The Book of Dreams and Ghosts by Andrew Lang
page 58 of 279 (20%)
page 58 of 279 (20%)
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fashioned red sofa covered with muslin, which she found in the next
country house she visited. Miss Baillie's brother, a young athlete (at short odds for the amateur golf championship), laughed at these experiments, took the ball into the study, and came back looking "gey gash". He admitted that he had seen a vision, somebody he knew "under a lamp". He would discover during the week whether he saw right or not. This was at 5.30 on a Sunday afternoon. On Tuesday, Mr. Baillie was at a dance in a town some forty miles from his home, and met a Miss Preston. "On Sunday," he said, "about half-past five you were sitting under a standard lamp in a dress I never saw you wear, a blue blouse with lace over the shoulders, pouring out tea for a man in blue serge, whose back was towards me, so that I only saw the tip of his moustache." "Why, the blinds must have been up," said Miss Preston. "I was at Dulby," said Mr. Baillie, as he undeniably was. {60a} This is not a difficult exercise in belief. Miss Preston was not unlikely to be at tea at tea-time. Nor is the following very hard. THE COW WITH THE BELL I had given a glass ball to the wife of a friend, whose visions proved so startling and on one occasion so unholy that she ceased to make experiments. One day my friend's secretary, a young student and golfer, took up the ball. |
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