
A curious anthology arrives, claiming to capture the thoughts of long‑deceased greats as they speak through a trance‑bound medium. The editor explains that a gifted clairvoyant acted as a conduit, allowing the spirits of poets, philosophers, scientists and statesmen to dictate their reflections on everything from art and religion to politics and the nature of the afterlife.
Readers hear familiar voices—Byron, Hawthorne, Humboldt, Brontë, Poe and many others—each rendered in a style that hints at their original brilliance while exploring new, otherworldly concerns. The collection weaves together satire, prophecy, lyrical musings and earnest commentary, offering a kaleidoscope of perspectives that feel both oddly intimate and startlingly strange.
Presented as a series of original papers, the work invites listeners to contemplate what might lie beyond our mortal realm, encouraging a playful yet thoughtful engagement with the possibility that the dead still have stories to tell.
Full title
Strange Visitors A series of original papers, embracing philosophy, science, government, religion, poetry, art, fiction, satire, humor, narrative, and prophecy, by the spirits of Irving, Willis, Thackeray, Brontë, Richter, Byron, Humboldt, Hawthorne, Wesley, Browning, and others now dwelling in the spirit world; dictated through a clairvoyant, while in an abnormal or trance state
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (329K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-08-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
A little-known writer linked to the imaginative collection Strange Visitors, blending mystery, suspense, and science-fiction ideas into short fiction. Very little biographical information appears to be readily available, which gives the work an added air of obscurity.
View all books
by Andrew B. (Andreas Bernardus) Smolnikar

by Mary T. (Mary Theresa) Longley

by Margaret Cameron

by Sara Weiss

by C. (Charles) Hammond

by Frederick Bligh Bond