BIBLIOGRAPHY

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Abercromby’s Finns.

Leo Allatius.

Barth’s The Religions of India.

Bartholin’s de Causa contemptÛs mortis.

Beaumont’s Treatise on Spirits.

Blavatsky’s Isis Unveiled.

Calmet’s Dissertation upon Apparitions.

Calmet’s The Phantom World.

Hugh Clifford’s In Court and Kampong.

Codrington’s Melanesians.

Conway’s Demonology and Folk-lore.

William Crooke’s Popular Religion and Folk-lore of Northern India.

Gabriele D’Annunzio’s The Triumph of Death.

De Schartz, Magia Postuma.

C. M. Doughty’s Arabia Deserta.

Eaves’ Modern Vampirism.

EncyclopÆdia Britannica.

Eyre’s Discoveries in Central Australia.

Farrer’s Primitive Manners and Customs.

Fornari’s History of Sorcerers.

Fortis’ Travels into Dalmatia.

Frazer’s Golden Bough.

Goethe’s Bride of Corinth.

Baring Gould’s Book of Were Wolves.

Grimm’s Teutonic Mythology.

J. J. Morgan de Groot’s Religious System of China.

Baron von Haxthausen’s Transcaucasia.

Hikayat Abdullah.

Reginald Hodder’s The Vampire.

Jewish EncyclopÆdia.

Keightley’s Fairy Mythology.

T. S. Knowlson’s Origin of Popular Superstitions.

Leake’s Travels in Northern Greece.

Liddell’s The Vampire Bride.

Mackenzie and Irby’s Travels in the Slavonic Provinces of Turkey in Europe.

Mayo’s On the Truths contained in Popular Superstitions.

Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (vol. ii.).

More’s Antidote against Atheism.

Nider’s Formicarius.

Laurence Oliphant’s Scientific Religion.

Pashley’s Crete (vol. ii.).

Polidori’s The Vampyre.

Michael Psellus’ Dialogus de Operationibus DÆmonum.

Ralston’s Russian Folk Tales.

Ralston’s Songs of the Russian People.

Roussel’s Transfusion of Human Blood.

Rycaut’s The Present State of the Greek and Armenian Churches.

Rymer’s Varney the Vampire.

St Clair and Brophy’s Bulgaria.

Saxo Grammaticus’ Danish History.

Sayce’s Ancient Empires of the East.

Scoffern’s Stray Leaves of Science and Folk-lore.

Sir Walter Scott’s translation of Eyrbyggia Saga.

Siegbert’s Chronicle.

W. W. Skeat’s Malay Magic.

Skeat and Blagden’s Pagan Races of the Malay Peninsula.

Southey’s Thalaba the Destroyer.

Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

R. Campbell Thompson’s The Devils and Evil Spirits of Babylonia.

J. Pitton de Tournefort’s A Voyage into the Levant.

Tozer’s Researches in the Highlands of Turkey.

Trumbull’s Blood Covenant.

Turner’s Nineteen Years in Polynesia.

Tylor’s Primitive Culture.

Voltaire’s Dictionnaire Philosophique.

Horace Walpole’s Reminiscences.

Westermarck’s Origin and Development of Moral Ideas.

William of Newbury.

Periodical Literature

All the Year Round (vol. xxv.).

Annals of Psychical Science.

Blackwood’s Magazine (vol. lxi.).

Borderland.

Chambers’s Journal (vol. lxxiii.).

Colburn’s Magazine (vol. vii.).

Contemporary Review (July 1885).

Gentleman’s Magazine (July 1851).

Household Words (vol. xi.).

Journal du MagnÉtisme.

Journal Indian Archipelago (vol. i.).

Lippincott’s Magazine (vol. xlvii.).

London Journal (March 1732).

New Monthly Magazine (1st April 1819).

Nineteenth Century (September 1885).

Notes and Queries.

Occult Review.

Open Court (vol. vii.).

Revue Spiritualiste (vol. iv.).

St James’s Magazine (vol. x.).

Wonderful Magazine (1764).

PRINTED BY NEILL AND CO., LTD., EDINBURGH


THE VAMPIRE

A ROMANCE OF THE UNCANNY

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By REGINALD HODDER

AUTHOR OF “A SOLDIER OF FORTUNE,” ETC.

Crown 8vo, Cloth Gilt, Coloured Frontispiece

“The story is really exciting, and the ordinary reader who merely wishes to be thrilled will gain his desire and find Mr Hodder’s pages most engrossing. To occultists the author presents a new theory and a novel treatment of an ancient subject, both of which merit their attention and consideration.”—Times.

“Readers who enjoy fierce mystery of the supernatural order will discover a most thrilling experience in ‘The Vampire.’”—Glasgow Herald.

“For the first few pages we attempted to employ a critical mind, but the narrative soon held us in a grip of terror, and we could do no more than sit at the author’s feet and abandon ourselves to fearful joy.”—The Standard.

“Horror succeeds horror, and mystery is piled upon mystery. It is a blood-curdling, hair-raising story of the black art and of evil spirits.”—Sheffield Independent.

“It is one of the most sensationally weird stories ever written—a marvellous excursion into the realms of the occult.”—Hampshire Independent.

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“These letters are really ‘the letters of a traveller in a strange country. They record his impressions, often his mistakes, sometimes perhaps his provincial prejudices; but at least they are not a re-hash of what somebody else has said.’ It is obvious that the writer took over with him to the other side the keen intelligence of an investigator as well as the impartiality of a judicial mind, which his occupation on earth had been the best means of cultivating. I question if the same can be said of any previous communication from the other world, and it is this very fact that renders ‘Letters from a Living Dead Man’ so original and supremely absorbing. Compared with it, all previous records seem trivial and commonplace.”—Ralph Shirley in the Occult Review.

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COSMIC SYMBOLISM. By “Sepharial.” Crown 8vo, ornamental cloth gilt, 304 pp. 3s. 6d. net.

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A MANUAL OF OCCULTISM. A Complete Exposition of the Occult Arts and Sciences by “Sepharial.” With numerous diagrams and illustrations. 368 pp., handsomely bound in cloth gilt. Gilt tops. Crown 8vo. 6s. net.

A NEW MANUAL OF ASTROLOGY. In four books. With Set of Tables. By “Sepharial.” Revised and Enlarged Edition. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt. 264 pp. 10s. 6d. net.

SECOND SIGHT: A Study of Natural and Induced Clairvoyance. By “Sepharial.” Crown 8vo, 96 pp. Stiff boards, 1s. net.

The author writes from personal experience in this department of psychic research and brings to his aid a considerable knowledge of the methods employed in the general field of Occultism.

The present publication embraces the theory and practice of Clairvoyance, both natural and induced.

THE KABALA OF NUMBERS. A Handbook dealing with the Traditional Interpretation of Numbers and their Predictive Value. By “Sepharial.” Second Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt. 2s. 6d. net.

KABALA OF NUMBERS. Part II. By “Sepharial.” Crown 8vo, cloth. 2s. 6d. net.

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Contents in Eight Views: Clearing the Approach—The Vision—Mysticism and Symbolism—Love in Action—The Physical Film—Space—Time—Creation.

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The writer of this book, it is admitted, has enjoyed access to sources of information not commonly open to mankind in its present state of development.

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“There are a great many people to whom this book, which is seriously intended, will appeal; and the ‘conclusion’ is plainly the result of much thought.”—The English Review.

“His work will probably take many readers further along this path once they have started on it.”—The AthenÆum.

“The book is a very spirited and successful attempt to justify the Occult Arts on a purely scientific basis. It is written very clearly and convincingly, and shows that the author has a fine grasp of both the occult and the scientific sides of the question.”—Review of Reviews.

WHAT IS OCCULTISM? A Philosophical and Critical Study. By “Papus.” Translated from the French by F. Rothwell. Crown 8vo, Cloth. Price 2s. net.

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LONDON:
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