The Book of the Damned - Charles Fort-pages

Page 104 of 376

Page 104 of 376
The Book of the Damned - Charles Fort-pages

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in other [p. 84] becomes the indigenous, or from the strangest of places we'd expect the familiar. Or if hosts of living frogs have come here--from somewhere else--every living thing upon this earth may, ancestrally, have come from--somewhere else. | find that | have another note upon a specific hurricane: Annals and Mag. of Nat. Hist., 1-3-185: After one of the greatest hurricanes in the history of Ireland, some fish were found "as far as 15 yards from the edge of a lake." Have another: this is a good one for the exclusionists: Fall of fish in Paris: said that a neighboring pond had been blown dry. (Living Age, 52-186.) Date not given, but | have seen it recorded somewhere else. The best-known fall of fishes from the sky is that which occurred at Mountain Ash, in the Valley of Abedare, Glamorganshire, Feb. 11, 1859. The Editor of the Zoologist, 2-677, having published a report of a fall of fishes, writes: "| am continually receiving similar accounts of frogs and fishes." But, in all the volumes of the Zoologist, | can find only two reports of such falls. There is nothing to conclude other than that hosts of data have been lost because orthodoxy does not look favorably upon such reports. The Monthly Weather Review records several falls of fishes in the United States; but accounts of these reported occurrences are not findable [paragraph continues] American publications. Nevertheless, the treatment by the Zoologist of the fall reported from Mountain Ash is fair. First appears, in the issue of 1859-6493, a letter from the Rev. John