
Wild Talents, by Charles Fort, [1933]
From the story of J. Temple
Thurston, I pick up that this man, with his clothes on, was so scorched as to
bring on death by heart failure, by a fire that did not affect his clothes.
This body was fully clothed, when found, about
In this burning house, nothing was afire in Thurston's room. Nothing was
found—such as charred fragments of nightclothes—to suggest that, about three
o'clock, Thurston, awakened by a fire elsewhere in the house, had gone from his
room, and had been burned, and had returned to his room, where he had dressed,
but had then been overcome.
It may be that he had died hours before the house was afire.
It has seemed to me most fitting to regard all accounts in this book, as
"stories." There has been a permeation of the fantastic, or whatever
we think we mean by "untrueness." Our
stories have not
been realistic. And there is something about the
story of J. Temple Thurston that, to me, gives it the look of a revised story.
It is as if, in an imagined scene, an author had killed off a character by
burning, and then, thinking it over, as some writers do, had noted
inconsistencies, such as a burned body, and no mention of a fire anywhere in
the house—so then, as an afterthought, the fire in the house—but, still, such
an amateurish negligence in the authorship of this story, that the fire was not
explained.
To the firemen, this fire in the house was as unaccountable as, to the
coroner, was the burned body in the unscorched
clothes. When the firemen broke into Hawley Manor, they found the fire raging
outside Thurston's room. It was near no fireplace; near no electric wires that
might have crossed. There was no odor of paraffin, nor was there anything else
suggestive of arson, or of ordinary arson. There had been no robbery. In
Thurston's pockets were money and his watch. The fire, of unknown origin,
seemed directed upon Thurston's room, as if to destroy, clothes and all, this
burned body in the unscorched clothes. Outside, the
door of this room was blazing, when the firemen arrived.
We have had other stories of unaccountable injuries. According to them, men
and women have been stabbed, but have not known until later that they were
wounded. There was no evidence to indicate that Thurston knew of his scorched
condition, tried to escape, or called for help.
There are stories of persons who have been found dead, with bullet wounds,
under clothing that showed no sign of the passage of bullets. The
police-explanation has been of persons who were killed, while undressed, and
were then dressed by the murderers. New York Times, July I,
1872—mysterious murder, at
I have come upon so many stories of showers of stones that have entered
closed rooms, leaving no sign of entrance in either ceilings or walls, that I
have not much sense of strangeness in the idea that
bullets, or a knife, could pierce a body, under
uncut clothes. There are stories of bullets that have entered closed rooms,
without disturbing the materials of walls or ceilings.
Dispatch, dated
About two years later, being not very speedy in getting around to this, I
wrote to the
There is a story, in the
Religio-Philosophical Journal,
In the R. P. J.,
short intervals, and then falls that lasted an hour
or more. Many bullets appeared, but when
How bullets could enter closed rooms is no more mysterious than is the howness of Houdini's escape from prison cells, though,
according to all that was supposed to be known of physical confinements,
that was impossible. In
I have a story of a horse that appeared in what would, to any ordinary
horse, be a closed room. It makes one nervous, maybe. One glances around, and
would at least not be incredulous, seeing almost any damned thing, sitting in a
chair, staring at one. I'd like to have readers, who consider themselves superior
to such notions, note whether they can resist just a glance. The story of the
horse was told in the London Daily Mail,
There were other occurrences that could not be. Heavy barrels of lime, with
nobody perceptibly near them, were hurled down the stairs. This was in the
daytime. Though occasionally I do go slinking
about, at night, with our data, mostly ours are
sunlight mysteries. The mill was an isolated building, and nobody—at least
nobody seeable—could approach it unseen. There were two watchdogs. A large
water butt, so heavy that to move it was beyond human strength, was overthrown.
Locked and bolted doors opened. I mention that the miller had a young son.
About the middle of March, 1901—that a woman was stabbed to death, in a
fiction—or in a scene like an imagined scene that did not belong to what we
call "reality." The look of the story of Lavinia
Farrar is that it, too, was "revised," and by an amateurish, or
negligent, or in some unknown way hampered, "author," who, in an
attempt to cover up his crime, bungled—or that this woman had been killed
inexplicably, in commonplace terms, and that, later, means were taken, but
awkwardly, or almost blindly, and only by way of increasing the mystery, to
make the murder seem understandable in terms of common human experience.
A knife was on the floor, and blood was on the floor. But it seemed that
this blood had not come from the woman's wound. This wound was almost
bloodless. Only one of her garments, the innermost, was blood-stained, and only
slightly. There had been no robbery. The jury returned an open verdict.
Upon the evening of March 9, 1929—see the New York Times, March 10,
11, 1929—Isidor Fink, of 4 East 132nd Street, New
York City, was ironing something. He was the proprietor of the Fifth
[paragraph continues] Avenue
Laundry. A hot iron was on the gas stove. Because of the hold-ups that
were of such frequent occurrence at the time, he was afraid; the windows of his
room were closed, and the door was bolted.
A woman, who heard screams, and sounds as if of
blows, but no sound of shots, notified the police. Policeman Albert Kattenborn went to the place, but was unable to get in. He
lifted a boy through the transom. The boy unbolted the door. On the floor lay
Fink, two bullet wounds in his chest, and one in his left wrist, which was
powder-marked. He was dead. There was money in his pockets, and the cash
register had not been touched. No weapon was found. The man had died instantly,
or almost instantly.
There was a theory that the murderer had crawled through the transom. A
hinge on this transom was broken, but there was no statement, as to the look of
this break, as indicating recency, or not. The
transom was so narrow that Policeman Kattenborn had
to lift a boy through it. It would have to be thought that, having sneaked
noiselessly through this transom, the murderer then, with much difficulty, left
the room the same way, instead of simply unbolting the door. It might be
thought that the murderer had climbed up, outside, and had fired through the
transom. But Fink's wrist was powder-burned, indicating that he had not been
fired at from a distance. More than two years later, Police Commissioner Mulrooney, in a radio-talk, called this murder, in a closed
room, an "insoluble mystery."