94 THE FEEBLY INHIBITED. 



27c, F. Very nervous and cross; has a terrible temper. 



vSon. Subject to convulsions; had violent outbreaks of temper ; was brutal 

 to animals; became violently insane and suicidal. 

 1 a, F. A great fighter; of ugly, disagreeable disposition. 

 Son. Became wild and reckless; reproached by his sister, he said he would 

 not stand that, took some "Rough on rats," and died at 19 

 years. 

 13a, Son. Was easily excited; lively; not depressed; hanged himself. 

 Dau. Quick-tempered; musical. 



Dau. Bright and happy, but a little peculiar; committed suicide at 35. 

 2a, Dau. Became violently insane at 17; put broken glass in a pie that was 

 being baked for the family; recovered; naturally jolly and kind. 

 ga, dau. An actress who is obstinate, irritable, and passionate; after child- 

 birth she became deranged and is now obstinate, silly and 

 shameless; has attempted suicide. 

 12a, dau. A great talker; at 31 became violent, restless, noisy; developed de- 

 lusions and hallucinations and threatened to commit suicide. 

 Dau. Contrary and stubborn; hyper-religious; became noisy, restless, 

 sullen, and had delusions. 

 1 3 d, son. Impulsive, irritable, and passionate; became excited; attempted to 

 shoot himself. 

 Dau. Quick-tempered; at 32 became excited; had acute mania. 

 180, son. Alcoholic, cross, irritable; at 37 threatened suicide; was excitable; 

 had delusions and hallucinations. 

 Son. Quick-tempered, had delirium tremens and hallucinations. 

 27a, son. Sulky and impatient as a boy; drank; quick-tempered, homicidal, 



and suicidal; has hallucinations and delusions. 

 46a, dau. High-tempered, extravagant; became insane and jumped out of 

 window, killing herself. 

 Son. At 20 became erratic, silly, irresponsible; wanted to travel and 

 follow girls. 

 266, dau. Obstinate, irritable, and passionate as a child; became hysterical 

 and tried to hang herself and kill her child. 



NOTE.— A considerable range in kind and degree of behavior will be noted in the foregoing 

 list; in a few cases the classification may be said to be in doubt, but in such cases it is (for the 

 testing of the hypothesis) immaterial. Taking all things into consideration, the assigned 

 classification seemed the most reasonable. 



5. CONCLUSION. 



It is morally certain that temperament in man is "determined" by 

 a pair of hereditary, germinal factors, namely, a factor for -excitation 

 whose allelomorph is absence of excitation or placidity; and a factor 

 for normal cheerfulness whose allelomorph is absence of cheerfulness 

 or depression; that these factors may be inherited independently of 

 each other; that dominance is ordinarily imperfect, so that two doses 

 of a factor give a more pronounced result in the offspring than only 

 one dose ; that (with rare exceptions) the offspring of two manic parents 

 are excitable ; of two placid parents are not excitable ; of a depressed and 

 a non-depressed are not depressed; of two depressed are all depressed. 



