A man is wise when he
seeks wisdom, he is mad when he thinks he has found it. (Talmud).
The greatest ignorance is the one
that does not know and believes to know, because it gives rise to all the
mistakes that we make with our intelligence. (Socrates).
One white crow is enough to prove
that not all are black. (LOEFFLER).
INTRODUCTION
– The favorite thesis of Quevedo and "Co. Limited" is that no person can know,
through any psychic means, what happened in a range of up to 200 years. Although
we searched for this thought on the internet, we were not successful in finding
it. However, we got it from another parapsychologist, who thinks exactly the
same as the mentioned “parapsycatholic”:
[…] Parapsychology, a science that
studies this phenomenon and many others carried out by the unconscious, has
experimentally proven us that our unconscious knows the past (retrocognition),
the present (simulcognition) and the future (precognition) of someone
(telepathy) or history (clairvoyance), in a range of up to 200 years.
(SAMPAIO, 2006, Internet.)
Interesting is that this "has proven
us" cannot be found anywhere. Therefore, we ask: where are the researches to
prove this? If they exist, was the one who made them free from religious
prejudices? Finally, there are many questions and we cannot find the right
answers. But who knows if this proof cannot be found in the "unconscious" of
some parapsychologist?
But as "a white crow is enough to
prove that not all are black", we are going to present the following case, which
we copy from the book Region in Litigation between this world and the other,
by Robert Dale Owen:
MANIFESTATION OF A FAVORITE
MUSICIAN OF THE KING OF FRANCE
– On not so distant days, when Paris - considered the center of civilization and
intended to be the most joyful and brilliant of the capitals of the world, in
1865 – a man lived there, a respectable gentle man, who I believe still lives
there and who had inherited from his ancestors the musical gift.
Mr. N. G. Bach, then sixty-seven
years old, was the great-grandson of the celebrated Sebastian Bach, who became
known in the first half of the eighteenth century. Although his health was
somewhat delicate, he was, at the time referred to, in the full enjoyment of his
mental faculties, a diligent composer and liked by his art colleagues for both
his professional talents and his honesty and kindness.
On May 4, 1865, the son of Mr. N.
Bach, Leon Bach, an old-fashioned gentleman, found among the curiosities of a
used stuff store in Paris an apparently very ancient spinet (musical
instrument), but of remarkable beauty and perfection, and still in good
conditions. It was made of oak, ornamented with delicate carvings of fine
arabesques, encrusted with turquoise and gold fleur de Lys. It was evident that
it had belonged to some rich and distinct person; the merchant, however, only
knew that it had recently been brought from Italy by the person who sold it to
him.
Imagining that his father would be
very pleased with it, the young man bought it. He was right. Mr. Bach, who
shared his son's taste for the relics of the past, was pleased with the new
acquisition and spent most of the day admiring it, listening to its sounds and
examining its mechanism. It was five feet long and two feet wide; it had no
feet, but was enclosed in a wooden box that protected it, like a violin. To play
it, the spinet was placed on a table. Despite the cost of its decoration,
it was small, compared to those manufactured today with a wonderful power and
superb shades. In its general work, however, it resembled those of today, and
the small keyboard was set in the same order; but the keys, when played, moved a
piece of wood of the thickness of a woman's finger, each equipped with a point
meant to hit the corresponding rope. As for the quality of the sound, we can
easily imagine it.
Before the end of the day, Mr. Bach
made a discovery which, for him, compensated for the imperfections noted in the
instrument, and he seemed to distinguish something written on the narrow strip
of wood that supported the plank, only. Fixed on this strip, there were two
easels that separated it from the mentioned board and hid part of what was
written on it. However, moving the instrument into a convenient position and
giving it a very lively light, one could read the following: ln Rome Antonins
Nobilis; then came one of the easels and then: Brena Medislani Patrice;
and then the other easel: Diexiy Aprillis 1564. Undoubtedly, these words
were written before the construction of the instrument.
This was how Mr. Bach knew that his
spinet was more than three hundred years old; and it was made in Rome in
the year 1564 by a certain Anconeos Nobilis, apparently from the suburbs of
Milan, and is likely to have been completed on April 14 of that year. The
instrument had thus an indication of the place where it had been made and the
name of the manufacturer. This, in the eyes of antique dealers, as with
paleontologists, greatly increases the value of a relic.
Very happy, the old gentleman went to
sleep and, of course, dreamed of his son's gift. But this dream had some weird.
In it a handsome young stranger appeared, with a beard carefully combed and
dressed elegantly, in the fashion of the old French court: a rich doublet with a
broad collar and the tight, battered sleeves at the top; wide shorts, long
stockings and low entry shoes with tope. The tall, pointed, broad-brimmed hat
was adorned with a white feather. This young man, bowing and smiling, went up to
Mr. Bach's bed and said to him: "The spinet you have today belonged to me, it
served me to please or entertain my master, King Henry. In his youth, he
composed an aria that he liked to sing, accompanied by me, and whose lyrics were
written in memory of a lady whom he loved very much and of whom, with great
regret, he was separated. This lady died, and in his moments of sadness, he used
to sing this aria".
After a while, this strange visitor
continued: "I will play it and will find a way for you to remember it, since you
have a poor memory”. He sat down beside the spinet, and accompanied the words he
himself sang. The old man awoke crying, touched by the sadness of the singer.
Lighting a candle, he found that it
was two o'clock. Thinking about the dream and imagining he was still listening
to the mournful melody of that song, he began to sleep again.
There is nothing remarkable about all
this. If something happened to Mr. Bach before he awoke the next morning, he
could not remember it when he opened his eyes already full day. But then he
found, with great astonishment, a piece of paper on the bed, on the top of which
were written in ancient characters: Words of King Henry III. His
astonishment grew as he studied the writing more closely. It was a rare
archaeological specimen: the notes were small, the keys similar to those used
once, in a careful and old-fashioned writing, appearing in another point the
Gothic type, noted in certain letters, in the manuscripts of the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries ; a spelling very similar to that used three hundred
years ago.
Glancing through the first few notes,
he recognized the music he had heard in a dream. Then he noticed the words in
the corner: they were the same. He sat down at the piano and was convinced, with
no doubt, that it was exactly the song and verses that the visitor in his dream
had sung accompanied by the spinet.
At first he was puzzled, disturbed,
and even frightened. What did all this mean? When he awoke at night, he had not
given great importance to the dream itself, though it was lively and remarkable.
But what was that? Paying attention to the paper found on the bed, he saw that
it was the fourth page of a music sheet, on which he had written the first two
pages on the previous day when he wrote a song of his composition, which he had
left on his working table. Could someone have taken it away during the night?
But who was this person who had filled two blank pages with that mysterious song
of a past time? Someone had been there…
Was it he himself? But he was not a
somnambulist; it was not known that he had ever walked through the house or
wrote in his sleep. e did not believHe did
not believe and did not know about Spiritism; therefore, there was no
possibility of even thinking that it could be a spiritual message. He was
confused and bewildered, especially after he noticed the coincidence of names
and dates. The man, who appeared in his dream, had spoken of his master, King
Henry; at the top of the page on which the song was written, it was written
that the handwriting was of Henry III; the spinet had been built in 1564, when
Henry, then Duke of Anju, was fourteen years old. Was it not possible that he
had found this instrument a few years later, in his trip to Rome to the court of
France, and brought it with him, considering that History says he was a musical
composer of some merit?
Mr. Bach spoke of these wonders to
his friends, who went on telling the story to others, and very soon a crowd of
curious, literary, artists, antiques and others flocked to the well-known
musician's quarters in order to hear from his own mouth the story and look, with
their own eyes, at the marvelous spinet. Among these visitors were some
committed Spiritists, and it was then that for the first time Mr. Bach heard of
scribbling mediums and learned that his hand might have been guided to write in
his sleep.
All this, though very unusual and
strange to confirm his belief, made him think; and one day, three or four weeks
after the dream, feeling his head heavy and a kind of a nervous shiver in his
arm, he thought that perhaps some Spirit wished to write through him, in order
to thereby give him any explanation of the mystery he could not explain. As soon
as he held the pencil and paper, he lost consciousness of himself, and in that
state the hand wrote in French: "King Henry, my master, who gave me the spinet,
which belongs to you today, wrote four lines on a piece of paper and he made me
fix it on the box on the morning he sent me the instrument. A few years later,
when I had to travel and took the spinet with me, fearing to lose the paper, I
took it out and for safety I placed it in a small opening, to the left of the
keyboard, where it can still be found. “This communication was signed by
Baldazzarini. After it were the following lines:
“King Henry gives this beautiful
spinet
to Baldazzarini, an excellent
musician.
If it is not good, if it is
believed to be very simple,
may this gift be kept at least as
a remembrance”.
After all, there was some probability
of obtaining tangible evidence in relation to these mysteries. There was a test
to be made to find out whether Baldazzarini was a myth or a real character, able
to clarify the facts in question.
To satisfy the public’s curiosity,
the spinet was exposed for a few days in the Retrospective Museum of the Palace
of Industry; and it was during this time that the communication was written.
Immediately, they sent for it.
Imagine the nervous yearning father
and son were feeling awaiting for its arrival to confirm if the story of the
paper written by the king's own hand and hidden in an opening in the instrument
box, was a novel or reality.
For an hour or two, Mr. Bach says,
they explored every corner of the old instrument, finding nothing. Then, when
all hope seemed lost, Leon Bach, rereading what his father's hand had written,
proposed that they should carefully disassemble the instrument without disabling
it. When they had removed the keyboard and removed some hammers, they discovered
underneath and on the left side a narrow crevice in the wood, in which was
hidden a strip of parchment of eleven or twelve inches in length by two quarters
of width, on which one could see written, with a firm hand, four lines similar
to those that Mr. Bach's hand had drawn; but the newly found lines had the
handwritten signature of Henry. They cleaned it as best as they could, and then
they were able to read:
"I, King Henry the Third, offer
this spinet
to Baltazzarini, my esteemed
musician,
if he finds it poor in tone, or of
small value,
may he keep it in its box and may
I be remembered,
Henry”.
It is difficult, to translate in
simple words the emotion of the exalted researchers when, finally, they took
out from the secret hiding place, discolored by time and covered in the dust of
centuries, this silent witness. The father, when he saw this, was aware that the
warning that had led him to make this discovery was both his own and the pen
that had written it. When he awoke from the trance, during which he had written,
he read it as if it were written by a strange person. However, in substance,
what was written was real and the proof of the evidence was there!
The differences that appear in what
was obtained by Mr. Bach and what is read on the parchment are insignificant.
There you see: Le Roy Henry; here: Moy le roy Henry trois; There:
très bon musicien, here gay musicien; there: si elle n'est bonne;
and here: s'il dit mal sone; there: pas assez coquette, and here:
ou bien (ma) moule simplette; and so on.
The meaning is the same.
Astonished as they were, I doubt it
had occurred to them, as it happens to me that the evidence thus obtained is
much stronger, much more convincing, because, since the two blocks are
substantially identical in form, one is not a copy of the other. In the third
verse of the parchment block, the word (ma) is inserted, which was not
understood at first, but was later perfectly explained. When Mr. Bach
showed the original parchment to the friend from whom I obtained this story, he
said to him: "No one understood the meaning of the word ma in quotation
marks, which is seen there, but one day my hand again involuntarily moved and
wrote: "My friend, the king liked to tease me because of my French
accent, for I always said ma rather than more. That is why he
wrote thus. "It is a simple observation that the Italian, speaking French or
Portuguese, says ma instead of more. The original parchment,
blackened by age, was taken by Mr. Bach to the Imperial Library (if the Grand
Library of France is still called like this), and was compared there with the
original manuscripts. In these it was noted that Henry's handwriting did not
have a constant type; but as regards the signature, the concordance of the
parchment with the others was perfect, as Mr. Bach said. The examination of the
antiquaries came to the same conclusion.
The little holes that were seen along
the edges of the parchment indicated that it had been nailed to a wooden
surface, as the communication had said; on the lines written on the parchment
was a red cross; it is also an additional proof of authenticity, for it is a
sign of devotion which always appears in all the writings of Henry III, which
have come to us.
(Continued on next
issue.)
References:
OWEN, R. D. Region in
Litigation between this world and the other, Rio de Janeiro: FEB, 1982.
SAMPAIO, L. F.,
jornal do leitor, accessed on 06/30/2006 at 2:32 p.m.