Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- PREFACE
- I AN ANSWER TO THE ARGUMENTS OF HUME, LECKY, AND OTHERS AGAINST MIRACLES
- II THE SCIENTIFIC ASPECT OF THE SUPERNATURAL—
- 1 Introductory
- 2 Miracles and Modern Science
- 3 Modern Miracles viewed as Natural Phenomena
- 4 Od-Force, Animal Magnetism, and Clairvoyance
- 5 The Evidence of the Reality of, Apparitions
- 6 Modern Spiritualism: Evidence of Men of Science
- 7 Evidence of Literary and Professional Men to the Facts of Modern Spiritualism
- 8 The Theory of Spiritualism
- 9 The Moral Teachings of Spiritualism
- 10 Notes of Personal Evidence
- III A DEFENCE OF MODERN SPIRITUALISM
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
7 - Evidence of Literary and Professional Men to the Facts of Modern Spiritualism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- PREFACE
- I AN ANSWER TO THE ARGUMENTS OF HUME, LECKY, AND OTHERS AGAINST MIRACLES
- II THE SCIENTIFIC ASPECT OF THE SUPERNATURAL—
- 1 Introductory
- 2 Miracles and Modern Science
- 3 Modern Miracles viewed as Natural Phenomena
- 4 Od-Force, Animal Magnetism, and Clairvoyance
- 5 The Evidence of the Reality of, Apparitions
- 6 Modern Spiritualism: Evidence of Men of Science
- 7 Evidence of Literary and Professional Men to the Facts of Modern Spiritualism
- 8 The Theory of Spiritualism
- 9 The Moral Teachings of Spiritualism
- 10 Notes of Personal Evidence
- III A DEFENCE OF MODERN SPIRITUALISM
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
Summary
T. Adolphus Trollope was educated at Oxford, and is the well-known author off numerous works of high excellence in the departments of travels, fiction, biography, and history. In 1855 he wrote a letter to Mr. Rymer, of Ealing, which was published in the Morning Advertiser, and is reproduced in “Incidents of my Life,” 2nd ed., p. 252, in which he shows the inaccuracy and unfairness of Sir David Brewster's account of phenomena occurring in the presence of both, at Mr. Rymer's house, and concludes with these words: “I should not, my dear sir, do all that duty, I think, requires of me, in this case, were I to conclude without stating very solemnly, that after very many opportunities of witnessing and investigating the phenomena caused by, or happening to Mr. Home, I am wholly convinced, that be what may their origin, and cause, and nature, they are not produced by any fraud, machinery, juggling, illusion, or trickery, on his part.” Again in a letter to the Athenœum, eight years later (dated Florence, March 21, 1863) he says, “I have been present at very many ‘sittings’ of Mr. Home in England, many in my own house in Florence, some in the house of a friend in Florence.… My testimony then is this: I have seen and felt physical facts, wholly and utterly inexplicable, as I believe, by any known and generally received physical laws.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- On Miracles and Modern SpiritualismThree Essays, pp. 91 - 99Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1875