The Unknown Guest by Maurice Maeterlinck
page 30 of 211 (14%)
page 30 of 211 (14%)
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"Not at all; he is not thinking of it." And, seeking her words as though to express an unaccustomed and obscure thought, she added: "I don't know why he is so much interested; it is not like him. He has no particular passion for horses. He has some lofty idea which I can't quite discover. . . ." She made two rather curious mistakes in this experiment. The first was that, at the time when she saw me in Krall's stable-yard, I was no longer there. She had received her vision just in the interval of a few hours between two visits. Experience shows, however, that this is a usual error among psychometers. They do not, properly speaking, see the action at the very moment of its performance, but rather the customary and familiar action, the principal thing that preoccupies either the person about whom they are being consulted or the person consulting them. They frequently go astray in time. There is not, therefore, necessarily any simultaneity between the action and the vision; and it is well never to take their statements in this respect literally. The other mistake referred to our dress: Krall and I were in ordinary town clothes, whereas she saw us in those long coats which stable-lads wear when grooming their horses. Let us now make every allowance for my wife's unconscious suggestions: she knew that I was at Elberfeld and that I should |
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