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Thus the account we give may be partial, but still
such as it is it is very consistent and of
extraordinary interest, since it refers to our own
destiny and that of those we love. All agree that life
beyond is for a limited period, after which they pass
on to yet other phases, but apparently there is more
communication between these phases than there is
between us and Spiritland. The lower cannot ascend,
but the higher can descend at will. The life has a
close analogy to that of this world at it its best. It
is pre-eminently a life of the mind, as this is of the
body. Preoccupations of food, money, lust, pain,
etc., are of the body and are gone. Music, the Arts,
intellectual and spiritual knowledge, and progress have
increased. The people are clothed, as one would
expect, since there is no reason why modesty should
disappear with our new forms. These new forms are the
absolute reproduction of the old ones at their best,
the young growing up and the old reverting until all
come to the normal. People live in communities, as one
would expect if like attracts like, and the male spirit
still finds his true mate though there is no sexuality
in the grosser sense and no childbirth. Since
connections still endure, and those in the same state
of development keep abreast, one would expect that
nations are still roughly divided from each other,
though language is no longer a bar, since thought has
become a medium of conversation. How close is the
connection between kindred souls over there is shown by
the way in which Myers, Gurney and Roden Noel, all
friends and co-workers on earth, sent messages together
through Mrs. Holland, who knew none of them, each
message being characteristic to those who knew the
men in life--or the way in which Professor Verrall and
Professor Butcher, both famous Greek scholars,
collaborated to produce the Greek problem which has
been analysed by Mr. Gerald Balfour in The Ear of
Dionysius, with the result that that excellent
authority testified that the effect COULD have been
attained by no other entities, save only Verrall and
Butcher. It may be remarked in passing that these and
other examples show clearly either that the spirits
have the use of an excellent reference library or else
that they have memories which produce something like
omniscience. No human memory could possibly carry all
the exact quotations which occur in such communications
as The Ear of Dionysius.
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