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however, she cared so little for the preservation of the secret, that when she declined to be further examined by the Commission, she admitted to Mr. Furness that the gentlemen had ample ground for looking upon the manifestations which she had given as unsatisfactory. Mr. Furness says: "I told her that the Commission had now had two seances with her, and that _the conclusion to which they had come is that the so-called raps are confined wholly to her person_, whether produced by her voluntarily or involuntarily they had not attempted to decide; furthermore, that although thus satisfied in their own minds they were anxious to treat her with all possible deference and consideration, and accordingly had desired me to say to her that if she thought another seance with her would or might modify or reverse their conclusion, they held themselves ready to meet her again this evening and renew the investigation of the manifestations; at the same time I felt it my duty to add that in that case the examination would necessarily be of the most searching description. "Mrs. Kane replied that the manifestations at both seances had been of an unsatisfactory nature, so unsatisfactory that _she could not really blame the Commission for arriving at their conclusion_. In her present state of health she _really_ doubted whether a third meeting would prove any better than the two already held. It might even be more unsatisfactory, and instead of removing the present belief of the Commission it might add confirmation of it. In view of these considerations, she decided not to hold another seance." * * * * * Mrs. Kane declares that with her muscles and the joints of her toes so educated by long practice, and her ability to produce the noise of "raps" with no perceptible movement, she could have gone on deceiving the world indefinitely without being detected. She explains that the making of the "raps," when she is stationed on glass tumblers, requires a far greater effort than when her feet are in contact with the carpet or floor. The shock must in that case be conveyed through a comparatively non-conducting substance. For this reason, when the floor was especially hard or thick and lacking in sonorousness, she sometimes failed in the expected effect. In every instance, it was most difficult to produce the "raps" under those circumstances. * * * * * The verdict, however,
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