http://galton.org
<<prevgalton human faculty 0186next>>

OCR Rendition - approximate

Recognized HTML document

History of Twins   165


Martin sprang on his grandchild, declaring that he was the thief, and would have strangled him if he had not been prevented; he then became steadily worse, complained of violent pains in his head, went out of doors on some excuse, and tried to drown himself in the river Steir, but was forcibly stopped by his son, who had watched and followed him. He was then taken to an asylum by gendarmes, where he’ died in three hours. Francois, on his part, calmed down on the morning of the 24th, and employed the day in. inquiring about the robbery. By a strange chance, he crossed his brother’s path at the moment when the latter was struggling with the gendarmes; then he himself became’ maddened, giving way to extravagant gestures and using. incoherent language (similar to that of his brother). He. then asked to be bled, which was done, and afterwards, declaring himself to be better, went out on the pretext of executing some commission, but really to drown himself in the River Steir, which he actually did, at the very spot where Martin had attempted to do the same thing a few’ hours previously.

The next point which I shall mention in illustration of the extremely close resemblance between certain twins is the similarity in the association of their ideas. No less than eleven out of the thirty-five cases testify to this. They make’ the same remarks on the same occasion, begin singing the’ same song at the same moment, and so on; or one would commence a sentence, and the other would finish it. An observant friend graphically described to me the effect produced on her by two such twins whom she had met casually. She said: “Their teeth grew alike, they spoke alike and together, and said the same things, and seemed just like one’ person.” One of the most curious anecdotes that I have received concerning this similarity of ideas was that one twin, A, who happened to be at a town in Scotland, bought a set of champagne glasses which caught his attention, as a surprise for his brother B; while, at the same time, B, being in England, bought a similar set of precisely the same pattern as a surprise for A. Other anecdotes of a like kind have’ reached me about these twins.

The last point to which I. shall allude regards the tastes and dispositions of. the thirty-five pairs of twins. In sixteen