul" has, therefore, a triple meaning, and
is employed by each school according to the special meaning it attributes
to that word. In order to avoid the confusion naturally resulting from
the use of the same word to express three different ideas, it would he
necessary to confine the word to one of these three ideas; it would not
matter to which, provided the choice were clearly understood. We think
it more natural to take it in its most common acceptation; and for this
reason we employ the word SOUL to indicate the immaterial and individual
being which resides in us, and survives the body. Even if this being
did not really exist, and were only a product of the imagination, a specific
term would still be needed to designate it.
For want of such a term for each of the other ideas now loosely understood
by the word soul, we employ the term vital principle to designate the material
and organic life which, whatever may be its source, is common to all living
creatures, from the plant to man. As life can exist without the thinking
faculty, the vital principle is something distinct from independent of
it. The word vitality would not express the same idea. According to some,
the vital principle is a property of matter; an effect produced wherever
matter is found under certain given conditions; while, in the opinion of
the greater number of thinkers, it resides in a special fluid, universally
diffused, and of which each being absorbs and assimilates a portion during
life, as inert bodies absorb light; the vital principle being identical
with the vital fluid, which is generally regarded as being the same as
the animalised electric fluid, designated also as the magnetic fluid, the
nervous fluid, etc.
However this may be, one fact is certain, for it is proved by observation,
viz., that organic beings possess in themselves a force which, so long
as it exists, produces the phenomena of life ; that physical life is common
to all organic beings, and is independent of intelligence and thought;
that intelligence and thought are faculties peculiar to certain organic
species; and, lastly, that, among the organic species endowed with intelligence
and thought, there is one which is endowed with a special moral sense that
gives it an incontestable superiority over the others, viz., human species.
It is evident that, being employed according to various acceptations, the
term soul does not exclude either Materialism or Pantheism. Spiritualists
themselves understand the term soul according to one or other of the first
two definitions, without denying the distinct immaterial being, to which,
in that case it would give some other name. This word, therefore, is not
the representative of an opinion; it is a Protean term, defined by each
after his own fashion, and thus giving rise to interminable disputes.
We might also avoid confusion, even while employing the word soul in the
three senses defined above, by adding to it some qualifying term that should
specify the point of view from which we consider it, or the mode in which
we apply it. It would be, in that case, a generic word, representing at
once the principles of material life, of intelligence, and of the moral
faculty, each of which would be distinguished by an attribute, as is done,
for example, with the word gas, by adding the words hydrogen, oxygen, etc.
Thus we might say-and it would, perhaps, be the best plan to adopt-vital
soul for the principle of material life, intellectual soul for the principle
of intelligence, and spiritual soul for the principle of our individuality
after death ; in which case the vital soul would be common to all organic
beings, plants, animals, and men ; the intellectual soul would be the peculiar
property of animals and men ; and the spiritual soul would belong to men
only.
We have thought it all the more important to be explicit in regard to this
point, because the spiritist theory is naturally based on the existence
in us of a being independent of matter, and that survives the body. As
the word soul will frequently recur in the course of this work, it was
necessary to define the meaning we attach to it, in order to avoid all
misunderstanding.
We now come to the principal object of this preliminary explanation.
III
[To the beginning]
Spiritist doctrine, like all new theories, has its supporters and its
opponents. We will endeavour to reply to some of the objections of the
latter, by examining the worth of the reasons on which they are based,
without, however, pretending to be able to convince averybody, but addressing
ourselves to those who, without prejudices or preconceived ideas, are sincerely
and honestly desirous of arriving at the truth; and will prove to them
that those objections are the result of a too hasty conclusion in regard
to facts imperfectly observed.
Of the facts referred to, the one first observed was the movement of
objects, popularly called "table-turning". This phenomenon, first
observed in America (or rather, renewed in that country, for history proves
it to have been produced in the most remote ages of antiquity), was attended
with various strange accompaniments, such as unusual noises, raps produced
without any ostensible cause, etc. From America this phenomenon spread
rapidly over Europe and the rest of the world. It was met at first with
incredulity; but the movements were produced by so many experimenters,
that it soon became impossible to doubt its reality.
If the phenomenon in question had been limited to the movement of inert
objects, it might have been possible to explain it by some purely physical
cause. We are far from knowing all the secret agencies of nature, or all
the properties of those which are known to us. Electricity, moreover, is
not only multiplying, day by day, the resources it offers to mankind but
appears to be about to irradiate science with a new light. It seemed, therefore,
by no means impossible that electricity, modified by certain circumstances,
or some other unknown agent, might be the cause of these movements. The
fact that the presence of several persons increased the intensity of the
action appeared to strengthen this supposition; for the union of these
might not ineptly be regarded as constituting a battery, of which the power
was in proportion to the number of its elements.
That the movement of the tables should be circular was in no way surprising,
for the circular movements is of frequent occurrence in nature. All the
stars move in circles; and it therefore seemed to be possible that in the
movement of the tables we had a reflex on a small scale of the movement
of the universe; or that some cause, hitherto unknown, might produce, accidentally,
and, in regard to small objects, a current analogous to that which impels
the worlds of the universe in their orbits.
But the movement in question was not always circular. It was often irregular,
disorderly; the object moved was sometimes violently shaken, overthrown,
carried about in various directions, and, in contravention of all known
laws of statics, lifted from the ground and held up in the air. Still in
all this, there was nothing that might not be explained by the force of
some invisible physical agent. Do we not see electricity overthrow buildings,
uproot trees and hurl to considerable distances the heaviest bodies, attracting
or repelling, as the case may be?
The rappings and other unusual noises, supposing them to be due to something
else than the dilatation of the wood, or other accidental cause, might
very well be produced by an accumulation of the mysterious fluid; for does
not electricity produce the loudest sounds?
Up to this point everything might be considered as belonging to the domain
of physics and physiology. Without going beyond this circle of ideas, the
learned might have found in the phenomenon referred to matter well worthy
of serious study. Why was this not done? It is painful to be obliged to
make the confession, but the neglect of the scientific world was due to
causes that add one more proof to the many already given of the frivolity
of the human mind. In the first place, the non-glamour of the object which
mainly served as the basis of the earliest experimentations had something
to do with this disdain. What an influence, in regard to even the most
serious matters, is often exerted by a mere word! Without reflecting that
the movement referred to might be communicated to any object, the idea
of tables became associated with it in the general mind, doubtless because
a table, being the most convenient object upon which to experiment, and
also because people can place themselves round a table more conveniently
than round any other piece of furniture, was generally employed in the
experiments referred to. But men who pride themselves on their mental superiority
are sometimes so puerile as to warrant the suspicion that a good many keen
and cultivated minds may have considered it beneath them to take any notice
of what was commonly known as "the dance of tables." If the phenomenon
observed by Galvani had been made known by some unlearned person, and dubbed
with some absurd nickname, it would probably have been consigned to the
lumber-room, along with the divining-rod; for where is the scientist who
would not in that case have regarded it as derogatory to occupy himself
with the dance of frogs?
A few men of superior intellect, however, being modest enough to admit
that nature might not have revealed to them all her secrets, conscientiously
endeavoured to see into the matter for themselves; but the phenomena not
having always responded to their attempts, and not being always produced
at their pleasure, and according to their methods of experimenting, they
arrived at an adverse conclusion in regard to them. The tables, however,
despite that conclusion, continued to turn; and we may say of them, with
Galileo, "Nevertheless, they move!" We may assert, still further,
that the facts alluded to have been multiplied to such an extent that they
have become naturalised among us, so that opinions are now only divided
as to their nature.
And here let us ask whether the fact that these phenomena are not always
produced in exactly the same way, and according to the wishes and requirements
of each individual observer, can be reasonably regarded as constituting
an argument against their reality? Are not the phenomena of electricity
and chemistry subordinated to certain conditions, and should we be right
in denying their reality because they do not occur when those conditions
are not present? Is it strange, then, that certain conditions should be
necessary to the production of the phenomenon of the movement of objects
by the human fluid, or that it should not occur when the observer, placing
himself at his own individual point of view, insists on producing it at
his own pleasure, or in subjecting it to the laws of phenomena already
known, without considering that a new order of facts may, and indeed must,
result from the action of laws equally new to us? Now, in order to arrive
at a knowledge of such laws, it is necessary to study the circumstances
under which those facts are produced; and such a study can only be made
through long-sustained and attentive observation.
"But," it is often objected, "there is evident trickery
in some of the occurrences referred to." To this objection we reply,
in the first place, by asking whether the objectors are quite sure that
what they have taken for trickery may not be simply an order of facts which
they are not yet able to account for, as was the case with the peasant
who mistook the experiments of a learned professor of physics for the tricks
of a clever conjuror? But even admitting that there has been trickery in
some cases, is that a reason for denying the reality of facts? Must we
deny the reality of physics because certain conjurors give themselves the
title of physicists? Moreover, the character of the persons concerned in
these manifestations should be taken into account, and the interest they
may have in deceiving. Would they do so by way of a joke? A joke may amuse
for a moment, but a mystification, if kept up too long, would become as
wearisome to the mystifier as to the mystified. Besides, a mystification
carried on from one end of the earth to the other, and among the most serious,
honourable, and enlightened people, would be at least as extraordinary
as the phenomena in question.
IV
[To the beginning]
If the phenomena we are considering had been limited to the movement
of objects, they would have remained, as we have already remarked, within
the domain of physical science; but so far was this from being the case,
that they speedily proved to be only the forerunners of facts of a character
still more extraordinary. For it was soon found that the impulsion communicated
to inert objects was not the mere product of a blind mechanical force,
but that it revealed the action of an intelligent cause, a discovery that
opened up a new field of observation, and promised a solution of many mysterious
problems. Are these movements due to an intelligent power? Such was the
question first to be answered. If such a power exists, what is it? What
is its nature? What its origin? Is it superhuman? Such were the secondary
questions which naturally grew out of that first one.
The earliest manifestations of intelligence were made by means of the legs
of tables, that moved up and down, striking a given number of times, and
replying in this way by "yes" or "no" to the questions
asked. Even here, it must be confessed, there was nothing very convincing
for the incredulous, as these apparent answers might be an effect of chance.
But fuller replies were soon obtained, the object in motion striking a
number of blows corresponding to the number of each letter of the alphabet,
so that words and sentences began to be produced in reply to the questions
propounded. The correctness of these replies, their correlation with the
questions asked, excited astonishment. The mysterious being who gave these
replies, when questioned as to its nature, declared itself to be a "spirit"
or "genius," gave itself a name, and stated various particulars
about itself. This is a circumstance of noteworthy importance, for it proves
that no one suggested the idea of spirits as an explanation of the phenomenon,
but that the phenomenon gave this explanation of itself. Hypotheses are
often framed, in the positive sciences, to serve as a basis of argument;
but such was not the case in this instance.
The mode of communication furnished by the alphabet being tedious and inconvenient,
the invisible agent (a point worthy of note) suggested another, by advising
the fitting of a pencil to a small basket. This basket, placed upon a sheet
of paper, was set in motion by the same occult power that moved the tables;
but, instead of obeying a simple and regular movement of rotation, the
pencil traced letters that formed words, sentences, and entire discourses,
filling many pages, treating of the deepest questions of philosophy, morality,
metaphysics, psychology, etc., and as rapidly as though written by the
hand.
This suggestion was made simultaneously in America, in France, and in various
other countries. It was made in the following terms, in Paris, on the 10th
of June 1853, to one of the most fervent partisans of the new phenomena-one
who, from the year 1849, had been busily engaged in the evocation of spirits:-"
Fetch the little basket from the next room; fasten a pencil to it; place
it upon a sheet of paper; put your fingers on the edge of the basket."
This having been done, the basket, a few moments afterwards, began to move,
and the pencil wrote, quite legibly, this sentence -"I expressly forbid
your repeating to any one what I have just told you. The next time I write,
I shall do it better."
The object to which the pencil is attached being merely an instrument,
its nature and form are of no importance, convenience being the only point
to be considered. The instrument known as the planchette has since been
generally adopted.
The basket, or planchette, will only move under the influence
of certain persons gifted with a special power or faculty, who are called
mediums, - that is to say, go-betweens, or intermediaries
between spirits and men. The conditions which give this power depend on
causes, physical and moral, that are as yet but imperfectly understood,
for mediums are of all ages, of both sexes, and of every degree of intelectual
development. The faculty of mediumship, moreover, is developed by exercise.
V
[To the beginning]
It was next perceived that the basket and the planchette only
formed, in reality, an appendix to the hand. The medium, therefore, now
held the pencil in his hand, and found that he was made to write under
an impulsion independant of his will, and often with an almost feverish
rapidity. In this way the communications were not only made more quickly,
but also became more easy and complete. At the present day, this method
is the one most frequently employed, the number of persons endowed with
the aptitude of involuntary writing being very considerable, and constantly
increasing. Experience gradually made known many other varieties of the
mediumistic faculty, and it was found that communications could be received
through speech, hearing, sight, touch, etc., and even through the direct
writing of the spirits themselves, - that is to say, without the help of
the medium's hand, or of the pencil.
This fact established, an essential point still remained to be ascertained,
viz., the nature of the medium's action, and the share taken by him, mechanically
and morally, in the obtaining of the replies. Two points of the highest
importance, and that could not escape the notice of the attentive observer,
sufficed to settle the question. The first of these is the way in which
the basket moves under the influence of the medium, through the mere laying
of his fingers on its edges, and in such a manner that it would be impossible
for him to guide it in any direction whatever. This impossibility becomes
still more evident when two or three persons place their fingers at the
same time on the same basket, for a truly phenomenal concordance of movements
and of thoughts would be required between them, in order to produce, on
the part of each, the same reply to the question asked. And this difficulty
is increased by the fact that the writing often changes completely with
each spirit who communicates, and that, whenever a given spirit communicates,
the same writing re-appears. In such cases, the medium would have to train
himself to change his handwriting an indefinite number of times, and would
also have to remember the particular writing of each spirit.
The second point referred to is the character of the replies given, which
are often, and especially when the questions asked are of an abstract or
scientific nature, notoriously beyond the scope of the knowledge, and even
of the intellectual capacity, of the medium, who, moreover, is frequently
unaware of what he is made to write, since the reply, like the question
asked, may be couched in a language of which he is ignorant, or the question
may even be asked mentally. It often happens, too, that the basket, or
the medium, is made to write spontaneously, without any question having
been propounded, and upon some subject altogether unexpected.
The replies thus given, and the messages thus transmitted, are sometimes
marked by such sagacity, profundity, and appropriateness, and convey thoughts
so elevated, so sublime, that they can only emanate from a superior intelligence,
imbued with the purest morality; at other times, they are so vapid, frivolous,
and even trivial, that they cannot be supposed to emanate from the same
source. This diversity of language can only be explained by the diversity
of the intelligences who thus manifest themselves. Do these intelligences
reside in the human race, or are they beyond the pale of humanity? Such
is the next point to be cleared up, and of which the complete explanation
will be found in the present work, such as it has been given by the spirits
themselves.
The facts referred to, as being of an order beyond our usual circle of
observation, do not occur mysteriously, but in broad daylight, so that
every one can see them and ascertain their reality; they are not the privilege
of a single individual, but are obtained by tens of thousands of persons
every day at pleasure. These effects have necessarily a cause; and as they
reveal the action of an intelligence and a will, they are evidently beyond
the domain of merely physical effects.
Many theories have been broached in relation to this subject; these we
shall presently examine, and shall then be able to decide whether they
can account for all the facts now occurring. Let us, meanwhile, assume
the existence of beings distinct from the human race, since such is the
explanation given of themselves by the intelligences thus revealed to us,
and let us see what they say to us.
VI
[To the beginning]
The beings who thus enter into communication with us designate themselves,
as we have said, by the name of spirits or genii, and as
having belonged, in many cases at least, to men who have lived upon the
earth. They say that they constitute the spiritual world, as we, during
our earthly life, constitute the corporeal world.
We will now briefly sum up the most important points of the doctrine
which they have transmitted to us, in order to reply more easily to the
objections of the incredulous.
"God is eternal, immutable, immaterial, unique, allpowerful, sovereignly
just and good.
"He has created the universe, which comprehends all beings, animate
and inanimate, material and immaterial.
"The material beings consitute the visible or corporeal world,
and the immaterial beings consitute the invisible or spiritual world, that
is to say, the spirit-world, or world of spirits.
"The spirit-world is the normal, primitive, eternal world, preexistent
to, and surviving, everything else.
"The corporeal world is only secondary; it might cease to exist,
or never have existed, without changing the essentiality of the spiritual
world.
"Spirits temporarily assume a perishable material envelope, the
destruction of which, by death, restores them to liberty.
"Among the different species of corporeal beings, God has chosen
the human species for the incarnation of spirits arrived at a certain degree
of development; it is which gives it a moral and intellectual superiority
to all the others.
"The soul is an incarnated spirit, whose body is only its envelope.
"There are in man three things: 1. The body, or material being,
analogous to the animals, and animated by the same vital principle; 2.
The soul, or immaterial being, a spirit incarnated in the body; 3. The
link which unites the soul and the body, a principle intermediary between
matter and spirit.
"Man has thus two natures: by his body he participates in the
nature of the animals, of which it has the instincts; by his soul, he participates
in the nature of spirits.
"The link, or perispirit, which unites the body and the
spirit, is a sort of semi-material envelope. Death is the destruction of
the material body, which is the grossest of man's two envelopes; but the
spirit preserves his other envelope, viz., the perispirit, which constitutes
for him an ethereal body, invisible to us in its normal state, but which
he can render occasionally visible, and even tangible, as in the case in
apparitions.
"A spirit, therefore, is not an abstract, undefined being, only
to be conceived of by our thought; it is a real, circumscribed being, which,
in certain cases, is appreciable by the senses of sight, hearing
and touch.
"Spirits belong to different classes, and are not equal to one
another either in power, in intelligence, in knowledge, or in morality.
Those of the highest order are distinguished from those below them by their
superior purity and knowledge, their nearness to God, and their love of
goodness; they are "angels" or "pure spirits". The
other classes are more distant from this perfection; those of the lower
ranks are inclined to most of our passions, hatred, envy, jealousy, pride,
etc.; they take pleasure in evil. Among them are some who are neither very
good nor very bad, but are teazing and troublesome rather than malicious,
are often mischievous and unreasonable, and may be classed as giddy and
foolish spirits.
"Spirits do not belong perpetually to the same order. All are destined
to attain perfection by passing through the different degrees of the spirit-hierarchy.
This amelioration is effected by incarnation, which is imposed on some
of them as an expiation, and on others as a mission. Material life is a
trial which they have to undergo many times until they have attained to
absolute perfection; it is a sort of filter, or alembic, from which they
issue more or less purified after each new incarnation.
"On quitting the body, the soul re-enters the world of spirits from
which it came, and from which it will enter upon a new material existence
after a longer or shorter lapse of time, during which its state is that
of an errant or wandering spirit. ¹
"Spirits having to pass through many incarnations, it follows that
we have all had many existences, and that we shall have others, more or
less perfect, either upon this earth or in other worlds.
"The incarnation of spirits always takes place in the human race;
it would be an error to suppose that the soul or spirit could be incarnated
in the body of an animal.
"A spirit's successive corporeal existences are always progressive,
and never retrograde; but the rapidity of our progress depends on the efforts
we make to arrive at perfection.
"The qualities of the soul are those of the spirit incarnated in us;
thus, a good man is the incarnation of a good spirit, and a bad man is
that of an unpurified spirit.
"The soul possessed its own individuality before its incarnation;
it preserves that individuality after its separation from the body.
"On its re-entrance into the spirit world, the soul again finds there
all those whom it has known upon the earth, and all its former existences
eventually come back to its memory, with the remembrance of all the good
and of all the evil which it has done in them.
"The incarnated spirit is under the influence of matter; the man who
surmounts this influence, through the elevation and purification of his
soul, raises himself nearer to the superior spirits, among whom he will
one day be classed. He who allows himself to be ruled by bad passions,
and places all his delight in the satisfaction of his gross animal appetites,
brings himself nearer to the impure spirits, by giving preponderance to
his animal nature.
"Incarnated spirits inhabit the different globes of the universe.
"Spirits who are not incarnated, who are errant, do not occupy any
fixed and circumscribed region; they are everywhere, in space, and around
us, seeing us, and mixing with us incessantly; they constitute an invisible
population, constantly moving and busy about us, on every side.
"Spirits exert an incessant action upon the moral world, and even
upon the physical world; they act both upon matter and upon thought, and
constitute one of the powers of nature, the efficient cause of many classes
of phenomena hitherto unexplained or misinterpreted, and of which only
the spiritist theory can give a rational explanation.
"Spirits are incessantly in relation with men. The good spirits try
to lead us into the right road, sustain us under the trials of life, and
aid us to bear them with courage and resignation; the bad ones tempt us
to evil: it is a pleasure for them to see us fall, and to make us like
themselves.
"The communications of spirits with men are either occult or ostensible.
Their occult communications are made through the good or bad influence
they exert on us without our being aware of it; it is our duty to distinguish,
by the exercise of our judgement, between the good and the bad inspirations
that are thus brought to bear upon us. Their ostensible communications
take place by means of writing, of speech, or of other physical manifestations,
and usually through the intermediary of the mediums who serve as their
instruments.
"Spirits manifest themselves spontaneously, or in response to evocation.
All spirits may be evoked: those who have animated the most obscure of
mortals, as well as those of the most illustrious personages, and whatever
the epoch at which they lived; those of our relatives, our friends, or
our enemies; and we may obtain from them, by written or by verbal communications,
counsels, information in regard to their situation beyond the grave, their
thoughts in regard to us, and whatever revelations they are permitted
to make to us. ²
"Spirits are attracted by their sympathy with the moral quality
of the parties by whom they are evoked. Spirits of superior elevation take
pleasure in meetings of a serious character, animated by the love of goodness
and the sincere desire of instruction and improvement. Their presence repels
the spirits of inferior degree who find, on the contrary, free access and
freedom of action among persons of frivolous disposition, or brought together
by mere curiosity, and wherever evil instincts are to be met with. So far
from obtaining from spirits, under such circumstances, either good advice
or useful information, nothing is to be expected from them but trifling,
lies, ill-natured tricks, or humbugging; for they often borrow the most
venerated names, in order the better to impose upon those with whom they
are in communication.
"It is easy to distinguish between good and bad spirits. The language
of spirits of superior elevation is constantly dignified, noble, characterised
by the highest morality, free from every trace of earthly passion; their
counsels breathe the purest wisdom, and always have our improvement and
the good of mankind for their aim. The communications of spirits of lower
degree, on the contrary, are full of discrepancies, and their language
is often commonplace, and even coarse. If they sometimes say things that
are good and true, they more often make false and absurd statements, prompted
by ignorance or malice. They play upon the credulity of those who interrogate
them, amusing themselves by flattering their vanity, and fooling them with
false hopes. In a word, instructive communications worthy of the name are
only to be obtained in centres of a serious character, whose members are
united, by an intimate communion of thought and desire, in the pursuit
of truth and goodness.
"The moral teaching of the higher spirits may be summed up, like that
of Christ, in the gospel maxim, 'Do unto others as you would that others
should do unto you'; that is to say, do good to all, and wrong no one.
This principle of action furnishes mankind with a rule of conduct of universal
application, from the smallest matters to the greatest.
"They teach us that selfishness, pride, sensuality, are passions which
bring us back towards the animal nature, by attaching us to matter; that
he who, in this lower life, detaches himself froni matter through contempt
of worldly trifles, and through love of the neighbour, brings himself back
towards the spiritual nature; that we should all make ourselves useful,
according to the means which God has placed in our hands for our trial;
that the strong and the powerful owe aid and protection to the weak; and
that he who misuses strength and power to oppress his fellow-creature violates
the law of God. They teach us that in the spirit-workl nothing can be hidden,
and that the hypocrite will there be un-masked, and all his wickedness
unveiled; that the presence, unavoidable and perpetual, of those whom we
have wronged in the earthly life is one of the punishments that await us
in the spirit-world; and that the lower or higher state of spirits gives
rise in that other life to sufferings or to enjoyments unknown to us upon
the earth.
"But they also teach us that there are no unpardonable sins, none
that cannot be efaced by expiation. Man finds the means of accomplishing
this in the different existences which permit him to advance progressively,
and according to his desire and his efforts, towards the perfection that
constitutes his ultimate aim."
Such is the sum of spiritist doctrine, as contained in the teachings given
by spirits of high degree. Let us now consider the objections that are
urged against it.
¹ There is. between this doctrine
of re-incarnation and that of metempsychosis, as held by certain sects,
a characteristic difference, which is explained in the course of the present
work.
² Vide, in connection with the statements of this
paragraph, the qualifying explanations and practical counsels of The Mediums'
Book - TRANS.