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Crawford, F. Marion (Francis Marion), 1854-1909

"The Witch of Prague"

I never heard of a like case."
"After all, I do not see why it should not be so," said the Wanderer
thoughtfully. "At all events, whatever she can do, is evidently done by
hypnotism, and such extraordinary experiments have succeeded of late--"
"I did not say that there was nothing but hypnotism in her processes."
"What then? Magic?" The Wanderer's lip curled scornfully.
"I do not know," replied the little man, speaking slowly. "Whatever her
secret may be, she keeps it, even when speaking in sleep. This I can
tell you. I suspect that there is some other being, or person, in that
queer old house of hers whom she consults on grave occasions. At a loss
for an answer to a difficult scientific question, I have known her to
leave the room and to come back in the course of a few minutes with a
reply which I am positive she could never have framed herself."
"She may have consulted books," suggested the Wanderer.
"I am an old man," said Keyork Arabian suddenly. "I am a very old man;
there are not many books which I have not seen and partially read at one
time or at another, and my memory is surprisingly good. I have excellent
reasons for believing that her information is not got from anything that
was ever written or printed."
"May I ask of what general nature your questions were?" inquired the
other, more interested than he had hitherto been in the conversation.
"They referred to the principles of embalmment.


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