NORMAL AND HEIGHTENED SUGGESTIBILITY. 641 



changed into a bright red on the chest, abdomen, and inside of 

 the limbs. The face is furnished with full, light gray whiskers 

 on the cheeks, and a very peculiar aspect is given to it by two 

 broad white rays that extend from the superciliary arches to the 

 top of the head, and unite with the tuft of black hairs to form a 

 forelock on top of the forehead. Two bands of the same dark color 

 occupy the sides of the face. Captivity did not take away her 

 charming manners from Nyanga. She came to us joyously and 

 let us caress her, and we could let her out of the cage then with- 

 out danger of her running away. But the amiable animal had 

 just escaped the greatest danger. 



Her skin is so beautiful, she takes care of it with such pains 

 that she is in as fine condition as if she were living free in the 

 forests of the Congo ; so that a person, whom I will not be so un- 

 kind as to name, found her so well kept that he proposed nothing 

 less than to kill her, in order to put her stuffed skin in the cases. 

 Fortunately, this idea was not carried out ; and it is not likely 

 that the learned director of the museum would ever consent to 

 listen to it. Translated for the Popular Science Monthly from La 

 Nature. 



NORMAL AND HEIGHTENED SUGGESTIBILITY. 



BT PROF. WILLIAM EOMAINE NEWBOLD. 



rriHERE is perhaps no question so perplexing to a worker in a 

 JL relatively new field as that which arises with reference to 

 his terminology. Not only must he be influenced by consider- 

 ations of euphony and etymological correctness, but he must also 

 be on his guard against using words the connotations of which 

 would tend to lead both himself and his reader astray in their 

 practical inferences. It is, for example, true that a quart of alco- 

 hol acts as a poison, but it does not follow that we should use an 

 ounce of alcohol as we would an ounce of strychnine. It may be 

 eminently proper to apply a bad name to a dog under certain 

 conditions, but it does not follow that the dog should be forthwith 

 hanged. 



" Suggestion " and " suggestibility " are words which usage 

 compels us to employ, and, as their connotations are apt to mis- 

 lead us, I shall find it necessary to preface my account with a 

 brief analysis of their various meanings. 



In dealing with any mental state, we have to consider (1) its 

 character, (2) its conditions and causes, (3) its effects. The word 

 " suggestion " properly denotes either an agency which produces 

 a mental state, or the state so produced, and in the latter use it 

 connotes the notion of the agency. Its most common meaning, 



VOL. XLVIIL 46 



