My Library

cookies are null

THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP

Vincent N. Turvey

Page118 Tempo:
<<<117 List Books Page >>>119
116 THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP.
following, at our hall, to the audience and “chance it.” Directly I had finished doing so, a lady rose in the audience and acknowledged that the description was correct, and the inci- dent true in every detail. He wasa “squatter” on the next “station” to her husband’s, One of her servants had been bitten by a snake, and she had had to ride for a doctor. To save time she had trespassed on his land, and had jumped the gate. When she returned she saw him, and explained her reasons, “and made things square.”
The above is signed for as “recognized” in my note-book. I have no proof that it was a Visttant, beyond my own statement. The lady was a visitor to Bournemouth and a per- fect stranger to me at the time.
The next incident is so explicitly set forth in the following letter, that words from me would be superfluous—
(No. 19.) Bournemouth, Feb, 12, 1908. DEAR MR. TURVEY,
In reply to yours of yesterday's date referring to my visit on Sunday afternoon last, I willingly bear witness to the fact you mention, viz. that on Sunday last, between 4 and § p.m. you described to me (but not for me) the spirit of a
<<<117 List Books Page >>>119

© 2026 Lehal.net