Chapter IX
Yet not these alone does the unmeasurable capacity of my memory retain. Here also is all, learnt of the liberal sciences and
as yet unforgotten; removed as it were to some inner place, which is yet no place: nor are they the images thereof, but the
things themselves. For, what is literature, what the art of disputing, how many kinds of questions there be, whatsoever of
these I know, in such manner exists in my memory, as that I have not taken in the image, and left out the thing, or
that it should have sounded and passed away like a voice fixed on the ear by that impress, whereby it might be recalled,
as if it sounded, when it no longer sounded; or as a smell while it passes and evaporates into air affects the sense of smell,
whence it conveys into the memory an image of itself, which remembering, we renew, or as meat, which verily in the belly hath
now no taste, and yet in the memory still in a manner tasteth; or as any thing which the body by touch perceiveth, and which
when removed from us, the memory still conceives. For those things are not transmitted into the memory, but their images
only are with an admirable swiftness caught up, and stored as it were in wondrous cabinets, and thence wonderfully by the
act of remembering, brought forth.