Author

David Patterson (Spirit) Hatch

1846-1912

David Patterson (Spirit) Hatch (1846-1912) is a public-domain author available on Rivro. Read free books, explore subjects, and discover related classics.

Subjects

Books by David Patterson (Spirit) Hatch

Letters from a living dead man

Letters from a living dead man by David Patterson Hatch is a spiritualist epistolary work written in the early 20th century. It presents purported messages from a recently deceased thinker known as “X,” conveyed through a medium, describing the conditions, laws, and experiences of consciousness after death. Expect vivid accounts of astral travel, teachers and helpers, reincarnation, heavens and hells, and the mechanics of cross‑world communication, with recurring figures like a guiding Teacher and a boy named Lionel. The opening of this work begins with an introduction from the recorder explaining how the letters started through automatic writing in Paris, the surprising news of “X’s” death, her reluctance and later decision to publish, and her insistence that the communications be judged by their substance. The early letters then unfold: “X” asserts his presence, explains the ease and brightness of the transition, asks for discretion, and teaches safeguards against intrusive astral influences and the mental poise needed for writing. He describes movement and perception in the subtle world; the role of will; the “pattern world” of prototypes; a League that helps the newly dead; and meetings with souls, including Lionel, along with glimpses of a “heaven country” and a Christ vision. He reports visiting archives (a Paracelsus treatise), shaping garments by thought, and warns the newly departed not to revisit their corpses; he relates a marital tangle between a man and his two wives, notes individualized hells, and tells of a devoted couple reunited in a home he built for her. The section closes with reflections on finding God (“God is”), the rhythm of rebirth and eternity, a defense of this controlled collaboration (distinguishing it from indiscriminate mediumship), and a final vignette setting off to witness a great imperial funeral.

Last letters from the living dead man

"Last letters from the living dead man" by David Patterson Hatch is a collection of spiritualist letters and metaphysical essays written in the early 20th century. Framed as messages dictated through Elsa Barker’s automatic writing, it offers posthumous guidance on America’s moral destiny during and after the Great War, blending occult insight with practical civic counsel. The focus is on courage, unity, ethical reform, and the shaping influence of unseen worlds on national life. The opening of this work begins with Barker’s candid introduction: she recounts how the letters were “written down” during 1917–1918, her earlier volumes, her reluctance to continue automatic writing, and her turn to analytical psychology (especially Jung) while affirming a deep, experiential belief in immortality and the practical value of prayer and mysticism. The first letters from “X” invoke the “Genius of America,” urging fearlessness, service, and national unity amid wartime upheaval, and foretelling great change akin to winter giving way to spring. He warns that America suffers from an “indigestion of gold,” presses for rebuilding Europe, shipbuilding, fair lending, government stewardship of key utilities and food, and steady work to prevent panic and hysteria, while cautioning about a coming surge in psychic sensitivity and the need for restraint. Further letters advise honest dealing at home, level heads in turbulent politics, simple methods to calm fear, and describe “invisible armies” aiding from beyond; they also stress America’s role in spiritual culture, discuss reincarnated Native souls within the population, and narrate a forest encounter with an indigenous chieftain that reframes vengeance into future brotherhood—before returning to the central theme that a nation’s ideals, like individuals’, determine its fate.

War letters from the living dead man

"War letters from the living dead man" by David Patterson Hatch is a collection of spiritualist letters written in the early 20th century. It presents purported communications from a deceased American judge, “X,” channeled through Elsa Barker, who reports from the afterlife on the unseen forces shaping the Great War. Blending battlefield vignettes with esoteric teaching, it explores karma, elemental beings, the struggle of love versus hate, and a call to universal brotherhood under the guidance of a Teacher and an angelic “Beautiful Being.” The opening of the work sets the stage through Barker’s introduction, detailing her automatic writing method, her cautious skepticism, and incidents she takes as evidence, then moves into the first letters in which “X” returns from a starry sojourn to confront demonic forces driving the war and assures that the powers of good will ultimately prevail. Early letters depict astral battles, monstrous elementals, the Archduke’s troubled after-death state, a sharp critique of Prussianized Germany coupled with a plea to love one’s enemies, and Belgium’s suffering framed through karmic “spectres of the Congo.” Further chapters offer scenes of unseen guardians protecting a Belgian home, consolation for the bereaved via a reincarnation-as-day metaphor, an angelic discourse on love and hate, and teachings on Humanity as one body, the inner “foeman,” and the danger of over-climaxing any rhythm. The narrative includes reading soldiers’ thoughts in Brussels, a prophecy of a coming Sixth Race centered in America, praise of France’s civility and restraint (with Abraham Lincoln watching over the U.S.), and closes this opening stretch with a glimpse of Masters debating how to soften the war’s end and a warning about will-driven “magic” that forces outcomes against the larger law.