I  picked up the 1921 edition of this book second hand - largely because 
of the author.
William T. Stead was one of the greatest newspaper 
editors ever. He invented things that today we take for granted - such 
as a headline in a bigger typeface than the story and sending reporters 
to go to interview people. And he died a hero's death when the Titanic 
went down in 1912. So when I saw this in a second hand bookshop in Hay 
on Wye, I pounced. 
The title is, in fact, rather misleading as 
only a very few of the incidents recounted here are about ghosts. It is 
really about the supernatural more generally. Given the date this was 
written, Stead uses different vocabulary to describe the things he is 
talking about. We would refer to Crisis Apparitions, Out Of Body 
Experiences, ESP, Remote Viewing, Near Death Experiences and so forth. 
To Stead these are all "ghosts" as they are beyond the normal and I 
suppose he did not really know what else to call them. 
Although 
it is nowhere stated, this book reads very much as if it is a 
compilation of articles that were published in Stead's newspaper at 
intervals over the years - most of them date to about 1870 - 1895, 
though there are a few earlier incidents. So what you have here is a 
compilation of true incidents that Stead obviously made considerable 
effort to track down and get eye witness accounts about. He is also keen
 to emphasise that the eye witnesses are all sober and respectable 
persons - including a good smattering of clergymen - so as to avoid 
suspicious that we are dealing with a bunch of uneducated drunks. But 
that is all this is - a compilation of anecdotes. There is no real 
effort made to analyse the incidents. 
A very interesting book that includes dozens of incidents that I had never heard of before.
£1 well spent!
         
Monday, 1 June 2020
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