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THE CHERITON DUGOUT
I have mentioned in the text that I had some recent
experience of a case where a "polter-geist" or
mischievous spirit had been manifesting. These
entities appear to be of an undeveloped order and
nearer to earth conditions than any others with which
we are acquainted. This comparative materialism upon
their part places them low in the scale of spirit, and
undesirable perhaps as communicants, but it gives them
a special value as calling attention to crude obvious
phenomena, and so arresting the human attention and
forcing upon our notice that there are other forms of
life within the universe. These borderland forces have
attracted passing attention at several times and places
in the past, such cases as the Wesley persecution at
Epworth, the Drummer of Tedworth, the Bells
of Bealing, etc., startling the country for a time--
each of them being an impingement of unknown forces
upon human life. Then almost simultaneously came the
Hydesville case in America and the Cideville
disturbances in France, which were so marked that they
could not be overlooked. From them sprang the whole
modern movement which, reasoning upwards from small
things to great, from raw things to developed ones,
from phenomena to messages, is destined to give
religion the firmest basis upon which it has ever
stood. Therefore, humble and foolish as these
manifestations may seem, they have been the seed of
large developments, and are worthy of our respectful,
though critical, attention.
Many such manifestations have appeared of recent
years in various quarters of the world, each of which
is treated by the press in a more or less comic vein,
with a conviction apparently that the use of the word
"spook" discredits the incident and brings discussion
to an end. It is remarkable that each is treated as an
entirely isolated phenomenon, and thus the
ordinary reader gets no idea of the strength of the
cumulative evidence. In this particular case of the
Cheriton Dugout the facts are as follows:
Mr. Jaques, a Justice of the Peace and a man of
education and intelligence, residing at Embrook House,
Cheriton, near Folkestone, made a dugout just opposite
to his residence as a protection against air raids.
The house was, it may be remarked, of great antiquity,
part of it being an old religious foundation of the
14th Century. The dugout was constructed at the base
of a small bluff, and the sinking was through ordinary
soft sandstone. The work was carried out by a local
jobbing builder called Rolfe, assisted by a lad. Soon
after the inception of his task he was annoyed by his
candle being continually blown out by jets of sand,
and, by similar jets hitting up against his own face.
These phenomena he imagined to be due to some gaseous
or electrical cause, but they reached such a point that
his work was seriously hampered, and he complained to
Mr. Jaques, who received the story with absolute
incredulity. The persecution continued, however,
and increased in intensity, taking the form now of
actual blows from moving material, considerable
objects, such as stones and bits of brick, flying past
him and hitting the walls with a violent impact. Mr.
Rolfe, still searching for a physical explanation, went
to Mr. Hesketh, the Municipal Electrician of
Folkestone, a man of high education and intelligence,
who went out to the scene of the affair and saw enough
to convince himself that the phenomena were perfectly
genuine and inexplicable by ordinary laws. A Canadian
soldier who was billeted upon Mr. Rolfe, heard an
account of the happenings from his host, and after
announcing his conviction that the latter had "bats in
his belfry" proceeded to the dugout, where his
experiences were so instant and so violent that he
rushed out of the place in horror. The housekeeper at
the Hall also was a witness of the movement of bricks
when no human hands touched them. Mr. Jaques, whose
incredulity had gradually thawed before all this
evidence, went down to the dugout in the absence of
everyone, and was departing from it when five stones
rapped up against the door from the inside. He
reopened the door and saw them lying there upon the
floor. Sir William Barrett had meanwhile come down,
but had seen nothing. His stay was a short one. I
afterwards made four visits of about two hours each to
the grotto, but got nothing direct, though I saw the
new brickwork all chipped about by the blows which it
had received. The forces appeared to have not the
slightest interest in psychical research, for they
never played up to an investigator, and yet their
presence and action have been demonstrated to at least
seven different observers, and, as I have said, they
left their traces behind them, even to the extent of
picking the flint stones out of the new cement which
was to form the floor, and arranging them in tidy
little piles. The obvious explanation that the boy was
an adept at mischief had to be set aside in view of the
fact that the phenomena occurred in his absence. One
extra man of science wandered on to the scene for a
moment, but as his explanation was that the movements
occurred through the emanation of marsh-gas, it did not
advance matters much. The disturbances are still
proceeding, and I have had a letter this very morning
(February 21st, 1918) with fuller and later details
from Mr. Hesketh, the Engineer.
What is the REAL explanation of such a matter?
I can only say that I have advised Mr. Jaques to dig
into the bluff under which he is constructing his
cellar. I made some investigation myself upon the top
of it and convinced myself that the surface ground at
that spot has at some time been disturbed to the depth
of at least five feet. Something has, I should judge,
been buried at some date, and it is probable that, as
in the case cited in the text, there is a connection
between this and the disturbances. It is very probable
that Mr. Rolfe is, unknown to himself, a physical
medium, and that when he was in the confined space of
the cellar he turned it into a cabinet in which his
magnetic powers could accumulate and be available for
use. It chanced that there was on the spot some agency
which chose to use them, and hence the phenomena. When
Mr. Jaques went alone to the grotto the power left
behind by Mr. Rolfe, who had been in it all
morning, was not yet exhausted and he was able to
get some manifestations. So I read it, but it is well
not to be dogmatic on such matters. If there is
systematic digging I should expect an epilogue to the
story.
Whilst these proofs were in the press a second very
marked case of a Polter-geist came within my knowledge.
I cannot without breach of confidence reveal the
details and the phenomena are still going on.
Curiously enough, it was because one of the sufferers
from the invasion read some remarks of mine upon the
Cheriton dugout that this other case came to my
knowledge, for the lady wrote to me at once for advice
and assistance. The place is remote and I have not yet
been able to visit it, but from the full accounts which
I have now received it seems to present all the
familiar features, with the phenomenon of direct
writing superadded. Some specimens of this script have
reached me. Two clergymen have endeavoured to mitigate
the phenomena, which are occasionally very violent, but
so far without result. It may be some consolation to
any others who may be suffering from this strange
inflition, to know that in the many cases which
have been carefully recorded there is none in which any
physical harm has been inflicted upon man or beast.

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