Uncle Dale wrote:...I'm willing to stand briefly on common ground with Glenn,
to say that Smith thought peepstones magical and Nephites historical
...
That much said, it should be clearly evident that Joe Smith
could NOT see things under the ground by magical powers.
He was NOT the 1826 equivalent of ground penetrating radar.
So -- at least by 1826 (and his hearing at So. Bainbridge)
Joe was aware of the fact that he was NOT locating any
buried treasures with his peepstone. He knew that such
pretensions were a fraud -- whether or not he had truly
believed in that superstition previously.
The New York
Minerva of August 27, 1825 printed an
article on divining rods, and the writer concluded:
To discover where the supposed treasure is, whether in a natural or artificial state, the searchers, beside the use of the rod, pretend to possess traditionary stories, to have received monitions by dreams thrice occurring, to have a knowledge of certain inscriptions upon rocks or marks upon ancient trees, directing to the objects of their future wealth. But their firmest reliance, or rather their last resort, is in the alleged efficacy of the Mineral Rod. This instrument when properly employed, is affirmed to be so strongly attracted by the precious metals, as to be capable of leading the person who holds it directly to the spot where they lie in concealment. Some really believe in its power, while others employ it as an engine of imposture, to cheat their avaricious and credulous neighbours.
http://olivercowdery.com/smithhome/smithrod.htm#1825Min
"...others employ it as an engine of imposture, to cheat..."
By 1826 Joe Smith must have realized that his peepstone
was being employed for just that purpose -- to cheat --
But reports say that Joe began his con-artist pretensions
by using a divining rod, and not his later peepstone. Joe's
father appears to have always been a rod con-artist, who
never graduated to peepstones.
But Joe must have understood, by the early 1820s at least,
the natural limitations of the divining rod. The rodsman
could only direct his dupes on so many unproductive hunts
for buried treasure, before they realized the fraud.
The peepstone con-artist, on the other hand, could
always resort to depictions of his "seers' powers" to
explain how "slippery treasures" moved underground, away
from the money-diggers' excavations. The peepstone con
man could tell his followers that he SAW the buried gold
and silver slipping away to some new location -- and thus
avoid the embarrassment of the false divining rod results.
At the time Joe was telling his followers that he SAW their
sought-after buried treasures slipping away, he must have
been using his peepstone as part of a knowing fraud. When
116 pages of Nephite record turned up missing, Joe KNEW
that his peepstone could NOT locate the stolen pages.
So, I'd say that Joe's belief in divining rod powers and in
peepstone powers must have faded by the early 1820s.
If he believed in such stuff as a boy, then surely when he
reached adulthood he understood that he could NOT
discover hidden objects by supernatural powers. Such
stuff was reserved for the fantasies of Solomon Spalding,
who spoke of pornographic peepstones, that could
display the lovemaking of couples behind closed doors to
the criminal peeping tom.
But -- and I pause here, to reflect for a moment -- Is it
possible that the use of peepstones served to place Joe
in a trance-like altered state of consciousness? I think
that is a very real possibility, and that we should not be
quick to dismiss Joe's own belief in himself as some sort of
a "seer."
True -- he could not see buried Nephite treasures under
the hillsides of Manchester. But he could allow his vivid
imagination to sweep him away, on flights of fancy, some
of which were perhaps induced by alcohol or other drugs.
My guess is that the peepstones employed by Joe were
used as something more than simple "props" to his hoaxes.
I'm open to the possibility that -- at times -- Joe really
believed he was seeing supernatural visions of heavenly
messengers, buried Nephite cities, or even the very words
& actions of preColumbian Christians of the 6th dispensation
UD