登陆注册
37839500000005

第5章 THE MAGIC EGG(5)

There was nothing there that you said was there. Everything was a sham and a delusion; every word you spoke was untrue. And yet everybody in that theatre, excepting you and me, saw all the things that you said were on the stage. I know they saw them all, for I was with the people, and heard them, and saw them, and at times I fairly felt the thrill of enthusiasm which possessed them as they glared at the miracles and wonders you said were happening."Loring smiled. "Sit down, my dear Edith," he said. "You are excited, and there is not the slightest cause for it. I will explain the whole affair to you. It is ****** enough. You know that study is the great object of my life. I study all sorts of things; and just now I am greatly interested in hypnotism. The subject has become fascinating to me. I have made a great many successful trials of my power, and the affair of this afternoon was nothing but a trial of my powers on a more extensive scale than anything I have yet attempted. I wanted to see if it were possible for me to hypnotize a considerable number of people without any one suspecting what I intended to do. The result was a success. I hypnotized all those people by means of the first part of my performance, which consisted of some combinations of colored glass with lights thrown upon them. They revolved, and looked like fireworks, and were strung on a wire high up on the stage.

"I kept up the glittering and dazzling show--which was well worth seeing, I can assure you--until the people had been straining their eyes upward for almost half an hour. And this sort of thing--I will tell you if you do not know it--is one of the methods of producing hypnotic sleep.

"There was no one present who was not an impressionable subject, for I was very careful in sending out my invitations, and when I became almost certain that my audience was thoroughly hypnotized, I stopped the show and began the real exhibition, which was not really for their benefit, but for mine.

"Of course, I was dreadfully anxious for fear I had not succeeded entirely, and that there might be at least some one person who had not succumbed to the hypnotic influences, and so Itested the matter by bringing out that table and telling them it was something it was not. If I had had any reason for supposing that some of the audience saw the table as it really was, I had an explanation ready, and I could have retired from my position without any one supposing that I had intended ****** hypnotic experiments. The rest of the exhibition would have been some things that any one could see, and as soon as possible I would have released from their spell those who were hypnotized. But when I became positively assured that every one saw a light pine table with four straight legs, I confidently went on with the performances of the magic egg."Edith Starr was still standing by the library table. She had not heeded Loring's advice to sit down, and she was trembling with emotion.

"Herbert Loring," she said, "you invited my mother and me to that exhibition. You gave us tickets for front seats, where we would be certain to be hypnotized if your experiment succeeded, and you would have made us see that false show, which faded from those people's minds as soon as they recovered from the spell, for as they went away they were talking only of the fireworks, and not one of them mentioned a magic egg, or a chicken, or anything of the kind. Answer me this: did you not intend that Ishould come and be put under that spell?"

Loring smiled. "Yes," he said, "of course I did. But then your case would have been different from that of the other spectators: I should have explained the whole thing to you, and Iam sure we would have had a great deal of pleasure, and profit too, in discussing your experiences. The subject is extremely--""Explain to me!" she cried. "You would not have dared to do it! I do not know how brave you may be, but I know you would not have had the courage to come here and tell me that you had taken away my reason and my judgment, as you took them away from all those people, and that you had made me a mere tool of your will--glaring and panting with excitement at the wonderful things you told me to see where nothing existed. I have nothing to say about the others. They can speak for themselves if they ever come to know what you did to them. I speak for myself. I stood up with the rest of the people. I gazed with all my power, and over and over again I asked myself if it could be possible that anything was the matter with my eyes or my brain, and if I could be the only person there who could not see the marvellous spectacle that you were describing. But now I know that nothing was real, not even the little pine table--not even the man!""Not even me!" exclaimed Loring. "Surely I was real enough!""On that stage, yes," she said. "But you there proved you were not the Herbert Loring to whom I promised myself. He was an unreal being. If he had existed he would not have been a man who would have brought me to that public place, all ignorant of his intentions, to cloud my perceptions, to subject my intellect to his own, and make me believe a lie. If a man should treat me in that way once he would treat me so at other times, and in other ways, if he had the chance. You have treated me in the past as to-day you treated those people who glared at the magic egg. In the days gone by you made me see an unreal man, but you will never do it again! Good-by.""Edith," cried Loring, "you don't--"

But she had disappeared through a side door, and he never spoke to her again.

Walking home through the dimly lighted streets, Loring involuntarily spoke aloud.

"And this," he said, "is what came out of the magic egg!"

同类推荐
  • JUDE THE OBSCURE

    JUDE THE OBSCURE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 小窗幽记

    小窗幽记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 东谷所见

    东谷所见

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Iphigenia at Aulis

    Iphigenia at Aulis

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • IN THE SOUTH SEAS

    IN THE SOUTH SEAS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 十方域主

    十方域主

    太古时期,元灵创世,引发先天生灵混战。为渡化众生,先经鸿蒙传道,后历女娲造人,亦无法重立秩序。而随着人族崛起,混战遂演变成人妖两族之战。上古时期,下界飞升通道崩裂,八大神器下落不明。后十方图出世,人妖两族为抢夺神器至尊大打出手,导致蛮荒封印被破,一场灭世大灾难随即拉开序幕。然,半妖族木易却有幸得十方图和上苍创世功......感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持
  • 天才少女陈小鬏

    天才少女陈小鬏

    平凡少女陈小鬏,为什么能得到男神孟山空的暗中帮助,成为会写作文的天才,走上升学开挂的道路?禁欲腹黑大学霸、阳光痞帅体育生、还有不知名的路人甲……听说最后的男主,是一个比太阳都温暖的人哦,只是,你永远猜不到他是谁。
  • 史上最强乞儿

    史上最强乞儿

    “下辈子,我一定要投胎当个城里人,天天给要饭的拿馒头吃!”天桥上,秦寿攥紧拳头,暗发毒誓,“我是禽兽……咳咳,秦寿,我要奋斗!汪汪!”
  • 桀骜风采

    桀骜风采

    你听,他来了。我们去会会他吧。这个游戏很好玩。一声雷鸣,大名鼎鼎的宋云舒来到了另外一个陌生的世界,这里,似乎以后会发生很多奇怪好玩的事情,换了身装扮的宋云舒竟然先去找吃的!但她却因机缘巧合来到了一位陌生男子的药房,他是高冷的,不爱说话,平常总是宋云舒和他说很多,但他却只回了几个字。在宋云舒说出一个大秘密后,他竟然……还是无动于衷!
  • 陪伴孩子香甜入睡的108个好故事

    陪伴孩子香甜入睡的108个好故事

    本书中有《塑造孩子良好性格的108个好故事》,有《培养孩子文明行为的108个好故事》。这些好故事仿佛一滴滴甘露,滋润着孩子稚嫩的心灵;又好似一位循循善诱的智者,引导孩子变得聪明好学,让孩子更加求知若渴。
  • 你别追了我不跑

    你别追了我不跑

    当长相一般的肖云,遇上三个妖孽级别的男神,第一人“肖云,我喜欢你。”“呵呵,你别开玩笑了。”第二人“肖云我爱你。”“啊啊,我还有事,改天再约。”第三人二话不说先来个强吻再说,“混蛋,你竟然强吻我,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,要吻也是我强吻你”说完,一个飞身便扑了上去
  • 异界之仙侠奇缘

    异界之仙侠奇缘

    缘之一字神秘莫测,是情缘是福缘,当一宅男机缘巧合之下带着宇宙第一奇物天道石,和一个华夏记忆系统来到异界后,又有怎样的传奇。
  • 22岁以后不可不懂人情世故

    22岁以后不可不懂人情世故

    22岁以后,你走出了校园,走进了社会,走入了职场,要怎样才能把事做好、把人做好?怎样才能让自己在最短的时间里融入到社会、融入到职场?这里有个极为关键的因素,那就是要懂得人情世故。所谓人情世故,是指与人交往中的博弈与礼数。这在人际关系极为重要的当今社会尤为突出。对于阅历尚浅的年轻人而言,若想在人际交往中站稳脚跟并最终胜出,的确是很困难的事情,同时也是必须要做好的事情。因为只有在人际交往中左右逢源,才算走好了踏入社会的第一步,才能迈好踏入社会以后的每一步。
  • 少年游侠记

    少年游侠记

    江湖就是一片恩怨之地,腥风血雨中,不是你死就是我活。为了同一个目标,万众一心,当目标达成时,万众之心会不会依旧凝聚?面对人心的贪婪,我们在这片江湖之地,逐一揭开他们虚假的面纱。
  • 计中人

    计中人

    一触即发的战争,各个族的勾心斗角,大国间的矛盾尖锐。场面仿佛随时都会失控,疯狂的世界因为一道划过天际的闪电,拉开了大战的序幕。而这一切,不过都是场计谋罢了……