Page:Ideas of Good and Evil, Yeats, 1903.djvu/48

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

Ideas of Good and Evil.

galvanizing a corpse into life.' Presently he said, 'Perhaps my bad health in this life comes from that experiment.' I asked if he had read Frankenstein, and he answered that he had. He was the only one of us who had, and he had taken no part in the vision.


III

Then I asked to have some past life of mine revealed, and a new evocation was made before the tablet full of little squares. I cannot remember so well who saw this or that detail, for now I was interested in little but the vision itself. I had come to a conclusion about the method. I knew that the vision may be in part common to several people.

A man in chain armour passed through a castle door, and the seeress noticed with surprise the bareness and rudeness of castle rooms. There was nothing of the magnificence or the pageantry she had

38