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" I had no recollection of having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me a human figure, the features and dress of which were as distinctly visible as that of any real existence, and of which, after an interval of many years.... "
A New View of Insanity: The Duality of the Mind Proved by the Structure ... - Page 73
by Arthur Ladbroke Wigan - 1844 - 459 pages
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The Philosophy of Sleep

Robert Macnish - Hygiene - 1834 - 310 pages
...always followed the motion of the eyes ; and, secondly, that the objects which were the best defined and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no recollection of ever having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me a human figure,...
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The Philosophy of Sleep

Robert Macnish - Sleep - 1834 - 362 pages
...always followed the motion of the eyes ; and, secondly, that the objects which were the best defined and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no recollection of ever having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me a human figure,...
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On man's power over himself to prevent or control insanity

John Barlow (F.R.S.) - 1843 - 82 pages
...always followed the motion of the eyes: and secondly, that the objects which were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no recollection of ever having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours, I had constantly before me a human figure,...
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The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 58

1863 - 518 pages
...understood, their moving with the eye, and, secondly, that the objects which were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no...having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I hud constantly before me a human figure, the features and dress of which were as distinctly visible...
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Small Books on Great Subjects, Volume 1

Philosophy - 1846 - 456 pages
...followed the motion of the eyes ; and" secondly, that the objects which were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no recollection of ever having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours, I had constantly before me a human figure,...
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The Constitution of Man

George Combe - Phrenology - 1850 - 452 pages
...remained the longest visible, were such as I lad no recollection of ever having previously seen. ?or about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me...retain the most lively impression ; yet, neither at the ;ime nor since have I been able to discover any person whom I had previously seen who resembled it....
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On Hallucinations: A History and Explanation of Apparitions, Visions, Dreams ...

Alexandre-Jacques-François Brierre de Boismont - Hallucinations and illusions - 1859 - 476 pages
...always followed the motion of the eyes ; and secondly, that the objects which were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no recollection of ever having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me a human figure,...
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On Hallucinations: A Rational History and Explanation of Apparitions ...

Alexandre-Jacques-François Brierre de Boismont - Hallucinations and illusions - 1860 - 456 pages
...always followed the motion of the eyes ; and secondly, that the objects which were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no recollection of ever having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me a human figure,...
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The British Quarterly Review, Volume 36

Henry Allon - Christianity - 1862 - 512 pages
...organ of vision itself, or more deeply seated in the brain. Apparitions. ' were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were ' such as I had...recollection of having previously seen. For ' about twenty -four hours I had constantly before me a human ' figure, the features and dress of which were...
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Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 58

John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - American periodicals - 1863 - 552 pages
...understood, their moving with the eye, and, secondly, that the objects which were the best defined, and remained the longest visible, were such as I had no...features and dress of which were as distinctly visible as those of any real existeuce, and of which, after an interval of many years, I still retain the most...
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