An Essay Towards a Theory of Apparitions |
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Page 17
... wit and elegance , which never had any real existence , and of which , to his utter mortification , he cannot recollect a single line , next morning ; and then the Bibliomane pur- chases illuminated manuscripts THEORY OF APPARITIONS . 17.
... wit and elegance , which never had any real existence , and of which , to his utter mortification , he cannot recollect a single line , next morning ; and then the Bibliomane pur- chases illuminated manuscripts THEORY OF APPARITIONS . 17.
Page 33
... never could obtain any other account , than that they were small , very much deformed , and had horns and claws , like the imps of our terrific modern romances . I have been forced to listen with much gravity , to a man partially insane ...
... never could obtain any other account , than that they were small , very much deformed , and had horns and claws , like the imps of our terrific modern romances . I have been forced to listen with much gravity , to a man partially insane ...
Page 36
... never be sufficiently stated , unless written in " the liquor wherewith witches use to " write their covenants ; and that he " who becomes an author at such a time , had need be fenced with iron , " and the staff of a spear . " 66 ...
... never be sufficiently stated , unless written in " the liquor wherewith witches use to " write their covenants ; and that he " who becomes an author at such a time , had need be fenced with iron , " and the staff of a spear . " 66 ...
Page 53
... never of an unpleasant " turn . At different times there appeared " to me both dear and sensible friends of " both sexes , whose addresses tended to 66 66 66 66 appease my grief , which had not yet wholly subsided : these consolatory ...
... never of an unpleasant " turn . At different times there appeared " to me both dear and sensible friends of " both sexes , whose addresses tended to 66 66 66 66 appease my grief , which had not yet wholly subsided : these consolatory ...
Page 56
... never produced so marvellous a story . Cardan , however , describes himself as amused , in his youth , with recollected images , similar to those which I have described , in the first chapter . Before he left his bed , in the morning ...
... never produced so marvellous a story . Cardan , however , describes himself as amused , in his youth , with recollected images , similar to those which I have described , in the first chapter . Before he left his bed , in the morning ...
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Common terms and phrases
66 appeared Achtermaunshohe affrighted afterwards albæ appa Arise Evans Armagh attended Baronius Beaumont's beheld Bezuel blood body Broken Caen called Cardan castle chamber Charles VII clouds coloured curious demons deposeth Desfontaines door dreadful drowned extraordinary eyes Ficinus figures forms frequently ghosts Guion hand Harz Harz mountains head heard horrible horror imagination incubis inquit insanity instance instar Jurat length light looked ments Mercato mind modum morning mountains nature never night nihil noise o'clock objects observed occasion Pancrates perceived persons phantasms pheno physician Pordage Portnedown Bridge produced qu'elle quæ Quarrè reader recollected images repeated rition Saumur Scotland second-sighted seemed seen Seers servants shew sion sleep sometimes Sortoville spectral delusions spectral impressions spectre spirit or vision supernatural Susannah Martin tasms terror THEORY OF APPARITIONS tion told unto vanished voice walked WARRINGTON window witchcraft YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
Popular passages
Page 13 - Achtcrmannshohe, a human figure of a monstrous size. A violent gust of wind having almost carried away my hat, I clapped my hand to it by moving my arm towards my head, and the colossal figure did the same.
Page 14 - ... compliments by bending their bodies as we did; after which they vanished. We retained our position, kept our eyes fixed on the same spot, and in a little time the two figures again stood before us, and were joined by a third. Every movement that we made by bending our bodies, these figures imitated, but with this difference, that the phenomenon was sometimes weak and faint, sometimes strong and well defined.
Page 39 - I opened my eyes. I conversed sometimes with my physician and my wife of the phantasms which at the moment surrounded me ; they appeared more frequently walking than at rest, nor were they constantly present. They frequently did not come for some time, but always reappeared for a longer or shorter period, either singly or in company, the latter, however, being most frequently the case.
Page 41 - ... short, and never of an unpleasant turn. At different times there appeared to me both dear and sensible friends of both sexes, whose addresses tended to appease my grief, which had not yet wholly subsided : their consolatory speeches were in general addressed to me when I was alone. Sometimes, however, I was accosted by these consoling friends while I was engaged in company, and not unfrequently while real persons were speaking to me.
Page 46 - Camden, he saw in a vision his eldest son (then a child and at London) appear unto him with the Mark of a bloody cross on his forehead as if it had been cutted with a sword...
Page 36 - I might preserve a clear consciousness of the changes which should take place within myself; I observed these phantasms very closely, and frequently reflected on my antecedent thoughts to discover, if possible, by means of what association of ideas exactly these forms presented themselves to my imagination. I thought at times I had found a clue, but taking the whole together, I could not make out any natural...
Page 22 - ... at him, and very much hurt him, with a blow on the side of the head: and that on the same day, about noon, the same shape walked in the room where he was, and an apple strangely flew out of his hand, into the lap of his mother, six or eight foot from him.