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THE BEGINNINGS OF SEERSHIP

Vincent N. Turvey

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INTRODUCTION. 53
and is apparently fully conscious, normal, and in no way entranced.
Thus “‘*I’ went to Mr. Brown's house in Bedford, and ‘Me’ described to Mr. Jones what ‘I’ saw there,” may be taken to mean that, while Mr. Jones was talking to me in my house at Bournemouth, a part of my consciousness seemed to be able to function in Mr. Brown's house at Bedford, and in some way or other I was able to tell Mr. Jones what Mr. Brown was doing, at the same time as that part of my consciousness was, in some partially embodied form, apparently walking about Mr. Brown's house.
At the time of writing, that is to say, so far as I have developed as a seer, the differences which I experience between the three phases of Clairvoyance are as follows—
In plain, long-distance Clairvoyance I appear to see through a tunnel which is cut through all intervening physical objects, such as towns, forests and mountains. This tunnel seems to terminate just inside Mr. Brown's study, for instance, and I can oxfy see what is actually there, and am not able to walk about the house, or use any other faculty but that of sight. In fact, it is almost like extended physical sight on a flat earth void of obstacles.
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