Perkins, the Fakeer. A Travesty on Reincarnation

As the title suggests we are treated to three humourous and curious psychical transpositions in the cases of "When Reginald was Caroline," "How Chopin came to Remsen," and "Clarissa's troublesome baby" . If you're looking for a break from more serious fare you can count on this one to amuse and entertain you.


By : Edward S. Van Zile (1863 - 1931)

00 - Preface



01 - 1- When Reginald Was Caroline Chapters 1-2



02 - 1- When Reginald Was Caroline Chapters 3-4



03 - 1- When Reginald Was Caroline Chapters 5-6



04 - 1- When Reginald Was Caroline Chapters 7-8



05 - 1- When Reginald Was Caroline Chapters 9-10



06 - 1- When Reginald Was Caroline Chapters 11-12



07 - 2- How Chopin Came to Remsen Chapters 1-2



08 - 2- How Chopin Came to Remsen Chapters 3-4



09 - 2- How Chopin Came to Remsen Chapters 5-6



10 - 2- How Chopin Came to Remsen Chapters 7-8



11 - 2- How Chopin Came to Remsen Chapters 9-10



12 - 3- Clarissa's Troublesome Baby Chapters 1-2



13 - 3- Clarissa's Troublesome Baby Chapters 3-4



14 - 3- Clarissa's Troublesome Baby Chapters 5-6



15 - 3- Clarissa's Troublesome Baby Chapters 7-8



16 - 3- Clarissa's Troublesome Baby Chapters 9-11


In offering to the public in book form the following tales, from the pages of THE SMART SET, the opportunity is presented to the author of answering the questions that have frequently been asked of him and the publishers, since these stories first appeared in print, concerning their origin. He is not, and has not been, the deus ex machina.

One Perkins, a Yankee who lived for fifty years in India, and became an adept in mysteries rejected by the Occidental mind, is responsible for the curious psychical transpositions described in the following pages. I am not at liberty to say much about Perkins. He has control of a power that is so peculiar, and I may say erratic, that I dare not offend him. If, in this preface, I should tell the public too much about Perkins, he has both the ability and the inclination to work me harm of the disastrous sort herein described. I do not dare to defy him.

I have taken the liberty of telling these stories in the first person. My choice of this method will at once commend itself to the thoughtful reader; and, what is more important, I am sure that it will satisfy the amour propre of Perkins, the Fakeer--a consummation devoutly to be wished.

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