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THE MEDIUMS’ BOOK > PART SECOND - SPIRIT-MANIFESTATIONS > CHAPTER XIII. PSYCHOGRAPHY > Indirect Psychography: Baskets and Planchettes
Indirect Psychography: Baskets and Planchettes
152. The development of the spiritist movement has been unusually rapid; for
although we are separated only by a few years from its primitive manifestations, so
often contemptuously alluded to as "table-turning," we are already enabled to converse
with spirits as easily and rapidly as men converse with each other, and by the very same
means, viz., by speech and by writing. Writing has the special advantage of furnishing
a permanent evidence of the action of occult power; one which we are able to preserve
as we preserve letters received from correspondents in the flesh. As previously
remarked, the first method employed was the use of small baskets and planchettes with
a pencil attached to them; which method of correspondence we will now briefly
describe.
153. We have said that a person endowed with a
special aptitude can impress a movement of rotation
to a table or any other object whatever; take now,
instead of a table, a little basket (either of wood or of
willow ; no matter which, the substance is indifferent).
If a pencil is passed through the bottom of it and
solidly fastened, the point outward, then, holding
the whole squarely on the point of the pencil placed
on a sheet of paper, resting the fingers on the edge
of the basket, it will begin to move; but instead of
turning, it will carry the pencil in various ways over
the paper, whether in insignificant characters or in
writing. If a spirit is invoked, and he desires to com-
municate, he will answer, not by rappings, as in typtol-
ogy, but by written words. The motion of the basket is
no longer automatic, as in the turning tables ; it becomes
intelligent. In this way, when the pencil reaches the
end of the line, it does not return to begin another; it
continues circularly, so that the lines of writing form
a spiral, and the paper has to be turned several times
to read what is written. The writing thus obtained is
not very legible, the words not being separated; but
the medium, by a sort of intuition, easily deciphers it.
For economy, a slate and slate pencil can be substitut-
ed for the ordinary paper and pencil. We call this
basket corbeille-toupie. For this basket is sometimes
substituted a card, the pencil forming the axis of the
teetotum.
154. Other ways have been thought of to secure
the same end. The most convenient is that we shall
call corbeille-d-bec (basket with a beak), which consists
in adapting to the basket an inclined piece of wood in
the position of the bowsprit of a vessel. Through a
hole pierced in the end of this stick or beak a pencil
is passed, long enough for the point to rest on the
paper. The medium having his fingers on the edge
of the basket, the whole machine is moved, and the
pencil writes as in the above case, with this difference,
that the writing is, in general, more legible, the words
separated, and the lines are not so spiral, the medium
easily taking the pencil from one line to another.
Dissertations of several pages are obtained in this
way as rapidly as with the hand.
155. The intelligence that acts is often manifested
by other unequivocal signs. Having reached the end
of the page, the pencil makes a spontaneous movement
to turn ; if he wish to refer to a preceding passage
in the same page, or in another, he seeks it with the
point of the pencil, as with the finger, then underlines
it. Should the spirit wish to address one of the assist-
ants, the end of the beak of wood is directed toward
him. To abridge, he often expresses the words yes
and no by the sign of affirmation and negation, as we
do with the head ; if he wish to express anger or im-
patience, he strikes forcibly with the point of the
pencil, often breaking it.
156. Instead of a basket, some persons use a kind
of little table made for the purpose, with three feet,
one of which carries a pencil; the other two are
rounded, or furnished with a little ivory ball, to make it
glide smoothly over the paper. Others use a simple
planchette, triangular, oblong, or oval; on one edge is
an oblique hole for the pencil; placed to write, it is
inclined, and rests by one side on the paper ; this side
is sometimes finished with two little rollers to facilitate
the movement. It may be readily imagined that there
is nothing absolute in any of these arrangements; the
most convenient is the best.
With all these machines, two persons are almost always necessary; but it is not necessary that the sec- ond person should be endowed with the medianimic faculty : it is only to maintain the equilibrium, and diminish the fatigue of the medium.
With all these machines, two persons are almost always necessary; but it is not necessary that the sec- ond person should be endowed with the medianimic faculty : it is only to maintain the equilibrium, and diminish the fatigue of the medium.