A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook Title: The Epworth
Phenomena (1917) Author: Dudley Wright (1868-1949) eBook No.:
0301311.txt Edition: 1 Language: English Character set encoding:
Latin-1(ISO-8859-1)--8 bit Date first posted: October 2003 Date most
recently updated: October 2003
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A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook
Title: The Epworth Phenomena (1917) Author: Dudley Wright
(1868-1949)
The Epworth Phenomena (1917)
To which are appended certain Psychic Experiences recorded by John
Wesley in the pages of his journal
[Wesley if the founder of Methodism]
Collated by Dudley Wright [1868-1949]
Contents
Introduction, by J. Arthur Hill Forward by Dudley Wright The Epworth
Phenomena Letters concerning some supernatural disturbances at the
Rev. Samuel Wesley's house at Epworth, in Lincolnshire The Rev.
Samuel Wesley's Journal or Diary, transcribed by John Wesley, August
27th, 1726. Summary of Phenomena Mrs. Samuel Wesley's statement
to her son John Emily Wesley's account to her brother John Molly
Wesley's account to her brother John Susannah Wesley's account to her
brother John Nancy Wesley's account to her brother John The account
of the Rev. Mr. Hoole, Vicar of Haxey The account of Robin Brown,
manservant to John Wesley Narrative drawn up by John Wesley and
published by him in the Arminian Magazine Excerpts from the Journal
of the Rev. John Wesley-- A Gruesome Apparition A Curse-and its
Result Dreams of Drowning A Miraculous Conversion A Clairvoyant
Vision of Murder A Mysterious Obsession A Strange Disorder A Case
of Possession Strange Apparitions to a Young Girl A Sexton's Weird
Experience Psychic Experiences of Elizabeth Hobson A Case of
Obsession (?) A Dream of Buried Treasure Two Remarkable Dreams
Double Obsession Three Apparition Miraculous Cure of Blindness Life
saved through a Dream Preaching under Spirit Compulsion Remarkable
Panic An Angel Visitant
Introduction
It is fairly certain that Galileo never said, "It moves, for all that," and
that Wellington never said, "Up, Guards, and at 'em!" And one
humorous writer has proved that Napoleon never existed, so perhaps
Waterloo was never fought, and no enemy there for the Guards to be up
and at. History, in short, is an uncertain affair. It depends on fallible
human testimony; and though most of us are agreed on the principal
points, even these cannot be coercively proved, and from them there
spreads a region of ever-increasing dimness, where many things are lost,
all outlines are indistinct, and illusions and false perspectives abound.
Who was the Man in the Iron Mask? Was William Rufus murdered, or
killed accidentally? Did Branwell Bronte make love to his employer's
wife? Did D. D. Home really float out of one window and in at another?
We do not know. How then shall we expect to know exactly what
happened in the parental home of John Wesley two hundred years ago,
or the exact details of ghost stories and the like that were told him on
his travels? No certainty is attainable. Each must judge for himself-or
must suspend judgment-and the verdict will depend partly on the
evidence, partly on our knowledge or ignorance of similar cases, and
partly on our emotional bias if we have any. Anyhow, as John Wesley
quaintly says, no great harm will be done "provided those who believe
and those who disbelieve . . . have but patience with each other."
As for myself, I do not feel that I have any emotional bias about the
Epworth haunting. I do not care whether it was due to a spirit, or to
"animal magnetism," or to Mr. Podmore's naughty little girl (in this
case Miss Hetty Wesley, aged nineteen), or to rats, or water pipes, or
some undiscovered joker. If it could be proved that one of these was the
real cause, whichever it were it would not conflict with any belief or
disbelief of mine. I believe in the existence of all the causes mentioned,
and would accept any one of them as the culprit, on sufficient evidence.
But I do want sufficient evidence, and it seems to me that the more
sceptical writers
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