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logical Sciences by a Committee of that Institution。



〃The singular nature of the case we are about to narrate and comment

upon will; we feel confident; arrest the attention of those who have

learned the great fact that Nature often throws the strongest light

upon her laws by the apparent exceptions and anomalies which from

time to time are observed。  We have done with the lusus naturae of

earlier generations。  We pay little attention to the stories of

'miracles;' except so far as we receive them ready…made at the hands

of the churches which still hold to them。  Not the less do we meet

with strange and surprising facts; which a century or two ago would

have been handled by the clergy and the courts; but today are calmly

recorded and judged by the best light our knowledge of the laws of

life can throw upon them。  It must be owned that there are stories

which we can hardly dispute; so clear and full is the evidence in

their support; which do; notwithstanding; tax our faith and sometimes

leave us sceptical in spite of all the testimony which supports them。



〃 In this category many will be disposed to place the case we commend

to the candid attention of the Academy。  If one were told that a

young man; a gentleman by birth and training; well formed; in

apparently perfect health; of agreeable physiognomy and manners;

could not endure the presence of the most attractive young woman; but

was seized with deadly terror and sudden collapse of all the powers

of life; if he came into her immediate presence; if it were added

that this same young man did not shrink from the presence of an old

withered crone; that he had a certain timid liking for little maidens

who had not yet outgrown the company of their dolls; the listener

would be apt to smile; if he did not laugh; at the absurdity of the

fable。  Surely; he would say; this must be the fiction of some

fanciful brain; the whim of some romancer; the trick of some

playwright。  It would make a capital farce; this idea; carried out。

A young man slighting the lovely heroine of the little comedy and

making love to her grandmother!  This would; of course; be

overstating the truth of the story; but to such a misinterpretation

the plain facts lend themselves too easily。  We will relate the

leading circumstances of the case; as they were told us with perfect

simplicity and frankness by the subject of an affection which; if

classified; would come under the general head of Antipathy; but to

which; if we give it a name; we shall have to apply the term

Gynophobia; or Fear of Woman。〃



Here follows the account furnished to the writer of the paper; which

is in all essentials identical with that already laid before the

reader。



〃 Such is the case offered to our consideration。  Assuming its

truthfulness in all its particulars; it remains to see in the first

place whether or not it is as entirely exceptional and anomalous as

it seems at first sight; or whether it is only the last term of a

series of cases which in their less formidable aspect are well known

to us in literature; in the records of science; and even in our

common experience。



〃To most of those among us the explanations we are now about to give

are entirely superfluous。  But there are some whose chief studies

have been in different directions; and who will not complain if

certain facts are mentioned which to the expert will seem

rudimentary; and which hardly require recapitulation to those who are

familiarly acquainted with the common text…books。



〃The heart is the centre of every living movement in the higher

animals; and in man; furnishing in varying amount; or withholding to

a greater or less extent; the needful supplies to all parts of the

system。  If its action is diminished to a certain degree; faintness

is the immediate consequence; if it is arrested; loss of

consciousness; if its action is not soon restored; death; of which

fainting plants the white flag; remains in possession of the system。



How closely the heart is under the influence of the emotions we need

not go to science to learn; for all human experience and all

literature are overflowing with evidence that shows the extent of

this relation。  Scripture is full of it; the heart in Hebrew poetry

represents the entire life; we might almost say。  Not less forcible

is the language of Shakespeare; as for instance; in 'Measure for

Measure:'



    'Why does my blood thus muster to my heart;

     Making it both unable for itself

     And dispossessing all my other parts

     Of necessary fitness?'



More especially is the heart associated in every literature with the

passion of love。  A famous old story is that of Galen; who was called

to the case of a young lady long ailing; and wasting away from some

cause the physicians who had already seen her were unable to make

out。  The shrewd old practitioner suspected that love was at the

bottom of the young lady's malady。  Many relatives and friends of

both sexes; all of them ready with their sympathy; came to see her。

The physician sat by her bedside during one of these visits; and in

an easy; natural way took her hand and placed a finger on her pulse。

It beat quietly enough until a certain comely young gentleman entered

the apartment; when it suddenly rose infrequency; and at the same

moment her hurried breathing; her changing color; pale and flushed by

turns; betrayed the profound agitation his presence excited。  This

was enough for the sagacious Greek; love was the disease; the cure of

which by its like may be claimed as an anticipation of homoeopathy。

In the frontispiece to the fine old 'Junta' edition of the works of

Galen; you may find among the wood…cuts a representation of the

interesting scene; with the title Amantas Dignotio;the diagnosis;

or recognition; of the lover。



〃Love has many languages; but the heart talks through all of them。

The pallid or burning cheek tells of the failing or leaping fountain

which gives it color。  The lovers at the 'Brookside' could hear each

other's hearts beating。  When Genevieve; in Coleridge's poem; forgot

herself; and was beforehand with her suitor in her sudden embrace;



    'T was partly love and partly fear;

     And partly 't was a bashful art;

     That I might rather feel than see

     The swelling of her heart'



Always the heart; whether its hurried action is seen; or heard; or

felt。  But it is not always in this way that the 'deceitful' organ

treats the lover。



    'Faint heart never won fair lady。'



This saying was not meant; perhaps; to be taken literally; but it has

its literal truth。  Many a lover has found his heart sink within

him;lose all its force; and leave him weak as a child in his

emotion at the sight of the object of his affections。  When Porphyro

looked upon Madeline at her prayers in the chapel; it was too much

for him:



    'She seemed a splendid angel; newly drest;

     Save wings; for heaven:Porphyro grew faint;

     She knelt; so pure a thing; so free from earthly taint。'



And in Balzac's novel; 'Cesar Birotteau;' the hero of the story

'fainted away for…joy at the moment when; under a linden…tree; at

Sceaux; Constance…Barbe…Josephine accepted him as her future

husband。'



〃One who faints is dead if he does not I come to;' and nothing is

more likely than that too susceptible lovers have actually gone off

in this way。  Everything depends on how the heart behaves itself in

these and similar trying moments。  The mechanism of its actions

becomes an interesting subject; therefore; to lovers of both sexes;

and to all who are capable of intense emotions。



〃The heart is a great reservoir; which distributes food; drink; air;

and heat to every part of the system; in exchange for its waste

material。  It knocks at the gate of every organ seventy or eighty

times in a minute; calling upon it to receive its supplies and unload

its refuse。  Between it and the brain there is the closest relation。

The emotions; which act upon it as we have seen; govern it by a

mechanism only of late years thoroughly understood。  This mechanism

can be made plain enough to the reader who is not afraid to believe

that he can understand it。



〃The brain; as all know; is the seat of ideas; emotions; volition。

It is the great central telegraphic station with which many lesser

centres are in close relation; from which they receive; and to which

they transmit; their messages。  The heart has its own little brains;

so to speak;small collections of nervous substance which govern its

rhythmical motions under ordinary conditions。  But these lesser

nervous centres are to a large extent dominated by influences

transmitted from certain groups of nerve…cells in the brain and its

immediate dependencies。



〃There are two among the special groups of nerve…cells which produce

directly opposite effects。  One of these has the power of

accelerating the action of the 

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