Page:Memory; how to develop, train, and use it - Atkinson - 1919.djvu/47

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Memory Systems
41

of the things would denote the things themselves; so that we should use the places as waxen tablets and the symbols as letters.” Quintillian advises students to “fix in their minds places of the greatest possible extent, diversified by considerable variety, such as a large house, for example, divided into many apartments. Whatever is remarkable in it is carefully impressed on the mind, so that the thought may run over every part of it without hesitation or delay. . . . Places we must have, either fancied or selected, and images or symbols which we may invent at pleasure. These symbols are marks by which we may distinguish the particulars which we have to get by heart.”

Many modern systems have been erected upon the foundation of Simonides and in some of which cases students have been charged high prices “for the secret.” The following outline given by Kay gives the “secret” of many a high priced system of this class: “Select a number of rooms, and divide the walls and floor of each, in imagination, into nine equal parts or squares, three in a row. On