Frederick Bligh Bond
The Gate of Remembrance
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Table of contents
PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
NOTE
GLASTONBURY
PART I THE LOST CHAPEL
THE LOST CHAPEL
DISCOVERY OF THE EDGAR CHAPEL, GLASTONBURY ABBEY:
PRINCIPLES AND METHODS OF PSYCHOLOGY APPLIED TO ARCHÆOLOGICAL RESEARCH
ON AUTOMATISM
SOME NOTES ON THE SCRIPT AND ITS PUBLICATION
NARRATIVE OF THE WRITINGS
PART II THE CHILD OF NATURE
THE CHILD OF NATURE
THE STORY OF EAWULF
PART III THE LORETTO CHAPEL
THE LORETTO CHAPEL
THE LORETTO CHAPEL
CONCLUSION
ENVOI
FOOTNOTES:
PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION
Two
problems in the script have engaged the serious attention of critics.
The first and simpler of the two is that which is involved in the
language and literary form of the messages. This is a curious
patchwork of Low Latin, Middle English of mixed periods, and Modern
English of varied style and diction. It is a mosaic of multi-coloured
fragments cemented together in a strangely random fashion. This
anomaly is the more remarkable from the contrast it presents to the
sustained and consistent burden of the script itself, which, as
though in obedience to some preordained intention and settled plan,
seems to proceed to the presentment, line by line, of a completed
whole, with absolute patience and indifference to interruptions.
Lapse of time seems of no account. After a break of several hours,
the thread is resumed at the point where it had been dropped. The
unfinished communications about the Loretto Chapel in 1911 are picked
up and spontaneously completed five years later. Nevertheless, the
queer patchwork of language is again evident.For
this fact, the following explanation is offered. It will easily be
conceded that whatever the source or inspiring influence of these
messages, the language in which they are conveyed is the
mechanical side
of the matter, the most assuredly conventional element in the process
of transmission. But the obvious instruments are the brains of F.B.B.
and J.A. The reasoning and reflective faculties are at the time in
abeyance or are otherwise engaged,[1]
their attention being entirely diverted: but the storehouse of
memories and subconscious impressions latent within are being used,
and quite independently used, though concurrently in point of time
with the normal use of the thinking faculties on a wholly different
subject.Consider
for a moment the human brain as the repository of all impressions
made on the mind from childhood upwards. Thus viewed, it becomes, as
it were, an encyclopedia of all knowledge which the conscious mind
has stored, each item recording an idea of a certain quality, in such
language as circumstances may at the time have dictated. Suppose
then—and it is not difficult to do so—that each of these records
is responsive to the impulse of an Idea which is seeking expression,
and whose instrument of expression is some sort of sympathetic
vibration attuned to the original thought which recorded the
particular memory or subject. The sympathetic vibration lays hold of
the denser or physical particles of the record, causing them to
respond and to emit their own proper voice.In
other words, the language of the script would be simply the product
of the reaction of our brain-records to the sympathetic vibration of
Idea, from whatever source arising.Not
that such conditions are always necessary or possible. There are, for
example, many quite well-authenticated cases of automatic writing in
which not only the idea conveyed is outside the consciousness of the
writer, but the language itself is entirely unknown to him, or to
her, as the case may be. Take, for example, the many recorded cases
of automatic writing in languages unknown to the medium, and
sometimes requiring special scholarship to appreciate. The
explanation seems in this case to be that the mind of the medium is
plastic to a more direct spiritual influence which can therefore
mould its particles and create a new record for itself. This must
have been so in the Gift of Tongues at the Pentecost, and later in
the history of the Primitive Church.The
second problem noted by critics is a more difficult one. It concerns
the intelligent source of the messages. As to this, I have propounded
the view of a Greater Memory transcending, and interpenetrating our
own. This theory is suggestive rather than explanatory. It does not,
and cannot, explain many things which in our present state of
knowledge are inexplicable. Neither does it pretend to cover the
whole ground. It is, as I say, merely suggestive. Its virtue is that
it excludes no other possible agencies, hence leaving room not only
for the exercise of transcendental faculty, such as clairvoyance, but
for any variety of
primary
impulse, and for any number or degree of directive agencies capable
of employing it.For
as we are obliged by our own experience to acknowledge that our own
latent memory is revived and brought out in these scripts by some
intelligence working apart from our conscious minds; and to admit
that telepathy between two is involved: so we are also bound to allow
the possible presence of a further range of telepathic action working
through our minds in the production of these messages. And if we are
prepared to agree on the one hand that whereas the physical brain
dissolves at death and its action ceases, yet, on the other hand,
that a more inward and less material brain, the organ and vehicle of
the subconscious or intuitive self, still persists and survives
entirely the death of the physical body, and if we consider this more
inward brain as composed of finer particles, responsive to the far
more rapid movements of intuitive thought, then we shall have to
allow that the memory-record of any defunct personality, if capable
of response
to the same stimulus of spiritual Will and Idea which canactuate our
own,
can be drawn upon in like manner by the energising Intelligence, and
again, as in our own case,
without evoking the conscious "spirit" or personality
proper to it.
This is surely the meaning of Johannes when he says (p. 95):"Why
cling I to that which is not? It is I, and it is not I, butt part of
me which dwelleth in the past, and is bound to that which my carnal
soul loved and called 'home' these many years. Yet I, Johannes, amm
of many partes, and ye better part doeth other things—Laus, laus
Deo!—only that part which remembreth clingeth like memory to what
it seeth yet."Thus
it seems to me the problem of personality, in the sense of the
conscious personal presence of individuals deceased, need not arise
at all in connection with these writings. All that it seems vital to
assume is the union of the deeper strata of our own latent mind or
dream-consciousness with others of a kindred nature and tone, by
virtue of their sympathetic and accordant motion in the presence of a
greater and all-inclusive spiritual essence, Idea, or Will,
omnipresent and all-permeating, waking into activity all dormant
memory-records, and directing them into any channel of mind which by
previous preparation on the conscious plane has become receptive and
retentive of them.Still
small Voices from a distant Time!—thrilling through the void and
stirring faint resonances within the deeps of our own being—the
great Telepathy, the true Communion of Mind, the gate of the
Knowledge, the Gnosis of the apostle, whose key is Mental Sympathy,
the key that the lawyers took away, neither entering themselves, nor
suffering others to enter.No
discord can mar this communion, since love and understanding are its
law. Death cannot touch it: rather is he Keeper of the Gate. Time, as
we know it, here counts for naught, for to the deeper
dream-consciousness, a day may be as a thousand years, and a period
of trance or sleeping as one tick of the clock.
NOTE
By
SIR WILLIAM BARRETT, F.R.S.As
some readers of this remarkable book have thought it too incredible
to be a record of fact, but rather deemed it a work of imagination,
it may be useful to add my testimony to that given in the book as to
the genuineness of the whole narrative.The
author has, I am sure, with scrupulous fidelity and care, presented
an accurate record of the scripts obtained through the automatic
writing of his friend, together with all the archæological knowledge
of the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey that was accessible before the
excavations were begun. In order to remove any doubt on this point,
before further excavations were made, Mr. Bligh Bond has wisely asked
representatives of certain societies to examine the later scripts
which refer to the Loretto Chapel, note their contents, and see how
far the further excavations may or may not verify any of the
statements made in the later scripts.From
any point of view the present book is of great interest. To the
student of psychology, who ignores any supernormal acquisition of
knowledge and yet accepts the good faith of the author, the problem
presents many difficulties. Chance coincidence may be suggested, but
this does not carry us far. The question therefore arises, where did
the veridical or truth-telling information given in some of these
scripts come from? As is so often the case in automatic writing a
dramatic form is taken, and messages purport to come from different
deceased people. The subconscious or subliminal self of the
automatist, doubtless, is the source of much contained in the
scripts, and may possibly be responsible for all the insight shown.
But in that case we must confer upon the subconsciousness of the
automatist faculties hitherto unrecognised by official science. The
author has pointed out, on p. 156, some of the powers the
subconscious mind must be assumed to possess; to these we may add a
possible telepathic transfer of information between the author and
the automatist, and also occasionally the faculty of
clairvoyance,
or a transcendental perceptive power; for, according to the
investigations of the author, some of the statements made in the
script were unknown to any living person, and not found in historical
records, prior to their verification in subsequent excavation. We
must, however, be on our guard against the too facile use of words
such as "telepathy" and "subliminal consciousness"
as a cloak to our ignorance. The history of physical science shows
how progress has often been retarded by the use of phrases to account
for obscure phenomena—words such as "Phlogiston,"
"Catalysis," etc., which explained nothing, and now are
ridiculed, but which were once used by scientific authorities as
unquestionable axioms. It is wiser to acknowledge our ignorance and
convey our thanks to the author and his friend for the patient and
laborious care with which they have furnished valuable material for
future psychological explanation. Nor must we omit to recognise the
courage shown by Mr. Bligh Bond in the publication of a work which
might possibly jeopardise the high reputation he enjoys.
GLASTONBURY
Grey
among the meadows, solitary, bare:Thy
walls dismantled, and thy rafters low,Naked
to every wind and chilly airThat
steeps the neighbouring marsh, yet standest thou,Great
cloistral monument of other days!Though
marked by all the storms that beat thee through,A
radiant Parable of heavenly waysThat
scarce thy lordly builders guess'd or knew!Vanishing
image of great service done,Smiling
to God under the open sky:Even
in thy translation, stone by stone,Keeping
thy spirit-grace and symmetry,Through
ruined clerestory and broken roodOur
chastened souls with tears ascend to God.A.
M. Buckton: from
Songs of Joy"Even
so ye, forasmuch as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts, seek that ye
may excel to the edifying of the church."Wherefore
let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue pray that he may
interpret."For
if I pray in an unknown tongue, my spirit prayeth, but my
understanding is unfruitful."What
is it then? I will pray with the spirit and I will pray with the
understanding also."I
Cor. xiv. 12-15.
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!