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 the spirit who dictated it. "Stephen," the dead soldier who stands responsible for the diffuse philosophy of "Our Unseen Guest," dedicates the book to the "wistful" questioners who seek enlightenment at his hands. "Anne Simon," a transcendental spirit with a strong bias for hyphenated words, sends her modest "Message," dictated through her husband, to "world-mortals for their regeneration."

How lightly that tremendous word, "regeneration," is bandied about by our ghostly preceptors. Mr. Basil King, in "The Abolishing of Death," reports the spirit of Henry Talbot, the distinguished Boston chemist, assaying, "My especial mission is to regenerate the world." It is a large order. The ungrateful but always curious mortal who would like a few practical hints about chemistry, is told instead that "grief is unrhythmical," which proves that Mr. Talbot never read "In Memoriam"; or finds himself 60