Born: Lopez de la Vega,
great Spanish dramatist, 1562, Madrid; Charles Kemble,
actor, 1775, Brecon; Henry Mayhew, popular writer,
1812, London.
Died:
Pope Lucius III, 1185; Andrea Doria,
Genoese admiral and patriot, 1560, Genoa; Edward
Alleyn, actor, founder of Dulwieh College, 1626,
Dulwich; John Tillotson, archhishop of Canterbury,
eminent Whig divine, 1694, Lambeth.; Dr. Isaac Watts,
poet and hymn writer, 1748, Stoke Newington; Henry
Baker, author of The Microscope made Easy, 1774,
London; Richard Glover, poet, 1785; Thomas Amory,
eccentric author, 1788; Sir Augustus Wall Calcott,
landscape painter, 1844, Kensington; John Gibson
Lockhart, son in law and biographer of Sir Walter
Scott, 1854, Abbotsford; Rev. John Kitt, illustrator
of the Bible and sacred history, 1854, Cannstadt, was
Stuttgart; Angus B. Reach, miscellaneous writer, 1856
London.
Feast Day:
St. Catharine, virgin and martyr, 4th
century. St. Erasmus or Elme, bishop and martyr, 4th
century.
ST. CATHARINE
Among the earlier saints of the Romish calendar,
St. Catharine holds an exalted position, both from
rank and intellectual abilities. She is said to have
been of royal birth, and was one of the most
distinguished ladies of Alexandria, in the beginning
of the fourth century. From a child she was noted for
her acquirements in learning and philosophy, and while
still very young, she became a convert to the
Christian faith. During the persecution instituted by
the Emperor Maximinus I, St. Catharine, assuming the
office of an advocate of Christianity, displayed such
cogency of argument and powers of eloquence, as
thoroughly silenced her pagan adversaries. Maximinus,
troubled with this success, assembled together the
most learned philosophers in Alexandria to confute the
saint; but they were both vanquished in debate, and
converted to a belief in the Christian doctrines. The
enraged tyrant thereupon commanded them to be put to
death by burning, but for St. Catharine he reserved a
more cruel punishment. She was placed in a machine,
composed of four wheels, connected together and armed
with sharp spikes, so that as they revolved the victim
might be torn to pieces. A miracle prevented the
completion of this project. When the executioners were
binding Catharine to the wheels, a flash of lightning
descended from the skies, severed the cords with which
she was tied, and shattered the engine to pieces,
causing the death both of the executioners and numbers
of the bystanders.
Maximinus, however, still bent on her destruction,
ordered her to be carried beyond the walls of the
city, where she was first scourged and then beheaded.
The legend proceeds to say, that after her death her
body was carried by angels over the Red Sea to the
summit of Mount Sinai. The celebrated convent of St.
Catharine, situated in a valley on the slope of that
mountain, and founded by the Emperor Justinian, in the
sixth century, contains in its church a marble
sarcophagus, in which the relics of St. Catharine are
deposited. Of these the skeleton of the hand, covered
with rings and jewels, is exhibited to pilgrims and
visitors.
A well known concomitant of St. Catharine, is the
wheel on which she was attempted to be tortured, and
which figures in all pictured representations of the
saint. From this circumstance are derived the well
kown circular window in ecclesiastical architecture,
termed a Catharine wheel window, and also a firework
of a similar form. This St. Catharine must not be
confounded with the equally celebrated St. Catharine
of Siena, who lived in the fourteenth century.
THE FOUNDER
OF DULWICH COLLEGE
Edward Alleyn, the son of an innkeeper, was born at
the sign of the 'Pye,' in Bishopsgate, London. In the
days before theatres were specially erected for the
purpose, the yards of old inns, surrounded by tiers of
wooden galleries, were particularly eligible for the
representation of plays. Young Alleyn must, therefore,
have been early accustomed to witness stage
performances. His father dying, and his mother
marrying again one Browne, an actor and haberdasher,
Alleyn was bred a stage player, and soon became the
Roscius of his day.
Ben Jonson thus hears testimony to
his merit:
'If Rome so great, and in her wisest age,
Feared not to boast the glories of her stage,
As skilful Roscius and grave �sop, men,
Yet crowned with honours as with riches then;
Who had no less a trumpet of their name
Than Cicero, whose every breath was fame;
How can such great example die in me,
That Alleyn, I should pause to publish thee?
Who both their graces in thy self hast more
Outstript, than they did all that went before:
And present worth in all dost so contract,
As others speak, but only thou dost act.
Wear this renown: tie just, that who did give
So many poets life, by one should live.'
Exactly so, the poor player struts and frets his
hour upon the stage, then dies, and is heard no more,
but the poet lives for all time; and it was a brave
thing for rare old Ben to acknowledge this, in the
last two of the preceding lines:
'Tis just that who did give
So many poets life,
by one should live.'
Alleyn has been termed the
Garrick of
Shakspeare's
era, and was no doubt intimate with the bard of Avon,
as well as with Ben Jonson. A story is told of this
grand trio spending their evening, as was their wont,
at the Globe, in Blackfriars. On this occasion, Alleyn
jocularly accused Shakspeare of having been indebted
to him for Hamlet's speech, on the qualities of an
actor's excellency. And Shakspeare, seemingly not
relishing the innuendo, Jonson said:
'This affair needeth no contention, you stole it from Ned, no
doubt; do not marvel: have you not seen him act, times
out of number?'
Alleyn's first wife was Joan Woodward, the step
daughter of one Henslowe, a theatrical speculator and
pawnbroker; a thrifty man, withal, well calculated to
foster and develop the acquisitive spirit, so
characteristic of the future life of his step son in
law. Soon after his marriage, Alleyn commenced to
speculate in messuages and lands buying and selling
and his exertions seem always to have been attended
with profit. Amongst his other purchases, are inns of
various signs as the Barge, the Bell and Cock, at the
Bankside; the Boar's Head, probably the very house
immortalised by his friend and fellow actor
Shakspeare, in East cheap; the parsonage of Firle, in
Sussex, and the manor of Kennington in Surrey, may be
adduced as instances of the curious variety of
Alleyn's property. Being appointed to the office of
royal bearward, he became keeper and proprietor of the
bear garden, which, besides bringing him an income of
�500 per annum, led him to speculate in hulls, bears,
lions, and animals of various kinds. One of the papers
in Dulwich College, is a letter from one Fawnte, a
trainer of fighting bulls, who writes as follows:
'Mr. Alleyn, my love remembered, I understood by a
man, who came with two bears from the garden, that
you have a desire to buy one of my bulls. I have
three western bulls at this time, but I have had
very ill luck with them, for one has lost his horn
to the quick, that I think he will never he able to
fight again; that is my old Star of the West, he was
a very easy bull; and my bull Bevis, he has lost one
of his eyes, but I think if you had him, he would do
you more hurt than good, for I protest he would
either throw up your dogs into the lofts, or else
ding out their brains against the grates, so that I
think he is not for your turn. Besides, I esteem him
very high, for my Lord of Rutland's man bad me for
him twenty marks. I have a bull, which came out of
the west, which stands me in twenty nobles. If you
should like him, you shall have him of me. Faith he
is a marvellous good bull, and such a one as I think
you have had but few such, for I assure you that I
hold him as good a double bull as that you had of me
last is a single, and one that I have played thirty
or forty courses, before he bath been taken from the
stake, with the best dogs.�
Though Alleyn had, without doubt, a keen eye for a
bargain, a ready hand to turn a penny, and an active
foot for the main chance, he was, unlike many men of
that description, of a true, affectionate, and kindly
nature; ever anxious for the welfare and happiness of
his home and its inmates. In his letters, when from
home, he playfully styles his wife 'mecho, mousin, and
mouse'; speaks of her father as 'Daddy Henslowe'; and her
sister, as 'Sister Bess', or 'Bess Dodipoll', the latter
appellation probably derived from some theatrical
character. When the
plague was raging, in his absence
from London, he thoughtfully and playfully writes to
his wife:
'My good, sweet mouse, keep your house fair and
clean, which I know you will, and every evening
throw water before your door; and have in your
windows good store of rue and herb of grace, and
with all the grace of God, which must be obtained by
prayers; and, so doing, o doubt but the Lord will
mercifully defend you.'
His interest in home matters, among all his more
money making transactions, never seems to flag. On
another occasion he writes:
'Mouse, you send me no news of any things; you
should send me of your domestical matters, such
things as happen at home, as how your distilled
water proves, or this or that.'
It is little wonder to us, that such a man, when
finding himself advanced in years, without an heir,
should devote his property to the benefit of the poor.
But the had repute, that anciently attached to an
actor's profession, made the circumstance appear in
his own day a miracle, which, of course, was explained
by its consequent myth. According to the latter,
Alleyn, when acting the part of a demon on the stage,
was so terrified by the apparition of a real devil,
that he forthwith made a vow to bestow his substance
on the poor, and subsequently fulfilled this
engagement by building Dulwich College.
The bad odour in which an actor was formerly held,
is clearly exhibited by Fuller, who, speaking of
Alleyn, quaintly says:
'In his old age, he mule friends
of his unrighteous mammon, building therewith a fair
college at Dulwich, for the relief of poor people.
Some, I confess, count it built on a foundered
foundation, seeing, in a spiritual sense, none is good
and lawful money, save what is honestly and
industriously gotten; hut, perchance, such who condemn
Master Alleyn herein, have as bad shillings in the
bottom of their own bags, if search were made therein.
Thus he, who outacted others, outdid himself before
his death.'
In further evidence of the disrepute attaching to
actors in these days, it may be mentioned here,
probably for the first time in print, that
Izaak
Walton, in his life of Dr. Donne, has unworthily
suppressed the fact, that Donne's daughter, Constance,
was Alleyn's second wife. There were other reasons,
however, for maintaining a prudent silence on this
point; by a letter preserved at Dulwich, it would
appear that Donne attempted to cheat Alleyn out of his
wife's dowry.
Exercising his practical genius, Alleyn had his
college built during his lifetime. In 1619, it was
opened with a sermon and an anthem; then the founder
read the Act of creation; and the party, consisting of
the Lord Chancellor, the Earl of Arundel, Inigo Jones,
and others of similar position and consequence, went
to dinner. Each item of the feast, and its price, is
carefully recorded in Alleyn's diary. Suffice it to
say here, that they had beef, mutton, venison,
pigeons, godwits, oysters, anchovies, grapes, oranges,
&c., the whole washed down by eight gallons of claret,
three quarts of sherry, three quarts of white wine,
and two hogsheads of beer.
Alleyn then took upon himself the management of his
college of God's Gift; living in it among the twelve
poor men and twelve poor children, whom his bounty
maintained, clothed, and educated. Here he was visited
by the wealthy and noble of the land; and here he lost
his faithful partner, Joan Woodward, and soon after
married Constance, daughter of Dr. Donne. Alleyn
administered the affairs of his college till his
death, which took place in the sixty first year of his
age, on the 25th of November 1626. With a pardonable
wish to preserve his name in connection with the
charity he founded, Alleyn appointed that the master
and governor thereof should always be of the blood and
surname of Alleyn. So strictly was this rule kept,
that one Anthony Allen, a candidate for the
mastership, was rejected in 1670, for want of a letter
y in his name; but that objection has since
been overruled.
Alleyn did not forget the people among whom he was
born, nor those among whom he made his money. By his
last will and testament Edward Alleyn, Esquire, Lord
of the Manor of Dulwich, founded ten alms houses, for
ten poor people of the parish of St. Botolph's,
Bishopsgate; and ten alms houses for ten poor people
of the parish of St. Saviour's, Southwark, where his
bear garden had so splendidly flourished. And,
forgetting the ill treatment he received from his
father in law, he amply provided for his widow with a
legacy of �1600; no mean fortune according to the
value of money in those days.
DR. KITTO
Per ardua
was the motto graven on John Kitto's
seal, and a more apt one he could scarcely have
chosen. He was born in Plymouth in 1804, and as an
infant was so puny, that he was hardly expected to
live. He was carried in arms long after the age when
other children have the free use of their limbs, and
one of his earliest recollections was a headache,
which afflicted him with various intermissions to the
end of his days. His father was a master builder, but
was daily sinking in the world through intemperate
habits. Happily the poor child had a grandmother, who
took a fancy for him, and had him to live with her.
She was a simple and kindly old woman, and entertained
her little Johnny' for hours with stories about
ghosts, wizards, witches, and hobgoblins, of which she
seemed to have an exhaustless store. She taught him to
sew, to make kettle holders, and do patch work, and in
fine weather she led him delightful strolls through
meadows and country lanes.
As he grew older, a taste for reading shewed
itself, which grew into a consuming passion, and the
business of his existence became, how to borrow hooks,
and how to find pence to buy them. He had little
schooling, and that between his eighth and eleventh
years, frequently interrupted by seasons of illness.
When he was ten, his affectionate grandmother became
paralysed, and he had to return to his parents, who
found him a situation in a barber's shop. One morning
a woman called, and told Kitto she wished to see his
master. The guileless boy went to call him from the
public house, and in his absence she made off with the
razors. In his rage at the loss, the barber accused
Kitto of being a confederate in the theft, and
instantly discharged him.
His next employment was as assistant to his father,
and in this service occurred the great misfortune of
his life. They were repairing a house in Batter
Street, Plymouth, in 1817, and John had just reached
the highest round of a ladder, with a load of slates,
and was in the act of stepping on the roof, when his
foot slipped, and he fell from a height of five and
thirty feet on a stone pavement. He bled profusely at
the mouth and nostrils, but not at the ears, and
neither legs nor arms were broken. For a fortnight he
lay unconscious. When he recovered, he wondered at the
silence around him, and asking for a book, was
answered by signs, and then by writing on a slate.
�Why do you write to me?' exclaimed the poor sufferer.
'Why do you not speak? Speak! speak!' There was an
interchange of looks and seeming whispers; the fatal
truth could not be concealed; again the scribe took
his pencil, and wrote: You are deaf!' Deaf he was, and
deaf he remained until the end of his life.
If the prospect of poor Kitto's life was dark
before, it was now tenfold darker. His parents were
unable to assist him, and left him in idleness to
pursue his reading. He waded and groped in the mud of
Plymouth harbour for bits of old rope and iron, which
he sold for a few pence wherewith to buy books. He
drew and coloured pictures, and sold them to children
for their half pence. He wrote labels, to replace
those in windows, announcing 'Logins for singel men,'
and hawked them about town with slight success. By
none of these means could he keep himself in food and
raiment, and in 1819, much against his will, he was
lodged in the workhouse, and set to learn shoe making.
There his gentle nature and studious habits attracted
the attention and sympathy of the master, and procured
him a number of indulgences. He commenced to practise
literary composition, and quickly attained remarkable
facility and elegance of style. He began to keep a
diary, and was prompted by the master to write
lectures, which were read to the other workhouse boys.
At the end of 1821, he was apprenticed to a shoemaker,
who abused and struck him, and made him so miserable,
that the idea of suicide not infrequently arose to
tempt him. Here, however, Kitto's pen came to his
effectual help, and his well written complaints were
the means of the dissolution of his apprenticeship and
readmission to the workhouse after six months of
intolerable wretchedness. Mean while the literary
ability of the deaf pauper boy began to be known; he
was allowed to read in the Public Library; and some of
his essays were printed in the Plymouth Journal. In
the end there was written in the admission book of the
work house John Kitto discharged, 1823, July 17th.
Taken out under the patronage of the literati of the
town.
Kitto's first book appeared in 1825, consisting of
Essays and Letters, with a short Memoir of the Author.
It brought him little profit, but served to widen his
circle of friends. One of these, Mr. Grove, an Exeter
dentist, invited him to his house, and liberally
undertook to teach him his own art; but after a while,
hoping to turn his talents to better account, he had
him introduced to the Missionary College at Islington,
to learn printing. From thence he was sent to Malta,
to work at a press there; but Kitto was much more
inclined to private study than to mechanical
occupation, and his habits not giving satisfaction to
the missionaries, he returned to England in 1829, and
set out with Mr. Grove on a religious mission to the
east. For four years he travelled in Russia, the
Caucasus, Armenia, and Persia. Whilst living at Bagdad
in 1831, the plague broke out, in which about fifty
thousand perished, or nearly three fourths of the
inhabitants of the city. In this dreadful visitation,
Mr. Grove lost his wife. Kitto was restored to his
native land in safety in 1833, with a mind enriched
and enlarged with a rare harvest of experience.
Anxious, because with o certain means of
livelihood, he fortunately procured an introduction to
the secretary of the Society for the Diffusion of
Useful Knowledge, and was employed by Mr. Charles
Knight as a contributor to the Penny Magazine. Proving
a capable and steady workman, he obtained the promise
of constant occupation, on the strength of which he
married, and in his wife found a helpmate literary and
domestic. Mr. Knight, in 1835, projected a Pictorial
Bible, with notes, and intrusted the editorship to
Kitto. It was published in numbers, it was praised
everywhere, it sold well, and its execution clearly
indicated the line in which Kitto was destined to
excel. He was next engaged on a Pictorial History of
Palestine, then on a Cyclopedia of Biblical
Literature, and finally on eight volumes of Daily
Bible Illustrations. Besides these, he produced a
number of minor works in illustration of the
Scriptures, and started and edited a quarterly Journal
of Sacred Literature. These writings made the name of Kitto a familiar word
in every religious household in
the land, and in 1850 he was placed for a pension of
�100 a year on her Majesty's civil list, in
consideration of his services.
Kitto was a ready writer, but at the same time
painstaking and correct; and the production of such a
mass of literature as lies under his signature, within
a period of less than twenty years, entailed the
necessity of perpetual labour. The working day of the
British Museum, he wrote to Mr. Knight, is six hours
mine is sixteen hours. His deafness, as well as habits
of incessant industry, cut him off from society, and
he seldom saw any visitors except such as had actual
business to transact. He confessed to a friend, in the
summer of 1851, that he had not crossed his threshold
for six weeks. His work was his joy, he loved nothing
better; but the strain he put upon his fragile
constitution was too great. Congestion of the brain
set in; he was told his only chance for life lay in
perfect rest and abstinence from work for a year or
two; but he insisted on completing his literary
engagements, and alleged, truly, that he had a wife
and ten children to provide for. A number of his
admirers subscribed ample funds to justify some years
of repose, and in the August of 1851 he retired to Cannstadt, in W�rtemherg, but
it was too late. On the
25th of November he died at Cannstadt, and was there
buried.
In his seventeenth year, Kitto wrote this
description of himself, which, making allowance for
age, might serve for his picture at fifty, with the
addition perhaps of an inch or two to his stature.
"I
am four feet eight inches high; my hair is stiff and
coarse, of a dark brown colour, almost black my head
is very large, and, I believe, has a tolerable good
lining of brain within. My eyes are brown and large,
and are the least unexceptionable part of my person;
my forehead is high, eyebrows bushy; my nose is large;
my mouth very big teeth well enough; my limbs are not
ill shaped my legs are well shaped."
DOUBLE
CONSCIOUSNESS: ALTERNATE SANITY AND INSANITY
An inquest, held in London on the 25th of November
1835, afforded illustrative testimony to that
remarkable duality, double action, or alternate action
of the mind, which physiologists and medical men have
so frequently noticed, and which has formed the basis
for so many theories. Mr. Mackerel, a gentleman
connected with the East India Company, and resident in
London, committed suicide by taking prussic acid,
while labouring under an extraordinary paroxysm of
delusions. During a period of four years, he had had
these delusions every alternate day. Dr. James
Johnson, his physician, had bound himself by a solemn
promise to the unhappy man, never to divulge to any
human being the exact nature of the delusions in
question. Fulfilling this promise, he avoided giving
to the jury any detailed account. The doctor stated
that the delusions under which his patient laboured,
while accompanied by most dreadful horrors and
depression of mind, had not the remotest reference to
any act of moral guilt, or to any circumstance in
which the community could have an interest, but turned
on an idle circumstance equally unimportant to himself
and to others, but still were capable of producing a
most extraordinary horror of mind.
Mr. Mackerell called his two sets of days his good
days and bad days. On his bad days he would, if
possible, see no one, not even his physician. On his
good days he talked earnestly with Dr. Johnson
concerning his malady; and said that although what he
suffered on his had days in body and mind might induce
many men to rush madly upon suicide for relief, yet he
himself had too high a moral and religious sense ever
to be guilty of such an act. The delusion, Dr. Johnson
declared, was not of a kind that would have justified
any restraint, or any imputation of what is usually
called insanity. It was on one subject only, a true
monomania, that a hallucination prevailed. Whether in
London or the country, traveling by road or by sea,
this monomania regularly returned every alternate day,
beginning when he woke in the morning, and lasting all
the day through. The miserable victim felt the first
attack of it at a period of unusual excitement and
disappointment; and from that time it gradually
strengthened until his death leaving him on the
intermediate days, however, a clear headed and
perfectly sane man: nay, a highly educated gentleman,
of very superior intellectual powers.
On two different occasions, his alternations of
good and bad days influenced his proceedings in a
curious way, leading him to undo each day what had
been done the day before. It was just before the era
of railways, when long journeys occupied two or more
days and nights in succession. At one time, he secured
a passage in the mail to Paisley; but on reaching
Manchester he quitted the coach, and returned by the
first conveyance to London. Again he quitted London by
mail for Paisley, but turned back at Birmingham. A
third time he engaged a place in the mail to Paisley,
but did not start at all, and sent his landlord to
make the best bargain he could with the clerk at the
coach office for a return of a portion of the fare. It
would appear that his good days gave him an inducement
to travel northward, but the bad days then supervened,
and changed his plans. He committed suicide, in spite
of his oft expressed religious views, on one of his
good days (for the persons in whose house he lived
kept a regular account of these singular
alternations), having been apparently worn out with
the unutterable miseries of one half of his waking
existence.
Dr. Wigan, in his curious view of insanity, dues not
mention this particular case; but he adduces two
others of alternate sanity and insanity, or at least
double manifestations of mental power. We have
examples of persons who, from some hitherto
unexplained cause, fall suddenly into, and remain for
a time, in a state of existence resembling
somnambulism; from which, after many hours, they
gradually awake having no recollection of anything
that has occurred in the preceding state; although,
during its continuance, they had read, written, and
conversed, and done many other acts implying an
exercise, however limited, of the understanding. They
sing or play on an instrument, and yet, on the
cessation of the paroxysm, are quite unconscious of
everything that has taken place. They now pursue their
ordinary business and avocations in the usual manner,
perhaps for weeks; when suddenly the somnambulic state
recurs, during which all that had happened in the
previous attack comes vividly before them, and they
remember it as perfectly as if that disordered state
were the regular habitual mode of existence of the
individual the healthy state and its events being now
as entirely forgotten as were the disordered ones
during the healthy state. Thus it passes on for many
months, or even years. Again, in one peculiar form of
mental disease, an adult becomes a perfect child, is
obliged to undertake the labour of learning again to
read and write, and passes gradually through all the
usual elementary branches of education makes
considerable progress, and finds the task becoming
daily more and more easy; but is entirely unconscious
of all that had taken place in the state of health.
Suddenly she is seized with a kind of fit, or with a
sleep of preternatural length and intensity, and wakes
in full possession of all the acquired knowledge which
she had previously possessed, but has no remembrance
of what I will call her child state, and does not even
recognize the persons or things with which she then
became acquainted.
She is exactly as she was before the first attack,
and as if the disordered state had never formed a
portion of her existence. After the lapse of some
weeks, she is again seized as before with intense
somnolency, and after a long and deep sleep wakes up
in the child state. She has now a perfect recollection
of all that previously occurred in that state, resumes
her tasks at the point where she had left off, and
continues to make progress as is person would do who
was of that age and under those circumstances; but has
once more entirely lost all remembrance of the persons
and things connected with her healthy [or adult]
state. This alternation recurs many times, and at last
becomes the established habit of the individual like
an incurable ague. There are numerous recorded cases
in which a person knows that he or she is subject to
alternate mental states, and can reason concerning the
one state while under the influence of the other.
Humboldt's servant, a German girl, who had charge
of is child, entreated to be sent away; for whenever
she undressed it, and noticed the whiteness of its
skin, she felt an almost irresistible desire to tear
it in pieces. A young lady in a Paris asylum had, at
regular intervals, a propensity to murder some one;
and when the paroxysm was coming on, she would request
to be put in a strait waistcoat, as a measure of
precaution. A country woman was seized with a desire
to murder her child whenever she put it into her
cradle, and she used to pray earnestly when she felt
this desire coming on. A butcher's wife often
requested her husband to keep his knives out of her
sight when her children were nigh; she was afraid of
herself. A gentleman of good family, and estimable
disposition, had a craving desire, when at church, to
run up into the organ loft and play some popular tune,
especially one with jocular words attached to it. All
these cases, and many others of a kind more or less
analogous, Dr. Wigan attributes to a duality of the
mind, connected with a duality of the brain,. He
maintains that the right and left halves of the brain
are virtually two distinct brains, dividing between
them the organism of the mental power. Both may be
sound, both may be unsound in equal degree, both may
be unsound in unequal degree, or one may be sound and
the other unsound. The mental phenomena may exhibit,
consequently, varying degrees of sanity and insanity.
This view has not met with much acceptance among
physiologists and psychologists; but, nevertheless, it
is worthy of attention.