GENERIC IMAGES.
535
appeared in the "Spectator," of December 28th last, two very interesting letters concerning a peculiar form of visualizing possessed by the late Mr. Bidder, the engineer, known in early life as the "calculating boy," and this gift is possessed in a high though less degree by several of his descendants. Thus the eldest son, Mr. George Bidder, Q. C, can mentally multiply fifteen figures by fifteen, though not with the same precision and rapidity as his father. One of the two letters is from Mr. Bidder's friend, Professor Elliot, who writes thus:
The second letter is from Mr. George Bidder, who writes:
Mr. Bidder continues, in a letter addressed to myself:
All this shows that mental impressions of extreme vividness may at the same time have great mobility and be subject to "an almost inconceivable rapidity of operation," and that they need not be fixed in the way that hallucinations often are.
Next as regards actual blending. Mr. G. Bidder, in very kindly replying to some questions that I put, writes:
This was Mr. Bidder's own view, quite independent of any suggestions from myself, and is therefore all the more valuable.
The strongest proof that those who have vivid memories of special objects are also capable of blending them is found in the works of such men as Macaulay. I am assured on excellent authority that his visual memory of book, page, and line was of the clearest possible char-