Fig. 105a
The above is interesting, as suggesting that whatever agency furnished the information knew more than it was telling. For if Craig’s drawing, a pair of curves, constituted a crude letter N, or had no significance, why add the blood-drops, which were not in the original? On the other hand, if her subconscious mind knew it was a heart, why not give her the whole heart, and let her draw it?
So much for the drawings of my secretary; and now for my own early drawings. When I was a school boy, we used to represent human figures in this way; and, as you see, Craig got the essentials (Figs. [106], [106a]):
Fig. 106
Fig. 106a
Several weeks later, I drew a pair of such figures in action and the comment was: “It’s a whirligig of some sort” (Figs. [107], [107a]).
Fig. 107