Chapter 18
C. and her daughter ; none of them attached any
importance to it. However, as a snowstorm broke the telegraph wires on Saturday, the day after the dream, Mrs. Weiss was uneasy. On Tuesday the state of Mrs. C. demanded a doctor. Mrs. Weiss sent a telegram for Mr. C. ; he came at last, went out to bring a doctor, and was long absent. Then Mrs. Weiss suddenly felt a calm certainty that she (though inexperienced in such cares) could do what was needed. " I heard myself say in a peremptory fashion : * Ada, don't be afraid, I know just what to do ; all will go well '." All did go well ; mean- while Mr. C. ran to seven doctors' houses, and at last returned with a young man whom Mrs. Weiss vaguely recognised. Mrs. C. whispered, " Look at the doctor's cravat ". It was blue and coral sprigged, and then first did Mrs. Weiss remember her dream of Friday night.
48 DREAMS AND GHOSTS.
Mrs. Weiss's story is corroborated by Mr. Blan- chard, who heard the story ** a few days after the event". Mrs. C. has read Mrs. Weiss's statement, " and in so far as I can remember it is quite correct ". Mr. C. remembers nothing about it ; " he declares that he has no recollection of it, or oj any matters outside his husinesSy and knowing him as I do," says Mrs. Weiss, "I do not doubt the assertion ".
Mr. C. must be an interesting companion. The nurse remembers that after the birth of the baby Mrs. C. called Mr. C.'s attention to ** the doctor's necktie," and heard her say, ** Why, I know him by mamma's description as the doctor she saw iiij her dreams "}
The only thing even more extraordinary thai the dream is Mr. C.'s inability to remember anything whatever ** outside of his business ". Another wit-| ness appears to decline to be called, "as it woul( be embarrassing to him in his business ". This i1 is to be Anglo-Saxon !
We now turn to a Celtic dream, in which know- ledge supposed to be only known to a dead man] was conveyed to his living daughter.
THE SATIN SLIPPERS.
On 1st February, 1891, Michael Conley, a farmer| living near Ionia, in Chichasow county, Iowa, went to Dubuque, in Iowa, to be medically treated. Hej left at home his son Pat and his daughter Elizabeth,
^Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. xi., p. 522.
OLD CLOTHES. 49
a girl of twenty-eight, a Catholic, in good health. On February 3 Michael was found dead in an out- house near his inn. In his pocket were nine dollars, seventy-five cents, but his clothes, including his shirt, were thought so dirty and worthless that they were thrown away. The body was then dressed in a white shirt, black clothes and satin slippers of a new pattern. Pat Conley was telegraphed for, and arrived at Dubuque on February 4, accompanied by Mr. George Brown, " an intelligent and reliable farmer". Pat took the corpse home in a coffin, and on his arrival Elizabeth fell into a swoon, which lasted for several hours. Her own account of what followed on her recovery may be given in her own words : —
" When they told me that father was dead I felt very sick and bad ; I did not know anything. Then father came to me. He had on a white shirt " (his own was grey), ** and black clothes and slippers. When I came to, I told Pat I had seen father. I asked Pat if he had brought back father's old clothes. He said * No,' and asked me why I wanted them. I told him father said he had sewed a roll of bills inside of his grey shirt, in a pocket made of a piece of my old red dress. I went to sleep, and father came to me again. When I awoke I told Pat he must go and get the clothes" — her father's old clothes.
Pat now telephoned to Mr. Hoffman, Coroner of Dubuque, who found the old clothes in the back yard of the local morgue. They were wrapped up in a bundle. Receiving this news, Pat went to Dubuque on February 9, where Mr. Hoffman opened
4
50 DREAMS AND GHOSTS.
the bundle in Pat's presence. Inside the old grey shirt was found a pocket of red stuff, sewn with a man's long, uneven stitches, and in the pocket notes for thirty-five dollars.
The girl did not see the body in the coffin, but asked about the old clothes, because the figure of her father in her dream wore clothes which she did not recognise as his. To dream in a faint nothing unusual.^
THE DEAD SHOPMAN.
I
Swooning, or slight mental mistiness, is not very unusual in ghost seers. The brother of a friend of my own, a man of letters and wide erudition, was, as a boy, employed in a shop in a town, say Wexing- ton. The overseer was a dark, rather hectic-looking man, who died. Some months afterwards the boy was sent on an errand. He did his business, but, like a boy, returned by a longer and more interesting route. He stopped as a bookseller's shop to stare at the books and pictures, and while doing so felt a kind of mental vagueness. It was just before his dinner hour, and he may have been hungry. On resuming his way, he looked up and found the dead overseer beside him. He had no sense of surprise,.
^ The case was reported in the H^raZ^i (Dubuque) for 12th February, 1891. It was confirmed by Mr. Hoffman, by Mr. George Brown and by Miss Conley, examined by the Rev. Mr. Crum, of Dubuque. — Proceedings, S.P.R., viii., 200-205. Pat Conley, too, corroborated, and had no theory of explanation. That the girl knew beforehand of the dollars is conceivable, but she did not know of the change of clothes.
I
THE SPECTRE'S BOOTS. $1
and walked for some distance, conversing on ordinary topics with the appearance. He happened to notice such a minute detail as that the spectre's boots were laced in an unusual way. At a crossing, something in the street attracted his attention ; he looked away from his companion, and, on turning to resume their talk, saw no more of him. He then walked to the shop, where he mentioned the occurrence to a friend. He has never during a number of years had any such experience again, or suffered the pre- ceding sensation of vagueness.
This, of course, is not a ghost story, but leads up to the old tale of the wraith of Valogne. In this case, two boys had made a covenant, the first who died was to appear to the other. He did appear before news of his death arrived, but after a swoon of his friend's, whose health (like that of Elizabeth Conley) suffered in consequence.
NOTE.
" Perceval Murder." Times, 25th May, 1812.
" A Dumfries paper states that on the night oi Sunday, the loth instant, twenty-four hours before the fatal deed was perpetrated, a report was brought to Bude Kirk, two miles from Annan, that Mr. Perceval was shot on his way to the House of Commons, at the door or in the lobby of that House. This the whole inhabitants of the village are ready to attest, as the report quickly spread and became the topic of conversation. A clergyman investigated the rumour, with the view of tracing it to its source, but without success."
The Times of 2nd June says, " Report without foundation ".
Perth Courier, 28th May, quoting from the Dumfries and Gallo- way Courier, repeats above almost verbatim, "... The clergyman to whom we have alluded, and who allows me to make use of his name, is Mr. Yorstoun, minister of Hoddam. This gentlemari
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DREAMS AND GHOSTS.
went to the spot and carefully investigated the rumour, but has hitherto been successful, although he has obtained the most sat factory proof of its having existed at the time we have mentione We forbear to make any comments on this wonderful circumstanc but should anything further transpire that may tend to throw li^ upon it, we shall not fail to give the public earliest information.^
The Dumfries and Galloway Courier I cannot find I It is not the British Museum.
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