The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 62, December, 1862 by Various
page 34 of 280 (12%)
page 34 of 280 (12%)
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it done? Some thought mesmerism could account for it, and others thought
it miraculous. The first experiment was this. Each director wrote on a piece of paper the names of all the board. Eleven lists were handed him, and he specified the writer of each by the manner in which he wrote his own name. He then asked them to write their own or any other name, with as much disguise as they pleased, and as many as pleased writing on the same piece of paper; and in every instance he named the writer. As an example of the other experiments, take this one. The superscription of a letter was shown him. He began immediately:-- "A clergyman, without doubt, who reads his sermons, and is a little short-sighted. He is aged sixty-one, is six feet high, weighs about one hundred and seventy, is lean, bony, obstinate, irritable, economical, frank, and without a particle of hypocrisy or conceit. He is naturally miserly, and bestows charity only from a sense of duty. His mind is methodical and strong, and he is not a genius or an interesting preacher. If he has decided upon any doctrine or construction of Scripture, it would be as impossible to change him as to make him over again." The company began to laugh, when one of them said,-- "Come, come, Mr. Sidney, you are disclosing altogether too much of my father-in-law." And now the supposed forged notes were handed him. He gave the characteristics of the signatures very nearly as he had before done |
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