118 galton.org
118
Inquiries into Human Faculty
opened (2), when all of a sudden it burst open and the petals became reflexed (3).
[1]
Fig. 73. The spontaneous appearance of a poppy capsule* (1) dehiscing as usual by
pores, but with inordinately long and arching valves over the pores. These valves were
eminently suggestive of hooded flowers. Hence they changed to a whorl of salvias. (2).
Each blossom now gyrated rapidly in a vertical plane. Concentrating observation on one
rotating flower, it became a rotating haze, as the rapid motion rendered the flower totally
indistinct. The haze now shaped itself into a circle of moss with a deep funnel-like
cavity. This was suggestive of a birds nest. It became lined with hair, but the nest was a
deep, pointed cavity. A nest was suggestive of eggs. Hence a series appeared (4); the two
rows meeting in one at the apex appears to have arisen from the perspective view of the
nest. The eggs all disappeared but one (5), which increased in size; the bright point of light
now shone with great intensity like a star; then it gradually grew dimmer and dimmer till it
disappeared into the usual hazy obscurity into which all [my] visual objects ultimately
vanish.
I have a sufficient variety of cases to prove the continuity between all
the forms of visualisation, beginning with an almost total absence of it,
and ending with a complete hallucination. The continuity is, however, not
simply that of varying degrees of intensity, but of variations in the
character of the process itself, so that it is by no means uncommon to find
two very different forms of it concurrent in the same person. There are
some who visualise well, and who also are seers of visions, who declare
that the vision is not a vivid visualisation, but altogether a different
phenomenon. In short, if we please to call all sensations due to external
impressions direct, and all others induced, then there are many
channels through which the induction of the latter may take place, and
the channel of ordinary
visualisation in the persons just mentioned is
different from that through which their visions arise.
The following is a good instance of this condition. A friend writes
These visions often appear with startling vividness, and so far from depending on any
voluntary effort of the mind, they
[1]
The details and illustrations of four other experiments with the image of a rosebud
have been given me. They all vary in detail.