Skip to main content

Psyche

(1)

(2) next ›››

(1)
A JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY AND AL-l- BRANGftES OF PSYCMICAt, SCIENCE.
No. 498. (Vol. 21. No. 3). MAY, 1882. SSce'
Pi’ice 7s. 6d. Crown 8vo. Clpth. Red Edges.
A PHILOSOPHY OF IMMORTALITY.
By , THE nON. RODEN NOEL
Author of* “ A Little Child’s Monument,” etc. ;; ) ^ ^ 1
Tsyche Office, 38, Museum Street, London, W.C.
Crown Svo. Clpth. Gilt. Handsomely Printed in Red and Black Inks.. Price os. 6d., Post Free.
NOW READY,:
A GLANCE AT THE PAISTON PLAY.
By CAPTAIN E. E. BUETON.
The Frontispiece represents the Crucifixion scene of the Passion Play at Oberammorgau. “ ;
THIS WOEH CONTAINS SEVEEAL PAGES ON THE EELIGIOUS ASPECTS OF SPIETTUALISM. ^ .
' Psyche Office, 38, Museum Street, London* W.C.
: ^ Y ; Demy BYo. Cloth. Red Edges. Price 12s. 6d. Post Free.
A ILLUSTRATED PY VARIOUS FULL PAGE AND DOUBLE PAGE ENGRAVINGS.
TRAN 8 0 E N4 E N T A L PHYSIOS,
AN ACCOUNT OF EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS FROM THE SCIENTIFIC TREATISES OF
JOHANN GAEL FEIEDEICH ZOLLNEE,
Professor of Physical Astronomy at the University of Leipsic ; Member of the Royal Saxon Soaiety of Sciences ; Foreign Member of the Royal
Astronomical Society of London: of the Imperial Academy of Natural Philosophers at Moscow; and Honorary Member of the-Physical
Association at Frankfort-on-tbe-Main. ■. . - ■" . - '" . . ■ : , ■ ■■ ' . ' ''' ’
; TEANSbATED; FEOtl THE GEEMAN, WITH A PREFACE AND APPENDICES, BY , '
CHAELE8 CAELETON MASSEY, (of Lincoln’s inn, Barrister-at-Latv.) gl
Psyche Office, 3S, Museum Street, London, W.C.'
A NEW PUBLIC LENDING LIBEAEY.
“THE SPIRITUALIST LIBRARY,”
38, MUSEUM STREET, LONDON, W.C.
Catalogues may ho had on application. Subscription Fifteen Shillings a year, exclusive of the cost of postage of hooks.
Full particulars as to terms will be found in the catalogue. < p : ^ i i.
• ' Just Published^ Price 2s. 6d. Crown Svo. Cloth. Red Edges.
MESMERISM, WITH HINTS FOR BEGINNERS.
By CAPTAIN JOHN JAMES,
(Formerly of the Ninetieth Light Infantry).
A text-book by an Author who has had thirty years' experience in Mesmerism. [/: . . :;v ' \ p
“ Captain James .is, it is needless to say, a very firm believer V . he holds that one of the chief causes of the failure of mesmerists
in the reality and uses of the mesmeric sleep, and he has here ; J Y ;. is, that they give up the trail too quickly, and that they also
thrown together the results of his own experiences, at the request i -; V i mesmerise far too many persons. As to the beneficial results of
of his publisher. We agree with Mr. Harrison that the author , < mesmerism, our author has no doubts whatever, whether as a
has treated the subject exactly in the way in which it,is desirable v , s\v' W cure for epilepsy, headache, toothache, or other ailment; and his
that matters on which the public require information should be '■i < i final advice to the practitioner is, ‘ Call it what you like, but per-
treated; and he tells concisely, and yet fully, many of the ( sistently employ it for the berefit of the sick and suffering',
secrets of what is still regarded in many quarters as a somewhat ? © Even if Captain James fails Jto make converts by his little volume,
dark art. Want of faith is, he argues, the great bar to the pro- V he may at any rate be credited with having written an interesting
gross of what he terms ‘ a just appreciation of the powers and ' > work in a thoroughly pleasant way,”-—The Publisher's Circular.
the blessings to be derived from a proper use of mesmerism,Land J
Psyche Office, 88, Museum-street, London, W.C.-

Images and transcriptions on this page, including medium image downloads, may be used under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence unless otherwise stated. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence