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The Mediumship of Cecil Husk
Cecil Husk (1847-1920) was one of the many mediums who
worked in Victorian England, and provided excellent evidence of survival
through physical mediumship. Cecil sought to develop his mediumship, sitting two or three times a week,
and through this, table-turning was achieved. His father, a professional
singer, participated in these activities, although his mother was somewhat
unenthusiastic. Cecil followed his father into the musical profession,
eventually becoming a member of the Carl Rosa Opera Company, and while
travelling on tour, gave sittings to those who wanted evidence of survival: he
conducted seances on a regular basis from 1870, and from 1875, was able to
facilitate materializations. When he experienced diminishing eyesight, he
abandoned his career and embarked upon a lifetime of professional mediumship.
Cecil had five guides, the primary one being 'John King', who was often
involved in the work of other physical mediums in the nineteenth century. A considerable amount of information concerning Cecil's mediumship was
supplied by Florence Marryat when she detailed what was witnessed during the
different seances attended from 1892. She described how, at the beginning of
the seance, the sitters would hear Cecil's controls talking among themselves
in their endeavour to begin the phenomena. In the case of the apparel used by
the materialized forms, she noticed that 'when the full form dematerialises in
sight, and goes down through the floor, the drapery invariably is left behind
for a few seconds till it follows suit'. She relates one amusing incident when John Powles, a friend who had died,
refused to use white apparel when he materialized. This led to an informative
conversation between Marryat and John King: she asked him why white was
preferred by most materializations and King replied that it was wholly
unrelated to spiritual standing, as was often believed by sitters, but it
helped to preserve the borrowed material form for a longer period of time.
Marryat also reported how King refused to inform the sitters of who was about
to materialize as he believed they should be recognized, and if this did not
occur, it simply meant they had failed to attain sufficient strength and
should make another attempt on a later occasion. Supplying a further example of excellent evidence, Marryat went on to
detail the reunion with her own mother who had died on 13 February, 1883. Very
shortly before her death, the mother had asked Marryat to sing the hymn 'Rock
of Ages', and also made it very clear that she did not want flowers at her
funeral, but Marryat decided that she could not comply with the request and
placed violets on her body as it lay in its coffin: she told no one of this.
Years later, at a seance with Cecil, the room became filled with the scent of
violets, so much so that the different sitters began asking which one was
wearing violet scent or powder. Not long afterwards, 'Rock of Ages' began to
be heard. Marryat also referred to a seance when a young boy, who had died of food poisoning, materialized for his father who was present. She details how she saw the boy and 'heard him speak to his father of his home, mentioning everybody there by name, enumerating the playthings and books he had left behind, and saying to whom he wished them given'. This was one example of the many occasions when parents were reunited with their children through Cecil's mediumship: 'I have seen mothers and fathers at these sittings, with the tears pouring down their cheeks, as they spoke with their children again'.(3) One phenomenon that was often produced through Cecil's mediumship, was the
passing of matter through matter; one of the more unusual features of this
activity was the placing of a ring around his wrist. Dr George Wyld provided
an oval ring that was so designed that it was too small to be fitted on the
wrist by passing it over the medium's hand. Wyld held Cecil's hand and then
found the ring had been placed on Cecil's wrist; he subsequently produced a
yet smaller ring of solid iron, and once again, while Cecil's left hand was
held, the ring was found to have been placed on his wrist. In old age, Cecil recorded how, when the feat was accomplished, he 'felt a shock go through my arm, and immediately felt the coldness of the ring encircling my wrist'. He went on to relate how 'I suppose I must have had my arm tugged and pulled at by hundreds of people...who tried to take the ring off, but there was no way of moving it. I am very much thinner now than I was, but it still cannot be taken off'.(5) Cecil wore the ring until he died and indeed, according to Boddington, the ring, 'remained to his dying day a puzzle to conjurers and scientists alike'.(6) When Cecil was interviewed about his mediumship, he revealed how the
behaviour of some sitters had caused him ill-health and physical injury, e.g.
they had pressed pins into him while in trance and turned on the light during
a materialization s‚ance. He had also suffered annoyance by mischievous
spirits although his guides protected him from any harm in this respect. In the Annals of Psychic Science (July 1906), Henry Fotherby described the occasion when the materializations developed from a type of phosphorescent vapour in the air, and they were seen to have flecks of bright light, and made visible by the luminous slates 'which rose by themselves from the table'.(7) Other witnesses testified to further paranormal activity, e.g. Gambier Bolton who saw, in his own house along with fourteen other investigators, Cecil levitated in his chair. When Admiral Moore attended seances conducted by Cecil in 1904, there was the movement of objects about the seance room, followed by the materialization of some fifteen persons. Meads described an occasion when the Maharaja of Nepal visited this country in 1908 and had sittings with Cecil and Robert Boursnell, a medium through whom spirit photographs were facilitated. Through the agency of both mediums, those persons who appeared in the spirit photographs could be recognized when they also materialized through Cecil. Meads also attended a sitting with Cecil when materialized persons 'clearly showed their faces, but each gave her or his name'.(8) Fodor relates an amusing incident when a sitter, during a period when
communicators were speaking, asked whether they were using the medium's
throat. Suddenly, a bellowing voice boomed close to him: 'Do you think that
this is the medium's throat? If so, he must have a long neck'.(9)
It was also noted that communicators spoke in various different languages.
Furthermore, the seances were sometimes accompanied by communicators singing
in the different tones, and with considerable volume; this occurred even when
Cecil was suffering illness. The extent of Cecil's mediumship is demonstrated
by the letters written by those who attended his seances: George Davis,
writing to Two Worlds, described how he had sat with Cecil during the
previous four years. One witness to Cecil's mediumship was Sir William Barrett, a prominent
figure in the SPR, and a person whose testimony carries significant weight.
When he reviewed his years of research, he referred to having had only one
experience of witnessing a materialization: this was with Cecil. He recounted
how he and others met in a 'almost bare room', that had been lent for the
occasion. Cecil's legs were tied to the table and his hands were held by the
sitter on either side. He went into trance, whereupon lights appeared and
began to dart about the room, accompanied by object movement. Sadly, Cecil's final years were spent in considerable discomfort. By 1917,
he was bed-ridden, paralysed, and blind: however, he was given support by
Spiritualists and well-wishers; through the setting-up of the Husk Fund, it
was possible to support him financially and assist in the nursing that he
needed. NB. This article appeared in the March 1998 NAS Newsletter. (C) Noah's Ark Society |
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