Another World 
 
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Title: Another World Fragments from the Star City of Montalluyah 
Author: Benjamin Lumley (AKA Hermes) 
Release Date: August 10, 2005 [EBook #16503] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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ANOTHER WORLD; 
OR 
FRAGMENTS FROM THE STAR CITY 
OF 
MONTALLUYAH. 
BY 
HERMES. 
[Illustration.] 
LONDON: SAMUEL TINSLEY, 10, SOUTHAMPTON ST., STRAND, 1873. 
[_The right of Translation is reserved._] 
LONDON:
PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET, AND 
CHARING CROSS. 
 
PREFACE. 
The fact that there is a plurality of worlds, that, in other words, the planets of our solar 
system are inhabited, has been so generally maintained by modern astronomers, that it 
almost takes its place among the truths commonly accepted by the large body of educated 
persons. As two among the many works, which bear directly on the subject, it will be 
here sufficient to name Sir David Brewster's 'More Worlds than One, the Creed of the 
Philosopher and the Hope of the Christian,' and Mr. B.A. Proctor's 'Other Worlds than 
Ours.' 
A fragmentary account of some of the ways peculiar to the inhabitants of one of these 
"star worlds," and of their moral and intellectual condition is contained in the following 
pages. 
When the assertion is made that the account is derived, not from the imagination, but 
from an actual knowledge of the star, it will at first receive scant credence, and the reader 
will be at once inclined to class the fragments among those works about imaginary 
republics and imaginary travels which, ever since the days of Plato, have from time to 
time made their appearance to improve the wisdom, impose on the credulity, or satirize 
the follies of mankind. 
Nor can the reader's anticipated want of faith be deemed other than natural; for, although 
tests applied daily during a period extending over nearly a lifetime have proved the 
source of the fragments to be such as is here represented, the Editor feels bound to say 
that, notwithstanding much confirmatory evidence, many years passed and many facts 
were communicated before all doubts were completely removed from his mind. 
One great obstacle to the reader's belief that an authentic description of another world is 
before him will arise from the circumstance that the means by which such extraordinary 
experience was acquired are not included in the sphere of his knowledge, and that any 
attempt to explain them at present would only increase his incredulity. He would only see 
one enigma solved by another apparently more insoluble than itself. The Editor, therefore, 
would call especial attention to the practical value of the revelations here communicated, 
convinced as he is that they are so replete with instruction to terrestial mankind, that the 
difficulty of giving credence to them ought not to be augmented by premature disclosures. 
Ultimately satisfied as to the origin of the fragments, he entreats the reader not, indeed, to 
surrender, but simply to suspend his judgment until he has carefully examined them, 
conceiving that, apart from all external proof, they rest upon an intrinsic evidence, the 
force of which it will be difficult to resist. Nay, he is even of opinion that an impartial 
student will find it easier to believe in their planetary origin than in their emanating from 
an ordinary human brain. The practical value of the facts, considered apart from their 
source, will excuse his request not to be too hastily judged.
The people to whom the fragments relate are, it will be found, not only human, but 
constituents of a highly civilized and even polished society. Their notions of good and 
evil, of happiness and misery correspond to ours, and though they employ different 
means, the objects they pursue are the same with those sought by terrestrial 
philanthropists. Health, education, marriage, the removal of disease, the prevention of 
madness and of crime, the arts of government, the regulation of amusement, the efficient 
employment of physical forces--themes so often discussed here--have equally occupied 
the attention of our planetary brethren, although, as will be seen, in the results of our 
studies we differ not a little. This is not a story of Anthropophagi, or men whose heads do 
grow beneath their shoulders, which can merely excite wonder, but a record of actual 
men, who, widely separated from us in the ocean of space, are beings with whom we can 
sympathise much more than with    
    
		
	
	
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