MEMORY AND BY F. W. EDRIDGE-GREEN, M. D., F. R. C. S. AUTHOR OF COLOUR BLINDNESS AND COLOUR PERCEPTION, ETC. NEW YORK D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 1897 MAY 11 1398 BIP .ED7 PREFACE ONE of the most marked features of the present age is the invention of labour and time saving appliances; it is evident that time saved is time gained. In an age which is specially characterised by intellectual progress, much time must necessarily be expended in the acquirement of knowledge, which will serve as a basis for further development. I hope, therefore, that any rules which will lighten labour in this direction will be found useful. After discovering the facts which led me to write on the subject of Memory, I found that I could learn a subject in about a fifth of the time that it previously took me. I hope that those who read this book will be able to improve their memories in a corresponding degree. 6 RAVENSFIELD VILLAS, HENDON, N.W. F. W. EDRIDGE-GREEN. |