ursula-第12章
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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 sciencesif 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 amand 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