The Unfinished Preface
by
Carleton G. Ferris
Love of Nature, Religion, Philosophy
& Psychical Research
In his autobiography father has referred to his intense interest in seeing
and hearing the great men and women of his time in their various fields
of endeavor and the sacrifices he made in order to indulge his interest.
He has also referred to his fondness for the theatre and the dramatic arts.
In the lighter vein it may surprise the reader to know that he was very
fond of good perfume, but refrained from its use except in a very mild way
and at rare intervals. He was also a diamond lover but his nature so rebelled
against ostentatious display that he contented himself with the ownership
of a very few modest stones. The wonders of Nature never ceased to hold
his interest his early associations on the farm in the comparatively primitive
period of his boyhood undoubtedly implanted in him an appreciation of the
works of nature which remained with him throughout his busy life. He loved
the soil and often expressed the hope that he might return to it. On October
18, 1927, he writes to me as follows:
"I hate business. I was intended for a dirt farmer. One who could
wear long whiskers, long hair, drive a pair of steers or stags and raise
thirteen or fourteen children. I missed my calling but it is too late to
get back to fundamentals now."
Apropos of his close observations of the ways of nature here are a few lines
written to me on March 18, 1927:
"The robins are here and I suppose the ground hog has come out of
his hole. I long since learned to discount the intelligence of robins, blue-jays
and ground hogs. I am not particularly desirous of assuming the attitude
of a pessimist."
Father has referred to some extent to his attitude toward religion. While
he was entirely free from racial or religious intolerance, he was at times
the target for considerable criticism with reference to his association
with the Unitarian Church. It did not disturb him particularly, however.
He never accepted any doctrine, religious, social, political or economic,
lock stock and barrel. His affiliation with the Unitarian Church, therefore,
simply meant that to him it comprehended a religious philosophy that he
could understand and believe in . . . at least in part. The following extract
from one of his letters to me on May 29, 1923, concisely expresses his religious
philosophy:
"I know that neither you nor Phelps has ever engaged in much religious
thinking. I believe that both of you have missed something worth while.
I still believe that if the Christian Church could be converted to Christianity,
something worth while could be accomplished. The truth of the matter is,
there is no difference between church members and non-church members except
by profession. None of them believe in practical Christianity. I believe
that the Sermon on the Mount is genuinely practical. I find that the man
or woman who is without this philosophy of life is unstable and unable to
fight successfully the battles of life. I have always worshipped the courage
that conquers. It is not worthwhile
to ask whether life is worth living or not. We are compelled to live it.
The fundamental virtues exemplified by Christ constitute the only energizing
forces in the universe."
Father possessed a type of curiosity that gave him a perpetual thirst for
knowledge and sometimes carried him far afield. There was nothing that he
would not delve into when his interest was sufficiently aroused. During
his entire life he was interested in psychical research. Being intensely
practical he was wary of accepting in toto the experiences of others
in the field of psychic phenomena. On the other hand, he could not accept
in its entirety the theory of self-hypnotism as applied to the experiences
of Sir Oliver Lodge, Sir Conan Doyle, Crooks, the English physicist; Flammarion,
the French astronomer, and many others. Intensely interested in human nature
and free from prejudice he was forever trying to verify by experiment experiences
of others in the realm of the unknown. I can recall that at one time he
had a standing offer of one thousand dollars to be paid to any person who
could produce on slates clamped together, with a slate pencil between, any
message from his father. Many tried it but no one was successful. The reason
usually given being that my father's presence and skepticism constituted
a type of resistance which the medium or control could not overcome.
Some ten years before his death he had a series of experiences immediately
following the death of my mother which continued for a period of a year
or more that he was unable to explain. At least four members of the family
were witnesses to these phenomena.
At his request, at the time, I made a typewritten summary of these various
phenomena which is still in my possession. I doubt that any series of incidents
of this nature that have ever been recorded are any more unusual and inexplicable
or better substantiated by unprejudiced witnesses than are the ones to which
I refer.
Throughout, father remained cool and calm. While neither he nor any of us
could offer a satisfactory explanation, it was his judgment that there might
be a logical solution that the study of human nature still is in its infancy
and our knowledge of the capacities of the human mind exceedingly limited
as yet.