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The Unknown Guest By Maurice Maeterlinck Translated by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos Methuen & Co., Ltd. 36 Essex Street, W.C. London 1914 TRANSLATOR'S NOTE Of
the five essays in this volume, The Knowledge of the Future has appeared in the
Cosmopolitan Magazine, of New York, The Elberfeld Horses in the Metropolitan
Magazine of the same city, and The Unknown Guest in Harper's Magazine. The remainder
have not, at this present date, been published elsewhere.
A. T. DE M.
Chelsea, June 20, 1914 INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I. PHANTASMS OF THE LIVING AND THE DEAD CHAPTER II. PSYCHOMETRY CHAPTER III. THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE FUTURE CHAPTER IV. THE ELBERFELD HORSES CHAPTER V. THE UNKNOWN GUEST My
Essay on Death1 led me to make a conscientious enquiry into
the present position of the great mystery, an enquiry which I have endeavoured
to render as complete as possible. I had hoped that a single volume would be
able to contain the result of these investigations, which, I may say at once,
will teach nothing to those who have been over the same ground and which have
nothing to recommend them except their sincerity, their impartiality and a
certain scrupulous accuracy. But, as I proceeded, I saw the field widening under
my feet, so much so that I have been obliged to divide my work into two almost
equal parts. The first is now published and is a brief study of veridical
apparitions and hallucinations and haunted houses, or, if you will, the
phantasms of the living and the dead; of those manifestations which have been
oddly and not very appropriately described as "psychometric"; of the
knowledge of the future: presentiments, omens, premonitions, precognitions and
the rest; and lastly of the Elberfeld horses. In the second, which will be
published later, I shall treat of the miracles of Lourdes and other places, the
phenomena of so called materialization, of the divining-rod and of fluidic
asepsis, not unmindful withal of a diamond dust of the miraculous that hangs
over the greater marvels in that strange atmosphere into which we are about to
pass. 2 When
I speak of the present position of the mystery, I of course do not mean the
mystery of life, its end and its beginnings, nor yet the great riddle of the
universe which lies about us. In this sense, all is mystery, and, as I have
said elsewhere, is likely always to remain so; nor is it probable that we shall
ever touch any point of even the utmost borders of knowledge or certainty. It
is here a question of that which, in the midst of this recognized and usual
mystery, the familiar mystery of which we are almost oblivious, suddenly
disturbs the regular course of our general ignorance. In themselves, these
facts which strike us as supernatural are no more so than the others; possibly
they are rarer, or, to be more accurate, less frequently or less easily
observed. In any case, their deep-seated cause, while being probably neither
more remote nor more difficult access, seem to lie hidden in an unknown region
less often visited by our science, which after all is but a reassuring and
conciliatory expression of our ignorance. Today, thanks to the labours of the
Society for Psychical Research and a host of other seekers, we are able to
approach these phenomena as a whole with a certain confidence. Leaving the
realm of legend, of after-dinner stories, old wives' tales, illusions and
exaggerations, we find ourselves at last on circumscribed but fairly safe
ground. This does not mean that there are no other supernatural phenomena
besides those collected in the publications of the society in question and in a
few of the more weighty reviews which have adopted the same methods.
Notwithstanding all their diligence, which for over thirty years has been
ransacking the obscure corners of our planet, it is inevitable that a good many
things escape their notice, besides which the rigour of their investigations
makes them reject three fourths of those which are brought before them. But we
may say that the twenty-six volumes of the society is Proceedings and
the fifteen or sixteen volumes of its Journal, together with the
twenty-three annuals of the Annales des Sciences Psychiques, to mention
only this one periodical of signal excellence, embrace for the moment the whole
field of the extraordinary and offer some instances of all the abnormal
manifestations of the inexplicable. We are henceforth able to classify them, to
divide and subdivide them into general, species and varieties. This is not
much, you may say; but it is thus that every science begins and furthermore
that many a one ends. We have therefore sufficient evidence, facts that can
scarcely be disputed, to enable us to consult them profitably, to recognize
whither they lead, to form some idea of their general character and perhaps to
trace their sole source by gradually removing the weeds and rubbish which for
so many hundreds and thousands of years have hidden it from our eyes. 3 Truth
to tell, these supernatural manifestations seem less marvelous and less
fantastic than they did some centuries ago; and we are at first a little
disappointed. One would think that even the mysterious has its ups and downs
and remains subject to the caprices of some strange extra mundane fashion; or
perhaps, to be more exact, it is evident that the majority of those legendary
miracles could not withstand the rigorous scrutiny of our day. Those which
emerge triumphant from the test and defy our less credulous and more
penetrating vision are all the more worthy of holding our attention. They are
not the last survivals of the riddle, for this continues to exist in its
entirety and grows greater in proportion as we throw light upon it; but we can
perhaps see in them the supreme or else the first efforts of a force which does
not appear to reside wholly in our sphere. They suggest blows struck from
without by an Unknown even more unknown than that which we think we know, an
Unknown which is not that of the universe, not that which we have gradually
made into an inoffensive and amiable Unknown, even as we have made the universe
a son of province of the earth, but a stranger arriving from another world, an
unexpected visitor who comes in a rather sinister way to trouble the
comfortable quiet in which we were slumbering, rocked by the firm and watchful
hand of orthodox science. 4 Let
us first be content to enumerate them. We shall find that we have
table-turning, with its raps; the movements and transportations of inanimate
objects without contact; luminous phenomena; lucidite, or clairvoyance;
veridical apparitions or hallucinations; haunted houses; bilocations and so
forth; communications with the dead; the divining-rod; the miraculous cures of
Lourdes and elsewhere; fluidic asepsis; and lastly the famous thinking animals
of Elberfeld and Mannheim. These, if I be not mistaken, after eliminating all
that is in, sufficiently attested, constitute the residue or caput mortuum
of this latter-day miracle. Everybody
has heard of table-turning, which may be called the A B C of occult science. It
is so common and so easily produced that the Society for Psychical Research has
not thought it necessary to devote special attention to the subject. I need
hardly add that we must take count only of movements or "raps"
obtained without the hands touching the table, so as to remove every
possibility of fraud or unconscious complicity. To obtain these movements it is
enough, but it is also indispensable that those who form the "chain"
should include a person endowed with mediumistic faculties. I repeat, the
experiment is within the reach of any one who cares to try it under the
requisite conditions; and it is as incontestable as the polarization of light
or as crystallization by means of electric currents. In
the same group may be placed the movement and transportation of objects without
contact, the touches of spirit hands, the luminous phenomena and
materialization. Like table-turning, they demand the presence of a medium. I
need not observe that we here find ourselves in the happy hunting-ground of the
impostor and that even the most powerful mediums, those possessing the most
genuine and undeniable gifts, such as the celebrated Eusapia Paladino, are upon
occasion — and the occasion occurs but too often — incorrigible cheats. But,
when we have made every allowance for fraud, there nevertheless remains a
considerable number of incidents so rigorously attested that we most needs
accept them or else abandon all human certainty. The
case is not quite the same with levitation and the wonders performed, so
travelers tell us, by certain Indian jugglers. Though the prolonged burial of a
living being is very nearly proved and can doubtless be physiologically
explained, there are many other tricks on which we have so far no authoritative
pronouncement. I will not speak of the "mango-tree" and the "basket-trick,"
which are mere conjuring; but the "fire-walk" and the famous
"rope-climbing trick" remain more of a mystery. The
fire-walk, or walk on red-hot bricks or glowing coals, is a sort of religious
ceremony practiced in the Indies, in some of the Polynesian islands, in
Mauritius and elsewhere. As the result of incantations uttered by the high
priest, the bare feet of the faithful who follow him upon the bed of burning
pebbles or brands seem to become almost insensible to the touch of fire. Travelers
are anything but agreed whether the heat of the surface traversed is really
intolerable, whether the extraordinary power of endurance is explained by the
thickness of the horny substance which protects the soles of the natives' feet,
whether the feet are burnt or whether the skin remains untouched; and, under
present conditions, the question is too uncertain to make it worth while to
linger over it. "Rope-climbing"
is more extraordinary. The juggler takes his stand in an open space, far from
any tree or house. He is accompanied by a child; and his only impedimenta
are a bundle of ropes and an old canvas sack. The juggler throws one end of the
rope up in the air; and the rope, as though drawn by an invisible hook, uncoils
and rises straight into the sky until the end disappears; and, soon after,
there come tumbling from the blue two arms, two legs, a head and so on, all of
which the wizard picks up and crams into the sack. He next utters a few magic
words over it and opens it; and the child steps out, bowing and smiling to the
spectators. This
is the usual form taken by this particular sorcery. It is pretty rare and seems
to be practised only by one sect which originated in the North-West Provinces.
It has not yet perhaps been sufficiently investigated to take its place among
the evidence mentioned show. If it were really as I have described, it could
hardly be explained save by some strange hallucinatory power emanating from the
juggler or illusionist, who influences the audience by suggestion and makes it see
what he wishes. In that case the suggestion or hallucination covers a very
extensive area. In point of fact, onlookers, Europeans, on the balconies of
houses at some distance from the crowd of natives, have been known to
experience the same influence. This would be one of the most curious
manifestations of that "unknown guest" of which we shall speak again
later when, after enumerating its acts and deeds, we try to investigate and
note down the eccentricities of its character. Levitation
in the proper sense of the word, that is to say, the raising, without contact,
and floating of an inanimate object or even of a person, might possibly be due
to the same hallucinatory power; but hitherto the instances have not been
sufficiently numerous or authentic to allow us to draw any conclusions. Also we
shall meet with it again when we come to the chapter treating of the
materializations of which it forms part.
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