CHARTER VII HOW TO GIVE AN ENTERTAINMENT.
Mesmerism, as an entertainment, either in drawing-room, or more publicly
in platform exhibitions, is always fascinating. There is an air of the
wonderful and mysterious about mesmeric entertainments which
is always sure to draw the public. Where such exhibitions are
judiciously and humanely given,
the public will always be much interested. As long as. the public—and I am sorry to say, medical,
men and. others who ought to know better—cannot distinguish between the genuine and
the false, between
the hypnotic condition and the gross, and in many instances extremely gross imitations
of it, "world-renowned mesmerists"
and "only living mesmerists" will deluge town and country with their
brazen lies, and the public platform with their still more unblushing
audacities.
Some of the most interesting and instructive entertainments I know of
have been mesmeric in character. I do not think any other class of
entertainment can be made so enjoyable or so innocent in character.
If the mesmerist is a physiognomist or phrenologist he will be able to
tell what are the salient points in character which distinguish each subject,
and one subject from' another. He will proceed accordingly, and endeavour to
excite or exalt such faculties (by manipulation or suggestion, or both), which
he desires to bring into plays.. This he will accomplish much more successfully
than an operator —however good a mesmerist—who cannot with equal facility read
character. For public entertainments, as well as in every other sphere
of abour, the keen-reader of character—all else being-equal—has the advantage
over all others. What is true of the greater, cannot be false of the less.
Therefore, the mesmerist in this respect is no exception to the rule-
To give a public entertainment it is a sine
qua non that, lor any hope of success in that direction, the operator has
had considerable practice in private, therefore, he is at home in his
work, knows what he is about, what he has to do and the dfficulties with, which
he has to contend. That he has recognised, and is prepared to
successfully overturn, the difficulties which may arise from the capricious
fancies of his audience, and such difficulties as may arise from having few
none, or very subjects. He may be nervous and anxious; his audience may be
small in numbers, ignorant or sceptical but be this as they may, be must have perfect
control over himself, and ability; to have full control over his
audience. If he Is not able either to control or entertain his audience, all
his hope for success as an exhibitor or entertainer will be seriously shaken by
failure. For confidence begets confidence, and success.
To succeed, he must not only be a good
mesmerist, possess the utmost faith in his own powers, but he must be a
usually wide-awake person, adding to firmness, will resolution, ready fact, and
keenness of observation, and thereby have complete command of his audience, as
well as his subjects. He will often require to avert disaster, and either
minimise failures, or turn them into undoubtable success. Occasionally some
very clever people .may come upon the platform, assume to be mesmerised, and up
to a certain stage appear to do their part well, at the same time, when
opportunity occures they will make cabalistic signs with their thumb fingers,
and nose behind the operator's back to their confederates in the audience. The
majority of audiences being composed of persons
who come more for fun and amusement than
instruction they areready in consequence
to enter into the spirit of the thing, which, if successful, may amuse, the
audience but it means ruin to the entertainer. He must detect the fraud, and be
ready to seize, a
good moment to expose the humbug, and
completely tarn the ridicule upon him. By a clever movement the mesmerist will
gratify his audience, secure their
confidence, and continue to amuse them, and what is very important, with
profitable results.
I remember in the city of Edinburgh a brilliant audience of nearly
2000 persons, in Newsome's Circus. Nicholson Street, was assembled to witness one of my mesmeric
demonstrations. There was,
however, a turbulent element present. Mesmerism, or Hypnotism, not being so
fashionable then as now, a good number of medical men were present, as well as
some three hundred and fifty of
four hundred students. Some fun was anticipated by
them. It was the
"dominant idea," of the students, and, of course, would soon be
expressed, scientifically in the "expectant." What a wonderful thing science
is, what a disabuser of charms and fancies—what profundity of thought, what paucity of heart, and total
annihilation of soul, characterise science in certain quarters. Well these
young students had not yet attained to the full height of intellectual
cramming; of heart and soul, doughtless they had plenty. However, in the present instance,
such possessions were overshadowed by the fact that they had just had a
rectoral election, and, for a day or two, they intended to make "Roma
howl" Raids were
organised upon various places of amusement. Mine
was not to escape. The local people had made the necessary
precautions.
The students, baffled at the theatres and concerts, made a grand rush
for Nicholson Street.
Crowding through the entrances they soon filed up the gallery and what
few vacant places that were to be found elsewhere. 'For a short time the
tumult baffled description.
'The students shouted,
whistled, spat peas through tin tubes, threw bags of flour on the unoffending people in
the pit and reserved seats.
Women screamed, and men muttered cures both loud and deep. Order of decorum there was none, save upon the platform. There
my poor subjects were posed in various attitudes, with every expression of
feature, from grave to gay, from lively to severe, utterly oblivious of what
was taking place about them.
The slightest timidity on my part would soon be communicated to them
(some twenty in number, four of whom were my own
sensitives, the balance were taken from the audience in the ordinary way). That
was to be avoided. The slightest show of timidity would be a signal to
the unfeathered bipeds—embryo medicos and divines—to be as heartless and
as daring as possible.I.also feared a collision between the audience and
the students— the former were so indignant with the conduct of the latter. Amid
the din and excitement, to reduce to order such chaos seemed to be a hopeless
task. Nerved by the thought of my sensitives, and the financial
consequences, i determined to make the effort. All this time my pianist was
"playing like mad," thumping order out of discord, in a vain
endeavour to drown the noise by his music. I signalled to him to
let the poor piano alone, and give his arms and fingers a rest, I walked up and
down the platform as if about to do something—a habit which I had when I
wished particularly to arrest the attention of an audience—and then suddenly
faced the audience, and lifted my right hand and stood still. The major portion
of the audience looked toward the platform. "Rule Britannia" and
"Old John Brown" of the students were now reduced to fitful
gusts. The element of curiosity had now slightly got ahead of "dominant idea of having a good night's fun. "What's he going to
do now? became the undercurrent Idea, I trusted to the innate love of fair play
which is the characteristic of every Briton, although just now overshadowed by
the horseplay peculiar to students at rectorial elections, I made several
pantomimic motions indicating a desire for a "word." Taking advantage
of a lull, secured by these efforts, I said—"Ladies and gentlemen,
and particularly my young friends of the Edinburgh University who have just
arrived, if you will permit me, 1 will tell you of a little incident which
occurred a short time ago." (Slight booing and shouts of "goahead"
and "'wire in," from my cultured young friends, but general attention
from the whole audience.)
"A gentleman was out with a few friends
and his hounds hunting one day near Rathmines. They had succeeded in
ousting an old fox;. getting him into the open, they were soon after him with
full cry.. The hounds had out run the riders considerably. The fox was getting
pretty tired of this sort of thing. He didn'tthink it was altogether
right, to put it mildly, for so many to be down on one. So the
fox stopped short too. The fox addressed the hounds cousteously, between puffs
thus—'Gentlemen, what are you after? We are out for a day's fun said the puppy
who led the hounds. Well, then, gentlemen, said the fox, "it may be fun to
you, but it is death to me." Itell the AEsopian story badly, but
the effect was magical. The people applauded, aha the students sang.
"For he's a jolly good fellow," and gave me no more trouble that
evening or during my stay.
I turned my apparent defeat that night into a victory by a little
coolness and tact. I asked the students and the audience to appoint a committee
of six gentlemen—three medical and three nonmedical—to represent them on the
platform, and keenly watch the experiments. This was done. At the close, the
committee reported entired satisfaction with all that they had seen. They critically
examined the subjects, and were perfectly satisfied with the genuineness
of the phenomena which occurred through them. They also complimented me in no
stinted manner; and no wonder. The opposition I met with that night and the
determination to bring the whole to a happy issue, seemed to arouse in me all
my energies, for it was certainly one of most complete exhibitions of mesmeric
power I ever gave.
These experiments, out of many, Will serve as an illustration of what
took place. In the first—with a Glasgow sensitive—I exhibited my complete
control over the arterial circulation. Thus, while the subject stood placidly
between two medical men, each holding a wrist and carefully taking the pulse
indications, etc accelerated or retarded the action of the
heart at will. Strange as this may appear, stranger must follow I caused
the pulse to reach 120 or 130 per minute on the right arm, and It beat less
than 50 per minute on the left, and vice-versa. This can he explained on two
grounds: either the subject was mesmerised by me, and the phenomena, as
described, did occur (as testified to by these medical men at the time), or the
medical men themselves were mesmerised by me, and, under my guidance, hypnotically
declared what was false to he true I might add that the subject was in a
deep unconscious sleep; the medical men were apparently wideawake. The commonsense
conclusion would be that the subject was mesmerised and not they; and that
they, being wide awake and in the full possession of their senses, had testified
to what they had seen. This experiment has been frequently repeated.
The second experiment was somewhat similar in character to the above.
The medical gentlemen on the committee asked my permission to test the
insensibility of the subjects. It was proposed to place a hot spirit-tube
suddenly to different muscles to see if they flexed under the test, and thereby
indicate the presence of nervous sensitiveness or consciousnes. I made no
objection to this. There was some difficulty in getting a spirit test-tube,
so, to prevent unnecessary waiting, a gentleman lent a gold scarf-pin,
and a lady her brooch to the committee. 1 made the subject's arm rigid in a
horizontal position. One of the medical committee men, feeling the carpus of
the hand carefully, took the scarf-pin, and put it through the hand about the
centre, from back to front He. also placed the gold pin of the brooch through
the sensitive's cheek, the brooch itself hanging on the outside, the poor
fellow laughing and chatting as if nothing had happened. Neither by movement
nor sign did he show he experienced any pain, or that he was the least
conscious of what had taken place When the audience, or rather their committee
ware satisfied of this, I took the scarf-pin out of the hand and the brooch out
of the cheek. No blood
fiowed
from the cicatrix. Imagination, suggestion, are capable of doing
strange things. The late and esteemed Dr. Carpenter claims much for the
"dominant idea and expectancy." Can they account for the foregoing
experiments?
Again, 1 either was instrumental in producing the extraordinary
effect—phenomenon if you will—in the case by mesmerising the subject, or
it was brought about by a much more extraordinary effort on my part, i.e., I
had mesmerised the committee and my audience, self-deception and fraud being
out of the question. The common-sense view of the case is: I had such control
over the sensitive that I stopped the flow of his blood, which, in ordinary
circumstances, would have taken place.. The committee, being satisfied with the
result, testified to the fact.
The third experiment was not a pleasant one, but to the committee Was as
convincing as were the others. The committee desired me . to produce two
results—the first without contact, and the next any way I pleased. The directions
were written on paper that I should cause the subject to stand erect, slowly
raise his arms holding them out horizontal to his shoulders, and then gradually
open out his legs, as if standing astride of something. I placed the subject
facing the audience, and standing several feet in rear of hie, I made passes in
the direction of the position I wanted him to take up. Slowly, but surely, the
sensitive responded to my mental efforts and mesmeric passes, and took up the
position as designed by the committee.
The next experiment was to produce a cataleptic fit, which could not be
distinguished in any of its pathological features from a case such as a medical
man would meet in the ordinary course of practice. This was done by irregular
phreno-manipulation and suggestion. The spectacle produced by the
subject is not likely to be soon forgotten by either the committee or the
audience. The man suddenly fell upon the platform with the despairing' shout
peculiar to that disease. The veins
of the neck and head became
engorged, the lips from ahealthy redbecame a deep blue-black. The
spasmodic struggles of the body and the irregular action of the heart confirmed
the processes of the disease. I watched the case narrowly, so as not to prolong
the condition, and be ready to entirely de-mesmerise the sensitive and relieve
him of all unpleasant results.(*) The committee mere more than
satisfied. Mesmerism came triumphant out of theordeal; and what at first appeared a
defeat, a hopeless disaster, was changed into a victory.
During the remainder of my stay in Edinburgh— namely, three weeks,' I
met with every courtesy from the medical profession and from the students, I
had no further trouble—in fact, large number turned out every evening to learn
as well as to be entertained.
In bringing this chapter to a close, 1 have reason to believe that the
public idea of the use and abuses of Mesmerism is an extravagant one. The
claims ill its favour are as often imaginative as those which call for its
denunciation.
(*)Unpleasant as this experiment appears to be
it is not without its modicum of good—viz., the same methods adopted to stay
its progress will arrest and finally cure cataleptic fits, etc.
The following extract from the Glasgow News is a fair
example:—"Lecturing in Glasgow recently, Professor M'Kendrick admitted the
existence of a mesmeric—or, to employ the more fashionable term,
hypnotic—power, and pointed out that it might be legitimately and usefully
employed by medical men; but he strongly objected to the public exhibitions of
professional mesmerists, as calculated to lead to the infliction, in some
instances, of serious and permanent injury upon the 'subjects' experimented
with. A case in point is reported from the south of England, where a young lady
of large property' is said to have lost her reason through the influence
brought to bear upon her by an itinerant French 'hypnotist.' After having been
mesmerised by this man, 'she did not seem to regain her full senses, but
raved all night,
and for several days, of the dark-eyed Gaul.'
At last she disappeared, and at the end of three days was discovered by
the aid of the mesmerist, whom she had followed to France. Her condition is now
described as one of 'raving madness', and she has been placed in a lunatic
asylum. It is only fair to say that in this instance the operator does not seem
to have had evil designs of any kind, and of course, the poor girl's malady
might have developed itself without his intervention; but Mesmerism appears to
have been the exciting cause, and at all events, the terrible
possibilities suggested by the case should lend force to Professor M'Kendrick's
warning".
"The dark-eyed Gaul," in toy opinion,
was in no way responsible for the result. Her "raving madness"
would have soon ceased to be had he had any influence over her. Ignorant
itinerants may do much harm, and ladies of property must be protected, but how
about pouper and other humble patients in our hospitals hypnotised by budding
medicos? Should not something be done for them?
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