
Scanned by Dianne Bean of Phoenix, Arizona.
THE UNKNOWN GUEST - CHAPTER I. PHANTASMS OF THE LIVING AND THE DEAD
CHAPTER II. PSYCHOMETRY
CHAPTER III. THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE FUTURE
A meticulous scholar sets out to map the shadowy border between ordinary experience and the uncanny. Beginning with a personal meditation on death, he expands his inquiry to cover everything from fleeting apparitions and haunted houses to eerie premonitions, omens and the curious “psychometric” sensations that seem to bridge mind and matter. Drawing on three decades of investigations by the Society for Psychical Research, the work assembles a surprisingly orderly catalogue of phenomena that have long been dismissed as folklore or illusion.
The author’s tone is sober and exacting, refusing sensationalism while acknowledging the limits of current science. By sorting the extraordinary into clear categories, he invites readers to see these events not as miracles or tricks, but as data points that hint at a deeper, still‑unexplored layer of reality. Listeners will find a thoughtful, historically grounded portrait of humanity’s ongoing fascination with the unknown, presented with the rigor of a true early‑20th‑century inquiry.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (338K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2000-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1862–1949
A quiet, dreamlike voice in European literature, this Belgian writer helped shape Symbolist drama and won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1911. His plays and essays often turn simple images—silence, fate, light, bees, blue birds—into something haunting and memorable.
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