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Updated: May 3, 2025


A few examples may prove interesting and instructive. Maudsley says: "It is surprising how uncomfortable a person may be made by the obscure idea of something which he ought to have said or done, and which he cannot for the life of him remember. There is an effort of the lost idea to get into consciousness, which is relieved directly the idea bursts into consciousness."

Kennedy did not dwell on the contradiction, but added, "And the crowd?" "Strangers, too." "Dr. Maudsley is your family physician?" he questioned. "Yes." "Did he call er yesterday?" "He calls every day to supervise the nurse who has Junior in charge." "Could one always be true to oneself in the face of any temptation?" he asked suddenly. It was a bold question.

Lady Dargan could make no effort of memory, but she replied without hesitation or conscience: "Yellow and brown." "There," said Mrs. Gasgoyne, "we are both wrong, Captain Maudsley. Sophie never makes a mistake." Maudsley assented politely, but, stealing a look at Lady Dargan, wondered what the little by-play meant. Gaston was between Sir William and Mrs. Gasgoyne.

The words that followed the look, simple as they were, drove home the naked reproof: "What is your name, my man?" "Lugley, sir." "Lugley! Lugley! H'm! Well, Lugley, I like the hounds better than I like you. Who is Master of the Hounds, Lugley?" "Captain Maudsley, sir." "Just so. You are satisfied with your place, Lugley?" "Yes, sir," said the man in a humble voice, now cowed.

Maudsley laid especial stress upon the observation, that intemperance, without hereditary predisposition, was one of the most powerful agencies in the production of aberration of the mind.

Maudsley, Dr., on the influence of the sense of smell in man; on idiots smelling their food; on Laura Bridgman; on the development of the vocal organs; moral sense failing in incipient madness; change of mental faculties at puberty in man. Mayers, W.F., on the domestication of the goldfish in China. Mayhew, E., on the affection between individuals of different sexes in the dog.

There is no scientific stone I would have left unturned until I had delved at the truth of this riddle. Fortunately it was not necessary. Simple finger prints have told me enough. And best of all, it has been in time to frustrate that devilish scheme you and Veronica Haversham have been slowly unfolding." Maudsley crumpled up, as it were, at Kennedy's denunciation.

Maudsley says: "The firmest resolve or purpose sometimes vanishes issueless when it comes to the brink of an act, while the true will, which determines perhaps a different act, springs up suddenly out of the depths of the unconscious nature, surprising and overcoming the conscious."

"I suppose that study of these prints, Maudsley, will convey nothing to you. I know that it is usually stated that there are no two sets of finger prints in the world that are identical or that can be confused.

The sane and scientific conclusion seems to lie in the following from Dr. Henry Maudsley:

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