182 THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP. PREDICTIONS OF THE KING'S DEATH. Weymouth, May 11, rgto. SIR, On April 22 last, while spending the after- noon with a friend at Bournemouth, I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Vincent N. Turvey. After much interesting conversation and while I was telling him a strange story of my losing and recovering a ring, Mr. Turvey interrupted me by saying (afrepos of nothing, apparently), “The King will die soo#.” I finished my story, but carefully remembered his remark, interjected in so peculiar a manner and with such emphasis. This may be of interest to some of your readers, and it is doubly so to me, asa fulfilled prophecy occurring in a fortnight to the day, Yours, etc., C. S. B, (COLONEL). The following letter appeared in ZLigh¢ for June 25, 1910. The headline is a little mis- leading, for the letter concerns ¢iree prophetic pictures at least, viz. one concerning the Spanish King and a bomb, one concerning an ordinary Channel collision between two vessels, and one concerning a collision be- tween a vessel and a sunken object. The writers refer chiefly to the “two pictures on