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judgment or memory. liar condition of the sensorium, I conceive that the best supported stories of apparitions may be completely accounted for.

To render this inquiry more perspicuous, I shall consider,

I. The general law of the system, to which the origin of the spectral impressions may be referred :

II. The proof of the existence of morbid impressions of this nature, without any sensible external agency:

III. The application of these principles to the best-authenticated examples of apparitions.

§ I.

It is a well-known law of the human œconomy, that the impressions produced

on some of the external senses, especially on the eye, are more durable than the application of the impressing cause. The effect of looking at the. sun, in producing the impression of a luminous globe, for some time after the eye has been withdrawn from the object, is familiar to every one.

This subject has been so thoroughly investigated by the late Dr. Darwin, that I need only to refer the reader to his treatise on ocular spectra.* In young persons, the effects resulting from this permanence of impression are extremely curious. I remember, that about the age of fourteen, it was a source of great amusement to myself. If I had been viewing any interesting object in the course of the day, such as a romantic ruin, a fine seat, or a review of a body

*The experiments in this Essay appear to have been suggested, by those of Mariotte, Le Cat, and Bernouilli.

of troops, as soon as evening came on, if I had occasion to go into a dark room, the whole scene was brought before my eyes, with a brilliancy equal to what it had possessed in day-light, and remained visible for several minutes. I have no doubt, that dismal and frightful images have been presented, in the same manner, to young persons, after scenes of domestic affliction, or public horror.

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From this renewal of external impressions, also, many of the phænomena of dreams admit an easy explanation. When an object is presented to the mind, during sleep, while the operations of judgment are suspended, the imagination is busily employed in forming a story, to account for the appearance, whether agreeable or distressing. Then the author enjoys the delight of perusing works of infinite wit and elegance, which never had any real existence, and of which, to his utter mortification, he cannot recollect a single line, next

morning; and then the Bibliomane purchases illuminated manuscripts, and early editions on vellum, for sums so trifling, * that he cannot conceal his joy from the imaginary vender.

Dr. R. Darwin seems to believe, that it is from habit only, and want of attention, that we do not see the remains of former impressions, or the musca volitantes, on all objects. Probably, this is an instance, in which the error of external sensation is corrected by experience, like the deceptions of perspective, which are undoubtedly strong in our childhood, and are only detected by repeated observation.

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"After having looked," says Dr. Darwin, long at the meridian sun, in

making some of the preceding experi"ments, till the disk faded into a pale "blue, I frequently observed a bright "blue spectrum of the sun in other

* Zoonomia, Sect. xi. 2.

"objects all the next and the succeeding "day, which constantly occurred when "I attended to it, and frequently when "I did not attend to it... When I closed and covered my eyes, this appeared "of a dull yellow; and at other times "mixed with the colours of other objects " on which it was thrown."

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It is scarcely necessary to mention the well-known experiment of giving a rotatory motion to a piece of burning wood, the effect of which is to exhibit a complete fiery circle to the eye. Lowong

To this principle of a renewal of impressions formerly made by different objects, belongs the idle amusement of tracing landscapes, and pictures of various composition, in the discoloured spots of an old wall. This may be truly called a wakinga dream, as it is composed of the shreds and patches of past sensations; yet there are, perhaps, few persons who

*Sect! xi. 8.

*

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