Zitat:
In 1880 I went to Prague, Bohemia, carrying out my father's wish to complete my education at the
University there. It was in that city that I made a decided advance, which consisted in detaching
the commutator from the machine and studying the phenomena in this new aspect, but still
without result. In the year following there was a sudden change in my views of life. I realized that
my parents had been making too great sacrifices on my account and resolved to relieve them of
the burden. The wave of the American telephone had just reached the European continent and
the system was to be installed in Budapest, Hungary. It appeared an ideal opportunity, all the
more as a friend of our family was at the head of the enterprise. It was here that I suffered the
complete breakdown of the nerves to which I have referred.
What I experienced during the period of that illness surpasses all belief. My sight and hearing
were always extraordinary. I could clearly discern objects in the distance when others saw no
trace of them. Several times in my boyhood I saved the houses of our neighbors from fire by
hearing the faint crackling sounds which did not disturb their sleep, and calling for help.
In 1899, when I was past forty and carrying on my experiments in Colorado, I could hear very
distinctly thunderclaps at a distance of 550 miles. The limit of audition for my young assistants
was scarcely more than 150 miles. My ear was thus over thirteen times more sensitive. Yet at
that time I was, so to speak, stone deaf in comparison with the acuteness of my hearing while
under the nervous strain. In Budapest I could hear the ticking of a watch with three rooms
between me and the time-piece. A fly alighting on a table in the room would cause a dull thud in
my ear. A carriage passing at a distance of a few miles fairly shook my whole body. The whistle
of a locomotive twenty or thirty miles away made the bench or chair on which I sat vibrate so
strongly that the pain was unbearable. The ground under my feet trembled continuously. I had to
support my bed on rubber cushions to get any rest at all. The roaring noises from near and far
often produced the effect of spoken words which would have frightened me had I not been able to
resolve them into their accidental components. The sun's rays, when periodically intercepted,
would cause blows of such force on my brain that they would stun me. I had to summon all my
will power to pass under a bridge or other structure as I experienced a crushing pressure on the
skull. In the dark I had the sense of a bat and could detect the presence of an object at a
distance of twelve feet by a peculiar creepy sensation on the forehead. My pulse varied from a
few to two hundred and sixty beats and all the tissues of the body quivered with twitchings and
tremors which was perhaps the hardest to bear. A renowned physician who gave me daily large
doses of Bromide of Potassium pronounced my malady unique and incurable.