Philosophic
Encyclopedia
In the Land of the
Living Dead
by Prentiss Tucker
Chapter IX
An Experience With
Nature Spirits
   In a kind of waking dream passed the next few months of Jimmie's life,  a
life  made very busy by the demands of his work and tinctured by  a  curious
feeling that something was soon to happen, a feeling of uneasiness, of waiting,
of suspense.   He wrote to Louise regularly and received answers which were
apparently satisfactory,  to judge by the number of times that he  read and
re-read each letter.   In his "sleep life,"  which was becoming more and more
distinct and real, he was developing rapidly.
   Every  night  he slipped the cable and soared out into  the  great  world
which lies unseen about us,  and every time he did so he was more deeply
impressed  with the wondrous exaltation which the "atmosphere"  of that  world
produces.
   Much of this,  of course it is impossible to describe for the reason that it
is not to be communicated by language, much less by the printed word.   I can
think of only one way in which my meaning can be made clear to those who read
this little story.   Did you ever have a very vivid dream in which  you went
through  some  most  delightful  experience or adventure?  Can you not
remember,  in a faint and very imperfect way, the wonderful "atmosphere"  of
that fairy country which you dreamed you visited?   Can you not recall  how,
when you tried to describe your dream, your words were so very cold and
colorless?   Can you not remember that the great thing which made you so
enthusiastic about that dream was not so much the adventure itself as it was
the strange, wonderful, tingling glamour of the thing?  Glamour is not the
right word but,  as I said, there is no word in our language to hint at,  far
less to describe,  the strange, exhilarated feeling which one has in that
beautiful country.  It is a feeling which must be experienced to be realized.
It can never be portrayed to one who has never felt it.   A man born blind  can
listen to your words of description of the beauty of color and the  splendor of
the sunset,  but to him your words mean nothing.  You speak of a "riot of
color" when you have in mind some wonderful exhibition of atmospheric coloring
in the western sky as the sun sinks to rest.
   The  blind man knows what a riot is and he has an academic idea  of  what
color is, but of the combination, which is so clear in your mind, he has and
can have no conception whatever.
   So, to those of us who are not able to visit those glorious regions,  the
description of them seems cold.  And, what is more unfortunate,  the actions
which are based upon familiarity with  those  regions  and  their  laws seem
foolish.
   It is but another verification of the Biblical statement that "the wisdom of
God is foolishness to men."   We are yet so steeped in selfishness,  even those
of us who most pride ourselves upon our unselfishness,  that when  we come
face  to  face with real wisdom we are like the man  in  the  Bible,
"speechless."
   The  morning  and  evening exercises given to him by  the  Elder  Brother
Jimmie  kept  up faithfully,  for he had now come to see the  philosophy  of
them,  and he felt ever more and more their tremendous effect.   He had long
ago quit smoking and meat eating.  These departures of his were a never ending
source of wonder to his comrades, who could not understand why any  sane person
should quit eating meat except, possibly,  to cure rheumatism,  while the
giving  up  of tobacco could be accounted for by only  one  word,
"fanaticism."
   He liked to attend church,  not only for the strong spiritual  vibrations
which were present in the church, but also to practice reading the colors in
the  various  auras.   The minister of the church to which he  usually  went
thought that his sermons were the main attraction and took Jimmie's  regular
attendance as, in part, a compliment to himself.  But Jimmie knew,  as every
esotericist  knows,  that  on  Sunday the vibrations all  over  the  land  are
different and vastly better than on week days.  Jimmie had  in  some  of his
excursions visited foreign lands and had watched their various religious
rites, and he was in a position to compare the vibration there to the
vibrations which were prevalent over his own country on a Sunday.  The
tremendous contrast impressed upon him the fact that the western world is on the
eve  of something "different."
   As  the time passed on in work and drill,  in various social  activities,
and  in  his more and more absorbingly interesting esoteric  development,  the
terrible  Russian debacle began to feature more and more in the news of  the
day and in the thoughts and words of men.   Something of it Jimmie was  able to
watch at times when he made excursions during his sleeping hours.  But he was
hampered greatly by the fact that he had not as yet learned how to leave his
body consciously,  and so he was not in the full possession of choice as to
where his wanderings would lead him.  Generally if he made up  his  mind
strongly  before he went to sleep,  he could determine the locality  of  his
visit,  but to do this required interest in it and as on the occasions  when he
had visited the country of the former Czar he had not been able to understand a
single thing which he had heard, this interest was more or less mild when
compared with the intense longing to spend his time on the battle  line with
his old comrades,  now and then helping one of them across to the other side of
death.
   The  question which will occur to many at this time,  a perfectly  normal
question,  is this:   Why did not Jimmie use his newly found power to  visit
Louise, since he was really in love with her and corresponded with her?
   The reason was a twofold one.  In the first place,  Jimmie came of gentle
people and his boyhood training had been such that it would have been
impossible for him to have used any esoteric power to spy upon his sweetheart.
The other reason,  which would have operated had the first not been his
guiding impulse,  was the warning which Mr. Campion had strongly impressed upon
him that  the esoteric law will not permit the use of esoteric power for any
motive of curiosity or selfishness.
   When any one is developing the ability to see on the other planes and  to
travel in "foreign countries,"  he must have practice, and to that end he is
allowed to watch the auras and the play of auric colors about strangers;  he is
allowed to travel and examine distant lands and to watch people and their lives
but  only to do so for the purpose of study and practice.   Abuse  of spiritual
power brings its own peculiar and terrible punishment.   But aside from  any
dread of punishment it would have been utterly foreign and  abhorrent  to
Jimmie's nature to have attempted to spy upon his sweetheart.   The idea never
occurred to him, for he was, above and beyond all else, a gentleman.
   The  one  remaining way of honorably communicating with her  by  means  of
sending out a call on the higher planes he had promised not to do, since she
was busy all the time and her sleep was taken when she could get it  instead of
at regular intervals.   Had he called her she would have come,  but  the call
might have been sounded just at a time when her attention  was  needed for
some  critical operation — it might,  possibly,  have cost a  life.   So Jimmie
had promised,  and being a gentleman,  he loyally kept that  promise. Therefore
his only means of communication was by the same post  upon  which all the rest
of American sweethearts had to depend.
   But no such rule applied in the case of Marjorie.  In that case he was at
liberty to call when he got upon the other side,  and in a very little while
Marjorie would come dancing up,  full of gaiety and happiness,  and the  two
would embark upon a long "glide," sometimes half around the world.
   It  was Marjorie who introduced him to the nature spirits with  whom  she
was a prime favorite,  and Jimmie made the acquaintance of the elves and the
brownies  and even the fairies themselves.  He learned that there  are  many
more  tribes of these strange creatures,  some of whom avoid man as much  as
possible while some are actively hostile to him.
   As a rule,  those whom he met in his wanderings were gentle,  timid folk, or
gentle even if not timid.  He grew to be very  fond  of  the  brownies in
particular,  whom he could always meet in out of the way  forest  countries. He
loved to talk and play with them, and they grew to love him too, for they are
of a rather affectionate nature but distrustful of men, since the vibrations of
the average man are very coarse and unpleasant to a being of sensitive nature.
   The  fairies were harder to know,  but with the help of Marjorie he  made
many  friends among them,  who used to visit him sometimes when he  was  out
alone in the woods.
   This  phase of his extraphysical life was full of adventure and was  like
one  long fairy story,  but I am mentioning it now for a single purpose  and
that is to show what a tremendous dynamo of energy is the human will.
   Jimmie had few holidays, but once in a while he was able to get away from
the camp and plunge into the woods,  which he could reach after a very short
railway journey.   He liked to go out into the forest for the reason that it
was here the little people were to be found,  and after they discovered  the
fact  that  he was harmless to them they used to flock around  him  whenever
they caught him wandering alone, and together they had a merry time.
   It was on one of these trips that he had not gone far into the woods when he
was aware of something wrong with the vibrations in the ether.   He heard no
one calling, but somehow he knew that there was trouble at  hand,  and he about
to find it.  It was only a few minutes after first sensing the etheric
disturbance that he saw in a little glade one of his brownie friends  trying to
defend  himself against the attacks of five most  loathsome  beings.   I shall
not attempt to describe them beyond saying that they were  apparently
semihuman, semi-animal.  Evidently they were not of the harmless type of nature
spirits,  for the little brownie was having a hard time of it.   He was not
fighting with any weapon but would make motions at the creatures, and as he
did so they would shrink back,  much as though he had struck  them.   At once,
however,  they would recover and press in on him  again,  and  Jimmie knew,
though this was his first experience of the sort, that he was witnessing a
combat on the etheric plane.
   As he came up the brownie tried to break through the circle,  but he  was
evidently weakened in some way,  and three of the creatures blocked him  and
drove him back.
   They  did  not touch the brownie nor did the brownie touch them,  yet  in
some  way or other the contact was a most practical one since  Jimmie  could
tell  by his little friend's movements that he was much distressed and  that
the odds were too great for him.
   There was not the slightest hesitation in Jimmie's action.   Never before
had  he  seen  such  a thing as a fight upon this plane of being, but he did
know  that  there was such a thing as a contest between  different  sets  of
forces.  Evidently it was some such thing which he was witnessing now and he
knew why the little brownie was getting the worst of it.
   On the other plane a contest is a contest,  not of blows or of what would
correspond to physical force,  but of the will.   It is not entirely of  the
will either.   For instance, a number of evilly inclined spirits may be
tormenting another, yet when one of the "Masters" happens by and puts a stop to
the affair,  he does not do so by physical force nor yet by a supreme  exercise
of a stronger will,  though of course he has stronger will.   His power to stop
the cruelty is the result of a stronger will combined with the  fact that  his
higher position in the scale of being has given him an aura  whose vibrations
are  so strong that a being whose vibrations are  less  good  or positively
evil,  simply  cannot endure the higher vibratory  rate  of  the Master's
presence.   This is an extreme instance,  of course,  but it  holds good on all
planes of nature where the higher vibrations can be felt, and it would act with
full power on the physical plane except for the fact that the higher vibrations
here are so dulled by the flesh that they lose their force and can only act
slowly.   It reminds one strongly of a line in a hymn which says, "Where Thou
are present, evil cannot be," and the statement holds true in all cases where
good  is  brought  into  contact  with  evil, the effect varying with the
degree of difference between the intensity of the good  and the intensity of
the evil.
   Now the brownies are a gentle, likable, little race,  but they are nature
spirits, and while innocent and sensitive to a great degree, their innocence is
not the result of a positive and long drawn out fight against temptation, but
is more like the innocence of childhood,  and therefore is not a  source of
power.   They are remarkably like little children in many ways,  with  a
child's affection and a child's intuitive likes and dislikes but with a good
deal of a child's helplessness against aggression.
   So  this  little brownie,  who was so bravely fighting  against  terrible
odds,  did not have the strength which would have been his had he  been  the
product  of a long evolution of physical plane suffering and  training.   He
was like a little,  helpless child, striking bravely but futilely against  a
pack of wolves who are restrained only because they think him to be stronger
than he is.
   Such was the state of affairs when Jimmie came upon the scene.   A  sharp
exclamation burst from him and in a few strides he stood by the brownie  and
faced the loathsome elementals who were attacking him.  Jimmie merely looked at
them, pointed, said "Go", and used his imagination and will to sweep them
together and disintegrate them.  They leered horribly at him and mouthed and
gibbered,  but the human will, the result of long evolution,  was too strong
for  them and they simply faded from sight like a vanishing picture  on  the
screen.
   The brownie had fallen in a heap when Jimmie took the fight off his hands
but recuperative power on the etheric plane is rapid, and the elementals had
hardly  disappeared  when he sprang up and with one bound threw  himself  in
Jimmie's arms and clung to him,  sobbing incoherently for all the world like a
child;  and since his height was only about eighteen inches,  it is not to be
wondered at that Jimmie had the same feeling which one would have  after
rescuing a child from a vicious dog.
   This was the first time that a brownie had ever touched him, for they are a
shy  little people.   But now that his friendship was  proved,  this  one
brownie,  at any rate,  clung to him and caressed his cheek and stroked  his
hair and kept repeating:
   "Jimmie, my friend; Jimmie, my friend."
   They walked on for a few minutes,  and since the brownie weighed nothing,
being  an  etheric entity,  Jimmie simply held him as he would have  held  a
child  and tried to soothe him gently and help him recover from his  fright.
Thus they were situated when a whole troop of the little people came dancing
out of the denser forest and spied them.
Chapter X
A Crisis in Love
   When  the band of brownies spied the most unheard of sight which  greeted
them as they swept out of the cover of the woods and came face to face  with
Jimmie holding his little brownie friend in his arms,  they showed signs  of
greatest excitement.
   Very naturally and just as human beings might do, they jumped to the
conclusion  that at least one brownie had turned traitor to his race  and
kindred.  They surrounded Jimmie at a respectful distance and began to shout to
his little companion in their own language, which Jimmie recognized since it
was a sort of universal language, but still he could not tell what they were
saying.
   His little friend understood,  however, and showed the most  unmistakable
tokens of distress.  Finally, the accusations becoming too harsh for his
endurance, he leaped out of Jimmie's arms and ran straight for the brownie who
seemed  to be the leader of the band.   He then began an explanation of  the
occurrence.  Jimmie  could  follow  him quite well although he talked faster
than  any Frenchman he had ever heard.   The little fellow's powers of
gesticulation were wonderful.
   Acted out before him and accompanied by the most rapid verbal performance to
which he had ever listened,  Jimmie saw the whole adventure.   The little
brownie  would  have made an incomparable actor could he have  been  enticed
upon a stage and given a more material body.   The surprise by the  horrible
elementals;  the  desperate seeking for some way to escape;  the  tremendous
fight and the awful weariness which was fast giving way to the certainty  of
death;  the mouthings and grimaces of the hostile circle around him, and the
despair which overcame him when each attempt at escape was blocked; then the
tremendous relief when suddenly this great giant of a human being with  that
terrible human will power stood at his side and took his part in the unequal
struggle.
   "You  see,"  the Brownie shrieked at last, "It is all right.   He  is  my
friend.  You see!"
   Here his enthusiasm overcame him,  and with one tremendous leap he landed
squarely  on  Jimmie's shoulder and began to jump from one shoulder  to  the
other,  every now and then giving Jimmie's head a friendly kick as he passed
over it.   This, since he was an etheric entity, did not give Jimmie any
inconvenience and seemed to amuse the crowd of brownies immensely.
   They  crowded in a little closer,  and Jimmie was aware of the change  in
their  attitude by the friendliness of their glances,  the  frequent  smiles
with which they greeted him, and the bantering manner in which they spoke to
his active little friend.
   As a general thing the vibrations of the human race are offensive to  the
little people for the reason that most human beings, on account of their
habitual  line  of thinking and acting, have built into their  etheric  bodies
most undesirable etheric matter.
   To a great extent this also holds true of their desire bodies, and as the
brownies are on the borderland between the two kingdoms,  they are  affected
very adversely thereby.
   Jimmie  did not know exactly what to do so he did the most natural  thing
possible,  he sat down on a log and stretched his feet out in front of  him.
One of the bolder of the brownies after several feints, took a running start
and jumped over his feet, giving one of them a little touch with his foot as he
passed over.  Finding that he was still unhurt he jumped again, this time
landing on Jimmie's foot and immediately jumping away again.
   Meantime  a number of them had come up beyond reach of his arms and  were
discussing him in their queer little high-pitched voices, while he felt many
touches on his back and little tweaks at his belt and blouse.   This was
entirely possible even though the little folk were not on the physical  plane.
The seeming incongruity did not occur  to  Jimmie until some time afterward,
for when we see that a thing is really true we are very prone to accept  the
fact  without  question,  never stopping to consider that according  to  all
theory and reason the fact ought to be a fancy only.
   "Say,  Buster," Jimmie spoke to the little brownie whom he had saved from
the  elementals,  "What's the matter with your friends?   They  seem  to  be
afraid of me.  Tell them I won't hurt them."
   "Oh,  they're  foolish!   They're  afraid.  You  won't  hurt.   You're  a
friend."
   He began an impassioned harangue in his own language with the result that
three brownies came and sat on Jimmie's leather leggings,  while some others
came within reach of his arm but stood as though ready to jump at a moment's
notice.
   Jimmie sat perfectly still, not moving a muscle except that he kept talking
to "Buster",  whose name he asked in vain as the little fellow seemed to be
proud of the name Jimmie himself had carelessly bestowed,  and to  every
inquiry  returned the statement that "Buster"  was his name and he  knew  no
other.
   Gradually the talk and Buster's assurances had their effect, and the rest of
the  brownies began to lose their fear of the big human  being  who  had saved
their comrade from so awful a fate.  They  drew nearer and showed more interest
in the conversation,  and Jimmie took advantage of the fact to  ask Buster what
would have happened to him had the elementals won the fight.  He was  uncertain
whether  death was a possibility to any  being  who  had  no physical body,
but the great relief and gratitude which Buster had  evinced made it clear than
an adverse outcome of the combat would at least have been highly disagreeable
to the brownie.
   But Buster hated to think of what would have happened.   He did not,
apparently,  like to use his imagination.   Like a child intent on play he was
impatient of any attempt to make him think seriously, and only cared for his
play  and the particular sport upon which he happened to be engaged.
Irresponsibility seemed to be the keynote of his make-up, and concentration
upon any particular thing, unless he happened to be interested in it, was
irksome to him.  Jimmie finally gave up the attempt and turned his attention to
making friends with the rest of the band.
   In  this he was successful for the brownies soon lost all their  fear  of
him and came within reach of his arms without watching him to forestall  any
possible hostile movement.
   "Buster,"  said Jimmie at length, "tell me why your people were afraid of
me.  What harm can I do them?"
   "You see," squeaked Buster, "your will power.  It is so strong.   That is
why.  They did not know as I know."
   It  took  a great many questions to elicit the reason for  the  brownie's
shyness,  but Buster, with the help of others who took a hand in the
conversation,  finally  enlightened Jimmie as to the cause of  the
disinclination which his people have towards association with mortals.
   It seems that not only are the human vibrations usually very disagreeable to
the brownies,  but the human will power is so strong that when it is
intelligently directed,  they are often unable to resist it.   This makes them
afraid of the neighborhood of men,  for some human beings are gifted with  a
slight clairvoyance and it frequently happens that the clairvoyant ones  are
not the most advanced members of the race.   Thus a low grade mortal with  a
little clairvoyant power can make himself very disagreeable to the brownies.
   Also  it developed that to touch a human being gives that being  in  some
mysterious  way an added power of being disagreeable,  should he so  choose.
From  this  Jimmie could see why the brownies were so  horrified  when  they
first saw Buster riding in his arms and on such friendly terms with him.
   By  this time all reserve was thrown to the winds and the  whole  brownie
band were reveling in their acquaintance with a  man.  They climbed all over
him,  they stood on his head and jumped over his feet,  and it was with
considerable  difficulty  that  Jimmie could get one to stop in  his  play  and
answer any questions.   It was as though their intelligence made them  somewhat
like a very young child — able to talk and to understand simple language but
wholly incapable of any mental effort beyond that of a six or seven year old.
But like children, their love and trust, once given, were without reserve.
   So Jimmie spent a pleasant afternoon with his little friends until a near
approach of some berry pickers alarmed them, and they scampered off into the
forest after making him promise another visit.   He had come to the  conclusion
that  any real information to be obtained about them must  be  derived from
some other source than themselves.   It was the first time that he  had been
brought into contact with nature spirits or elementals, and he resolved to find
out more about them since it was evident that in meeting them he had glanced
into another one of the mansions of our Father's House,  which is so full of
wonders.
   The brownies having gone, he started for home, walking slowly and reviewing
in  his mind the things he would put in his next letter to  Louise  and
thinking a little,  too,  of how happy he would be when she should come home
again and when the war should be over and peace declared.  He  would have to
work  hard to make up for lost time and earn the money for the  little  home
which he wanted so much.   And the great work must not be forgotten  either,
for he would have to plan some way to reach the great mass of people who are so
hungry for every little crumb of spiritual knowledge,  and who are  often fed
with pebbles instead of crumbs.   After all,  the world was a fine place to
live in for one who was willing to work,  and he began to feel the thrill of
joy which is the reward of every earnest worker,  and from which one  may
imagine the bliss which is the part of the great Brothers of the Light,  who
spend  their energy to serve mankind and who renounce the rest and peace  of
heaven itself in order to serve.
   He walked back to the train in a sort of dream,  so fascinated was he  in
the  hopes and plans which he had made and the castles in the air  which  he
had  built.   And through it all there ran that dangerous thread of  vanity,
which so often insinuates itself in the place of other and grosser forms  of
evil which we may have managed to throw out.   He was not conscious that  it
was  vanity,  but had he stopped to analyze,  he would have known  that  his
dreams were all based on what he would do and on the service which he would perform,  and there was lacking that one great mark of the  devoted
worker, namely, a thankfulness to the Master for giving him opportunity to
serve.
   It  is the subtle difference between the laudable joy of service and  the
unjustifiable  pride of service which often makes our deposits in the
heavenly treasure house of humble silver instead of kingly gold.
   But Jimmie was unconscious of this sinister thread which ran through  the
warp and woof of his dreams.  He dwelt on the happiness which he hoped would be
his and,  too,  on the possibility that he might be able to get back  to France
before the "show"  was over,  for he coveted one of the valor  medals and meant
to get one if he had to capture a whole German army single-handed. Here he
could not help smiling at himself for his imagination was presenting him  with
pictures  of  himself driving ahead of him  a  whole  company  of "Fritzies,"
and with the smile he came back to earth again.
   It  was  a happy and enthusiastic Jimmie who entered  his  quarters  that
evening,  singing a song which had been one of the trench favorites and
literally  bubbling over with hope and irresponsibility.   And there  upon  his
table lay a letter from France, from Louise.
   He snatched it quickly and felt a slight wonder that it was so thin,  but
the wonder was only a semi-conscious one as he tore the envelope open in his
eagerness to know what she had to say.
   His face changed as he read the first few lines, and the letter fluttered in
his  hand.   He said nothing but presently went and leaned  against  the wall.
In  a little while he came back and picked up the  letter  from  the floor and
read it again.  It was cruelly short.
   "Dear Mr. Westman," it ran, "I am about to sail for home on the next
convenient steamer and write to tell you not to send any more letters to France
for me.   On thinking it over I am convinced that our engagement was not the
result of a sufficiently long acquaintance,  so I release you and think that it
would be better to let the matter end there.  I shall not expect any more
letters from you,  and I trust that you will regard my wishes in the  matter
and forget that I ever entered your life.   With best wishes for your future
happiness, etc."
   Jimmie felt stunned.   The other letters he had had from Louise were
generally short, for she was worked almost to death and he knew it and made
allowance for it,  but in those short letters, almost notes, she had never
before given expression to a word of regret for the engagement into which they
had entered.   All sorts of reasons flashed through his mind only to be
rejected as unworthy of himself or Louise.
   Perhaps she had met some one whom she loved better.  That was a possibility,
he  admitted to himself,  but it would not explain  the  curtness  and
abruptness of the letter.   Perhaps she had — Oh!   He could not believe that
she really wrote what was in her mind.  Yet,  if she did not write what  was in
her mind,  why should she write at all?   She was not compelled to write. There
was no law which forced her to write.   She surely could not be  angry for  she
knew very well that he had been compelled to obey his  orders  and that he had
not left France willingly.  This was war time,  orders were  orders, and Louise
knew that as well as he, for she had been up near the front where men were
dying every day on account of these same "orders."
   The  more he thought the matter over the more he found that his love  for
Louise  was  a very deep and strong feeling.   Well could  he  remember  the
kindly,  gentle nursing,  the little things she had done for him when he was
helpless,  how she had gone without some of the sleep she needed so badly in
order  to read to him when the shell shock nervousness came over him.   Once
when he had lain there,  in no great pain it is true,  yet almost  screaming
from the horror of those jagged nerves,  she had sat by him with her hand on
his forehead,  soothing him with little verses of poetry, snatches of hymns,
anything that she could remember,  to steady his mind and take his  thoughts
away from that strange, peculiar condition which  is  the  result  of  shell
shock and which is always different in each case.
   And then,  after he was well — oh shucks!   letter of no letter,  he would
not  believe  what she had written until she had confirmed it with  her  own
spoken words.  He would find her and learn from her own lips.
   It  was characteristic of Jimmie that in all the excuses and reasons  and
explanations  which  he had threshed over in his mind,  never  once  had  he
thought of Louise discarding him for any financial reasons.   It was as fine
and noble a tribute as he could have laid at the feet of this golden girl of
his,  that  all the reasons which he could imagine for her action  took  the
form of a fear that in some way he had not measured up to the high  standard
which she had set for him,  or that he had unwittingly offended her in  some
way,  but never once did he dream of a low or base,  mercenary motive on her
part.   Could she have known this, it would surely have melted her heart
towards him,  but Jimmie himself, was as unconscious of the matter as she was;
to ascribe an unworthy motive to her letter simply had never occurred to him.
   He knew the little town where her home was.   He figured that on  account of
the slowness of the postal service from France,  she had probably reached this
country some time ahead of her letter,  and the chances were that  she was even
now at home.  The thought set him tingling, and he made up his mind that he
simply must get a week's furlough and follow the matter to the end.
   But furloughs are not easy to get in time of war.   He knew it would take at
least a day to reach her home and a day to get back,  and he wanted a day
there.  If connections were bad, it might well take longer, so he decided to
ask for a week.
   That night as he fell asleep he determined to sound a call for  Marjorie,
and sure enough,  when he awoke in the now familiar conditions of the Desire
World,  he became conscious that Marjorie was coming.   So he was  not
surprised  at all when the young lady herself,  laughing and evidently  in  the
best of spirits, stood before him.
   Jimmie  at  once  began to tell the story of his woes in  the  hope  that
Marjorie would sympathize with him and offer to help him,  but he had  reckoned
without his hostess for all she did was to laugh at him.   If those  of us  who
regard the other world as a place of funereal gloom and despair  and
hopelessness  could  have looked on at that little scene,  how much  of  the
dread of death would we have lost.
   Marjorie was dead.  This girl had been torn from her family by that ruthless
King of Terrors,  and according to all the generally accepted  beliefs she
should have been anything but what she really was — happy,  joyous  with the
pure joy of living — happy because of the conditions in which she  lived, freed
from all the cramping necessities of physical  life,  pain, weariness, the ten
thousand little things which never rise above the threshold of  consciousness
but which in their aggregate amount to a continuous  discomfort; and above all,
happy because not separated from her family,  although  they were separated
from her.
   This apparently anomalous condition arose from the fact that every  night
she  could meet them on the desire plane,  talk to them,  and  "visit"  with
them;  although they were unable to carry back the memory of these meetings,
she  was  under  so such limitation.   So it was really true  that  all  the
separation  was on their side,  not on hers.   Hence there is nothing to  be
wondered at in her happiness, for why should she not be happy?
   But Jimmie thought she was entirely too happy.  He,  himself,  was miserable
or thought he was, and he needed sympathy.  Also, though he had not admitted it
to himself,  he hoped that Marjorie would tell him something about Louise and
why she had acted so.  He felt that Marjorie must know.  It would not be right
to ask, but perhaps she would volunteer a few words of comfort. This  thought
of Jimmie's did not escape Marjorie for a moment,  and it  was what  she was
laughing at.   Jimmie had come to have an idea that he was  of considerable
importance, and there was a lesson the subject due him.
Chapter XI
Light Again
   Jimmie was looking for sympathy.   He was really feeling that he had been
rather badly used,  and he had sounded a call for Marjorie with a hazy  idea
that  perhaps she could tell him why Louise had acted in such an  extraordinary
manner.   In the finer realms, knowledge does not always have to be acquired in
the same way that we obtain it in the physical world,  but the advanced  soul
can very often know things by merely turning his  attention  to them.
   Jimmie was well aware of this fact, but was doubly barred from making use of
it,  for in the first place he was not far enough advanced to gain  much
information in this way,  and also in this particular instance it would have
been unfair to attempt to learn why Louise had done as she had except by the
method of calling on her in person.
   But  there  remained a slight possibility that  Marjorie  knew  something
about the matter and might be willing to give him a few hints,  and also  he
thought that she would sympathize with him and thus  encourage  him  even if
she did not give him any real information.
   But Marjorie,  though she had come at his call for help,  had not come in
the way he had expected.   He knew that Marjorie could sense from the
vibrations  that surrounded him that he was in deep trouble and he  had
expected that  she would come up all sympathy and interest and ready to
proffer  her help,  so it was no wonder that he should have been somewhat
shocked to find her so full of life and happiness and the sheer, pure joy of
living.  Sympathy was apparently far from her mind just at the time.
   "Oh,  Jimmie,  I'm so glad you called me.   I was wondering  whether  you
would  come  over  soon.   I  have  so much  to  tell  you;  just  the  most
'be-you-tiful' things that you ever dreamed of!"
   Jimmie looked at her, contemplatively, but was silent.
   "They've given me a promotion,  Jimmie,  isn't that fine?   Now I can  do
more  work  and be of some real use.   They've given me a  little  class  to
teach,  some of the little children who have just passed over,  and  they're
such dear little things!   They were so frightened and bewildered,  but I've
been  showing them that there's nothing to fear and nothing around them  but
love,  and it's so beautiful to see them come out of their shells of  terror
and just blossom out as the little flowers do when the sun  shines  on them.
I'm so happy I can't stay still."
   What  an  object lesson it would have been to some of  the  sorrowing  of
earth  life could they have seen that radiant girl with the love and  happiness
of that plane on which she was living, and transfigured with the joy of the
realm into which she was leading those poor little mites who  had  been driven
out of their bodies by the harshness of conditions on  the  physical plane.
Could the relatives of those children have seen her, they would have given
their  sorrow and sympathy,  not to the ones who had "died,"  but  to those
who had been left to face the long struggle and hard  experiences  of earth.
   Jimmie tried to meet her mood and succeeded in congratulating her on  the
congenial work which had been assigned to her,  but the dominant thought  in
his mind would not be banished so easily and he blurted out:
   "I'm in trouble, Marjorie."
   Instantly Marjorie's face grew grave and Jimmie continued:
   "Have you seen Louise lately?"
   "No,  Jimmie,  I have not.   I've been so very busy,  and then you know I
don't go down to the earth plane.  The only time  I  see  any  of  my  earth
friends is when they come over here in sleep,  and they often fail to  come.
I'm  sure  there's nothing serious troubling you.   You know  that  you  and
Louise are both on the earth plane,  and you can go and see her if you  want
to.  It's fortunate you asked me the question because I will just forget it;
but  suppose you had asked the Elder Brother a question of  mere  curiosity,
what would he have thought!"
   Her face had cleared and she was now laughing at him again,  but she  had
given him quite a shock.
   "Marjorie,  I envy those little children.  Sometime I want to  come  over
and  see your little class if I may.   Now I am going back and I  will  take
your advice,  for you have helped me more than you know,  perhaps,  and more
than I expected.  You are a dear, true friend, Marjorie."
   Back in his physical body Jimmie thought over her words and realized more
and more how he had let his selfishness mislead him.  "Curiosity!"  A "question
of mere curiosity," it certainly was.  The very thing he had known well he must
not do,  he had done.   And she had not rebuked him nor found  fault with him,
but had just led him so gently and so kindly to see his error.  He made  up
his  mind  that never again would he make such a mistake and never again would
he forget the great watchword of "Service."
   "Mother!  I can see it!  O Mother, Mother!  I can see it!"
   "Can you!  Oh, darling, are you sure?  Don't strain your eyes.   Remember
what the doctor said.  Better let me put the bandage back."
   "No,  no.   I can't bear that awful bandage any more.  I can see,  I tell
you.   I saw that lone pine over on the ridge almost as well as I  ever  saw
it.  Don't put the bandage back.  I'll keep my eyes shut and that will do as
well.   I promise I will.  Really and truly I will.  And I'm going out for a
little walk all by myself.  I promise you I won't look much and I'll keep my
eyes almost closed."
   "You willful girl!  Don't go and spoil everything now.  Better let me put
the bandage back and lie down for a while.
   "Remember I'm a nurse,  Mother, and I know a lot.  I won't strain my eyes
even the least little bit,  but I must get out for a little walk or I  think
I'll die.  Please, Mother!  I know the way blindfolded even, so I won't need to
look but just a little."
   "Where do you want to go?"
   "Just over to the old pine on the ridge and then I'll come right back.  I
know  the  way in the dark,  and I think if I just walk over  there  all  by
myself and touch the old tree, it will almost make me well again."
   "Well, all right, but don't be gone long or I'll come after you, and don't
try to open your eyes.  They're too weak yet."
   The sun was shining almost directly down upon a little cottage where this
conversation  took place,  filling the gently rolling country side with  its
summer glory, flecking the ground between the trees with quivering splotches of
gold, and bringing into sharp relief the houses of the village beyond and the
ridges of the woods nearby, and showing in its lonely grandeur the great tree
which reared its head far above its fellows on a low elevation some few hundred
yards behind the house.
   It was towards this tree that a girl soon took her way, emerging from the
back door of the house,  and wearing on her head an old-fashioned sun bonnet
which effectually shaded her face from the brilliant light around her.   She
walked  slowly  as though a little uncertain of the path and with  one  hand
partly outstretched in the manner of one who walks by night.
   There  was a distinct path towards the big tree for it was the short  cut to
the village and always used by those who preferred to walk  through  the cool
of the woods instead of by the slightly longer wagon road.
   The girl walked along it as though it were familiar to her,  as indeed it
should be, for she had been born and brought up in that little cottage where
her  mother  had just gone back to the homely task of washing  dishes  after
sundry long and anxious looks at the retreating figure.
   There was no danger to the venturesome traveler,  she knew,  for there in
the  great State of New York there were no invading armies and no  murderous
artillery or bombs.   No danger threatened that slender figure on the  path,
either  from man or beast,  and yet the mother sought the doorway every  now
and then to cast another loving look at the sunbonnet bobbing its  leisurely
way towards the goal of the great tree on the ridge.  No,  there was no danger,
for war was far from this peaceful land.
   Now the sunbonnet was near the tree and soon it would be starting on  its
return  journey.   But stop!   The mother took off her glasses and  polished
them on her apron.   Some one else was on the path.  Some one else wearing a
uniform and looking like a soldier.  Surely it could not be.  Soldiers
sometimes  passed through the village but not often,  and the village  boys
who could  go had all gone to the war.   Strangers never came along  this
path. Well!  The soldier man had stopped the sunbonnet and was talking to it,
asking  the  way,  doubtless.   How long it took to ask  the  way!   Sunbonnet,
Sunbonnet!  what is the matter?  Don't you know better than to stop and talk to
strange soldier men?   The soldier man has caught Sunbonnet in his  arms and is
embracing her!   Oh,  this is awful!   The mother hastened out of the back door
and along the path.   Her suspense did not last long for she  soon met
Sunbonnet walking back,  and with her, his arm about her,  walked a tall
officer  who  was  calling her "Louise" and other  things,  just  as  though
Sunbonnet had known him well.
   That afternoon as they all sat on the porch,  everything was made  clear.
Jimmie had started to ride to the house after being directed as to the  way,
but something had changed his mind and he had walked.
   "And  do you know,  I was about to take the long way by the road  when  a
little  friend of mine whom I know as 'Buster'  called to me from the  woods
and showed me the path."
   "Buster,  Buster,"  said Louise thoughtfully, "I don't remember  any  boy
around here who is called that."
   "No.   That's  another  story which I'll tell you some  day,  but  Buster
thought he owed me a good turn and right well he paid his debt."
   Louise too had her story to tell.   There had been a great need,  and she
had been sent  to a station up near the front where a temporary hospital was
located  and where the nurses and surgeons were working to the limit of
endurance.   One  night an enemy plane had dropped a number of  bombs  on  the
spot,  and one of them had fallen near Louise as she was trying to help  her
wounded charge.  A great flash and roar, a violent blow on the head, and she
had known nothing more until she awakened in a hospital in Paris to find her
eyes tightly bandaged and their sight very nearly gone.
   Her first thought was for Jimmie, and she determined that never would she
burden  him with a sightless and disfigured wife — hence the letter which  in
the  despair of her heart she had had written in defiance of the rules,  and
which another nurse had posted for her.
   The  disfigurement had yielded to skillful treatment,  but  the  eyesight
grew worse,  and she was sent home, a woebegone little piece of flotsam cast by
the great storm of war upon a peaceful shore.
   But  in the last day or two she had been able to discern a little  light,
and that morning,  having quietly removed the bandage,  she had found  that,
though blurred and distorted, her sight was coming back.
   "And, Oh!  God is good to me, Jimmie.  He has given me back my sight, and He
has given me something worth so much more even than that."
   "What?"
   "How much would you like to know?"
   Well,  well!   This is not a story of love but a story of the Land of the
Living  Dead.   And yet how can they be separated?   For all love is of  God
whose name is Love,  and to those who do His will there is naught in all the
universe,  either in this world or the next, but Love.   There are sacrifice
and service,  but they are just the evidences of Love, showing itself in
action.   In the Land of the Living Dead there is Love too,  and no account of
that Land can be true which does not tell of the Love which throbs and
pulsates through all its beautiful worlds.   Even down in those dark realms  of
which I have not spoken there is a dim light which filters through,  and the
very pain which is felt there is but the preparation for the Love which  one
day  will fill all the universe,  when the knowledge of God shall cover  the
earth as the waters cover the sea.
End of
In the Land of
the Living Dead
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