Εικόνες σελίδας
PDF
Ηλεκτρ. έκδοση

self-taught calculator of the first class, and as such was known in many parts of the kingdom, and to none better than the writer of this article, who has often tried his powers to the utmost with the most abstruse questions, in which he was invariably right. By what method he arrived at his conclusions he could never explain, nor could the writer ever discover the system he pursued. The powers of his memory were astonishing. He could state accurately where he had been on any day for the last thirty years, what persons he saw, and what he was about. He lived for many years with an uncle in this parish, who was a farmer, and he would recount the quantity of live stock bred during the whole time he lived with him, to whom they were sold, and the price they fetched. He has been often asked to state on what day of the year Easter Sunday was for a century past, and has never been wrong in his answers. The birth days and ages of all the individuals, among George's acquaintance were as well known to him as to themselves; and he has often raised a laugh against single ladies of a certain age, by stating the day of their birth in company. But one of his favourite amusements was to recount the number of acres, amount of population, size of the church, and weight of the tenor bell of every parish in the county, which he would do without making a mistake. It was the wish of some individuals, well known to the poor fellow, and who took an interest in his behalf, to have assisted him; but his wandering habits were such that to fix him to any place was impossible, and from his idiotic obstinacy he had latterly contracted such dirty ways, that it was found the only place he could be taken in at was the workhouse, where he has been kindly treated until death put an end to his sufferings. Poor George will be long missed in the neighbourhood."Sussex Express. [Can any of our readers oblige us with some account of the phrenological development of this person? - Editor.]

Phrenological Societies. Some excellent observations, on the steps proper to render Phrenological Societies effective, were given in the New York Weekly Whig, for April 21., under their head of "Medical Examiner." The spirit of the article is, that a good phrenological cabinet should be the prime object; next a good library of phrenological works. It is worthy of being reprinted in this country, and we hope to copy it in an early Number, for the benefit of British societies.

Phrenological Quacks. We again entreat the active zeal of true phrenologists, towards relieving the public from the impositions of phrenological quacks. Allusions have been made in former Numbers to those who go about to the country towns, giving most inaccurate representations of Phrenology, and picking the pockets of persons who are silly enough to pay them for their fortune-telling and prophecies. Their advertisements of offers to "predict" character, and to apply the "phrenological plumb-line," now appear in the newspapers, and are thrust into the hands of persons in the streets of London, in close imitation of the proceedings of quack-doctors and nostrum-dealers. We should abstain from notice of these worthies, were it not that Phrenology has been so long and so grossly misrepresented, that its respectable advocates are compelled to protest against persons whose conduct must render the subject ridiculous and disreputable in the eyes of those who take that conduct as a sample of phrenological proceedings.

To Correspondents. - We have not introduced the notice about the recently elected Professor, in Cambridge, because, whatever may be the Professor's private opinions about Phrenology, we must at present look upon him as an ill-wisher to the cause. He may have been, and may still be, a subscriber to this Journal; but he recently voted against the introduction of it into the Reading-room of the Philosophical Society. The choice is

perhaps creditable to the University, and we hope the Professor will not prove another addition to those who receive good salaries for lectures never delivered.—Mr. J. T. Smith is wrong; but his letter shall have place in next Number, together with our own remarks upon it: we were not disposed to withdraw any other article, in order to make room for the letter in this Number. Dr. Verity's tables and figures should be reduced into descriptions written in words: his notes would then be useful, and, we doubt not, agreeable to our readers. — R. M. should know that "want of time" is a valid objection for not writing at all; but is a poor excuse for badness of composition or illegible penmanship.- The Essay on Acquisitiveness will probably appear in January. - MSS. are received also from Mr. Levison, Rev. R. Govett, Mr. Noble, and Count Francis Thun.

BOOKS AND PAPERS RECEIVED.

Phrenology Vindicated, and Antiphrenology Unmasked. By Charles Caldwell, M. D. 12mo. pp. 156.

The Education of the Feelings.

Small 8vo. pp. 195.

The Principles of Phrenology. By Sidney Smith. 8vo. pp. 223. (We received this volume after the MS. of our present Number was completed. There is vigour and originality in the work, with too much impetuosity of temper, and some strange errors. It demands a full notice.)

A Practical Treatise on the Management and Diseases of Children. By R. T. Evanson, M.D., &c., and Henry Mansell, M.D., &c. Second edition, enlarged. 8vo. pp. 483.

Memorie Risguardanti La Dottrina Frenologica ed altre Scienze che con essa hanno stretto rapporto. Di Luigi Ferrarese, Dottore di Medicina, &c. &c. 8vo. pp. 261.

Opuscoli sopra Svariati Scientifici Argomenti. Di Luigi Ferrarese. 8vo.

pp. 80.

Trattato della Monomonia Suicida. Di Luigi Ferrarese. 8vo. pp. 97. Sul Morbo Colera Asiatico Riflessioni Teoriche e Pratiche. Di Luigi Ferrarese. 8vo. pp. 48.

The Analyst. No. XXIV. July, 1838.

The British and Foreign Medical Review. No. XI. July, 1838.
The Medico-Chirurgical Review. No. LVII. (New Series) July, 1838.
The Naturalist. Nos. XXI, XXII, XXIII. June, July, August, 1838.

-

[ocr errors]

-

Newspapers. New York Weekly Whig, March 24. April 21. 28. Guernsey Comet, May 3. 7.- Guernsey Star, May 10.- West Kent Advertiser, May 26.- - Leeds Mercury, May 26. - Preston Chronicle, May 26. July 21. 28. Star in the East, June 9. July 14. 28. -Cheltenham LookerOn, June 16. Birmingham Journal, June 16. 23. Sheffield Iris, June 26. Dumfries Courier, July 4.- Dumfries Times, August 1. Herald, July 5.- Morning Herald, July 5.— Scotsman, July 7.-— Standard, July 16. Fifeshire Journal, July 26.- Ayrshire Examiner, July 27. August 3, 10.

[ocr errors]

- Fife

INDEX

ΤΟ

THE PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL FOR THE YEAR 1838.

A. B., his development, as a phrenolo-
gical exercise, 402.

334.

-

Aberdeen, phrenological society of, 212.
Mr. Moir's lectures in, 442.
Adam's Knowledge Qualification, 185.
Address by the Original Proprietors of
the Phrenological Journal, i.
Aitken, his lectures in Dumfries, in
Annan, Thornhill, and Carlisle, 445.
Alimentiveness, disorder of, concomit-

ant with inflammation of stomach,
158.

Amativeness, Magendie on, 78. - Its
connexion with the cerebellum, 79.
298.

Analyst, notices of, 324. 430.
Animal Magnetism, 94.
Animals, sufferings of, when destroyed,
for food, 83.- Hereditary qualities
of, 397.

Anti-Quack, his attack on Phrenology,
395.

Antipathies, Sir G. Mackenzie on, 112.
Apoplexy, inducing insanity, 152. — A
peculiar symptom in, 295.
Armagh, Mr. Keir's lectures in, 213.
Association of Phrenologists proposed,

95.

Athenæum, on the progress of mental

philosophy, 85-on compensation to
slave-owners, 438.

Barber, Dr., his lectures in United
States, 91.

Barclay, Dr., consequences of his mis-
representations of Phrenology, 394.
Barlow's Causes and Effects of Disease,
174.

Barlow, Dr., on the connexion of disease
with war, 119.

Bath, Mr. Combe's lectures in, 334.
Becker, Madame, her account of Gall,

28.

Bedford, Rev. J. G., his case of defective
vision and depression of the organs of
colour, 296.- A correction of the re-
port, 411.

Beeston, Mr. Dow's lecture in, 335.
Bell, Sir Charles, his discoveries in the
nervous system, 160.

Benevolence, a case of large organ of,
and insanity arising from a supposed
shock to it, 291.

Bentham, development of, as indicated
by cast and portrait, $32.
Birmingham, Mr. Combe's lectures in,

442.

Birds, cause of song in, 73.

Blackburn, Phrenology in, 110. 442.
Blandford, Mr. Prideaux' lectures in,

211.

Bohemians, development of the, 23.
Booth, Dr., his silly remarks on Phre-
nology, 213. 219.

Brachet, Dr., cruelty of his experiments,
165.

Brain, size of European and African,
1.- Breadth of female, 208. - Sup-
posed relations between its structure
and function, 301. Effect of its
lesions, 331.

Bray, C., his lectures in Coventry, 214.
British Annual, its omission of the Lon-

don Phrenological Society, 221.
British Association, its proceedings con-

nected with Phrenology, 92, 93. 343.
British and Foreign Medical Review,
325. 430.

-

Browne, W. A. F., his services at the
Montrose Asylum, 157. Appoint-
ment to the Asylum at Dumfries,
336.
Brussels, Phrenological Prize Essay
in, 220.

Bulwer, E. L., allusions to Phrenology,
in his writings, 204.

[blocks in formation]

Cargill, Dr., on the development and
character of Greenacre, 135.
Cards, Phrenological, 60.
Carlile, his remarks against Phreno-
logy, 93. 343.

Cases and Facts, objects of that section
of the Phrenological Journal, 7.
Catlin, W., a congenital idiot, 287.
Causality, injury to organ and lesion of
function in, 326.

Cerebellum, its function, 78, 79. 298.
Ceres, Mr. Hodgson's lecture, 443.
Channing, Dr., his opinion of the thea-
tre, 211.- Eulogy on Britain, for
the abolition of slavery, 437.
Children, on overtasking their brains
with book-knowledge, 320.
Christison, Dr., on the character of Dr.
Turner, 147.

Classical Studies, 87. 331.
Cobden, Mr., a phrenologist, 264.
Colonisation, new system of, 247.
Colour, deficiency of development of,
in blind persons, 296.

[ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

Dow, his lectures at Beeston, 355.
Dreams, Hazlitt on, 332.

Dublin Journal of Medical Science, on
gestures, 75.- Its attack on Phre-
nology, 395.

Dubois, his classification of idiocy and
insanity, 328.

Dumblane, Mr. Goyder's lectures in,
336.

Dumfries, Phrenology in, 443.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

Edinburgh Royal Society, its disregard
of Phrenology, 282.
Editorial Ignorance, 445.
Education, its power of preventing vice,
77.- Views of the Working Men's
Association, 307. Application of
Phrenology in, 420.
Education of the Feelings, 419.
Elementary works on Phrenology, 321.
Elliotson, Dr., his opinion of Gall's
works, 65.-On the respective merits
of Gall and Spurzheim, 94. 159.
167. 225. His phrenological ques-
tions to students of medicine, 338.
Elliotson's Human Physiology, 159.
Ellis, Sir W. C., his resignation at Han-
well, 285. His recommendation of
Phrenology, 418.

-

-

Ellis's Treatise on Insanity, 414.
Encyclopædia Britannica, its editor's
injustice towards Phrenology, 278.
Its article on Phrenology, 445.
Engledue, Dr., on a peculiar symptom
in Apoplexy, 295.

Erotomania, frequency of, in the Asy-
lum at Vienna, 25.

Esquirol, weight of his opinions on
Phrenology, 355.

Evanson, Professor, his support of Phre-
nology at the meeting of the British
Association, 93. On Mr. Carlile's
objections to Phrenology, 343.
Exercises, phrenological, 401.

Facts in Phrenology, importance of ac-
cumulating them, 99.- On the report
of, 101.

Form, pain in the organ of, when very
active, 407.

Forster, Dr., his invention of the name
of Phrenology, 246.

Forster's Life and Works, 429.
Fossati, his opinion of Mr. Combe's
work, 66.

Francis 1st, Emperor of Austria, his
wish for Gall to return to Vienna, 29.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

Hazlitt on dreams, 331.

Heldenmaier, notice of his school, 115.
Henderson Bequest, the conduct of the
trustees of, 244.

Henry, W., on the development of Pro-
fessor Turner, 293.

Hewitson, on the habits of the magpie,
67.

Higginson, A., his opposition to Phre-
nology, 337.

Hodgson, W. B., lectures in Kirkcaldy,
336. 443., in Ceres, 443., in Cupar,
443., in Leven, 443.,- Report of a
case of supposed enlargement of Lo-
cality, and pain felt in the forehead of
an artist, 407.

Hodgson's Lecture on Education, 180.
Holm, J. D., his lectures in London,
217.

Hunt, T., his fancies about the insanity
of the Kentish followers of Thoms,
432.

[blocks in formation]
« ΠροηγούμενηΣυνέχεια »