Comparing projection with the confusion and disorder of a dream, he says: "One is quite normal and rational. Consciousness is not only self-evident, but enlarged, reasoning faculties are rendered more acute, there is no delusion about it.... One is never more clear-minded and intelligent than when projected." That seems to be the unvarying experience of every projector, once the emotions are controlled or dismissed from the consciousness. Here are two projections from accidents. A friend of Sylvan Muldoon was driving a sleigh, when, the horses shying at the report of a gun, he was thrown out on his head. He was at once fully conscious, and astonished to see his body lying motionless by the side of the road, and the man who had fired the shot running towards him. He then remembered no more till he came to himself as he lay on the ground, to find the hunter kneeling beside him trying to bring him round. Only then did he realize that he had left his body, and could not understand how there could be a duplicate of himself. The other case is furnished by Professor Denton, who quotes the statement of a labourer who fell from the scaffolding of a building. "As I struck the ground," he said, "I suddenly bounded up, as though I had a new body; and I was standing among the spectators looking at my old one. I saw them trying to bring it to, and I only managed to enter it after several fruitless efforts." On August 21st, 1941, Air-Commodore Goddard broadcast the stories of two R.A.F. pilots who crashed, one on land, the other in the Channel, and, coming out of their bodies, watched, in one case the efforts of onlookers to salvage what was left of him from the 'plane, and, in the other, his own