The Humbugs of the World P. T. Barnum (ebook reader for comics txt) đ
- Author: P. T. Barnum
Book online «The Humbugs of the World P. T. Barnum (ebook reader for comics txt) đ». Author P. T. Barnum
It is scarcely necessary to make comments on such horrible nonsense as this. I may recur to the subject in future, should it appear expedient. At present I must drop the subject of female men.
At the head of the âMessage Departmentâ is a standing advertisement, which reads as follows:
âOur free circles are held at No. 158 Washington Street, Room No. 4 (upstairs,) on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday afternoons. The circle-room will be open for visitors at two oâclock; services commence at precisely three oâclock, after which time no one will be admitted. Donations solicited.â
On the days and at the hour mentioned in the above advertisement, quite an audience assembles to hear the messages Mrs. C. may have to deliver. If a stranger present should request a message from one of his spirit-friends, he would be told that a large number ofspirits were seeking to communicate through that âinstrument,â and each must await his turn! Having read obituary notices in the files of old newspapers, and the published list of those recently killed in battle, the medium has data for any number of âmessages.â She talks in the style that she imagines the person whom she attempts to personate would use, being one of the doctrines of spiritualism that a personâs character and feelings are not changed by death. To make the humbug more complete, she narrates imaginary incidents, asserting them to have occurred in the Earth-experience of the spirit who purports to have possession of her at the same time she is speaking. Mediums in various parts of the country furnish her with the names of and facts relative to different deceased people of their acquaintance, and those names and facts are used by her in supplying the âMessage Departmentâ of the Banner of Light.
If the assumed âmediumshipâ of this woman was not an imposture, some of the many people who have visited her for the purpose of getting communications from their spirit-friends would have been gratified. In most of the âmessagesâ published in the Banner, the spirits purporting to give them, express a great desire to have their mortal friends receive them; but those mortals who seek to obtain through Mrs. Conant satisfactory messages from their spirit-friends, are not gratifiedâ âthe medium not being posted. The mediums are as much opposed to ânew testsâ as a noncommittal politician.
Time and again have leading spiritualists, in various parts of the country, endorsed as âspiritual manifestations,â what was subsequently proved to be an imposture.
Several years ago, a man by the name of Paine created a great sensation in Worcester, MA, by causing a table to move âwithout contact,â he claiming that it was done by spirits through his âmediumship.â He subsequently came to New York, and exhibited the âmanifestationâ at the house of a spiritualistâ âwhere he boardedâ âin the upper part of the city. A great many spiritualists and not a few âskepticsâ went to see his performance. Paine was a very soft-spoken, âgood sort of a fellow,â and appeared to be quite sincere in his claims to âmediumship.â He received no fee from those who witnessed his exhibition; and that fact, in connection with others, tended to disarm people of suspicion. His sĂ©ances were held in the evening, and each visitor was received by him at the door, and immediately conducted to a seat next the wall of the room.
The visitors all in and seated, Mr. Paine took a seat with the rest in the âcircle.â In the middle of the room a small table had previously been placed, and the gas had been turned partly off, leaving just enough light to make objects look ghostly.
In order to get âharmonized,â singing was indulged in for a short time by members of the âcircle.â Soon a number of raps would be heard in the direction of the table, and one side of that piece of furniture would be seen to rise about an inch from the floor. Some very naturally wanted to rush to the table and investigate the matter more closely, but Paine forbade thatâ âthe necessary âconditionsâ must be observed, he said, or there would be no further manifestation of spirit-power. As there was no one nearer to the table than six or eight feet, the fact of its moving, very naturally astonished the skeptics present. Several âseeing mediumsâ who attended Mr. Paineâs sĂ©ances, were able to see the spiritsâ âso they declaredâ âwho moved the table. One was described as a âbig Injun,â who cut various capers, and appeared to be much delighted with the turn of affairs. Believers were wonderfully well-pleased to know that at last a medium was âdevelopedâ through whom the inhabitants of another world could manifest their presence to mortals in such a way that no one could gainsay the fact. The âinvisiblesâ freely responded, by raps on the table, to various questions asked by those in the âcircle.â They thumped time to lively tunes, and seemed to have a decidedly good time of it in their particular way. When the sĂ©ance was concluded, Mr. Paine freely permitted an examination of his table.
In the Sunday Spiritual Conferences, then held in Clinton Hall, leading spiritualists gave an account of the âmanifestations of the spiritsâ through Mr. Paine, and, as believers, congratulated themselves upon the existence of such âindubitable facts.â The spiritualist in whose house this exhibition of table-moving âwithout contactâ took place, was well known as a man of strict honesty; and it was reasonably presumed that no mechanical contrivance could be used without his cognizance, in thus moving a piece of his furnitureâ âfor the table belonged to himâ âand that he would countenance a deception was out of the question.
There were in the city three gentlemen who had, for some time, been known as spiritualists; but they were, at the period of Paineâs debut as a medium in New York, very skeptical with regard to âphysical manifestations.â They had, a short time before, detected the Davenports and other professed mediums in the practice
Comments (0)