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                    |  In fiction, folklore, and popular culture, a doppelgänger is a ghostly double of a living person, often perceived as a 
sinister form of bilocation. In 
the vernacular, the word 
doppelgänger has come to refer (as in German) to any double 
or look-alike of a person. The 
word is also used to describe the sensation of having glimpsed oneself in peripheral vision, 
in a position where there is no chance that it could have been a reflection. 
They are generally regarded as harbingers of bad luck. In some traditions, a 
doppelgänger seen by a person's friends or relatives portends illness or danger, 
while seeing one's own doppelgänger is an omen of death. In Norse mythology, a 
vardøger is a ghostly 
double who precedes a living person and is seen performing their actions in 
advance. On 8 July 1822, Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet, 
drowned in the Bay of 
Spezia near Lerici. On 15 August, 
while staying at Pisa, Percy's wife Mary Shelley wrote a letter 
to Maria 
Gisborne in which she relayed Percy's claims to her that he had met his own 
doppelgänger. A week after Mary's nearly fatal miscarriage, in the early hours of 23 June, Percy 
had had a nightmare about the 
house collapsing in a flood, and 
... talking it over the next morning he told me that he had had many visions 
lately — he had seen the figure of himself which met him as he walked on the 
terrace & said to him — "How long do you mean to be content" — No very 
terrific words & certainly not prophetic of what has occurred. But Shelley 
had often seen these figures when ill; but the strangest thing is that Mrs 
Williams saw him. Now Jane, though a woman of sensibility, has not much 
imagination & is not in the slightest degree nervous — neither in dreams or 
otherwise. She was standing one day, the day before I was taken ill, [15 June] 
at a window that looked on the Terrace with Trelawny — it was day — she saw as 
she thought Shelley pass by the window, as he often was then, without a coat or 
jacket — he passed again — now as he passed both times the same way — and as 
from the side towards which he went each time there was no way to get back 
except past the window again (except over a wall twenty feet from the ground) 
she was struck at seeing him pass twice thus & looked out & seeing him 
no more she cried — "Good God can Shelley have leapt from the wall? Where can he 
be gone?" Shelley, said Trelawny — "No Shelley has past — What do you mean?" 
Trelawny says that she trembled exceedingly when she heard this & it proved 
indeed that Shelley had never been on the terrace & was far off at the time 
she saw him. Percy Shelley's drama Prometheus Unbound (1820) 
contains the following passage in Act I: "Ere Babylon was dust, / The Magus 
Zoroaster, my dear child, / Met his own image walking in the garden. / That 
apparition, sole of men, he saw. / For know there are two worlds of life and 
death: / One that which thou beholdest; but the other / Is underneath the grave, 
where do inhabit / The shadows of all forms that think and live / Till death 
unite them and they part no more...." Izaak Walton claimed 
that John Donne, the English 
                        metaphysical poet, saw his wife's 
doppelgänger in 1612 in Paris, on the same night as the stillbirth of their 
daughter. 
Two days after their arrival there, Mr. Donne was left alone, in that 
room in which Sir Robert, and he, and some other friends had dined 
together. To this place Sir Robert returned within half an hour; and, as 
he left, so he found Mr. Donne alone; but, in such ecstacy, and so 
altered as to his looks, as amazed Sir Robert to behold him in so much 
that he earnestly desired Mr. Donne to declare befallen him in the short 
time of his absence? to which, Mr. Donne was not able to make a present 
answer: but, after a long and perplext pause, did at last say, I have seen a 
dreadful Vision since I saw you: I have seen my dear wife pass twice by me 
through this room, with her hair hanging about her shoulders, and a dead child 
in her arms: this, I have seen since I saw you. To which, Sir Robert 
replied; Sure Sir, you have slept since I saw you; and, this is the result of 
some melancholy dream, which I desire you to forget, for you are now awake. 
To which Mr. Donnes reply was: I cannot be surer that I now live, then 
that I have not slept since I saw you: and am, as sure, that at her second 
appearing, she stopped, looked me in the face, and vanished. This account first appears in the edition of Life of Dr John Donne 
published in 1675, and is attributed to "a Person of Honour... told with such 
circumstances, and such asseveration, that... I verily believe he that told it 
me, did himself believe it to be true." At the time Donne was indeed extremely 
worried about his pregnant wife, and was going through severe illness himself. 
However, R. C. Bald points out that Walton's account "is riddled with 
inaccuracies. He says that Donne crossed from London to Paris with the Drurys in 
twelve days, and that the vision occurred two days later; the servant sent to 
London to make inquiries found Mrs Donne still confined to her bed in Drury 
House. Actually, of course, Donne did not arrive in Paris until more than three 
months after he left England, and his wife was not in London but in the Isle of Wight. The 
still-born child was buried on 24 January.... Yet as late as 14 April Donne in 
Paris was still ignorant of his wife's ordeal."  
In January, Donne was still at Amiens. 
His letters do not support the story as given. Carl Sandburg's 
biography contains the following: 
A dream or illusion had haunted Lincoln at times through the winter. On the 
evening of his election he had thrown himself on one of the haircloth sofas at 
home, just after the first telegrams of November 7 had told him he was elected 
President, and looking into a bureau mirror across the room he saw himself full 
length, but with two faces. 
It bothered him; he got up; the illusion vanished; but when he lay down 
again there in the glass again were two faces, one paler than the other. He got 
up again, mixed in the election excitement, forgot about it; but it came back, 
and haunted him. He told his wife about it; she worried too. 
A few days later he tried it once more and the illusion of the two faces 
again registered to his eyes. But that was the last; the ghost since then 
wouldn't come back, he told his wife, who said it was a sign he would be elected 
to a second term, and the death pallor of one face meant he wouldn't live 
through his second term.[9] This is adapted from Washington in Lincoln's Time (1895) by Noah Brooks, who claimed that 
he had heard it from Lincoln himself on 9 November 1864, at the time of his 
re-election, and that he had printed an account "directly after." He also 
claimed that the story was confirmed by Mary Todd Lincoln, and partially confirmed by 
Private Secretary John Hay (who 
thought it dated from Lincoln's nomination, not his election). Brooks' version 
is as follows (in Lincoln's own words): 
It was just after my election in 1860, when the news had been coming in 
thick and fast all day and there had been a great "hurrah, boys," so that I was 
well tired out, and went home to rest, throwing myself down on a lounge in my 
chamber. Opposite where I lay was a bureau with a swinging glass upon it (and 
here he got up and placed furniture to illustrate the position), and looking in 
that glass I saw myself reflected nearly at full length; but my face, I noticed 
had two separate and distinct images, the tip of the nose of one being 
about three inches from the tip of the other. I was a little bothered, perhaps 
startled, and got up and looked in the glass, but the illusion vanished. On 
lying down again, I saw it a second time, plainer, if possible, than before; and 
then I noticed that one of the faces was a little paler — say five shades — than 
the other. I got up, and the thing melted away, and I went off, and in the 
excitement of the hour forgot all about it — nearly, but not quite, for the 
thing would once in a while come up, and give me a little pang as if something 
uncomfortable had happened. When I went home again that night I told my wife 
about it, and a few days afterward I made the experiment again, when (with a 
laugh), sure enough! the thing came back again; but I never succeeded in 
bringing the ghost back after that, though I once tried very industriously to 
show it to my wife, who was somewhat worried about it. She thought it was a 
"sign" that I was to be elected to a second term of office, and that the 
paleness of one of the faces was an omen that I should not see life through the 
last term. Lincoln was known to be superstitious, 
                        and old mirrors 
will occasionally produce double images; whether this Janus illusion can 
be counted as a doppelgänger is perhaps debatable, though probably no more than 
other such claims of doppelgängers. An alternate consideration, however, 
suggests that Lincoln suffered vertical strabismus in his left eye, a disorder which could induce visions of a vertically displaced image. Near the end of Book XI of his autobiography, Dichtung und Wahrheit 
("Truth and Fiction"), Goethe wrote, almost in passing: 
Amid all this pressure and confusion I could not forego seeing Frederica 
once more. Those were painful days, the memory of which has not remained with 
me. When I reached her my hand from my horse, the tears stood in her eyes; and I 
felt very uneasy. I now rode along the foot-path toward Drusenheim, and here one of the most singular 
forebodings took possession of me. I saw, not with the eyes of the body, but 
with those of the mind, my own figure coming toward me, on horseback, and on the 
same road, attired in a dress which I had never worn, — it was pike-gray 
[hecht-grau], with somewhat of gold. As soon as I shook myself out of 
this dream, the figure had entirely disappeared. It is strange, however, that, 
eight years afterward, I found myself on the very road, to pay one more visit to 
Frederica, in the dress of which I had dreamed, and which I wore, not from 
choice, but by accident. However, it may be with matters of this kind generally, 
this strange illusion in some measure calmed me at the moment of parting. The 
pain of quitting for ever noble Alsace, 
with all I had gained in it, was softened; and, having at last escaped the 
excitement of a farewell, I, on a peaceful and quiet journey, pretty well 
regained my self-possession. This is a rare example of a doppelgänger which is both benign and reassuring. 
To some this may not be so reassuring, however. A famous Victorian apparition was the strange appearance of Vice-Admiral 
Sir George Tryon. He 
walked through the drawing room of his family home in Eaton Square, London, looking straight ahead, without exchanging a 
word to anyone, in front of several guests at a party being given by his wife on 
22 June 1893 whilst he was supposed to be in a ship of the Mediterranean 
Squadron, manoeuvering off the coast of Syria. Subsequently it was reported that 
he had gone down with his ship, the HMS Victoria, that very same night, 
after it had collided with the HMS Camperdown following an 
unexplained and bizarre order to turn the ship in the direction of the other 
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