A treatise
on mesmerism
Towards the end of the eighteenth
century science was sundered as widely by the apparition
of Mesmer as art had been by that of Gluck. After
re-discovering magnetism Mesmer came to France, where,
from time immemorial, inventors have flocked to obtain
recognition for their discoveries. France, thanks
to her lucid language, is in some sense the clarion
of the world.
“If homoeopathy gets to Paris
it is saved,” said Hahnemann, recently.
“Go to France,” said Monsieur
de Metternich to Gall, “and if they laugh at
your bumps you will be famous.”
Mesmer had disciples and antagonists
as ardent for and against his theories as the Piccinists
and the Gluckists for theirs. Scientific France
was stirred to its center; a solemn conclave was opened.
Before judgment was rendered, the medical faculty
proscribed, in a body, Mesmer’s so-called charlatanism,
his tub, his conducting wires, and his theory.
But let us at once admit that the German, unfortunately,
compromised his splendid discovery by enormous pecuniary
claims. Mesmer was defeated by the doubtfulness
of facts, by universal ignorance of the part played
in nature by imponderable fluids then unobserved,
and by his own inability to study on all sides a science
possessing a triple front. Magnetism has many
applications; in Mesmer’s hands it was, in its
relation to the future, merely what cause is to effect.
But, if the discoverer lacked genius, it is a sad
thing both for France and for human reason to have
to say that a science contemporaneous with civilization,
cultivated by Egypt and Chaldea, by Greece and India,
met in Paris in the eighteenth century the fate that
Truth in the person of Galileo found in the sixteenth;
and that magnetism was rejected and cast out by the
combined attacks of science and religion, alarmed
for their own positions. Magnetism, the favorite
science of Jesus Christ and one of the divine powers
which he gave to his disciples, was no better apprehended
by the Church than by the disciples of Jean-Jacques,
Voltaire, Locke, and Condillac. The Encyclopedists
and the clergy were equally averse to the old human
power which they took to be new. The miracles
of the convulsionaries, suppressed by the Church and
smothered by the indifference of scientific men (in
spite of the precious writings of the Councilor, Carre
de Montgeron) were the first summons to make experiments
with those human fluids which give power to employ
certain inward forces to neutralize the sufferings
caused by outward agents. But to do this it was
necessary to admit the existence of fluids intangible,
invisible, imponderable, three negative terms in which
the science of that day chose to see a definition
of the void. In modern philosophy there is no
void. Ten feet of void and the world crumbles
away! To materialists especially the world is
full, all things hang together, are linked, related,
organized. “The world as the result of
chance,” said Diderot, “is more explicable
than God. The multiplicity of causes, the incalculable
number of issues presupposed by chance, explain creation.
Take the Eneid and all the letters composing it; if
you allow me time and space, I can, by continuing to
cast the letters, arrive at last at the Eneid combination.”
Those foolish persons who deify all
rather than admit a God recoil before the infinite
divisibility of matter which is in the nature of imponderable
forces. Locke and Condillac retarded by fifty
years the immense progress which natural science is
now making under the great principle of unity due
to Geoffroy de Saint-Hilaire. Some intelligent
persons, without any system, convinced by facts conscientiously
studied, still hold to Mesmer’s doctrine, which
recognizes the existence of a penetrative influence
acting from man to man, put in motion by the will,
curative by the abundance of the fluid, the working
of which is in fact a duel between two forces, between
an ill to be cured and the will to cure it.
The phenomena of somnambulism, hardly
perceived by Mesmer, were revealed by du Puysegur
and Deleuze; but the Revolution put a stop to their
discoveries and played into the hands of the scientists
and scoffers. Among the small number of believers
were a few physicians. They were persecuted by
their brethren as long as they lived. The respectable
body of Parisian doctors displayed all the bitterness
of religious warfare against the Mesmerists, and were
as cruel in their hatred as it was possible to be
in those days of Voltairean tolerance. The orthodox
physician refused to consult with those who adopted
the Mesmerian heresy. In 1820 these heretics
were still proscribed. The miseries and sorrows
of the Revolution had not quenched the scientific
hatred. It is only priests, magistrates, and physicians
who can hate in that way. The official robe is
terrible! But ideas are even more implacable
than things.
Doctor Bouvard, one of Minoret’s
friends, believed in the new faith, and persevered
to the day of his death in studying a science to which
he sacrificed the peace of his life, for he was one
of the chief “betes noires” of the Parisian
faculty. Minoret, a valiant supporter of the
Encyclopedists, and a formidable adversary of Desion,
Mesmer’s assistant, whose pen had great weight
in the controversy, quarreled with his old friend,
and not only that, but he persecuted him. His
conduct to Bouvard must have caused him the only remorse
which troubled the serenity of his declining years.
Since his retirement to Nemours the science of imponderable
fluids (the only name suitable for magnetism, which,
by the nature of its phenomena, is closely allied to
light and electricity) had made immense progress, in
spite of the ridicule of Parisian scientists.
Phrenology and physiognomy, the departments of Gall
and Lavater (which are in fact twins, for one is to
the other as cause is to effect), proved to the minds
of more than one physiologist the existence of an
intangible fluid which is the basis of the phenomena
of the human will, and from which result passions,
habits, the shape of faces and of skulls. Magnetic
facts, the miracles of somnambulism, those of divination
and ecstasy, which open a way to the spiritual world,
were fast accumulating. The strange tale of the
apparitions of the farmer Martin, so clearly proved,
and his interview with Louis XVIII.; a knowledge of
the intercourse of Swedenborg with the departed, carefully
investigated in Germany; the tales of Walter Scott
on the effects of “second sight”; the
extraordinary faculties of some fortune-tellers, who
practice as a single science chiromancy, cartomancy,
and the horoscope; the facts of catalepsy, and those
of the action of certain morbid affections on the
properties of the diaphragm,—all such phenomena,
curious, to say the least, each emanating from the
same source, were now undermining many scepticisms
and leading even the most indifferent minds to the
plane of experiments. Minoret, buried in Nemours,
was ignorant of this movement of minds, strong in
the north of Europe but still weak in France where,
however, many facts called marvelous by superficial
observers, were happening, but falling, alas! like
stones to the bottom of the sea, in the vortex of
Parisian excitements.
At the bottom of the present year
the doctor’s tranquillity was shaken by the
following letter:—
My old comrade,—All friendship,
even if lost, as rights which it is difficult to set
aside. I know that you are still living, and I
remember far less our enmity than our happy days in
that old hovel of Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre.
At a time when I expect to soon leave
the world I have it on my heart to prove to you that
magnetism is about to become one of the most important
of the sciences—if indeed all science is
not one. I can overcome your incredulity
by proof. Perhaps I shall owe to your curiosity
the happiness of taking you once more by the hand
—as in the days before Mesmer.
Always yours,
Bouvard.
Stung like a lion by a gadfly the
old scientist rushed to Paris and left his card on
Bouvard, who lived in the Rue Ferou near Saint-Sulpice.
Bouvard sent a card to his hotel on which was written
“To-morrow; nine o’clock, Rue Saint-Honore,
opposite the Assumption.”
Minoret, who seemed to have renewed
his youth, could not sleep. He went to see some
of his friends among the faculty to inquire if the
world were turned upside down, if the science of medicine
still had a school, if the four faculties any longer
existed. The doctors reassured him, declaring
that the old spirit of opposition was as strong as
ever, only, instead of persecuting as heretofore, the
Academies of Medicine and of Sciences rang with laughter
as they classed magnetic facts with the tricks of
Comus and Comte and Bosco, with jugglery and prestidigitation
and all that now went by the name of “amusing
physics.”
This assurance did not prevent old
Minoret from keeping the appointment made for him
by Bouvard. After an enmity of forty-four years
the two antagonists met beneath a porte-cochere in
the Rue Saint-Honore. Frenchmen have too many
distractions of mind to hate each other long.
In Paris especially, politics, literature, and science
render life so vast that every man can find new worlds
to conquer where all pretensions may live at ease.
Hatred requires too many forces fully armed.
None but public bodies can keep alive the sentiment.
Robespierre and Danton would have fallen into each
other’s arms at the end of forty-four years.
However, the two doctors each withheld his hand and
did not offer it. Bouvard spoke first:—
“You seem wonderfully well.”
“Yes, I am—and you?”
said Minoret, feeling that the ice was now broken.
“As you see.”
“Does magnetism prevent people
from dying?” asked Minoret in a joking tone,
but without sharpness.
“No, but it almost prevented me from living.”
“Then you are not rich?” exclaimed Minoret.
“Pooh!” said Bouvard.
“But I am!” cried the other.
“It is not your money but your
convictions that I want. Come,” replied
Bouvard.
“Oh! you obstinate fellow!” said Minoret.
The Mesmerist led his sceptic, with
some precaution, up a dingy staircase to the fourth
floor.
At this particular time an extraordinary
man had appeared in Paris, endowed by faith with incalculable
power, and controlling magnetic forces in all their
applications. Not only did this great unknown
(who still lives) heal from a distance the worst and
most inveterate diseases, suddenly and radically,
as the Savior of men did formerly, but he was also
able to call forth instantaneously the most remarkable
phenomena of somnambulism and conquer the most rebellious
will. The countenance of this mysterious being,
who claims to be responsible to God alone and to communicate,
like Swedenborg, with angels, resembles that of a
lion; concentrated, irresistible energy shines in it.
His features, singularly contorted, have a terrible
and even blasting aspect. His voice, which comes
from the depths of his being, seems charged with some
magnetic fluid; it penetrates the hearer at every
pore. Disgusted by the ingratitude of the public
after his many cures, he has now returned to an impenetrable
solitude, a voluntary nothingness. His all-powerful
hand, which has restored a dying daughter to her mother,
fathers to their grief-stricken children, adored mistresses
to lovers frenzied with love, cured the sick given
over by physicians, soothed the sufferings of the dying
when life became impossible, wrung psalms of thanksgiving
in synagogues, temples, and churches from the lips
of priests recalled to the one God by the same miracle,—that
sovereign hand, a sun of life dazzling the closed
eyes of the somnambulist, has never been raised again
even to save the heir-apparent of a kingdom.
Wrapped in the memory of his past mercies as in a
luminous shroud, he denies himself to the world and
lives for heaven.
But, at the dawn of his reign, surprised
by his own gift, this man, whose generosity equaled
his power, allowed a few interested persons to witness
his miracles. The fame of his work, which was
mighty, and could easily be revived to-morrow, reached
Dr. Bouvard, who was then on the verge of the grave.
The persecuted mesmerist was at last enabled to witness
the startling phenomena of a science he had long treasured
in his heart. The sacrifices of the old man touched
the heart of the mysterious stranger, who accorded
him certain privileges. As Bouvard now went up
the staircase he listened to the twittings of his
old antagonist with malicious delight, answering only,
“You shall see, you shall see!” with the
emphatic little nods of a man who is sure of his facts.
The two physicians entered a suite
of rooms that were more than modest. Bouvard
went alone into a bedroom which adjoined the salon
where he left Minoret, whose distrust was instantly
awakened; but Bouvard returned at once and took him
into the bedroom, where he saw the mysterious Swedenborgian,
and also a woman sitting in an armchair. The
woman did not rise, and seemed not to notice the entrance
of the two old men.
“What! no tub?” cried Minoret, smiling.
“Nothing but the power of God,”
answered the Swedenborgian gravely. He seemed
to Minoret to be about fifty years of age.
The three men sat down and the mysterious
stranger talked of the rain and the coming fine weather,
to the great astonishment of Minoret, who thought
he was being hoaxed. The Swedenborgian soon began,
however, to question his visitor on his scientific
opinions, and seemed evidently to be taking time to
examine him.
“You have come here solely from
curiosity, monsieur,” he said at last.
“It is not my habit to prostitute a power which,
according to my conviction, emanates from God; if
I made a frivolous or unworthy use of it, it would
be taken from me. Nevertheless, there is some
hope, Monsieur Bouvard tells me, of changing the opinions
of one who has opposed us, of enlightening a scientific
man whose mind is candid; I have therefore determined
to satisfy you. That woman whom you see there,”
he continued, pointing to her, “is now in a somnambulic
sleep. The statements and manifestations of somnambulists
declare that this state is a delightful other life,
during which the inner being, freed from the trammels
laid upon the exercise of our faculties by the visible
world, moves in a world which we mistakenly term invisible.
Sight and hearing are then exercised in a manner far
more perfect than any we know of here, possibly without
the help of the organs we now employ, which are the
scabbard of the luminous blades called sight and hearing.
To a person in that state, distance and material obstacles
do not exist, or they can be traversed by a life within
us for which our body is a mere receptacle, a necessary
shelter, a casing. Terms fail to describe effects
that have lately been rediscovered, for to-day the
words imponderable, intangible, invisible have no meaning
to the fluid whose action is demonstrated by magnetism.
Light is ponderable by its heat, which, by penetrating
bodies, increases their volume; and certainly electricity
is only too tangible. We have condemned things
themselves instead of blaming the imperfection of our
instruments.”
“She sleeps,” said Minoret,
examining the woman, who seemed to him to belong to
an inferior class.
“Her body is for the time being
in abeyance,” said the Swedenborgian. “Ignorant
persons suppose that condition to be sleep. But
she will prove to you that there is a spiritual universe,
and that the mind when there does not obey the laws
of this material universe. I will send her wherever
you wish to go,—a hundred miles from here
or to China, as you will. She will tell you what
is happening there.”
“Send her to my house in Nemours,
Rue des Bourgeois; that will do,” said Minoret.
He took Minoret’s hand, which
the doctor let him take, and held it for a moment
seeming to collect himself; then with his other hand
he took that of the woman sitting in the arm-chair
and placed the hand of the doctor in it, making a
sign to the old sceptic to seat himself beside this
oracle without a tripod. Minoret observed a slight
tremor on the absolutely calm features of the woman
when their hands were thus united by the Swedenborgian,
but the action, though marvelous in its effects, was
very simply done.
“Obey him,” said the unknown
personage, extending his hand above the head of the
sleeping woman, who seemed to imbibe both light and
life from him, “and remember that what you do
for him will please me.—You can now speak
to her,” he added, addressing Minoret.
“Go to Nemours, to my house,
Rue des Bourgeois,” said the doctor.
“Give her time; put your hand
in hers until she proves to you by what she tells
you that she is where you wish her to be,” said
Bouvard to his old friend.
“I see a river,” said
the woman in a feeble voice, seeming to look within
herself with deep attention, notwithstanding her closed
eyelids. “I see a pretty garden—”
“Why do you enter by the river
and the garden?” said Minoret.
“Because they are there.”
“Who?”
“The young girl and her nurse, whom you are
thinking of.”
“What is the garden like?” said Minoret.
“Entering by the steps which
go down to the river, there is the right, a long brick
gallery, in which I see books; it ends in a singular
building,—there are wooden bells, and a
pattern of red eggs. To the left, the wall is
covered with climbing plants, wild grapes, Virginia
jessamine. In the middle is a sun-dial. There
are many plants in pots. Your child is looking
at the flowers. She shows them to her nurse—she
is making holes in the earth with her trowel, and planting
seeds. The nurse is raking the path. The
young girl is pure as an angel, but the beginning
of love is there, faint as the dawn—”
“Love for whom?” asked
the doctor, who, until now, would have listened to
no word said to him by somnambulists. He considered
it all jugglery.
“You know nothing—though
you have lately been uneasy about her health,”
answered the woman. “Her heart has followed
the dictates of nature.”
“A woman of the people to talk
like this!” cried the doctor.
“In the state she is in all
persons speak with extraordinary perception,”
said Bouvard.
“But who is it that Ursula loves?”
“Ursula does not know that she
loves,” said the woman with a shake of the head;
“she is too angelic to know what love is; but
her mind is occupied by him; she thinks of him; she
tries to escape the thought; but she returns to it
in spite of her will to abstain.—She is
at the piano—”
“But who is he?”
“The son of a lady who lives opposite.”
“Madame de Portenduere?”
“Portenduere, did you say?”
replied the sleeper. “Perhaps so. But
there’s no danger; he is not in the neighbourhood.”
“Have they spoken to each other?” asked
the doctor.
“Never. They have looked
at one another. She thinks him charming.
He is, in fact, a fine man; he has a good heart.
She sees him from her window; they see each other
in church. But the young man no longer thinks
of her.”
“His name?”
“Ah! to tell you that I must
read it, or hear it. He is named Savinien; she
has just spoken his name; she thinks it sweet to say;
she has looked in the almanac for his fete-day and
marked a red dot against it,—child’s
play, that. Ah! she will love well, with as much
strength as purity; she is not a girl to love twice;
love will so dye her soul and fill it that she will
reject all other sentiments.”
“Where do you see that?”
“In her. She will know
how to suffer; she inherits that; her father and her
mother suffered much.”
The last words overcame the doctor,
who felt less shaken than surprised. It is proper
to state that between her sentences the woman paused
for several minutes, during which time her attention
became more and more concentrated. She was seen
to see; her forehead had a singular aspect; an inward
effort appeared there; it seemed to clear or cloud
by some mysterious power, the effects of which Minoret
had seen in dying persons at moments when they appeared
to have the gift of prophecy. Several times she
made gestures which resembled those of Ursula.
“Question her,” said the
mysterious stranger, to Minoret, “she will tell
you secrets you alone can know.”
“Does Ursula love me?” asked Minoret.
“Almost as much as she loves
God,” was the answer. “But she is
very unhappy at your unbelief. You do not believe
in God; as if you could prevent his existence!
His word fills the universe. You are the cause
of her only sorrow.—Hear! she is playing
scales; she longs to be a better musician than she
is; she is provoked with herself. She is thinking,
’If I could sing, if my voice were fine, it would
reach his ear when he is with his mother.’”
Doctor Minoret took out his pocket-book
and noted the hour.
“Tell me what seeds she planted?”
“Mignonette, sweet-peas, balsams—”
“And what else?”
“Larkspur.”
“Where is my money?”
“With your notary; but you invest
it so as not to lose the interest of a single day.”
“Yes, but where is the money that I keep for
my monthly expenses?”
“You put it in a large book
bound in red, entitled ’Pandects of Justinian,
Vol. II.’ between the last two leaves; the
book is on the shelf of folios above the glass buffet.
You have a whole row of them. Your money is in
the last volume next to the salon— See!
Vol. III. is before Vol. II.—but
you have no money, it is all in—”
“—thousand-franc notes,” said
the doctor.
“I cannot see, they are folded.
No, there are two notes of five hundred francs.”
“You see them?”
“Yes.”
“How do they look?”
“One is old and yellow, the other white and
new.”
This last phase of the inquiry petrified
the doctor. He looked at Bouvard with a bewildered
air; but Bouvard and the Swedenborgian, who were accustomed
to the amazement of sceptics, were speaking together
in a low voice and appeared not to notice him.
Minoret begged them to allow him to return after dinner.
The old philosopher wished to compose his mind and
shake off this terror, so as to put this vast power
to some new test, to subject it to more decisive experiments
and obtain answers to certain questions, the truth
of which should do away with every sort of doubt.
“Be here at nine o’clock
this evening,” said the stranger. “I
will return to meet you.”
Doctor Minoret was in so convulsed
a state that he left the room without bowing, followed
by Bouvard, who called to him from behind. “Well,
what do you say? what do you say?”
“I think I am mad, Bouvard,”
answered Minoret from the steps of the porte-cochere.
“If that woman tells the truth about Ursula,—and
none but Ursula can know the things that sorceress
has told me,—I shall say that you are
right. I wish I had wings to fly to Nemours
this minute and verify her words. But I shall
hire a carriage and start at ten o’clock to-night.
Ah! am I losing my senses?”
“What would you say if you knew
of a life-long incurable disease healed in a moment;
if you saw that great magnetizer bring sweat in torrents
from an herpetic patient, or make a paralyzed woman
walk?”
“Come and dine, Bouvard; stay
with me till nine o’clock. I must find
some decisive, undeniable test!”
“So be it, old comrade,” answered the
other.
The reconciled enemies dined in the
Palais-Royal. After a lively conversation, which
helped Minoret to evade the fever of the ideas which
were ravaging his brain, Bouvard said to him:—
“If you admit in that woman
the faculty of annihilating or of traversing space,
if you obtain a certainty that here, in Paris, she
sees and hears what is said and done in Nemours, you
must admit all other magnetic facts; they are not
more incredible than these. Ask her for some
one proof which you know will satisfy you—for
you might suppose that we obtained information to
deceive you; but we cannot know, for instance, what
will happen at nine o’clock in your goddaughter’s
bedroom. Remember, or write down, what the sleeper
will see and hear, and then go home. Your little
Ursula, whom I do not know, is not our accomplice,
and if she tells you that she has said and done what
you have written down—lower thy head, proud
Hun!”
The two friends returned to the house
opposite to the Assumption and found the somnambulist,
who in her waking state did not recognize Doctor Minoret.
The eyes of this woman closed gently before the hand
of the Swedenborgian, which was stretched towards her
at a little distance, and she took the attitude in
which Minoret had first seen her. When her hand
and that of the doctor were again joined, he asked
her to tell him what was happening in his house at
Nemours at that instant. “What is Ursula
doing?” he said.
“She is undressed; she has just
curled her hair; she is kneeling on her prie-Dieu,
before an ivory crucifix fastened to a red velvet
background.”
“What is she saying?”
“Her evening prayers; she is
commending herself to God; she implores him to save
her soul from evil thoughts; she examines her conscience
and recalls what she has done during the day; that
she may know if she has failed to obey his commands
and those of the church—poor dear little
soul, she lays bare her breast!” Tears were in
the sleeper’s eyes. “She has done
no sin, but she blames herself for thinking too much
of Savinien. She stops to wonder what he is doing
in Paris; she prays to God to make him happy.
She speaks of you; she is praying aloud.”
“Tell me her words.”
Minoret took his pencil and wrote, as the sleeper
uttered it, the following prayer, evidently composed
by the Abbe Chaperon.
“My God, if thou art content with
thine handmaid, who worships thee and prays to thee
with a love that is equal to her devotion, who strives
not to wander from thy sacred paths, who would gladly
die as thy Son died to glorify thy name, who desires
to live in the shadow of thy will—O God,
who knoweth the heart, open the eyes of my godfather,
lead him in the way of salvation, grant him thy
Divine grace, that he may live for thee in his last
days; save him from evil, and let me suffer in his
stead. Kind Saint Ursula, dear protectress,
and you, Mother of God, queen of heaven, archangels,
and saints in Paradise, hear me! join your intercessions
to mine and have mercy upon us.”
The sleeper imitated so perfectly
the artless gestures and the inspired manner of his
child that Doctor Minoret’s eyes were filled
with tears.
“Does she say more?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“Repeat it.”
“‘My dear godfather; I
wonder who plays backgammon with him in Paris.’
She has blown out the light—her head is
on the pillow—she turns to sleep!
Ah! she is off! How pretty she looks in her little
night-cap.”
Minoret bowed to the great Unknown,
wrung Bouvard by the hand, ran downstairs and hastened
to a cab-stand which at that time was near the gates
of a house since pulled down to make room for the Rue
d’Alger. There he found a coachman who
was willing to start immediately for Fontainebleau.
The moment the price was agreed on, the old man, who
seemed to have renewed his youth, jumped into the carriage
and started. According to agreement, he stopped
to rest the horse at Essonne, but arrived at Fontainebleau
in time for the diligence to Nemours, on which he
secured a seat, and dismissed his coachman. He
reached home at five in the morning, and went to bed,
with his life-long ideas of physiology, nature, and
metaphysics in ruins about him, and slept till nine
o’clock, so wearied was he with the events of
his journey.