The Night-Side of Nature Or, Ghosts and Ghost-Seers

The stories in Volume 1 centre on dreams, psychic presentiments, traces, wraiths, doppelgängers, apparitions, and imaginings of the after-life. Crowe's vivid tales, written with great energy and imagination, are classic examples of nineteenth-century spiritualist writing and strongly influenced other authors as well as providing inspiration for later adherents of ghost-seeing and psychic culture.


By : Catherine Crowe (1803 - 1876)

00 - Preface



01 - Chapter 1 - Introduction



02 - Chapter 2 - The Dweller in the Temple



03 - Chapter 3 - Waking and Sleeping; and How The Dweller in the Temple Sometimes Looks Abroad



04 - Chapter 4 - Allegorical Dreams, Presentiment, Etc.



05 - Chapter 5 - Warnings (Part 1)



06 - Chapter 5 - Warnings (Part 2)



07 - Chapter 6 - Double-Dreaming and Trance (Part 1)



08 - Chapter 6 - Double-Dreaming and Trance (Part 2)



09 - Chapter 7 - Wraiths



10 - Chapter 8 - Doppelgangers, or Doubles



11 - Chapter 9 - Apparitions (Part 1)



12 - Chapter 9 - Apparitions (Part 2)



13 - Chapter 10 - The Future that Awaits Us (Part 1)



14 - Chapter 10 - The Future that Awaits Us (Part 2)



15 - Chapter 11 - The Power of Will



16 - Chapter 12 - Troubled Spirits



17 - Chapter 13 - Haunted Houses (Part 1)



18 - Chapter 13 - Haunted Houses (Part 2)



19 - Chapter 13 - Haunted Houses (Part 3)



20 - Chapter 14 - Spectral Lights, and Apparitions Attached to Certain Families (Part 1)



21 - Chapter 14 - Spectral Lights, and Apparitions Attached to Certain Families (Part 2)



22 - Chapter 15 - Apparitions Seeking the Prayers of the Living (Part 1)



23 - Chapter 15 - Apparitions Seeking the Prayers of the Living (Part 2)



24 - Chapter 16 - The Poltergeist of the Germans, and Possession (Part 1)



25 - Chapter 16 - The Poltergeist of the Germans, and Possession (Part 2)



26 - Chapter 17 - Miscellaneous Phenomena



27 - Chapter 18 - Conclusion


In my late novel of “Lilly Dawson,” I announced my intention of publishing a work to be called “The Night-Side of Nature;" this is it.

The term “Night-Side of Nature” I borrow from the Germans, who derive it from the astronomers, the latter denominating that side of a planet which is turned from the sun, its night-side. We are in this condition for a certain number of hours out of every twenty-four; and as, during this interval, external objects loom upon us but strangely and imperfectly, the Germans draw a parallel between these vague and misty perceptions, and the similar obscure and uncertain glimpses we get of that veiled department of nature, of which, while comprising as it does, the solution of questions concerning us more nearly than any other, we are yet in a state of entire and wilful ignorance. For science, at least science in this country, has put it aside as beneath her notice, because new facts that do not fit into old theories are troublesome, and not to be countenanced.

We are encompassed on all sides by wonders, and we can scarcely set our foot upon the ground, without trampling upon some marvellous production that our whole life and all our faculties would not suffice to comprehend. Familiarity, however, renders us insensible to the ordinary works of nature; we are apt to forget the miracles they comprise, and even, sometimes, mistaking words for conceptions, commit the error of thinking we understand their mystery. But there is one class of these wonders with which, from their comparatively rare occurrence, we do not become familiar; and these, according to the character of the mind to which they are presented, are frequently either denied as ridiculous and impossible, or received as evidences of supernatural interference—interruptions of those general laws by which God governs the universe; which latter mistake arises from our only seeing these facts without the links that connect them with the rest of nature, just as in the faint light of a starlit night we might distinguish the tall mountains that lift their crests high into the sky, though we could not discern the low chain of hills that united them with each other.

There are two or three books by German authors, entitled “The Night-Side,” or “The Night-Dominion of Nature,” which are on subjects, more or less analogous to mine. Heinrick Schubert’s is the most celebrated among them; it is a sort of cosmogony of the world, written in a spirit of philosophical mysticism—too much so for English readers in general.

In undertaking to write a book on these subjects myself, I wholly disclaim the pretension of teaching or of enforcing opinions. My object is to suggest inquiry and stimulate observation, in order that we may endeavor, if possible, to discover something regarding our psychical nature, as it exists here in the flesh; and as it is to exist hereafter, out of it.

If I could only induce a few capable persons, instead of laughing at these things, to look at them, my object would be attained, and I should consider my time well spent.

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