Chapter 9
III. and the Rosicrucian.--An extraordinary Seance in
Paris.--Spectra.--Phosphorus and the Elixir of Life.--The Magic Mirror.--Who was he?--What was it?--The Secret of Perpetual Youth!--The Priest of Fire.--The Magic Slumber.--Strange Revelations.--Confession.--The Magic Pictures.--"And several other Worlds!"--Very curious.--An Astounding Chapter!--Singular Experiment.--"A Man goes in a Cab in search of his own Ghost!"--A Strange Wager.--Mystery thickens.--Deeper and Deeper.--Murder will out.--The Devil in Paris.--Diablerie extraordinary.--"The Saucer on the Floor." What some Folks believe are Spirits!--_An Astounding Disclosure!_--The Grand Secret.--A Theory demolished.--Ravalette explains.--The Sleep, and a Revelation of the Destinies of Nations, a chapter so extraordinary that it alone is worth the price of the whole book. II. TOM CLARK AND HIS WIFE; THEIR DOUBLE DREAMS, AND THE CURIOUS THINGS THAT BEFELL THEM THEREIN. _Being the Third Thousand of the celebrated_ ROSICRUCIAN'S STORY. III. PRE-ADAMITE MAN: Demonstrating Human Existence 100,000 years ago, and that Adam was not the First Man. "When the gude Laird was making Adam, even then the clan Grant was as thick and numerous as the heather on yon hills."--Bailey Grant. Universally conceded by the Press of two countries, to be-- "A remarkable book." "We hail this shot from the Fort of Truth!... Shows that men built cities 35,000 years ago!... Extra valuable volume." "Great grasp of thought!... _Proves_ Adam was _not_ the first man, nor anything like it!... Engrossingly interesting.... Soul-stirring and grand beyond description!" "The Author exhibits a profound reverence for the truths of Scripture, but a still profounder one for Truth herself. Dissent we may to some things, yet on the whole, we commend the work to the favorable attention particularly of the learned world." IV. "DEALINGS WITH THE DEAD." The Human Soul--What it is; whence it came; its location in the body; its passage through death; whither it goes after death; what it does; how it lives! Marriage in the Soul-world! Offspring there! Eating, drinking, sleeping after we are dead! Do Souls occupy space? Does a Soul feel heat, cold, get wet in a storm? What becomes of dead children?--of idiots?--lunatics?--premature births? Heaven! Hell!--their nature and location, with scores of equally important and profound questions, are all answered in this most extraordinary and entirely original volume. V. AN INSIDE VIEW OF SPIRITUALISM. A thorough and complete summing up of the system, showing its true nature and vividly depicting its effects upon the minds, bodies, morals and characters of all its adherents, by one who had a thorough experience of ten years of, and in it. VI. THE ROSICRUCIAN'S STORY. The great Sensation Tale. Embracing the celebrated and quite extraordinary "Miranda Theory." By Dr. P. B. Randolph. N.B. The above two books are especially valuable by reason of the flood of light thrown on the modern phenomena usually attributed to "spirits." VII. IT ISN'T ALL RIGHT; Being an Answer to, and refutation of, the modern doctrine that "Whatever is is right." The book is an eloquent defence of Marriage, and embraces an appeal for the poor prostitute against the villainous wiles of those who make her what she is. Nothing in the language speaks more forcibly for fallen woman than this rare pamphlet. * * * * It is doubtful if any List of Modern Works by a single author can surpass in variety, interest, scope or power, that above presented. The volumes are well worth perusal. All orders for them, or any books published by this house, or any other, will be promptly filled, whether for single copies or in quantities. SINCLAIR TOUSEY. _In addition to the above, will be for sale_, THE CELEBRATED "RODREY" DREAM-BOOK, RE-TRANSLATED, CONDENSED, AND ADAPTED TO MODERN USAGE. This, the largest and most perfect book of the kind in the world, in any language, has been enlarged till it now contains the enormous number of Three Thousand Solutions of Three Thousand Dreams! It is utterly impossible to have any sort of Dream; the interpretation and meaning of which is not contained in this very curious book. It also embraces the famous Persian "Pfal," whereby these Orientals tell their own and each others fortunes by means of the numbers thrown with three dice. As a source of amusement, and instruction too, this book is unsurpassed. End of Project Gutenberg's Tom Clark and His Wife, by Paschal Beverly Randolph
