200 THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP. and, therefore, I will endeavour to lay it before the reader as fully as is possible. On the Tuesday to which Mr. Street refers, he, Mr. Walker, and one or two other friends had spent the evening with me. They left my house at about 10.30 p.m. Directly they had gone I hurried into bed and endeavoured to follow them in the mental body, in order, if possible, to obtain an unexpected “test” which would enable us all to reply in the negative to the question, “ Was anything of this in your mind at the time?” My intention was to notice one or two things which I could not know in the ordinary way, such as the posi- tions in which they sat, the appearance of the conductor, etc., and to tell them about it when they next visited me. The idea of “controlling” Mr. Walker was of in “ Me’s” brain, and must, I think, be attributed to an afterthought on the part of I.” In noticing the conductor “I” had an experience which I do not desire to have repeated. The con- ductor stood in such a position that had “1” been a physical body “I” could not have passed by him without asking him to step aside, As he did not, of course, see “I,” “1” was compelled to walk through half of him, and, at the same time, half of the door post.