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Ere long they came into the rich valley of Furness; and he made her notice the difference between it and the vale of Esk and Duddon, with its dreary waste of sullen moss and unfruitful solitudes. "Those old Cistercian monks that built Furness Abbey knew how to choose a bit of good land, Charlotte. Eh? What?" "I suppose so. What did they do with it?" "Let it out."

About forty seconds elapse. Mr. Sellers: Are they seated at two tables? Mr. The information we receive through these responses is of little importance to us compared with the information which we must obtain as to whether these sounds are produced by a disembodied Spirit or by some living person; that is, in deference to the Medium. Mr. Furness is understood to assent. Mr. We have the sounds here.

PHILADA., November 6th, 1884. The Committee reconvened this day, at 8 o'clock P.M., at the residence of Mr. H.H. Furness, when the investigation of the Spirit Rappings, in the presence of Mrs. Margaret Fox Kane as Medium, was resumed. The persons present were the following: Of the Committee Dr. Leidy, Mr. Furness, Dr. Koenig, Mr. Fullerton, Mr.

Furness here read to the Committee the following: Before Dr. Slade came to Philadelphia to meet this Commission, I was told by a valued Correspondent, an eminent Spiritualist, that much of Dr. Slade's success in Spiritual manifestations would depend on the way in which he was treated, and that he should be met in a cordial, friendly spirit. As this was but natural, and as Dr.

The Medium: No, not to-night, for it takes quite a little while before we feel those things. Mr. Furness: Do these raps always have that vibratory sound tr-rut tr-rut tr-rut? The Medium: Sometimes they vary. Mr. Furness: As a general rule I have heard them sound so. The Medium: Every rap has a different sound. For instance, when the Spirit of Mr.

The stoppage of the line had caused some confusion, and the usher, who had followed it, now came up to ascertain the cause. "This is my old pupil, or rather I should say, my young pupil; but the best pupil I ever had. I am most delighted to see him, sir," said Furness, taking off his hat. "May I presume to ask who has the charge of this dear child at this present moment?"

"With joy we draw water from the wells of salvation," and before the other had replied, it was at this moment, that Christ, as Dr. Furness very reasonably conjectures, took up the response in his own person, and overwhelmed attention by that memorable declaration, "If any man thirst, let him come to me and drink; and from within him shall flow rivers of living water."

The Medium farther explained that her understanding of the second communication was that it was a translation of the Latin contained in the first. The glass tumblers are here again produced and the Medium takes her position upon them, with Mr. Fullerton standing next to her upon the right and Mr. Furness to the left. Mr.

God! do I not love it, my England? Yet not my England yet. Till she proclaim it herself, I am not hers. I will make her mine. I will write as no man has ever written about her, for very love of her. I look out to-night from my narrow window and think how the moonlight falls on Tintern, on Glastonbury, on Furness. How it falls on the primrose I would not pluck.

"I gladly avail myself of the pleasure of your company, sir." As the reader is well aware that Furness was an intemperate man, it is not surprising that he accepted the offer; and before the second glass was finished, the ale and brandy had begun to have the effect, and he had become very communicative.