The Revue
Spirite of
1861
Part 6
We continue in
this issue the study
of the Revue
Spirite of
1861, a monthly
newspaper
focused on the
divulgation of
Spiritism,
founded and
directed by
Allan Kardec.
This study is
based on the
translation into
the Portuguese
language made by
Julio Abreu
Filho and
published by
EDICEL. The
answers to the
proposed issues
are at the end
of the text for
reading.
Issues for discussion
A. How to define prayer?
B. Do pure Spirits have wings?
C. What is the perispirit?
Text for reading
92. Commenting on a letter received from Roustaing,
Kardec considers him a serious Spiritist and praises the
statement with which Roustaing ends his letter: "I am
honored to emphatically and in public say that I am a
Spiritist." (Pages 182 and 183)
93. The Revue transcribes a poem entitled "The
Prayer," written by the Spirit of Joly, which defines
prayer as "an impulse of love, of fluidic passion that
escapes from the soul and rises to the Lord". (Pages 184
and 185)
94. "Prayer does not change the Law of the Eternal
Father in any way," says Joly, "but the Father’s heart
showers the one who pleads with His influx”. Kardec
comments that God certainly does not reduce His Laws at
our request; the prayer acts mainly on the one who
prayers, leading him to repentance and to the desire to
repair his errors. (Pages 185 and 186)
95. Commenting on the case of the Marquis de Saint-Paul,
who before his death saw the world he was about to
inhabit, Kardec says that the phenomenon of the early
detachment of the soul is frequent: before dying many
people see the world of the Spirits , and therefore
their regret of leaving this world softens and fills
them with hope. (P. 187)
96. In his last moments the Marquis, was thirsty and
said: "He is thirsty," referring to the physical body
that he could clearly distinguish from the thinking “I”,
which is in the Spirit. (P. 188)
97. Evoked by Kardec, he declared himself to be in a
transitory state, in which the human virtues acquire
their true price. His condition was a thousand times
preferable to that of the earthly incarnation, but his
soul would be satisfied only when he could fly up to the
feet of the Creator, our Father. (P. 188)
98. Kardec evokes the famous “Arithmetic calculator” and
Pastor Henri Mondeux, an illiterate man who from the age
of ten was noted for the prodigious ease with which he
solved the most complicated questions of Arithmetic.
(Pages 188 and 189)
99. Explaining his mission, which astonished the
mathematicians, Mondeux says that his Spirit was
prepared to see the numbers that other Spirits gave him;
he was no more than a medium in giving his answers. (P.
191)
100. Mrs. Anais Gourdon, evoked at the request of her
father and husband, says she is happy in the spiritual
world. "Heaven does not frighten me", she says, "and I
hope that the white wings will grow on me with
confidence and love". Kardec, strangely aware of such
ideas, claims that the wings of angels, archangels, and
seraphim are an attribute imagined by men. (P. 192)
101. Pure spirits, however, may appear to men with this
accessory to correspond to their imagination, as other
Spirits take on the appearance they had on Earth to
become known. (P. 192)
102. Kardec, in reporting on the death of Mr.
Laferriere, says that if one were to make a statistic of
the causes which lead to brain breakdowns, one would see
that despair accounts for at least 80% of occurrences.
(P. 194)
103. The press reported that Mr. Laferriere had
religious feelings; however, these feelings did not stop
him from giving in to despair; this might have been
prevented if he had more knowledge about the future,
such as those offered by Spiritism, which proves the
real non-existence of death. (P. 194)
104. The suicide of Mr. Léon L ..., 25 years old, a bus
driver, who did not bear the death of his wife, made a
strong impression on the region where he was highly
esteemed. He killed himself to join his wife, a mistake
that would have been avoided if Leon had learned from
Spiritism the fate of the suicides. (P. 195)
105. Kardec mentions a fact in which the communication
of the husband's Spirit made his ex-wife drop her desire
to revenge on the doctor, who she considered to be
responsible for her husband’s death, due to malpractice.
(Pages 195 and 196)
106. Erastus urges the Spiritists: "Go and preach the
divine word". (P. 197)
107. In the same message, Erastus teaches how to
recognize the Spiritists who are on the right path.
(Pages 198 and 199)
108. One Spirit says that boredom does not affect those
who live by the Spirit and whose faculties tend toward a
certain goal. Boredom, he says, results only from the
emptiness of the soul and the poorness of thought. (P.
199)
109. Lamennais says that the words lack color and form
to express the perispirit and its nature, but one thing
is certain: the perispirit is the material fluidic
envelope of the soul. (P. 201)
110. The perispirit, says Lamennais, is for the Spirits
the agent through whom they communicate with us, either
indirectly or directly. (P. 202) (Continued on next
issue).
Answers to the issues
A. How to define prayer?
In a poem called "A Prayer," Joly (Spirit) defines
prayer as "an impulse of love, of fluidic passion that
escapes from the soul and rises to the Lord". "Prayer
does nothing to change the law of the Eternal Father,"
says Joly, "but the Father’s heart showers with His
infusion the one who begs God". Kardec comments on the
subject stating that God certainly does not derogate
from His Laws at our request, but prayer acts primarily
on the individual who prays, leading him to repentance
and to the desire to repair his errors. (Revue
Spirite, 1861, pages 184 to186).
B. Do pure Spirits have wings?
No. Commenting on a message from the Spirit of Anais
Gourdon, evoked at the request of her father and
husband, Kardec clarifies that the wings of angels,
archangels, and seraphim are no more than an imagined
attribute of men. Pure spirits can, however, appear to
men with this accessory, to respond to their thinking,
as other Spirits take on the appearance they had on
Earth to become known. (Ibid, p. 192)
C. What is the perispirit?
Lamennais says that the words lack color and form to
express the perispirit and its nature, but one thing is
certain: the perispirit is the material fluidic envelope
of the soul. The perispirit is for Spirits, says
Lamennais, the agent through whom they communicate with
us, either indirectly or directly. (Ibid, pages 201 and
202)