This is interesting. We all know that Smith can't dictate at will contents of books he's unfamiliar with unless there is a trick going on. It would appear in this case that the book was Smith's and he likely prepared himself for this show by memorizing a page in advance..for the sole purpose of such a show. Had Stowel picked his own book and asked Smith to do the same thing, I'm sure the outcome would have been different.
Maybe that's what made Stowell think it was palpable. Maybe he said, wow, Joe, nice trick, now can you read this one? Who knows? That's the problem, we simply don't have enough information. I really wish Stowell would have elaborated.
But what is interesting is Smith showing his propensity to perform tricks. He's not simply claiming to translate with God's help, words which appear on a stone, he's performing a trick, trying to show that he can dictate any book without looking at it by using his stone.
Correct. Joseph Smith was obviously a trickster. And he'd been honing the craft since his adolescent days. The religious stuff came later. But what the Stowell testimony reveals is that Smith had started attempting to fool people with regard to reading books through a seer stone as early as 1826, two years before Book of Mormon translation even started.
So this indicates Smith's propensity and interest in preparing in advance for a trick to perform. Here he is transferring the treasure seeking trickery to books.
Good points.
And why would he be thinking along those lines? Because he's likely already been thinking along those lines with the Book of Mormon.
Well that is a good question. The timing of all this. The 1826 thing happened in the spring/early summer, if I remember correctly. The most likely time for Smith to meet Rigdon is in the weeks following the 1826 trial. But I suppose if we were to view the book trick as a possible clue, it might suggest they had met before summer, 1826.
It might be worth looking into a possible meeting of Smith & Rigdon in late 1825 or early '26. I wonder if Rigdon ever preached in Chenango or Broome counties during that time? Maybe Dale can enlighten us on Rigdon's whereabouts at that point.
The majority of the Book of Mormon would have been done by simply reading from a preprepared manuscript with the scribe Cowdery and whoever else as scribe he spent a good deal of time with ..and they'd by in on the process of knowing a manuscript was being used. But for some minor scribes a prepared in advance trick could easily be planned. Memorize a page or 2..and use that for show purposes..those same memorized pages could be used a number of times if necessary for show. And of course he can also always wing it temporarily.
What has always struck me about the Badger's Tavern account is this:
...and peek into his hat and call out a word to Cowdery, who sat at the same table and wrote it down.
The way Hine describes this, one word at a time, sounds painfully slow. On the other hand, with theatrics, the act could be impressive... as though he's struggling to read the words as they appear. This is the impression I get from Smith's reading ability... that he would likely have been a slow reader.
But if Hine's account has any basis in reality, it shows that at least the show part was being performed for public consumption--exactly my earlier point to Dan! On the one hand we have Dan claiming poor Joe needed privacy from curiosity seekers and on the other hand, according to Hine, we have Oliver and Jo tag-teaming at the local watering hole in an effort to generate curiosity (that was apparently working!) No doubt Dan simply rejects Hine's testimony out of hand since it doesn't mesh very neatly with his S/A paradigm.
Another possible solution to the trick is simply two copies of the same book--and Cowdery was a book peddler for a while. From what I remember at least some of these seer stones had holes in them. So if Joseph can look though the hole and point it at a concealed copy of the same book, then he can see the same words. Even better with Cowdery working as an assistant.
The point is some sort of deception was being employed. How good of a magician Smith was is not clear.
If Smith is only into dictating the Book of Mormon from his creative mind, then why is he into performing tricks of dictating books which have nothing to do with his claims to what is happening with the Book of Mormon and divine involvement?
The parlor tricks seem to have been done early on. Joseph himself admitted to "folly" in his youth. But it definitely looks like he progressed from alleging he sees articles in the stone to alleging he can read words in the stone. I think the early LDS mindset was to think of Smith's gift for seeing in a stone as a talent that could be used for good or evil. So God took the talent and used it for good--to translate the Book of Mormon.
But, in reality, I think the book reading stone trick probably emerged out of a response to a skeptic to prove he could really see things in the stone.