[63] Annales des Sciences Psychiques, vol. iii. pp. 257-267.

[64] Dr. Latour's brother, house-surgeon at the hospital.

[65] See No. 23, chap. iv.

[66] Miss X.'s notes have been in some cases slightly abbreviated, in order to save space. Full details of the experiments will be found in Proc. S.P.R., vol. vi. pp. 377-397.

[67] Miss X. kindly submitted her diaries for inspection to Mrs. Sidgwick, who has carefully examined them.

[68] Excluding two in which the distance was only a few yards.

[69] A familiar name given to Miss G. by Mr. and Mrs. Kirk.

[70] Mr. Kirk explains later that this dog had been lost six years before. They had all been much attached to him, and his loss was still an occasional topic of conversation and of dreams by Mr. Kirk.

[71] Of the Proceedings of the S.P.R., published by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, & Co., three or four parts are published yearly. The Journal, which appears monthly, contains a record of recent cases of interest, unaccompanied, for the most part, by any critical commentary, and is privately printed for circulation amongst members and associates of the Society. Any reader, however, desirous of studying the subject may procure any number of the Journal referred to in this book on application at the Rooms of the S.P.R., 19 Buckingham St., Adelphi, W.C. Of the foreign periodicals referred to in the text, perhaps the most important is the Annales des Sciences Psychiques, edited by Dr. Dariex, and published by Germer Baillière et Cie., Paris. Cases of interest are also to be found in Sphinx, a German periodical, to be obtained through Kegan Paul & Co.; in the Revue Spirite (Paris: 24 Rue des Petits-Champs); and elsewhere.

[72] Professor C. Lloyd Morgan in Mind, 1887, p. 282.