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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50907 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50907)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Anatomy of Suicide, by Forbes Winslow
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
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-
-
-Title: The Anatomy of Suicide
-
-
-Author: Forbes Winslow
-
-
-
-Release Date: January 12, 2016 [eBook #50907]
-
-Language: English
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-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ANATOMY OF SUICIDE***
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-E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Turgut Dincer, and the Online Distributed
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-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- The original text contains some unpaired quotation marks
- which could not be corrected with cofidence.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Vide p. 331.]
-
-
-THE ANATOMY OF SUICIDE:
-
-by
-
-FORBES WINSLOW,
-
-Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, London;
-Author of “Physic and Physicians.”
-
-
- “But is there yet no other way, besides
- These painful passages; how we may come
- To death, and mix with our connatural dust?
-
- * * * * *
-
- Nor love thy life, nor hate: but what thou liv’st
- Live well; HOW LONG OR SHORT PERMIT TO HEAVEN.”
-
- MILTON.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London:
-Henry Renshaw, 356, Strand.
-Sold By Carfrae & Son, Edinburgh;
-And Fannin & Co., Dublin.
-1840.
-
-
- TO
-
- JAMES JOHNSON, ESQ., M.D.
-
- PHYSICIAN EXTRAORDINARY TO THE LATE KING,
- ETC. ETC.
-
- This Work is dedicated,
-
- AS A TESTIMONY OF RESPECT FOR HIS HIGH PROFESSIONAL ATTAINMENTS,
-
- AND AS AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE
-
- ADVANTAGES DERIVED FROM A PERUSAL OF THE MANY ABLE WORKS
-
- WITH WHICH HE HAS ENRICHED
-
- THE MEDICAL LITERATURE OF HIS COUNTRY.
-
-
- _London,—May, 1840._
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-This treatise had its origin in the following circumstance:—A
-few months ago, the author had the honour of reading before the
-_Westminster Medical Society_, a paper on “Suicide Medically
-considered,” which giving rise to an animated discussion, and evolving
-an expression of the opinions of several eminent professional men,
-excited at the time much interest.
-
-It was the author’s object in his paper to establish a fact, he
-believes, of primary importance,—that the disposition to commit
-self-destruction is, to a great extent, amenable to those principles
-which regulate our treatment of ordinary disease; and that, to a degree
-more than is generally supposed, it originates in derangement of the
-brain and abdominal viscera.
-
-Notwithstanding, however, these points were not considered with the
-minuteness commensurate with their value, the discussion which followed
-the author’s communication afforded him great satisfaction. It tended
-to strengthen in his mind an opinion previously formed, that the
-members of the medical profession were inferior to no other class in a
-knowledge of those higher branches of philosophy that give dignity and
-elevation to human character.
-
-To explain more fully the author’s views on the subject of Suicide is
-the object of the present work, which is, strange to say, the first
-in England that has been exclusively devoted to this important and
-interesting branch of inquiry.
-
-Hitherto suicide has been the theme of the novel and the drama, and has
-never, with the exception of an incidental notice in works on medical
-jurisprudence, been considered in this country in reference to its
-pathological and physiological character.
-
-That an intimate acquaintance with this branch of knowledge is highly
-important to the medical philosopher, few will deny; that it is a
-subject of general and painful interest, all must admit. The apparent
-coolness with which suicide is often committed has induced many to
-suppose that the unfortunate perpetrator was at the time in possession
-of a sound mind; and it is this idea which has induced the profession
-to conceive the subject as one foreign to their pursuits, and belonging
-rather to the province of the moral philosopher. How far the author has
-succeeded in disproving this opinion, it is for others to decide.
-
-He takes this opportunity of acknowledging the assistance he has
-received from the writings of Pinel, Esquirol, Falret, Fodére, Arnold,
-Crichton, Willis, Black, Haslam, Burrows, Conolly, Pritchard, Mayo,
-Ellis, Paris, Smith, Beck, Taylor, and Ray. To the pages of Dr.
-Johnson’s Medico-chirurgical Review, the Medical Gazette, the Lancet,
-and British and Foreign Medical Review, he is also largely indebted.
-
-In conclusion, the author, conscious of its imperfections, claims for
-his work no other praise than that it is the first attempt in this
-country to reflect light on a branch of medical and moral philosophy,
-the importance of which is only equalled by the difficulties impeding
-its investigation. He will feel himself amply repaid, should his
-introductory essay (for such only can it be considered) stimulate
-others more competent than himself to prosecute the inquiry which he
-has commenced. Their success will afford him much satisfaction and
-pleasure; for in the attainment of their endeavours will his hopes be
-fulfilled, and his ambition gratified.
-
-
- LONDON,—MAY, 1840.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- SUICIDES OF THE ANCIENTS.—ANCIENT LAWS AND OPINIONS
- ON THE SUBJECT OF SUICIDE.
-
- Examples of antiquity no defence of suicide—Causes of ancient
- suicides—The suicides of Asdrubal, Nicocles, Isocrates,
- Demosthenes, Hannibal, Mithridates, the inhabitants of
- the city of Xanthus, Cato, Charondas, Lycurgus, Codrus,
- Themistocles, Emperor Otho, Brutus and Cassius, Mark Antony
- and Cleopatra, Petronius, Lucan, Lucius Vetus, Sardanapalus,
- M. Curtius, Empedocles, Theoxena—Noble resistance of
- Josephus—Scripture suicides: Samson, Saul, Ahitophel, Judas
- Iscariot, Eleazar, Razis—Doctrines of the stoics, Seneca,
- Epictetus, Zeno—Opinions of Cicero, Pliny, on suicide—Ancient
- laws on suicide p. 1-29
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- WRITERS IN DEFENCE OF SUICIDE.
-
- Opinions of Hume—Effect of his writings—Case of suicide caused
- by—The doctrines of Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Montaigne
- examined—Origin of Dr. Donne’s celebrated work—Madame de
- Staël’s recantation—Robert of Normandy, Gibbon, Sir T. More,
- and Robeck’s opinions considered p. 30-35
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- SUICIDE A CRIME AGAINST GOD AND MAN.—IT IS NOT AN
- ACT OF COURAGE.
-
- The sin of suicide—The notions of Paley on the
- subject—Voltaire’s opinion—Is suicide self-murder?—Is it
- forbidden in Scripture?—Shakspeare’s views on the subject—The
- alliance between suicide and murder—Has a man a right to
- sacrifice his own life?—Everything held upon trust—Suicide
- a sin against ourselves and neighbour—It is not an act of
- courage—Opinion of Q. Curtius on the subject—Buonaparte’s
- denunciation of suicide—Dryden’s description of the suicide in
- another world p. 36-44
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- ON THE INFLUENCE OF CERTAIN MENTAL STATES IN INDUCING
- THE DISPOSITION TO SUICIDE.
-
- Moral causes of disease—Neglect of psychological
- medicine—Mental philosophy a branch of medical study—Moral
- causes of suicide—Tables of Falret, &c.—Influence of
- remorse—Simon Brown, Charles IX. of France—Massacre of
- St. Bartholomew—Terrible death of Cardinal Beaufort, from
- remorse—The Chevalier de S——. Influence of disappointed
- love—Suicide from love—Two singular cases—Effects of
- jealousy—Othello—Suicide from this passion—The French opera
- dancer—Suicide from wounded vanity—False pride—The remarkable
- case of Villeneuve, as related by Buonaparte—Buonaparte’s
- attempt at suicide—Ambition—Despair, cases of suicide from—The
- Abbé de Rancé—Suicide from blind impulse—Cases—Mathews,
- the comedian—Opinion of Esquirol on the subject—Ennui,
- birth of—Common cause of suicide in France—Effect of
- speculating in stocks—Defective education—Diffusion of
- knowledge—“Socialism” a cause of self-destruction—Suicide
- common in Germany—Werter—Goëthe’s attempt at suicide—Influence
- of his writings on Hackman—Suicide from reading Tom Paine’s
- “Age of Reason”—Suicide to avoid punishment—Most remarkable
- illustrations—Political excitement—Nervous irritation—Love
- of notoriety—Hereditary disposition—Is death painful? fully
- considered, with cases—Influence of irreligion p. 45-107
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- IMITATIVE, OR EPIDEMIC SUICIDE.
-
- Persons who act from impulse liable to be influenced—Principle
- of imitation, a natural instinct—Cases related by Cabanis and
- Tissot—The suicidal barbers—Epidemic suicide at the Hôtel
- des Invalids—Sydenham’s epidemic—The ladies of Miletus—Dr.
- Parrish’s case—Are insanity and suicide contagious? p. 108-114
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- SUICIDE FROM FASCINATION.
-
- Singular motives for committing suicide—A man who delighted
- in torturing himself—A dangerous experiment—Pleasures of
- carnage—Disposition to leap from precipices—Lord Byron’s
- allusion to the influence of fascination—Miss Moyes and
- the Monument—A man who could not trust himself with a
- razor—Esquirol’s opinion of such cases—Danger of ascending
- elevated places p. 115-120
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- OF THE ENTHUSIASM AND MENTAL IRRITABILITY WHICH, IF
- ENCOURAGED, WOULD LEAD TO SUICIDE.
-
- Connexion between genius and insanity—Authors of fiction
- often feel what they write—Metastasio in tears—The enthusiasm
- of Pope, Alfieri, Dryden—Effects of the first reading of
- Telemachus and Tasso on Madame Roland’s mind—Raffaelle and
- his celebrated picture of the Transfiguration—The convulsions
- of Malbranche—Beattie’s Essay on Truth—Influence of intense
- study on Boerrhave’s mind—The demon of Spinello and
- Luther—Bourdaloue and his violin—Byron’s sensitiveness—Men do
- not always practise what they preach—Cases of Smollett, La
- Fontaine, Sir Thomas More, Zimmerman—Tasso’s spectre—Johnson’s
- superstition—Concluding remarks p. 121-129
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- PHYSICAL CAUSES OF SUICIDE.
-
- Influence of climate—The foggy climate of England does not
- increase the number of suicides—Average number of suicides in
- each month, from 1817 to 1826—Influence of seasons—Suicides
- at Rouen—The English not a suicidal people—Philip Mordaunt’s
- singular reasons for self-destruction—Causes of French
- suicides—Influence of physical pain—Unnatural vices—Suicide
- the effect of intoxication—Influence of hepatic disease
- on the mind—Melancholy and hypochondriasis, Burton’s
- account of—Cowper’s case of suicide—Particulars of his
- extreme depression of spirits—Byron and Burns’s melancholy
- from stomach and liver derangement—Influence of bodily
- disease on the mind—Importance of paying attention to it—A
- case of insanity from gastric irritation—Dr. Johnson’s
- hypochondria—Hereditary suicide, illustrated by cases—Suicide
- from blows on the head, and from moral shocks communicated to
- the brain—Dr. G. Mantell’s valuable observations and cases
- demonstrative of the point—Concluding remarks p. 130-161
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- MORAL TREATMENT OF SUICIDAL MANIA.
-
- Diseases of the brain not dissimilar to affections of other
- organs—Early symptoms of insanity—The good effects of
- having plenty to do—Occupation—Dr. Johnson’s opinion on the
- subject—The pleasure derived from cultivating a taste for
- the beauties of nature—Effect of volition on diseases of
- the mind—Silent grief injurious to mental health—Treatment
- of _ennui_—The time of danger, not the time of disease—The
- Walcheren expedition—The retreat of the ten thousand Greeks
- under Xenophon—Influence of music on the mind in the cure of
- disease—Cure of epidemic suicide—Buonaparte’s remedy—How the
- women of Miletus were cured of the disposition to suicide, and
- other illustrations—Cases shewing how easily the disposition
- to suicide may be diverted—On the cure of insanity by
- stratagems—On the importance of removing the suicidal patient
- from his own home—On the regulation of the passions p. 162-194
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- PHYSICAL TREATMENT OF THE SUICIDAL DISPOSITION.
-
- On the dependence of irritability of temper on physical
- disease—Voltaire and an Englishman agree to commit
- suicide—The reasons that induced Voltaire to change his
- mind—The ferocity of Robespierre accounted for—The state
- of his body after death—The petulance of Pope dependent
- on physical causes—Suicide from cerebral congestion,
- treatment of—Advantages of bloodletting, with cases—Damien
- insane—Cold applied to the head, of benefit—Good effects of
- purgation—Suicide caused by a tape-worm—Early indications of
- the disposition to suicide—The suicidal eye—Of the importance
- of carefully watching persons disposed to suicide—Cunning
- of such patients—Numerous illustrations—The fondness for a
- particular mode of death—Dr. Burrows’ extraordinary case—Dr.
- Conolly on the treatment of suicide—Cases shewing the
- advantage of confinement p. 195-220
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- IS THE ACT OF SUICIDE THE RESULT OF INSANITY?
-
- The instinct of self-preservation—The love of life—Dr.
- Wolcott’s death-bed—Anecdote of the Duke de Montebello—Louis
- XI. of France—Singular death of a celebrated lawyer—Dr.
- Johnson’s horror of dying—The organ of destruction
- universal—Illustrations of its influence—Sir W. Scott, on
- the motives that influence men in battle—Have we any test of
- insanity?—Mental derangement not a specific disease—Importance
- of keeping this in view—Insanity not always easily detected—Is
- lowness of spirits an evidence of derangement?—The cunning
- of lunatics—Esquirol’s opinion that insanity is always
- present—Moral insanity—The remarkable case of Frederick of
- Prussia—Suicide often the first symptom of insanity—Cases
- in which persons have been restored to reason from loss
- of blood, after attempting suicide—The cases of Cato, Sir
- Samuel Romilly, Lord Castlereagh, Colton, and Chatterton,
- examined—Concluding remarks p. 221-245
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- SUICIDE IN CONNEXION WITH MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE.
-
- The importance of medical evidence—The questions which medical
- men have to consider in these cases—Signs of death from
- strangulation—Singular positions in which the bodies of those
- who have committed suicide have been found—The particulars of
- the Prince de Condé’s case—On the possibility of voluntary
- strangulation—General Pichegru’s singular case—The melancholy
- history of Marc Antonie Calas—How to discover whether a person
- was dead before thrown into water—Singular cases—Admiral
- Caracciolo—Drowning in a bath—The points to keep in view in
- cases of suspicious death—Was Sellis murdered?—Death from
- wounds—The case of the Earl of Essex p. 246-264
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- STATISTICS OF SUICIDE.
-
- Number of suicides in the chief capitals of Europe from 1813
- to 1831—Statistics of death from violence in London from 1828
- to 1832—Number of suicides in London for a century and a
- half—Suicides in Westminster from 1812 to 1836—Suicide more
- frequent among men than women—Mode of committing—Influence of
- age—Effect of the married state—Infantile suicides—M. Guerry
- on suicides in France—Cases—Suicide and murder—Suicide in
- Geneva p. 265-279
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- APPEARANCES PRESENTED AFTER DEATH IN THOSE WHO
- HAVE COMMITTED SUICIDE.
-
- Thickness of cranium—State of membranes and vessels of
- brain—Osseous excrescences—Appearances discovered in one
- thousand three hundred and thirty-eight cases—Lesions of the
- lungs, heart, stomach, and intestines—Effect of long-continued
- indigestion p. 280-282
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- SINGULAR CASES OF SUICIDE.
-
- Introduction—Contempt of death—Eustace Budgel—M. de Boissy
- and his wife—Mutual suicides from disappointed love—Suicide
- from mortification—Mutual suicide from poverty—A French lady
- while out shooting—A fisherman after praying—Determination to
- commit if not cured—Extraordinary case after seduction—Madame
- C. from remorse—M. de Pontalba after trying to murder his
- daughter-in-law—Young lady in a pet—Sir George Dunbar—James
- Sutherland while George III. was passing—Lancet given by a
- wife to her husband to kill himself—Servant girl—Curious
- verses by a suicide—Robber on being recognised—A man who
- ordered a candle to be made of his fat—After gaming—Writing
- whilst dying—From misfortune just at a moment of
- relief—Curious papers written by a suicide—By heating a
- barrel in the fire—By tearing out the brains—Sisters by the
- injunction of their eldest sister—Mutual from poverty—Girl
- from a dream—Three servants in one pond—Indifference as to
- mode—By starvation—A man forty-five days without eating—Mutual
- of two boys after dining at a restaurateur’s—By putting head
- under the ice—By a pair of spectacles—By jumping amongst
- the bears—Young lady from gambling—Verses by a suicide—To
- obtain salvation—A lover after accidentally shooting his
- mistress—Mutual attempt—M. Kleist and Madame Vogle—Richard
- Smith and wife—Love and suicide—Bishop of Grenoble—Suicide
- in a pail of water—Mutual suicide of two soldiers—Lord
- Scarborough—A man who advertised to kill himself for benefit
- of family—The case of Creech, and the romantic history of
- Madame de Monier—Suicide of M. ——, after threatening to kill
- his brother—Two young men—Two lovers—Homicide and suicide from
- jealousy—Cure of penchant for suicide—Attempt at prevented—Man
- in a belfry—Attempt at—The extraordinary case of Lovat by
- crucifixion p. 283-334
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- CAN SUICIDE BE PREVENTED BY LEGISLATIVE ENACTMENTS?—INFLUENCE
- OF MORAL INSTRUCTION.—CONCLUSION.
-
- The legitimate object of punishment—The argument of
- Beccaria—A legal solecism—A suicide not amenable to human
- tribunals—Evidence at coroners’ courts _ex-parte_—The old law
- of no advantage—No penal-law will restrain a man from the
- commission of suicide.—Verdict of _felo-de-se_ punishes the
- innocent, and therefore unjust—All suicides insane, and
- therefore not responsible agents—The man who reasons himself
- into suicide not of sound mind—Rational mode of preventing
- suicide by promoting religious education p. 335-340
-
-
-
-
-ERRATA.
-
- Page 46, for “mens conscia” &c. read _mens sana in corpore
- sano_, and for “Horace” read JUVENAL.
-
-
-
-
-ANATOMY OF SUICIDE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-SUICIDES OF THE ANCIENTS.—ANCIENT LAWS AND OPINIONS ON THE SUBJECT OF
-SUICIDE.
-
-
- Examples of antiquity no defence of suicide—Causes of ancient
- suicides—The suicides of Asdrubal, Nicocles, Isocrates,
- Demosthenes, Hannibal, Mithridates, the inhabitants of
- the city of Xanthus, Cato, Charondas, Lycurgus, Codrus,
- Themistocles, Emperor Otho, Brutus and Cassius, Mark Antony
- and Cleopatra, Petronius, Lucan, Lucius Vetus, Sardanapalus,
- M. Curtius, Empedocles, Theoxena—Noble resistance of
- Josephus—Scripture suicides: Samson, Saul, Ahitophel, Judas
- Iscariot, Eleazar, Razis—Doctrines of the stoics, Seneca,
- Epictetus, Zeno—Opinions of Cicero, Pliny, on suicide—Ancient
- laws on suicide.
-
-Human actions are more under the influence of example than precept;
-consequently, suicide has often been justified by an appeal to the
-laws and customs of past ages. An undue reverence for the authority of
-antiquity induces us to rely more upon what has been said or done in
-former times, than upon the dictates of our own feelings and judgement.
-Many have formed the most extravagant notions of honour, liberty, and
-courage, and, under the impression that they were imitating the noble
-example of some ancient hero, have sacrificed their lives. They urge
-in their defence that suicide has been enjoined by positive laws, and
-allowed by ancient custom; that the greatest and bravest nation in
-the world practised it; and that the most wise and virtuous sect of
-philosophers taught that it was an evidence of courage, magnanimity,
-and virtue. There is no mode of reasoning so fallacious as that which
-is constantly appealing to examples. A man who has made up his mind
-to the adoption of a particular course can easily discover reasons
-to justify himself in carrying out his preconceived opinions. If a
-contemplated action, abstractedly considered, be good, cases may
-be of service in illustrating it. There must be some test by which
-to form a correct estimate of the justness or lawfulness of human
-actions; and until we are agreed as to what ought to constitute that
-standard, examples are perfectly useless. No inferences deduced from
-the consideration of the suicides of antiquity can be logically applied
-to modern instances. We live under a Christian dispensation. Our
-notions of death, of honour, and of courage, are, in many respects,
-so dissimilar from those which the ancients entertained, that the
-subject of suicide is placed entirely on a different basis. In the
-early periods of history, self-destruction was considered as an
-evidence of courage; death was preferred to dishonour. These principles
-were inculcated by celebrated philosophers, who exercised a great
-influence over the minds of the people; and, in many instances, the
-act of self-immolation constituted a part of their religion. Is it,
-then, to be wondered at, that so many men, eminent for their genius,
-and renowned for their valour, should, under such circumstances, have
-sacrificed themselves?
-
-The famous suicides of antiquity generally resulted from one of three
-causes:—First, it was practised by those who wished to avoid pain and
-personal suffering of body and mind; secondly, when a person considered
-the act as a necessary vindication of his honour; and thirdly, when
-life was sacrificed as an example to others.
-
-The first class is the most excusable of the three. Pain, physical
-or mental, puts a man’s courage severely to the test. He may have to
-choose between the alternative of years of unmitigated anguish, or an
-immediate release from torture. Need we feel surprise at many resorting
-to the latter alternative, when they have been taught to believe death
-either to be an eternal sleep, or a sure entrance into regions of
-happiness!
-
-How many instances have we on record of persons who have dispatched
-themselves to avoid falling into the hands of an enemy! The case of
-the wife of Asdrubal, the Carthaginian general, is a famous instance
-of the kind. Asdrubal had deserted his post, and had fled to Scipio;
-and during his absence his wife took shelter with her troops in
-the temple, which she set on fire. She then attired herself in her
-richest robes, and holding her two children in her hands, addressed
-Scipio—who had surrounded the building with his troops—in the following
-language:—“You, O Roman, are only acting according to the laws of open
-war; but may the gods of Carthage, and those in concert with them,
-punish that false wretch who, by such a base desertion, has betrayed
-his country, his gods, his wife, his children! Let him adorn thy gay
-triumph; let him suffer in the sight of all Rome those indignities and
-tortures he so justly merits!”
-
-The case of Nicocles, King of Paphos, in Cyprus, who committed suicide
-in conjunction with his wife and daughter, on the approach of King
-Ptolemy, is another in point. Isocrates, the celebrated Athenian
-orator, starved himself to death, sooner than submit to the dominion of
-Philip of Macedon. Demosthenes also poisoned himself, when Antipater,
-Alexander’s ambassador, required the Athenians to deliver up their
-orators, fearful of being subjected to slavery and disgrace.
-
-The persecution to which the Romans subjected Hannibal, after he was
-oppressed with years and sunk in obscurity, impelled him to have
-recourse to the poison which he always kept about him in a ring,
-against sudden emergencies. Mithridates took poison, and administered
-the same to his wives and daughters, in order to escape being taken
-prisoner by Pompey, before whose victorious arms he had been compelled
-to fly.
-
-The case of the inhabitants of the city of Xanthus is another
-remarkable instance of the determination exhibited by thousands of
-persons, resolved sooner to die by their own hands than submit to
-the dominion of a conqueror. Notwithstanding the proffered clemency
-of Brutus, who not only wept at the dreadful scene he witnessed, but
-commanded his soldiers to extinguish the fire, and even offered a
-reward for every inhabitant whose life was saved, the people were so
-eager for death that they rushed into the flames with exclamations of
-delight, and forceably drove back the soldiers who were sent by Brutus
-for the purpose of saving their lives.
-
-The example of Cato is applauded by some writers as a proof of
-magnanimity; the action was the reverse; it was the effect of pride
-and timidity. If ever Rome required his experience and patriotic
-counsels it was at that very period. To desert the duty which Rome had
-a right to demand by a voluntary death was the meanest conduct in his
-character. It stamped an indelible stain on his reputation, which only
-a supposition that his intellect was impaired could rationally excuse.
-It was not the virtuous Cato who had stemmed the torrent of tyranny,
-who had crushed the Cataline conspiracy, who had given the most noble
-examples of virtuous resolution and rectitude in moral conduct, but
-the enfeebled Cato, sinking under the accumulation of evils, whose
-soul was depressed with suspense and distracting passions, waiting an
-opportunity for revenge, or preparing to finish his life on the first
-disappointment.
-
-If such examples were admitted magnanimous, in any serious quarrel
-or war, where success could not be commanded, it might be considered
-laudable to commit suicide. The consequences of such reasoning would
-be obvious. On such occasions, countries would lose their bravest
-generals, private families their noblest and most experienced
-supporters.
-
-“If I cannot acquire what I wish,” says Cato, “I will kill myself;
-I will not live to grace Cæsar’s triumph, though I know Cæsar to be
-the most generous and clement of conquerors; I cannot consent to
-receive Cæsar’s favours. My pride is wounded; my fears destroy all
-tranquillity; my body is sinking under adversity; I will not dedicate
-my services to my distressed country under the auspices of successful
-Cæsar. I will plunge a sword into my bosom, and commit an injustice to
-myself, which through a long life I never committed to others. From
-the uniformity of my former patriotic character, writers, without
-deep reasoning, will paint this concluding action in glowing colours;
-they will give additional lustre to an immortal reputation.” Such,
-we conceive, were the secret springs of action in Cato’s mind; such
-were the contending passions which excited the delirium. It was not
-the placid, judicious Cato of former years, but the depressed Cato,
-_impos mentis_, committing a rash action, contrary to all his former
-great reasoning, and virtuous persevering conduct. It was, in fact,
-Cato’s act of insanity; it was not dying to serve his country, but to
-effectually rob Cæsar of his eminent services; it therefore appears
-more the effect of private pique and despondency than a demonstration
-of public virtue or courage. Had all others concerned in that civil
-war followed this extraordinary example, the country would have
-been robbed of many of its brightest ornaments. Cato could not say
-with Horace, “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori,” for it was not
-for his countrymen that he died, but to gratify a selfish caprice,
-a personal resentment and hatred to Cæsar and his power. Had Cæsar
-attacked the city while Cato enjoyed a vigour of mind and body, and
-when the citizens were better disciplined and less corrupt, he would
-have despised such inglorious conduct; he would rather have hoped for
-some future opportunity to dispel the dark clouds overwhelming the
-distracted country.
-
-Physicians have frequent opportunities of observing the diminution of
-human courage and wisdom from long continued misfortunes, or bodily
-infirmities. The most lively, spirited, and enterprising, have become
-depressed from reiterated disappointment; cowardice and despair have
-succeeded to the most unquestionable bravery and ambition. The man
-is then changed; his blood is changed; and with these his former
-sentiments. The timidity is no longer Cato’s, but belongs to the
-miserable _debilitated body_ of Cato, which had lost that _vigorous
-soul_ that so eminently distinguished on other important occasions this
-excellent and divine patriot.
-
-La Motte observes, with reference to Cato’s death—
-
- “Stern Cato, with more equal soul,
- Had bowed to Cæsar’s wide control,
- With Rome, had to her conqueror bowed,
- But that his spirit, rough and proud,
- Had not the courage to await
- A pardoned foe’s too humbling fate.”
-
-Voltaire, in alluding to the lines quoted above, says, “It was, I
-believe, because Cato’s soul was always equal, and retained to the last
-its love for his country and her laws, that he chose rather to perish
-with her than to crouch to the tyrant. He died as he had lived.
-
-“Incapable of surrendering, and to whom? to the enemy of Rome—to the
-man who had forcibly robbed the public treasury in order to make war
-upon his fellow citizens, and enslave them by means of their own
-money. A pardoned foe! It seems as if La Motte Houdart was speaking of
-some revolted subject who might have obtained his Majesty’s pardon by
-letters in chancery. It seems (continues Voltaire) rather absurd to say
-that Cato slew himself through weakness. None but a strong mind can
-thus surmount the most powerful instinct of nature. This strength is
-sometimes that of frenzy; but a frantic man is not weak.”
-
-In forming an estimate of the condition of Cato’s mind, we must not
-look at him as delineated by the dramatist and poet, but as exhibited
-by the historian and philosopher. Our notions of Cato are too often
-based on Addison’s, and not Plutarch’s description of his character.
-That Cato was one of the most complete and perfect examples in
-antiquity of private manners and of public spirit cannot be questioned;
-and therefore, in this respect, worthy to be held up as an example.
-Sallust thus eulogizes Cato:—“His glory can neither be increased by
-flattery nor lessened by detraction. He was one who chose to be, rather
-than to appear good. He was the very image of virtue, and in all points
-of disposition more like the gods than men. He never did right that he
-might seem to do right, but because he could not do otherwise. That
-only seemed to be reasonable which was just. Free from all human vices,
-he was superior to the vicissitudes of fortune.” It was the dignity of
-Cato’s life that stamped a celebrity on the mode of his death.
-
-In forming a judgment of the motives which led this distinguished
-man to sacrifice his life, we must look at him in connexion with his
-great enemy, Cæsar. He was not only opposed to him on public, but on
-private grounds. Cæsar’s intimacy with Servilia, Cato’s sister, was
-the ground of much conversation at Rome. During one of the debates
-concerning the Cataline conspiracy, Cæsar received a letter whilst he
-was in the senate house. Cato, who had intimated that Cæsar had been
-privy to Cataline’s proceedings, and believing that the letter might
-refer to the subject, from the manner in which Cæsar endeavoured to
-conceal it, demanded that it should be handed over to him. The letter
-was accordingly handed to Cato, when, perceiving that it was a letter
-from Servilia to Cæsar, full of protestations of love to his deadliest
-enemy, he threw it at Cæsar in a great rage, and called him a drunkard.
-This, added to the circumstance of Cæsar’s complete triumph over him,
-induced Cato to put an end to his own life. He did not commit suicide
-to defeat usurpation, or to preserve the liberties and laws of Rome,
-but it was done when he despaired of his country. It arose from his
-horror of tyranny, and the feeling of intolerable shame at the prospect
-of a long life under an arbitrary master. The superstructure of years
-was in a moment levelled to the dust. He had to choose between death
-or slavery. After the defeat at Thapsus, and hearing that Cæsar was
-marching against him, Lucius Cæsar offered to intercede for Cato. His
-answer was as follows:—“If I would save my life, I ought to go myself;
-but I will not be beholden to the tyrant for any act of his injustice;
-and ’tis unjust for him to pretend to pardon those as a lord over
-whom he has no lawful power.” Although it was evident he was bent
-upon suicide, he persuaded his son to go to Cæsar, and cautioned his
-friend Statilius, whom Plutarch calls “a known Cæsar-hater,” not to
-kill himself, but to submit to the conqueror. He then entered into a
-discussion concerning liberty, which he carried on so violently that
-his friends were apprehensive that he would lay hands on himself.
-In consequence of this, his son removed his sword. Cato is then
-represented as reading Plato’s Phædo, and then calling for his sword,
-which they refused to bring him. He called a second and third time, and
-in a fit of rage he struck the servant, and wounded him, and by doing
-so, injured his own hand, which prevented him from effectually killing
-himself with his weapon. After he had stabbed himself, his wound was
-dressed; but so determined was he to sacrifice his life, that he tore
-open the wound forcibly, and pulled his bowels out, and thus effected
-his purpose.[1]
-
-It has been said that Addison approved of Cato’s self-murder. This
-does not appear to be the fact, if we are to judge from the words which
-he has put in the mouth of the dying hero—
-
- “I am sick to death; oh, when shall I get loose
- From this vain world, the abode of guilt and sorrow!
- And yet methinks a beam of light breaks in
- On my departing soul. Alas, I fear
- I have been too hasty! O ye powers that search
- The heart of man, and weigh his inmost thoughts,
- If I have done amiss, impute it not:
- The best may err, but you are good, and—(_dies._)”
-
-Two celebrated instances amongst the Grecians of men who voluntarily
-sacrificed their lives in order to maintain the dignity and importance
-of their own institutions, are exhibited in the cases of Charondas and
-Lycurgus. The former, in order to encourage a proper freedom of debate,
-had made it death to come armed into the assembly of the states. One
-day, coming himself in haste to a convention without having first laid
-aside his sword, he was rebuked by some one present, as a transgressor
-of his own laws. Stung with the justice of the imputation, he instantly
-plunged the sword into his own heart, both as a sacrifice to the
-violated majesty of the law, and a tremendous example of disinterested
-justice; trusting, moreover, thus to seal with his own blood a strict
-observance in others of his wholesome institutions.
-
-When Lycurgus had accomplished his great work of legislation in Sparta,
-he took the following method of rendering his system unchangeable and
-immortal. He stated that it was necessary that he should consult the
-Delphian oracle relative to his new laws. He then made all the Spartan
-magistrates and people take a solemn oath that they would observe
-and keep his laws inviolate “till his return.” He accordingly went
-to consult the oracle, and having sent back the answer in writing to
-Sparta, “That the laws were excellent, and would render the people
-great and happy who should observe them,” he resolved never to return
-himself, in order that the people might never be absolved from their
-oath. He accordingly starved himself to death. Plutarch considers
-that Lycurgus reasoned himself into the act, under the belief that a
-good statesman and patriot should seek to make his death itself in
-some way useful to his country. The same authority considers that
-he intended the mode of his death to be a practical illustration of
-the great principle which pervaded the whole code of his laws, which
-was—_temperance_.
-
-Alike honourable, in a worldly point of view, was the death of Codrus,
-King of Athens. The oracle was consulted with reference to the
-condition of the country. That nation was predicted to be prosperous
-whose king should be first slain by the enemy. Codrus disguised himself
-as a private soldier, and entered the enemy’s camp, where he contrived
-to pick a quarrel with the first man he met, whom he permitted to slay
-him; thus, for the good of his country, courting his own death.
-
-Themistocles is said to have poisoned himself rather than lead on the
-Persian army against his own countrymen, although fame, wealth, and
-honour were within his grasp.
-
-The Emperor Otho, to avoid the further sacrifice of life in the
-imperial contest, resolved to die by his own hands, notwithstanding
-his troops implored and beseeched him to lead them on to a second
-engagement in which victory was almost certain. King Otho’s answer to
-the demand of his soldiers is considered to embody the spirit of true
-Roman heroism—“Deny me not the glory of laying down my own life to
-preserve yours. The more hope there is left, the more honourable is my
-early retirement; since it is by my death alone that I can prevent the
-further effusion of Roman blood, and restore peace and tranquillity
-to a distracted empire, by being ready to die for its peace and
-security.”[2]
-
-Two of the most distinguished men of antiquity who sacrificed their
-own lives were Brutus and Cassius. Before their battle with Cæsar
-on the plains of Philippi, these two warriors had a conversation on
-suicide. Cassius asked Brutus what his opinions were on the subject of
-self-destruction, provided fortune did not favour them in the contest
-in which they were about to be engaged. Brutus replied, that formerly
-he had embraced such sentiments as induced him to condemn Cato for
-killing himself; he deemed it an act of irreverence towards the gods,
-and that it was no evidence of courage. But he continues, “Now, in
-the midst of dangers, I am quite of another mind.” He then proceeds
-to tell Cassius of his determination to surrender up his life “on the
-Ides of March.” He states no particular reasons for having changed
-his opinions on the subject of suicide. The issue of the battle is
-well known. Many things conspired to damp the courage of Cassius and
-Brutus. In imitation of Cæsar, Brutus made a public lustration for his
-army in the field, and during the ceremony an unlucky omen is said to
-have happened to Cassius. The garland he was to wear at the sacrifice
-was given to him the wrong side outwards; the person, also, who bore
-the golden image before Cassius stumbled, and the image fell to the
-ground. Several birds of prey hovered about his camp, and swarms of
-bees were seen within the trenches. Cassius, believing in the Epicurean
-philosophy, considered all these circumstances as disheartening omens
-of his fate. After the defeat of Cassius, he ordered his freedman to
-kill him, which he did by severing his head from his body.
-
-Plutarch makes Brutus die most stoically. After having taken an
-affectionate leave of his friends, and having assured them that he
-was only angry with fortune for his country’s sake, since he esteemed
-himself in his death more happy than his conquerors, he advised them to
-provide for their own safety. He then retired, and, with the assistance
-of Strato, he ran his sword through his body. Dion Cassius (Lib. xlvii.)
-represents Brutus as far from acting the stoic at his last moments. He
-is said just before his death to have quoted the following passage from
-Euripides—“O wretched virtue! thou art a bare name! I mistook thee for
-a substance; but thou thyself art the slave of fortune.”
-
-In considering the motives that induced Brutus to destroy himself,
-we must not forget to take into calculation the effect which the
-apparition he saw previous to the battle of Philippi must have had
-on his mind. Brutus was naturally watchful, sparing in his diet, and
-allowed himself but little time for sleep. He never retired to rest,
-day or night, until he had arranged all his business. At this time,
-involved as he was in the operations of war, and solicitous for the
-event, he only slumbered a little after supper, and spent the remainder
-of the night in attending to his most urgent affairs. When these were
-dispatched, he occupied himself in reading till the third watch, when
-the tribunes and centurions came to him for orders. Thus, a little
-before he left Asia, he was sitting alone in his tent, by a dim light,
-at a late hour. The whole army lay in sleep and silence, while Brutus,
-wrapped in meditation, thought he perceived something enter his tent;
-turning towards the door, he saw a monstrous and horrible spectre
-standing by the side of his bed. “What art thou?” said he, boldly.
-The spectre answered, “I am thy evil genius, Brutus! Thou wilt see
-me at Philippi.” To which he calmly replied, “I’ll meet thee there.”
-In the morning he communicated to Cassius what he had seen. Cassius,
-who was an Epicurean, had often disputed with Brutus on the subject
-of apparitions. He said, when he had heard the statement of Brutus,
-that the spectre was not a spirit, but a real being; and argued at
-considerable length on the subject, and induced the general to think
-that his fate was decided. There can be no doubt but that this singular
-presentiment co-operated with other circumstances in inducing Brutus to
-fall by his own hands.[3]
-
-Amongst the ancient suicides, those of Mark Antony and Cleopatra
-deserve especial consideration. It is not our purpose to enter into an
-elaborate history of these celebrated characters, but merely to refer
-to those circumstances that had an immediate connexion with their last
-moments.
-
-Three circumstances acted powerfully on Antony’s mind in inducing him
-to seek a voluntary death. The first was his having been defeated by
-Cæsar; the second, the idea that Cleopatra had betrayed him; and the
-third was the belief in Cleopatra’s death.
-
-As soon as Antony was defeated, the unhappy queen fled to her monument,
-ordered all the doors to be barred, and commanded that Antony should
-be informed that she was dead. He was overwhelmed with grief, and
-retiring to his chamber, opened his coat of mail, and ordered his
-faithful servant Eros (who had been engaged to kill him whenever he
-should think it necessary) to dispatch him. Eros drew his sword,
-and, instead of killing his master, ran it through his own body, and
-fell dead at Antony’s feet. Antony then plunged his sword into his
-bowels, and threw himself on the couch. The wound was not, however,
-immediately fatal. In a short period after, Diomedes, Cleopatra’s
-servant, came to Antony with a request that he would instantly repair
-to her chamber. His delight was unbounded when he heard that Cleopatra
-was alive, and he directly ordered his servant to carry him to her.
-As she would not allow the doors to be opened, Antony was drawn up to
-her window by a cord. He was suspended for a considerable time in the
-air stretching out his hands to Cleopatra. Notwithstanding she exerted
-all her strength, strained every nerve, and distorted her features
-in endeavouring to draw him up, it was with the greatest difficulty
-it was effected. Cleopatra laid him on the bed, and, standing over
-him, so extreme was her anguish, that she rent her clothes, and beat
-and wounded her breast. After Antony’s death, when Cleopatra heard
-that Cæsar had dispatched Gallus to take her prisoner, and that he
-had effected an entrance into the monument, _she attempted to stab
-herself with a dagger which she always carried about with her for that
-purpose_. When she heard that it was Cæsar’s intention to send her
-into Syria, she asked permission to visit Antony’s tomb, over which
-she poured forth most bitter lamentations. “Hide me, hide me,” she
-exclaimed, “with thee in the grave; for life, since _thou_ hast left
-it, has been misery to _me_.” After crowning the tomb with flowers,
-she kissed it, and ordered a bath to be prepared. She then sat down to
-a magnificent supper; after which, a peasant came to the gate with a
-small basket of figs covered with leaves, which was admitted into the
-monument. Amongst the figs and under the leaves was concealed the asp,
-which Cleopatra applied to her bosom. She was found dead, attired in
-one of her most gorgeous dresses, decorated with brilliants, and lying
-on her golden bed.
-
-Few of the illustrious men of antiquity have exhibited such philosophic
-coolness as Petronius, after he had determined to sacrifice his life.
-The levity which distinguished his voluntary death was in accordance
-with the gaiety and frivolity of his life. The capricious friendship
-of a Nero had been withdrawn from him, and in consequence he had
-determined on his own death. This _arbiter elegantiarum_ during life,
-determined to indulge in a luxurious refinement of that death he was
-preparing to encounter. Being well aware he could not long escape
-from the murderous edict, after a fall from the summit of imperial
-favour, he opened and closed his veins at pleasure. He slept during the
-intervals, or sauntered about and enjoyed the delights of conversation
-with his friends; but his discourse was not of so elevated a character
-as that attributed to Seneca or Socrates.
-
-The poet Lucan exhibited great apparent serenity at the approach of
-death. After the veins of his arm had been voluntarily opened, and he
-had lost a large quantity of blood, he felt his hands and his legs
-losing their vitality. As the hour of death approached, he commenced
-repeating several lines out of his own Pharsalia, descriptive of a
-person similarly situated to himself. These lines he repeated until he
-died.
-
-Cocceius Nerva starved himself to death in the reign of Tiberius. It
-was said that he was displeased with the state of public affairs, and
-had made up his mind to die whilst his own integrity remained unsullied.
-
-During the bloody reign of Nero, many singular suicides took place. The
-particulars attending the deaths of Lucius Vetus, his mother-in-law
-Sextia, and Pollutia his daughter, are worth recording. After Lucius
-had distributed all his wealth among his domestics, requesting them
-to remove everything from his house excepting three couches, he, with
-his mother-in-law and daughter, retired into the same chamber, opened
-a vein with the same lancet, and after, reclining each on a separate
-couch, waited calmly the approach of death. His eyes, and those of his
-mother-in-law, were both fixed on the daughter, while the daughter’s
-wandered from one to the other. It was the earnest prayer of each of
-them to die first, and to leave the others in the act of expiring.[4]
-
-When the throne of Sardanapalus was endangered, he conceived a
-magnificent and truly luxurious mode of committing suicide, quite in
-character with the extravagance and dissoluteness of his former life.
-He erected a funeral pile of great height in his palace, and adorned
-it with the most sumptuous and costly ornaments. In the middle of this
-building was a chamber of one hundred feet in length, built of wood,
-in which a number of golden couches and tables were spread. On one of
-these he reclined with his wife, his numerous concubines occupying
-the rest. The building was encompassed round at some distance with
-large beams and thick wood, to prevent all egress from the place.
-Much combustible matter, and an immense pile of wood were also placed
-within, together with an infinite quantity of gold and silver, royal
-vestments, costly apparel, rich furniture, curious ornaments, and
-all the apparatus of luxury and magnificence. All being arranged, this
-splendid funeral pile was set on fire, and continued burning until the
-fifteenth day; during which time Sardanapalus revelled in all kinds
-of sensualities. The multitude without were in astonishment at the
-tremendous scene, and at the immense clouds of incense and smoke which
-issued with the flames. It was stated that the king was engaged in
-offering some extraordinary sacrifices; while the attendants within
-alone knew that this dissolute prince was putting such a splendid end
-to his effeminate life.[5]
-
-There has been some dispute as to the death of Marcus Curtius. Plutarch
-attributes his death to accident, but Procillius considers that it
-was voluntary. He says, the earth having opened at a particular time,
-the Aruspices declared it necessary, for the safety of the republic,
-that the bravest man in the city should throw himself into the gulf;
-whereupon Curtius, mounting his horse, leaped armed into it, and the
-gulf immediately closed. But Livy and Dionysius relate the circumstance
-in a different manner. They say that Curtius was a Sabine, who, having
-at first repulsed the Romans, but being in his turn overpowered by
-Romulus, and endeavouring to make good his retreat, fell into the lake,
-which from that time bore his name. The lake was situated almost in the
-centre of the Roman forum. Some writers consider the name was derived
-from Curtius the Consul, because he caused it to be walled in after it
-had been struck with lightning.[6]
-
-The death of the celebrated philosopher and poet, Empedocles, of
-Sicily, was remarkable. Wishing to be believed a god, and that his
-death might be unknown, he threw himself into the crater of Mount Ætna,
-and perished in the flames. The mode of his death was not discovered
-until some time afterwards, when one of his sandals was thrown up from
-the volcano.
-
-Ancient history affords us many noble examples of individuals who
-preferred voluntary death to dishonour and loss of character. If ever
-self-murder could be considered as in the slightest degree justifiable,
-it would be under such circumstances. Who cannot but honour the conduct
-of the noble virgins of Macedon, who threw themselves into the wells,
-and courted death, sooner than submit to the dishonourable proposals
-of the Roman governor! When Theoxena was pursued by the emissaries of
-Philip, king of Macedon, who had been guilty of murdering her first
-husband, she produced a dagger and a box of poison, and placing them
-before the crew of the ship in which she was endeavouring to make her
-escape, she said, “Death is now our only remedy and means of vengeance;
-let each take the method that best pleases himself of avoiding the
-tyrant’s pride, cruelty, and lust. Come on, my brave companions
-and family, seize the sword or drink of the cup, as you prefer an
-instantaneous or gradual death.” Some fell on the sword, others drank
-the poison until death was effected. After Theoxena had accomplished
-her designs, she threw herself into the arms of her husband, and they
-both plunged into the sea.
-
-The resistance which Josephus made to the importunities of his soldiers
-to fall by his own hand sooner than surrender to the enemy, is perhaps
-the most noble instance of the kind on record. After the success of
-the Romans in Judæa, Josephus, who commanded the Jewish army, wished
-to deliver himself up to his conquerors; he was encouraged to this by
-certain dreams and visions. When Josephus’s intention was known, the
-soldiers flocked round him, and expressed their indignation at his
-intention. They urged him to fall by his own sword, and to let them
-follow his example, sooner than abandon the field. To this appeal
-Josephus replies, “Oh, my friends, why are you so earnest to kill
-yourselves? why do you set your soul and body, which are such dear
-companions, at such variance? It is a brave thing to die in war, but
-it should be by the hands of the enemy. It is a foolish thing to do
-that for ourselves, which we quarrel with them for doing to us. It is a
-brave thing to die for liberty; but still it should be in battle, and
-by those who would take that liberty from us. He is equally a coward
-who will not die when he is obliged to die. What are we afraid of, when
-we will not go up and meet the Romans? Is it death? Why then inflict it
-on ourselves? You say, We must be slaves. Are we then in a clear state
-of liberty at present? Self-murder is a crime most remote from the
-common nature of all animals, and an instance of impiety against God
-our Creator.”
-
-Josephus, in the spirit of a true philosopher, urged his soldiers to
-abandon the notion of suicide; but instead of being calmed by his
-discourse, they became enraged, and rushed on him. Fearing that the
-case was hopeless, Josephus prevailed upon them to listen to the
-following proposal. He persuaded them to draw lots; the man on whom
-the first lot fell was to be killed by him who had the second, and the
-second by the third, and so on. In this way no soldier would perish
-by his own hand, except the last man. Lots were accordingly drawn;
-Josephus drew his with the rest. He who had the first lot willingly
-submitted his neck to him who had the second. It happened that Josephus
-and a soldier were left to draw lots; and as the general was desirous
-neither to imbrue his own hand in the blood of his countryman, nor to
-be condemned by lot himself, he persuaded the soldier to trust his
-fidelity, and to live as well as himself. Thus ended this tragical
-scene, and Josephus immediately surrendered himself up to Vespasian.
-
-The first instance of suicide recorded in Scripture is that of Samson.
-After suffering many indignities from the hands of the Philistines, his
-anger was roused to the highest pitch, and, resting against the pillars
-that supported the building in which the lords of the Philistines
-and an infinite number of others were assembled, he offered up the
-following prayer: “O Lord God, remember me, I pray thee, and strengthen
-me, I pray thee, only this once, O God, that I may at once be avenged
-of the Philistines for my two eyes;” and taking hold of the pillars, he
-said, “Let me die with the Philistines: and he bowed himself with all
-his might, and the house fell upon the lords and all that were therein;
-so that the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which
-he slew in his life.”
-
-In Samson’s case, there is nothing said in Scripture either to condemn
-or justify the act; but it appears evident from the whole history of
-the last events of his life, that he was but an instrument in the
-hands of God for the accomplishment of his wise purposes. The glory of
-God had been violated in the person of Samson; he had been subjected
-by the Philistines to great indignities; and it was to demonstrate
-the power of God in the destruction of his enemies that Samson’s life
-was sacrificed. Samson is, then, to be considered as a martyr to his
-religion and his God.
-
-The case of Saul has also been cited. It is thus referred to in
-Scripture:—“And the battle went sore against Saul, and the archers hit
-him, and he was sore wounded of the archers. Then said Saul unto his
-armourbearer, Draw thy sword, and thrust me through therewith, lest
-these uncircumcised come and thrust me through, and abuse me. But his
-armourbearer would not, for he was sore afraid; therefore Saul took a
-sword and fell upon it. And when his armourbearer saw that Saul was
-dead, he fell likewise upon his sword and died with him.”[7]
-
-It must be recollected that the Jews considered that a man was
-justified in committing suicide to prevent his falling into the
-enemy’s hand, and on this account Saul was commended for killing
-himself. But there was nothing glorious in Saul’s death. His army was
-defeated by the Philistines, and Saul sounded a retreat; and as he was
-making his ignominious flight, an arrow from the ranks of the enemy hit
-him, and it was then that he implored his armourbearer to dispatch him.
-
-Much has been made of the self murder* of Ahitophel. Donne has referred
-to it at some length. He says that in this case there can be “no room
-for excuse.” Ahitophel was considered one of the wisest counsellors of
-his age. He joined Absalom in his rebellion against his lawful prince,
-David; and when he saw that it was God’s determination to defeat his
-counsel, and that his advice for the first time was neglected, he
-became full of secret indignation and disappointment; and in order
-to avoid the consequences of his own utter despair and ruin, for his
-perfidy, he hanged himself. Nothing can be urged in justification
-of this act. The facts are presented to us in biblical history; and
-we are left to form our own judgment upon the course which this
-“Machiavellian counsellor,” as he has been termed, thought proper to
-adopt.
-
-Donne has also cited the case of Judas Iscariot.[8] He must have
-been sadly in want of sound illustrations to have brought forward the
-instance of this traitor as a justification of the act of suicide.
-Judas has been considered by some writers as a martyr. Petilian said
-“that Judas, and all who killed themselves through remorse of sin,
-ought to be accounted martyrs, because they punish in themselves what
-they grieve to have committed.” To whom Augustine replies, “Thou hast
-said, that the traitor perished by the rope, and has left a rope behind
-him for such as himself. But we have nothing to do with him. We do not
-venerate those as martyrs who hang themselves.”
-
-The case, mentioned by the same authority, of Eleazar, the brother of
-Judas Maccabeus, taken from the book of the Maccabees, is said to be
-one of voluntary suicide, and where self-destruction was laudable.
-Eleazar sacrificed his own life for the purpose of destroying King
-Antiochus, and therefore his suicide is to be considered as a voluntary
-sacrifice for the good of his country.
-
-The self-destruction of Razis is full of horror, and can only be quoted
-as an evidence of the act of a madman. When the tower in which Razis
-was fighting against the enemy of Nicanor was set on fire, he fell
-on his own sword, “Choosing rather,” says the text, “to die manfully
-than fall into the hands of the wicked, to be abused otherwise than
-beseemed his noble birth; but missing his stroke through haste, the
-multitude also rushing within doors, he ran boldly up to the wall, and
-cast himself down manfully among the thickest of them; but they quickly
-giving back, and a space being made, he fell down in the midst of a
-void place. Nevertheless, while there was yet breath within him, being
-inflamed with anger, he rose up; and though his blood gushed out like
-spouts of water, and his wounds were grievous, yet he ran through in
-the midst of the throng, and standing on a steep rock, when, as his
-blood was not quite gone, he plucked out his bowels, and taking them in
-both his hands, he cast them upon the throng, and calling upon the Lord
-of life and spirit to restore him them again, he thus died.”[9]
-
-Having considered the remarkable suicides of antiquity, we will now
-briefly allude to those doctrines and opinions of the celebrated
-philosophers of ancient times, which must of necessity have tended to
-create this recklessness of human life.
-
-The doctrines inculcated by the stoical philosophers, or the disciples
-of Zeno, must have increased the crime of suicide. “A stoical wise man
-is ever ready to die for his country or his friends. A wise man will
-never look upon death as an evil; that he will despise it, and be ready
-to undergo it at any time.” “A wise man,” says Diog. Laertius, in his
-life of Zeno, when expounding the stoical philosophy, “will quit life,
-when oppressed with severe pain, or when deprived of any of his senses,
-or when labouring under desperate diseases.” It is astonishing that a
-sect of philosophers who inculcated that pain was no evil, should so
-often have practised suicide. Much as we would condemn such principles,
-still we must admit that most of the admired characters of antiquity
-belonged to this celebrated sect—men distinguished for their wisdom,
-learning, and the strictness of their morals. Cato was a stoic, and he
-put into practice the principles of the sect to which he belonged.[10]
-
-Among the philosophers of antiquity, Seneca stands preeminently*
-forward as the defender of suicide. He says, “Does life please you?
-live on. Does it not? go from whence you came. No vast wound is
-necessary; a mere puncture will secure your liberty. It is a bad
-thing (you say) to be under the necessity of living; but there is no
-necessity in the case. Thanks be to the gods, nobody can be compelled
-to live.”[11] These were the principles of the “wise Seneca,” and yet
-he wanted the courage to commit suicide when put to the test. He says,
-“Being emaciated by a severe illness, I often thought of suicide,
-but was recalled by the old age of a most indulgent father; for I
-considered not how resolutely ‘I’ could encounter death, but how ‘he’
-could bear up under my loss.” This is not, however, the only instance
-in which Seneca yielded his stoical principles to the dictates of
-natural affection and rational judgment.
-
-Among other distinguished philosophers who advocated suicide was
-Epictetus. Although a stoic, he did not blindly follow the doctrines
-of Zeno. Epictetus considered that it was the duty of man to suffer to
-almost any extent before he sacrificed his own life. “If you like not
-life, you may leave it; the door is open; get you gone! But a little
-smoke ought not to frighten you away; it should be endured, and will
-thereby be often surmounted.”
-
-Epictetus followed strictly his own principles: in this respect he
-was superior to Seneca. Seneca was born in the lap of good fortune;
-Epictetus was a slave, and had to pass through the rugged paths of
-adversity, bodily pain, and penury. Seneca was banished from Rome for
-an intrigue; Epictetus was sent into exile for being a man of learning
-and a philosopher.
-
-When Epictetus was beaten unmercifully by his master, he said, with
-great composure, “You will certainly break my leg.” He did so; and the
-philosopher calmly rejoined, “Did I not tell you you would do it?”
-This was in the true spirit of stoical philosophy.
-
-Marcus Aurelius Antoninus was, perhaps, one of the brightest ornaments
-of the sect of stoics. He carried into the minutest concern of life the
-doctrine of Zeno. “He was,” says Gibbon, “severe to himself, indulgent
-to the imperfections of others, just and beneficent to all mankind.”
-
-Zeno, the founder of the sect of stoical philosophers, acted up to
-the principles which he inculcated to his disciples. His suicide is
-recorded to be as follows:—As he was going out of his school one day,
-at the age of ninety-eight, he fell down, put a finger out of joint,
-went home, and hanged himself.
-
-Cleanthes, also, the successor of Zeno, followed the example of his
-master in philosophy, by shortening the period of his life in the
-following manner:—After having used abstinence for two days, by the
-advice of his physician, for the cure of a trifling indisposition under
-which he was labouring, he had permission to return to his former diet;
-but he refused all sustenance, saying, “_that as he had advanced so far
-on his journey towards death, he would not retreat_.” He accordingly
-starved himself to death.
-
-Among the most distinguished orators of antiquity who spoke in favour
-of suicide stands Cicero. During his banishment he would have actually
-destroyed himself, if it had not been for his natural timidity and
-want of resolution. He writes to his brother Quintus, “The tears of my
-friends have prevented me from flying to death as my refuge.”
-
-Pliny was an advocate of suicide. In a chapter entitled “On God,” he
-writes thus—“The chief comfort of man in his imperfect state is this,
-that even the Deity cannot do all things. For instance, he cannot put
-himself to death when he pleases, which is the greatest indulgence he
-has given to man amid the severe evils of life.” Pliny belonged to the
-Epicureans, and his notions are in accordance with the doctrines of
-that sect.
-
-Pliny the younger appears to have had different notions on the
-subject. When lamenting the death of a dear friend, Corellius Rufus,
-who had killed himself, he says, “He is dead—dead by his own hand,
-which agonizes my grief; for that is the most lamentable kind of death
-which neither proceeds from nature nor from fate.” The whole epistle
-from which the above extract is made indicates a noble and feeling
-heart.
-
-It appears that the Roman laws respecting suicide were of a fiscal
-nature. They viewed the act not as a crime abstractedly, but considered
-how far the circumstance affected the state or treasury. In some
-portion of the Roman empire the magistrate had the power of granting
-or refusing permission to commit suicide. If the decision was given
-against the applicant, and he persisted in sacrificing his life,
-disgrace and ignominy were heaped upon his body, and it was buried in
-the most humiliating manner. The tenour of the law relating to suicide
-laid down in “Justinian’s Digests” is to the following effect:—“Those
-who, being actually accused, or who being caught in any crime, and
-dreading a prosecution, made way with themselves, were to have their
-effects confiscated. But this confiscation was no punishment of
-suicide, _as a crime in itself_, being then only to take place when the
-crime committed incurred the confiscation of property, and when the
-person accused of it would have been found guilty. For which reason
-the heirs-at-law were permitted (if they thought proper) to try the
-cause as though the accused person, who had put a period to his life,
-had been still living; and if his innocence could be proved, they were
-still entitled to his effects. But if any one killed himself, either
-through weariness of life, or an impatience under pain or ill health,
-for a load of private debt, or for any other reason not affecting the
-state or public treasury, the property of the deceased flowed in its
-natural channel. In the case of an attempted but incomplete suicide,
-where a man was under no accusation, a distinction was made as to the
-causes impelling to it, before the question as to its punishment was
-to be determined. If it proceeded not from weariness of life, or an
-impatience under the pressure of some calamity, the attempter was to
-suffer the same punishment as if he had effected his purpose; and for
-this reason, because he who without reason spared not his own life,
-would not be likely to spare another man’s.”[12]
-
-If a prisoner committed suicide, the jailor authorized to protect him
-was punished very severely. The Roman law made a distinction between
-soldiers and civilians. If a soldier attempted to take away his life,
-and it could not be proved that he was suffering at the time from great
-grief, misfortune, madness, &c., it was deemed a capital offence, and
-death was the punishment. And even in cases where it was established
-that the act was the result of mental perturbation, he was dismissed
-from the service with ignominy and disgrace.
-
-During the pure ages of the Roman Republic, when religion was
-reverenced, when the gods were looked up to with respect as the
-disposers of all events, suicide was but little known. But when the
-philosophy of Greece was introduced into the Roman Empire, and the
-manners of the people became corrupted and degenerated, the crime
-increased to an alarming extent. This indifference to life was also
-augmented by the spread of stoical and epicurean principles. The stoic
-was taught to believe his life his own; that he was the sole arbiter of
-his existence; and that he could live or die as he pleased. The same
-principles were inculcated by the epicurean philosophy. Is it, then, to
-be wondered at, that suicide should be of common occurrence, when such
-degrading principles had taken possession of the minds of the people?
-
-By the law of Thebes, the person who committed suicide was deprived of
-his funeral rites, and his name and memory were branded with infamy.
-The Athenian law was equally severe: the hand of the self-murderer
-was cut off, and buried apart from his body, as having been an enemy
-and traitor to it. The Greeks considered suicide as a most heinous
-crime. The bodies of suicides, according to the Grecian custom, were
-not burned to ashes, but were immediately buried. They considered it
-a pollution of the holy element of fire to consume in it the carcases
-of those who had been guilty of self-murder. Suicides were classed
-“with the public or private enemy; with the traitor, and conspirator
-against his country; with the tyrant, the sacrilegious wretch, and
-such grievous offenders whose punishment was impalement alive on a
-cross.”[13]
-
-These laws, however, fell into disuse, as appears evident from the
-circumstance of there being so many cases of suicide which escaped this
-treatment.
-
-In the island of Ceos the magistrates had the power of deciding whether
-a person had sufficient reasons for killing himself. A poison was kept
-for that purpose, which was given to the applicant who made out his
-case before the magistracy.
-
-The same custom was followed among the Massilians, the ancient
-inhabitants of Marseilles. A preparation of hemlock was kept in
-readiness, and the senate, on hearing the merits of the case, had the
-power to decide whether the applicant had good and substantial reasons
-for committing suicide. There was, no doubt, much good effected by this
-regulation, as it clearly acknowledged the principle that the power
-of a man over his own life rested not in himself, but in the voice of
-the magistrate, who alone was to determine how his life or death might
-affect the state.
-
-Libanius, of Antioch, who flourished towards the end of the fourth
-century, has very happily ridiculed the practice to which we have
-alluded. In some imaginary pleadings before the senate, he advocates
-the cause of a man who wishes to swallow the hemlock draught, that
-he may be freed from the garrulity of a loquacious wife. “Truly,”
-says he, “if our legislator had not been addicted too much to law
-making, I should have been under no necessity of proving before you
-the expediency of my departure, but a rope and the first tree would
-have given me peace and quiet. But since he, determining we should be
-slaves, has deprived us even of the liberty of dying when we please,
-and has enchained us with decrees on this business, I imprecate the
-author and obey his mandates, in thus laying my complaints and my
-request before you.” He then, with considerable eloquence and humour,
-advocates the cause of the “envious man,” who wishes to taste the
-“suicidal draught” because his neighbour’s wealth had increased beyond
-his own. “Let the wretch,” he says, “recite his calamities, let the
-senate bestow the antidote, and let grief be dissolved in death.”
-
-Libanius then pleads in behalf of Timon, the man hater, who begs
-permission to dispatch himself because he was bound by profession to
-hate all mankind, but he could not help loving Alcibiades.
-
-It is a singular circumstance connected with the subject of suicide,
-that authors who have written in its defence should quote the cases
-referred to in this chapter in justification of their views. They
-have not taken into consideration the peculiar customs, habits, and
-religion of the people, which of course must have greatly influenced
-their actions. How absurd would it be for us to take the authority of
-antiquity as an infallible rule of conduct. The Massagetes considered
-those unhappy who died a natural death, and therefore eat their dearest
-friends when they grew old. The Libarenians broke their necks down a
-precipice. The Bactrians were thrown alive to the dogs. The Scythians
-buried the dearest friends of the deceased with them alive, or killed
-them on the funeral pile. The Roman people, when sunk in vice and
-licentiousness, considered it a mark of courage and honour to fall by
-their own hands, and suicide was a common occurrence with them.
-
-“In the beginning of the spring,” says Malt. Brun, “a shocking ceremony
-takes place at Cola Bhairava, in the mountains between the rivers Taptæ
-and Nerbuddah. It is the practice of some persons of the lowest tribes
-in Berar to make vows of suicide, in return for answers which their
-prayers are believed to have received from their idols. This is the
-place where such vows are performed in the beginning of spring, when
-eight or ten victims generally throw themselves from a precipice. The
-ceremony gives rise to an annual fair, and some trade.”[14]
-
-No just distinction can be drawn between these customs. The Indian
-widow, in obedience to the religion of her country, ascends the
-funeral pile of her husband, and is burnt to death. Thousands annually
-sacrifice their lives by throwing themselves under the wheels of their
-idol Juggernaut. Strong feelings of religion impel them to this; they
-become excluded from society, they lose caste, and are subjected to
-all kinds of persecution if they do not bow to the customs of the
-country. What legitimate argument can be deduced from these facts in
-favour of suicide? And yet these cases are considered to constitute
-a justification of the stoical dogma, that we have a right when we
-please to put an end to our own existence. Desperate indeed must be the
-circumstances of those who are compelled to found their reasoning on so
-flimsy a basis.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-WRITERS IN DEFENCE OF SUICIDE.
-
-
- Opinions of Hume—Effect of his writings—Case of suicide caused
- by—The doctrines of Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Montaigne
- examined—Origin of Dr. Donne’s celebrated work—Madame de
- Staël’s recantation—Robert of Normandy, Gibbon, Sir T. More,
- and Robeck’s opinions considered.
-
-It will be foreign to my purpose to enter elaborately into an
-examination of the opinions of those who have thought proper to justify
-the commission of suicide. The arguments which have been advanced by
-Hume, Donne, Rousseau, Madame de Staël, Montesquieu, Montaigne, Gibbon,
-Voltaire, and Robeck, are founded on such gross and apparent fallacies,
-that they carry with them their own refutation.
-
-Hume, whose pen was always ready to support opinions at variance with
-the precepts of the Christian religion, wrote an essay on the subject
-of suicide. He has endeavoured to shew that self-murder is consistent
-with our duty to God, our neighbour, and ourselves. Referring to the
-first of these three heads, he says—“As, on the one hand, the elements
-and other inanimate parts of creation carry on their action without
-regard to the particular interests and situation of men, so men are
-entrusted to their own judgment and discretion in the various shades
-of matter, and may employ every faculty with which they are endowed in
-order to provide for their ease, happiness, or preservation.”
-
-If an action be clearly shewn to be an infringement of the laws of
-God, it certainly cannot be one which he has left us to exercise
-at discretion. All the laws of religion and morality are so many
-abridgments of man’s liberty, in the exercise of his judgment and
-discretion for his own happiness. Hume then proceeds to examine
-whether suicide be a breach of duty to our neighbour and society. He
-observes—“A man who retires from life does no harm to society,—he
-only ceases to do good; which, if it be an injury, is of the lowest
-kind.” The man who sacrifices his own life does a _great injury_ to
-society. There are very few men in the world who have no relations
-or connexions, and he entails upon these the opprobrium that society
-attaches to the crime of suicide. Independently of this, his example
-acts injuriously on the minds of others, who may not have such good
-reasons for suicide as he has. “I believe,” continues Hume, “that no
-man ever threw away life while it was worth keeping. For such is our
-natural horror of death, that small motives will never be able to
-reconcile us to it.” He might as well have stated that such is our
-horror of poverty that no man ever threw away _riches_ which were worth
-keeping. The fallacy consists in drawing a conclusion from a mind
-supposed in its right state, in which every faculty, propensity, and
-aversion has its due proportion of strength; and in which the natural
-horror of death will secure a man from throwing away a life which is
-worth keeping: and this conclusion is applied to a _depraved_ state of
-mind, in which it can by no means hold.
-
-The same author asserts, “That it would be no crime in me to divert
-the Nile or Danube from its course, if I could; where, then, is the
-crime of turning a few ounces of blood out of its natural channel?” The
-argument is too puerile to merit refutation. He must first establish
-that no injury would accrue from diverting the course of the Nile and
-Danube, before any argument can be deduced from it which is worth one
-moment’s consideration.
-
-It has been asserted, and remains uncontradicted, that Mr. Hume lent
-his “Essay on Suicide” to a friend, who on returning it told him it was
-a most excellent performance, and pleased him better than anything he
-had read for a long time. In order to give Hume a practical exhibition
-of the effects of his defence of suicide, his friend shot himself the
-day after returning him his Essay.
-
-If, in any one instance, suicide might admit of something like an
-apology, it would have been in this—if the detestable author of this
-abominable treatise had, on receiving the melancholy intelligence,
-committed it to the flames, and terminated his own pernicious existence
-by a cord. But the cold-blooded infidel was too cowardly to execute
-summary justice on himself. With a truly diabolical spirit, his delight
-was to scatter firebrands among the people, and say, “Am I not in
-sport?”
-
-Mr. Hume is the hero of modern infidels, because he is the only one
-among them whose life was not disgraced by the grossest of vices;
-for this, his selfish and avaricious spirit affords, perhaps, the
-true reason. It is well known that Hume, in more than one instance,
-sacrificed his principles (if he had any) to views of emolument at the
-suggestion of the booksellers. It has been said that he was scarcely
-guilty of a good or benevolent action. His treatment of Rousseau was
-unfeeling in the extreme; and an intimate friend of the essayist
-affirms, that “his heart was as hard and cold as marble.”
-
-Montesquieu’s arguments in favour of suicide appear to border very
-closely on those advanced by Hume. They will be found in a letter
-written in the character of a Persian resident in Europe.
-
-Rousseau[15] in his “Nouvelle Heloïse” observes, “The more I reflect
-upon it (suicide), the more I find that the question reduces itself
-to this fundamental proposition:—To seek one’s own good, and avoid
-one’s own harm in that which hurts not another, is the law of nature.”
-Rousseau must first clearly establish that what he terms “seeking
-one’s own good” will not be productive of injury to others. According
-to the notion of what the majority of men conceive to be their good,
-much evil would result from allowing mankind to act under the influence
-of their own feelings and judgment. What one man considers “good,”
-another considers evil; and what often appears to be very beneficial to
-ourselves, if examined fairly, will be found to be the very reverse.
-
-Montaigne’s arguments are borrowed from ancient writers in defence of
-suicide. He assumes at the commencement that suicide is not an evil.
-He says, that pain, and the fear of suffering a worse death, is an
-excusable incitement to suicide. The whole that he has advanced is but
-a string of sophistries.
-
-Dr. Donne has entered more fully into the defence of suicide than any
-other writer. The whole of his work appears to be written for the
-purpose of demonstrating that it is praiseworthy to shew a contempt of
-life in the discharge of our duty, and in the execution of noble and
-beneficent enterprises.
-
-Dr. Donne was probably drawn to the contemplation of this subject by
-his own sufferings. While he was secretary to Lord Chancellor Egerton,
-he married a young lady of rank superior to his own, which gave offence
-to his patron, and he was consequently dismissed from office. He
-suffered extreme poverty with his wife and children; and in a letter,
-in which he adverts to the illness of a daughter whom he tenderly
-loved, he says that he dares not expect relief, even from death, as he
-cannot afford the expense of a funeral. He afterwards took orders, and
-was promoted to the deanery of St. Paul’s. In the early part of his
-life, and probably during the period of his sufferings, he wrote his
-book, entitled, “Βιαθανατος, _A Declaration of that paradox
-or thesis, that self-homicide is not so naturally sin that it may never
-be otherwise_.” He did not publish it. He desired _it to be remembered,
-that it was written by Jack Donne, not by Dr. Donne_; and it was
-published many years after his death, by his son, a dissipated young
-man, tempted by his necessities to forget his father’s prohibition.
-
-_Madame de Staël_ attempted to justify suicide in her work on the
-passions, but she, greatly to her honour, published her celebrated
-“Reflections on Suicide,” which was written as a recantation of some
-opinions on the subject incidentally expressed in the work alluded
-to. She expresses the change in her sentiments on this subject in the
-following curious manner:—“J’ai l’acte du suicide, dans mon ouvrage sur
-l’influence des passions, et je me suis repentie depuis de cétte parole
-inconsiderée. J’etois alors dans tout l’orgueil et la vivacité de la
-première jeunesse; mais à quoi servirait-il de vivre, si ce n’était
-dans l’espoir de s’ameliorer.”
-
-Madame de Staël has treated the subject with considerable ingenuity
-and ability, and with a great deal of eloquence, but she has hardly
-enforced sufficiently the arguments against this crime which may be
-deduced from the use of that portion of existence we pass upon earth.
-We are wise and good just in proportion as we consider and treat life
-and all its incidents as moral means to a great end. Upon every moment
-of time an eternity is dependent; and whenever we sacrifice a moment,
-we throw away an instrument by which we might have created an eternity
-of happiness.
-
-All mankind are not placed upon an equality. Some experience pleasure,
-others pain, privation or suffering; the tools with which we are to
-work may be inconvenient or burthensome, or light and pleasant; but
-they must be the most useful and efficacious, or they would not be
-put into our hands; at any rate, they are all we have. We cannot fix
-too deeply on our minds the truth that life is not an absolute, but a
-relative existence, as in its relation to the eternity with which it is
-connected, consists all its value and importance.
-
-_Robert of Normandy_, surnamed the Devil, sacrificed his own life,
-and before doing so he wrote a work in defence of suicide, in which
-he argued that there was no law that forbids a person to deprive
-himself of life; that the love of life is to be subservient to that
-of happiness; that our body is a mean and contemptible machine, the
-preservation of which we ought not so highly to value; if the human
-soul be mortal, it receives but a slight injury, but if immortal,
-the greatest advantage; a benefit ceases to be one when it becomes
-troublesome, and then surely a man ought to be allowed to resign it;
-a voluntary death is often the only method of avoiding the greatest
-crime; and finally, that suicide is justified by the example of most
-nations in the world. Such is the substance of the arguments in favour
-of suicide urged by Robert of Normandy, and worthy of his celebrated
-namesake.
-
-Gibbon and Sir Thomas More are cited as champions in favour of suicide;
-but there is nothing which these authors have advanced that merits a
-separate consideration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-SUICIDE A CRIME AGAINST GOD AND MAN.—IT IS NOT AN ACT OF COURAGE.
-
-
- The sin of suicide—The notions of Paley on the
- subject—Voltaire’s opinion—Is suicide self-murder?—Is it
- forbidden in Scripture?—Shakspeare’s views on the subject—The
- alliance between suicide and murder—Has a man a right to
- sacrifice his own life?—Everything held upon trust—Suicide
- a sin against ourselves and neighbour—It is not an act of
- courage—Opinion of Q. Curtius on the subject—Buonaparte’s
- denunciation of suicide—Dryden’s description of the suicide in
- another world.
-
-Among the black catalogue of human offences, there is not, indeed,
-any that more powerfully affects the mind, that more outrages all
-the feelings of the heart, than the crime of suicide. Our laws have
-branded it with infamy, and the industry which is exerted by surviving
-relatives to conceal its perpetration evinces that the shame which is
-attached to it is of that foul and contagious character, that even the
-innocent consider themselves infected by its malignity.
-
-Much discussion has taken place as to whether self-murder is expressly
-forbidden in the Old or New Testament.[16] Paley, who is a high
-authority on all questions connected with moral philosophy, denies that
-it is. He considers that the article in the decalogue so often brought
-forward, “Thou shalt do no murder,” is inconclusive. “I acknowledge (he
-observes) that there is to be found neither any express determination
-of the question, nor sufficient evidence to prove that the case of
-suicide was in the contemplation of the law which prohibits murder. Any
-inference, therefore, which we deduce from Scripture, can be sustained
-only by _construction and implication_.”
-
-To maintain that God has not forbidden us to destroy the work of his
-hands, because self-murder is not particularly specified, is to leave
-us at liberty to commit many other offences which are not named among
-the prohibitions, but which are included under general heads. When
-God said to Noah, “Whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man shall his blood
-be shed, for in the image of God made he man,” it is evident that,
-whatever meaning we may attach to the last words, in whatever sense man
-is said to be made in the image of God, the reason of the prohibition
-holds as strong against self-murder as against any other kind of
-murder. If I am commanded not to shed the blood of another man because
-he is made in the _image of God_, I am not justified in shedding my own
-blood, as I stand in the same relation to the Deity as my fellow-men.
-But there is a particular reason why suicide is not any where expressly
-forbidden by _name_; that is, that whatever sins and offences God,
-as a lawgiver, prohibits, he does so with a penalty; he affixes such
-a punishment to such a crime, and he who transgresses is to undergo
-the determined punishment in this world or in the next. Neither God
-nor the magistrate can prohibit self-murder with any penalty that can
-affect the criminal himself; because of his very crime, he escapes
-all temporal punishment in person—he has anticipated the operation of
-the law. In fact, he has, in his own person, acted the part of the
-criminal, judge, jury, and executioner; he is dead before the law
-can take any cognizance of his offence. No law can be enacted to any
-purpose without a penalty; where, therefore, there can be no penalty,
-there can be no law. Self-murder prevents all penalty, and therefore
-wants no particular prohibition; it must therefore be included under
-general commands, and forbidden as a _sin_, which it is only in the
-power of God to take cognizance of, in another world.
-
-Again, doubtlessly the inspired writer considered suicide of such an
-atrocious nature that the warnings of conscience were sufficient to
-prevent its frequency, and because the voice of nature instinctively
-cries out against it.
-
-That the act of suicide must be most offensive in the sight of God is
-evident, since it is that which most directly violates those laws by
-which his providence has formed, and still directs, the universe. If
-any one principle in man is instinctive and implanted in him by the
-hand of nature, it is that of self preservation. Different religions
-and different codes have marked out particular duties, and proscribed
-particular crimes; in this, every religion unites, every society
-concurs, and every individual acknowledges within his own bosom the
-sacred command. If, therefore, to disobey the ordinances of God must be
-sinful in his sight, if ever the ordinances of men are to be respected,
-what must be the guilt of that person who violates the first law of
-nature, who disregards the principle that holds human society together,
-that fits us for every duty, and prompts us in the performance of them!
-
-But it is not merely against the ordinance of his Creator that the
-self-murderer offends,[17] he is guilty of a breach of duty to his
-neighbour. He plants a dagger not merely in his own breast, but in that
-of his dearest, his tenderest connexions. He wantonly sports with the
-pangs of sensibility, and covers with the blush of shame the cheek of
-innocence. With a degree of ingratitude which excites our abhorrence,
-he clouds with sorrow the future existence of those by whom he was most
-tenderly beloved, and affixes a mark of ignominy on his unfortunate
-descendants. He disobeys the first of social laws, that order by which
-God appropriated his labours to the welfare of society, and, because he
-fancies he can no longer exist with comfort to himself, disregards all
-the duties which he owes to others.
-
-The alliance between suicide and the murder of others is a closer one
-than is generally supposed. How many instances are recorded in which
-suicide and homicide have been conjoined! He who will not scruple to
-take away his own life, will not require much reasoning to impel him
-to sacrifice another’s. We refer to the cases of Mithridates, king of
-Pontus, and Nicocles, as illustrative of this position. Many modern
-instances are recorded of the same character.
-
-It was maintained by Marcus Aurelius, that there was no more of evil in
-parting from life than in going out of a smoky chamber; and Rousseau
-asks, “Why should we be permitted to cut off a leg, if we may not
-equally take away life? has not the will of God given us both?” Madame
-de Staël very properly observes that the following passage in Scripture
-replies to this sophism—“If thy hand offend thee, cut it off; if thine
-eye offend thee, pluck it out and cast it from thee.” Temptation is
-evidently referred to in the above passage, but it may consistently be
-used in refutation of Rousseau’s illogical argument. Although a man may
-use any means placed in his power for the removal of physical evils, he
-is distinctly prohibited from destroying his existence.
-
-The interrogatory argument, if it can be so denominated, which is so
-often used in justification of suicide—“Cannot a man do what he likes
-with his own?”—is based upon an absurd and gross fallacy. Man, during
-his residence on this earth, is but a trustee; his wealth, his talents,
-his time, and his very life, are but trust property. He can call
-nothing truly his own; he is held accountable for the most apparently
-trivial action he performs. Life is given to him for noble purposes;
-it is an emanation from the Deity himself; and no circumstances would
-justify us in asserting that our very existence is placed at our own
-disposal. How truly has the noble poet observed, when alluding to the
-tenure upon which we hold everything during this life—
-
- “Can despots compass aught that hails their sway,
- Or call one solid span of earth their own,
- Save that wherein at last they crumble bone by bone?”
-
-This life is one of privation. We are born to misery; we are led to
-expect disappointment at every step we take; blighted expectations,
-ruined hopes, pain, mental and bodily, constitute a part and parcel of
-our very existence. No man was more overwhelmed with any species of
-misfortune than Job; he was emphatically styled “_the man of grief_;”
-and when, prostrated to the earth by the most poignant misery, his wife
-exhorted him to quit life,—to “curse God, and die,”—he replied, “What,
-shall I receive good from the hand of God, and not evil?”
-
-No suffering, however acute, could for one moment justify the
-commission of self-murder. “The concluding scene in the life of Jesus
-Christ,” says Madame de Staël, with a fervid eloquence which does her
-immortal honour, “seems peculiarly intended to confute those who
-contend for the right of destroying life to escape misfortune. The
-dread of suffering seized him who had willingly devoted himself to
-death for the good of mankind. He prayed a long time to his Father in
-the Mount of Olives, and his countenance was shaded by the anguish
-of death. ‘My Father,’ he cried, ‘if it be possible, let this cup
-pass from me.’ Thrice with tears was this prayer repeated. All the
-sorrows of our nature had passed through his divine mind; like us, he
-feared the violence of men; like us, perhaps, regretted those whom
-he cherished and loved, his mother and his disciples; like us, he
-loved this earth, and the celestial pleasures resulting from active
-benevolence, for which he incessantly thanked his Father. But, not able
-to avert the destined chalice, he cried, ‘Oh, my Father, let thy will
-be done,’ and resigned himself into the hands of his enemies. What
-more can be sought for in the gospel respecting resignation to grief,
-and the duty of supporting it with fortitude and patience.” Poets
-and orators have entered into a chivalrous rivalry to celebrate the
-character of the “bold man struggling with the storms of fate.” That
-adversity refines and ennobles our nature there cannot be a doubt. The
-most beautiful features of the human mind are developed in suffering;
-the ordeal through which we pass, however repugnant and abhorrent it
-may be to our feelings, produces a moral regeneration in the character.
-We come out of the “fiery furnace,” like gold and silver, deprived of
-much of our dross; and life, youthful and innocent life, again dawns
-upon us and gladdens our hearts.
-
-Suicide is an injury to our neighbour and to society. As long as life
-lasts,—no matter what amount of misery a person may suffer,—he has it
-in his power to contribute to the happiness of others. By mitigating
-the distresses of others, his own will be subdued. Let a man writhing
-under the torture of the gout be brought into contact with a person
-suffering from the intense agony of tic doloureux, and he will have a
-practical illustration of the fact, that there are others in the world
-worse off than himself.
-
-Suicide has been defended as an act of courage. Courage, forsooth! If
-ever there is an act of cowardice, it is that exhibited by the person
-who, to escape from the disappointments and vexations of the world,
-wantonly puts an end to his existence. The man of courage will defy the
-opinions and scorns of the world, when he knows himself to be in the
-right; will be above sinking under the petty misfortunes that assail
-him; will make circumstances bow to him; will court difficulties and
-dangers, in order to shew that he is able to master them.
-
-It was a noble sentiment which Q. Curtius put into the mouth of Darius,
-after every ray of hope had abandoned him:—“I will wait,” cried the
-king, addressing his attendants, “the issue of my fate. You wonder,
-perhaps, that I do not terminate my own life; but I choose rather to
-die by another’s crime than by my own.” The sentiments of Cleomenes,
-king of Sparta, expressed when his fortunes appeared most desperate,
-are equally noble and magnanimous. Being much urged by a friend to
-dispatch himself, he replied—“By seeking this easy and ready kind of
-death, you think to appear brave and courageous; but better men than
-you and I have been oppressed by fortune, and borne down by multitudes.
-He that sinks under toil, or yields to affliction, or is overcome by
-the opinions and reproaches of men, gives way, in fact, to his own
-effeminacy and cowardice. A voluntary death is never to be chosen as a
-relief from action, but as exemplary in itself, it being base to live
-or die only for ourselves. The death to which you now invite us is only
-proposed as a release from present misery, but conveys with it no signs
-of bravery or prospects of advantage.”
-
-Euripides put the following words in the mouth of Hercules: “I have
-considered, and, though oppressed with misfortunes, I have determined
-thus: Let no one depart out of life through fear of what may happen to
-him; for he who is not able to resist evils will fly, like a coward,
-from the darts of the enemy.”
-
-When Buonaparte was told of the prevalent opinion, that he ought not
-to have survived his political downfall, he calmly replied—“No, no; I
-have not enough of the Roman in me to destroy myself.” After reasoning,
-with considerable ingenuity, on the subject of suicide, he concluded
-by giving expression to this decided opinion:—“Suicide is a crime the
-most revolting to my feelings; nor does any reason present itself to my
-understanding by which it can be justified. It certainly originates in
-that species of fear which we denominate cowardice, (_poltronnerie_.)
-For what claim can that man have to courage who trembles at the frowns
-of fortune? True heroism consists in becoming superior to the ills
-of life, in whatever shape they may challenge him to the combat.” He
-might have added—“Tu ne cede malis, sed contrà audentior ito.” On
-another occasion, when talking on the subject of suicide, Buonaparte
-observed, “If Marius had slain himself in the marshes of Minturnæ, he
-never would have stood the seventh time for consul.” After having been
-some time at St. Helena, he one day spoke further on the subject of
-suicide. He observed:—“With respect to the English language, I have
-been very diligent. I now read your newspapers with ease; and must own
-that they afford me no inconsiderable amusement. They are occasionally
-inconsistent, and sometimes abusive. In one paper I am called a
-_Lear_; in another, a _tyrant_; in a third, a _monster_; and in one of
-them—which I really did not expect—I am described as a _coward_. But it
-turned out, after all, that the writer did not accuse me of avoiding
-danger in the field of battle, or flying from an enemy, or fearing to
-look at the menaces of fate and fortune. It did not charge me with
-wanting presence of mind in the hurry of battle, and in the suspense of
-conflicting armies; no such thing. I wanted courage, it seems, because
-I did not coolly take a dose of poison, or throw myself into the sea,
-or blow out my brains. The editor most certainly misunderstands me; I
-have, at least, too much courage for that.”[18]
-
-We think it has decidedly been established in the preceding
-observations that suicide is a crime clearly prohibited in the Bible;
-that it is, in every sense of the term, self-murder; and that our duty
-to our Creator, to ourselves, and to society, loudly calls upon us to
-denounce it, and hold it up to the scorn and reprobation of mankind.
-How terrifically has Dryden, in his Fables, portrayed the condition of
-the unfortunate suicide in another world:—
-
- “The slayer of himself, too, saw I there:
- The gore, congealed, was clotted in his hair.
- With eyes half closed, and mouth wide ope, he lay,
- And grim as when he breathed his sullen soul away.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-ON THE INFLUENCE OF CERTAIN MENTAL STATES IN INDUCING THE DISPOSITION
-TO SUICIDE.
-
-
- Moral causes of disease—Neglect of psychological
- medicine—Mental philosophy a branch of medical study—Moral
- causes of suicide—Tables of Falret, &c.—Influence of
- remorse—Simon Brown, Charles IX. of France—Massacre of
- St. Bartholomew—Terrible death of Cardinal Beaufort, from
- remorse—The Chevalier de S——. Influence of disappointed
- love—Suicide from love—Two singular cases—Effects of
- jealousy—Othello—Suicide from this passion—The French opera
- dancer—Suicide from wounded vanity—False pride—The remarkable
- case of Villeneuve, as related by Buonaparte—Buonaparte’s
- attempt at suicide—Ambition—Despair, cases of suicide from—The
- Abbé de Rancé—Suicide from blind impulse—Cases—Mathews,
- the comedian—Opinion of Esquirol on the subject—Ennui,
- birth of—Common cause of suicide in France—Effect of
- speculating in stocks—Defective education—Diffusion of
- knowledge—“Socialism” a cause of self-destruction—Suicide
- common in Germany—Werter—Goëthe’s attempt at suicide—Influence
- of his writings on Hackman—Suicide from reading Tom Paine’s
- “Age of Reason”—Suicide to avoid punishment—Most remarkable
- illustrations—Political excitement—Nervous irritation—Love
- of notoriety—Hereditary disposition—Is death painful? fully
- considered, with cases—Influence of irreligion.
-
-In our voyage through life, the passions are said to be the gales that
-swell the canvass of the mental bark; they obstruct or accelerate
-its course, and render the passage favourable or full of danger, in
-proportion as they blow steadily from a proper point, or are adverse or
-tempestuous. Like the wind itself, the passions are engines of mighty
-power and of high importance. Without them we cannot proceed, and with
-them we may be shipwrecked and lost. Curbed in and regulated, they
-constitute the source of our most elevated happiness; but when not
-subdued, they drive the vessel on the rocks and quicksands of life, and
-ruin us.
-
- “How few beneath auspicious planets born
- With swelling sails make good the promis’d port,
- With all their wishes freighted.”
-
- YOUNG.
-
-“In this country,” Dr. J. Johnson justly observes, “where man’s
-relations with the world around him are multiplied beyond all example
-in any other country, in consequence of the intensity of interest
-attached to politics, religion, amusement, literature, and the arts;
-where the temporal concerns of an immense proportion of the population
-are in a perpetual state of vacillation; where spiritual affairs excite
-in the minds of many great anxiety; and where speculative risks are
-daily involving in difficulties all classes of society,—the operation
-of physical causes in the production of disease dwindles into complete
-insignificance when compared with that of anxiety and perturbation of
-mind.”
-
-“Mens conscia recti in corpore sano,” is Horace’s well-known
-description of the happy man. Lucretius appears to have formed a
-correct estimate of the most important bodily and mental conditions on
-which our happiness depends:—
-
- “O wretched mortals! race perverse and blind!
- Through what dread, dark, what perilous pursuits
- Pass ye this round of being! Know ye not,
- Of all ye toil for, Nature nothing asks,
- But for the _body_ freedom from disease,
- And sweet unanxious quiet for the mind?”
-
-Like human beings, the sciences are closely connected with, and are
-mutually dependent upon, one another. The link in the chain may not be
-apparent, but it has a real and palpable existence. Medical and moral
-science are more nearly allied than we should, _à priori_, conclude.
-We speak of the science of medicine, not the practice of it; for,
-like judgment and wit, or, as the author of the School for Scandal
-ironically observes, like _man and wife_, how seldom are they seen in
-happy union. Garth feelingly alludes to this unnatural divorce:—
-
- “The healing art now, sick’ning, hangs its head,
- And, once a _science_, has become a _trade_.”
-
-Psychological medicine has been sadly neglected. We recoil from the
-study of mental philosophy as if we were encroaching on holy ground. So
-great is the prejudice against this branch of science, that it has been
-observed, that to recommend a man to study metaphysics was a delicate
-mode of suggesting the propriety of confining him in a lunatic asylum!
-
-In order to become a useful physician, it is necessary to become a good
-metaphysician; so says a competent authority. It was not, however,
-Dr. Cullen’s intention to recommend that species of philosophy which
-confounds the mind without enlightening it, and which, like an _ignis
-fatuus_, dazzles only to lead us from the truth. To the medical man we
-can conceive no preliminary study more productive of advantage than
-that which tends to call into exercise the latent principle of thought,
-and to accustom the mind to close, rigid, and accurate observation.
-The science of mind, when properly investigated, teaches us the laws
-of our mental frame, and shews us the origin of our various modes and
-habits of thought and feeling—how they operate upon one another, and
-how they are cultivated and repressed; it disciplines us in the art of
-induction, and guards us against the many sources of fallacy in the
-practice of making inferences; it gives precision and accuracy to our
-investigations, by instructing us in the nicer discriminations of truth
-and falsehood.
-
-The value of mental philosophy as a branch of education will be
-properly appreciated when we consider that this ennobling principle was
-given to us for the purpose of directing and controlling our powers and
-animal propensities, and bringing them into that subjection whereby
-they become beneficial to the individual and to the world at large,
-enabling him to exchange with others those results which the power
-of his own and the gigantic efforts of other minds have developed;
-maintaining and perpetuating the most dignified and exalted state of
-happiness, the attribute of social life; unfolding not only treasures
-which the concentrated powers of individuals are enabled to discover,
-but developing those more quiet and unobtrusive characteristics of
-virtuous life, those social affections, which are alone calculated to
-make our present state of being happy.
-
-Independently of the utility of the study, what a world of delight is
-open to the mind of that man who has devoted some portion of his time
-to the investigation of his mental organization! In him we may truly
-behold—
-
- “Nature, gentle, kind,
- By culture tamed, by liberty refreshed,
- And all the radiant fruits of truth matured.”
-
-When we take into consideration the tremendous influence which the
-different mental emotions have over the bodily functions, when we
-perceive that violent excitement of mind will not only give rise to
-serious functional disorder, but actual organic disease, leading to the
-commission of suicide, how necessary does it appear that he to whose
-care is entrusted the lives of his fellow-creatures, should have made
-this department of philosophy a matter of serious consideration! It
-is no logical argument against the study of mental science, to urge
-that we are in total ignorance of the nature or constitution of the
-human understanding. We know nothing of the nature of objects which are
-cognizable to sense, and which can be submitted to actual experiment,
-and yet we are not deterred from the investigation of their properties
-and mutual influences. The passions are to be considered, in a medical
-point of view, as a part of our constitution. They stimulate or depress
-the mind, as food and drink do the body. Employed occasionally, and in
-moderation, both may be of use to us, and are given to us by nature for
-this purpose; but when urged to excess, the system is thrown off its
-balance, and disease is the result.
-
-To the medical philosopher, nothing can be more deeply interesting than
-to trace the reciprocity of action existing between different mental
-conditions, and affections of particular organs. Thus the passion of
-fear, when excited, has a sensible influence on the action of the
-heart; and when the disease of this organ takes place independently of
-any mental agitation, the passion of fear is powerfully roused. Anger
-affects the liver and confines the bowels, and frequently gives rise
-to an attack of jaundice; and in hepatic and intestinal disease, how
-irritable the temper is!
-
-Hope, or the anticipation of pleasure, affects the respiration; and
-how often do we see patients, in the last stage of pulmonary disease,
-entertaining sanguine expectations of recovery to the very last!
-
-As the passions exercise so despotic a tyranny over the physical
-economy, it is natural to expect that the crime of suicide should
-often be traced to the influence of mental causes. In many cases,
-it is difficult to discover whether the brain, the seat of the
-passions, be primarily or secondarily affected. Often the cause of
-irritation is situated at some distance from the cerebral organ; but
-when the fountain-head of the nervous system becomes deranged, it
-will react on the bodily functions, and produce serious disease long
-after the original cause of excitement is removed. It is not our
-intention to attempt to explain the _modus operandi_ of mental causes
-in the production of the suicidal disposition. That such effects
-result from an undue excitement of the mind cannot for one moment
-be questioned. Independently of mental perturbation giving rise to
-maniacal suicide, there are certain conditions of mind, dependent
-upon acquired or hereditary disposition, or arising from a defective
-expansion of the intellectual faculties, which originate the desire for
-self-destruction. These states will all be alluded to in the course of
-the present inquiry.
-
-Some idea of the influence of certain mental states on the body will
-be obtained by an examination of the various tables which have been
-published, in this and other countries, respecting the causes of
-suicide, as far as they could be ascertained.
-
-The following suicides were committed in London, between the years 1770
-and 1830:[19]—
-
- _Indication of Causes._ _Men._ _Women._
-
- Poverty 905 511
- Domestic grief 728 524
- Reverse of fortune 322 283
- Drunkenness and misconduct 287 208
- Gambling 155 141
- Dishonour and calumny 125 95
- Disappointed ambition 122 410
- Grief from love 97 157
- Envy and jealousy 94 53
- Wounded self-love 53 53
- Remorse 49 37
- Fanaticism 16 1
- Misanthropy 3 3
- Causes unknown 1381 377
- ———— ————
- Total 4337[20] 2853
-
-According to a table formed by Falret of the suicides which took place
-between 1794 and 1823, the following results appear:—Of 6782 cases, 254
-were from disappointed love, and of this number 157 were women; 92 were
-from jealousy; 125 from being calumniated; 49 from a desire, without
-the means, of vindicating their characters; 122 from disappointed
-ambition; 322 from reverses of fortune; 16 from wounded vanity; 155
-from gambling; 288 from crime and remorse; 723 from domestic distress;
-905 from poverty; 16 from fanaticism.
-
-In preparing the present work, we have endeavoured to obtain access to
-documents which would throw some light on the probable origin of the
-many cases of self-destruction which have taken place within the last
-four or five years. In many cases we could obtain no insight into the
-motives of the individuals; but in nine-tenths of those whose histories
-we succeeded in making ourselves somewhat conversant with, we found
-that mental causes played a very conspicuous part in the drama. Our
-experience on this point accords with that of many distinguished French
-physicians who have devoted their time and talents to the consideration
-of the subject.
-
-In considering the influence of mental causes, we shall in the first
-instance point out the effects of certain passions and dispositions
-of the individual on the body; then investigate the operation of
-education, irreligion, and certain unhealthy conditions of the mind
-which predispose the individual to derangement and suicide.
-
-There is no passion of the mind which so readily drives a person to
-suicide as remorse. In these cases, there is generally a shipwreck of
-all hope. To live is horror; the infuriated sufferer feels himself an
-outcast from God and man; and though his judgment may still be correct
-upon other subjects, it is completely overpowered upon that of his
-actual distress, and all he thinks of and aims at is to withdraw with
-as much speed as possible from the present state of torture, totally
-regardless of the future.
-
-
- “I would not if I could be blest,
- I want no other paradise but rest.”
-
-
-The most painfully interesting and melancholy cases of insanity are
-those in which remorse has taken possession of the mind. Simon Brown,
-the dissenting clergyman, fancied that he had been deprived by the
-Almighty of his immortal soul, in consequence of having accidentally
-taken away the life of a highwayman, although it was done in the act
-of resistance to his threatened violence, and in protection of his
-own person. Whilst kneeling upon the wretch whom he had succeeded in
-throwing upon the ground, he suddenly discovered that his prostrate
-enemy was deprived of life. This unexpected circumstance produced so
-violent an impression upon his nervous system, that he was overpowered
-by the idea of an involuntary homicide, and for this imaginary crime
-fancied himself ever afterwards condemned to one of the most dreadful
-punishments that could be inflicted upon a human being.
-
-A young lady was one morning requested by her mother to stay at home;
-notwithstanding which, she was tempted to go out. Upon her return to
-her domestic roof, she found that the parent whom she had so recently
-disobliged had expired in her absence. The awful spectacle of a
-mother’s corpse, connected with the filial disobedience which had
-almost immediately preceded, shook her reason from its seat, and she
-has ever since continued in a state of mental derangement.
-
-It is said that the solitary hours of Charles the Ninth of France were
-rendered horrible by the repetition of the shrieks and cries which had
-assailed his ears during the massacre of St. Bartholomew.[21]
-
-The death of Cardinal Beaufort is represented as truly terrible. The
-consciousness of having murdered the Duke of Gloucester is said to
-have rendered Beaufort’s death one of the most terrific scenes ever
-witnessed. Despair, in its worst form, appeared to take possession of
-his mind at the last moment. His concluding words, as recorded by
-Harpsfield,[22] were—“And must I then die? Will not all my riches save
-me? I could purchase the kingdom, if that would save my life. What! is
-there no bribing of death? When my nephew, the Duke of Bedford, died,
-I thought my happiness and my authority greatly increased; but the
-Duke of Gloucester’s death raised me in fancy to a level with kings,
-and I thought of nothing but accumulating still greater wealth, to
-purchase at last the triple crown. Alas! how are my hopes disappointed!
-Wherefore, O my friends, let me earnestly beseech you to pray for me,
-and recommend my departing soul to God!” A few minutes before his
-death, his mind appeared to be undergoing the tortures of the damned.
-He held up his two hands, and cried—“Away! away!—why thus do ye look at
-me?” It was evident he saw some horrible spectre by his bed-side. This
-last scene in the Cardinal’s life has been most ably delineated by the
-immortal Shakspeare:—
-
-
- SCENE—_The Cardinal’s Bed-chamber_.
-
- _Enter_ KING HENRY, SALISBURY, and WARWICK.
-
- _King Hen._ How fares my Lord? Speak, Beaufort, to thy sovereign.
-
- _Cardinal._ If thou be’st Death, I’ll give thee England’s treasure,
- Enough to purchase such another island,
- So thou wilt let me live, and feel no pain.
-
- _King Hen._ Ah! what a sign it is of evil life
- When death’s approach is seen so terrible.
-
- _Warwick._ Beaufort, it is thy sovereign speaks to thee.
-
- _Cardinal._ Bring me unto my trial when you will.
- Died he[23] not in his bed? Where should he die?
- Can I make men live whe’er they will or no?
- O, torture me no more, I will confess—
- Alive again? then shew me where he is:
- I’ll give a thousand pound to look upon him—
- He hath no eyes, the dust hath blinded them.—
- Comb down his hair; look! look! it stands upright,
- Like lime-twigs set to catch my winged soul.—
- Give me some drink, and bid the apothecary
- Bring the strong poison that I bought of him.
-
- _King Hen._ O thou eternal Mover of the Heav’ns,
- Look with a gentle eye upon this wretch.
- O, beat away the busy meddling fiend,
- That lays strong siege unto this wretch’s soul,
- And from his bosom purge this black despair.
-
- _Warwick._ See how the pangs of death do make him grin!
-
- _Salisbury._ Disturb him not; let him pass peaceably.
-
- _King Hen._ Peace to his soul, if God’s good pleasure be!
- Lord Cardinal, if thou think’st on heaven’s bliss,
- Lift up thy hand, make signal of thy hope.—
- He dies, and makes no sign—O God, forgive him!
-
- _Warwick._ So bad a death argues a monstrous life.
-
- _King Hen._ Forbear to judge, for we are sinners all.—
- Close up his eyes, and draw the curtain close,
- And let us all to meditation.[24]
-
-M. Guillon relates the following remarkable case:—“The Chevalier de S——
-had been engaged in seventeen ‘affairs of honour,’ in each of which his
-adversary fell. But the images of his murdered rivals began to haunt
-him night and day; and at length he fancied he heard nothing but the
-wailings and upbraidings of seventeen families—one demanding a father,
-another a son, another a brother, another a husband, &c. Harassed by
-these imaginary followers, he incarcerated himself in the monastery of
-La Trappe; but the French revolution threw open this asylum, and turned
-the chevalier once more into the world. He was now no longer able to
-bear the remorse of his own conscience, or, as he imagined, the sight
-of seventeen murdered men, and therefore put himself to death. It is
-evident that insanity was the consequence of the remorse, and the cause
-of the suicide.
-
-“No disease of the imagination is so difficult to cure as that which
-is complicated with the idea of guilt: fancy and conscience then act
-interchangeably upon us, and so often shift their places, that the
-illusions of one are not distinguished from the dictates of the other.
-If fancy presents images not moral or religious, the mind drives them
-away when they give pain; but when melancholy notions take the form of
-duty, they lay hold on the faculties without opposition, because we are
-afraid to exclude or banish them.”[25]
-
-How accurately has the poet depicted the tortures, the sleeplessness,
-of a guilty conscience:—
-
- “Though thy slumber may be deep,
- Yet thy spirit shall not sleep;
- There are shades which will not vanish,
- There are thoughts thou canst not banish;
- By a power to thee unknown,
- Thou canst never be alone;
- Thou art wrapt as with a shroud,
- Thou art gathered in a cloud;
- And for ever shalt thou dwell
- In the spirit of this spell.”
-
-A woman with her husband had been employed in a French hospital as
-servants for a considerable time. Having left their situations, the
-wife, _thirty years_ afterwards, declared she heard a voice within,
-commanding her to repair instantly to the chief commissioner of police,
-and confess the thefts she had committed during the time she was at
-the hospital. The fact was, that she had been guilty of appropriating
-occasionally to her own use a portion of the food supplied for the
-patients attached to the Institution. The commissioner listened to the
-woman’s story, and her demand that she should be punished, but refused
-to take any cognizance of the offence. She returned home, and for some
-time was extremely dejected. She became so miserable that existence was
-no longer desirable; and as the legal tribunals refused to punish her,
-she determined on suicide, which she committed at the age of fifty-one.
-
-It is admitted, by almost universal consent, that there is no affection
-of the mind that exerts so tremendous an influence over the human race
-as that of love.
-
- “To love, and feel ourselves beloved,”
-
-is said to constitute the height of human happiness. This sacred
-sentiment, which some have debased by the term passion, when unrequited
-and irregulated, produces the most baneful influence upon the system.
-
-“A youthful passion, which is conceived and cherished without any
-certain object, may be compared to a shell thrown from a mortar by
-night: it rises calmly in a brilliant track, and seems to mix, and
-even to dwell for a moment with the stars of heaven; but at length it
-falls—it bursts—consuming and destroying all around, even as itself
-expires.”[26]
-
-From the constitution of woman, from the peculiar position which she
-of necessity holds in society, we should, _à priori_, have concluded
-that in her we should see manifested this sentiment in all its purity
-and strength. Such is the fact. A woman’s life is said to be but the
-history of her affections. It is the soul within her soul; the pulse
-within her heart; the life blood along her veins, “blending with every
-atom of her frame.” Separated from the bustle of active life—isolated
-like a sweet and rare exotic flower from the world, it is natural to
-expect that the mind should dwell with earnestness upon that which is
-to constitute almost its very being, and apart from which it has no
-existence.
-
- “Alas! the love of woman, it is known
- To be a lovely and a fearful thing;
- For all of theirs upon that die is thrown;
- And if ’tis lost, life hath no more to bring
- To them, but mockeries of the past alone.”
-
- BYRON.
-
-The term “broken heart” is not a mere poetical image. Cases are
-recorded in which that organ has been ruptured in consequence of
-disappointed hope. Let those who are sceptical as to the fact that
-physical disease so often results from blighted affection, visit the
-wards of our public and private asylums. In those dreary regions of
-misery they will have an opportunity of witnessing the wreck of many
-a form that was once beauteous and happy. Ask their history, and you
-will be told of holy and sincere affection nipped in the bud—of wild
-and passionate love strangled at its birth—of the death of all human
-hopes, of a severance from those about whom every fibre of the soul had
-entwined itself. Silent and sullen grief, black despair,
-
- “And laughter loud, amidst severest woe,”
-
-are the painful images that meet the eye at every step we take through
-these “hells upon earth.”[27]
-
-In this country, the great majority of the cases of insanity among
-women, in our establishments devoted to the reception of the insane,
-can clearly be traced to unrequited and disappointed affection. This
-is not to be wondered at, if we consider the present artificial state
-of society. We make “merchandize of love;” both men and women are
-estimated, not by their mental endowments, not by their moral worth,
-not by their capacity of making the domestic fire-side happy, but
-by the length of their respective purses. Instead of seeking for a
-heart, we look for a dowry. Money is preferred to intellect; pure and
-unadulterated affection dwindles into nothingness when placed in the
-same scale with titles and worldly honours,
-
- “And Mammon wins his way
- Where seraphs might despair.”
-
-How little do those who ought to be influenced by more elevated motives
-calculate the seeds of wretchedness and misery which they are sowing
-for those who, by nature, have a right to demand that they should be
-actuated by other principles!
-
- “Shall I be won
- Because I’m valued as a _money-bag_?
- For that I bring to him who winneth me,”[28]
-
-says Catherine, in the spirit of honest indignation. It should be
-remembered that “wedlock joins nothing, if it joins not hearts.”
-
-How many melancholy cases of suicide can clearly be traced to this
-cause! Death is considered preferable to a long life of unmitigated
-sorrow. When the heart is seared, when there exists no “green spot
-in memory’s dreary waste,”—when all hope is banished from the mind,
-and wretched loneliness and desolation take up their residence in the
-heart, need it excite surprise that the quiet and rest of the grave is
-eagerly longed for! If a mind thus worked upon be not influenced by
-religious principles, self-destruction is the idea constantly present
-to the imagination.
-
-Of all the sufferings, however, to which we are exposed during our
-sojourn below, nothing is so truly overwhelming and irreparable as
-the death of one with whom all our early associations are inseparably
-linked—one endeared to us by the most pleasing recollections. Death
-leaves a blank in our existence; a cold shuddering shoots through the
-frame, a mist flits before our eyes, darkening the face of nature,
-when the heart that mingled all its feelings with ours lies, cold and
-insensible, in the silent grave.
-
-As long as life lasts, there is hope; but death snatches every ray
-of consolation from the mind. The only prop that supported us is
-removed, and the mansion crumbles to the dust; the mind becomes
-utterly and hopelessly wrecked. To say that this is but the effect on
-understandings constitutionally weak, is to say what facts will not
-establish. The most elevated and best cultivated minds are often the
-most sensitively alive to such impressions.
-
-The following case made considerable noise at Lyons, in 1770. A young
-gentleman of rank, of handsome exterior, possessing considerable mental
-endowments, and most respectably connected, fell in love with a young
-lady, who, like himself, possessed a handsome person, in union with
-accomplishments of a high order. They met; the passion was reciprocal,
-and the gentleman accordingly made an application to her parents to
-be allowed to consummate their bliss by marriage. The parents, as
-parents sometimes do under these circumstances, refused compliance.
-The gentleman took it greatly to heart; it preyed much upon his mind,
-and in the midst of his grief he burst a blood-vessel. His case was
-given over by the medical men. The young lady, on being made acquainted
-with his condition, paid him a clandestine visit, and they then agreed
-to destroy themselves. Accordingly the lady brought with her, on her
-next visit, two pistols and two daggers, in order that, if the pistols
-missed, the daggers might the next moment pierce their hearts. They
-embraced each other for the last time. Rose-coloured ribbons were tied
-to the triggers of the pistols; the lover holding the ribbon of his
-mistress’ pistol, while she held the ribbon of his; both fired at a
-given signal, and both fell at the same instant dead on the floor!
-
-The case now about to be recorded presents some peculiarly interesting
-features. An English lady, moving in the first circles of society,
-went, in company with her friends, to the opera at Paris. In the next
-box sat a gentleman, who appeared, from the notice he took of the
-lady, to be enamoured of her. The lady expressed herself annoyed at
-the observation which she had attracted, and moved to another part of
-the box. The gentleman followed the carriage home, and insisted upon
-addressing the lady, declaring that he had had the pleasure of meeting
-her elsewhere, and that one minute’s conversation would convince her
-of the fact, and do away with the unfavourable impression which his
-apparent rudeness might have made upon her mind. As his request did
-not appear at the moment unreasonable, she consented to see him for
-a minute by herself. In that short space of time he made a fervent
-declaration of his affection; acknowledged that desperation had
-compelled him to have recourse to a _ruse_ to obtain an interview,
-and that, unless she looked favourably on his pretensions, he would
-kill her and then himself. The lady expressed her indignation at the
-deceit he had practised, and said, with considerable firmness, that
-he must quit the house. He did so, retired to his home, and with a
-lancet opened a vein in his arm. He collected a portion of blood in a
-cup, and with it wrote a note to the lady, telling her that his blood
-was flowing fast from his body, and it should continue to flow until
-she consented to listen to his proposals. The lady, on the receipt of
-the note, sent her servant to see the gentleman, and found him, as
-he represented, actually bleeding to death. On the entreaty of the
-lady, the arm was bound up and his life saved. On writing to the lady,
-under the impression that she would now accept his addresses, he was
-amazed on receiving a cool refusal, and a request that he would not
-trouble her with any more letters. Again driven to desperation, he
-resolved effectually to kill himself. He accordingly loaded a pistol
-and directed his steps towards the residence of his fair amorosa,
-when, knocking at the door, he gained admission, and immediately
-blew out his brains. The intelligence was communicated to the lady,
-she became dreadfully excited, and a severe attack of nervous fever
-followed. When the acute symptoms subsided, her mind was completely
-deranged. Her insanity took a peculiar turn. She fancied she heard a
-voice commanding her to commit suicide, and yet she appeared to be
-possessed of sufficient reason to know that she was desirous of doing
-what she ought to be restrained from accomplishing. Every now and then
-she would exclaim, “Take away the pistol! I won’t hang myself! I won’t
-take poison!” Under the impression that she would kill herself, she
-was carefully watched; but notwithstanding the vigilance which was
-exercised she had sufficient cunning to conceal a knife, with which,
-during the temporary absence of the attendant, she stabbed herself in
-the abdomen, and died in a few hours. It appears that the idea that she
-had caused the death of another, and that she had it in her power to
-save his life by complying with his wishes, produced the derangement
-of mind under which she was labouring at the time of her death; and
-yet she did not manifest, and it was evident to everybody that she
-had not, the slightest affection for the gentleman who professed so
-much to admire her. Possessing naturally a sensitive mind, it was
-easily excited. The peculiar circumstances connected with her mental
-derangement were sufficient to account for the delusions under which
-she laboured. Altogether the case is full of interest.
-
-Few passions tend more to distract and unsettle the mind than that
-of jealousy. Insanity and suicide often owe their origin to this
-feeling. One of the most terrific pictures of the dire effects of this
-“green-eyed monster” on the mind is delineated in the character of
-Othello. In the Moor of Venice we witness a fearful struggle between
-fond and passionate love and this corroding mental emotion. Worked
-upon by the villainous artifices of Iago, Othello is led to doubt the
-constancy of Desdemona’s affection; the very doubt urges him almost to
-the brink of madness; but when he feels assured of her guilt, and sees
-the gulf into which he has been hurled, and the utter hopelessness of
-his condition, he abandons himself to despair. Nothing which the master
-spirit of Shakspeare ever penned can equal the exquisitely touching
-and melting pathos of the speech of the Moor when he becomes perfectly
-conscious of the wreck of one around whom every tendril of his heart
-had indissolubly interwoven itself. To be forcibly severed from one
-dearer to us than our own existence is a misfortune that requires much
-philosophy to bear up against; to be torn from a beloved object by
-death, to feel that the earth encloses in its cold embrace the idol
-of our affections, freezes the heart; but to be separated from one who
-has forfeited all claim to our affection and friendship, and who still
-lives, but lives in dishonour, must be a refinement of human misery.
-Need we then wonder that, when influenced by such feelings, Othello
-should thus give expression to the overflowings of his soul:—
-
- “Oh now, for ever,
- Farewell the tranquil mind! farewell content!
- Farewell the plumed troop, and the big wars,
- That make ambition virtue! Oh, farewell!
- Farewell the neighing steed, and the shrill trump,
- The spirit-stirring drum, th’ ear-piercing fife,
- The royal banner, and all quality,
- Pride, pomp, and circumstance of glorious war!
- And, oh, you mortal engines, whose rude throats
- Th’ immortal Jove’s dread clamours counterfeit,
- Farewell! Othello’s occupation’s gone!”
-
-It is under the infliction of such a concentration of misery that many
-a mind is shattered, and that death is courted as the only relief
-within its grasp. Othello, having discovered when it was too late that
-he had wrongly suspected Desdemona, and had sacrificed the life of the
-sweetest creature on earth, a combination of passions drives him to
-distraction, and under their influence he plunges the dagger into his
-heart. Jealousy was not, as some have supposed, the exclusive cause of
-Othello’s suicide.
-
-The following singular case attracted considerable notice fifteen
-years ago. A woman was subjected to much maltreatment by her husband.
-She was jealous of his attentions to one of the servants, and she had
-frequently declared, that if he persisted in insulting her under her
-own roof she would either cause his or her own death. On one occasion
-she was more than usually violent, and expressed her determination to
-ruin him. Fearful that she would carry her threat into execution, he
-had her placed in a room where there was no furniture, and nothing
-that she could use for the purpose of self-destruction. Her rage was
-greatly increased by this barbarous treatment, and her screams were
-sufficiently loud to alarm the whole neighbourhood. As her husband
-refused to release her from confinement, she determined no longer to
-submit to his brutal control, and resolved to commit suicide. Having no
-instrument that she could use, she felt some difficulty in effecting
-her purpose. She held her breath for some time, but that did not
-succeed. She then tried to strangle herself with her hands, but that
-mode was equally unsuccessful. Her determination was so resolutely
-fixed, that in desperation she tore her hair out by the roots. Still
-death did not come to her relief. In vain she searched in every corner
-of the room for something with which she might effectually take away
-her life. Just as she was beginning to give up the idea as hopeless,
-her eye caught a sight of the glass in the window; she instantly broke
-a pane, and with a piece of it endeavoured to cut her throat; and yet
-she could not succeed in effecting her horrid purpose. At last, as a
-dernier resort, she resolved to swallow a piece of the broken glass,
-hoping by this means to choke herself. She did so, and the glass stuck
-in her throat, and produced the most excruciating agony. Her groans
-became audible; the husband became alarmed, and opened the door, when
-he found his wife apparently in the last struggles of death. Medical
-relief was immediately obtained, and although everything that surgical
-ingenuity could suggest was had recourse to, she died, a melancholy
-spectacle of the effects of unsubdued passion.
-
-The two following cases shew how trifling a cause often incites to
-self-destruction:—
-
-Madame N——, a once famous dancer at the French opera-house, was taken
-to task by her husband for not acquitting herself so well in the ballet
-as she usually did. She exhibited indications of passion at the, as
-she thought, unmerited reproof. When she arrived home, she resolved to
-die, but was much puzzled to effect her purpose. The next morning, she
-purchased a potent poison, but when she returned to her home she found
-that her husband looked suspiciously at her, and appeared to watch her
-movements. She then made up her mind to take the fatal draught in the
-evening, as she was going in the carriage to the opera. She accordingly
-did so; the poison did not have an immediate effect. The ballet
-commenced, and Madame N—— was led on the stage; and it was not until
-she had commenced dancing that she began to feel the draught producing
-the desired effect. She complained of illness, and was removed to her
-dressing-room, where she expired in the arms of her husband, confessing
-that she had, in a fit of chagrin at his rebuke, swallowed poison!
-
-A young gentleman, of considerable promise, of high natural and
-acquired attainments, had been solicited to make a speech at a public
-meeting, which was to take place in the town in which he resided. As
-he had never attempted to address extemporaneously a public body,
-he expressed himself extremely nervous as to the result, and asked
-permission to withdraw his name from the published list of speakers.
-This wish was not, however, complied with, as it was thought that when
-the critical moment arrived he would not be found wanting even in the
-art of public speaking. He had prepared himself with considerable care
-for the attempt. His name was announced from the chair; when he rose
-for the purpose of delivering his sentiments. The exordium was spoken
-without any hesitation; and his friends felt assured that he would
-acquit himself with great credit. He had not, however, advanced much
-beyond his prefatory observations, when he hesitated, and found himself
-incapable of proceeding. He then sat down, evidently excessively
-mortified. In this state he retired to a room where the members of the
-committee had previously met, and cut his throat with his penknife. He
-wounded the carotid artery, and died in a few minutes.
-
-A case of suicide from mortified pride, somewhat similar to the last,
-occurred some years ago in London. A gentleman, whose imagination was
-much more active than his judgment, conceived that he was possessed of
-histrionic powers equal to those which were exhibited by the immortal
-Garrick. A manager of a London theatre, to whom he was introduced,
-allowed him to make his débût at his theatre. As is often the case,
-the public formed a different estimate of his abilities to that which
-the vanity of the young aspirant had induced him to form; and the
-consequence was, that he was well hissed and hooted for his presumption
-in attempting a character for which his talents so little adapted him.
-Being naturally sensitive, his failure preyed on his mind; and under
-the influence of the mortification, he hung himself, leaving in his
-room the following laconic epistle, addressed to his mother:—
-
-“MY DEAR MOTHER,—All my hopes have been ruined. I fancied myself a man
-of genius; the reality has proved me to be a fool. I die, because life
-is no longer to be supported. Look charitably on this last action of my
-life. Adieu!”
-
-A common cause of suicide is the feeling of false pride. The only
-reason assigned for the desperate act of Elizabeth Moyes, who
-threw herself from the Monument, was, that, owing to the reduced
-circumstances of her father, (a baker,) it was determined that she
-should procure a situation at a confectioner’s, and support herself.
-This she allowed to prey upon her mind, although she expressed a
-concurrence in the propriety of the course suggested. How true it is—
-
- “Abstract what others feel, what others think,
- All pleasures sicken, and all glories sink.”
-
- POPE.
-
-Owing to the fictitious notions abroad in society, the ridiculously
-false views which are taken of worldly honours, the ideas which
-a sickly sentimentality infuses into the mind, this feeling is
-engendered, to an alarming extent, through the different ranks of
-society. This constitutes one great element which is undermining and
-disorganizing our social condition. A fictitious value is affixed to
-wealth and position in the world; it is estimated for itself alone, all
-other considerations being placed out of view.
-
- “None think the great unhappy but the great.”
-
-Vatel committed suicide because he was not able to prepare as sumptuous
-an entertainment as he wished for his guests.
-
-We cannot conceive how this evil is to be obviated, unless it be
-possible to revolutionize the ideas which are generally attached to
-fame and worldly grandeur. It is difficult to persuade such persons
-that the end of fame is merely
-
- “To have, when the original is dust,
- A name, a wretched picture, and worse bust.”
-
-There is a nameless, undefinable something, that the world is taught
-to sigh after—is always in search of; a moral _ignis fatuus_, which
-is dazzling to lead it from the road which points to true and
-unsophisticated happiness.
-
-Persons naturally proud are less able than others to bear up against
-the distresses of life; they are more severely galled by the yoke of
-adversity; and hence this passion often produces mental derangement.
-Such characters exhibit a morbid desire for praise; it acts like moral
-nourishment to their souls; it is a stimulus that is almost necessary
-to their very being, forgetting that
-
- “Praise too dearly loved, or warmly sought,
- Enfeebles all eternal weight of thought;
- ’Till the fond soul, within itself unblest,
- _Leans for all pleasure on another’s breast_.”
-
-Dr. Reid justly observes, that “he who enters most deeply into the
-misfortunes of others, will be best able to bear his own. A practical
-benevolence, by habitually urging us to disinterested exertion, tends
-to alienate the attention from any single train of ideas, which, if
-favoured by indolence and self contemplation, might be in danger
-of monopolizing the mind, and occasions us to lose a sense of our
-personal concerns in an enlarged and liberal sympathy with the general
-good.”
-
-Villeneuve, the celebrated French admiral, when he was taken prisoner
-and brought to England, was so much grieved at his defeat that he
-studied anatomy in order to destroy himself. For this purpose he bought
-some anatomical plates of the heart, and compared them with his own
-body, in order to ascertain the exact situation of that organ. On
-his arrival in France, Buonaparte ordered that he should remain at
-Rennes, and not proceed to Paris. Villeneuve, afraid of being tried by
-a court-martial for disobedience of orders, and consequently losing
-his fleet, (for Napoleon had ordered him not to sail or to engage the
-English,) determined to destroy himself; and accordingly took his
-plates and compared them with the position of his heart. Exactly in the
-centre he made a mark with a large pin; then fixed it, as near as he
-could judge, in the same spot in his own breast, and shoved it on to
-its head; it penetrated his heart, and he expired. When the room was
-opened, he was found dead, the pin through his breast, and a mark in
-the plate corresponding with the wound.[29]
-
-It has been said that after the death of Josephine, and when Buonaparte
-was overwhelmed with misfortunes, he attempted suicide. Those who
-consider Napoleon immaculate deny the accuracy of the charge. But in
-order to give the reader an opportunity of judging for himself, we lay
-before him Sir Walter Scott’s account of the transaction referred to.
-“Buonaparte,” he observes, “belonged to the Roman school of philosophy;
-and it is confidently reported by Baron Fane, his secretary—though not
-universally believed—that he designed to escape from life by an act of
-suicide. The Emperor, according to this account, had carried with him,
-ever since his retreat from Moscow, a packet containing a preparation
-of opium, made up in the same manner with that used by Condorcet,
-for self-destruction. His valet-de-chambre, in the night of the 12th
-or 13th of April, heard him arise, and pour something into a glass
-of water, drink, and return to bed. In a short time afterwards the
-man’s attention was called by sobs and stifled groans; an alarm took
-place in the chateau; some of the principal persons were roused, and
-repaired to Napoleon’s chamber. Yvan, the surgeon who had procured him
-the poison, was also summoned; but hearing the Emperor complain that
-the operation of the potion was not quick enough, he was seized with a
-panic of terror, and fled from the palace at full gallop. Napoleon took
-the remedies recommended, and a long fit of stupor ensued, with profuse
-perspiration. He awakened much exhausted, and surprised at finding
-himself still alive. He said aloud, after a few moments’ reflection,
-‘Fate will not have it so;’ and afterwards appeared reconciled to
-undergo his destiny without similar attempts at personal violence.”
-Napoleon’s illness was, at the time, imputed to indigestion. A general
-of the highest distinction transacted business with Napoleon on the
-morning of the 13th of April. He seemed pale and dejected, as from
-recent and exhausting illness. His only dress was a night-gown and
-slippers; and he drank, from time to time, a quantity of ptisan, or
-some such liquid, which was placed beside him, saying he had suffered
-severely during the night, but that his complaint had left him.[30]
-
-We cannot conceive a more piteous condition than that of a man of
-great ambition without the powers of mind which are indispensable for
-its gratification. In him a constant contest is going on between an
-intellect constitutionally weak, and a desire to distinguish himself
-in some particular department of life. How often a man so unhappily
-organized ends his career in a mad-house, or terminates his miserable
-existence by suicide! Let men be taught to make correct estimates of
-their own capabilities, to curb in the imagination, to cease “building
-castles in the air,” if we wish to advance their mental and bodily
-health. “_Ne sutor ultra crepidam_,” said Apelles to the cobbler. A
-young man who “penned a stanza when he ought to engross,” blew out his
-brains because he had failed in inducing a London publisher to purchase
-an epic poem which he had written, and which he had the vanity to
-conceive was equal to Paradise Lost, forgetting that, in order to be a
-poet,—
-
- “Nature’s kindling breath
- Must fire the chosen genius; nature’s hand
- Must string his nerves and imp his eagle wings.”
-
-That this state of mind predisposes and often leads to the commission
-of suicide, numerous cases testify.
-
-Despair often drives men to suicide. The dread of poverty and want;
-the hopes in which we often injudiciously place too much of our
-happiness entirely blasted; either honest or false pride humbled by
-public or private contempt; ambitious views suddenly and unexpectedly
-disappointed; pains of the body, the loss of those dear and near to
-us,—tend to originate this feeling, and induce the unhappy person to
-seek relief in self-murder.
-
-How terrible is the situation of the man exposed to the influence of
-this passion, and deprived of the cheering and elevating influence
-of hope! We had an opportunity, some years back, of witnessing the
-case of a maniac, whose derangement of mind consisted in his having
-abandoned himself completely to despair. He laboured under no distinct
-or prominent delusion, but his mental alienation consisted in the total
-absence of all prospect of relief. The iron had entered his very soul;
-he appeared as if the hand of a relentless destiny had written on the
-threshold of his door, as on the gate of the Inferno of Dante, the
-heart-rending sentence, “Abandon all hope!”
-
-A woman is seduced by some heartless and profligate wretch; she is in
-a short time forsaken and left to her fate. Her mind recurs to the
-past; she recalls to recollection her once happy state of innocence and
-peace. Scorned by the world, shunned by her relations and friends, she
-is driven to a state of agonizing distraction. Despair, in its worst
-features, takes possession of her mind, and under this feeling she puts
-an end to her existence. A man under the operation of this passion
-wrote as follows:—
-
-“It has pleased the Almighty to weaken my understanding, to undermine
-my reason, and to render me unfit for the discharge of my duty. My
-blood rolls in billows and torrents of despair. It must have vent.
-How? I possess a place to which I am a dishonour, inasmuch as I am
-incapable of discharging it properly; I prevent some better man from
-doing it more justice. This piece of bread which I lament is all that I
-have to support myself and family; even this I do not merit; I eat it
-in sin, and yet I live. Killing thought! which a conscience hitherto
-uncorrupted inspires. I have a wife, also, and my child reproaches me
-with its existence. But you do not know, my dear friends, that if my
-unhappy life is not speedily ended, my weak head will require all your
-care, and I shall become a burthen rather than an assistance to you.
-It is better that I yield myself a timely sacrifice to misfortune,
-than, by permitting the delusion to continue longer, I consume the
-last farthing of my wife’s inheritance. It is a duty of every person
-to do that which his situation requires; reason commands it, religion
-approves. My life, such as it is, is a mere animal life, devoid of
-reason; in my mind, a life which stands in opposition to duty is moral
-death, and worse than that which is natural. In favour of the few whose
-life I cannot render happy, it is at least my duty not to become an
-oppression. I ought to relieve them from a weight which sooner or later
-cannot fail to crush them.”
-
-This unfortunate man, after penning the above account of his morbid
-feelings, sent his wife to church on Sunday, May 13th, 1783; and
-after writing an addition to his journal, took a pair of scissors and
-attempted, although unsuccessfully, to terminate his life by cutting
-his throat. He then opened the arteries at the wrists, and again failed
-in destroying himself; he staggered to the window, and saw his wife
-returning home, upon which he seized a knife used for killing deer, and
-stabbed himself in the heart. He was lying weltering in his blood when
-his wife came in, but was not quite dead. M. le Clarc, who relates the
-case, observes, that he was a man of understanding, and of a lively
-wit. He possessed a great deal of theoretical learning; his heart was
-incorruptibly honest. Like every calm and determined self-murderer, he
-was proud; but his pride was not the pride of rank, of riches, or of
-learning, but that divine pride which arises from a consciousness of
-incorruptible honesty, and of being possessed of good powers of mind.
-The office he held was that of an assistant judge in a small college of
-justice at Insterberg. His mother had been once deranged in her mind.
-
-Few persons have given a more striking example of this passion than the
-Abbé de Rancé, when first touched with remorse for the enormity of his
-past life, and before the disturbed state of his mind had settled into
-that turn for religious seclusion and mortification which produced the
-appalling austerities of La Trappe. “To a state of frantic despair,”
-says Don Lancelot, in his letter to La Mère Angelique of Port Royal,
-“succeeded a black melancholy. He sent away all his friends, and shut
-himself up in his mansion at Veret, where he would not see a creature.
-His whole soul, nay, even his bodily wants, seemed wholly absorbed in
-a deep and settled gloom. Shut up in a single room, he even forgot to
-eat and drink; and when the servant reminded him that it was bed-time,
-he started as from a deep reverie, and seemed unconscious that it
-was not still morning. When he was better, he would often wander in
-the woods for the entire day, wholly regardless of the weather. A
-faithful servant, who sometimes followed him by stealth, often watched
-him standing for hours together in one place, the snow and the rain
-beating on his head, whilst he, unconscious of his position, was wholly
-absorbed in painful recollections. Then, at the fall of a leaf, or the
-noise of the deer, he would awake as from a slumber, and, wringing
-his hands, hasten to bury himself in a thicker part of the wood, or
-else throw himself prostrate, with his face in the snow, and groan
-bitterly.”[31]
-
-How many commit suicide from what is termed a _blind impulse_! They
-fancy that an internal voice tells them to kill themselves; and
-considering it impossible to resist what they term a destiny, they do
-so. A gentleman, a merchant of the city of London, had been exposed to
-great mental perturbation; his nervous system had received a severe
-shock. He suffered extremely from a dread of going mad. As he was
-walking home one afternoon, he heard a voice say, “Kill thyself!”
-“Commit suicide!” and from that moment he could not banish the idea
-from his mind. Two or three times he was on the eve of obeying the
-mandate of this internal voice; but he fortunately possessed sufficient
-resolution to resist the temptation. In this state of mind he consulted
-a physician, who ordered him to be cupped in the neighbourhood of the
-head. His bowels were attended to, and he was recommended to visit
-some friends in the north of Scotland, and to banish from his mind all
-ideas connected with business. He followed the advice of his judicious
-physician, and in a short time he completely recovered.
-
-In the midst of health apparently perfect and uniform, a man was
-attacked with a sudden disposition to destroy. He seized a stick,
-raised it, struck indiscriminately and broke everything that presented
-itself to him. After some seconds, the stick fell from his hands,
-and he appeared restored to himself. The man knew nothing of what he
-had just done. He was reproached, he was shewn the remnants of the
-things that he had broken; he thought they were ridiculing him, and
-he was greatly irritated. He was again seized with frenzy, and killed
-a person. He was taken before a court of justice, acquitted on the
-ground of insanity, and placed in an hospital. This disposition to
-destroy returned at distant intervals; it then came on more frequently;
-and finally, changed into fits of epilepsy. A person seized with
-this morbid desire is not always unconscious of the approach of the
-disposition; he has sometimes a presentiment of it, perceives its
-danger, seeks to combat it, and frequently succeeds in effecting his
-purpose.
-
-A labourer, at the end of his day’s work, felt himself seized with an
-irresistible desire of running; he rushed upon the quay, which goes
-from the Louvre to the Grève: every obstacle was overcome. An attempt
-was made to stop him, but it was not successful. At last he dexterously
-engaged one of his arms in the wheel of a carriage, which happened to
-be within his reach. Thus withheld, he recovered his breath, became
-calm, and appeared to have no idea of what had occurred. This feeling
-was again manifested, and he was properly sent by his friends to an
-hospital, when it was discovered that he had a disease of the spinal
-marrow.
-
-A man arrived upon the Pont Neuf; he rushed violently to the parapet,
-and precipitated himself into the Seine. He was seen by some of the
-bystanders, who drew him out of the water and saved his life. After
-some days of complete restoration, his friends asked him the reason of
-his strange conduct. He replied, “I cannot give any account. I am in
-the happiest situation in the world. I have only to play with fortune
-and with men. I have never been ill. I do not know what troubles may
-come upon me. I can only recollect my arrival on the Pont Neuf, and my
-recall to life.”
-
-The particulars of the following fact are recorded in Mrs. Mathews’
-life of her husband. Mathews the comedian had lived for some days a
-vapid and inactive life. His spirit had been pressed down, “cabin’d,
-cribb’d, confin’d.” In this state of mind, a party of gentlemen called
-upon him, and proposed a day’s excursion. Accordingly, they all mounted
-their horses. Mrs. Mathews says—“My husband’s depressed spirits were
-exhilarated by the beauty of the weather, and the prospect of a day’s
-pleasure (free from the restraint of a room, listening to truisms) in
-the open air, where he would have uncontrolled power to gaze upon his
-idol, Nature, in her most beautiful form. He had not ridden out of
-the city for some weeks, and was in a state of childish delight and
-excitement. At this moment his eyes turned upon one of the party, a
-very little man, who was perched on a very tall horse, and who seemed
-unusually grave and important. Mr. Mathews looked at him for a moment;
-and the next, knocked him off with a smart blow, felling him to the
-ground. The whole party were struck with horror; but no one felt more
-shocked than he who had committed the outrage. He dismounted, picked up
-the little victim to his unaccountable freak, declared himself unable
-to give any motive for the action, but that it was an impulse he could
-not resist; and afterwards, in relating this extraordinary incident, he
-declared his conviction that it was done in a moment of frenzy, induced
-by the too sudden reaction from previous stagnation of all freedom and
-amusement.”
-
-A young woman, about twenty years of age, who had been insane but a
-short time, and appeared to be recovering, after having assisted to
-whitewash and clean a ward in an asylum in which she was confined, was
-sitting, in the evening, taking tea with the nurse and several other
-inmates. She took advantage of the opportunity when the nurse went to
-the cupboard for some sugar to seize a knife with which some bread had
-just been cut; and in the presence of the whole party, in an instant,
-before her hand could be arrested, cut her throat in so dreadful a
-manner that she died almost immediately.
-
-A patient in the Asylum at Wakefield, the wife of a labourer, a
-kind-hearted and clever woman, was afflicted with such a propensity
-to destroy that she was almost constantly obliged to be kept in
-confinement; and when at liberty, she could not resist the pleasure
-of breaking anything she met with. In one instance, she saw some
-tea-cups on a table, and for some time walked backwards and forwards,
-and checked the inclination; but eventually the temptation proved too
-strong, and she swept them at once on to the floor. She afterwards
-regretted the circumstance; but the impulse was too powerful to be
-resisted.
-
-A monomaniac (says Esquirol) heard a voice within him repeat these
-words—“_Kill thyself! kill thyself!_” He therefore committed suicide,
-in obedience to this superior power, whose order he dare not withstand.
-
-A man, under a religious hallucination, believed himself to be in
-communication with the Deity. He fancied he heard a celestial voice
-saying—“_My son, come and seat thyself by my side._” He opened the
-window to obey the invitation, fell down, and fractured his leg. When
-he was carried to his bed, he expressed the greatest astonishment on
-finding that he had precipitated himself from the window.
-
-A young lady of considerable beauty was accosted in the street by a
-strange gentleman. She took no notice at first of the unwarrantable
-liberty; but on finding that he persisted in following her, she
-attempted, by quickening her pace, to escape. Being extremely timid,
-and having naturally a very nervous temperament, she was much excited.
-The person in the garb of a gentleman followed her for nearly a mile,
-and when he saw that she was home, he suddenly turned down a street,
-and disappeared. The young lady expressed herself extremely ill soon
-after she entered the house. A physician was sent for, who declared his
-astonishment at her severe illness from a cause so trifling. During
-the following night she manifested indications of mental derangement,
-with a disposition to commit suicide. A strait-waistcoat was procured,
-and all apprehensions of her succeeding in gratifying the propensity of
-self-destruction was removed. Some weeks elapsed before she recovered.
-To all appearance she was perfectly well. She had no recollection of
-what had transpired, and expressed herself amazed when she was told
-that she had wished to kill herself. Two months after she left her bed
-she was missed. Search was made in every direction, but in vain. After
-the lapse of two days, she was discovered floating in a pond of water
-several miles from her home. In her pocket was discovered a piece of
-paper, on which were written the following lines:—“Oh, the misery and
-wretchedness I have experienced for the last month no one but myself
-can tell. A demon haunts me—life is insupportable. A voice tells me
-that I am destined to fall by my own hands. I leave this world for
-another, where I hope to enjoy more happiness. Adieu.”
-
-We have no doubt that in this case, although the acute symptoms of
-insanity had subsided, she had not recovered completely her sane
-state of mind. None but those conversant with the subject of mental
-derangement would believe that so trifling a circumstance as that of
-being spoken to in the street would have produced so violent an attack
-of maniacal delirium as was witnessed in the case of this poor girl.
-
-M. Esquirol states that he has never seen an unequivocal instance
-of any individual drawn to the commission of suicide by a kind of
-irresistible impulse, independently of any secret grievance, real or
-imaginary. Could the secret feelings of these suicides be accurately
-ascertained, there would generally, if not always, be found some
-lurking source of discontent, real or fanciful, in the breast, which
-serve as motives to their suicidal propensity. Many instances are on
-record, it is true, where men have put a period to their existence
-without any apparent visible cause or motive; but as Rousseau has
-justly observed, “_Le bonheur n’a point d’enseigne exterieur: pour en
-juger, il faudrait lire dans le cœur de l’homme heureux_.”
-
-“Individuals,” says Esquirol, “who appear outwardly the residence of
-happiness, are often inwardly the focus of chagrin, and tortured with
-distracting passions. That man can destroy his own life, being at the
-same time happy in his mind, is a phenomenon which human reason cannot
-comprehend.”
-
-A diseased temperament, a serious lesion of one or more of the viscera,
-a gradual exhaustion of the energies of the system, may so aggravate
-the miseries of life as to hasten the period of voluntary death. But
-how are we to account for the irresistible propensity to suicide which
-sometimes exists, independent of any apparent mental or physical
-ailments? A melancholic, whose case was published in Fourcroy’s Medical
-Journal of 1792, once said, “I am in prosperous circumstances; I have a
-wife and a child who constitute my happiness; I cannot complain of bad
-health, and still I feel a horrible propensity to throw myself into the
-Seine.” His declaration was too fatally verified in the event. Crichton
-was once consulted upon the case of a young man, twenty-four years
-of age, in full vigour and health, who was tormented by periodical
-accessions of these gloomy feelings and propensities. At those times
-he meditated his own destruction. But on a nearer view of the fatal
-act, he shrunk back into himself, and recoiled with horror from its
-execution. Without relinquishing his project, he never had the courage
-to accomplish it. “It is in cases like these,” says Crichton, “that
-energetic measures of coercion, and the effectual excitement of terror,
-should lend their aid to the powers of medicine and regimen.”
-
-In many cases of suicide, the act is preceded by a long train of
-perverted reasoning. These individuals become taciturn, morose,
-pusillanimous, and distrustful. The future presents itself to their
-view under the most unfavourable aspect, and despair becomes painted
-on their countenances. Their eyes become hollow; they complain of
-sleeplessness, and are disturbed by frightful dreams. The bowels are
-in an inactive state; the functions of the liver become to a certain
-extent suspended. It is in this state that they contemplate the idea
-of suicide; and the diaries which some have kept of their sensations
-and thoughts disclose the various kinds of death which they have
-contemplated and rejected, one after another, often for reasons the
-most preposterous and ridiculous. It is singular that in these journals
-they generally endeavour to hide their despondency and their mental
-aberration, while their moral and intellectual weakness is sure to be
-betrayed. They often accuse themselves of insanity, and bewail their
-unhappy lot; others argue most ingeniously in favour of their meditated
-suicide. Others again, subdued as it were by the force of the moral and
-religious principles which they have imbibed, represent to themselves
-that the act they contemplate is contrary to the moral end for which
-man was created—fatal to the welfare and happiness of their families.
-Then ensues a conflict in their breasts. If reason and religion
-prevail, the project is abandoned,—sometimes abandoned altogether. If
-otherwise, the suicide is committed. Falret knew the case of a woman
-who exhibited a tendency to suicide, but who was delivered for a period
-from the commission of the crime by the principles of religion in which
-her mind had been educated. A long period elapsed before she could
-reconcile herself to the act of suicide, and then she argued herself
-into it by the following piece of sophistry:—“There are no general
-rules without exceptions; and I am the precise exception in this
-case: therefore I may commit suicide without violating my religious
-principles.”
-
-Having once conceived the idea of suicide, the mind is often rendered
-so miserable in consequence of it, that the person rushes into the arms
-of death in order to escape from the terrible state of anticipation.
-Others meditate on the bloody deed for years. Rousseau, after drawing
-a piteous portrait of his proscribed and solitary condition, and of
-the state of his health, adds, “_Puisque mon corps n’est plus pour moi
-qu’un embarras, un obstacle à mon repos, cherchons donc à m’en degager
-le plus tôt que je pourrai_.”
-
-_Tedium vitæ_, or _ennui_, is said to be a frequent cause of suicide.
-We have heard of an Englishman who hanged himself in order to avoid the
-trouble of pulling off and on his clothes. Goëthe knew a gardener, and
-the overseer of some extensive pleasure-grounds, who once splenetically
-exclaimed, “Shall I see these clouds for ever passing, then, from
-east to west?” So singularly developed was this weariness of life,
-this feeling of satiety, in one of our distinguished men, that it is
-said of him that he viewed with dissatisfaction the return of spring,
-and wished, by way of change, that everything would, for once, be red
-instead of green.[32]
-
- “—— Within that ample nich,
- With every quaint device of splendour rich,
- Yon phantom, who, from vulgar eyes withdrawn,
- Appears to stretch in one eternal yawn:
- Of empire here he holds the tottering helm,
- Prime-minister in Spleen’s discordant realm,
- The pillar of her spreading state, and more,
- Her darling offspring, whom on earth she bore.
- For, as on earth his wayward mother strayed,
- Grandeur, with eyes of fire, her form surveyed,
- And with strong passion starting from his throne,
- Unloos’d the sullen queen’s reluctant zone.
- From his embrace, conceived in moody joy,
- Rose the round image of a bloated boy:
- His nurse was, Indolence; his tutor, Pomp,
- Who kept the child from every childish romp.
- They rear’d their nursling to the bulk you see,
- And his proud parents called their imp—_Ennui_.”
-
- _Hayley’s Triumphs of Temper._
-
-It is rare for an Englishman to commit suicide from ennui. The English
-are different in this respect from the French people. The causes which
-lead to suicide in this country, are those connected with sudden
-reverse of fortune, or grievous disappointments, which are allowed to
-prey upon the mind until the individual seeks relief in the arms of
-death. In great commercial communities, where men may be reduced, in a
-few minutes, from affluence to beggary; where the hopes and aspirations
-of years are levelled in a moment to the dust, and the individual finds
-himself exposed to the insulting pity of friends, and the searching
-curiosity of the public, we need not feel surprise, when all these
-circumstances rush upon a man’s mind in the sudden convulsion and
-turbulence of its elements, that he should welcome the only escape from
-the abyss into which he has been hurled.
-
-It has been stated, by a competent authority, that the week following
-the drawing of the last lottery in England, no less than fifty suicides
-were committed!
-
-_M. Gase_, in a memoir read before the _Academie Royale de Médecine_,
-traces the increase of suicide in Paris to the spirit of gambling
-which the Parisians so passionately indulge in. The extended system of
-speculation in this country approximates in its pernicious effects on
-the constitution to those which have been considered to result from
-gambling. The following case, which was communicated to a popular
-journal, by Dr. J. Johnson, forcibly illustrates how the constitution
-may be undermined by rash, inconsiderate conduct, during the excitement
-arising from temporary circumstances:—
-
-One day, on the Stock Exchange, when the rumours of failings at home
-and commotions abroad were producing such alarming vacillations in the
-public funds that the whole property of a gentleman of high probity,
-temperance, and respectability, was in momentary jeopardy, he found
-himself in so terrible a state of nervous agitation that he was obliged
-to leave the scene of confusion, and apply to wine, though quite
-unaccustomed to more than a glass or two after dinner. To his utmost
-surprise, the wine had no apparent effect, though he drank glass after
-glass, in rapid succession, until he had finished a whole bottle.
-Not the slightest inebriating influence was induced by this unusual
-quantity taken before dinner. His nervous agitation was, however,
-calmed, and he went back to the Exchange, and transacted business with
-steadiness, composure, and equanimity. None of the ordinary effects
-of wine were produced at the time, but a few days afterwards he was
-seized with a severe attack of indigestion, a malady by which he had
-never been previously affected. This case shews that although mental
-agitation masks, or even prevents, the usual effects of wine, and
-other stimulants, at the time, and thus enables, and indeed induces,
-men to take more than under ordinary circumstances, yet the ulterior
-effects are greatly worse on the constitution than if the stimulants
-had produced the usual excitement at the moment of their reception into
-the stomach. It is thus, we have no doubt, that the nervous system
-of thousands in this country is ruined, and, in numerous cases, the
-seeds of suicidal derangement sown, and that without the victims being
-conscious of the channel through which they have been poisoned.
-
-Defective education is a frequent cause of suicide. At the present
-day, the ornamental has taken the place of the substantial; the showy
-and specious, the situation of the solid and virtuous. The endowments
-of the mind and cultivation of the heart are forced to yield to the
-external accomplishments and graces of the body, and polished manners
-are too generally preferred to sound morals. The importance of fashion
-is inculcated in opposition to reason; religion is made to bow down
-before the shrine of honour; and the fear of the world is taught to
-supersede the fear of God. But what superstructure can be raised
-on so sandy a foundation? It can support no incumbent weight; and,
-in consequence, it cannot be deemed surprising that an inundation
-of folly and vice, like a sweeping torrent, should bear down all
-before it. The dignity of personal worth and character is a point
-too little considered. Brilliant parts supersede sound judgment;
-and disinterested virtue, integrity, and public spirit, are out of
-character in a nation immersed in voluptuousness. Education of a
-light and frivolous character leads to a vacuity of serious thoughts
-and solid principles of conduct. Luxury and profligacy, in all ages,
-have operated injuriously on the human mind. Cato the elder observes
-that there could be no friendship in a man whose palate had quicker
-sensations than his brain and heart. The man who has no internal
-sources of enjoyment to fly to when others fail,—he whose happiness
-consists in an indulgence in the pleasures of the senses, when these
-ephemeral sources of gratification are removed, will, to avoid the
-vacuum which is made in his existence, readily terminate his own life.
-
-There cannot be a doubt but that the general diffusion of knowledge,
-and the desire to place within the command of the humblest person
-the advantages of education, have not a little tended to promote the
-crime of suicide. It may be opposed to all our _à priori_ reasoning
-to suppose that, in proportion as the intellect becomes expanded,
-knowledge and civilization diffused, the desire to commit self-murder
-would be engendered. It is an indisputable fact, that insanity, in
-all its variations, is in a ratio to the refinement and civilization
-of a country. “It is clearly proved,” says Brown, “that in Finéstre,
-where the people are in a deplorable state of ignorance, and education
-is entirely neglected, only twelve in a hundred of the inhabitants
-being able to write or read, few suicides occur, at least only in
-the proportion of one in 25,000. In Paris, that focus of all that is
-brilliant and imposing in science and literature, the crime is of
-common occurrence. In Coréze, where only twelve in the hundred can
-read or write, one suicide in 47,000 occurs; and in the High Loire one
-in 163,000. On the other hand, in Oise and Lower Seine, both places
-in possession of the highest degree of general instruction, and of
-the means of advancing in improvement, suicides occur in every 5000
-or 9000 inhabitants. In the north of France, Catholicism has been
-nearly extirpated, and there suicide and crime predominate; south
-of the Loire, on the contrary, it still retains a strong hold of the
-affections of the people, and there suicide, and its sinister crimes
-or maladies are comparatively rare. This affords a noble proof that
-the effects of Christianity, in whatever form and under whatever
-circumstances, are peace and joy.”[33]
-
-It is our firm belief that the increase of suicide in this country is
-to a certain extent to be traced to the atrocious doctrines promulgated
-with such zeal by the sect of modern infidels, who falsely denominate
-themselves _Socialists_; a class whose opinions are subversive of all
-morality and Christianity, and which sap the foundation of society
-itself. It is natural to expect when such principles of infidelity are
-inculcated, when men are taught to believe in the non-existence of a
-God, and to consider they are not accountable agents, and are under the
-operation of an organization over which they have no control, that they
-should look with philosophic indifference on suicide, and consider it
-as a justifiable mode of putting an end to the misery and wretchedness
-engendered by their own opinions. Such doctrines must of necessity
-be productive of great evil to society; and it becomes the duty of
-every Christian and well-wisher to his fellow-men to hold them up to
-reprobation. The opinions of Owen strike at the root of all order,
-and of all virtue, social and public, and break down every barrier of
-law and restraint, making the passions the only standard of right and
-wrong—the animal appetites the only test of virtue and vice.
-
-In the Bishop of Exeter’s able speech in the House of Lords, on
-the subject of Socialism, he stated that cases of suicide under
-circumstances of the most dreadful suffering had occurred, which had
-been brought about by Mr. Owen’s pernicious doctrines. The learned
-prelate related the particulars of the following case:—Mr. Parke,
-a most respectable inhabitant of Wolverhampton, had an apprentice,
-who had been in the habit of attending Socialists’ meetings, and
-hearing their lectures. He purchased all their publications, and his
-master’s shop not being of that kind to furnish them, he was obliged
-to go elsewhere to obtain them. He dined and drank tea as usual with
-Mr. Parke on the Sunday, and left after tea to attend St. George’s
-Church. Not coming home at the usual hour, his master sat up for him
-until 12 o’clock, when, as he had not returned, he concluded that his
-relations had detained him. He was, however, found dead, in a sort of
-lumber room, the next morning. Two bottles of poison were lying by his
-side; the one which occasioned his death contained prussic acid; the
-other, nux vomica: near him were lying four letters, one addressed to
-his father, another to Mr. Parke, a third to the jury, and a fourth
-containing his creed; in all of which he expressed his disbelief in the
-Bible, considering it “the most dangerous book that ever was written,”
-and if ever such a person as Jesus Christ lived, he was the weakest man
-he ever heard of. In one of the letters he also stated that he had been
-nurtured in superstition, (meaning, that he had been brought up as a
-member of the church of England,) and that when he read Owen’s works
-he “shuddered at their common sense.” He denied all belief in a future
-state of retribution; and as he considered apprenticeship slavery, he
-thought it more prudent to suffer pain for a moment than to endure six
-years’ servitude. He earnestly entreated the jury not to bring in a
-verdict of insanity.
-
-It appears from a letter to the Bishop of Exeter, written by the
-unfortunate youth’s uncle, that he had been from infancy an exceedingly
-lively boy; between him and his parents the most glowing affection, as
-well as the most boundless confidence, existed; but the fatal poison
-of Socialism changed a confiding heart into a cold concentration of
-selfishness. After the verdict of the jury, the uncle declared aloud,
-before a crowded room, in a most vehement manner, that, were he in the
-presence of the Queen, he would proclaim Owen as the murderer of his
-nephew.
-
-The indifference with which self-murder is looked at in Germany is
-to be ascribed in a great measure to the popular productions of that
-country. We are reluctant to denounce as undoubted causes of suicide
-the works of men of splendid talents; but in such a case it would be
-wrong, it would be criminal, to mince the matter, and plead any excuse
-for so detestable a work as Werter, which has unhinged the minds of
-thousands, before they were aware of its impoisoned and insidious
-tendency. That it is the work of a man of genius only makes its
-blackening influence the stronger; as the fascination of the style,
-and the intense interest of the narrative, operate like an infernal
-spell to smooth the road to self-destruction. Its leading theme is,
-that human passions, and particularly love, are immediately inspired by
-Heaven; and that it would be wrong—nay, that it is impossible—to resist
-them; and consequently, if a lover meets with disappointment, his only
-virtuous course is suicide, which is triumphantly catalogued among the
-virtues, as it was by the heathen morality of the ancients.
-
-This work, together with Foscolo’s imitation of it, the “_Ultime
-Lettere di Jacopo Ortis_,” and all publications of a similar character,
-ought to be repudiated by every sound thinking man. Resistance to
-the dictates of passion, when it prompts to crime and suicide, is
-a most deadly sin against Werterism; whilst, obeying the passions
-to the letter, even if they incite to criminal love or self-murder,
-gives to its disciple the stamp of one of the virtuous who have
-courageously braved the laws of good order, fearlessly dared to trample
-under foot all the commands of God and man, and stood forth as the
-redoubted champions of human supremacy and the glorious right of
-self-destruction. Such are the principles of the miscreants who wish to
-prove that suicide is a virtue; and, with the sentiments found in the
-pages of Werter, they rush headlong and unthinkingly into a deep and
-awful futurity.
-
-It is not generally known that Goëthe, the author of the work alluded
-to, attempted suicide. He considered the death of the Emperor Otho as
-worthy of imitation. In contemplating the feelings which influenced
-that monarch, he says he convinced himself that if he could not proceed
-as Otho had done, he was not entitled to resolve on renouncing life. He
-adds, “By this conviction, I saved myself from the purpose, or indeed,
-more properly speaking, from the whim, of suicide. Among a considerable
-collection of arms, I possessed a costly well-ground dagger. This I
-laid down nightly by my side; and, before extinguishing the light,
-I tried whether I could succeed (_à la Otho_) in sending the sharp
-point an inch or two deep into my heart. But as I truly never could
-succeed, I at last took to laughing at myself, threw away all these
-hypochondriacal crotchets, and determined to live.”
-
-In the melancholy case of Hackman and Miss Ray, the following is the
-substance of a correspondence which passed between them on the subject
-of Werter. Hackman was refused the sight of this book by Miss R.,
-who had a copy of the French translation, because, as she expresses
-herself, she saw too great a similarity between her lover and Werter,
-not only in point of situation, but in the impetuosity of their
-tempers. “The book you mention,” says Miss R., “is just the only book
-you should never read. On my knees, I beg you never to read it! Perhaps
-you have read it; perhaps—I am distracted! Heaven only knows to whom
-I may be writing this letter.” To this, Hackman, who was in Ireland,
-replies: “Nonsense! to say it will make me unhappy, or that I shall
-not be able to read it. Must I pistol myself because a thick-blooded
-German has been fool enough to set the example, or because a German
-novelist has feigned such a story.” Werter was read, and the effect was
-most injurious on his mind. Whilst confined in Newgate, he wrote the
-following letter:—“Among my papers you will see, my friend, some lines
-I wrote on reading Goëthe’s Werter, translated from German into French,
-which, whilst I was in Ireland, Miss R. refused to lend me. When I
-returned to England, I made her let me read it. But I never shewed her
-these lines, for fear they should make her uneasy. Unhappy Werter!
-still less pretence hadst thou for suicide than I. After finally
-seeing thy Charlotte married to another—marrying her thyself—hadst
-thou a right over thy existence, because she was not thy wife? Yet
-wast thou less barbarous than I; for thou didst not seek to die in her
-presence,—but neither didst thou doubt her love. We can neither of us
-hope for pardon!”
-
-The lines were these, supposed to be found, after Werter’s death, upon
-the ground by the pistol—
-
- “If chance some kindred spirit should relate
- To future times unhappy Werter’s fate;
- Should in some pitying, almost pardoning age,
- Consign my sorrows to some weeping page;
- And should the affecting page be haply read
- By some new Charlotte—mine will then be dead.
- (Yes; she shall die—sole solace of my love!
- And we shall meet—for so she said—above.)
- O Charlotte! (Martha—by whatever name,
- Thy faithful Werter hands thee down to fame,)
- O be thou sure thy Werter never knows
- The fatal story of my kindred woes!
- O do not, fair one,—by my shocking end
- I charge thee!—do not let thy feeling friend
- Shed his sad sorrows o’er my tearful tale:
- Example, spite of precept, may prevail.”
-
-It may be mentioned, as a fact corroborating the opinion, that
-productions of an infidel character have a tendency to originate a
-disposition to suicide by weakening the moral principles; that when
-the celebrated and notorious Tom Paine’s “Age of Reason” was first
-published, the papers of the day recorded many cases of self-murder
-committed by persons who avowed that the idea never entered their heads
-until they had become familiar with the works of the above-mentioned
-writer. An individual, zealous in the diffusion of Paine’s principles,
-purchased several hundred copies of his work, which he most
-industriously circulated, gratuitously, in quarters where he knew the
-doctrines of Christianity had already obtained a footing. A copy of the
-“Age of Reason,” elegantly bound, was received by a young lady who was
-acting in the capacity of a governess in the family of a gentleman of
-great respectability. The lady had no conception from whom the present
-came, and having heard of the book, she felt a curiosity to become
-acquainted with the doctrines which it inculcated. The circumstance of
-her having received the book was not mentioned to any member of the
-family with whom she resided; and in the evening, when she retired to
-her own room, she read it with great attention. The family noticed,
-in a few weeks, a perceptible alteration in the appearance of the
-young lady. She became extremely thoughtful and contemplative. Her
-health also appeared sensibly affected. The mother of the children
-whom she was instructing took advantage of the first opportunity of
-speaking to her on the subject. She expressed herself very unhappy in
-her mind, but refused to disclose the cause of her mental uneasiness.
-It was thought she had formed an attachment, and was suffering from
-the effects of disappointed affection. She was questioned on these
-points, but persisted in concealing the circumstances which had
-been operating so injuriously on her mind. The mental dejection
-increased, and the result was, an alarming attack of nervous fever, of
-which she was cured by an able physician with much difficulty. When
-convalescent, she was noticed one day busily employed in writing, and
-when interrupted, shewed great anxiety to secrete the piece of paper
-on which she had been transcribing her thoughts. In the course of the
-evening of the same day, a deep groan was heard to issue from her
-room. The servant immediately entered, when, to her great horror, she
-saw the governess on the floor with a terrible gash in her throat.
-Assistance was directly obtained, but, alas! not in time to save the
-life of the poor unfortunate girl. On searching her desk, a sheet of
-paper was discovered, on which she had disclosed her reasons for the
-rash act. She said, that from the moment she read the “Age of Reason,”
-her mind became unsettled. Her previous religious impressions were
-undermined; in proportion as she was induced to imbibe the doctrines
-of Tom Paine, so she became miserable and wretched. From one error
-she fell into another, until she actually believed that death was
-annihilation; and although she appeared firmly rooted in this belief,
-she expressed herself horrified beyond all expression at the bare idea
-of dissolution. For some time prior to her illness, she had felt an
-impulse to sacrifice her life, but had not the courage to perform the
-act. After her recovery, she felt the impulse renewed with increased
-strength, until, with a hope of escaping from an accumulation of misery
-which was weighing her to the earth, she determined to commit suicide.
-She also, in the document referred to, asked her friends to forgive
-her, and to take warning from her fate.
-
-That many rush into suicide in order to escape the just and legal
-punishment of their crimes cannot be a matter of doubt. Many under such
-circumstances are influenced by a fear of public exposure, and prefer
-death to the idea of being compelled to undergo the ordeal of a trial
-in a court of justice. The following case is but the type of many that
-could be related:—
-
-A young man of family, the Hon. Mr. ——, staying at an inn in Portsmouth,
-previously to sailing for India, where he was going out as an
-aide-de-camp to General——, with a party of friends, also officers,
-joined company at supper one evening with Mr. Bradbury, the clown of
-Covent Garden Theatre, a person of very gentlemanlike exterior and
-manners, and ambitious of the society of gentlemen. He was in the habit
-of using a very magnificent and curious snuff-box, and on this occasion
-it was much admired by the party, and handed round for inspection from
-one to the other. Mr. Bradbury soon after left the inn, and retired
-to his lodging, when he missed his box, and immediately returned to
-inquire for it. The gentlemen with whom he had spent the evening had
-all retired to bed; but he left word with the porter to mention to the
-officers early the next day that he had left the box, and to request
-them to restore it to him when found.
-
-The next morning, Mr. Bradbury again hastened to the inn, anxious
-to recover his property, and met on his way the Hon. Mr. ——, and
-communicated his loss to him; when he was informed by that gentleman
-that a similar circumstance had occurred to himself, his bed-room
-having been robbed the night before of his gold watch, chain, and
-seals, &c., and that he was on his way to a Jew in the town to apprize
-him of the robbery, in order that if such articles should be offered
-for sale, he might stop them and detain the person who presented them.
-This was very extraordinary! Mr. Bradbury then met the other gentlemen
-of the party, and was told by them that their rooms had also been
-robbed, one of bank notes to a great amount, another of a gold watch,
-&c.
-
-The Hon. Mr. —— was violently infuriated by his loss; and as he was
-bound to sail from Portsmouth when the ship was ready, he naturally
-dreaded being compelled to depart without his property. He hinted,
-too, that he had certain suspicions of certain people. An officer
-was sent for from London. This man came down promptly, to the great
-satisfaction of the Hon. Mr. ——; and after searching the house and
-their trunks, Rivett (the officer) addressed the gentlemen, observing,
-that there was yet a duty unperformed, and which was a painful one to
-him—he must search the _persons_ of all present, and as the Hon.
-Mr. ——’s trunks had been the first to be inspected, perhaps he would
-allow him to examine him at once. To this he agreed; but the next moment0
-he was observed to look very ill. Rivett was proceeding to search
-him, as a matter of course, when he requested that everybody would
-leave the room, except the officer and Mr. Bradbury, which request
-was immediately complied with. He then fell upon his knees, entreated
-for mercy, and placed Mr. Bradbury’s box in his hand, begging him to
-forgive him and spare his life. Rivett upon this proceeded to search
-him, but he resisted; the object was effected by force, and the
-greater part of the property found that had been stolen in the house.
-The officer, conceiving that he had not got the whole of the bank
-notes, inquired of Mr. —— where the remainder was; when he pointed to
-a pocket-book which was under the foot of the bed; and while Rivett
-relaxed his hold of him, and was in the act of stooping to pick up
-the book, Mr. —— caught up a razor and cut his throat. Rivett and Mr.
-Bradbury seized an arm each, and forced the razor from him; but he
-was so determined on self-destruction, that he twisted his head about
-violently in different ways, in order to make the wound larger and
-more fatal. To prevent him from continuing this, he was braced up with
-linen round his neck so tightly that he could not move it. A surgeon
-of the town, with two assistants, came, and after seeing the wound,
-gave it as their opinion that it was possible for him to recover, and
-by the assistance of some powerful soldiers holding him, they dressed
-the wound. His clothes were then cut off, and he was carried down
-stairs into another room. During this operation he coughed violently;
-but whether naturally or by design, to make his wound worse, was not
-ascertained. It had, however, the effect of setting his wound bleeding
-again, and the dressing was obliged to be repeated.
-
-The sequel of this distressing case was of an equally melancholy
-character.
-
-Poor Mr. Bradbury was standing close to the unfortunate young man when
-he committed the sudden attempt upon his own life. The horror of the
-act, and the shocking appearance of his lacerated throat, the blood
-from which flowed out upon Mr. Bradbury, in short, this heart-rending
-result of the previous agitation and discovery, acted upon the
-sensibility of Mr. Bradbury to such an extent as to deprive him of
-reason. This fact was noticeable two days after the above scene, by
-his entering a church, and after the service was ended, going into the
-vestry, and requesting the clergyman to pray for him, as he intended
-to cut his throat! This distemper of mind was not too great at first
-to admit of partial control; but it daily increased, and ultimately
-caused him to be placed under restraint.[34]
-
-A woman, about thirty-six years of age, who had been well educated,
-but whose conduct had not been exempt from some irregularities, in
-consequence of intemperance and manifold disappointments, became
-affected with madness. She was by turns furious and melancholic, and
-conceived she had murdered one of her children, for which she ought to
-suffer death. She detailed the manner in which she had destroyed the
-child, and the motives which actuated her, so circumstantially, and
-with so much plausibility and feeling, that if it had not been known
-that her child was living, the physician under whose care she was
-placed might have been deceived. By her own hands she had repeatedly
-endeavoured to terminate her existence, but was prevented by constant
-vigilance and due restraint. Her disposition to suicide was afterwards
-relinquished; but she still persisted that for the murder of the child
-she ought to suffer death, and requested to be sent to Newgate, in
-order to be tried, and undergo the sentence of the law; indeed, she
-appeared to derive consolation from the hope of becoming a public
-example, and expiating her supposed crime on the scaffold. While in
-this state, and with a hope of convincing her of its safety, the child
-was brought to visit her. When she beheld it, there was a temporary
-burst of maternal affection; she kissed it, and for a few moments
-appeared to be delighted: but a look of suspicion quickly succeeded,
-and this was shortly followed by a frown of indignation, which rendered
-the removal of the child a measure of wholesome necessity. Perhaps
-in no instance was the buoyancy of madness more conspicuous over
-reason, recollection, and feeling. She insisted they had attempted to
-impose on her a strange child, which bore a faint resemblance to her
-own; however, by such subterfuges she was not to be deceived; she
-had strangled the child until life had totally departed, and it was
-not in the order of nature that it should exist again. The effect of
-this interview was an exasperation of her disorder: she became more
-cunning and malignant, and her desire for an ignominious death was
-augmented. To render this more certain, and accelerate her projected
-happiness, she enticed into her apartment a young female patient to
-whom she appeared to be attached, and having previously platted some
-threads of her bed-quilt into a cord, she fixed it round the neck of
-the young woman, and proceeded to strangle her. Fortunately, some
-person entered the room and unloosed the cord in time to save her.
-When this unhappy maniac was questioned concerning the motive which
-induced her to attempt the destruction of a person for whom she had
-manifested kindness, she very calmly replied, that as the murder of her
-own child was disbelieved, she wished to exhibit a convincing proof
-of the ferocity of her nature, that she might instantly be conveyed
-to Newgate and hanged, which she desired as the greatest blessing.
-With considerable satisfaction, we may add, that in a few months,
-notwithstanding her derangement had been of three years’ duration, this
-woman perfectly recovered, and for a considerable time performed the
-duties of an important and respectable office.[35]
-
-The great increase of the crime of suicide has been referred by many
-able physicians of the present day to the political excitement to which
-the minds of the people have been exposed of late years. In despotic
-countries, suicide and insanity are seldom heard of: the passions
-are checked by the nature of the government; the imagination is not
-elevated to an unhealthy standard; every man is compelled to follow the
-calling in life to which he is born, and for which he has capacity;
-and on this account the evil and corrupt dispositions of the mind are,
-to a certain extent, kept in abeyance. In republican governments, the
-greatest latitude is allowed to the turbulent passions; all mankind
-are theoretically placed on an equality; the man whose “talk is of
-bullocks” considers himself as fit to carry on the complicated business
-of government as he whose education, associations, and experience tend
-to qualify him for the duties of a legislator.
-
-In proportion as men are exposed to the influence of causes which
-excite the passions, so will they become predisposed to mental
-derangement in all its forms. The French and American revolutions
-increased considerably the crime of suicide. It has been said that
-during the “reign of terror” statistical evidence does not shew that
-self-murder was more common than at any other period. Perhaps the
-alleged unfrequency of suicide may be attributed to the circumstance
-of the French people having been so busy in killing others that they
-had no time to think of killing themselves. More than the average
-number of suicides may not have really occurred during the crisis of
-the Revolution, but it is an undisputed fact that, both before and
-after that political convulsion, self-destruction prevailed to an
-alarming extent. Disappointed hopes, wounded pride and vanity, blighted
-ambition, loss of property, death of friends, disgust of life, all
-came into active operation after the turbulence and bloodshed of the
-Revolution had somewhat subsided: these passions, working upon minds
-easily excited, and not under the benign influence of religion, it was
-almost natural to expect that great recklessness of life should be
-exhibited. Such facts demonstrate to us the folly of uselessly exciting
-the passions of the people, and raising in their minds exaggerated
-expectations from political changes.
-
-The tendency of refined sensibility to become wound up in a paroxysm,
-terminating in suicidal attempts, is strikingly illustrated in a case
-reported by Dr. Burrows:—
-
-“A gentleman of a family of rank, and distinguished for talent, married
-early in life the object of his most ardent affections. He possessed
-extreme sensibility, with a most highly cultivated and refined mind.
-It may be remarked, as a constitutional peculiarity, that his natural
-pulse did not exceed forty beats in a minute. When anything suddenly
-occurred to agitate him, it produced an attack of fever, and his pulse
-was accelerated in an astonishing degree. Though in ordinary affairs
-he was a man of firm resolution and great spirit, yet when this fit
-happened, he was seized with such a panic, or impulse, that he knew
-not what he did, and he was unnerved for days. His lady being well
-acquainted with the infirmities of his constitution, rendered him,
-by her good sense and soothing, a happier man than he had previously
-been. Most unfortunately, she died in the first year of her marriage.
-His grief at her loss was excessive; and even when time had abated
-its poignancy, he continued very miserable. His thoughts were always
-reverting to the virtues of her whom he had lost, and the comparative
-happiness he had enjoyed in her society. He tried everything to divert
-his melancholy; but these impulses would follow reflection; and then
-his ideas adverted to self-destruction. He reasoned with himself
-upon the subject till, he confessed, he had become an infidel in
-religion, and could no longer view the act as wicked. I had,” said
-Dr. Burrows, “an opportunity of knowing the exact state of his mind
-during this struggle, from perusing some notes which he had written,
-describing it. He expressed himself with the utmost tenderness and
-affection with respect to his departed wife, and of his intention of
-soon joining her by a voluntary death; not, however, in heaven, but
-in Elysium. One night, after having been occupied in reading to some
-dear relations, and apparently much enjoying the subject, he retired
-to his chamber. He undressed, and dismissed his valet. His gloomy
-reflections recurred. One of these strange impulses came over him.
-He seized a pistol, and discharged it: it failed of effect. He fired
-another: he wounded himself severely, but not mortally; neither was
-the effusion of blood great. He then called for assistance. Little
-constitutional disturbance followed, and the wound readily healed. It
-was during the time he was confined from the effects of this wound
-that Dr. Burrows was consulted. He could not detect the slightest
-aberration of the mind, nor was there a trait in his countenance of
-a propensity to commit suicide. He freely conversed on his past and
-present situation and opinions; was perfectly ready to submit to any
-supervision Dr. Burrows might advise, or plan that might be suggested,
-to bring him into a better and happier state of mind. By degrees, he
-acquired more composure. He afterwards travelled for a year and a
-half on the Continent. Upon his return, he seemed much improved in
-general appearance. Nothing, however, conquered his constitutional
-susceptibility.”
-
-That the LOVE OF NOTORIETY often impels to suicide there cannot be
-a doubt. The man who was killed by attaching himself to a rocket,
-and he who threw himself into the crater of Mount Vesuvius, were, no
-doubt, stimulated by a desire for posthumous fame. Shortly after the
-suicide at the Monument, a boy made an unsuccessful endeavour to poison
-himself; and on being questioned as to his motives, he said, “I wished
-to be talked of, like the woman who killed herself at the Monument!”
-How strange and anomalous are the motives which influence human actions!
-
-Many are induced to think of suicide from the circumstance of their
-being conscious that they labour under an hereditary disposition to
-insanity. We know the case of a lady whose mind has been dwelling upon
-the subject of suicide for some time, and she has told her friends
-repeatedly that she feels assured she shall commit some rash act. “The
-disposition to suicide and insanity is in the family, and how can I
-fight against my physical organization?” Such is the mode of reasoning
-she adopts whenever urgently persuaded to banish from her mind the
-horrid sensations which are embittering her life.
-
-A gentleman, in full possession of his reasoning faculties, and a
-man of considerable powers of intellect, said to us one day, in a
-conversation we had with him on the subject of suicide, “You may
-probably smile when I tell you that, happy and contented as I appear
-to be in my mind at this moment, I feel assured I shall fall by my
-own hands.” Upon our asking him why he thought so, he replied, that a
-relation of his had killed himself some years previously, and that he
-laboured under an hereditary predisposition which nothing would subdue.
-
-A woman, thirty-five years of age, placed herself, in 1821, under the
-care of M. Falret, for symptoms of phthisis. When nineteen years old,
-the death of an uncle, by his own hands, made a deep impression on her
-mind. She heard that insanity was hereditary, and the idea pursued
-her that she should one day fall into this melancholy condition. She
-confessed her apprehensions only to the priests, who endeavoured to
-dissipate the mournful impression. In this state she continued for two
-years, when the death of her reputed father, also by suicide, riveted
-the conviction on her mind that her own doom was sealed. She was
-convinced that _her blood was corrupted_; and this idea appeared to be
-confirmed by other circumstances. Tortured by this notion, she resolved
-to drown herself. After leaving a letter in her chamber, apprising her
-friends of the manner of her meditated death, she plunged into the
-river; but being immediately taken out, she was restored to life. The
-night following this attempt, she was harassed with a pain in her head,
-and after a short sleep, awoke, incapable of recognising any of the
-friends about her. She was evidently delirious, but made no allusion
-to her former melancholy impressions. Although previously religious
-and well-behaved, she uttered nothing but obscenities. This delirious
-excitement continued three days, and was succeeded by melancholy and a
-disposition to suicide. Headache again came on, with nausea and bilious
-vomitings, which, however, soon subsided. She became considerably
-emaciated after this, and looked the picture of despair; in fact, she
-could not look into the glass at herself without terror. Once more she
-wished the aid of religion, which afforded her some consolation, but
-was insufficient to dissipate entirely her sufferings. Meanwhile, her
-mother revealed to her the secret that her real father was still alive;
-and, after considerable scepticism on the point, she consented to an
-interview with him. The physical resemblance was so striking, that
-all doubt was instantly removed from her mind. From that moment all
-idea of suicide vanished; her spirits and health became progressively
-re-established. Fourteen years, says Falret, have now elapsed since the
-attempt at self-destruction. She is the mother of three children, and,
-during her married state, has been reduced to the greatest penury and
-distress; but has never, since the period alluded to, entertained the
-remotest idea of suicide; on the contrary, she has proved an exemplary
-wife and affectionate parent, having the full possession of her
-intellectual faculties.[36]
-
-Everything that tends to throw the mind off its healthy balance will,
-of course, predispose to suicide. Excessive devotion of the attention
-to any particular branch of study, or to business, often originates
-cerebral disease and suicidal mania. In alluding to the injurious
-effects of excessive study, Marcilius Ficinus, as quoted by Burton,
-justly observes—“Other men look to their tools: a painter will wash
-his pencils; a smith will look to his hammer, anvil, and forge; a
-husbandman will mend his plough-irons and grind his hatchet, if it
-be dull; a falconer or huntsman will have an especial care of his
-hawks, hounds, horses, and dogs; a musician will string and unstring
-his lute,—only scholars neglect that instrument (their _brain_ and
-_spirit_, I mean) which they daily use, and by which they range over
-all the world, and which by much study is consumed.”
-
-The melancholy case of William Eyton Tooke, Esq., who committed
-suicide some years ago, will illustrate the operation of the cause
-referred to.
-
-“This gentleman,” says a relative, in a letter to the _Times_
-newspaper, explanatory of the causes of Mr. T.’s death, “from a very
-early period of life, devoted himself to the most abstruse inquiries
-into moral and political philosophy, and has thus fallen a victim
-to the absorbing and exclusive nature of the pursuit.” One of the
-witnesses who was examined at the inquest stated, that the deceased
-was of an exceedingly studious turn, and had for many months past been
-directing his attention particularly to commercial subjects. This
-subject was his constant study, and the theme of his conversation. It
-seemed to engross the whole of his attention, and his health, both
-bodily and mentally, was evidently impaired by it. A short period
-before his death, he was heard frequently to say, placing his hand upon
-his head, “This subject is too much for me; my head is distracted!” It
-was under the influence of this over-excited state of brain that he
-committed suicide.
-
-It has been observed, in another part of this work, that many commit
-suicide from the notion that death from natural causes is attended
-with considerable agony.[37] This is the generally received notion,
-but it is an erroneous one. Those who have often witnessed the act of
-dying allow that it is not a painful process. In some delicate and
-irritable persons, a kind of struggle is indeed sometimes excited when
-respiration becomes difficult; but more frequently the dying obviously
-suffer nothing, and express no uneasiness. Dr. Ferriar says, “In those
-who die of chronic diseases, the gradation is slow and distinct.
-Consumptive patients are sometimes in a dying state for several
-days; they appear at such times to suffer little, but to languish for
-complete dissolution; nay, I have known them express great uneasiness
-when they have been recalled from the commencement of insensibility,
-by the cries of their friends, or the efforts of the attendants to
-alleviate pain. In observing persons in this situation, I have always
-been impressed with an idea that the approach of natural death produces
-a sensation similar to that of falling asleep. The disturbance of
-respiration is the only apparent source of uneasiness to the dying; and
-sensibility seems to be impaired just in proportion to the decrease of
-that function. Besides, both the impressions of present objects and
-those recalled by memory are influenced by the extreme debility of the
-patient, whose wish is for absolute rest. I could never see the close
-of life under these circumstances without recollecting those beautiful
-lines of Spencer—
-
- “Sleep after toil, port after stormy seas,
- Ease after war, death after life, doth greatly please.”
-
-Professor Hufeland, on the subject of death, observes, “that many fear
-death less than the operation of dying.” People, he continues, “form
-the most singular conceptions of the last struggle—the separation
-of the soul from the body, and the like; but this is all void of
-foundation. No man certainly ever felt what death is; and insensibly
-as we enter life, equally insensibly do we leave it. The beginning
-and the end are here united. My proofs are as follows:—First, man can
-have no sensation of dying; for to die means nothing more than to lose
-the vital powers; and it is the vital power which is the medium of
-communication between the soul and the body. In proportion as the vital
-power decreases, we lose the power of sensation and consciousness; and
-we cannot lose life without, at the same time, or rather before, losing
-our vital sensation, which requires the assistance of the tenderest
-organs. We are taught also by experience that all those who ever
-passed through the first stage of death, and were again brought to
-life, unanimously asserted that they felt nothing of dying, but sunk at
-once into a state of insensibility.[38]
-
-“Let us not be led into a mistake by the convulsive throbs, the
-rattling in the throat, and the apparent pangs of death, which are
-exhibited by many persons when in a dying state. These symptoms are
-painful only to the spectators, and not to the dying, who are not
-sensible of them. The case here is the same as if one, from the
-dreadful contortions of a person in an epileptic fit, should form a
-conclusion respecting his internal feelings: from what affects us so
-much, he suffers nothing.
-
-“Let one always consider life, as it really is, a mean state, which
-is not an object itself, but a medium for obtaining an object, as the
-multifarious imperfections of it sufficiently prove: as a period of
-trial and preparation, a fragment of existence, through which we are to
-be fitted for, and transmitted to, other periods. Can the idea, then,
-of really making this transition—of ascending to another from this mean
-state, this doubtful, problematical existence, which never affords
-complete satisfaction—ever excite terror? With courage and confidence
-we may, therefore, resign ourselves to the will of that Supreme Being
-who, without our consent, placed us in this sublunary theatre, and give
-up to his management the future direction of our fate.
-
-“Remembrance of the past, of that circle of friends who were nearest,
-and always will be dearest to our hearts, and who, as it were, now
-smile upon us with a friendly look of invitation from that distant
-country beyond the grave, will also tend very much to allay the fear of
-death.”
-
-We recollect attending the case of a young lady labouring under a
-disease which produced extreme mental and physical suffering, who
-exhibited, a short period before her death, some singular phenomena.
-This lady had not been seen to smile, or to shew any indication of
-freedom from pain, for some weeks prior to dissolution. Two hours
-before she died, the symptoms became suddenly altered in character.
-Every sign of pain vanished; her limbs, from being subject to violent
-spasmodic contractions, became natural in their appearance; her face,
-which had been distorted, was calm and tranquil. All her friends
-supposed that the crisis of the disease had arrived, and that it had
-taken a favourable turn, and delight and joy were manifested by all
-who were allowed access to her chamber, and who were made acquainted
-with the change which had taken place. She conversed most freely,
-and smiled as if in a happy condition. We must confess that the case
-puzzled us, and that we were for a short time induced to entertain
-sanguine hopes of her ultimate recovery. But, alas! how fragile are
-all our best hopes! For two hours we sat by the bed, watching the
-patient’s countenance with great anxiety. Every unfavourable indication
-had vanished; her face was illuminated by the sweetest smile that ever
-played on the human countenance. During the conversation we had with
-her, she gave a slight start, and said, in a tone of great earnestness,
-“Did you see that?” Her face became suddenly altered; an expression
-of deep anguish fixed itself upon her features, and her eyes became
-more than ordinarily brilliant. We replied, “What?” She answered, “Oh!
-you must have seen it. How terrible it looked as it glided over the
-bed. Again I see it,” she vociferated, with an unearthly scream, “I am
-ready!” and, without a groan, her spirit took its flight!
-
-Dr. Symonds recollects to have heard a young man, who had been but
-little conversant with any but civic scenes, discourse most eloquently,
-a short period before his death, of sylvan glen and bosky dells,
-purling streams and happy valleys, as if his spirit had been already
-luxuriating itself in the gardens of Elysium. Nothing more frequently
-prognosticates the approach of death than the appearance of a spectre
-at the bed-side of the patient. In some cases, the mind, when in a happy
-frame, dwells with delight on the contemplation of the last struggle,
-and has a foretaste of that heavenly joy which is the reward of a
-well-spent life. The spirits of good men and of angels are said to
-hover round the departing soul of the Christian, as if waiting to bear
-it to the mansions of bliss:—
-
- “Saw you not even now a blessed troop
- Invite me to a banquet, whose bright faces
- Cast thousand beams upon me, like the sun?
- They promised me eternal happiness;
- And brought me garlands, Griffith, which I feel
- I am not worthy yet to wear.”
-
- KING HENRY VIII.
-
-Many have, under the notion that the fear of death is beneficial to the
-mind, done their best to keep the idea constantly before them.
-
- “If I must die, I’ll snatch at anything
- That may but mind me of my latest breath;
- Death’s-heads, graves, knells, blacks, tombs, all these shall bring
- Into my soul such useful thoughts of death,
- That this sable king of fears
- Shall not catch me unawares.”
-
-Young raised about him an artificial idea of death; he darkened his
-sepulchral study, placing a skull on his table by lamp-light. At the
-end of an avenue in his garden was placed on a seat an admirable
-chiaro-oscuro, which when approached presented only a painted surface,
-with an inscription, alluding to the deception of the things of this
-world.
-
-Dr. J. Donne, the celebrated English divine and poet, is said to have
-longed for the hour of dissolution. Previous to his death, he gave
-instructions for a monument, which his friends had declared their
-intention to erect to his memory. A carver made him in wood the figure
-of an urn, and having secured the services of a painter, the Doctor
-ordered the urn to be brought into his chamber. Having taken off his
-clothes, he procured a white sheet, which was put on him, and tied with
-knots at his hands and feet. In this state he stood upon the urn, with
-his eyes closed, and a portion of the sheet turned aside in order to
-shew his lean, pale, and death-like face. In this posture, the painter
-sketched him; and when the monument was finished, it was placed by his
-bed-side, and was hourly the source of contemplation until his death.
-
-The “lightening up before death,” so often perceptible, is but the
-result of venous blood being sent to the brain. When respiration
-becomes imperfect, the blood does not undergo the proper chemical
-change in the lungs (arterialization), and its effect on the sentient
-organ is such as is occasionally witnessed prior to dissolution.
-Abernethy considers the sensations of the dying similar to those
-experienced by persons labouring under delirium. He relates the case
-of a man who appeared, during his delirious state, to meet with old
-acquaintances. The companions of his youthful days flocked once more
-around him—old associations were revived. “How are you, my dear
-fellow?” he exclaimed. “It is long since we met. Give us your fist, my
-hearty. Now, that is a good joke; I never heard a better. Ah! ah! ah!”
-
-We had once the painful duty of watching the expiring struggles of
-a man whose life had been one long career of vice and debauchery.
-His death was truly appalling. It was evident, from the expressions
-which escaped him when dying, that his mind had a vivid conception
-of the scenes in which he had played so conspicuous a part. “Now for
-the dice!” he exclaimed, with the fury of a maniac. “That’s mine! No!
-all, all is gone! More wine, d—— you; more wine! Oh! how they rattle!
-Fiends, fiends, assail me! I say, you cheat! the cards are marked! Now
-the chains rattle! O death! O death!” and with a terrific groan he
-breathed his last.
-
-Among the causes which operate in producing the disposition to commit
-suicide, we must not omit to mention those connected with erroneous
-religious notions. M. Falret justly remarks, that the religious system
-of the Druids, Odin, and Mahomet, by inspiring a contempt for death,
-have made many suicides. The man who believes that death is an eternal
-sleep, scorns to hold up against calamity, and prefers annihilation.
-The sceptic also often frees himself by self-destruction from the agony
-of doubting. The maxim of the Stoics, that man should live only so long
-as he ought, not so long as he is able, is, we may observe, the very
-parent of suicide. The Brahmin, looking on death as the very entrance
-into life, and thinking a natural death dishonourable, is eager at all
-times to get rid of life. The Epicureans and Peripatetics ridiculed
-suicide, as being death caused by fear of death. M. Falret, however,
-goes perhaps too far when he asserts that the noble manner in which the
-gladiators died in public, not only familiarized the Romans with death,
-but rendered the thoughts of it rather agreeable than otherwise.
-
-Misinterpretations of passages of scripture will sometimes lead those
-who are piously inclined to commit suicide. M. Gillet hung himself
-at the age of seventy-five, having left in his own handwriting the
-following apology:—“Jesus Christ has said, that when a tree is old and
-can no longer bear fruit, it is good that it should be destroyed.”
-(He had more than once attempted his life before the fatal act.) Dr.
-Burrows attended a nobleman who, for fear of being poisoned, though
-he pretended it was in imitation of our Saviour’s fast, took nothing
-but strawberries and water for three weeks, and these in very moderate
-quantities. He never voluntarily abandoned his resolution. He was at
-length compelled to take some nutriment, but not until inanition had
-gone too far; and he died completely attenuated. When sound religious
-principles produce a struggle in the mind which is beginning to
-aberrate, the contest generally ends in suicide.
-
-Some murder themselves to get rid of the horrid thoughts of suicide;
-whilst others brood over them like Rousseau, for months and for years,
-and at length perpetrate the very action which they dread. A countryman
-of Rousseau’s, who advocated suicide as a duty, and who spent the
-greater part of a long life in writing a large folio volume to prove
-the soundness of his doctrine, thought it his duty, after he had
-completed his work, to give a practical illustration of his principles,
-and, accordingly, at the age of seventy, threw himself into the Lake of
-Geneva, and was drowned.
-
-It may appear strange that religion, the greatest blessing bestowed
-by Heaven on man, should ever prove a cause of one of his severest
-calamities. But perhaps it would be more accurate to impute such
-unhappy effects to fanaticism, or to the total want of religion.
-
-Instances very frequently occur in practice in which patients have
-appeared, some suddenly, and others gradually, to be seized with
-a species of religious horror, despairing of salvation, asserting
-that they had committed sins which never could be forgiven, who had
-never previously appeared to be under religious impressions. Some of
-these have been visited by divines of various denominations, and been
-induced to hear sermons and read books well calculated to dispel gloomy
-apprehensions, and excite religious hope and confidence. With some
-this has succeeded, especially when conjoined with medical aid; but
-it has been observed, that in the cases of those who have recovered,
-the patients have _emerged_ precisely as they _immerged_; for as they
-before were unconcerned about religious matters, so they remained
-after their recovery; thus the indisposition has been very erroneously
-imputed to religion when it has no kind of affinity to, or concern
-with it. Such cases almost invariably exhibit the same symptoms, which
-generally turn on these points—despair of temporal support, or despair
-of final salvation. But the medical practitioner, and not the divine,
-is the proper person to be consulted in such cases; and, however the
-mind may be affected in them, the patient is to be relieved by means
-of medicine. It may be added, that the agonies of mind under which
-some persons labour who are called fanatically mad arise from a sense
-of moral turpitude, independent of any peculiar religious tenets or
-opinions.
-
-The true doctrines of Christianity, when properly inculcated, never
-excite a gloomy state of mind. “To be religious,” says South, “it is
-not necessary to be dull.” Cowper (perhaps, however, the most miserable
-and melancholy of men) beautifully says—
-
- “True piety is cheerful as the day,
- Will weep indeed, and heave a pitying groan,
- For others’ woes, but smile upon her own.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-IMITATIVE, OR EPIDEMIC SUICIDE.
-
-
- Persons who act from impulse liable to be influenced—Principle
- of imitation, a natural instinct—Cases related by Cabanis and
- Tissot—The suicidal barbers—Epidemic suicide at the Hôtel
- des Invalides—Sydenham’s epidemic—The ladies of Miletus—Dr.
- Parrish’s case—Are insanity and suicide contagious?
-
-The most singular feature connected with the subject of suicide is,
-that the disposition to sacrifice life has, at different periods,
-been known to prevail epidemically, from a perversion, as it has been
-supposed, of the natural instinct of imitation. This is not only the
-case with reference to suicide, but is witnessed also in cases of
-murder. The atrocities of the French Revolution are, to a certain
-extent, to be traced to the influence of this imitative principle.
-Persons whose feelings are not thoroughly under their command, who act
-from impulse and not from reflection, are very prone to be operated
-upon by the cause referred to. Man has been defined an imitative
-animal; and in many instances we witness this propensity controlling
-almost irresistibly the actions of the individual. Tissot relates the
-case of a young woman in whom this faculty was so strongly developed
-that she could not avoid doing everything she saw others do. Cabanis
-gives the account of a man in whom the tendency to imitate was so
-strongly marked, and active, from disease, that “he experienced
-insupportable suffering” when he was prevented from yielding to its
-impulses. A woman, in the ward of an hospital, will be seized with an
-epileptic fit; in the course of a short period, other cases will occur
-in the same ward. A child was brought into one of our metropolitan
-hospitals, labouring under a violent attack of convulsions. She had not
-been in the house five minutes before three children who were present
-were seized with spasmodic convulsions of a similar character. The
-commission of a great and extraordinary crime produces not unfrequently
-the mania of imitation in the district in which it happened. A criminal
-was executed at Paris, not many years ago, for murder. A few weeks
-afterwards, another murder was perpetrated; and when the young man was
-asked to assign a reason for taking away the life of a fellow-creature,
-he replied, that he was not instigated by any feeling of malice, but,
-after having witnessed the execution, he felt a desire, over which he
-had no control, to commit a similar crime, and had no rest until he had
-gratified his feelings. It is only on the same principle that we can
-account for the following singular case of suicide. It is related by
-Sir Charles Bell, in his “Institutes of Surgery.” The surgeon of the
-Middlesex Hospital who preceded Sir Charles Bell went into a barber’s
-shop, in the neighbourhood of the institution, to be shaved. As the
-barber was operating upon his chin, the conversation turned upon the
-case of a man who had been admitted the previous day into the hospital,
-and who had attempted, unsuccessfully, to kill himself, by cutting his
-throat. “He could easily have managed it,” said the surgeon, in rather
-a jocular strain, “had he been acquainted with the situation of the
-carotid artery. He did not cut in the proper place.” “Where should
-he have cut?” asked the barber, quietly. The surgeon, not suspecting
-what was passing through the barber’s mind, gave a popular lecture on
-the anatomy of the neck—pointed out the exact position of the large
-vessels, and shewed where they could easily be wounded. After the
-conversation, the barber made some excuse for leaving the room; and,
-not returning as soon as was expected, the surgeon went to look for
-him, when he was discovered in the yard, behind the house, with his
-head nearly severed from his body!
-
-The following case is, perhaps, more strange and inexplicable than
-the one just related. The brother of a hairdresser and barber had
-killed himself by blowing out his brains. The circumstance appeared to
-affect seriously the mind of his relative. He left his business for a
-few days; and then returned, apparently more tranquil in his mind. In
-the morning, several persons came in to be shaved; and, all at once,
-he felt a strong, and almost overwhelming, inclination to cut some
-one’s throat. He fought manfully, however, against this horrid desire.
-During the whole of the earlier part of the day, he had been able to
-resist the gratification of the feeling. Every time he placed the razor
-in contact with the throat, he fancied he heard a voice within him
-exclaim, “Kill him! kill him!” In the afternoon, an elderly gentleman
-came into the shop to be shaved; and when the barber had nearly
-concluded the operation, he was again seized with the desire; and,
-before he could summon courage enough to suppress it, he gave the man’s
-throat a tremendous gash; fortunately, however, the wound was not fatal.
-
-Gall informs us of a man who, on reading in the newspapers the
-particulars of a case of murder, perpetrated under circumstances of
-peculiar atrocity, was instantly seized with a desire to murder his
-servant, and would have done so, had he not given his intended victim
-timely warning to escape.
-
-Some years ago, a man hung himself on the threshold of one of the doors
-of the corridor at the _Hôtel des Invalides_. No suicide had occurred
-in the establishment for two years previously; but in the succeeding
-fortnight, five invalids hung themselves on the same cross bar, and the
-governor was obliged to shut up the passage.
-
-Sydenham informs us that, at Mansfield, in a particular year, in the
-month of June, suicide prevailed to an alarming degree, from a cause
-wholly unaccountable. The same thing happened at Rouen, in 1806;
-at Stuttgard, in the summer of 1811; and at a village of St. Pierre
-Montjean, in the Valais, in the year 1813. One of the most remarkable
-epidemics of the kind was that which prevailed at Versailles in the
-year 1793. The number of suicides within the year was 1300—a number out
-of all proportion to the population of the town.
-
-In the olden time, the ladies of Miletus, in a fit of melancholy for
-the absence of their husbands and lovers, resolved to hang themselves,
-and vied with each other in the alacrity with which they did the
-deed. In the time of the Ptolemies, a stoic philosopher pleaded so
-eloquently, one day, to an Alexandrian audience on the advantages of
-suicide, that he inspired his hearers with his principles, and a great
-number voluntarily sacrificed their lives.
-
-A clergyman, master of a very large and popular school, the locality
-of which, for obvious reasons, it would not do to specify, recently
-informed one of his friends that he had discovered a new pupil in the
-act of practising a disgraceful vice. “Send him home to his parents,
-and say nothing about it,” was the friend’s judicious recommendation.
-The schoolmaster, however, placed great confidence in his own eloquence
-and the corrective powers of the birch. He assembled his boys, made an
-excellent harangue on the guilt of the delinquent, and gave him a sound
-flogging. The example of crime proved more influential than the example
-of punishment, and the vice spread so rapidly that the whole school was
-broken up in consequence.[39]
-
-The particulars of the following case are recorded in the “American
-Journal of the Medical Sciences,” by Dr. Parrish. He says, “I was
-called to visit a child in the family of J. S., a respectable gentleman
-residing in my neighbourhood. On my arrival, at 3 P.M., I found,
-on going into the chamber of my patient, that death had occurred.
-The patient was a girl in her fifteenth year, who had been carefully
-brought up by a family with whom she had lived between seven and eight
-years. She had generally enjoyed good health, with the exception of
-occasional attacks of sickness of the stomach, and headache. She had
-just passed the age of puberty, and possessed a docile disposition. Her
-situation in life, as far as could be ascertained, was in every respect
-agreeable, and congenial to her wishes.
-
-“On the morning of the day of her death, she was engaged as usual in
-the domestic concerns of the family until eight o’clock, when she was
-observed in the yard vomiting. Upon inquiring into the history of the
-case, I found that early in the morning on which the patient died, she
-had held a conversation with a little girl residing in the next house,
-in which she mentioned having lately read in a newspaper of a man who
-had been unfortunate in his business, and had taken arsenic to destroy
-himself; she also spoke of an apothecary’s shop near by, and said she
-frequently went there.
-
-“The narration of this conversation afforded strong suspicion to my
-mind that she had committed suicide; a suspicion which was strengthened
-by the fact, that a few months previous I had been called upon to visit
-a person residing in the same house, who had suffered for some years
-under mental derangement, and had recently been discharged from the
-insane hospital near Frankford; he had taken laudanum, with the intent
-of destroying himself.
-
-“This circumstance would naturally produce a strong impression upon the
-mind of the child, which was increased, no doubt, by the reading of
-the case detailed in the newspaper. In this way the desire to commit a
-similar act was kindled up in the mind of the deluded girl, and thus,
-by that inexplicable connexion which, in some instances at least,
-appears to exist between the knowledge of such a horrible act and the
-desire to perform it, she was almost irresistibly impelled to the deed.
-
-“This case is stated as affording strong testimony in favour of a
-principle which is now beginning to attract the attention of medical
-men—viz., that the publicity which is given to cases of suicide,
-in the newspapers and by other means, forms one of the strongest
-incentives to the commission of the act, in those who have a secret
-disposition to destroy themselves.
-
-“If this be the fact, a high responsibility rests upon physicians, so
-to influence public opinion, and more especially editors, as to prevent
-the narration of the circumstances connected with the death of this
-unfortunate class. No good can certainly arise (to the public) from
-the exposure of facts which ought to remain concealed in the bosom
-of distressed families; while there is reason to believe the list of
-victims to suicide is annually very much swelled from the course which
-is now so generally pursued.”[40]
-
-It has been noticed that certain atmospherical phenomena have attended
-or preceded the suicidal epidemics that have prevailed at various
-periods. Whether these electrical conditions of the air are in any
-way connected with this peculiar form of contagious malady is a point
-not easily to be decided. A certain degree of atmospherical moisture
-appears to favour the spread of the suicidal disposition; but this may
-result from the well known influence of moist air on the disposition
-of the mind, and may operate by causing a degree of mental despondency
-and lassitude, very favourable to the development of the suicidal
-mania, particularly after the occurrence of any very remarkable case
-of self-destruction. It is notorious that nothing is so likely to
-unsettle the mind, especially if an hereditary disposition be present,
-than constantly associating with lunatics, and allowing the mind to
-dwell for any length of time on the subject of insanity. If actual
-mental derangement does not result from an exposure to the causes
-referred to, a certain degree of eccentricity bordering on the confines
-of aberration is generally perceptible. With our present amount of
-knowledge of the subtle principle of contagion, it is difficult to
-say whether an effluvium may not be generated in such cases which,
-under certain conditions of the system, may communicate disease. We
-cannot possibly say that this is not the case. If we are justified,
-which we by no means are willing to admit, in the opinion that the
-disposition to suicide and insanity may be propagated by contagion,
-using this term in its usual acceptation, it is a great consolation to
-the mind to think that only occasionally does the disease exhibit the
-slightest approach to virulence, and that, unlike many of the admitted
-contagious maladies, we may approach the patient without much fear or
-apprehension.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-SUICIDE FROM FASCINATION.
-
-
- Singular motives for committing suicide—A man who delighted
- in torturing himself—A dangerous experiment—Pleasures of
- carnage—Disposition to leap from precipices—Lord Byron’s
- allusion to the influence of fascination—Miss Moyes and
- the Monument—A man who could not trust himself with a
- razor—Esquirol’s opinion of such cases—Danger of ascending
- elevated places.
-
-How strange, extraordinary, and inexplicable are the motives which
-often lead to the commission of suicide! Many have been induced to rush
-into the arms of death in order to avoid the pain which they fancy
-accompanies dissolution. “_Hic, rogo, non furor est, ne moriare mori?_”
-Others have been apparently led to the perpetration of the crime by a
-desire to ascertain what sensations attended the act of dying; whilst
-some have been influenced by a feeling of fascination, and have stated
-that they experienced ecstatic delight at the idea of self-immolation.
-
-The case of a man is recorded who felt the most exquisite delight in
-torturing himself. He had often expressed a wish to be hanged, from
-the notion that this Newgate mode of terminating life must give rise
-to sensations of great pleasure. The idea occurred to him one day of
-trying the experiment. He procured a piece of cord, attached it to
-the ceiling, and suspended himself from it; fortunately for the poor
-infatuated man, the servant entered the room a few minutes afterwards,
-and cut him down. Life was not extinct. The man expressed that he felt,
-during the few moments that he was hanging, a thrilling delight, which
-no language that he could use could convey anything like an adequate
-expression of. There was no doubt that this man laboured under an
-abnormal condition of the mind, which, if not amounting to insanity,
-certainly approached very nearly the confines of that disease.[41]
-
-A woman was admitted some years back into one of our metropolitan
-hospitals who had a propensity to cut her person with every sharp
-instrument that she could procure. It was not her intention to kill
-herself; and when reasoned with on the folly of her actions, she
-observed that she was impelled by no other motive than the fascinating
-pleasure she experienced whenever she succeeded in drawing blood.
-
-A lady, a passenger on board of a ship bound for the East Indies,
-was frequently heard to express a wish to know what feeling a person
-experienced in the act of being drowned. She fancied the sensations
-must be of a pleasurable character. Her fellow-passengers laughed
-at her whenever she alluded to the matter. Having introduced the
-subject again during dinner, she observed, “Well, I intend to try the
-experiment to-morrow morning.” The threat only excited the merriment
-of those who heard it. In the morning, whilst the passengers were on
-deck, the lady plunged into the sea, to the astonishment of everybody.
-Luckily for her, the ship was becalmed, and her life was saved.
-
-An extraordinary young man, who lived at Paris, and who was
-passionately fond of mechanics, shut himself up one evening in his
-apartment, and bound not only his chest and stomach, but also his
-arms, legs, and thighs, with ropes full of knots, the ends of which he
-fastened to hooks in the wall. After having passed a considerable part
-of the night in this situation, he wished to disengage himself, but
-attempted it in vain. Some neighbouring females, who were up, heard
-his cries, and, calling for assistance, they forced open the door of
-his room, when they found him swinging in the air, with only one arm
-extricated. He was immediately carried to the lieutenant-general of the
-police for examination, when he declared that he had often put similar
-trials into execution, as he experienced _indescribable pleasure in
-them_. He confessed that at first he felt pain, but that after the
-cords became tight to a certain degree, he was soon rewarded by the
-most exquisite sensations of pleasure.[42]
-
-“As the chill dews of evening were surrounding our bivouac,” says the
-author of the “Recollections of the Peninsula,” “a staff officer, with
-a courier, came galloping into it, and alighted at the quarters of our
-general. It was soon known amongst us that a severe and sanguinary
-action had been fought by our brother soldiers at Talavera. Disjointed
-rumours spoke of a dear-bought field, a heavy loss, and a subsequent
-retreat. I well remember how we all gathered round our fires to listen,
-to conjecture, and to talk about this glorious, but bloody event. We
-regretted that we had borne no share in the honours of such a day; and
-_we talked with an undefined pleasure about the carnage_. Yes! strange
-as it may appear, soldiers, and not they alone, talk of the danger of
-battle fields with a sensation which partakes of pleasure.”
-
-A watchmaker of Aberdeen, who had been looking over the precipices of
-Loch-na-Gair, suddenly felt a desire to precipitate himself from the
-height, and having first taken a step or two back for the purpose, he
-flung himself off.
-
-A gentleman travelling through Switzerland, with his wife, came to an
-eminence commanding an extensive and beautiful view of the surrounding
-country. He went, accompanied by his wife, to the edge of a mountainous
-cliff, and, turning round to his lady, he observed—“I have lived long
-enough!” and in a moment threw himself down the precipice.
-
-It was a notion of this kind which induced Lord Byron to observe that
-he believed no man ever took a razor into his hand who did not at the
-same time think how easily he might sever the silver cord of life. The
-noble poet evidently alludes, in the following stanzas, to the strange
-and unaccountable influence of fascination in exciting the mind to
-commit suicide:—
-
- “A sleep without dreams, after a rough day
- Of toil, is what we covet most, and yet
- How clay shrinks back from more quiescent clay!
- The very suicide that pays his debts
- At once, without instalments, (an old way
- Of paying debts, which creditors regret,)
- Lets out impatiently his rushing breath,
- Less from disgust of life than dread of death.
-
- ’Tis round him, near him, there, everywhere;
- And there’s a courage which grows out of fear,
- Perhaps of all most desperate, which will dare
- The _worst_ to know it:—when the mountains rear
- Their peaks beneath your human foot, and there
- You look down o’er the precipice, and drear
- The gulf of rock yawns,—you can’t gaze a minute
- Without an awful wish to plunge within it!
-
- ’Tis true, you don’t—but, pale and struck with terror,
- Retire: but look into your past impression!
- And you will find, though shuddering at the mirror
- Of your own thoughts, in all their self-confession,
- The lurking bias, be it truth or error,
- To the _unknown_; a secret prepossession,
- To plunge with all your fears—but where? You know not,
- And that’s the reason why you do—or do not.”
-
-A gentleman with whom we are acquainted, informed us that, a few
-days after Miss Moyes had thrown herself from the Monument, a friend
-of his had the curiosity to visit the spot, and on looking down the
-awful height from which this poor unfortunate girl had precipitated
-herself, he felt suddenly an attack of giddiness, which was succeeded
-in a moment by one of the most pleasurable sensations he had ever
-experienced, accompanied with a desire to jump off. He was not
-influenced, apparently, by any other motive than that of a wish to
-gratify a feeling of ecstasy which for a minute suspended all the
-operations of the mind. A gentleman who was by him asked him a question
-with reference to the height of the Monument, and this circumstance
-recalling him to the exercise of his reasoning faculties, he
-immediately left the spot, shuddering at the recollection of the idea
-which had momentarily flashed across his mind.
-
-The case is related of a man who had this feeling so strongly
-manifested that he never dared trust himself with a razor. He was
-not devoid of religious feeling, and was most happy in his domestic
-relations. On occasions which required the exercise of moral
-resolution, he was never found wanting. He declared his life would
-not be safe for a day if he were permitted to shave himself. Such
-instances are by no means uncommon, and require much ingenuity to
-account satisfactorily for them, unless they be referred to the effect
-of fascination.
-
-Andral observes, “that there are many men perfectly rational, and
-completely undisturbed by care or pain, who, singular to state,
-have been suddenly seized by a headlong, groundless inclination to
-destroy themselves. There are hundreds who cannot approach the brink
-of a cliff, or ascend a lofty tower, without experiencing an almost
-invincible desire to precipitate themselves to the bottom, from which
-fate they only save themselves by an instantaneous effort to retire
-from the temptation. I knew a gentleman who, while shaving himself
-one day, alone, was three times so vehemently urged to plunge the
-razor into his throat, that he was at length compelled to throw the
-instrument from him, in absolute horror and dismay. In rational men,
-however, these trying and dangerous moments are but of very short
-duration.”
-
-A sailor informed us that he had often, when at the top of the
-mast, felt disposed to precipitate himself from the giddy eminence,
-influenced by no other motive than that of pleasure.
-
-In such cases, what course is the medical man to pursue? It is
-difficult to give any instructions for the treatment of such cases
-of mental idiosyncrasy. Persons who are subject to feelings of this
-character should be advised to avoid ascending elevated places.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-OF THE ENTHUSIASM AND MENTAL IRRITABILITY WHICH, IF ENCOURAGED, WOULD
-LEAD TO SUICIDE.
-
-
- Connexion between genius and insanity—Authors of fiction
- often feel what they write—Metastasio in tears—The enthusiasm
- of Pope, Alfieri, Dryden—Effects of the first reading of
- Telemachus and Tasso on Madame Roland’s mind—Raffaelle and
- his celebrated picture of the Transfiguration—The convulsions
- of Malbranche—Beattie’s Essay on Truth—Influence of intense
- study on Boerrhave’s mind—The demon of Spinello and
- Luther—Bourdaloue and his violin—Byron’s sensitiveness—Men do
- not always practise what they preach—Cases of Smollett, La
- Fontaine, Sir Thomas More, Zimmerman—Tasso’s spectre—Johnson’s
- superstition—Concluding remarks.
-
-It has been observed that the act of suicide may often originate in a
-feeling analogous to the enthusiasm exhibited by men of great genius
-and sensibility. This mental idiosyncrasy, which borders so closely on
-the confines of insanity, has been compared to the narrow bridge of
-Al Sirat, which leads the followers of Mahomet from earth to heaven,
-but by so narrow a path that the passenger is in momentary danger of
-falling into the dismal gulf which yawns beneath him. This abnormal
-condition of the nervous system is, to a certain extent, dependent on
-natural organic structure, aided materially by an unhealthy exercise
-of the imaginative faculty. Fielding spoke but the history of his own
-sensations when he declared that he “had no doubt but the most pathetic
-scenes had been writ with tears.” Metastasio was found weeping over
-his Olympiad. He says: “When I apply with attention, the nerves of my
-sensorium are put into a violent tumult; I grow as red as a drunkard,
-and am obliged to quit my work.” Pope could not proceed with certain
-passages of his translation of Homer without shedding tears. Alfieri
-declares that he frequently penned the most tender passages in his
-plays “under a paroxysm of enthusiasm, and whilst shedding tears.”
-Dryden was seized with violent tremors during the composition of his
-celebrated ode. Rousseau, in conceiving the first idea of his Essay on
-the Arts, became almost delirious with enthusiasm.
-
-Madame Roland has thus powerfully described the ideal presence in
-her first readings of Telemachus and Tasso:—“My respiration rose,
-I felt a rapid fire colouring my face, and my voice changing had
-betrayed my agitation. I was Eucharis for Telemachus, and Emenia for
-Tancred. Having my reason during this perfect transformation, I did
-not yet think that I myself was anything for any one: the whole had
-no connexion with myself. I sought for nothing around me; I was they;
-I saw only the objects which existed for them; it was a dream without
-being awakened.”
-
-Raffaelle says, alluding to his celebrated picture, the
-Transfiguration—“When I have stood looking at that picture, from figure
-to figure, the eagerness, the spirit, the close unaffected attention of
-each figure to the principal action, my thoughts have carried me away,
-that I have forgot myself, and for that time might be looked upon as
-an enthusiastic madman; for I could really fancy the whole action was
-passing before my eyes.”
-
-Malbranche was seized with violent palpitations of the heart when
-reading Descartes’s Treatise on Man:—
-
- “With curious art, the brain too finely wrought
- Preys on itself, and is destroyed by thought;
- Constant attention wears the active mind,
- Blots out her powers, and leaves a blank behind.”
-
-Intense occupation of mind to any particular branch of study, often
-brings the mind on the verge of madness. “Since the ‘Essay on Truth’
-was printed in quarto,” says Dr. Beattie, “I have never _dared_ to read
-it over. I durst not even read the sheets to see whether there were any
-errors in the print, and was obliged to get a friend to do that office
-for me. These studies came, in time, to have dreadful effects upon
-my nervous system; and I cannot read what I then wrote without some
-degree of horror, because it recalls to my mind the horrors that I have
-sometimes felt after passing a long evening in these severe studies.”
-
-Boerrhave has related of himself that, having imprudently indulged in
-intense thought on a particular subject, he did not close his eyes for
-six weeks afterwards.
-
-Spinello, having painted the fall of the rebellious angels, had so
-strongly imagined the illusion, and more particularly the terrible
-features of Lucifer, that he was himself struck with such horror as
-to have been long afflicted with the presence of the demon to which
-his genius had given birth. Swedenburg saw a terrestrial heaven in the
-glittering streets of his New Jerusalem.
-
-Malbranche declared he heard the voice of God distinctly within him.
-Pascal often was seen to rush suddenly from his chair at the appearance
-of a fiery gulf by his side. Luther maintained that during his
-confinement the devil used to visit him.
-
-Hudibras says—
-
- “Did not the devil appear to Martin
- Luther, in Germany, for certain?”
-
-He declares that he had many a contest with his satanic majesty, and
-that he had always the best of the argument. At one time, the devil so
-enraged Luther that he threw the ink-stand at him, an action which the
-German commentators greatly applaud, from a conviction that there is
-nothing which the devil abhors more than ink.
-
-Descartes, after long confinement, was followed by an invisible person,
-calling upon him to pursue the search of truth.
-
-Mozart’s sensibility to music was connected with so susceptible a
-nervous system that, in his childhood, the sound of a trumpet would
-turn him pale, and almost induce convulsions. Dr. Conolly relates an
-amusing anecdote of the celebrated Bourdaloue. It is said that the
-composition of his eloquent sermons so excited his mind that he was
-unable to deliver them until he discovered some mode of allaying his
-excitement. “His attendants one day were both scandalized and alarmed,
-on proceeding to his apartment, for the purpose of accompanying him to
-the cathedral, by hearing the sound of a fiddle, on which was played
-a very lively tune. After their first consternation, they ventured to
-look through the keyhole, and were still more shocked to behold the
-great divine dancing about, without his gown and canonicals, to his own
-inspiring music. Of course, they concluded him to be mad. But, when
-they knocked, the music ceased; and after a short and anxious interval,
-he met them with a composed dress and manner; and, observing some signs
-of astonishment in the party, explained to them that without his music
-and his exercise he should have been unable to undertake the duties of
-the day.”
-
-In the character of Lord Byron we have an apt illustration of the kind
-of mental irritability and morbid sensitiveness of feeling that so
-often incites to acts of desperation. It has been said that the noble
-poet was the child of passion, born in bitterness and “nurtured in
-convulsion.” The true state of his mind can best be divined from the
-delineation of his own sensations as given in Childe Harold:—
-
- “I have thought
- Too long and darkly, till my brain became
- In its own eddy boiling, and orwrought
- A whirling gulf of phantasy and flame:
- And thus untaught in youth my heart to tame,
- My springs of life were poisoned.”
-
-Byron was subject to attacks of epilepsy; and perhaps this fact may
-account for much of the spleen and irritability which he manifested
-through life, and which made him so many enemies. It also teaches us
-an important lesson. We are too apt to form our estimate of character
-without taking into consideration all those circumstances which are
-known materially to influence human thought and actions. The state
-of the organization and the health ought to be maturely weighed
-before we pronounce authoritatively as to the motives of individuals,
-or denounce them for not acting or thinking according to what our
-preconceived opinions have taught us to consider as orthodox. Byron’s
-mind was morbidly alive to impressions. The most trifling circumstance
-would cause him to swoon. At Bologna, in 1819, he describes one of
-his convulsive attacks:—“Last night I went to the representation of
-Alfieri’s Myrrha, the last two acts of which threw me into convulsions;
-I don’t mean by that word lady’s hysterics, but an agony of reluctant
-tears, and the choking shudder which I do not often undergo for
-fiction.” He was seized in a similar manner at seeing Kean in Sir Giles
-Overreach; he was carried out of the theatre in convulsions. From early
-life, Byron exhibited this abnormal excitability. There can be no doubt
-that it was but the natural effect of a peculiar condition of nervous
-function; but, instead of endeavouring to subdue the feeling, he did
-his best to encourage it, and to fan the fire into a flame. He appears
-to have been tortured by horrid dreams. He says in his Journal—“I awoke
-from a dream: well, have not others dreamed? Such a dream! But she did
-not overtake me! I wish the dead would rest for ever. Ugh! how my blood
-is chilled! I do not like this dream; I hate its foregone conclusion.”
-
-The “Bride of Abydos” was written to distract the poet’s mind from his
-dreams. He was in such a nervous state at this period, that he says if
-he had not done something, he must have gone mad, or have eat his own
-heart.
-
-Stendhal, alluding to Byron’s apparent remorse, asks, “Is it not
-possible that Byron might have had some guilty stain on his conscience,
-similar to that which wrecked Othello’s fame? Can it be, have we
-sometimes exclaimed, that, in a frenzy of pride or jealousy, he
-had shortened the days of some fair Grecian slave, faithless to her
-vows?”[43]
-
-It is not just to form our opinions of the character of men by their
-writings or actions. In the mass, we are ready to admit that we have no
-other criteria by which to be guided; but we may charitably consider
-that Byron was not himself the “dark original he drew.”
-
- “O memory! torture me no more:
- The present’s all o’ercast—
- My hopes of future bliss are o’er;
- In mercy, veil the past.”
-
-Such were his feelings at the age of seventeen.
-
-La Fontaine penned tales fertile in intrigues, and yet he was never
-known, says D’Israeli, to have been engaged in a single amour. Smollett
-was anything but what his writings would lead us to expect. Cowley
-boasted of his mistresses, and wanted the courage to address one.
-Burton declaimed against melancholy, and yet he was the most miserable
-of men. Sir Thomas More preached in favour of toleration, yet in
-practice was a fierce persecutor. Zimmerman, whilst he was inculcating
-beautiful lessons of benevolence, was by his tyranny driving his son
-into madness, and leaving his daughter an outcast from home. Goëthe
-says, “Zimmerman’s harshness towards his children was the effect of
-hypochondria, a sort of madness or moral assassination, to which he
-himself fell a victim after sacrificing his offspring.”
-
-Byron occasionally fancied he was visited by a spectre, which he
-confesses was but the effect of an overstimulated brain.
-
-Tasso, whose fine imagination the passions of hopeless love, and
-of grief occasioned by ill treatment, disordered, was in daily
-communication with a spirit. This circumstance is alluded to in the
-following anecdote of him, prefixed to Hoole’s translation of his “_La
-Gierusalemme Liberata_.”
-
-“In this place (at Bisaccio, near Naples) Manso had an opportunity
-of examining the singular effects of Tasso’s melancholy, and often
-disputed with him concerning a familiar spirit, with which he pretended
-to converse. Manso endeavoured in vain to persuade his friend that
-the whole was the illusion of a disturbed imagination; but the latter
-was strenuous in maintaining the reality of what he asserted; and to
-convince Manso, desired him to be present at one of these mysterious
-conversations. Manso had the complaisance to meet him next day; and
-while they were engaged in discourse, on a sudden he observed that
-Tasso kept his eyes fixed upon a window, and remained in a manner
-immovable. He called him by his name several times, but received no
-answer. At last Tasso cried out, ‘There is the friendly spirit, who
-is come to converse with me. Look, and you will be convinced of the
-truth of all that I have said.’ Manso heard him with surprise; he
-looked, but saw nothing except the sunbeams darting through the window:
-he cast his eyes all over the room, but could perceive nothing, and
-was just going to ask where the pretended spirit was, when he heard
-Tasso speak with great earnestness, sometimes putting questions to the
-spirit, and sometimes giving answers, delivering the whole in such a
-pleasing manner, and with such elevated expressions, that he listened
-with admiration, and had not the least inclination to interrupt him.
-At last the uncommon conversation ended with the departure of the
-spirit, as appeared by Tasso’s words, who, turning to Manso, asked him
-if his doubts were removed? Manso was more amazed than ever; he scarce
-knew what to think of his friend’s situation, and waved any further
-conversation on the subject.”
-
-Boswell says, Dr. Johnson mentioned a thing as not unfrequent, of
-which he (Boswell) had never heard before,—being called, that is,
-hearing one’s name pronounced, by the voice of a known person at a
-great distance, far beyond the possibility of being reached by any
-sound, uttered by human organs. An acquaintance, on whose veracity
-Boswell says he could place every dependence, told him that, walking
-home one evening to Kilmarnock, he heard himself called from a wood,
-by the voice of a brother who had gone to America, and the next packet
-brought the account of that brother’s death. Macbean asserted that this
-inexplicable _calling_ was a thing very well known. Dr. Johnson said,
-that one day at Oxford, as he was turning the key of his chambers, he
-heard distinctly his mother call _Sam!_ She was then at Lichfield; but
-nothing ensued.
-
-Sir Joshua Reynolds gives an amusing instance of Dr. Johnson’s
-eccentricity. He says, “When he and I took a journey into the west, we
-visited the late Mr. Banks, of Dorsetshire. The conversation turning
-upon pictures, which Johnson could not well see, he retired to a corner
-of the room, stretching out his right leg as far as he could reach
-before him, then bringing up his left leg, and stretching his right
-still further on. The old gentleman observing him, went up to him, and
-in a very courteous manner assured him that, though it was not a new
-house, the flooring was perfectly safe. The Doctor started from his
-reverie, like a person waked out of a sleep, but spoke not a word.”
-
-Dr. Johnson had one peculiarity, says Boswell, of which none of his
-friends dared to ask an explanation. This was an anxious care to go out
-or in at a door or passage by a certain number of steps from a certain
-point, so that either his right or left foot should constantly make
-the first actual movement. Thus, upon innumerable occasions, Boswell
-has seen him suddenly stop, and then seem to count his steps with
-deep earnestness; and when he had neglected, or gone wrong in this
-sort of magical movement, he has been noticed to go back again, put
-himself in a proper posture to recommence the ceremony, and having gone
-through it, break from his abstraction, briskly walk on, and join his
-companions.
-
-An inordinate cultivation of any one faculty of the mind, but more
-particularly the imagination, will tend to produce the peculiarities
-which have been illustrated in this chapter. A person who accustoms
-himself to live in a world created by his own fancy—who surrounds
-himself with flimsy idealities—will, in the course of time, cease
-to sympathize with the gross realities of life. The imaginary
-intelligences which his own morbid mind has called into existence will
-exercise a terrific influence over him. A German poet commenced writing
-a poem on the Deity. He allowed his mind to dwell so intensely on the
-subject, that he fancied he was commanded to “flee from a world of
-sin and iniquity;” to effect which, he cut his throat, and was found
-dead in bed, with the razor in one hand and a portion of his poem in
-the other. The apparitions which the monomaniac fancies to haunt him
-are as real and sensible existences to him, as objects are to persons
-who have a healthy use of the media through which ideas obtain access
-to the mind. Mr. Calcraft, the late member of parliament, committed
-suicide. He imagined that a strange unearthly-looking being sat night
-and day perched at the top of his bed, watching with earnestness his
-every movement. This, which to all around him was an hallucination, to
-him _was_ a reality. It is possible for a person of vivid imagination
-to conjure into apparent existence the most grotesque images of the
-fancy, by allowing the mind to dwell with intenseness on a particular
-train of thought, and by perfectly abstracting the attention from all
-materiality.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-PHYSICAL CAUSES OF SUICIDE.
-
-
- Influence of climate—The foggy climate of England does not
- increase the number of suicides—Average number of suicides in
- each month, from 1817 to 1826—Influence of seasons—Suicides
- at Rouen—The English not a suicidal people—Philip Mordaunt’s
- singular reasons for self-destruction—Causes of French
- suicides—Influence of physical pain—Unnatural vices—Suicide
- the effect of intoxication—Influence of hepatic disease
- on the mind—Melancholy and hypochondriasis, Burton’s
- account of—Cowper’s case of suicide—Particulars of his
- extreme depression of spirits—Byron and Burns’s melancholy
- from stomach and liver derangement—Influence of bodily
- disease on the mind—Importance of paying attention to it—A
- case of insanity from gastric irritation—Dr. Johnson’s
- hypochondria—Hereditary suicide, illustrated by cases—Suicide
- from blows on the head, and from moral shocks communicated to
- the brain—Dr. G. Mantell’s valuable observations and cases
- demonstrative of the point—Concluding remarks.
-
-The following are the physical causes which are commonly found to
-operate in producing the suicidal disposition—viz., climate, seasons,
-hereditary predisposition, cerebral injuries, physical suffering,
-disease of the stomach and liver complicated with melancholia and
-hypochondriasis, insanity, suppressed secretions, intoxication,
-unnatural vices, and derangement of the _primæ viæ_. These causes can
-only act by influencing sympathetically the brain and nervous system,
-and in that way interfering with the healthy operations of the mind.
-Much will, of course, depend upon the physical conformation of the
-individual exposed to such agents. Should he labour under an hereditary
-predisposition to insanity, or to suicidal delirium, a very trifling
-corporeal derangement may call into existence the self-destructive
-propensity, and _vice versa_. It will be our object to consider
-_seriatim_ all the physical agents just enumerated.
-
-Among the causes of suicide, the foggy climate of England has been
-brought prominently forward. The specious and inaccurate conclusions
-of Montesquieu on this point have misled the public mind. The climate
-of Holland is much more gloomy than that of England, and yet in that
-country suicide is by no means common. The reader will perceive from
-the following tabular statement that the popular notion of the month of
-November being the “suicide’s month” is founded on erroneous _data_.
-
-The average number of suicides in each month, from 1817 to 1826, was as
-follows:—
-
- January 213
- February 218
- March 275
- April 374
- May 328
- June 336
- July 301
- August 296
- September 246
- October 198
- November 131
- December 217
- ————
- 3133
-
-
-It has been clearly established that in all the European capitals,
-when anything approaching to correct statistical evidence can be
-procured, the _maximum_ of suicide is in the months of June and July;
-the _minimum_ in October and November. Temperature appears to exercise
-a much more decided influence than the circumstances of moisture and
-dryness, storms or serenity. M. Villeneuve has observed a warm, humid,
-and cloudy atmosphere to produce a marked bad effect at Paris; and
-that so long as the barometer indicated stormy weather, this effect
-continued.[44] Contrary, however, to the opinion of Villeneuve, it
-appears that by far the fewer number of suicides occur in the autumn
-and winter at Paris, than in the spring and summer.
-
-_Number of suicides for seven years._
-
- In Spring 997
- In Summer 933
- In Autumn 627
- In Winter 648
-
-When the thermometer of Fahrenheit ranges from 80° to 90° suicide is
-most prevalent.
-
-The English have been accused by foreigners of being the _beau-ideal_
-of a suicidal people. The charge is almost too ridiculous to merit
-serious refutation. It has clearly been established that where there is
-one suicide in London, there are five in Paris. In the year 1810, the
-number of suicides committed in London amounted to 188; the population
-of Paris being near 400,000 less than that of London. From the year
-1827 to 1830, no less than 6900 suicides occurred; that is, an average
-of nearly 1800 per annum. Out of 120,000 persons who ensured their
-lives in the London Equitable Insurance Company, the number of suicides
-in twenty years was only fifteen; so much for the English being _par
-excellence_ disposed to suicide.
-
-The causes which frequently lead to self-destruction in France are,
-defective religious education, _ennui_, and loss at dice or cards.
-In considering the circumstances which produce this disparity in the
-number of voluntary deaths in the two countries, we must bear in mind
-the moral and religious habits of the people. When Christianity is not
-acknowledged as a matter of vital importance in the affairs of man;
-when morality is considered only as a conventional term, conveying
-no definite idea to the mind, it is natural that there should exist,
-co-relative with this tone of feeling, a marked recklessness of human
-life. Some notion may be formed of the state of religious feeling in
-Paris, when our readers are informed of the existence in the French
-metropolis of a “society for the mutual encouragement of suicide,” all
-the members of which, on joining it, swear to terminate their existence
-by their own hands, when life becomes insupportable.
-
-Dr. Schlegel dwells at much length on the abandoned state of Paris, and
-after giving us some important statistical evidence, he alludes to the
-gross immorality of the people, and denounces the French capital as “a
-suffocating boiling cauldron, in which, as in the stew of Macbeth’s
-witches, there simmer, with a modicum of virtue, all kinds of passions,
-vices, and crimes.”
-
-Alluding to the peculiarities of the French people, particularly their
-indifference to human life, an eminent writer observes, speaking of
-their notions of suicide, that a Frenchman asks you to see him “go
-off,” as if death were a place in the _malle poste_. “Will you dine
-with me to-day?” said a Frenchman to a friend. “With the greatest
-pleasure;—yet, now I think of it, I am particularly engaged to shoot
-myself; one cannot get off _such_ an engagement.” This is not the
-suicide _à la mode_ with us. We ape at no such extra civilization
-and refinement. We can be romantic without blowing out our brains.
-English lovers do not, when “the course of true love” does not run
-smooth, retire to some sequestered spot, and rush into the next world
-by a brace of pistols tied with cherry-coloured ribbons. When we do
-shoot ourselves, it is done with true English gravity. It is no joke
-with us. We have no inherent predilection for the act; no “hereditary
-imperfection of the nervous juices,” as Montesquieu, with all the
-impudence and gravity of a philosopher, asserts, forcing us to commit
-suicide. “Life,” said a man who had exhausted all his external sources
-of enjoyment, and had no internal ones to fly to, “has given me a
-headache; and I want a good sleep in the churchyard to set me to
-rights,” to procure which, he deliberately shot himself.[45]
-
-A late French writer thus attempts to account for the prevalence
-of suicide in France:—“The external circumstances which tend to
-suggest the idea of suicide are very numerous, at the present day, in
-France; but more particularly so in the capital. The high development
-of civilization and refinement which prevails here—the clash of
-interests—the repeated political changes—all contribute to keep the
-moral feelings in a perpetual state of tension. Life does not roll
-on among us in a peaceful and steady current; it rushes forward with
-the force and precipitation of a torrent. In the terrible _mêlée_,
-it often happens that the little minority, which has obtained a
-footing high above the multitude for a time, falls down as suddenly as
-they have risen. The struggles of life are full of miscalculations,
-disappointments, despair, and disgust. Hence the general source of
-our frequent suicides. But there are other causes in operation; and
-not the least, the strange turn that plays and spectacles have lately
-taken. The public taste has undergone a complete revolution in this
-respect. Nothing is more patronized now at the theatre than the display
-of crime unpunished, human misery unconsoled, and a low literature,
-impregnated by a spurious philosophy, declaiming against society,
-against domestic life, against virtue itself; applauding the vengeance
-of the assassin, and recognising genius only as it is seen in company
-with spleen, poison, and pistols. We appeal to all who read the novels
-of the present day, and who visit the theatres, whether what we say is
-not the fact.”
-
-It has been questioned whether physical suffering often originates
-the desire for suicide. Too many lamentable cases are on record to
-prevent us from coming to an opposite conclusion. Esquirol has justly
-observed, that “He who has no intervals of ease from corporeal pain;
-who sees no prospects of relief from his cruel malady, fails at length
-in resignation, and destroys his life in order to put a period to his
-sufferings. He calculates that the pain of dying is but momentary, and
-commits the act in a cool and meditated despair. It is the same in
-respect to _moral_ condition, that drives the hypochondriac to suicide,
-who is firmly persuaded that his sufferings are beyond imagining; that
-they are irremediable, either from some fatal peculiarity in his own
-constitution, or the ignorance of his physicians. It is a remarkable
-feature in hypochondriasis, and in no other disease, that there is
-such a fear of death and a desire to die combined. Both fears proceed
-from the same pusillanimity. Finally, it may be remarked that the
-hypochondriac talks most of death; often wishes his attendants to
-perform the friendly office; even makes attempts on his own life,
-but rarely accomplishes the act. The most trifling motive, the most
-frivolous pretext, is a sufficient excuse for procrastinating, from day
-to day, the threatened catastrophe.”
-
-The following case occurred in a provincial mad-house, in France. An
-apothecary who was confined there was haunted with _ennui_, and was
-always begging his companions to put him to death. At length, an insane
-patient was admitted, who instantly complied with the apothecary’s
-request. They both watched an opportunity, got out of a window in the
-back yard, and from thence into the kitchen. They pitched upon the
-cook’s chopper, and the apothecary laying his head on a block, his
-companion deliberately and effectually severed it from his body. He was
-seized, and examined before a tribunal, where he candidly confessed
-the whole transaction, and observed that he would again perform the
-same friendly office for any unhappy wretch who was tired of his
-existence![46]
-
-Lucinius Cæcinius, the prætor, subdued by the pain and _ennui_ of a
-tedious disease, swallowed opium. Dr. Haslam relates the case of a
-gentleman who destroyed himself to avoid the tortures of the gout.
-It is recorded that the pain of the same disease drove Servius the
-grammarian to take poison. Pliny informs us that one of his friends,
-Corellius Rufus, having in vain sought relief from the pangs of a
-disease under which he was labouring, starved himself to death at
-the age of sixty-seven. It is related of Pomponius Atticus and the
-philosopher Cleanthes, that they both starved themselves to death in
-order to get rid of physical pain. In the course of these attempts,
-the corporeal sufferings were removed—probably in consequence of the
-great exhaustion and attenuation; but both individuals persevered till
-death took place, observing that as this final ordeal must one day
-be undergone, they would not now retrace their steps or give up the
-undertaking.
-
-Few, perhaps, are aware how frequently suicide results from the habit
-of indulging, in early youth, in a certain secret vice which, we are
-afraid, is practised to an enormous extent in our public schools. A
-feeling of false delicacy has operated with medical men in inducing
-them to refrain from dwelling upon the destructive consequences of
-this habit, both to the moral and physical constitution, as openly and
-honestly as the importance of the subject imperatively demands.
-
-Medical men are, in the most enlarged acceptation of the term,
-guardians of the public health; and no fastidious desire to avoid
-saying what might possibly offend the taste of some, ought to keep
-them from discharging what may be termed a sacred duty. The physical
-disease, particularly that connected with the nervous system,
-engendered by the pernicious practice alluded to, frequently leads
-to the act of self-destruction. We have before us the cases of many
-suicides in whom the disposition may clearly be traced to this cause.
-This habit most seriously affects the brain and nervous system; and
-insanity, hypochondriasis, and melancholia, in their worst forms, are
-frequently the baneful consequences.
-
-If disease, structural or functional, of the abdominal viscera gives
-rise to the disposition to commit suicide, it will not require much
-ingenuity to establish the fact that the habitual indulgence in
-intoxicating liquors may originate a similar feeling.
-
-It has been already established by statistical evidence, that, in
-a very large proportion of the cases of insanity admitted into the
-asylums and hospitals devoted to the reception of this unhappy class
-of patients, the mental impairment can clearly be traced to habits of
-intemperance.
-
-The brain and nervous system become materially affected in those who
-indulge frequently in “potations pottle deep.” Delirium tremens,
-softening of the cerebral substance, palsy, epilepsy, extreme
-hypochondriasis, are daily witnessed as the melancholy effects of
-intoxication.
-
-M. Falret knew the case of a man who always felt disposed to cut his
-throat when under the influence of spirits. No reasoning could induce
-him to abstain from his favourite draught. The inevitable consequences
-were pointed out to him; he was reasoned with, and threatened with
-confinement in a mad-house; but nothing had the desired effect. One
-Sunday evening, after having drunk several glasses of spirits, although
-not sufficient to produce complete inebriation, he stabbed himself to
-the heart, and died in a few minutes.
-
-Incurable indigestion and organic disease of the liver are very
-commonly met with in habitual drunkards. In such persons, the
-constitution of the mind appears to undergo a complete change. At first
-it may not be perceptible, and the patient may not be conscious of it
-himself, but the mental disease will, sooner or later, unequivocally
-evince itself.
-
-In such cases, the medical man has fearful odds to contend against.
-
-A young man, who had become insane in consequence of long continued
-intoxication, made violent efforts to maim himself, and especially to
-pull out his right eye, which appeared to give him great offence. Rest,
-temperance, seclusion, the application of half a dozen leeches to the
-temple, and a few doses of opening medicine, restored him, in about a
-fortnight, to the full possession of his faculties.
-
-Many cases of suicide, in those who have a natural predisposition to
-it, arise from the brain sympathizing with the liver; nor can this
-be a matter of surprise to any one who has felt the depression of
-spirits incident to disease of that organ. So many cases have occurred
-from this cause, that some writers, from not finding, on subsequent
-dissection, any organic lesion of the brain, have referred it to
-diseased viscera only. But as we find that the insanity ceases when the
-liver is restored to health, there is no reason for supposing that the
-mental alienation is, in these instances, any other than the effect of
-disease of the brain.
-
-J. C., about fifty years of age, was insane for two years. He was
-formerly in respectable circumstances, and employed in the situation of
-writer in an office. He made several attempts on his life. He had been
-in the habit of drinking spirits very freely, and had a disease of the
-liver which appeared of some standing. At the time of his admission
-into Hanwell asylum, under the care of Sir W. Ellis, he was in a most
-emaciated state; his legs scarcely able to support him. His face and
-body also were covered with an eruption; tongue furred; his stools
-very dark: he was much depressed, and always moaning most piteously;
-complained of heat and numbness in his head, and pain in all his limbs.
-Leeches and cold lotions were applied to his head, his bowels opened
-by calomel and colocynth, and he went into the warm bath every other
-day. He was much relieved by these means. He still continued, however,
-to moan as before. His tongue remained furred, and stools unhealthy.
-He took five grains of blue pill every alternate night for some time.
-These were then left off awhile; no improvement taking place, he began
-the pills again, and continued them for two months, with evident
-advantage. His tongue was clean; he was less depressed; became strong,
-and gained flesh; the biliary secretions were much improved. He is now
-occupied in the office; and every day, as the action of the liver seems
-to improve, his mind makes a corresponding advance.
-
-There is no more frequent cause of suicide than visceral derangement,
-leading to melancholia and hypochondriasis. It has been a matter of
-dispute with medical men whether hypochondriacal affections have their
-origin in the mental or physical portion of the economy. Many maintain
-that the mind is the seat of the disease; others, that the liver and
-stomach are primarily affected, and the brain only secondarily. In
-this disputed point, as in most others, truth will generally be found
-to lie between the two extremities. That cases of hypochondria and
-melancholia can clearly be traced to purely mental irritation cannot
-for one moment be disputed; and that there are many instances in
-which the derangement appears to have commenced in one of the gastric
-organs, is as equally self-evident. Whatever may be the origin of these
-affections, there can be no doubt of their producing most disastrous
-consequences. Burton’s account of the horrors of hypochondria is truly
-graphic. “As the rain,” says Austin, “penetrates the stone, so does
-this passion of melancholy penetrate the mind. It commonly accompanies
-men to their graves. Physicians may ease, but they cannot cure it; it
-may lie hid for a time, but it will return again, as violent as ever,
-on slight occasions, as well as on casual excesses. Its humour is like
-Mercury’s weather-beaten statue, which had once been gilt; the surface
-was clean and uniform, but in the chinks there was still a remnant of
-gold: and in the purest bodies, if once tainted by hypochondria, there
-will be some relics of melancholy still left, not so easily to be
-rooted out. Seldom does this disease produce death, except (which is
-the most grievous calamity of all) when these patients make away with
-themselves—a thing familiar enough amongst them, when they are driven
-to do violence to themselves to escape from present insufferable pain.
-They can take no rest in the night, or, if they slumber, fearful dreams
-astonish them. Their soul abhorreth all meat, and they are brought to
-death’s door, being bound in misery and in iron. Like Job, they curse
-their stars, for Job was melancholy to despair, and almost to madness.
-They are weary of the sun, and yet afraid to die, _vivere nolunt et
-mori nesciunt_. And then, like Æsop’s fishes, they leap from the frying
-pan into the fire, when they hope to be cured by means of physic—a
-miserable end to the disease; when ultimately left to their fate by a
-jury of physicians, are furiously disposed; and there remains no more
-to such persons, if that heavenly physician, by his grace and mercy,
-(whose aid alone avails,) do not heal and help them. One day of such
-grief as theirs is as a hundred years: it is a plague of the sense, a
-convulsion of the soul, an epitome of hell; and if there be a hell upon
-earth, it is to be found in a melancholy man’s heart. No bodily torture
-is like unto it; all other griefs are swallowed up in this great
-Euripus. I say the melancholy man then is the cream and quintessence
-of human adversity. All other diseases are trifles to hypochondria;
-it is the pith and marrow of them all! A melancholy man is the true
-Prometheus, bound to Caucasus; the true Tityrus, whose bowels are still
-devoured by a vulture.”
-
- “Dull melancholy——
- She’ll make you start at ev’ry noise you hear,
- And visions strange shall to your eyes appear.
- Her voice is low, and gives a hollow sound;
- She hates the light, and is in darkness found;
- Or sits by blinking lamps, or taper small,
- Which various shadows make against the wall.
- She loves nought else but noise which discord makes,
- As croaking frogs whose dwelling is in lakes;
- The raven hoarse, the mandrake’s hollow groan,
- And shrieking owls, that fly i’th’ night alone;
- The tolling bell, which for the dead rings out,
- A mill, where rushing waters run about.
- She loves to walk in the still moonshine light,
- And in a thick dark grove she takes delight;
- In hollow caves, thatch’d houses, and low cells,
- She loves to live, and there alone she dwells.”
-
-“There are individuals who, from various physical or moral causes,”
-says Esquirol, “fall into a state of corporeal torpor and mental
-depression. They complain of want of appetite, dull pain in the head,
-sense of heat in the stomach and viscera, borborygmi, and constipation
-of the bowels; while they exhibit little or no indication of disease.
-In the female sex, the natural secretions become suspended. As the
-complaint advances, the features alter, and the countenance exhibits
-anxiety; the complexion becomes pale or sallow; there is a sense of
-tightness, or even pain, in the epigastrium; a kind of compression
-in the head, which prevents them from fixing their attention, or
-arranging their thoughts; a general torpor or lassitude, which keeps
-them inactive. They dislike to move out, and love to loll about on a
-sofa; they are irritated if you advise them to take exercise; they
-abandon their ordinary avocations, neglect their domestic concerns,
-become indifferent to their nearest connexions; in short, they will
-neither converse, nor study, nor read, nor write, shunning society, and
-being impatient of the inquiries and importunities of friends. In this
-state they become filled with gloomy ideas (_idées noires_), despair
-of ever being better, desire or even invoke death, and sometimes
-destroy themselves, from a conviction that they are no longer capable
-of fulfilling their duties in society. These people are perfectly
-sane on all subjects of conversation; their impulse to suicide being
-strong in proportion to the activity of their former avocations, and
-the importance of their former duties. I have seen their disease (for
-it is a disease) continue for months, and even years. I have seen it
-alternate with mania and with perfect health. I have seen patients who
-would be six months of the year maniacal or in sound health, and the
-other six months tormented with these gloomy ideas and impulses to
-suicide.”
-
-In confirmation of this view of Esquirol’s, the following cases are
-related:[47]—A gentleman of apparently sound constitution, aged 32, was
-married to a woman whom he affectionately loved. His affairs became
-deranged a few years after his marriage, which greatly discouraged
-him, and rendered him inactive, but without apparently affecting his
-health. He now embarked in a speculation which promised much advantage,
-and at first applied himself to business with unremitting assiduity.
-In the course of a month he encountered some difficulties, which
-depressed him beyond measure. He considered himself ruined, refused to
-quit his bed, and would not superintend his workmen, from a conviction
-that he was no longer capable of directing their operations. He
-complained of headache, heat in his stomach, &c. His affection for
-his wife and children, his pecuniary interests, all failed to rouse
-him from this moral and physical prostration. He reasoned sanely on
-the critical state of his affairs, and yet made no effort to rescue
-himself from his difficulties. Eight days passed in this way, when
-all at once he sprung from his bed in perfect integrity of mind and
-body. He resumed instantaneously all his activity for business, all
-his affection for his family. The same state, however, recurred ten
-or twelve times since, at irregular intervals, caused in general by
-trifling contrarieties of business, which, under other circumstances,
-would be considered as nothing. During several of these paroxysms he
-had impulses to suicide; but this dreaded catastrophe has not yet taken
-place.
-
-A female was admitted into the Salpetriere on the 23d of September,
-1819, in the 34th year of her age, and fourteen years after marriage.
-At the age of 21 she had a child, after which she was affected with
-an ulcer in the foot, which was healed in six months. From this time
-she was troubled with cardialgia, at first slight, but afterwards
-with intense pain and vomiting of her food. At the age of 33 she
-became irresolute in her ideas and actions. She expressed an aversion
-for those things which she had been previously pleased with, and was
-occasionally incoherent. After suffering from other derangements
-of her general health, she abandoned her household affairs, became
-quite despondent, and tried more than once to commit suicide. In this
-state she was admitted into the hospital, and was put upon diluents,
-low diet, &c. As she shewed indications of having recovered, she was
-allowed to return to her family; but in a short period she was harassed
-with gloomy ideas, despaired of recovery, and expressed a desire to
-quit life, the duties of which she said she was no longer able to
-fulfil.
-
-In the case of Cowper, we have a melancholy instance of hypochondriasis
-leading to suicidal mental derangement. That the poet’s mind was
-unsound when he attempted to kill himself, must be evident to those who
-are conversant with the history of his life. He never appears to have
-been free from hypochondriacal disorder. In a letter to Lady Hesketh,
-he says, “Could I be translated to paradise, unless I could leave my
-body behind me, my melancholy would cleave to me there.” A friend
-procured him the situation of reading clerk to the House of Lords,
-forgetting that the nervous shyness which made a public exhibition of
-himself “mortal poison,” would render it impossible for him ever to
-discharge the duties of his office. This difficulty presented itself
-to the mind of the poet, and gloom instantly enveloped his faculties.
-At his request, his situation was changed to that of clerk of the
-journals; but even before he could be installed into office he was
-threatened with a public examination before the House. This made him
-completely wretched; he had not resolution to decline what he had not
-strength to do: the interest of his friend, and his own reputation
-and want of support, pressed him forward to an attempt which he knew
-from the first could never succeed. In this miserable state, like
-Goldsmith’s traveller,
-
- “To stop too fearful, and too faint to go,”
-
-he attended every day for six months at the office where he was to
-examine the journals in preparation for his trust. His feelings were
-like those of a man at the place of execution, every time he entered
-the office door; and he only gazed mechanically at the books, without
-drawing from them the least portion of information he wanted. As the
-time of his examination approached, his agony became more and more
-intense; he hoped and believed that madness would come to relieve him;
-he attempted also to make up his mind to suicide, though his conscience
-bore stern testimony against it; he could not by any argument persuade
-himself that it was right; but his desperation prevailed, and he
-procured from an apothecary the means of self-destruction. On the day
-before his public appearance was to be made, he happened to notice a
-letter in the newspaper, which to his disordered mind seemed like a
-malignant libel on himself. He immediately threw down the paper, and
-rushed into the fields, determined to die in a ditch; but the thought
-struck him that he might escape from the country. With the same
-violence he proceeded to make hasty preparations for his flight; but
-while he was engaged in packing his portmanteau his mind changed, and
-he threw himself into a coach, ordering the man to drive to the Tower
-wharf, intending to throw himself into the river, and not reflecting
-that it would be impossible to accomplish his purpose, in that public
-spot, unobserved. On approaching the water, he found a porter seated
-upon some goods; he then returned to the coach, and drove home to
-his lodgings in the Temple. On the way, he attempted to drink the
-laudanum, but as often as he raised it, a convulsive agitation of his
-frame prevented its reaching his lips; and thus, regretting the loss
-of the opportunity, but unable to avail himself of it, he arrived half
-dead with anguish at his apartments. He then closed the door and threw
-himself on the bed, with the laudanum near him, trying to lash himself
-up to the deed; but a voice within seemed constantly to forbid it;
-and as often as he extended his hand to the poison, his fingers were
-contracted, and held back by spasms. At this time some of the inmates
-of the place came in, but he concealed his agitation; and as soon as
-he was left alone, a change came over him, and so detestable did the
-deed appear, that he threw away the laudanum, and dashed the phial to
-pieces. The rest of the day was spent in heavy insensibility, and at
-night he slept as usual; but on waking at three in the morning, _he
-took his penknife and laid with his weight upon it, the point being
-directed towards his heart_. It was broken, and would not penetrate. At
-day-break he rose, and passing a strong garter round his neck, fastened
-it to the frame of his bed. This gave way with his weight; but on
-securing it to the door, he was more successful, and remained suspended
-until he had lost all consciousness of existence. After a time, the
-garter broke, and he fell to the floor, so that his life was saved; but
-the conflict had been greater than his reason could endure. He felt
-a contempt for himself not to be expressed or imagined. Whenever he
-went into the street, it seemed as if every eye flashed upon him with
-indignation and scorn. He felt as if he had offended God so deeply that
-his guilt could never be forgiven, and his whole heart was filled with
-pangs of tumultuous despair.[48]
-
-When Cowper had once admitted the thought of self-destruction, he could
-not go into the street without meeting with something to tempt or drive
-him to the act. It seemed to him as if the whole world had conspired
-to make death by his own hand inevitable. When he ventured into the
-streets, after the failure of all his efforts, a ghastly shame and
-alarmed suspicion were his torments; and perhaps nothing in Cowper’s
-autobiography goes deeper into the heart than the following description
-of his sufferings.
-
-“I never went into the street but I thought the people stood and
-laughed at me, and held me in contempt; and could hardly persuade
-myself but that the voice of conscience was loud enough for any one
-to hear it. They who knew me, appeared to avoid me, and if they spoke
-to me, seemed to do it in scorn. I bought a ballad of one who was
-singing it in the street, because I thought it was written on me. I
-dined alone, either at a tavern, where I went in the dark, or at the
-chop-house, where I always took care to hide myself in the darkest
-corner of the room. I slept generally an hour in the evening, but it
-was only to be terrified in dreams; and when I awoke, it was some time
-before I could steadily walk through the passage into the dining-room.
-I reeled and staggered like a drunken man. The eyes of man I did not
-fear; but when I thought that the eyes of God were upon me, (which I
-felt assured of,) it gave me the most intolerable anguish. If, for a
-moment, a book or a companion stole away my attention from myself, a
-flash from hell seemed to be thrown into my mind immediately; and I
-said within myself, ‘What are these things to me, who am damned?’”
-
-Cowper is not the only instance, however, of a man of exquisite taste
-and genius whose life has been rendered miserable by hypochondria.
-We have alluded elsewhere to Byron’s morbid sensitiveness, and the
-reader’s attention is now called to the influence of hypochondriasis
-on the poet’s mind. He says in his journal, “What can be the reason
-I awake every morning in actual despair and despondency?” He had a
-great apprehension of insanity. In order to overcome his melancholy,
-considering that his diet had much to do with it, he put himself under
-a strict regimen, avoiding most scrupulously all animal food. He states
-that his diet for a week consisted of tea and six dry biscuits per
-diem. After having indulged in an ordinary dinner, he writes, “I wish
-to God I had not dined now; it kills me with heaviness; and yet it
-was but a pint of bucellas, and fish. Oh, my head! how it aches!—the
-horrors of indigestion!” Again he says, “This head was given me to ache
-with.” After a severe fit of indigestion, he writes, “I’ve no more
-charity than a vinegar cruet. Would that I were an ostrich, and dieted
-on fire-irons! O fool! I shall go mad!”
-
-Burns suffered much from indigestion, producing hypochondria. Writing
-to his friend, Mr. Cunningham, he says, “Canst thou not minister to
-a mind diseased? Canst thou speak peace and rest to a soul tost on a
-sea of troubles, without one friendly star to guide her course, and
-dreading that the next surge may overwhelm her? Canst thou give to
-a frame tremblingly alive to the tortures of suspense the stability
-and hardihood of a rock that braves the blast? If thou canst not do
-the least of these, why wouldst thou disturb me in my miseries with
-thy inquiries after me?” From early life, the poet was subject to a
-disordered stomach, a disposition to headache, and irregular action of
-the heart.
-
-He describes, in one of his letters, the horrors of his complaint:—“I
-have been for some time pining under secret wretchedness. The pang
-of disappointment, the sting of pride, and some wandering stabs of
-remorse, settle on my life like vultures, when my attention is not
-called away by the claims of society, or the vagaries of the muse. Even
-in the hour of social mirth my gaiety is the madness of an intoxicated
-criminal under the hands of an executioner. My constitution was
-blasted _ab origine_ with a deep incurable taint of melancholy that
-poisoned my existence.”
-
-Nothing can be more interesting to a physician who is endowed with
-only a moderate share of the spirit of observation than to watch the
-progress of hypochondriasis in a number of patients, especially in
-regard to its effect on the mind. They always struggle, more or less in
-the beginning, with the lowness and dejection which affect them; and
-it is not until many a severe contest has taken place between their
-natural good sense and the involuntary suggestions which arise from
-the obscure and painful feelings of the diseased nerves, that a firm
-belief in the reality of such thoughts gains a full conquest over their
-judgment. A firm belief in any one perception never takes place until
-it has acquired a certain degree of force; and as all impressions which
-arise from the viscera of the abdomen are naturally obscure, we see
-the reason why these must continue for a great length of time, or be
-often repeated, before they can withdraw a person’s attention from the
-ordinary impression of external objects, which are clear and distinct,
-and before they acquire such a degree of vividness as to destroy the
-operations of reason.
-
-We meet every day with hypochondriacs in whom the disease is
-just beginning to be formed, and who, being possessed of a good
-understanding, seem unwilling to tell, even to their medical friends,
-the singular, and often melancholy, thoughts with which they are
-tormented. They acknowledge them to be unreasonable, and yet insist
-that they cannot help believing in them. A very curious display of this
-kind of struggle between the habitudes of reason and the approach of
-delirium is to be found in the diary of an hypochondriac, from which we
-make the following extract:—
-
-“On the 14th of November, the idea that some person intended to kill
-me sprung up suddenly and involuntarily in my mind, and yet, I must
-confess, there was no reason why I should have harboured this thought,
-for I am convinced that no one ever formed such a cruel design against
-me. People who had a stick in their hands I looked on as murderers.
-As I was walking out of town, a countryman happened to follow me, and
-I was instantly filled with the greatest apprehension, and stood still
-to let him pass. I asked the fellow in a threatening voice, and with
-a view of intimidating him from his purpose, what was the name of the
-town before us. The man answered my question and walked on, and I found
-great relief, because he was no longer behind me.
-
-“In the evening, I observed some water in the glass out of which I
-commonly drink, and I instantly believed it was poisoned. I therefore
-washed it carefully out, and yet I knew, at the same time, that I
-myself had left the water in it.
-
-“18th November.—At particular periods I believe all mankind have
-conspired to murder me. I think I am deprived of my office; that I am
-doomed to die of hunger; and, to add to all this, I am tormented with
-horrid doubts concerning futurity, and these thoughts persecute me like
-furies. Those whom I used to love most, I now hate. I avoid my best
-friends, and my dear wife appears to me a much worse kind of woman than
-she really is.
-
-“I cannot describe the exertion it requires to conquer in society the
-aversion I feel to my fellow-creatures, and to prevent my ill-humour
-from breaking out against the most innocent people. When it really does
-so, I spare no one. I am sorry for it afterwards, but then I am too
-proud to acknowledge my error.
-
-“I find myself so enraged on seeing a stupid, vacant countenance, that
-I have almost an irresistible inclination to box the person’s ears to
-whom it belongs: the refraining from it is a severe effort.
-
-“20th November.—A boy with a face like a satyr met me, and occasioned
-me the greatest uneasiness. Although he did nothing to displease me, I
-was forced to go to him, and tell him that I was sure he would die on
-the gallows.
-
-“23rd November.—My sensibility is often extreme, and then my best
-friends become insupportable to me. To their expressions of regard
-I am either purposely cold or else I answer by rude and offensive
-speeches. I can seldom explain to myself the reason of this too great
-sensibility. If two people whisper to each other in my presence, I grow
-uneasy, and lose all command of mind, because I think they are speaking
-ill of me; and I often assume a satirical manner in company, in order
-to frighten them. Anxiety, dreadful anxiety, seizes me, if a person
-overlooks my hand at cards, or if a person sits down beside me when I
-am playing the harpsichord.”
-
-“From numerous facts which have come within my own observation,” says a
-distinguished living medical authority,[49] “I am convinced that many
-strange antipathies, disgusts, caprices of temper, and eccentricities
-which are considered solely as obliquities of intellect, have their
-source in corporeal disorder.
-
-“The great majority of these complaints, which are considered as purely
-mental, such as irascibility, melancholy, timidity, and irresolution,
-might be greatly remedied, if not entirely removed, by a proper system
-of temperance, and with very little medicine. There is no accounting
-for the magic-like spell which annihilates for a time the whole energy
-of the mind, and renders the victim of dyspepsia afraid of his own
-shadow, or of things, if possible, more unsubstantial than shadows.
-
-“It is not likely that the great men of the earth should be exempt
-from these visitations any more than the little; and if so, we may
-reasonably conclude, that there are other things beside ‘conscience’
-which ‘make cowards of us all,’ and that, by a temporary gastric
-irritation, many an ‘enterprise of vast pith and moment’ has had ‘its
-current turned away,’ and ‘lost the name of action.’
-
-“The philosopher and the metaphysician, who know but little of these
-reciprocities of mind and matter, have drawn many a false conclusion
-from, and erected many a baseless hypothesis on, the actions of men.
-Many a happy thought has sprung from an empty stomach; many a terrible
-and merciless edict has gone forth in consequence of an irritated
-gastric nerve. Thus health may make the same man a hero in the field
-whom dyspepsia may render imbecile in the cabinet.”
-
-The following case will shew how powerfully indigestion may affect the
-mind’s operations:—
-
-A young lady, after eating some heavy paste, was attacked by a
-sensation of burning heat at the pit of the stomach, which increased
-till the whole of the upper part of the body, both externally and
-internally, appeared to her to be all in flames. She rose up suddenly,
-left the dinner table, and ran into the street, from which she was
-immediately brought back. She soon came to herself, and thus described
-her horrible ideas. She declared that she had been very wicked, and had
-been dragged into the flames of hell. She continued in a precarious
-situation for some time. Whenever she experienced the burning sensation
-of which she first complained, the same dreadful thoughts occurred to
-her mind. She seized hold of whatever was nearest to prevent her from
-being forced away; and such was her alarm that she dreaded to be alone.
-This lady had long been distressed by family concerns, and harassed by
-restless and sleepless nights, which greatly affected her health.
-
-Dr. Johnson used to declare that he inherited “a vile melancholy” from
-his father, which made him “mad all his life, or, at least, not sober.”
-Insanity was his constant terror. Boswell says that, at the period when
-this great philosopher was giving to the world proofs of no ordinary
-vigour of understanding, he actually fancied himself insane, or in a
-state as nearly as possible approaching to it.
-
-Murphy says, “For many years before Johnson’s death, so terrible was
-the prospect of final dissolution that when he was not disposed to
-enter into the conversation which was going forward, he sat in his
-chair, repeating the well-known lines of Shakspeare—
-
- “To die, and go we know not where.”
-
-Like Metastasio, he would not, if he could help it, permit the word
-death to be pronounced in his presence. Boswell once introduced
-the topic in the course of conversation, which made Johnson highly
-indignant. He observed, that he never had a moment in which it was not
-terrible to him.
-
-Three or four days before he died, he declared that he would give one
-of his legs for a year more of life. The ruling passion was exhibited
-strong in death. At Dr. Johnson’s own suggestion, the surgeon was
-making slight punctures in the legs, with the hope of relieving his
-dropsical affection, when he cried out, “Deeper! deeper! _I want length
-of life_, and you are afraid of giving me pain, which I do not value.”
-If we had not a thorough conviction that this fear of death was but the
-result of physical disease, which no moral and religious principles
-could subdue, Dr. Johnson’s conduct towards the end of his life would
-excite a feeling in our mind towards him very opposite to that of
-respect.
-
-With reference to suicide, there is no fact that has been more clearly
-established than that of its hereditary character. Of all diseases to
-which the various organs are subject, there are none more generally
-transmitted from one generation to another than affections of the
-brain. It is not necessary that the disposition to suicide should
-manifest itself in every generation; it often passes over one, and
-appears in the next, like insanity unattended with this propensity. But
-if the members of the family so predisposed are carefully examined, it
-will be found that the various shades and gradations of the malady will
-be easily perceptible. Some are distinguished for their flightiness of
-manner, others for their strange eccentricity, likings and dislikings,
-irregularity of their passions, capricious and excitable temperament,
-hypochondriasis and melancholia. These are often but the minute shades
-and variations of an hereditary disposition to suicidal madness. A
-gentleman suddenly, and without any apparent reason, cut his throat.
-The father had always been a man of strong passions, easily roused, and
-when so, was extremely violent. The brother was a man of impulse; he
-always acted by fits and starts, and therefore never could be depended
-upon. The sister had a strange, unnatural, and superstitious horror
-of particular colours and odours. A yellow dress caused a feeling
-approaching to syncope, and the smell of hay produced great nervous
-excitement. The grandfather had been convicted of homicide, and had
-been confined for two years in a mad-house.
-
-Andral relates the case of a father who died from the effects of
-disease of the brain; the mother died sane. They had six children,
-three boys and three girls. Of the boys, the eldest was a man of
-original mind; the second was very extravagant in his habits, and was
-ultimately confined in a mad-house; the third was extremely violent in
-his temper. Of the girls, one had fits of apoplexy, and became insane;
-the other died at her accouchement, with symptoms of derangement; the
-third died of cholera, not, however, until she exhibited indications of
-mental aberration.
-
-A case more singular than the last is recorded. All the members of a
-particular family, being hereditarily disposed, exhibited, when they
-arrived at a certain age, a desire to commit self-destruction. It
-required no exciting cause to develope the fatal disposition. No wish
-was expressed, or attempt made, to overpower the suicidal inclination,
-and the greatest industry and ingenuity were exercised by the parties
-in order to effect their purpose. In two cases, the propensity was
-subdued by proper medical and moral treatment; but, just in proportion
-to its being suppressed, did the idea of suicide appear to fix itself
-resolutely in the mind. The desire came upon the individuals like the
-attacks of intermittent fever.
-
-A. K., a man aged 57, was twice married. He was a shoe-maker by trade;
-but not having received any education, his wife was compelled to attend
-to all his accounts. He had experienced, when young, a blow on the
-head, which occasionally gave him pain. He became very intemperate in
-his habits, and at particular intervals he exhibited an uncontrollable
-temper, quarrelled with everybody, neglected his business, abused his
-wife, and became extravagant and melancholy. During the paroxysm he
-would exclaim—“_Oh, my unlucky head! I am again a lost man!_” When the
-attack subsided, he returned to his business, was affectionate to his
-wife and family, most humbly begged her pardon for having ill-treated
-her, and expressed the greatest contrition for his conduct. These
-attacks came on at regular intervals. He procured a piece of rope for
-the purpose of hanging himself, and for some months carried it about
-with him in his pocket for that purpose. During one of his fits he
-effected his object. His grandfather had strangled himself, and his
-brother and sister had attempted suicide.
-
-Dr. Gall knew several families in which the suicidal propensity
-prevailed through several generations. Among the cases he mentions
-is the following very remarkable one:—“The Sieur Ganthier, the owner
-of various houses built without the barriers of Paris, to be used as
-_entrepôts_ of goods, left seven children, and a fortune of about two
-millions of francs to be divided among them. All remained at Paris,
-or in the neighbourhood, and preserved their patrimony; some even
-increased it by commercial speculations. None of them met with any real
-misfortunes, but all enjoyed good health, a competency, and general
-esteem. All, however, were possessed with a rage for suicide, and all
-seven succumbed to it within the space of thirty or forty years. Some
-hanged, some drowned themselves, and others blew out their brains.
-One of the first two had invited sixteen persons to dine with him one
-Sunday. The company collected, the dinner was served, and the guests
-were at the table. The master of the house was called, but did not
-answer; he was found hanging in the garret. Scarcely an hour before,
-he was quietly giving orders to the servants, and chattering with
-his friends. The last, the owner of a house in the Rue de Richelieu,
-having raised his house two stories, became frightened at the expense,
-imagined himself ruined, and was anxious to kill himself. Thrice they
-prevented him; but soon after, he was found dead, having shot himself.
-The estate, after all the debts were paid, amounted to three hundred
-thousand francs, and he might have been forty-five years old at the
-time of his death.”
-
-Falret, whose researches have thrown much light on this affection,
-believes that it is more disposed to be hereditary than any other kind
-of insanity. He saw a mother and her daughter attacked with suicidal
-melancholy, and the grandmother of the latter was at Charenton for
-the same cause. An individual, he says, committed suicide in Paris.
-His brother, who came to attend the funeral, cried out on seeing the
-body—“What fatality! My father and uncle both destroyed themselves; my
-brother has imitated their example; and twenty times during my journey
-hither I thought of throwing myself into the Seine!”
-
-Gall also relates the case of a dyer, of a very taciturn humour, who
-had five sons and a daughter. The eldest son, after being settled in
-a prosperous business with a family around him, succeeded, after many
-attempts, in killing himself by jumping from the third story of his
-house. The second son, who was rather taciturn, had some domestic
-troubles, lost part of his fortune at play, and strangled himself at
-the age of thirty-five. The third threw himself from the window into
-his garden, but did not hurt himself; he pretended he was trying to
-fly. The fourth tried one day to fire a pistol down his throat, but was
-prevented. The fifth was of a bilious, melancholic temperament, quiet,
-and devoted to business; he and his sister shewed no signs of being
-affected with their brothers’ malady. One of their cousins committed
-suicide.
-
-Among the physical causes of self-destruction, insidious affections
-of the brain must stand prominently forward. It is not often that the
-physician is permitted to examine after death the state of this organ;
-but there can be no doubt that, in the great majority of instances, the
-brain will be found to have undergone a serious structural alteration.
-“During the last twenty-five years,” says Dr. G. Mantell, “many cases
-of suicide have come under my notice in which the mental hallucination
-which led to self-destruction has depended on lesions of the brain,
-occasioned by slight or neglected injuries of the head, to which
-neither the patient nor his friends attached any importance. In several
-instances of self-destruction, without any assignable moral cause, and
-in which no previous signs of fatuity or insanity were manifested,
-I have found, upon a post mortem examination, either circumscribed
-induration or softening of the brain, or thickening and adhesions of
-some portions of its membranes. The conviction was forced upon my
-mind that very many of the _so called_ nervous or hypochondriacal
-affections, which are generally considered as imaginary and dependent
-on mental emotions, are ascribable to physical causes, and frequently
-originate from slight lesions of the brain.”
-
-The learned doctor relates the following cases in illustration of his
-views:—
-
-“A respectable tradesman, between fifty and sixty years of age, of
-temperate habits, was knocked down during an electioneering contest,
-and struck his head on the ground. He was stunned for a few minutes by
-the shock, and slightly bruised above the right temple, but experienced
-no further inconvenience, and the circumstance was considered of no
-consequence.
-
-“About six months after the event, he was seized, one evening, with
-rigors and a pain over the right brow; a smart reaction took place,
-which terminated in perspiration, and the following morning, the
-symptoms disappeared. A similar paroxysm came on daily for five or six
-days; the attack was considered intermittent, and, I believe, bark was
-freely administered. At the end of a week, the patient was well. After
-this period, he was subject to occasional pain over the right brow,
-accompanied with great mental despondency, the prevailing apprehension
-being that of eternal damnation. This state would continue for an
-uncertain time, the duration varying from a few days to three weeks;
-and by slow degrees he would lose all trace of disease, regain his
-accustomed cheerfulness, and be able to transact the affairs of an
-extensive business.
-
-“About two years from the occurrence of the accident, I saw him, at the
-request of his friends, while he was labouring under great despondency,
-which his relations assured me arose from some religious opinions
-he had imbibed; and I found that the medical treatment had been in
-accordance with such a notion. My inquiries led to the detection of the
-injury he had received two years previously, but neither the patient
-nor his friends would allow that there was any connexion between the
-blow and the symptoms under which he now suffered. Both general and
-local bleeding appeared to me necessary; a strict regimen was adopted,
-and he regained his usual flow of spirits, and expressed himself much
-better than he had been for years. The occasional use of leeches, and
-a rigid abstinence from fermented liquors, spirits, and stimuli of all
-kinds, maintained this favourable condition for a considerable time;
-but his occupation led him to occasional excess in diet, and a moderate
-quantity of wine or beer invariably brought on despondency and its
-accompanying hallucination; in other words, when the system was kept in
-a tranquil state, the cerebral functions were not impaired; but when
-excited, the morbid manifestations of the mind were produced.
-
-“During one of these attacks he cut his throat, and expired in the
-course of a few hours. A short time previous to his death, when greatly
-exhausted by the loss of blood from his wound, his intellect was
-unclouded, and he expressed to me his astonishment at what he had done,
-and assured me he had no reason for acting thus; but it was an impulse
-which he could not resist.
-
-“The only abnormal appearance upon inspecting the body after death was,
-a circumscribed adhesion of the dura mater to the pia mater, to the
-extent of about two inches in diameter, over the upper and anterior
-portion of the right hemisphere of the brain, opposite to the spot
-where the blow of the head had been inflicted some years previously.
-
-“I will not presume to offer any comment on a case which I am well
-aware presents nothing unusual, my only object being that of calling
-particular attention to those slight injuries of the head which,
-although unmarked by any striking symptoms at the moment of their
-occurrence, may give rise to the most distressing results years after
-their infliction, and when the original cause of disordered action
-is forgotten, and can no longer be detected; and of pointing out the
-possibility that many cases of suicide, apparently referrible to moral
-causes only, may be found to result solely from physical derangement
-of the organ through which the manifestations of the mind must be
-displayed. It is under circumstances of this kind that the medical
-philosopher, in his painful duty of exploring the relics of mortality,
-may have the high gratification of protecting the memory of an
-unfortunate individual from the censure of a world but too apt to judge
-harshly, and thus afford a lasting consolation to those by whom that
-memory will be cherished and revered.”
-
-No complaints can be more insidious than those connected with the
-brain. An apparently slight blow on the head in early life has been
-known, if not to give rise at the time to actual disease of the
-sentient organ, to predispose the person to attacks of cerebral
-derangement when exposed to the influence of causes so trivial as to be
-incapable, under any other circumstances, of producing any effect. The
-following case will demonstrate that moral irritation may derange the
-structure of the brain as effectually as any physical injury:—
-
-A gentleman in early life was exposed for a few weeks to an amount
-of mental excitement almost sufficient to bring on a severe maniacal
-attack. He complained for some time of a sensation in his head as if
-some person was hammering on his brain. In the course of a few years he
-apparently recovered. During a tour through Italy, he had a renewal
-of his old sensation, and became liable to head-aches, giddiness,
-and severe attacks of indigestion. He placed himself under the care
-of an Italian physician of eminence, who did his best to restore him
-to health. Instead of improving, the symptoms of his disease became
-more apparent; and one morning he was found dead on the floor of
-his dressing-room, having with a penknife effectually divided the
-carotid artery. On examining the brain, extensive _ramollissement_ was
-discovered. In this case the structural disease originated in a _moral
-shock_, the effects of which remained suspended for some years, and
-then gave rise to the train of symptoms that drove the unfortunate man
-to terminate his life. It is one of the most important facts connected
-with this subject, that mental excitement may produce as extensive and
-serious organic disease as that which so commonly follows the receipt
-of physical injury. With a knowledge of this fact, how cautious we
-ought to be in pronouncing an opinion as to the absence of disease of
-the brain in cases of suicide resulting from an apparently trifling
-departure from mental quietude, without being intimate with the
-previous history of the individual.
-
-“The English,” says Montesquieu, “frequently destroy themselves
-without any apparent cause to determine them to such an act, and even
-in the midst of prosperity. Among the Romans, suicide was the effect
-of education; it depended upon their customs and manner of thinking:
-with the English, it is the effect of disease, and depending upon
-the physical condition of the system.” A young man, twenty-two years
-of age, was intended by his parents for the church. He disliked the
-profession exceedingly, and absolutely refused to take orders. For
-this act, at once of integrity and disobedience, he was forced to
-quit his father’s house, and to exert his inexperienced energies for
-a precarious subsistence. He turned his thoughts to several different
-employments; and, at length, he went to reside with a family, where
-he was treated with great kindness, and where he appeared to enjoy
-a degree of tranquillity. His enjoyment, however, was not of long
-continuance, for his imagination was assailed by gloomy and distressing
-reflections. His life became more and more burdensome to him, and
-he considered by what method he should put an end to it. He one day
-formed the resolution of precipitating himself from the top of the
-house, but his courage failed him, and the execution of the project was
-postponed. Some days after, he took up a pistol with the same design
-of self-destruction. His perplexities and terrors returned. A friend
-of this unhappy youth called upon Pinel one day to inform him of the
-projected tragedy. Every means of prevention were adopted that prudence
-could suggest, but the most pressing solicitations and friendly
-remonstrances were in vain. The propensity to suicide unceasingly
-haunted him, and he precipitately quitted the family from whom he had
-experienced so many proofs of friendship and attachment. Financial
-considerations prohibited the suggestion of a distant voyage or a
-change of climate. He was therefore advised, as the best substitute,
-some constant and laborious employment. The young melancholic,
-sensibly alive to the horror of his situation, entered fully into
-Pinel’s views, and procured an engagement at Bled Harbour, where he
-mingled with the other labourers with a full determination to deserve
-his stipulated wages. But, completely fatigued and exhausted by the
-exertion of the first two days of his engagement, he was obliged to
-have recourse to some other expedient. He entered into the employment
-of a master-mason, in the neighbourhood of Paris, to whom his services
-were peculiarly acceptable, as he devoted his leisure hours to the
-instruction of an only son. No situation, apparently, could have been
-more suitable to his case than one of this kind, admitting of alternate
-mental and bodily exercise. Wholesome food, comfortable lodgings, and
-every attention due to misfortune, seemed rather to aggravate than to
-divert his gloomy propensities. After the expiration of a fortnight,
-he returned to his friend, and, with tears in his eyes, acquainted
-him with the internal struggles which he felt, and the insuperable
-disgust of life, which bore him irresistibly to self-destruction. The
-reproaches of his friend affected him exceedingly, and, in a state
-of the utmost anxiety and despair, he silently withdrew, probably to
-terminate a hated existence by throwing himself into the Seine.
-
-When laying down rules for the physical treatment of suicide, we have
-developed our view as to the influence of derangement of the _primæ
-viæ_, suppressed secretions, &c., on the healthy state of the mind;
-and we have only to refer the reader to that portion of the work for
-information on these points. In discussing the important question
-whether suicide invariably results from mental derangement, numerous
-instances have been brought forward that may be undoubtedly traced to
-that cause, therefore it will not be necessary to recapitulate in this
-chapter what has been there advanced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-MORAL TREATMENT OF SUICIDAL MANIA.
-
-
- Diseases of the brain not dissimilar to affections of other
- organs—Early symptoms of insanity—The good effects of
- having plenty to do—Occupation—Dr. Johnson’s opinion on the
- subject—The pleasure derived from cultivating a taste for
- the beauties of nature—Effect of volition on diseases of
- the mind—Silent grief injurious to mental health—Treatment
- of _ennui_—The time of danger, not the time of disease—The
- Walcheren expedition—The retreat of the ten thousand Greeks
- under Xenophon—Influence of music on the mind in the cure of
- disease—Cure of epidemic suicide—Buonaparte’s remedy—How the
- women of Myletus were cured of the disposition to suicide, and
- other illustrations—Cases shewing how easily the disposition
- to suicide may be diverted—On the cure of insanity by
- stratagems—On the importance of removing the suicidal patient
- from his own home—On the regulation of the passions.
-
-In treating this most important class of affections, we must dismiss
-from our minds all those pre-conceived notions which we have been
-led to form of what constitutes mental derangement. We must view the
-subject as medical philosophers in the most liberal acceptation of the
-term, and not as _nisi prius_ barristers; we must consider ourselves
-at the bed-side of a suffering patient, demanding from our skill that
-relief which he is led to believe we have in our power to afford, and
-not as in a court of justice, undergoing an examination at the hands
-of a lawyer anxious to establish his case; and, above all, we must
-apply to the disease of the brain and its disordered manifestations
-those pathological principles which guide us in the elucidation of
-the affections of other organs. If we consider insanity not as a
-specific disease invariably exhibiting the same phenomena, but as
-it really is, the effect of a disordered condition of the sentient
-organ, having an incipient, as well as an advanced stage, we may, by
-a judicious application of the principles of therapeutics, succeed
-in many cases in crushing the disposition to suicide before it has
-taken a formidable hold of the constitution. In the great majority of
-cases the premonitory indications are well marked and unequivocal. The
-experienced physician and accurate observer will be able to detect,
-before the mental alienation becomes apparent to others, the early
-dawnings of derangement. He knows that it is frequently manifested
-by some change in the person’s usual healthy habits of thinking and
-acting,—by the exhibition of odd fancies and whims. Although surrounded
-by everything calculated to contribute to his happiness, he is the most
-miserable of human beings. Trifles annoy and irritate him; he sees in
-his dearest friends his deadliest enemies; talks of conspiracies, of
-plots, and stratagems; becomes suspicious of everything and everybody;
-his former objects of pleasure afford him no delight; he avoids
-society, and is occasionally heard muttering strange things to himself.
-In the majority of cases these are the early dawnings of cerebral
-disease leading to unequivocal insanity, and yet so tied down are we to
-definitions, arbitrary standards and poetical tests, that we will not
-admit derangement of mind to be present until the symptoms are so self*
-evident and glaring that the condition of the mind becomes apparent to
-the most superficial observer. When this view of insanity is recognised
-as orthodox, and moral treatment adopted in the early stages of the
-disease, much good may be expected to result.
-
-How often do we see in society, and during the intercourse of private
-friendship, individuals complaining of the severest mental sufferings,
-the effect of morbid alterations of feeling almost in every respect
-similar to insanity, dependent upon the same causes, manifesting the
-same symptoms, and removed by the same remedial agents. How are these
-mental ailments treated? The poor sufferer is perhaps smiled at; he
-is considered to be fanciful, and no regard is paid to the cerebral
-affection. The disease is allowed to advance until other faculties of
-the mind are implicated, and then the mental alienation exhibits itself
-so unequivocally that no one doubts its existence.
-
-The success of the mental treatment of suicide will be mainly
-dependent on our paying strict attention to those apparently trifling
-alterations of temper and disposition, those deviations from the usual
-mode of thinking and acting, which so often predicate the presence
-of the incipient stage of insanity. An invincible love of solitude
-exhibited in a patient considered as labouring under an hypochondriacal
-affection, and who, when induced to converse, complains of being
-constantly pestered with one or two trains of ideas from which he
-cannot for a moment escape, although his efforts are great and
-unremitting, let his friends beware. These changes are, however, but
-rarely noticed, until some alarming event causes every friend to lament
-the want of timely attention.
-
-Occupation is an infallible specific for many of the imaginary and real
-ills of life. In cases where the mind is sinking under the influence
-of its own weight, and the fancy is allowed to dwell uninterruptedly
-on the ideas of its own creation, until the individual believes
-himself to stand apart from all the world, the very personification
-of human misery and wretchedness, the physician can recommend no
-better remedy than constant and steady occupation for the mind and
-body. Burton concludes his able work on Melancholy with this valuable
-piece of advice:—“Be not solitary; be not idle.” Dr. Reid recommended
-a patient, labouring under great mental depression, to engage in the
-composition of a novel, which, during the time he was occupied in the
-task, effected much good. By interesting himself in the distresses of
-fictitious beings, he diverted his attention from sufferings which were
-no less the offspring of the imagination.
-
-It has been suggested with great truth that the habit of gaming,
-prevalent as it is among persons in the upper ranks of life, is not
-to be attributed exclusively to a feeling of avarice. The man who
-is surrounded by everything to make his condition in life happy, as
-far as wealth is concerned, does not fly to dice for the purpose of
-aggrandisement, but he does so to seek refuge from the miseries of
-indolence and vacuity; from the gnawings of his own mind; from an eager
-desire to expose himself to that mental agitation which nature tells
-him is so necessary to make life supportable. “A woman is happier than
-a man,” says Dr. Johnson, “because she can hem a pocket-handkerchief.”
-
-Our faculties, like the vulture of Prometheus, devour our souls,
-if they have no action beyond ourselves. “Real lassitude is always
-mingled with grief,” says an eminent female genius; and Madame de Staël
-considers the observation a profound one.
-
-“The man in the Spectator who hanged himself to avoid the intolerable
-annoyance of having to tie his garters every day of his life, is but a
-satire on the misery of many who, having no useful occupation, find the
-flight of time marked only by the swift repetition of petty troubles.
-
-“The restlessness of Rousseau, his discontented and morbidly irritable
-disposition, was closely allied to insanity; and the painful struggles
-of Lord Byron, when ‘came the fit again,’ are detailed in words which
-shew too plainly how they disturbed and threatened the integrity of
-his judgment. In such natures, every strong emotion, or the occurrence
-of disease, may destroy the delicate balance, and make a ruin of a
-mind which even in ruins continues to excite a mournful admiration.
-The diversion of social intercourse, which to other men is necessary
-to prevent mental torpor, becomes to them a source of irritation by
-impeding the workings of their imagination: they find that, when alone,
-all the nobler aspirations of the soul are free, and images of beauty,
-and virtue, and wisdom, occupy the mind. Society transforms them into
-a being they despise, deprives them of all their high and valued
-thoughts, and it enables them to feel what slight circumstances, acting
-on the man without, may affect the man within. But the pleasures of
-solitude are transient; their train is followed by baseless fancies,
-by fears undefined, by griefs unexpressed, and black despondency,
-from which society can alone relieve. We learn, from observing such
-effects, arising from such causes, the advantage of mixed and varied
-occupations, suited to a being not made solely for contemplation or
-for action; and we may gather rules from these observations, the
-application of which to minds in a morbid state is very direct.”[50]
-
-With no less beauty than truth has the author of Rasselas depicted the
-insanity of the astronomer as gradually declining under the sanative
-influence of society and mental gratification. The sage confesses, that
-since he has mixed in the gay scenes of life, and divided his hours
-by a succession of amusements, he found the notion of his influence
-over the skies gradually fade away, and began to trust less to an
-opinion which he could never prove to others, and which he now found
-subject to variations from causes in which reason had no part. “If,”
-says he, “I am accidentally left alone for a few hours, my inveterate
-persuasion rushes upon my soul, and my thoughts are chained down by
-an uncontrollable violence; but they are soon disentangled by the
-prince’s conversation, and are instantaneously released by the entrance
-of Pekuah. I am like a man habitually afraid of spectres, who is set
-at ease by a lamp, and wonders at the dread which harassed him in the
-dark.”
-
-It is difficult to lay down general rules for the treatment of
-particular cases of melancholia with a tendency to suicide. Travelling,
-agreeable society, works of light literature, should be had recourse
-to, in order to dispel all gloomy apprehensions from the mind.
-
-In persons predisposed to insanity, or who manifest some slight
-indication of disease, how important it is to endeavour to call into
-exercise the higher faculties of the mind,—the judgment and reasoning
-powers,—and thus preserve the intellectual faculties in a healthy state
-of equilibrium. There is much wisdom in Lord Bacon’s advice, that
-“if a man’s wits be wandering, he should study the mathematics.” The
-patient should be taught to derive a pleasure from the contemplation
-of those objects that afford variety, and that are always within
-his reach. A beneficent Creator has wisely placed around us endless
-sources of the purest and most elevating enjoyments. In a ratio to our
-intellectual attainments, so are we enabled to derive pleasure from
-circumstances that appear trifling and foolish to others. Mungo Park
-could, in the solitude of an African desert, when exposed to the most
-distressing circumstances, derive a most exquisite pleasure from the
-sight of a small flower. How fully can we enter into the feelings of
-the man who, after being prostrated to the earth by an accumulation of
-worldly disappointments, yet spoke in a tone of noble triumph at his
-having retained, amidst the wreck of all his hopes, a perception of the
-beauties of nature!
-
- “I care not, Fortune, what you me deny;—
- You cannot rob me of free Nature’s grace;
- You cannot shut the windows of the sky,
- Through which Aurora shews her bright’ning face;
- You cannot bar my constant feet to trace
- The woods and lawns by living stream at eve:
- Let health my nerves and finer fibres brace,
- And I these toys to the great children leave:
- Of fancy, reason, virtue, nought can me bereave.”
-
-A devotion to the common pleasures of sense is better than a state of
-absolute indifference; for even if these give no kind of pleasure,
-whilst all higher pursuits are neglected, there is danger lest a man
-become of the same opinion as Dr. Darwin’s patient, “that all which
-life affords is a ride out in the morning, and a warm parlour and
-a pack of cards in the afternoon;” and, like him, finding these
-pleasures not inexhaustible, should shoot himself because he has
-nothing better to do!
-
-The miserable man should endeavour to make himself practically
-acquainted with the distresses of others. However desperate the
-circumstances of a person may be, he may still have it in his power
-to whisper a word of consolation to one whose situation may be more
-humiliating than his own.
-
-Human nature is accused of much more selfishness than it has any just
-claim to; a thousand kindly emotions break in upon and redeem our daily
-and interested life.
-
- “The poorest poor
- Long for a moment in a weary life
- When they can know and feel that they have been
- Themselves the fathers and the dealers out
- Of some small blessings; have been kind to such
- As needed kindness; for this single cause,
- That we have all one human heart.”[51]
-
-How few have anything like a proper conception of the power which the
-will can be made to exercise over the physical and mental ailments.[52]
-The stimuli which we all more or less have at command, if properly
-directed, will often subdue the early dawnings of disease, which, if
-permitted to take its own course, would have assumed a most formidable
-character. It is our duty to combat with the first menace of disordered
-feeling. Once the enemy is allowed to take up a favourable position, it
-will be fruitless to enter single-handed into the contest. “I will be
-good,” says the child, when he sees the rod ready to direct the will
-into the way of goodness; and “I will be cheerful,” ought the dull
-and dyspeptic to say, who observes a cloud of hypochondriacal fancies
-ready to burst upon his head. It may be said it is useless to struggle
-against the natural tendencies of the mind and body, or to declare war
-with habits which have become firmly rooted in the constitution. In
-reply to this we would say, let not the patient yield to the influence
-of those causes which have formed the habit; let him not hug to his
-bosom the viper which is preying upon his mind; let him not exclaim to
-gloom, “Henceforth be thou my god.”
-
-The hypochondriac may say, when advised to rouse himself from his state
-of mental despondency, and to exhibit the attributes of a free agent—
-
- “Go, you may call it madness, folly;
- You shall not chase my gloom away:
- There’s such a charm in melancholy,
- I would not, if I could, be gay.”
-
-But it is exercising a _conscientious duty_ to resist the encroachments
-of those ideal pleasures which sap the foundation of our moral
-constitution.
-
-I am inclined to concur in the opinion expressed by the late Dr. Uwins,
-that when melancholy is stripped of all its ornamental and poetical
-accompaniments, it will be found to be based in a great measure
-upon pride, selfishness, and indolence. This benevolent physician
-observes—“I cannot conceive a more delightful spectacle than that of an
-individual, whose constitutional cast is melancholy, warring against
-his temperament, and determining to enter with hilarity into the scenes
-and circumstances of social life.”
-
-Dr. Haindorft, in his German translation of Dr. Reid’s “Essay on
-Hypochondriasis,” in alluding to the possibility of the patient
-labouring under hypochondria being able, by an exercise of the power
-of volition, to control his morbid sensations, justly observes—“We
-should have fewer disorders of the mind if we could acquire more power
-of volition, and endeavour, by our own energy, to disperse the clouds
-which occasionally arise within our own horizon; if we _resolutely tore
-the first threads of the net_ which gloom and ill-humour may cast
-around us, and made an effort to drive away the melancholy images of
-a morbid imagination by incessant occupation. How beneficial would
-it be to mankind if this truth were universally acknowledged and
-acted upon—viz., that our state of health, mental as well as bodily,
-principally depends upon ourselves!”
-
- “By _seeming gay_, we grow to what we seem.”
-
-It was the remark of a man of great observation and knowledge of the
-world—“Only wear a mask for a fortnight, and you will not know it from
-your real face.”
-
-“I am determined to believe myself a happy man,” said a poor fellow,
-sunk in the lowest stage of melancholy, to Esquirol; and he did
-endeavour to triumph over his gloomy apprehensions, and for a short
-period he enjoyed the sunny aspect of life; but not having sufficient
-resolution to continue this effort of volition, he again gave way to
-despair.
-
-A thousand years before the Christian era, there were, at the two
-extremities of Egypt, temples devoted to Saturn, to which those
-labouring under hypochondriasis resorted in quest of relief. Some
-cunning priests, profiting by the credulity of these patients,
-associated with the pretended miracles of their powerless divinities
-and barren mysteries, natural means by which they always solaced
-their patients, and succeeded often in effecting cures by amusing
-the mind, and withdrawing the attention from the contemplation of
-physical suffering. The patients were religiously subjected to a
-variety of diversions and recreative exercises. Voluptuous paintings
-and seducing images were exposed to their view; agreeable songs and
-melodious sounds perpetually charmed their ears; gardens of flowers and
-ornamental groves furnished delightful walks and delicious perfumes.
-Every moment was consecrated to some diverting scene and amusement,
-which had a most beneficial result on the diseased mind, interrupted
-the train of melancholy thought, dissipated sorrow, and wrought the
-most salutary changes on the body through the agency of the mind.
-The Egyptian physicians recommended their patients to repair to these
-famous temples, as the faculty of the present day suggest a trip to a
-fashionable spa.
-
-That many suicides result from an indulgence in long-continued and
-corroding grief must be apparent to all who have given this subject
-any consideration. The medical man will find it difficult to manage
-such patients. Everything should be done to rouse the person from his
-state of mental abstraction. The immortal poet had a just conception of
-the baneful influence of silent grief on the mind and body; he makes
-Malcolm say, imploringly, to Macbeth,
-
- “Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak
- Whispers the o’er-wrought heart, and bids it break.”
-
-An eminent London physician communicated to me the particulars of the
-following case:—A young lady, connected with a family of rank, and
-possessing great accomplishments, had formed, unknown to her parents, a
-secret attachment to a gentleman who often visited the house. When it
-was discovered, he was requested to abandon all notions of the lady,
-as it was the determination of her relations to refuse their consent
-to an alliance with him. Both parties took it much to heart. The lady
-suffered from a severe attack of nervous disorder, which terminated
-in suicidal mania. She endeavoured several times to jump out of the
-window, and would have done so had she not been most carefully watched.
-Her symptoms were most distressing. The mind appeared to be weighed
-down to the earth by an accumulation of misery and wretchedness, which
-she was unable to shake off. “Oh! could I but be happy!” she would
-exclaim. “Will no one come to my relief? What can I do?” She would
-walk about the room, occasionally giving utterance to expressions
-similar to those just quoted. More than once she observed, that, could
-she cry, she felt assured her mind would be relieved; but not a tear
-could she shed. After a fearful struggle for some time, one evening,
-as she was retiring to rest, she burst into a flood of tears. The
-effect was most beneficial; from that moment she began to recover. The
-copious lachrymal secretion had the effect of relieving the cerebral
-congestion, and in this way the brain was restored to the performance
-of its healthy functions.
-
-It is difficult to lay down any particular instructions for the
-treatment of _ennui_. How is it possible to restore enjoyment to a man
-who has quite exhausted it? In such cases the advice which Fénélon
-gives to Dionysius the tyrant, by the mouth of Diogenes, will naturally
-apply,—“To restore his appetite, he must be made to feel hunger; and to
-make his splendid palace tolerable to him, he must be put into my tub,
-which is at present empty.”
-
-A lady became insane in consequence of a sudden and unexpected
-acquisition of wealth. In a few months she was reduced, by the failure
-of the house in which all her property was embarked, to complete
-indigence. Being compelled to work for her daily bread, her reason was
-soon restored. The great preservative from _tedium vitæ_ is, in keeping
-the mind and body in a state of healthy activity. How true it is—
-
- “That many ills o’er which man grieves,
- And still more woman, spring from not employing
- Some hours to make the remnant worth enjoying.”
-
- BYRON.
-
-In the army, it is proverbial that the time of fatigue and danger is
-not the time of disease; it is during the inactive and listless months
-of a campaign that crowds of patients pass to the hospitals. In both
-these cases it is the active exercise of the mind giving strength to
-the brain, and through it, healthy vigour to the body, which produces
-the effect. Shakspeare has not been unobservant of the consequences of
-excitement of mind on the bodily functions. In King Henry IV., when
-Northumberland is told of the fatal tidings from Shrewsbury, and is
-informed of the death of his son Percy, he breaks out,—
-
- “For this I shall have time enough to mourn.
- In poison there is physic; and these news
- That would, had I been well, have made me sick,
- _Being sick, have in some measure made me well_:
- And as a wretch whose fever-weakened joints,
- Like strengthless hinges, buckle under life,
- Impatient of his fit, breaks like a fire
- Out of his keeper’s arms; _even so my limbs_,
- Weakened with grief, being now enraged with grief,
- Are thrice themselves.”
-
-In illustration of the same principle, we have only to refer our
-readers to the ever-memorable Walcheren expedition. It has been stated
-that while our troops and seamen were actively engaged in the siege
-and bombardment of Flushing, exposed to intense heat, heavy rains,
-and poisonous exhalations from the malarious soil, inundated by the
-turbid waters of the Scheldt, scarcely a man was on the sick list; the
-excitement of warfare, the prospects of victory, and the expectation of
-booty, completely fortifying the body against all the potent causes of
-disease that environed the camp and the fleet.
-
-In the celebrated retreat of the “Ten thousand Greeks” under Xenophon,
-the troops were subjected to great mental despondency. They had to
-cross rapid rivers, penetrate gloomy forests, drag their weary way over
-vast and burning deserts, scale the summits of rugged mountains, and
-wade through deep snows and pestilent morasses, in continual fear of
-death or capture. It was a sense of the despondency which misfortune
-was producing among the troops that induced Xenophon, in his address
-to his companions on the fearful night which preceded the murder of
-Clearchus, to say, “The soldiers have at present nothing before their
-eyes but misfortune. If any one can persuade them to turn _their
-thoughts into action_ it would greatly encourage them.” It was to
-effect this purpose that the consummate general ordered everything in
-the camp, except the sword, to be abandoned. He inspired the hopes of
-his soldiers, roused their minds into activity, and thus prevented the
-development of serious disease among the troops.
-
-Lord Anson says, in speaking of the ravages which the scurvy made under
-his command, that “whatever discouraged the seamen, or damped their
-hopes, never failed to add new vigour to the distemper; for it usually
-killed those who were in the last stages of it, and confined those to
-their hammocks who before were capable of some kind of duty.”
-
-In certain diseases of the nervous system, particularly when associated
-with morbid conditions of the mind leading to suicide, the influence
-of music may be had recourse to with great advantage to the patient.
-The ancients, who paid more attention to the moral treatment of disease
-than the moderns have done, had a just appreciation of the beneficial
-effect of music on the nervous system. The learned Dr. Bianchini has
-collected all the passages found in ancient authors relative to the
-medical application of music; and from these it appears that it was
-used as a remedy by the Egyptians, Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans, not
-only in chronic, but in acute cases of disease.
-
-M. Burette, in his able and scientific work on music, allows it to be
-possible, and even probable, that music, by the impressions it makes
-upon the nerves, may be of use in the cure of certain maladies; yet he
-by no means supposes the music of the ancients possessed this power
-in a greater degree than that of the moderns. Homer attributes the
-cessation of the plague among the Greeks, at the siege of Troy, to
-music:—
-
- “With hymns divine the joyous banquet ends,
- The pæans lengthened till the sun descends:
- The Greeks, restored, the grateful rites prolong;
- Apollo listens and approves the song.”
-
- POPE.
-
-In the Memoirs of the French Academy of Sciences, for 1707 and 1708,
-there are many accounts of cases of disease which, after having long
-resisted and baffled the most efficacious remedies, had yielded under
-the influence of the soft impressions of harmony; and M. de Mairan, in
-the same records, published in 1735, has entered very fully into the
-consideration of the _modus operandi_ of music on the body in health
-and disease.
-
-The effect of music on the system is explained in two different ways.
-The monotony of the sound is supposed to have a soothing influence over
-the mind, similar to what is known to result from the gurgle of a mimic
-cataract of some mountain rill, or to a distant waterfall. How often
-has the music caused by the waves gently dashing upon the beach excited
-sleep, when all our narcotics have failed in producing a similar
-effect. This soporific effect of the repetition or monotony of sound is
-beautifully alluded to by Mackenzie, in his Man of Feeling. When his
-hero, Mr. Harley, arrives in London, he finds that the noise and varied
-excitement of the metropolis increase his nervous state of habit, and
-prevent him from sleeping. Ordinary narcotics produce no effect upon
-him, and he must have continued to suffer from watchfulness if he had
-not happily touched his shoe-buckle, which lay upon the table, when the
-vibration produced a monotonous sound so closely resembling the voice
-of his good aunt, who nightly read him asleep in the country, that from
-that time he regularly applied to the same narcotic, and always slept
-soundly. Music acts, secondly, by causing an association of agreeable
-ideas. A lady who was confined in an asylum in the vicinity of London,
-and who had been separated for some months from her home, and from all
-she held dear, was pronounced partially convalescent. She was, however,
-still melancholy; and it was suggested by her father that a piece, of
-which she was passionately fond, and which was associated with the
-happiest period of her life, should be played within her hearing. This
-wish was complied with; the effect produced was highly gratifying. For
-the first few minutes, no notice was taken of the music; in a short
-period, however, a smile was seen to play upon a countenance where
-all had been dark and gloomy for months. As the music proceeded, the
-effect became more sensible and powerful; ideas of a most pleasurable
-kind appeared to rush upon a mind which had previously been a blank; a
-chord had been touched which thrilled through her, until she appeared
-absorbed in the pleasing associations which the favourite air had
-conjured to her recollection. The past was no longer forgotten, and she
-for the first time gave evidence of being conscious of the situation in
-which she was in. A fatal blow had been given to the disease, and in a
-short period she was considered sufficiently recovered to be allowed to
-return home to the bosom of her family.
-
-The disease of Saul was alleviated by David’s harp. Aristotle maintains
-that actual madness in horses may be cured by the melody of lutes.
-“Experience has proved,” says Gibbon, “that the mechanical operation of
-sounds, by quickening the circulation of the blood and spirits, will
-act on the human machine more forcibly than the eloquence of reason
-and honour.” In illustration of the above observation the following
-fact may be adduced:—At the battle of Quebec, in April, 1760, while the
-troops were retreating in great confusion, the general complained to a
-field-officer of Fraser’s regiment of the bad behaviour of his corps.
-“Sir,” he answered, in great warmth, “you did very wrong in forbidding
-the bagpipes to play this morning; nothing encourages Highlanders so
-much in the day of action,—nay, even now the pipes would be of use.”
-“Let them blow, then, like the devil,” replied the General, “if it will
-bring back the men.” The bagpipes were ordered to play a favourite
-martial air. The Highlanders, the moment they heard the music, returned
-and formed with alacrity, and fought like infuriated lions.
-
-The influence of music over animals is known to be very great. Burney
-says that an officer, being shut up in the Bastille, had his lute
-allowed him; upon which, after a trial or two, the mice came issuing
-from their holes, and the spiders, suspending themselves from their
-threads, assembled round him to enjoy the melody.[53]
-
-Falret alludes particularly to the benefit which often accrues from
-music in peculiar disorders of the nervous system attended with a
-disposition to suicide. So exalted an idea had M. Appert of its effects
-on the mind, that he has observed, alluding to criminals, “_that the
-man sensible to the influence of harmony is not irretrievably lost_.”
-A young lady passionately fond of music manifested an inclination to
-kill herself; she was sent by her family to an hospital, where she was
-carefully watched. The idea of suicide was not, however, removed until
-she was allowed the use of her favourite instrument, the harp. The
-good effect was soon perceptible; her melancholy gradually subsided,
-and with it the suicidal disposition. She expressed to her friends how
-grateful she felt that she was allowed to indulge in her favourite
-amusement, and was conscious of the benefits which she had derived from
-it.
-
-The progress of epidemic suicide has been stayed by having recourse to
-measures which have powerfully affected the imagination.
-
-The young women of Marseilles, at one period, were seized with a
-propensity to commit suicide. In order to prevent the contagion from
-spreading, a law was passed to the effect that the body of every
-female who was guilty of self-murder should be publicly exposed after
-death. The beneficial result of this law became immediately apparent;
-the epidemic was stopped; the sense of shame prevailed over the
-recklessness of human life.
-
-In the French army, during the reign of Napoleon Buonaparte, a
-grenadier killed himself. This suicide was followed by another case,
-and it was feared that the disposition would assume an epidemic
-character. Buonaparte saw the necessity of prompt and decisive
-measures, and with a view of striking terror in the minds of the
-soldiers, and putting a stop at once to the spread of what appeared to
-be a contagious malady, he issued the following “order of the day,”
-dated _St. Cloud, 22 Floreal, an_ X.:—
-
-“The grenadier Groblin has committed suicide, from a disappointment
-in love. He was, in other respects, a worthy man. This is the second
-event of the kind that has happened in this corps within a month. The
-First Consul directs that it shall be notified in the order of the day
-of the guard, that a soldier ought to know how to overcome the grief
-and melancholy of his passions; that there is as much true courage in
-bearing mental affliction manfully as in remaining unmoved under the
-fire of a battery. To abandon oneself to grief without resisting, and
-to kill oneself in order to escape from it, is like abandoning the
-field of battle before being conquered.
-
- “Signed, NAPOLEON,
- “BESSIERES.”
-
-The effect of this masterly appeal to the courage of the French
-soldiery was truly magical. The disposition was completely quelled,
-and no case of suicide occurred for a considerable time afterwards.
-The course which Napoleon adopted shewed his great knowledge of human
-nature, as well as the thorough insight he had obtained into the
-character of the people over whose minds he exercised so tremendous an
-influence.
-
-An account of the punishment inflicted on the women of Miletus, a city
-of Ionia, who were seized with an epidemic suicide, is transmitted to
-us in the writings of Plutarch. He says, “The Milesian virgins were at
-one time possessed with an uncommon rage for suicide. All desire of
-life seemed suddenly to leave them, and they rushed on death (by the
-help of the halter) with an impetuous fury. The tears and entreaties
-of parents and friends were of no avail; and if they were prevented
-by force for awhile, they evaded all the attention and vigilance of
-their observers, and found means to perpetrate the horrid deed.
-Some ascribed this extraordinary species of desperation and frenzy
-to certain occult and maddening qualities of the air at that season,
-somehow or other peculiarly injurious to the female frame and texture,
-both of body and mind, (since the men were not visibly affected by it;)
-while the superstitious considered it as a calamity sent from the gods,
-and therefore beyond the power of human remedy. But whatever was the
-cause, the effect was visible and important, and could not be suffered
-to rage long without manifest injury to the state. While speculative
-men, therefore, were attempting to account for the phenomena, the
-active magistrate was endeavouring to arrest the progress of the
-contagion, for which purpose the following decree was issued;—“That
-the body of every young woman who hanged herself should be dragged
-naked through the streets by the same rope with which she committed
-the deed.” This wise edict had in a short time the desired effect.
-Plutarch adds—“The fear of shame and ignominy is an argument of a good
-and virtuous mind; and they who regarded not pain and death, which are
-usually esteemed the most dreadful of evils, could not, however, endure
-the thoughts of having their dead bodies exposed to indignity and
-shame.”
-
-In the Magdalen Asylum, at Edinburgh, a girl was seized with typhus
-fever, at the time that it was raging in the city, and though she
-was instantly removed, as well as all her bed-clothes &c., two more
-were seized next day, and an alarm or panic was soon spread over the
-whole house. Next day, no fewer than sixteen were in the sick-room,
-and in the course of four days, out of a community of less than fifty
-individuals, twenty-two were apparently labouring under decided fever.
-It now struck Dr. Hamilton that there was mad delusion in all this,
-and that the disease arose as much from panic and irritation as from
-any other causes. Acting on this belief, he went to the sick-room, and
-told the girls that such a rapid spread of the disease was entirely
-unprecedented; that they were under the delusion of yielding to
-their fears, and of imitating others who were now undergoing all
-the tortures of bleeding, blistering, and purging, in Queensbury
-Hospital. He assured them that the fumigation and other precautions
-must have destroyed the contagion, and that if they would only keep
-a good heart and dismiss their fears, he would pledge himself the
-fever would soon disappear. The effect of the Doctor’s speech was
-magical. All apprehension was instantly banished from the mind, the
-cheering influence of hope was inspired, moral courage was developed,
-and the progress of the pestilence stopped. Not one case of fever
-occurred afterwards, and those who had the fever at the time perfectly
-recovered.[54]
-
-It is only on the same principle that we can account for the success
-which Dr. A. T. Thompson met with in the treatment of the following
-case of whooping-cough, which had been kept up by habit. The patient,
-a young boy, was threatened with the application of a large blister;
-although it was not applied, but merely placed within his view, yet the
-dread of it completely removed the cough. Boerrhave cured epilepsy in a
-whole school, by marching into it at the moment of the expected attack
-with a red-hot poker, which he threatened to thrust down the throats of
-those who should have a fit.
-
-A remarkable instance of epidemic suicide occurred as far back as the
-reign of Tarquinius Priscus, which as it required, so it received,
-an effectual check by the spirited introduction of an extraordinary
-mode of punishment. After this king had employed the Roman people in
-successful wars abroad, he filled up their leisure at home in works
-of less apparent honour, though of greater utility. These were to cut
-drains and common sewers of immense size and durability. When the
-soldiers disdained these servile offices, and saw no end to their
-labours, many of them committed suicide by throwing themselves off the
-Capitoline Hill. Others followed their example, until the contagion
-spread through the whole of the men. The king, in order to strike
-terror into the minds of those who might contemplate self-destruction,
-issued an order commanding the bodies of those who should commit
-suicide to be nailed on crosses, and then exposed as spectacles to the
-rest of the citizens, and left a prey to the fowls of the air. The
-feeling of shame and horror had the effect of checking the disposition
-to sacrifice life, and thus the king’s purpose was effected.
-
-Whether any measures of a similar character could be adopted in cases
-where the disposition to suicide has a tendency to assume an epidemic
-form is a matter of considerable doubt.
-
-Experience has established the effect of some simple remedies in
-preventing the return of paroxysms of melancholia with a propensity
-to suicide. But it has likewise, and not unfrequently, evinced their
-insufficiency, and at the same time the influence of a strong and
-deeply impressed emotion in producing a solid and durable change. A
-man who worked at a sedentary trade consulted Pinel, about the end
-of October, 1783, for dyspepsia and great depression of spirits.
-He knew of no cause to which he could ascribe his indisposition.
-His unhappiness at length increased to such a pitch that he felt an
-invincible propensity to throw himself into the Seine. Unequivocal
-symptoms of a disordered stomach induced Pinel to prescribe some
-opening medicines, and for some days occasional draughts of whey. His
-bowels were effectually opened, and he suffered but little from his
-propensity to self-destruction during the remainder of the winter. Fine
-weather appeared to restore him completely, and his cure was considered
-as perfect. Towards the decline of autumn, however, his melancholia
-returned. Nature assumed to him a dark and dismal aspect, and his
-propensity to throw himself into the Seine returned with redoubled
-force. The only circumstance that in any degree restrained the horrid
-impulse was, the idea of leaving unprotected a wife and child, whom
-he tenderly loved. This struggle between the feelings of nature and
-his delirious frenzy was not permitted to continue long; for the most
-unequivocal proofs soon after appeared of his having executed his fatal
-project.
-
-A literary gentleman, devoted to the pleasures of the table, and who
-had lately recovered from a fever, experienced in the autumnal season
-all the horrors of the propensity to suicide. He weighed with shocking
-calmness the choice of various methods to accomplish the deed of death.
-A visit which he paid to London appears to have developed, with a new
-degree of energy, his profound melancholy, and his immovable resolution
-to abridge his term of life. He chose an advanced hour of the night,
-and went towards one of the bridges of that capital for the purpose of
-precipitating himself into the Thames; but at the moment of his arrival
-at the destined spot, he was attacked by some robbers. Though he had
-little or no money about him, he felt extremely indignant at this
-treatment, and used every effort to make his escape, which, however, he
-did not accomplish before he had been exceedingly terrified. Left by
-his assailants, he returned to his lodgings, having forgot the original
-object of his sally. This rencontre seems to have caused a thorough
-revolution in the state of his mind. His cure was complete.
-
-A watchmaker was for a long time harassed by the propensity to suicide.
-He once so far gave way to the horrid impulse, that he withdrew to his
-house in the country, where he expected to meet no obstacle to the
-execution of his project. Here he took a pistol, and retired to an
-adjoining wood, with the full intent of perpetrating the fatal deed;
-but missing his aim, the contents of the piece entered his cheek.
-Violent hæmorrhage ensued. He was discovered, and conveyed to his own
-house. During the healing of the wound, which was long protracted,
-an important change took place in the state of his mind. Whether
-from the agitation produced by the above tragic attempt, from the
-enormous loss of blood which it occasioned, or from any other cause,
-he never afterwards shewed the least inclination to put an end to his
-existence. This case, though by no means an example for imitation,
-is well calculated to shew that sudden terror, or any other lively or
-deep impression, may divert, and even destroy, the fatal propensity to
-suicide.
-
-A few years ago, an officer went into Hyde Park with an intention of
-shooting himself. He applied a pistol to his forehead; the priming
-flashed, but no discharge followed. A man of poor appearance, whom the
-officer had not observed, or perhaps thought unworthy of his notice,
-instantly ran up, and wrested the pistol from his hands. The other drew
-his sword, and was about to stab his deliverer, who, with much spirit,
-replied, “Stab me, Sir, if you think proper; I fear death as little as
-you, but I have more courage. More than twenty years I have lived in
-affliction and penury, and I yet trust in God for comfort and support.”
-The officer was struck with these spirited words, continued speechless
-and motionless for a short time, and then, bursting into tears, gave
-his purse to the honest man. He then inquired into his story, and
-became his private friend and benefactor; but he made the poor man
-swear that he would never make inquiries concerning himself, or seem to
-know him, if chance should ever bring them in sight of each other.
-
-A female patient, who had often threatened to destroy herself, one
-day assured M. Esquirol that she was about to do it. “Very well,” he
-answered; “it is nothing to me; and your husband will be delivered of a
-great torment.” She instantly ceased the preparations she was making to
-accomplish the act, and never spoke of committing it again.
-
-How easily lunatics may be diverted from their purpose by presence
-of mind, an intimacy with their character, and the tact to employ
-the destructive feeling by which they are actuated as the means of
-protection, is well exemplified in an anecdote related by Dr. Fox. He
-had accompanied a suicidal and furious maniac, who was at the time
-calm, to the upper story of his asylum to enjoy the prospect beyond
-the walls. In returning, the spiral staircase struck the eye of the
-patient; the opportunity roused the half-slumbering propensity, and a
-fit of frenzy ensued. His eyes glared, his teeth ground against each
-other; he panted like a bloodhound for his prey, and seizing the Doctor
-by the collar, howled into his ears, “You jump down, and I will jump
-after you.” The Doctor for the moment was petrified with horror; he
-was alone with a powerful man, frenzied by insanity; to escape was out
-of the question; to attempt to overcome him by force was still more
-futile: in a moment he hit upon a stratagem. Turning to the infuriated
-madman, he exclaimed, with a look of coolness and collectedness, “Bah!
-my child could jump from this place; it requires no nouse to do that;
-the thing is to jump up—that is the difficulty.” The madman listened
-with attention to what the Doctor said, and then observed, “But you
-cannot do so, can you?” The Doctor replied, he could, and they both
-hurried down to put the boast to the proof, and the sanguinary threat
-was forgotten before they reached the lobby.
-
-Physicians not practically acquainted with the treatment of insanity
-are too much inclined to believe that it is fruitless to attempt to
-reason a madman out of his morbid delusion, and that to have recourse
-to a trick in order to dispel the mental illusion is a species of
-practice unbecoming the dignity of a professional gentleman. Numerous
-cases are recorded in which patients have been cured of monomania by a
-well-contrived artifice; and in many cases of suicidal insanity, when
-other treatment fails, the medical man may have recourse to this mode
-of cure without any danger of sinking himself in public or professional
-estimation. The following cases are illustrations of the foregoing
-remark:—
-
-A celebrated watchmaker, at Paris, was infatuated with the chimera of
-perpetual motion, and to effect this discovery he set to work with
-indefatigable ardour. From unremitting attention to the object of his
-enthusiasm coinciding with the influence of revolutionary disturbances,
-his imagination was greatly heated, his sleep was interrupted, and, at
-length, a complete derangement of the understanding took place. His
-case was marked by a most whimsical illusion of the imagination. He
-fancied that he had lost his head on the scaffold; that it had been
-thrown promiscuously among the heads of many other victims; that the
-judges, having repented of their cruel sentence, had ordered them
-to be restored to their owners, and placed upon their respective
-shoulders; but that, in consequence of an unfortunate mistake, the
-gentleman who had the management of the business had placed upon his
-shoulders the head of one of his unhappy companions. The idea of this
-whimsical exchange occupied his thoughts night and day, on account
-of which his relations sent him to the Hôtel Dieu; and from thence
-he was transferred to the Asylum de Bicêtre. Nothing could equal the
-extravagant overflowings of his heated brain. He sung, cried, or danced
-incessantly; and as there appeared no propensity in him to commit acts
-of violence or disturbance, he was allowed to go about the hospital
-without control, in order to expend, by evaporation, the effervescent
-excess of his spirits. “Look at these teeth,” he constantly cried;
-“mine were exceedingly handsome; these are rotten and decayed. My mouth
-was sound and healthy; this is foul and diseased. What a difference
-between this hair and that of my own head!” To this state of delirious
-gaiety, however, succeeded that of furious madness. He broke to pieces,
-or otherwise destroyed, whatever was within the reach or power of his
-mischievous propensity. Close confinement became indispensable. Towards
-the approach of winter, his violence abated; and, although he continued
-to be extravagant in his ideas, he was never afterwards dangerous. He
-was therefore permitted, whenever he felt disposed, to go to the inner
-court. The idea of perpetual motion frequently recurred to him in the
-midst of his wanderings; and he chalked on all the walls and doors as
-he passed the various designs by which his wondrous piece of mechanism
-was to be constructed. The method best calculated to cure so whimsical
-an illusion appeared to be that of encouraging his prosecution of it to
-satiety. His friends were accordingly requested to send him his tools,
-with materials to work upon, and other requisites, such as plates of
-copper and steel, watch-wheels, &c. The governor permitted him to fix
-up a work-bench in his apartment. His zeal was now redoubled; his whole
-attention was rivetted upon his favourite pursuit. He forgot his meals.
-After about a month’s labour, which he sustained with a constancy
-that deserved better success, our artist began to think that he had
-followed a false route. He broke into a thousand fragments the piece of
-machinery which he had fabricated at so much expense of time, thought,
-and labour; entered on the construction of another upon a new plan,
-and laboured with equal pertinacity for an additional fortnight. The
-various parts being completed, he brought them together, and fancied
-that he saw a perfect harmony amongst them. The whole was now finally
-adjusted; his anxiety was indescribable; motion succeeded; it continued
-for some time, and he supposed it capable of continuing for ever. He
-was elevated to the highest pitch of enjoyment and triumph, and ran
-as quick as lightning into the interior of the hospital, crying out,
-like another Archimedes, “At length I have solved this famous problem,
-which has puzzled so many men celebrated for their wisdom and talents.”
-But, grievous to say, he was disconcerted in the midst of his triumph.
-The wheels stopped; the perpetual motion ceased! His intoxication
-of joy was succeeded by disappointment and confusion. But to avoid
-a humiliating and mortifying confession, he declared that he could
-easily remove the impediment; but tired of that kind of employment, he
-was determined for the future to devote his whole time and attention
-to his business. There still remained another maniacal impression to
-be counteracted,—that of the imaginary exchange of his head, which
-unceasingly recurred to him. A keen and an unanswerable stroke of
-pleasantry seemed best adapted to correct this fantastic whim. Another
-convalescent, of a gay and facetious humour, instructed in the part he
-should play in this comedy, adroitly turned the conversation to the
-subject of the famous miracle of Saint Denis. Our mechanician strongly
-maintained the possibility of the fact, and sought to confirm it by
-an application of it to his own case. The other set up a loud laugh,
-and replied, with a tone of the keenest ridicule, “Madman as thou
-art, how could Saint Denis kiss his own head? Was it with his heels?”
-This equally unexpected and unanswerable retort forcibly struck the
-maniac. He retired confused, amidst the peals of laughter which were
-provoked at his expense, and never afterwards mentioned the exchange
-of his head. Close attention to his trade for some months completed
-the restoration of his intellect. He was sent to his family in perfect
-health, and has now for more than five years pursued his business
-without a return of his complaint.
-
-Mr. Cox recollects a singular instance of a deranged idea in a maniac
-being corrected by a very simple stratagem. The patient asserted that
-he was the Holy Ghost; a gentleman present immediately exclaimed, “You
-the Holy Ghost! What proof have you to produce?” “I know that I am,”
-was his answer. The gentleman said, “How is this possible? There is but
-one Holy Ghost, is there? How then can you be the Holy Ghost, and I be
-so too?” He appeared surprised and puzzled, and, after a short pause,
-said, “But are _you_ the Holy Ghost?” When the other observed, “Did you
-not know that I was?” his answer was, “I did not know it before. Why,
-then, I cannot be the Holy Ghost.”
-
-A Portuguese nobleman became melancholy, and fancied that God would
-never forgive his sins. Various means were tried to subdue this morbid
-impression, but in vain, until the following artifice was adopted,
-which proved successful in restoring the lunatic to reason. During
-midnight, a person dressed as an angel was made to enter his bed-room,
-having a drawn sword in its right hand, and a lighted torch in the
-other. The imaginary angelic being addressed the monomaniac by name,
-who, rising from his bed, spoke to the supposed angel, beseeching it
-to tell him whether his sins would ever be forgiven; upon which the
-angel replied, “Be comforted, your sins are forgiven.” The poor man’s
-delight knew no bounds. He rose from his bed, summoned every one in
-the house to his presence, and explained to them all that had passed.
-From that moment the man rapidly recovered in bodily health, and his
-delusion has completely vanished.
-
-A man fancied he was dead, refused to eat, and importuned his parents
-to bury him. By the advice of his physician, he was wrapped in a
-winding-sheet, laid upon a bier, and in this way he was carried on the
-shoulders of four men to the churchyard. On their way, two or three
-pleasant fellows (appointed for that purpose) meeting the hearse,
-demanded in a commanding tone of voice to know whose body they had
-in the coffin. They replied it was a young man’s, and mentioned his
-name. “Surely,” said one of them, “the world is well rid of him; for
-he was a man who led a bad and vicious life, and his friends have
-good reasons to rejoice that he has thus ended his days, otherwise
-he would have died an ignominious death on the scaffold.” The young
-man overheard this observation, at which he felt extremely indignant;
-but feeling that it was not consistent with propriety or the laws
-of nature for a dead man on his way to his last home to exhibit any
-indications of passion, he satisfied himself by coolly replying, “That
-they were wicked men to do him that wrong, and that if he had been
-alive he would teach them to speak better of the dead.” “It is well,”
-said one of the men in reply, “that you are no more; both for yourself
-and family. You were a mean, pitiful scoundrel, guilty of every
-abomination, and the world is rejoiced that you no longer live.” This
-was too much for the patience of the dead man to endure, and feeling
-that he could no longer suffer such unjust aspersions to be cast on
-his character, he leaped from the coffin, procured the first stick he
-could lay hands on, and commenced belabouring his vile accusers. As it
-may be supposed, they gave him plenty to do, and by the time he had
-gratified his indignation, and well chastised his calumniators, he had
-become completely exhausted. In this state he was taken home, and in
-a few days he was completely cured of the morbid idea which had taken
-possession of his imagination.
-
-Menecrates, as we learn from Ælian,[55] become so mad, as seriously to
-believe himself the son of Jupiter, and to request of Philip of Macedon
-that he might be treated as a god. But it is not always that the man
-thus deranged falls into such good hands as those of the Macedonian
-monarch; for Philip humorously determining to make the madman’s disease
-work its own cure, gave orders immediately that his request should be
-complied with, and invited him to a grand entertainment, at which was
-a separate table for the new divinity, served with the most costly
-perfumes and incense, but with nothing else. Menecrates was at first
-highly delighted, and received the worship that was paid to him with
-the greatest complacency; but growing hungry by degrees over the empty
-viands that were offered him, while every other guest was indulged with
-substantial dainties, he at length keenly felt himself to be a man, and
-stole away from the court in his right senses.
-
-Many cases of suicidal insanity have been cured by removing the persons
-so unhappily afflicted from their own homes, friends, and relations.
-In these cases the physician has no little difficulty in persuading
-the friends of the invalid that a separation from old associations is
-absolutely indispensable; that without it, a return to sanity cannot be
-reasonably expected. When Dr. Willis undertook the cure of George III.,
-he insisted, in the first instance, in dismissing all the old servants,
-changing the furniture, and removing everything from the king’s sight
-that might tend to awaken in his mind ideas of the past. The success
-that attended his treatment is said mainly to have depended on this
-circumstance.
-
-Mr. ——, forty-seven years old, of a neuro-sanguineous temperament,
-was happy in his domestic circle, and his business had prospered
-until the year, 1830, from which period he was much harassed in the
-management of his affairs. In December, 1831, after a very trifling
-loss, he grew sorrowful and melancholy; his face was flushed, his eyes
-became blood-shot, his breathing was difficult, and he shed tears,
-incessantly repeating that he was lost. On the next and following days,
-he made several attempts to commit suicide, so that they were obliged
-to cover his apartment with wadding. He wished to strangle himself,
-tried to swallow his tongue, filled his mouth with his fist in hopes
-of suffocating himself, and then refused all nourishment. At the
-expiration of six days, the patient was brought to Paris, and entrusted
-to Esquirol’s care. From the moment of his arrival all desire to commit
-suicide vanished, and the patient appeared restored to reason. “The
-impression that I received,” said he, “on finding myself transported to
-a strange house cured me.” In fact, sleep, appetite, and a return of
-connected, and sometimes lively conversation, induced the belief that
-a cure was effected. Three weeks seemed enough for convalescence, when
-his wife and son came to fetch him. They passed two days at Paris to
-finish some business there, and then returned to the country. Scarcely
-had he arrived at his home when he felt himself impelled by the same
-desires, in consequence of which, he returned to Paris, transacted some
-business whilst he remained there, and appeared perfectly well. On
-returning to his home again, he made fresh attempts to commit suicide,
-struck his son, and those who waited upon him, and endangered the life
-of his wife. Neither the grief of his family, the watch placed over
-him, nor the pretended authority of those about him, could overcome
-these feelings. The patient passed several days without food; he tore
-up his linen to make a cord to hang himself, tied it round his neck,
-and got upon his bed in order to throw himself upon the floor; and at
-last, deceiving the watchfulness of his relations, escaped to throw
-himself into the river. He was immediately put into a carriage, and
-accompanied by his wife; but, notwithstanding the strait-waistcoat, he
-left no means untried to kill himself. On arriving at Paris, and being
-again confined, he became perfectly reasonable, and made no attempt
-to destroy himself during the six weeks that his second confinement
-lasted. There was reason to believe his cure complete. If he was asked
-why he did not overcome his terrible impressions at his own house as
-he did at Paris, he answered in an evasive manner, affirming that this
-time the trial had been long enough, that he was cured, and that he
-insisted upon returning home. “Deprived of my wife and son,” said he,
-“I am the most unhappy of men, and I cannot live.” “But if you are
-so unhappy here,” said Esquirol to him one day, “why do you not try
-to destroy yourself, as it is very easy to do so?” “I know not,” he
-replied; “but I am cured, and I wish to live.” This patient enjoyed
-the greatest liberty, and although no apparent precaution was taken
-to prevent his destroying himself, he never made the least attempt.
-He afterwards ceased to talk unreasonably; but Esquirol was never
-able to obtain an avowal of the motives which induced him to commit
-suicide at his own house, whilst he thought no more of it as soon as he
-came amongst strangers. On returning to his home for the fourth time,
-although he was able to transact important business, the same phenomena
-returned with equal violence.
-
-M.——, twenty-seven years old, after experiencing some reverses of
-fortune, became maniacal, with a tendency to commit suicide. The
-elevated situation of the room which he inhabited, the position of
-the staircase, the reiterated visits of his friends, “who came to
-contemplate his misfortunes,” and the despair of his wife, were so
-many circumstances which induced him to terminate his existence; and
-although he avowed that he had no motive for so doing, and that he was
-ashamed, and considered himself criminal for having attempted it, he
-left no means untried for more than a month to effect that end. When he
-was taken away from his home, and lodged in a ground-floor which led
-into a garden, the idea no longer harassed him. “It would be of no
-use,” he said; “I could never kill myself here; every precaution is
-taken to prevent me.”
-
-A baker’s wife, of a lymphatic temperament, experienced a violent
-fit of jealousy, which caused her much distress, and induced her to
-watch her husband’s steps, who vented his discontent in threats and
-reproaches. At last, this unhappy woman, being unable to bear the
-feeling any longer, threw herself out of the window. Her husband ran
-to pick her up, and bestowed marks of the most attentive kindness
-upon her. “It is useless,” she said; “you have a wife no longer.” She
-refused every kind of nourishment, and neither the solicitations,
-tears, prayers of her relations, and those of her husband, who never
-quitted her room, were able to overcome her resolution. After seven
-days of total abstinence, Esquirol was called in. They hid from him
-the cause of the disease, but he observed that every time her husband
-approached the bed, her face became convulsed. The patient was told
-that she was about to be sent into the country, but that it was
-necessary for her to take a little nourishment in order to support
-the journey. A little broth which was offered her was accepted; but
-notwithstanding her attempts, she could only swallow a few drops. She
-tried again the following morning, but she expired in the course of
-the day. “Had this woman,” says Esquirol, “been removed from her home
-immediately after the accident, there is little doubt but she would
-have been restored. How could she desire to live, her distress being
-continually aggravated by the presence of her husband?”
-
-The chief means of controlling the passions, and of keeping them within
-just bounds, is to form a proper estimate of the things of this life,
-of the relation of our present to a future state of existence, and
-of the influence which our actions in this world will have upon our
-happiness hereafter. Such a right estimate every rational man will
-labour to attain. He will endeavour, by correcting error, and acquiring
-such habits as are consistent with just sentiments, to withdraw the
-nourishment from the very root of passion, rather than be for ever
-fruitlessly occupied in merely pruning the luxuriance of some of its
-branches.
-
-It may be useful to impress strongly upon the minds of those who have
-not sufficient command over their feelings, the persuasion that the
-indulgence of any passion to excess, and especially of the selfish and
-malevolent ones, is likely to be injurious to health, will certainly
-be destructive of serenity and comfort; and of course, by diminishing
-happiness, will frustrate its own aim and intention, and may, by
-repetition, acquire accumulated force and facility of excitement,
-become at length unconquerable and habitual, and according to its
-nature, violence, and frequency, will, in a greater or less degree,
-be subversive of happiness, and leave them more or less open to the
-attacks of insanity.
-
-Such persons will therefore see it highly expedient, while under the
-influence of these impressions, to do all in their power to avoid them;
-to compare their urgent and apparent importance when they occur, with
-the probable diminution of the comfort and health of body and mind
-which they might induce; and to lay it down as a rule never to indulge
-any passion whatever, till, independently of moral considerations, and
-the notions of duty and obligation, they have deliberately reflected,
-whether the importance of the cause will be a sufficient counterbalance
-to the certain pain inflicted and the injury which may be thence
-derived to their health of body and ease and soundness of mind. A habit
-of such deliberation once acquired,—and it may be acquired by diligence
-and resolution,—will entirely put an end to exorbitant excitement,
-since by checking the very beginnings of emotion, its growth and
-progress will be altogether prevented.
-
-And as every one has some weak point on which he is more open to
-a successful attack, some constitutional or habitual feeling, the
-approaches of which he cannot easily withstand, all persons who are
-convinced of the expediency and necessity of subduing their passions,
-if they would consult their own ease, will be aware of the importance
-of keeping a diligent watch, and placing a strong guard, upon the one
-that most easily and successfully besets them.
-
-And whoever would secure a reasonable portion of present happiness will
-be sensible of the necessity of learning the art of contentment, which,
-difficult as it may seem to those who have not used themselves to check
-the wanderings of imagination, and to keep their desires within prudent
-bounds, not only appears indispensable, but easy, to the man who feels
-a lively and practical conviction of its wonderful tendency to multiply
-the sum of actual enjoyment.
-
-With the same view of promoting and securing their own present
-felicity, such persons will see the propriety of acquiring habits
-of good nature, and of cultivating the emotions of benevolence. And
-as virtue seldom fails to bring her own dowry, contentedness and
-benevolence will infallibly introduce habits of cheerfulness, which,
-while they improve our happiness, act as powerful preservatives against
-disease, and as determined enemies of insanity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-PHYSICAL TREATMENT OF THE SUICIDAL DISPOSITION.
-
-
- On the dependence of irritability of temper on physical
- disease—Voltaire and an Englishman agree to commit
- suicide—The reasons that induced Voltaire to change his
- mind—The ferocity of Robespierre accounted for—The state
- of his body after death—The petulance of Pope dependent
- on physical causes—Suicide from cerebral congestion,
- treatment of—Advantages of bloodletting, with cases—Damien
- insane—Cold applied to the head, of benefit—Good effects of
- purgation—Suicide caused by a tape-worm—Early indications of
- the disposition to suicide—The suicidal eye—Of the importance
- of carefully watching persons disposed to suicide—Cunning
- of such patients—Numerous illustrations—The fondness for a
- particular mode of death—Dr. Burrows’ extraordinary case—Dr.
- Conolly on the treatment of suicide—Cases shewing the
- advantage of confinement.
-
-Medical men have not considered with that degree of attention
-commensurate with its importance the relationship between physical
-derangement and those apparently trifling mental ailments which so
-often, if not subdued, lead to the commission of suicide. The origin
-of self-destruction is more frequently dependent upon derangement of
-the _primæ viæ_ than is generally imagined. Every one must, in his own
-person, be aware of the influence of indigestion, and what is termed
-bilious disorder, upon the spirits. An inactive condition of the bowels
-is a common cause of mental disquietude. Voltaire, who was a man of
-great observation, appears to have paid considerable attention to this
-connexion. He advises a person who intends to ask a favour of a prime
-minister, or a minister’s secretary, or a secretary’s mistress, to be
-careful to approach them after they have had a comfortable evacuation
-from the bowels. Dryden invariably dosed himself before sitting down
-to compose. He says—“If you wish to have fairy flights of fancy,
-you must purge the belly.” Carneades, the celebrated disputant of
-antiquity, was in the habit of taking white helebore, (a purgative,)
-preparatory to his refuting the dogmas of the Stoics. Lord Byron says,
-in one of his letters, “I am suffering from what my physician terms
-‘gastric irritation,’ and my spirits are sadly depressed. I have taken
-a brisk cathartic, and to-morrow ‘Richard will be himself again.’” The
-following anecdote is recorded of Voltaire:—“An English gentleman of
-fortune had been sitting many hours with this great wit and censurer of
-human character. Their discourse related chiefly to the depravity of
-human nature, tyranny and oppression of kings, poverty, wretchedness,
-and misfortune, the pain of disease, particularly the gravel, gout,
-and stone. They worked themselves up to such a pitch of imaginary
-evils that they proposed next morning to commit suicide together.
-The Englishman, firm to his resolution, rose, and expected Voltaire
-to perform his promise, to whom the genius replied, “_Ah! monsieur,
-pardonnez moi, j’ai bien dormi, mon lavement a bien operé, et le soleil
-est tout-à-fait clair aujourd’hui_.”
-
-We knew a gentleman whose temper was not controllable if he allowed
-himself to pass a day without his accustomed evacuation from the
-bowels. Pinel records the particulars of the case of a man who had
-fits of mental derangement whenever the action of the bowels became
-irregular.
-
-The blood-thirsty miscreant Robespierre is said to have been of a
-“_costive habit, and to have been much subjected to derangement of
-the liver_.” After death, it is said that “his bowels were found one
-adherent mass.” It is indeed interesting to consider, both morally and
-medically, how far these morbid ailments influenced this monster in the
-bloody career in which he was engaged.
-
-There can be no question but that the morbid irritability which
-many of our men of genius have manifested was but the effect of
-a derangement of the physical frame acting upon a mind naturally
-sensitive to such impressions.
-
-Much of the petulance, personality, and malignity of Pope was dependent
-upon causes over which he had no control—viz., disease of the stomach
-and liver, producing hypochondriasis. It has been well observed by
-Madden, “Who knows under what paroxysms of mental irritation caused
-by that disease (indigestion), which more than any other domineers
-over the feelings of the sufferer, he might have written those bitter
-sarcasms which he levelled against his literary opponents? Who knows
-in what moment of bodily pain his irascibility might have taken the
-form of unjustifiable satire, or his morbid sensibility assumed the
-sickly shape of petulance and peevishness? Who knows how the strength
-of the strong mind might have been cast down by his sufferings, when
-‘he descended to the artifice’ of imposing on a bookseller, and of
-‘writing those letters for effect which he published by subterfuge?’
-Who that has observed how the vacillating conduct of the dyspeptic
-invalid imitates the vagaries of this proteiform malady can wonder at
-his capriciousness, or be surprised at the anomaly of bitterness on the
-tongue, and benevolence in the heart, of the same individual?”[56]
-
-That Pope was a severe sufferer from bodily disease will appear
-evident from the following account given by Dr. Johnson of the poet.
-He says, “Pope’s constitution, which was originally feeble, became so
-debilitated that he stood in perpetual need of female attendance; and
-so great was his sensibility of cold that he wore a fur doublet under
-a shirt of very coarse warm linen. When he rose, he invested himself
-in a bodice made of stiff canvass, being scarcely able to hold himself
-erect till it was laced; and he then put on a flannel waistcoat. His
-legs were so slender that he enlarged their bulk with three pairs of
-stockings, which were drawn off and on by the maid, for he was not
-able to dress or undress himself, and he neither went to bed nor rose
-without help.”
-
-His frequent attacks of indigestion made him at times a perfect picture
-of misery and wretchedness. It clothed everything with a gloomy aspect,
-made him quarrel with his friends and domestics, and he has been known
-to say that he sighed for death as a reprieve from mental and bodily
-agony. Sir Samuel Garth was frequently consulted when he had these
-attacks; and it was only by exacting a strict attention to diet and
-exhibiting medicine that he was enabled to restore the mind of the poet
-to a healthy tone.
-
-This physical ailment, as it often does when long continued, ultimately
-affected the cerebral functions. At times he had symptoms of pressure
-on the brain, or at least of an unequal and imperfect distribution of
-blood to that organ. Spence says, he frequently complained of seeing
-everything in the room as through a curtain, and on other occasions,
-of seeing false colours on certain objects. At another period, on a
-sick-bed, he asked Dodsley what arm it was that had the appearance of
-coming out from the wall.
-
-When the disposition to suicide is present, the physician should
-carefully ascertain whether the patient is not labouring under cerebral
-congestion, or a determination of blood to the head. The loss of
-a small quantity of blood has frequently been known to remove the
-propensity to self-destruction. A case is referred to by Schlegel of
-a woman who was liable to periodical fits of suicidal mania whenever
-she allowed a redundancy of blood to accumulate in the system. On two
-occasions she attempted suicide. On the first indications of a return
-of her delirium, she was generally bled, and relief was instantaneously
-afforded.
-
-A gentleman who had received, during the peninsular campaign, a sabre
-cut in the head, felt for some years, whenever he was exposed to great
-mental excitement, or allowed himself to over-indulge in the use of
-spirits, a kind of suicidal delirium. Twice he was detected in the act
-of attempting to commit suicide, and was fortunately prevented from
-doing so. The local abstraction of blood from the neighbourhood of the
-head was the only remedy which appeared to subdue the disposition.
-
-The cases which are related in another chapter of individuals who were
-insane at the moment when the act of self-destruction was attempted,
-but who recovered the use of their reasoning after having inflicted
-a wound attended with loss of blood, fully testify the importance
-of general and local depletion in certain cases of cerebral disease
-attended by this unfortunate propensity.
-
-A blow on the head has been known to develope this feeling. The
-affection of the sentient organ may remain latent for many years, and
-then suddenly manifest itself. A man had received, when young, a kick
-from a horse, which produced at the time no very urgent symptoms.
-Six years after the accident, he, without giving any indications of
-previous derangement of mind, cut his throat. Upon examining the brain,
-it was found extensively diseased.
-
-A man, feeling the suicidal disposition, bled himself from the arm, and
-recovered.
-
-It will not be proper in all cases to abstract blood; for the
-destructive propensity has been known to exist where there has been
-a deficiency of blood in the brain. The practitioner should examine
-the condition of the patient thoroughly before he recommends active
-depletion. Sixty per cent. of the cases of suicide will, however, be
-found with cerebral disease either of a primary or secondary nature;
-and to that organ the medical man’s attention should be particularly
-directed.
-
-The following case happily illustrates the benefits which are sometimes
-derived from the local abstraction of blood in certain cases of
-temporary insanity, accompanied with a disposition to commit suicide.
-“A gentleman,” says Dr. Burrows, “of a very irascible and impetuous
-disposition, with whom I was intimate, experienced in a public
-meeting a rebuke which exceedingly mortified him, and made so deep
-an impression upon his mind, that he was quite miserable. At night,
-instead of going to bed, he roamed abroad; and at length, early in
-the morning, without knowing whither he went, he found himself near a
-sheet of water. The view of it at once determined him to drown himself,
-and he accordingly plunged in. The action was perceived, and he was
-rescued from the water, insensible, and immediately conveyed to a place
-where means of resuscitation were adopted. As his address was found in
-his pocket, a communication was directly made to his family, and Dr.
-Burrows was called in to see the patient. He found him in a state of
-insensibility. As soon as consciousness returned, he was dressed, put
-into a coach, and Dr. B. accompanied him to his residence. As yet, he
-had not spoken, neither did he appear to observe anything. The motion
-of the carriage on the stones seemed to rouse him, and he looked about.
-He took no notice of those who were in the carriage with him. He soon
-became violent; his eyes were wild, and rolled in their sockets; his
-face became flushed; the vessels of the forehead were excessively
-distended, and all the symptoms of genuine delirium came on.[57] Dr.
-Burrows ascribed the symptoms to a violent reaction in the vascular
-system from the state of collapse it had sustained, and ordered the
-oppressed vessels of the head to be relieved by the application of
-cupping glasses, and the abstraction of sixteen ounces of blood;
-the head to be kept cool, and enemata to be administered until the
-bowels were well cleansed out. After these operations, he soon became
-passive and disposed to sleep. He slept six hours, and awoke tolerably
-composed, but not quite coherent. He took light nourishment, and at
-night awoke perfectly collected, but exceedingly low. The next day he
-was well, but languid. An explanation was given him, which removed the
-impression that the offensive part of the speech had given him, and he
-by degrees recovered his usual state of mind.”
-
-We are inclined to believe, with D’Israeli, “that there are crimes for
-which men are hanged, but of which they might easily have been cured
-by physical means.” Damien, who attempted the assassination of Louis
-XV., and who in consequence was subjected to the most refined tortures,
-persisted to the last in declaring that if he had been bled, as he
-wished and implored to be, the morning previously, he never would have
-endeavoured to take the life of the king.
-
-Gaubius relates the case of a lady of a too inflammable constitution,
-whom her husband had reduced to a model of decorum by phlebotomy.
-
-In the month of April, M. Delormel was called to Madame Chatelain,
-at the Chateau de Armanvillers, who, according to the statement of
-the physician in attendance, was “melancholic, hypochondriacal, and
-insane.” She had made several attempts to commit suicide, and was
-carefully guarded. She had been bled, purged, and well dosed with
-anti-spasmodics, but to no purpose. M. Delormel examined the patient
-very carefully, and came to a conclusion respecting her case very
-different from that which had been formed by the other physicians
-who had seen her. The lady was thirty-seven years of age, of a very
-neuro-sanguineous temperament, active in body, and most amiable in
-disposition. For more than two years she had complained of burning heat
-in her stomach and bowels; digestion was painful, and constipation
-habitual. The catameniæ were irregular; she was much emaciated, and the
-symptoms of melancholia and hypochondriasis were well marked.
-
-Madame C. could not bear to see her husband and children, to whom she
-had, when in good health, been affectionately attached. Her chief
-desire was solitude, and the predominant idea was the conviction of
-approaching death. From an attentive examination of the case, it
-was pronounced one of chronic gastro-enteritis. Eighty leeches were
-applied to the abdomen, proper medicines were administered, her diet
-regulated, and in less than a month she was completely restored to
-health of body and mind.
-
-When it is evident that the patient is suffering from cerebral
-congestion, and yet general bleeding is inadmissible, the application
-of cold to the head by means of a shower bath has often been productive
-of much good. A young lady who laboured under the disposition to
-suicide consulted an eminent living physician, communicating to him
-the particulars of her malady, bitterly lamenting the unfortunate
-feeling that was undermining her health. After trying various remedies
-without effecting much relief, a cold shower bath was recommended
-every morning. In the course of ten days, the desire to commit
-self-destruction was entirely removed, and never afterwards returned.
-
-A timely-administered purge has been known to dispel the desire of
-self-destruction. Esquirol knew a man who was decidedly insane whenever
-he allowed his bowels to be in an inactive condition.
-
-A patient of Falret had well-marked suicidal delirium. So urgent were
-the symptoms, that he was placed under restraint and carefully watched.
-Active cathartics were administered, and Falret states that the
-largest tape-worm he ever saw was evacuated. The idea of suicide soon
-vanished, and the man was restored in perfect health to his friends and
-family.[58]
-
-Foderé examined the bodies of three persons in one family who fell
-by their own hands, and in the three cases considerable disease was
-discovered in the intestinal canal, which had been irritating the brain
-and disturbing its manifestations.
-
-In the instances just referred to, the indication of physical disease
-of the _primæ viæ_ were but trifling during life.
-
-Disease of the stomach and liver frequently incite to suicide; hepatic
-affections notoriously disturb the equilibrium of the mind. Many a case
-exhibiting an inclination to suicide has been cured by a few doses of
-blue pill. The physician should direct his attention to the condition
-of the uterine function and the state of the skin. During the puerperal
-state, a tendency to suicide is often manifested.
-
-A lady, shortly after her accouchement, expressed, with great
-determination, her intention to kill herself. Her bowels had not been
-properly attended to, and a brisk cathartic was given. This entirely
-removed the suicidal disposition.
-
-Any irregularity in the action of the uterine organ may give rise to
-the same inclination. Under such circumstances, emmenagogues will do
-much good.
-
-German writers dwell much upon the connexion between suicide and
-derangement of the cutaneous secretion. That this function should also
-be attended to there cannot be a doubt, although we cannot call to
-mind any cases of suicide which could be directly traced to suppressed
-perspiration.
-
-In some cases, a blister applied and kept open in the neighbourhood of
-the head has effected much good. In other instances, issues have been
-beneficial, particularly in persons subject to cerebral congestion.
-There is, however, a condition of brain accompanying the suicidal
-disposition which may be denominated a state of _cerebral irritation_,
-in which bleeding or depletion would be injurious. In such cases,
-friction on the spine, and the administration of anti-spasmodics,
-gentle aperients, and alteratives, will be serviceable.
-
-Sufficient attention is not paid to those precursory symptoms which
-indicate the existence of a disposition to suicide. In two-thirds of
-the cases that occur, the act is preceded by premonitory signs, which,
-if attended to, will prevent the developement of the propensity.
-
-With very few exceptions, the mental symptoms are those which are
-principally manifested in these cases. Lowness of spirits, a love of
-solitude, an indisposition to follow any occupation which requires
-exercise of the mind, are generally exhibited. The person’s suspicions
-become roused; he fancies his dearest friends are regardless of his
-interests, or are plotting against his life. He takes no pleasure in
-the family circle. He may be suffering from some evident physical
-malady, acting through sympathy on the brain, and deranging its
-functions; and then he will often refer to his disease, and express
-his utter hopelessness of ever being cured. There is an expression
-of countenance generally present in a person who meditates suicide,
-which, if once seen, cannot easily be forgotten. Suicidal mania is
-easily recognised by the experienced physician. The surgeon of a large
-establishment in the environs of the metropolis informed me, that in
-six cases out of ten he could detect, by the appearance of the eye, the
-existence of the desire to commit self-destruction. A young gentleman,
-a few days previously, had been admitted into the house as a patient.
-The surgeon, after examining and prescribing for the lunatic, said to
-one of the keepers, “You must watch Mr. —— carefully, for I feel assured
-he will attempt his life.” Everything with which he might injure
-himself, were he so disposed, was taken from him; but it appears that
-he had resolved to make away with himself, and had carefully concealed
-a penknife in his boot. On the evening of the day on which he was
-admitted he made a dreadful gash in his throat, but failed in injuring
-any large vessel. He confessed that he had determined to sacrifice
-his life; he said, “It has been pre-ordained that I should fall by my
-own hands, and I am only fulfilling my destiny by cutting my throat!”
-Shortly after this he was removed; and as we have been subsequently
-informed, sufficient care not being taken of him, he eventually
-succeeded in killing himself.
-
-How difficult it is for the medical man to persuade the friends of
-a person who has evinced a disposition to suicide, of the absolute
-necessity of his being confined and carefully watched! A physician,
-dining with a friend, met by accident a young lady who had exhibited,
-for a few days previously, a shrewdness of manner that attracted the
-notice of those with whom she associated. He also observed a wildness
-and incoherence about her ideas; but what particularly struck his
-attention was, the peculiar expression of countenance which so often
-denotes the presence of suicidal mania.[59] He felt convinced in his
-own mind that the lady meditated self-destruction; and so firmly
-persuaded was he of the fact, that he seriously spoke to the gentleman
-at whose table he was dining on the subject, and urged him, as he was
-intimately acquainted with the young lady’s family, to suggest the
-propriety of having medical advice, and of carefully watching the
-movements of the lady. This suggestion was treated with ridicule,
-and of course the subject was not broached again. Two days after the
-conversation took place, intelligence was brought that the lady had
-taken a large dose of laudanum, and had died from its effects! A little
-prudent caution might have saved the life of this poor unfortunate
-being.
-
-In cases in which the disposition to suicide has been evinced, the
-patient ought to be carefully watched, and, under some circumstances,
-placed under restraint. Men who talk loudly of the effects of moral
-coercion, and who repudiate the idea of strait-waistcoats* &c., have
-had but little practical experience of the treatment of the insane.
-Moral discipline has done much good. Deeply should we regret to see
-the system which has been in force within our own recollection again
-introduced into our lunatic asylums. In endeavouring to avoid Scylla
-we have fallen into Charybdis. How many lives are lost in consequence
-of the patients not being properly secured when they have exhibited a
-desire to commit self-destruction.
-
-A lady who had attempted to destroy herself was very properly sent to
-an asylum. Having expressed a determination to avail herself of the
-first opportunity for carrying her intentions into execution, she was
-most carefully guarded. She was never allowed to be out of sight; a
-trustworthy nurse always kept by her side; and in the course of time
-she was pronounced recovered. But as it was not considered prudent to
-send her home at once, she was separated from the other inmates of
-the house, and allowed to reside with the surgeon and matron of the
-establishment. Even under these circumstances it was thought better
-not to allow her to be wholly by herself, fearful that the disposition
-might again suddenly develope itself. She resided with the surgeon
-for some weeks, and appeared completely well. She expressed much
-astonishment when told that she had attempted her own life; she was
-apparently horrified at the idea. She was sitting with the matron
-one morning after breakfast; the surgeon was going round the asylum,
-when a child was heard to cry up stairs, as if it had received some
-injury. The matron immediately left the room; she was not absent
-three minutes, and when she returned she was astonished to find the
-young lady had vanished. Immediate search was made for her, but she
-was not to be found, when, looking behind the curtain in the parlour,
-the lady was discovered hanging to the cornice! In that short space
-of time she had succeeded in suspending herself, and was quite dead.
-Of course we cannot determine whether she had recovered, and this
-was but a sudden recurrence of the suicidal mania, or whether she
-had cunningly concealed her ailment for the purpose of throwing her
-attendant off her guard, and thus being enabled to effect her dreadful
-purpose. We should be more disposed to accede to the latter solution
-of the question, knowing the extreme cunning of such lunatics, and the
-ingenious stratagems they often have recourse to in order to accomplish
-any mischievous object they have in view.
-
-A person who manifested indications of mental aberration was found
-in the act of hanging himself. Upon being detected, he promised most
-solemnly to abandon his rash resolution. He attempted a second time to
-kill himself by cutting his throat, but the wound was not fatal. He was
-now placed under the care of a gentleman who had devoted much attention
-to the treatment of insanity; and, knowing his propensity, the
-keeper received strict injunctions to watch his movements carefully.
-Everything by which he could injure himself was removed from his room,
-he was shaved every day by a barber, and no instrument of any kind was
-allowed to be in his possession. He was confined for nine months; and
-it appeared, from what afterwards occurred, that he had, during the
-whole of this period, been absorbed in the one idea of how he should
-contrive to commit suicide. He was discovered one morning hanging by
-the neck from the bedstead, quite dead. How he got possession of the
-cord which suspended him, puzzled everybody acquainted with the history
-of the case. At last the enigma was solved. It appears that parcels of
-books and newspapers had occasionally been sent to him by his family,
-tied with twine; and he had carefully, and unknown to the keeper,
-concealed each piece, until he had collected a quantity to constitute
-a cord sufficiently strong with which to hang himself. For nine
-months this idea had exclusive possession of his mind; and although
-he exhibited no apparent symptoms of insanity, he had evidently been
-contemplating suicide for the period already specified.
-
-A female had made repeated attempts, during her residence in the
-asylum at Wakefield, to hang herself, but had been so watched that she
-had not succeeded. One evening, the servant, on going to remove all her
-clothes out of her bed-room, thought she saw something bright on the top
-of one of her under garments; upon examination, this was found to be
-a pin. She had contrived just before bed-time to take off her garter;
-and, knowing that her pockets as well as her clothes would all be
-removed, she contrived to pin it within her dress, so high up that it
-would not easily be perceived. Very providentially, the brightness of
-the metal discovered it, and she was again prevented from accomplishing
-her purpose. By degrees the propensity wore off; and after a residence
-of eighteen years in the Hanwell Asylum, Sir W. Ellis found her a
-few years ago, living, though upwards of eighty years of age, in a
-comparatively tranquil state, waiting her removal in the ordinary
-course of nature.
-
-When persons determined on suicide find that they are unceasingly
-watched, and so carefully secured that they have no opportunity of
-executing their design, they will assume a most cheerful manner for
-days and weeks together, in order to lull suspicion; and when a
-favourable opportunity offers, it is never neglected.
-
-A man who had long been in a state of despondency, and had made many
-attempts to hang himself, but had always been prevented, very suddenly
-appeared much better. He became apparently cheerful, and being desirous
-of employment, was sent out with a large party into the hay-field.
-He continued in this and other out-door occupations for some time,
-gradually improving. One evening, on returning from the field, when
-the rest of the party went in to tea, (which they were allowed when
-hay-making,) he told the farming man that he did not feel thirsty, and
-as it was very warm he would rather remain at the door. He was left
-there. A short time afterwards his keeper came down to inquire for him,
-and being told where he had been left, immediately exclaimed, “Then he
-has hung himself!” It was also singularly impressed upon his mind,
-that it was in one particular out-house that he had done it. There he
-went, and found him suspended and dead, as he expected.
-
-“A noble lord,” (says Dr. Rowley,) “whose family I had the honour to
-attend, had received, it is said, some little reproof from a great
-personage, concerning a military omission. It seized his lordship’s
-mind so seriously, that on examination it was evident to me that
-suicide was intended. All weapons and dangerous means whatever were
-removed. It being a circumstance of delicacy, I sent for his lordship’s
-son, then about eighteen, from Westminster school, communicated my
-apprehensions, and requested his constant attendance on his noble
-parent. This the young man executed for several days, and prevented
-the commission of the crime apprehended. In my absence a few hours in
-the country, a very eminent, learned, and indeed remarkably sagacious
-physician, but my mortal and vindictive enemy, was called in. I had,
-contrary to medical _etiquette_, enforced the necessity of promptly
-bleeding a most noble lady in an apoplexy, which saved life, but
-brought down invectives, hatred, and vengeance on me. Whether out of
-opposition to my vigilance, or from malicious motives, it would be
-difficult to determine, but the noble lord was liberated from all
-restraint, and my apprehensions treated by injurious insinuations and
-with contempt. Thirty-six hours had scarcely elapsed before the noble
-lord put a period to his existence, by a sword he had concealed, which
-had been a present from Prince Ferdinand: he wounded his breast in
-two places, but the third thrust pierced his heart. Thus perished a
-nobleman, whose liberality, feelings, and many virtues, did honour to
-human nature, and who might, in all probability, have been now living,
-had not medical arrogance and illiberality, merely from personal
-ambition, dictated error, at the risk of human destruction! _Horridum!
-valde horridum!_”
-
-The physician should constantly bear in mind this important fact
-connected with the suicidal disposition—viz., that those determined
-upon self-destruction often resolve to kill themselves in a particular
-manner, and however anxious they may be to quit life, they have been
-known to wait for months and years, until they have had an opportunity
-of effecting their purpose according to their own preconceived notions.
-A man who has attempted to drown himself will not readily be induced
-to cut his throat, and _vice versa_. A morbid idea is frequently
-associated in the maniac’s mind with a particular kind of death, and
-if he be removed from all objects likely to awaken this notion, the
-inclination to suicide may be removed.
-
-An old man, upwards of seventy years of age, who had a market garden,
-near the asylum at Wakefield, consulted the late Sir W. Ellis as to
-the best mode of destroying himself, as he had made up his mind not
-to live any longer. He said he had thought of hanging himself, if Sir
-William could not recommend an easier death. The physician talked to
-him some time upon the heinousness of the crime he contemplated, and
-endeavoured to shew him that hanging was a most horrible death, from
-the suffocation that must be felt. His conversation was attended with
-little success. Finding that the chylopoietic viscera were a good deal
-disordered, he prescribed for him, and sent to inform his wife that he
-ought never to be left alone. The medicine had the effect of restoring
-the secretions to a healthy action, and he got better. Sir William
-heard no more of him for some time, when he was at length informed that
-he was discovered dead in a little shed in his garden, where he used
-to keep his tools. But so fixed was the mode in his mind, by which he
-was determined to accomplish his death, that, though the place was so
-low he could not stand upright in it, and he had not a rope or a string
-with which he could suspend himself, he contrived to effect his purpose
-by getting a willow twig, and making it into a noose, which he fastened
-to one of the rafters. He stooped to put his head through it, and then
-pushing his feet from under him, suspended himself until he died. Now,
-if he had not made up his mind to destroy himself in this particular
-way, he might have accomplished it with much greater ease by drowning
-himself in the pond in his garden, or by cutting his throat with his
-garden knife, which he always had about him; but neither of these was
-the mode he previously intended.
-
-It may be practically useful to all who have the immediate care of
-suicidal patients to bear this in mind; and if the medical man can find
-out that any particular plan is contemplated, he ought to be especially
-careful to remove the means of accomplishing it out of the patient’s
-reach, and to prevent him having an opportunity of carrying it into
-execution.[60]
-
-“A medical friend,” says Dr. Burrows, “who had much enjoyed life,
-and never met with any circumstances to occasion him particular
-disquietude, when at the age of forty-five became very dyspeptic,
-low-spirited, and restless. He gradually shunned society; but still,
-though with great reluctance, pursued his professional avocations. This
-depression increased so much that he often told his wife that he should
-consult me. (He knew very well that both his father and grandfather had
-destroyed themselves.)
-
-“One morning he kept in bed much longer than usual, and a relation
-calling, went up, without being announced, to see him. He seemed
-composed, at length complained of being very faint, and upon
-raising him up, blood was perceived on his hands. Upon examination
-it was discovered, at the moment his friend entered the chamber,
-he was employed in opening the femoral artery; that there had been
-considerable hemorrhage from the small vessels he had divided. I saw
-him within an hour afterwards. He had recovered from the syncope, and
-expressed great sorrow for what he had done; described with minuteness
-his case; lamented he had not seen me sooner, but that he could not
-muster sufficient resolution; consented to place himself under my
-superintendence; and, in fact, to follow all my directions.
-
-“I placed him in charge of a careful keeper. It was agreed that he
-should be removed into lodgings in the environs of town; and he
-therefore submitted to the necessary medical treatment.
-
-“He remained two days at home, till lodgings could be procured, during
-which he was calm and rational; but there existed the suicidal eye,
-which sufficiently denoted that he was not to be trusted.
-
-“On the third morning, his keeper, having a violent attack of
-rheumatism in his right arm, could not shave him, and another person
-was obliged to be trusted. This person, unfortunately, laid the razor
-on the dressing-table; and, while his face was turned away, and the
-keeper was heating some water a few feet from the table, the patient
-suddenly jumped up, seized the razor, and in a moment applied it to his
-throat, and effectually divided the carotid artery.”
-
-A case somewhat similar we find recorded by the same authority. Major——
-had been wounded at the battle of Waterloo. He had since recovered
-his health, but a great depression of spirits followed. The maniacal
-diathesis was hereditary. By degrees he became more desponding, his
-ideas wandered, and at length a suicidal propensity was evident. On
-visiting him, Dr. Burrows strongly urged the necessity of placing
-him under the supervision of an experienced keeper; but here, as in
-too many cases, his family opposed this advice, and would not permit
-proper restraint, but put him under the care of a nurse only. In the
-evening, he retired early to bed. The nurse went to tea in his chamber,
-supposing her charge to be asleep. The patient watched the opportunity,
-jumped out of bed, seized a knife on the table, wounded, and would have
-effectually cut his throat, had not the nurse interposed.
-
-“A clergyman in Warwickshire told me,” says Dr. Conolly, “that he was
-requested, some years ago, to interfere respecting certain measures
-proper for securing a neighbour who had exhibited unquestionable
-symptoms of insanity. His neighbour, however, was not to be met with
-on the day when it was intended to remove him, and when he reappeared,
-which was either the next day or in a day or two afterwards, he was
-quite in a sound state, in which condition he has lived with great
-comfort up to the present time. On the other hand, an instance came
-under my own observation in which a gentleman had shewn many proofs
-of disordered mind for the space of three or four months, and his
-actions becoming dangerous, it was resolved to remove him. About
-two hours before I was to call for him, he was so quiet and orderly
-in a conversation with the old family-apothecary, that the latter
-gentleman rode off to the relations of the patient, relenting all
-the way concerning the proposed restraint, and purposing to solicit
-its postponement; in which attempt he was only prevented by being
-overtaken by a messenger before he had ridden half a mile, who came
-to inform him that his apparently tranquil patient had nearly blown
-up his house and his whole family with gunpowder, having for that
-purpose thrown a pound and a half of it into the fire, sitting by to
-see it explode. In another case, a gentleman had made repeated attempts
-at self-destruction, but seemed to have got well, and was no longer
-much looked after; yet after living comfortably at home for a little
-while, and having passed a cheerful evening in reading to his wife, he
-concluded it, when she had retired, by hanging himself in the parlour.
-
-“These lamentable accidents are, of course, always productive of
-disagreeable feelings in the mind of a practitioner; but never more
-so than when he has been too confident of the absence of danger. It
-is questionable, perhaps, whether there are not, in all these cases,
-certain means of which prudence might avail itself, for the purpose
-of ascertaining the exact state of the supposed convalescent’s mind,
-as well as the existence of such intentions in a lunatic as are
-inconsistent with the safety of other persons, or with the preservation
-of his own existence. The lunatic may maintain a very guarded silence
-on these matters so long as they remain quite unsuspected, but is
-not very well able, in general, to prevent his intentions becoming
-visible to those who have begun to suspect him. These intentions,
-too, are generally associated with certain recollections, or certain
-topics, or certain antipathies or prepossessions, which may be found
-out and brought into the conversation; in which case, the lunatic can
-seldom conceal his agitation, his superstitious belief, his anger, or
-his inly-cherished hope of full revenge. Indeed, he is often in no
-degree solicitous to conceal his feelings. There cannot be anywhere
-a more harmless person than Jonathan Martin; his manners are mild,
-his occupations are of the most peaceful description, his language
-is strikingly simple and unassuming; but take up the Bible, and you
-have touched the chord of his insanity; you find that, to destroy the
-noblest monuments of ancient piety and munificence seems to him a work
-to which God has especially called him. The effect of possessing a key
-to the excited feelings of a lunatic is, indeed, always surprising to
-those unaccustomed to their peculiarities. You walk with a man who
-seems to delight in the simplest pleasures of a state of innocence;
-he admires the flowers of the field and the beauty of the sky, or he
-dwells with satisfaction on the contemplation of whatever is generous
-and good; nothing can exceed the mildness of his manner: but a
-single word calculated to rouse a morbid train of ideas, a name, the
-reminiscence of a place, or any trifling inadvertency, will convert
-this placid being into a demon; the tones of his voice, his gestures,
-his countenance, his language, assume, in a moment, the expression of
-a fiend; and you discover that opportunity alone is wanting to effect
-some dreadful crime. The discovery of such a design is certainly not
-always so easy, but wherever suspicion exists, strict superintendence
-is warranted, or various degrees of restraint must be determined upon,
-and steadily adhered to.”[61]
-
-The following cases will shew the necessity of guarding a person
-by the strictest surveillance from the moment that he evinces the
-slightest symptom of mental alienation, when it manifests itself by
-incongruous expressions or attempts at self-destruction. This precept
-should be engraven on the mind of every medical man, and no feeling
-of false delicacy should prevent his communicating his suspicions and
-wishes the moment he considers measures of precaution necessary. In
-these cases, the loss of an hour may make all the difference between
-life and death.
-
-M. Piorry was called to the Hôtel de Bibliothèque, where he found a
-man of athletic form and military appearance in a state of complete
-insensibility. He manifested all the indications of apoplexy or
-epilepsy. Some time elapsed before the physician could ascertain
-what was the matter; he could not obtain any satisfactory answers to
-his repeated questions. At last the patient made Piorry understand
-that he had swallowed a key. Professor Roux was sent for, who, after
-considerable difficulty, succeeded in extracting the foreign body
-from the œsophagus, along with an oblong piece of copper attached
-by a chain to the handle of the instrument. On the succeeding night
-he made fresh attempts to destroy himself; first by hanging with the
-bed-clothes, and, on that mode not proving successful, he endeavoured
-to strangle himself by squeezing two chairs against his neck. Thwarted
-in effecting his design, he again swallowed the key, and he was nearly
-dead when he was discovered, and the key extracted from his throat. He
-was now confined in a strait-waistcoat, and was subjected to proper
-medical treatment. In the course of a short period, all disposition to
-suicide was removed, and his mind was restored to perfect integrity.[62]
-
-A soldier, who was greatly beloved in his regiment for his exemplary
-conduct and amiable qualities, became affected with suicidal
-melancholy, and fired a pistol into his mouth. The havoc made was
-dreadful; but by great exertions on the part of M. Petit, who attended
-the case, his life was preserved. During his confinement, he manifested
-great anxiety for his recovery, and expressed himself horrified that
-he should ever have attempted to commit self-destruction. The surgeon
-and his friends entertained every hope that all suicidal tendency
-was dissipated. The result, however, proved that the whole was a
-manœuvre on the part of the patient to lull suspicion to rest, and
-when he had succeeded by this dissimulation in throwing his friends off
-their guard, he put an effectual period to his existence whilst in the
-wards of the hospital.
-
-The following case exhibits some practical points exceedingly worthy
-of record, and displays besides, in a remarkable degree, the control a
-lunatic disposed to suicide acquires over himself, his conversation,
-and conduct, when he wishes to lull suspicion to sleep. In this
-instance, says Dr. Burrows, who relates the particulars of the case,
-a most judicious physician, and those in whom he had confidence, all
-experienced in the phases of this wonderful malady, insanity, and its
-no less wonderful concomitant, suicide, were completely deceived.
-
-A medical friend of the Doctor’s, travelling over Shooter’s Hill,
-observed a gentleman walking up it, his carriage following him. When
-opposite to each other, the stranger suddenly fell on his knees in
-the dirt, and lifted up his hands, as if in earnest prayer. The
-friend stopped his post-chaise at so extraordinary a sight, and soon
-found by his looks and manners that the poor gentleman was insane. He
-immediately accompanied him back to London, and placed him under Dr.
-B.’s care till his relations were informed of his state.
-
-The history of the case was this:—The patient was a cavalry officer
-of rank, aged thirty-five, and had particularly distinguished himself
-at the recent battle of Waterloo. On that occasion he had two horses
-killed under him, and was himself wounded in four places. He was first
-struck on the crown of his helmet by the splinter of a shell, which
-wounded the scalp and stunned him; he was next shot through the fleshy
-part of the thigh by a grape shot, which at the same time killed his
-first horse; from these two wounds he lost much blood. Whilst lying
-under his second horse, he was pierced in the groin by a lance; and
-in this helpless condition he received from a French drummer, who was
-rifling the dead and dying, a violent blow on the temple from the
-butt-end of a musket, from the effects of which, he remained some time
-insensible. He was afterwards conveyed in a most deplorable state as a
-prisoner within the French lines, and though released the same evening
-by the victorious allies, a long while elapsed before his wounds and
-exhausted condition received any attention.
-
-He inherited a predisposition to insanity, and was naturally reserved,
-diffident, and taciturn, but affectionate and generous.
-
-When he recovered from his wounds, he often complained of pains in
-his head; and it was observed that his temper became fretful and
-suspicious; that he slept ill, was depressed in spirits, and courted
-solitude. These symptoms increased latterly. At length he imagined
-himself the sport of his brother officers, and many other delusions
-arose.
-
-There was a moral cause likewise operating which, on a constitution
-that had recently received so severe a shock, no doubt greatly
-influenced his disorder. He had applied for promotion in consequence
-of his sufferings in the service. This was withheld, as he thought,
-ungraciously, and too long; and when he was raised a step, his mind was
-already too much disturbed duly to appreciate it. The anniversary of
-the glorious battle of Waterloo was just passed, and the recollection
-of it was painful to him. In this state he came to town.
-
-He was exceedingly sober and temperate by habit; but during the day
-before, with a brother officer, he was persuaded to commit an unusual
-excess in wine, with the hope of raising his spirits.
-
-This proved a match to the mine. It exploded, and his intellects became
-completely deranged.
-
-Dr. Burrows found him with his countenance very wild, the eyes injected
-and pupils contracted, pulse quick and weak, tongue white, and great
-thirst. He had had no sleep for five nights. Sometimes exalted,
-violent, and loquacious; sometimes depressed and taciturn. He was
-rather languid, which was imputed to his having lost full twenty ounces
-of blood from the rupture of an hæmorrhoidal vessel.
-
-It is not necessary to detail the medical treatment adopted, but we
-will proceed to those points in the case which are relevant.
-
-He was placed in lodgings with a careful attendant. In about three
-weeks he was nearly well, when unluckily a whitlow formed on his
-finger, and as one of his delusions was that he was rotten in every
-part, it was the cause, besides pain, of considerable irritation, and
-it broke his rest; other delusions returned, but subsided with the pain
-of the whitlow, and he again greatly improved.
-
-In six weeks he was so well that the Doctor took his leave, advising
-him to travel during the remainder of the autumn. The next day some
-domestic occurrence occasioned violent irritation, and he again
-relapsed into despondency, unattended by paroxysms of violence; but he
-shortly recovered.
-
-However, instead of going into the country and varying the scene, his
-lady brought him into town and permitted unrestricted intercourse
-with his relations, &c. He grew quarrelsome, suspicious, and very
-low-spirited, and began to abuse his wife. It was then earnestly
-recommended that he should be completely separated from all intercourse
-with her and his connexions, but the advice was disregarded.
-
-A boil now formed on his body. This irritated him more than the
-whitlow, and his delusions about his rottenness were more prominent
-than ever; but when the boil suppurated and discharged, his mind again
-improved.
-
-No persuasion could induce his friends to give him exercise or
-diversion, or change the scene. He therefore sat all day brooding over
-his fantasies, and reading religious books; for now there was added to
-his delusions an impression that he was very wicked, and had neglected
-his religious duties. His face, too, assumed the suicidal expression.
-
-A month afterwards, a consultation with two eminent physicians
-confirmed Dr. Burrows’ opinion of the treatment to be pursued. But,
-notwithstanding this consultation, all remedial aid was neglected,
-and he was allowed to follow his own inclinations, both in religious
-matters and in totally secluding himself. In about three weeks all the
-symptoms were so much increased that he was sent to a private asylum.
-A few days afterwards, while walking out, he tried to drown himself,
-but was rescued by his keeper. He continued in this desponding state
-some months, when, rather suddenly, he appeared much better; and
-continuing to improve, his physician thought him well, and he returned
-home. Two days only had passed, when he called on the same physician,
-acknowledged that he was as bad as ever, and entreated earnestly that
-he might again be received into his house. He was so on that day. The
-next day he poisoned himself and died.
-
-It proved, that he had never abandoned the desire of committing
-suicide; but he so well concealed it, and otherwise conducted himself,
-as to lead to the conclusion that he had recovered. It was, in fact,
-a scheme, the sole object of which was to get out and buy laudanum.
-Having procured a sufficient quantity, but anxious to save his wife the
-agony of witnessing the act he meditated, he preferred returning to the
-asylum to execute it.
-
-A few general principles have been laid down in this chapter to direct
-the practitioner in the management of certain cases of suicidal
-insanity. The success of the treatment will in a great measure be
-dependent on the physician making himself acquainted with the minute
-history of each case submitted to his professional care. No particular
-rules can be adduced that will be applicable to all cases of this
-description; much must be left to the judgment of the medical man. The
-physician should, however, never forget that whatever apparently may
-be the physical disturbance going on in the system, the brain, and the
-brain alone, is the seat of the disease in all cases of suicide, and to
-the condition of that organ most particular attention ought to be paid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-IS THE ACT OF SUICIDE THE RESULT OF INSANITY?
-
-
- The instinct of self-preservation—The love of life—Dr.
- Wolcott’s death-bed—Anecdote of the Duke de Montebello—Louis
- XI. of France—Singular death of a celebrated lawyer—Dr.
- Johnson’s horror of dying—The organ of destruction
- universal—Illustrations of its influence—Sir W. Scott, on
- the motives that influence men in battle—Have we any test of
- insanity?—Mental derangement not a specific disease—Importance
- of keeping this in view—Insanity not always easily detected—Is
- lowness of spirits an evidence of derangement?—The cunning
- of lunatics—Esquirol’s opinion that insanity is always
- present—Moral insanity—The remarkable case of Frederick of
- Prussia—Suicide often the first symptom of insanity—Cases
- in which persons have been restored to reason from loss
- of blood, after attempting suicide—The cases of Cato, Sir
- Samuel Romilly, Lord Castlereagh, Colton, and Chatterton
- examined—Concluding remarks.
-
-Nature has ordained no law more universal in its influence than the
-desire which all animated beings display, and which is indeed the
-governing principle in the greater part of their actions, to preserve
-their existence, and to secure themselves from the influence of
-circumstances that bring it into danger. That “no man ever yet hated
-his own flesh, but nourisheth it and cherisheth it,” is an axiom laid
-down in scripture, and one founded on reason and observation.[63]
-
-One of our poets, in alluding to this subject, after declaring life to
-be the dream of a shadow, “a weak-built isthmus between two eternities,
-so frail that it can neither sustain wind nor wave,” yet avers his
-preference of a few days’, nay, a few hours’ longer residence upon
-earth to all the fame that wealth and honour could bestow—
-
- “Fain would I see that prodigal
- Who his to-morrow would bestow
- For all old Homer’s life, e’er since he died till now.”
-
-“Is there anything on earth I can do for you?” said Taylor to Wolcott,
-as he lay on his death-bed. The _passion for life_ dictated the answer,
-“Give me back my youth?” These were the last words of the celebrated
-Peter Pindar.
-
-Dr. Johnson had a superstitious fear of death. Boswell asked him
-whether we might not fortify the mind for the approach of death.
-Johnson answered in a passion, “No, Sir, let it alone! It matters
-not how a man dies, but how he lives. The act of dying is not of
-importance; it lasts so short a time.” But when Boswell persisted in
-the conversation, Johnson was thrown into such a state of agitation
-that he thundered out, “Give us no more of this;” and turning to
-Boswell, he said, with great earnestness, “Don’t let us meet to-morrow!”
-
- “O thou strong heart!
- There’s such a covenant ’twixt the world and thee,
- They’re loath to break!”
-
-There is an anecdote recorded of one of the favourite marshals of
-Napoleon, the Duke de Montebello, which finely illustrates the strength
-of this instinctive principle. During a battle in the south of
-Germany, the duke was struck by a cannon-ball, and so severely wounded
-that there was no hope of his surviving. Summoning the surgeon to his
-side, he ordered the wounds to be dressed; and when help was declared
-to be unavailing, the dying officer, excited into frenzy by the love
-of life, burned with vindictive anger against the medical attendant,
-threatening the heaviest penalties if his art should bring no relief.
-The dying marshal demanded that Napoleon should be sent for, as one who
-had power to save, whose words could stop the effusion of blood from
-the wounds, and awe nature itself into submission. Napoleon arrived in
-time to witness the last fearful struggle of expiring nature, and to
-hear his favourite marshal exclaim, as the lamp of life was just being
-extinguished, “Save me, Napoleon!”
-
-The following case, which occurred in humble life, illustrates the same
-principle:—A man on the point of death vowed he would not die, cursing
-his physician, who announced the near termination of his life, and
-insisted that he would live in defiance of the laws of nature.
-
-It is recorded of Louis XI. of France, that so desperately did he cling
-to life when everything warned him to prepare for death, that he, in
-accordance with the barbarous physiology of that age, had the veins of
-children opened, and greedily drank their blood, hoping in that way to
-fan the dying embers of life into a flame!
-
-A once celebrated member of the English bar, whose strong original
-powers of mind had been obscured and enfeebled by the gross sensuality
-of his habits, in the extremity of his last illness, when the shadows
-of death were fast coming over him, with a blasphemous audacity, swore
-by his Creator that he _would not die_. In this state of morbid and
-impious rage he struggled out of his bed, tottered down the stairs, and
-fell lifeless in the passage. From the exclamation of this unfortunate
-man, it would seem as if he fancied that he held the reins of life in
-his hands, and could arrest at will the rapidity of its descending
-career.
-
-Spence says, that “Salvini was an odd sort of man, subject to gross
-absences, and a very great sloven. His behaviour in his last hour was
-as odd as any of his behaviour in all his lifetime before could have
-been. Just as he was departing, he cried out in great passion, “_Je ne
-veux pas mourir, absolument!_”
-
- “The weariest and most loathed worldly life
- That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment, can lay on man,
- Is paradise to what we fear of death.”
-
-It is not our intention to consider this subject phrenologically. That
-we have all certain good and evil propensities inherent in our nature,
-developed in various degrees in different individuals, is admitted by
-the anti-phrenologist, as well as by the most zealous advocate of that
-science. We need no phrenology to tell us, that “the heart of man is
-deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked:” scripture makes
-us acquainted with this fact. It is useful to look at the dark as
-well as the bright side of human nature. Without, then, using _terms_
-which might be considered objectionable, there can be no doubt of the
-existence in the human mind of a propensity to destroy, varying in
-degree from the simple pleasure of viewing the destruction of human
-life, to the most impassioned desire to kill others or oneself. This is
-a natural propensity, and, when not subdued by the higher faculties of
-the mind, it exhibits itself in the form of unequivocal insanity. This
-feeling to destroy may exist in conjunction with a consciousness on
-the part of the individual that he is about to commit a crime opposed
-to the laws of God and man. Dr. Gall relates many particulars of cases
-in which this natural propensity became morbidly developed. A student
-shocked his fellow-pupils by the extreme pleasure he took in tormenting
-insects, birds, and brutes. It was to gratify this inclination, he
-confessed, that he studied surgery. A man had so strong an inclination
-to kill that he became an executioner; and a Dutchman paid his butcher,
-who furnished ships with extensive supplies of meat, for being allowed
-to slaughter the oxen. In these cases we see this natural feeling
-inordinately developed. Subject such persons to the operation of causes
-likely to excite this extra-developed propensity, and they will murder
-others or themselves.
-
-Gall mentions the case of a person at Vienna who, after witnessing an
-execution, was seized with a propensity to kill; at the same time, he
-had a clear consciousness of his situation. He wept bitterly, struck
-his head, wrung his hands, and cried to his friends to take care and
-get out of his way. Pinel mentions the case of a man, exhibiting
-no apparent unsoundness of intellect, who confessed that he had a
-propensity to kill. He nearly murdered his wife, and then attempted
-several times to destroy himself.
-
-In 1805, a man was tried at Norwich for wounding his wife and cutting
-his child’s throat. He had been known to tie himself with ropes for
-a week to prevent his doing mischief to others and to himself. A man
-exposed to a sudden reverse of fortune was heard to exclaim, “Do, for
-God’s sake, get me confined; for if I am at liberty I shall destroy
-myself and wife! I shall do it, unless all means of destruction are
-removed; and therefore do have me put under restraint. Something above
-tells me I shall do it; and I shall!”
-
-Whenever the mind is exposed to the influence of excited feeling, and
-the operation of the reasoning powers are suspended, we see the faculty
-alluded to developed according to the constitution of the individual.
-On the field of battle, striking examples occur of the various energies
-of this inclination. One soldier at the appearance of blood experiences
-the intoxication of carnage; another will swoon at the same sight. Sir
-Walter Scott, in the poem in which he has referred to the battle of
-Bannockburn, alludes to the various feelings that influence the mind
-in the heat of an engagement; and it will be perceived that he directs
-particular attention to those who are influenced by no other motive
-than the pleasure they derive from sacrificing human life:—
-
- “But, oh! amid that waste of life,
- What various motives fired the strife!
- The aspiring noble _bled for fame_,
- The patriot for his country’s claim;
- This knight his youthful strength to prove,
- And that to earn his lady’s love;
- _Some fought for ruffian thirst of blood_;
- From habit some, or hardihood;
- But ruffian stern, and soldier good,
- The noble and the slave,
- From various cause the same wild road
- On the same bloody morning trode
- To that dark inn, the grave.”
-
-What conclusion are we justified in drawing from the facts just
-related? Certainly, that there is in us all a disposition to destroy,
-which is in some wisely and providentially restrained. If this view
-of the matter be correct, we do not think that we should be wrong in
-concluding that by far the great majority of cases of suicide result
-from a morbid development of this natural feeling, consequent upon a
-primary or secondary affection of the brain. This subject is of great
-interest in a medico-legal point of view, and is well deserving of
-serious consideration.
-
-Is the act of suicide an evidence of mental derangement? Before this
-question can be satisfactorily answered, it would be necessary for
-us to consider that _vexata questio_—what is insanity? Have we an
-unfailing standard to which to appeal; an infallible _test_ by which
-we can ascertain, with anything like a proximity to truth, the sanity
-of any mind? Perhaps, if we were to assert that we considered it
-impossible to point out the line of demarcation which separates the
-confines of a sane and insane condition of the mind, we might lay
-ourselves open to an attack. Again, were we bold enough to proclaim
-our non-adherence to what is considered as the orthodox faith in this
-matter, and assert that we viewed every departure from a healthy tone
-of mind, whether in its intellectual or moral manifestations, as an
-evidence of insanity, we might still more expose ourselves to the
-merciless lash of the critic; yet these are the opinions to which we
-should feel most disposed to give our assent. We must make a marked
-distinction between insanity considered as a _legal_ and as a _medical_
-question; and it is greatly owing to our not keeping this essential
-difference in mind that so much useless reasoning and vituperation
-has arisen. The man who is daily exposed to the kind and cheering
-influence of friendship, and who fancies himself alone in the world,
-without one human being to sympathize with him in his afflictions, is
-as essentially mad as he is who imagines himself to be made of glass,
-and is fearful of sitting down lest he should injure his brittle glutei
-muscles. A poet of antiquity wrote a book describing the miseries of
-the world, and destroyed himself at the conclusion of the task.
-
-“No man who is oppressed with grief,” Crichton justly observes, “and
-who is constantly preyed on by mental and bodily pain, can be supposed
-capable of exercising his judgment at all times correctly; a fresh
-misfortune, imaginary or real, excites an irresistible desire of
-relief. Tired out, hopeless, dismayed by the threatening aspect of many
-a bursting cloud; discerning nothing, whichever way he looks, but a
-dreary and comfortless life, how can he be supposed capable of taking
-a clear, calm, and comprehensive view of the obligations he owes to
-his Creator or society, or of reflecting on the sudden vicissitudes
-which daily occur in human life, and on which every man may safely form
-some hope, even in the most distressed situation? The wretchedness of
-life is the only picture present to the mind of one in whom grief has
-terminated in such a state of deep melancholy; the only objects of
-comparison are the misery of existence on the one hand, and the relief
-he can obtain by withdrawing himself from it on the other.”
-
-Insanity results from a disease of the brain. Although after death,
-in many cases, no appreciable structural lesion can be detected in
-the cerebral mass, it would be illogical for us to conclude that the
-sentient organ has not been physically affected. Derangement of mind
-is but the effect of physical disease, and, like all other diseases,
-it has an early as well as an advanced stage. Medical men have not
-paid sufficient attention to the premonitory indications of mental
-alienation. Having erected an arbitrary standard of derangement in
-their own minds, they have been disposed to consider no deviation from
-mental soundness as insanity, unless it exhibited the symptoms which
-their preconceived ideas had led them to suppose necessary, in order
-to constitute that disease. They have argued as if insanity were a
-specific disease invariably manifesting the same phenomena, and in
-this way definitions have been framed, by which the soundness of the
-intellect has been tested. It is hardly necessary to say how fallacious
-all such tests must be. The brain, like every other organ, is liable
-to a variety of diseases, in all of which the mental faculties are
-more or less affected. The danger of attempting to erect an arbitrary
-standard of insanity is this: it induces us to overlook the incipient
-symptoms of mental derangement, and to consider no deviation from
-soundness of intellect as insanity which does not come within the
-scope of our definition. The early symptoms of mental aberration are
-as much an evidence of the presence of insanity, as when the disease
-is more advanced, and the indications become so apparent that no one
-hesitates in pronouncing the individual mad. Medical men who have
-maintained that the act of suicide is not invariably the result of
-insanity have argued as if the mental ailment was always self-evident
-and easily detected; whereas, those who have had any experience in the
-matter know full well, that occasionally there are no diseases more
-difficult of detection than those which relate to a morbid condition of
-the mind. If an act of suicide has been committed, and the individual
-at the moment of perpetrating it did not manifest evident symptoms of
-insanity, the conclusion drawn is, that he was perfectly sane at the
-time. That the facts of the case do not warrant this inference must
-be apparent to those who consider the subject in an enlarged point of
-view. If we examine attentively the majority of cases of suicide, we
-shall find that the unfortunate persons have laboured, either for some
-time previously or at the very moment, under depression of spirits,
-anxiety of mind, and other symptoms of cerebral derangement. Very few
-cases of suicide take place in which you cannot trace the existence
-of previous mental depression, produced either by physical or moral
-agents. It may be said that lowness of spirits is not insanity;
-certainly not, according to the _legal_ definition of the term; but
-we may always be assured, that if mental anxiety or perturbation be
-more than commensurate with the exciting cause, it may be presumed
-that the individual is labouring under the incipient indications of
-insanity.[64] This view of the case is strengthened if an hereditary
-predisposition to the disease should also be present.
-
-“It will be said,” says Esquirol, “that there are individuals who,
-in the midst of affluence, grandeur, and pleasures, and in the full
-enjoyment of reason, have suddenly put an end to their existence,
-immediately after parting with their friends in good spirits, or after
-having written letters on business with perfect correctness. Can these
-be said to be insane when they commit suicide? Yes; most undoubtedly.
-Do not monomaniacs appear perfectly sane on all other subjects,
-till the particular idea is started which forms the burden of their
-hallucination? Are they not capable of curbing the expression of their
-delirium, and dissembling their aberration of intellect? It is the
-same with sane individuals, over whom the suicidal idea tyrannizes.
-A physical pain, an unexpected impression, a moral affection, a
-recollection, an indiscreet proposition, the perusal of a passage in
-writing, will occasionally revive the thought and provoke the act
-of suicide, although the individual the instant before should be in
-perfect integrity of mind and body.”
-
-In general, most persons actually insane wish not only to be esteemed
-free from the malady, but to be considered as possessing considerable
-intellectual endowments; hence, _real_ lunatics seldom allow the
-existence of their lunacy; but are always endeavouring to conceal from
-observation those lapses of thought, memory, and expression, which are
-tending every moment to betray them, and of the presence of which they
-are much oftener conscious than is generally apprehended or believed.
-Alexander Cruden, when suffering under his second and last attack of
-mental aberration, upon being asked whether he ever was mad, replied:
-“I am as mad now as I was formerly, and as mad then as I am now, that
-is to say, _not mad at any time_.”
-
-Again, medical men who have reasoned against this opinion have
-forgotten entirely one peculiar, and a very remarkable feature of
-insanity—viz., the singular cunning of lunatics; how extremely
-difficult it is in many cases where _we know_ the individual to
-be unquestionably mad, to make his delusion apparent. The case of
-the lunatic who indicted Dr. Monro for confining him in his asylum
-has often been cited. He brought an action against the Doctor at
-Westminster; and, although the man was subjected to a most severe
-examination and cross-examination, his insanity could not be detected.
-The trial was on the eve of being concluded, when Dr. Sims entered the
-court, and knowing the man’s peculiar delusion, he was requested to ask
-him a question. He did so, and his insanity instantly became apparent.
-He brought another action against Dr. Monro in the city of London, and,
-knowing that he had failed before by acknowledging his love for an
-imaginary princess, so remarkable a degree of cunning did he exhibit
-that one of the severest examinations to which a man was ever subjected
-in a court of justice could not induce the lunatic to disclose the
-delusion under which he was known to labour. This curious feature of
-insanity must be taken into consideration in forming an estimate of the
-presence of derangement in cases of suicide, and we must not hastily
-conclude, because insanity is not _self-evident_, that it does not
-exist.
-
-A merchant, fifty-five years of age, of a strong constitution,
-although of a lymphatic temperament, mild and gentle in his
-disposition, the father of a numerous family, and who had acquired a
-considerable fortune in business, experienced some domestic troubles,
-not sufficiently serious, however, to affect any one of a resolute
-character. About a year ago, he formed a large establishment for one
-of his sons, and shortly afterwards became very active, and expressed,
-contrary to his usual habits, the delight which he felt at his
-increasing prosperity. He was also more frequently absent from his
-warehouse and business than usual. But notwithstanding these trifling
-changes, neither his family, nor any of his friends or neighbours,
-suspected any disorder of his reason. One day, whilst he was from home,
-a travelling merchant brought to his house two pictures, and asked
-fifty louis for them, which he said was the price agreed on by a very
-respectable gentleman who had given his name and address. His son sent
-away both the pictures and the seller. On his return, the father did
-not mention his purchase; but the children began the conversation,
-alluding to the roguery of the merchant, and their refusal to pay him.
-The father became very angry, asserting that the pictures were very
-beautiful, that they were not dear, and that he was determined to
-purchase them. In the evening, the dispute became warmer, the patient
-flew into a passion, uttered threats, and at last became delirious.
-On the next day, he was confided to Esquirol’s care. His children,
-frightened at their father’s illness, and alarmed at the purchase
-which he had made, looked through their accounts; and great was their
-astonishment at seeing the bad state of their books, the numerous
-blanks which they presented, and the immense deficiency of cash. This
-irregularity had existed for more than six months. Had this discussion
-not taken place, one of the most honourable mercantile houses would
-have been compromised in a few days; for a bill of exchange of a
-considerable amount had become due, and no means had been taken to
-provide for it.
-
-A patient has been known to weep, and affect the deepest contrition
-for attempting suicide, when it has been proved that all the time he
-was meditating on the means of accomplishing his design. A workman was
-admitted into a French hospital, having a third time attempted his
-life. He appeared deeply mortified and broken-hearted that he should
-have suffered a relapse, and was much affected by the remonstrances of
-his physician. He promised faithfully, in tears, to abandon his rash
-resolve. Ten minutes afterwards, whilst on his road home, he perceived
-a piece of cord; he seized it, made a noose, put his head into it, and
-suspended himself from the branch of a tree, where he was found dead!
-Cases illustrative of the same fact are mentioned in another part of
-this work.
-
-Again, we must bear in mind that insanity is often as much a disease of
-the _moral_ as of the intellectual faculties, and that it is possible
-for the intellect to be perfectly sound, and yet for insanity to be
-present. Moral derangement has not met with that consideration from
-the profession which its importance demands. Insanity often consists
-in a vitiated condition of the moral principle, independently of
-any delusion of the intellect; and in many cases of suicide, if we
-investigate their history, we shall find that the alienation has been
-of this character. A man, whose disposition naturally disposed him
-to vice, fancied that he had been guilty of committing a nameless
-offence, and, whilst labouring under this idea, blew out his brains.
-In this case, the intellect was unaffected; the derangement consisted
-in a perversion of the moral powers. Senile insanity, which has been
-recognised in our courts of law, is a derangement of the moral
-constitution. In cases of this description, it is possible for the
-person to be conscious of his infirmity, and to confess, with great
-apparent regret, his inability to control his feelings. “I am impotent,
-and not fit to live,” said a man, and accordingly cut his throat.
-If we admit the existence of an insanity which consists solely in a
-perversion of the moral powers, then we should hesitate in pronouncing
-_ex cathedrâ_ that insanity is not present because no derangement of
-the intellectual faculties can be perceived.
-
-Dr. T. Mayo observes, that “no intellectual delusion need be present
-when self-destruction is coveted. But there must be an extinction
-of that moral sense which revolts from it on grounds independent of
-fear. Owing, however, to the systematic neglect of moral symptoms, the
-suicide is seldom recognised as possessing this destructive tendency
-until he has made an attempt upon his life; often, therefore, until all
-measures must be too late.”
-
-A very common feature of moral mania is a deep perversion of the
-social affections, whereby the feelings of kindness and attachment
-that flow from the relations of father, husband, and child, are
-replaced by a perpetual inclination to tease, worry, and embitter the
-existence of others. The ordinary scene of its manifestations is the
-patient’s own domestic circle, the peace and happiness of which are
-effectually destroyed by the outbreakings of his ungovernable temper,
-and even by acts of brutal ferocity. Frederic William of Prussia,
-father of Frederic the Great, undoubtedly laboured under this form
-of moral mania; and it furnishes a satisfactory explanation of his
-brutal treatment of his son, and his utter disregard of the feelings
-or comfort of any other member of his family. About a dozen years
-before his death, his health gave way under his constant debauches
-in drunkenness; he became hypochondriacal, and redoubled his usual
-religious austerities. He forbade his family to talk of any subject
-but religion, read them daily sermons, and compelled them to sing,
-punishing with the utmost severity any inattention to these exercises.
-The prince and his elder sister soon began to attract a proportionate
-share of his hostility. He obliged them to eat and drink unwholesome or
-nauseous articles, and would even spit in their dishes, addressing them
-only in the language of invective, and at times endeavouring to strike
-them with his crutch. About this time he attempted to strangle himself,
-and would have accomplished his design had not the queen come to his
-rescue. His brutality towards the prince arrived to such a pitch that
-he one morning seized him by the collar as he entered his bed-chamber,
-and began to beat him with a cane in the most cruel manner, till
-obliged to desist from pure exhaustion. On another occasion, shortly
-after, he seized his son by the hair, and threw him on the ground,
-beating him till he was tired, when he dragged him to a window,
-apparently for the purpose of throwing him out. A servant hearing the
-cries of the prince, came to his assistance, and delivered him from
-his hands. Not satisfied with treating him in this barbarous manner,
-he connived at the prince’s attempts to escape from his tyranny, in
-order that he might procure from a court-martial a sentence of death;
-and this even he was anxious to anticipate by endeavouring to run him
-through the body with his sword. Not succeeding in procuring his death
-by judicial proceedings, he kept him in confinement, and turned all
-his thoughts towards converting him to Christianity. At this time, we
-first find mention of any delusion connected with his son, though it
-probably existed before. In his correspondence with the chaplain to
-whom he had entrusted the charge of converting the prince, he speaks
-of him as one who had committed many and heinous sins against God and
-the king, as having a hardened heart, and being in the fangs of Satan.
-Even after he became satisfied with the repentance of the prince, he
-shewed no disposition to relax the severities of his confinement. He
-was kept in a miserable room, deprived of all the comforts and many of
-the necessaries of life, denied the use of pens, ink, and paper, and
-allowed scarcely food enough to prevent starvation. His treatment of
-the princess was no less barbarous. She was also confined, and every
-effort used to make her situation thoroughly wretched, and though,
-after a few years, he relaxed his persecution of his children, the
-general tenour of his conduct towards his family and others evinced
-little improvement in his disorder, till the day of his death.[65]
-
-In considering this point it is important to remember that _the
-attempt at self-destruction is_ OFTEN _the_ FIRST _distinct overt act
-of insanity_. A young lady of delicate constitution, but previously
-in apparent health, started up one day from the tea-table, rushed to
-the window, and endeavoured to throw herself out. It required several
-persons to restrain her until a strait-waistcoat could be procured. She
-remained insane from that time until the day of her death, with very
-partial glimmerings of reason. “Fortunately,” says Mr. Chevalier, who
-relates the case, “her life was not long protracted.”
-
-It has been inferred, that when an unsuccessful act of suicide has been
-committed, and the person expresses his regret for what he has been
-guilty of, that we are justified in concluding that the mind was sane
-when the suicide was attempted. The effort which Sir Samuel Romilly is
-said to have made to stop the hemorrhage after having cut his throat,
-has been cited by a celebrated living authority as an evidence of his
-previous sanity.[66] We must bear in mind that many cases of suicide
-result from derangement of mind dependent on cerebral congestion.
-
-In such cases, we can imagine a person insane when the act of
-self-destruction is attempted, and sane immediately afterwards. The
-loss of blood which a person would sustain from an extensive wound of
-the throat, particularly when, as is often the case, some large vessel
-is wounded, would instantly relieve the brain of the superabundant
-blood which had been oppressing it, and deranging its manifestations,
-and thus producing a return of sanity. That this was the fact in Sir
-Samuel Romilly’s case is evident from its history. There cannot be a
-shadow of doubt that he was insane when he cut his throat; and his
-apparent desire to live after the act was committed, may be attributed
-to the relief which he had derived from the loss of blood.
-
-Mr. T. Miller, of Spalding, in a fit of delirium, cut his throat so
-dreadfully that after languishing three days, he died. He manifested
-during this interval the utmost contrition for his offence, declaring
-he knew not what he had done until he found the blood streaming from
-his wound. He dictated his will, and talked rationally with his friends
-till his dissolution.[67]
-
-A merchant in the city, not many months back, met with some losses
-in business. His mind became affected to a certain extent; he felt
-a strong desire to kill himself; but being a man of education and
-enlarged capacity, he fought most resolutely against this inclination.
-He had been exposed during one day to the influence of circumstances
-which caused great mental depression. He said to his head-clerk,
-previously to his leaving his counting-house, that his head felt heavy
-and oppressed, and he had a _presentiment_ that something would happen
-before the morning. The clerk suggested the propriety of his having
-medical advice, but he did not think proper to do so. In this state he
-went to bed. In the middle of the night he awoke in a state of extreme
-agitation; no language could convey an adequate idea of his feelings,
-and suicide was the only act which held out the hope of relief. In this
-state he rose from his bed, called up the servants, and commanded them
-to run for the surgeon. A professional gentleman who lived close by
-was soon in attendance, and the moment he entered the room the patient
-exclaimed, “Bleed me, or I shall cut my throat!” The operation was
-instantly performed, and as the blood flowed from the vein the patient
-exclaimed, “Thank God! I have been saved from committing self-murder.”
-Every disposition to suicide was immediately removed.
-
-The following is an extract of a letter found in the pocket of Captain
-Aitkins, of the Pembroke Fusileers, who committed suicide:—“As some
-inquiry may be instituted as to the cause of my death, I think it
-necessary to state that it was inflicted by my own hand, partly from
-pecuniary embarrassment, and partly from the effect of _strong nervous
-malady_, which has fixed itself on my spirits so as to render life
-insupportable.” In this case we have no hesitation in asserting, that
-if the brain could have been relieved of the unnatural weight which
-oppressed it, this poor man would not have stained his hand with his
-own blood.
-
-In many cases the delusion of the intellect is so self-evident that no
-one questions the existence of insanity. A respectable Scotch merchant,
-near Pimlico, committed suicide by cutting his throat. He fancied the
-devil was in him; he asserted he could feel him in his throat. On
-examining his room after his death, two wills were discovered, in one
-of which he desires his executors to employ a surgeon to open his body,
-that the devil might be found, secured, and destroyed; and in this way,
-he says, he will be prevented from injuring any one else.
-
-Many other cases could be cited in which the act of suicide was clearly
-traceable to mental derangement, were it considered necessary further
-to illustrate this point. Much evil has resulted from the opinions
-which the profession have entertained relative to the absence of
-insanity in cases of those who have exhibited a disposition to destroy
-themselves. In this matter, the principle which the great Edmund Burke
-applied to politics is equally applicable to medicine—“We had better be
-blamed for too anxious apprehension, than be ruined by too confident a
-security.”
-
-It is a safe doctrine always to presume the presence of insanity
-in those who have exhibited a desire to commit suicide. A person
-who has once attempted to take away his life cannot be trusted,
-notwithstanding he manifest the usual evidences of a sane intellect. It
-is astonishing to consider the ingenious tricks and stratagems to which
-a person whose mind is bent on self-destruction will have recourse in
-order to effect his purpose. We find recorded the case of a woman who
-was tried for her life, and who, in order that she might escape from
-the hands of the executioner, applied a hundred leeches to her body,
-hoping to bleed to death. Another female exposed herself to a swarm
-of bees; and we read of an apothecary who endeavoured to beat out his
-brains with his own pestle.
-
-A builder, who had been found fault with by his employer, became
-melancholy, and finally determined upon self-destruction. He hurried
-to a steep part of the high road, where vehicles of all descriptions
-were compelled to put on the drag in the descent. Here he waited
-until a heavily loaded wagon reached the spot, when he seized hold of
-one of the wheels that was not locked, and applying his body to the
-circumference, was instantly crushed.
-
-A woman cut her throat severely, but not fatally. Her friends could
-not be prevailed on to believe that she was insane. She recovered,
-but shewed such evidences of that unhappy condition, through the
-whole progress of her cure, as were sufficiently unambiguous to every
-competent judge. She had speculated unsuccessfully in the lottery,
-and it was insisted that the rash act was solely to be ascribed to
-her disappointment in this venture. Soon after her recovery, and
-when her affairs had assumed a more comfortable train, she went up
-one day into her bed-room, and being thought to stay longer than was
-necessary, a person went to see after her, and found her sitting before
-a dressing-glass, with a basin under her chin, and a knife in her hand,
-cutting her throat again, as deliberately as a surgeon would have
-performed an operation. She recovered this time also, and afterwards
-made a third and successful attempt.
-
-A maniac who was extremely turbulent, and had evinced a strong
-propensity to destroy himself, was confined, and everything taken from
-him which could be imagined in any way capable of being instrumental
-for such a purpose. He was remarked on one occasion to be unusually
-quiet, and on his keeper looking through an aperture in his apartment,
-he discovered him scooping out his eyes with a bit of broken china
-found by him in the mattress, which he had torn to pieces; and with his
-face full in the glare of the sun, he had completely accomplished this
-horrid act before the door could be opened to secure him.
-
-A gentleman of some political consequence in France had an attack
-of apoplexy, from which he recovered by copious bloodletting. Some
-years afterwards, he had a fall from his horse, and was wounded
-severely in his head, the injury occasioning fever and delirium of
-some weeks’ duration. After this accident, he evinced some marks of
-mental aberration. He threw up his post under government, and retired
-to his chateau in the country, for the purpose of concocting, as he
-said, a scheme for _uniting the people of all nations_. To prepare a
-suitable edifice for this philanthropic union, he began to pull down
-his chateau; but being interrupted by his friends, he came to Paris,
-and one day jumped off the Pont-Neuf into the middle of the Seine. He
-swam manfully, and reached the shore in safety. He was so proud of this
-exploit that he considered himself invulnerable, and began next day to
-run in the way of carriages or fiacres he met in the street, calling to
-the drivers that they need not mind him, as he could not be injured!
-He was seized and carried home, but in a day or two jumped out of the
-chamber window into the street. He was then placed in M. Esquirol’s
-establishment, and considered as an incurable maniac.
-
-During the French revolution, a case of mania without delirium gave
-rise to an extraordinary scene at the Asylum de Bicêtre. The mob, after
-the massacre of the prisons, broke like madmen into the above hospital,
-under pretence of emancipating certain victims of the old tyranny,
-whom it had endeavoured to confound with the maniacal residents of
-that house. They proceeded in arms from cell to cell, interrogating
-the prisoners, and passing such of them as were manifestly insane. A
-maniac, bound in chains, arrested their attention by the most bitter
-complaints which he preferred, with apparent justice and rationality.
-“Is it not shameful,” said he, “that I should be bound in chains, and
-confounded with madmen.” He defied them to accuse him of any act of
-impropriety or extravagance. “It is an instance of the most flagrant
-injustice!” He conjured the strangers to put an end to such oppression,
-and to become his liberators. His complaints excited amongst the armed
-mob loud murmurs and imprecations against the governor of the hospital.
-They immediately sent for that gentleman, and, with their sabres at
-his breast, demanded an explanation of his conduct. When he attempted
-to justify himself, they imposed silence upon him. To no purpose did
-he adduce, from his own experience, similar instances of maniacs who
-were free from delirium, but at the same time extremely dangerous from
-their outrageous passions. They answered him only with abuse; and had
-it not been for the courage of his wife, who protected him with her own
-person, he would have been sacrificed to their fury. They commanded him
-to release the maniac, whom they led in triumph with reiterated shouts
-of “Vive la République!” The sight of so many armed men, their loud and
-confused shouts, and their faces flushed with wine, roused the madman’s
-fury. He seized with a vigorous grasp the sabre of his next neighbour,
-brandished it about with great violence, and wounded several of his
-liberators. Had he not been promptly mastered, he would soon have made
-them repent their ill-timed humanity. The savage mob then thought
-proper to lead him back to his cell, and, with shame and reluctance,
-yielded to the voice of justice and experience.
-
-Many modern and ancient cases of suicide have been referred to in
-support of the opinion that insanity is not necessarily present under
-such circumstances. The conclusions drawn from the history of ancient
-cases, such as Cato, Cleopatra, Cassius, &c., cannot fairly be made use
-of in the present inquiry; and yet if we examine these instances, which
-have been so triumphantly brought forward as incontrovertible proofs
-that it is possible for a person with a mind perfectly unclouded and
-free from even the semblance of aberration to commit suicide, we shall
-discover that they are not such good illustrations in support of the
-doctrines which they who cite them are anxious to uphold.
-
-The suicide of Cato has often been referred to, and is considered a
-most apt and conclusive instance in point. We admit this case is one
-of great importance, inasmuch as it has been held up as an example to
-others of a man who sacrificed his own life to promote the interests
-of his country. How many have been induced to plunge recklessly into
-another world in imitation of the conduct of the Roman hero!
-
-Was Cato perfectly sane when he sacrificed his life? We are disposed
-to think not. His whole conduct immediately preceding the last fatal
-act of his life evinces the extreme mental agitation under which he
-laboured; despair had taken possession of his faculties; the ambition
-and the hopes of years were prostrated in a moment to the dust, and to
-escape from a long life of tyranny, he perished on his own sword.
-
-Many modern cases have been cited as evidence of the coolness and
-collectedness which many have exhibited in the act of suicide. The
-Rev. Mr. Colton, the accomplished author of “Lacon,” is said to have
-been sane when he committed self-destruction. He shot himself with a
-pistol after having written the following apophthegm: “When life is
-unbearable, death is desirable, and suicide justifiable.” The last few
-weeks of Colton’s life were embittered by acute mental and physical
-suffering. He was involved in great pecuniary difficulties, and was
-dependent for the necessaries of life on the charity of his friends.
-Independently of this, he laboured under a very painful disease, and
-it was when exposed to this combination of misery that he committed
-suicide. His biographer states that there was no doubt of Colton’s
-insanity at the time of his death; it was evident to all who were
-about him. The evidence in Sir Samuel Romilly’s case is as strongly
-corroborative of his derangement as in that of poor Colton’s. At the
-time, he was suffering from the loss of a wife to whom he was most
-dotingly attached, and the cerebral derangement was so apparent that
-his physician ordered him to be cupped in the nape of the neck a short
-period previously to his killing himself. Lord Castlereagh’s insanity
-was also clearly manifested. His whole conduct on the day he cut his
-throat led irresistibly to the conclusion that he was not in his right
-senses. His strange manner was noticed some time previously in the
-House of Commons. The Duke of Wellington saw the necessity of medical
-advice, and had a physician sent to him; in fact, the evidence was as
-strong as evidence could be, and no one at the time questioned the
-correctness of the verdict. There were many peculiar circumstances
-connected with his lordship’s early history which ought to be borne in
-mind before we conclude that he was of sane mind at the moment of his
-suicide.
-
-It is now more than thirty-five years ago that the following singular
-circumstance occurred to the Marquis of Londonderry: He was on a visit
-to a gentleman in the north of Ireland. The mansion was such a one
-as spectres are fabled to inhabit. The apartment, also, which was
-appropriated to his lordship was calculated to foster such a tone of
-feeling from its antique character; from the dark and richly carved
-panels of its wainscot; from its yawning chimney, looking like the
-entrance to a tomb; from the portraits of grim men and women arrayed in
-orderly procession along the walls, and scowling a contemptuous enmity
-against the degenerate invader of their gloomy bowers and venerable
-halls; and from the vast, dusky, ponderous, and complicated draperies
-that concealed the windows, and hung with the gloomy grandeur of
-funeral trappings about the hearse-like piece of furniture that was
-destined for his bed. Lord Londonderry examined his chamber; he made
-himself acquainted with the forms and faces of the ancient possessors
-of the mansion as they sat upright in their ebony frames to receive
-his salutation; and then, after dismissing his valet, he retired to
-bed. His candle had not long been extinguished when he perceived a
-light gleaming on the draperies of the lofty canopy over his head.
-Conscious that there was no fire in his grate; that the curtains
-were closed; that the chamber had been in perfect darkness but a few
-minutes previously, he supposed that some intruder must have entered
-into his apartment; and, turning round hastily to the side from whence
-the light proceeded, he, to his infinite astonishment, saw not the
-form of any human visitor, but the figure of a fair boy surrounded
-by a halo of glory. The spirit stood at some distance from his bed.
-Certain that his own faculties were not deceiving him, but suspecting
-he might be imposed on by the ingenuity of some of the numerous guests
-who were then inmates of the castle, Lord Londonderry advanced towards
-the figure; it retreated before him; as he advanced, the apparition
-retired, until it entered the gloomy arch of the capacious chimney,
-and then sunk into the earth. Lord Londonderry returned to his bed,
-but not to rest; his mind was harassed by the consideration of the
-extraordinary event which had occurred to him. Was it real, or the
-effect of an excited imagination? The mystery was not so easily solved.
-
-He resolved in the morning to make no allusion to what had occurred
-the previous night, until he had watched carefully the faces of all
-the family, to discover whether any deception had been practised. When
-the guests assembled at breakfast, his lordship searched in vain for
-those latent smiles, those conscious looks, that silent communication
-between parties, by which the authors and abettors of such domestic
-conspiracies are generally betrayed. Everything apparently proceeded in
-its ordinary course; the conversation was animated and uninterrupted,
-and no indication was given that any one present had been engaged in
-the trick. At last, the hero of the tale found himself compelled to
-narrate the singular event of the preceding night. He related every
-particular connected with the appearance of the spectre. It excited
-much interest among the auditors, and various were the explanations
-offered. At last, the gentleman who owned the castle interrupted the
-various surmises by observing that “the circumstance which had just
-been recounted must naturally appear very extraordinary to those who
-have not been inmates long at the castle, and are not conversant with
-the legends of his family;” then, turning to Lord Londonderry, he
-said, “You have seen the Radiant Boy. Be content; it is an omen of
-prosperous fortunes. I would rather that this subject should not again
-be mentioned.”[68]
-
-The case of Chatterton—
-
- “The marvellous boy,
- The sleepless soul that perish’d in his pride”—
-
-has been adduced; but no one acquainted with the history of this
-unfortunate youth would doubt for one moment that he was insane.
-Chatterton possessed naturally acute sensibilities; he was
-unquestionably a man of genius. When the forgery of Rowley’s poems was
-detected, his mind received a severe shock; friend after friend forsook
-him. All his bright and cheering hopes were levelled to the earth; his
-character for integrity was gone; the world, which had been so eager to
-court his society and friendship, turned its back upon him; misfortunes
-followed in rapid succession, until he was frenzied by mental agony
-and physical suffering. At the time of his death he was in want of the
-common necessaries of life, realizing the affecting picture of the poet—
-
- “Homeless, near a thousand homes he stood,
- And near a thousand tables pined and wanted food.”
-
-Under such circumstances, it is not surprising that poor Chatterton’s
-mind should have been overthrown, and that he should have been led to
-commit suicide. A few days before his death, he wrote to his mother
-in these terms:—“I am about to quit for ever my ungrateful country.
-I shall exchange it for the deserts of Africa, where tigers are a
-thousand times more merciful than man.” A very important fact connected
-with Chatterton’s case ought to be borne in mind—viz., that insanity
-was in his family.
-
-We have entered at some length into the consideration of this
-question, because we felt it to be one of great importance. In forming
-an estimate of the condition of a person’s mind who has committed
-suicide, the coroner and jury should make particular inquiries into
-the following points:—First, as to state of mind for some time prior
-to the act. In many, and in fact, in all cases, if proper evidence
-can be obtained, it will be discovered that the person has laboured
-under depression of spirits, either resulting from physical or mental
-causes. Inquiry should be instituted as to the presence of any
-disease of the stomach or liver which may have operated injuriously
-on the mind. In many cases it will be found that the suicide has
-received at some period of his life a blow on his head, giving rise
-to cerebral injury, which may remain latent for a great length of
-time, and suddenly manifest itself. Is insanity, particularly suicidal
-insanity, in the family? What was the person’s natural character? Was
-he liable to sudden bursts of passion? Had his mind been dwelling on
-the subject of suicide? Was he monomaniacal, or remarkable for any
-peculiar eccentricity? All these various but important questions should
-be carefully sifted, should the coroner entertain any doubts as to
-the presence of mental derangement in such cases. In another chapter
-we have considered the unjustifiableness of a jury ever returning a
-verdict of _felo-de-se_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-SUICIDE IN CONNEXION WITH MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE.
-
-
- The importance of medical evidence—The questions which medical
- men have to consider in these cases—Signs of death from
- strangulation—Singular positions in which the bodies of those
- who have committed suicide have been found—The particulars of
- the Prince de Condé’s case—On the possibility of voluntary
- strangulation—General Pichegru’s singular case—The melancholy
- history of Marc Antonie Calas—How to discover whether a person
- was dead before thrown into water—Singular cases—Admiral
- Caracciolo—Drowning in a bath—The points to keep in view in
- cases of suspicious death—Was Sellis murdered?—Death from
- wounds—The case of the Earl of Essex.
-
-Medical men are frequently called upon in our courts of law to give
-evidence in cases where it is doubtful whether persons found dead
-were murdered or committed suicide. The questions involved in these
-judicial inquiries are of great public importance, and it is the sacred
-duty of medical men, for the sake of their own characters, and for a
-much higher consideration—for the ends of justice, to make themselves
-thoroughly conversant with all the evidence which can be brought to
-bear in the elucidation of such important questions. Our criminal
-annals are replete with illustrations in which individuals accused
-of the atrocious crime of murder have been saved from a dreadful and
-ignominious death by medical evidence. Cases also are recorded in which
-death has been ascribed to suicide, but which after investigation have
-been proved to have been effected by other hands. In doubtful cases
-of this description, the evidence of the medical man is of the highest
-importance; without it, in the great majority of cases, justice would
-be defeated.
-
-In the cases of persons found hanging, two questions naturally suggest
-themselves to the mind:—1. Whether the individual was suspended before
-or after death. 2. Whether it was an act of suicide or murder. It is
-possible, and such cases have occurred, that a person may have been
-hanged up after having been murdered, or may have endeavoured to
-destroy himself by firearms, or by cutting his throat, and suspend
-himself afterwards, not being able to effect his purpose in any other
-way. In the first case we might mistake murder for suicide; and in
-the second, suicide for assassination. The following are the signs
-of death from strangulation:—The countenance is livid and distorted;
-the eyes protrude, and are often suffused with blood; the tongue
-projects and is wounded by the teeth. If the rope be placed below the
-cricoid cartilage, the tongue will protrude; but if it presses above
-the thyroid cartilage, the tongue will not be seen in the position
-described. It was formerly the generally received opinion that persons
-who were hanged died of apoplexy; but the experiments of Sir B.
-Brodie and other physiologists clearly prove that death is owing to
-suffocation. The livid or depressed circle which the rope is said to
-make round the neck is pronounced by M. Klein to be an uncertain sign;
-he saw fifteen cases of suicide in which it was not discovered. Remer,
-of Breslaw, who has recently directed his mind to the consideration
-of this important point, found, out of one hundred cases of persons
-who died from strangulation, eighty-nine with sugillation on the neck
-in an evident manner. In addition to the signs mentioned, others have
-been enumerated. The fingers are said to be found bent, the nails blue,
-hands nearly closed, with swelling of the chest, shoulders, arms, and
-hands.
-
-If the body be not suspended, but touches, more or less, the ground
-or floor, while the cord is not tight enough for the purpose of
-strangulation, and there be no manifestations of any other means of
-death, there can hardly be room to doubt as to self-murder. It is
-true that the mere resting of the toes takes away but little of the
-character of suspension, but we may meet with stronger cases. A few
-years ago, a man, aged seventy-five, destroyed himself at Castle Cary,
-in the morning, by fixing a cord round his neck while sitting on the
-bed-side, and leaning forward till his purpose was accomplished. His
-wife, who had for years been bedridden, and was therefore not likely to
-have been very fast asleep, was in the room during the transaction, and
-knew nothing of what was going on. A prisoner hung himself in a gaol by
-fastening the cord to one of the window-bars, and pushing himself away
-from it with his arm.
-
-Persons have both wounded and hung themselves. This may be effected by
-placing the cord in a wrong position, which would protract the person’s
-sufferings, and compel him to struggle and make violent efforts to kill
-himself. Ballard relates, that a young priest, having first cut his
-throat to a certain extent, hung himself with his robe.[69] In cases
-like these there can be little difficulty in ascertaining the real
-cause of death.
-
-In a memoir published in a French journal,[70] there are related
-several instances of self-destruction by hanging, where the bodies
-were found in the most extraordinary positions and attitudes. A man
-was discovered in a granary hanging by a cotton handkerchief, made
-fast to a rope which stretched across; the knees were bent, so that
-the legs formed a right angle backwards; the feet were suspended on a
-heap of grain, over which the knees hung at a distance of a few inches.
-A prisoner was found suspended in a vertical position, with his heels
-resting on a window-stool. An Englishman, a prisoner in Paris, hung
-himself in his cell, which was an apartment with an arched roof, and at
-the lower part of it was a grated window, the highest part of which
-was not near the height of a man. Nevertheless, he hung himself to this
-grating, and was found almost sitting down, with his legs stretched out
-before, and his hips within a foot and a half of the ground. Another
-case is related of a man whose attitude was similar to the case first
-described. He had suspended himself to a large iron pin driven into the
-wall to support the bed-curtains, and his feet, bent at a right angle,
-rested on the bed, while his knees approached it within a few inches.
-A female suspended herself so low that, in order to accomplish her
-purpose, she was obliged to stretch out her legs, one before resting
-on the heel, the other behind resting on the toes. A female was found
-stretched at the foot of her bed, the legs, thighs, and left hip lying
-on the floor; the upper part of the body was raised, and suspended by a
-cord fixed to the neck, and fastened to the hospital bed.
-
-A patient in La Charité was found one morning hanging by the rope which
-was attached to the head of his bed. He had fastened this by a loop
-round his neck, but his body was so retained, that when discovered he
-was on his knees by the side of his bed.
-
-In 1832, at the west end of the town, a man was found hanging in his
-room, with his knees bent forwards and his feet resting upon the floor.
-He had evidently been dead for some time, since cadaverous rigidity had
-already commenced. The manner in which this man had committed suicide
-was as follows:—He had made a slip knot with one end of his apron, (he
-was a working mechanic,) and having placed his neck in this, he threw
-the other end of the apron over the top of the door, and shutting the
-door behind him, he had succeeded in wedging it in firmly. At the same
-moment he had probably raised himself on tip-toe, and then allowed
-himself to fall; in this way he died. The weight of his body had
-apparently sufficed to drag down a part of the apron, for it seemed as
-if it had been very much stretched.
-
-In October, 1833, a gentleman who was employed as an assistant in a
-respectable school in the neighbourhood of London, was discovered by
-some of his pupils, one morning, in a sitting posture, on a dark part
-of a staircase of the house. Upon examining further, it was ascertained
-that he was completely dead, and that he was suspended to the banisters
-by a cravat firmly tied round his neck. The deceased had evidently
-made two similar attempts at self-destruction before he succeeded, as
-part of a silk pocket-handkerchief and his braces were found suspended
-to other parts of the banisters. It seemed scarcely possible to those
-who discovered him that the deceased could really have accomplished
-suicide by hanging in such a situation, for his body was resting
-entirely on the stairs, and, making every allowance for the slipping of
-the ligature by which he was suspended, still his feet must have been
-throughout in contact with the stair.
-
-There have been few medico-legal investigations of late years which
-have excited greater interest than the case of the Duke de Bourbon, in
-France.
-
-On the 27th August, 1830, the duke was found suspended in his bed-room,
-in the chateau* of St. Leu. An inquest was held the same morning on
-the body, and from the evidence of the witnesses, as well as from the
-reports of the physicians and surgeons who examined it, a verdict was
-returned to the effect that the duke had committed suicide in a fit of
-temporary insanity. This event did not excite much notice until the
-contents of his will were made public.
-
-The deceased, it appears, had made his will in favour of the Baroness
-de Feuchéres, a female who had lived with him for some years,
-bequeathing to her the whole of his immense estates, and leaving the
-Duke d’Aumale, the youngest son of the king of the French, residuary
-legatee. The Princes de Rohan, heirs by collateral descent to the
-deceased, thus finding themselves deprived of an expected inheritance,
-attempted to set aside the will, alleging that undue influence had
-been exercised over him. The cause came on for hearing before the
-First Chamber of the Civil Tribunal of Paris, in December, 1831, and
-excited considerable attention, not so much in consequence of the
-dispute concerning the validity of the will, as of the question which
-was raised during the trial,—whether the duke had committed suicide,
-or whether he had been murdered, and afterwards suspended, in order to
-defeat the ends of justice.
-
-The facts of the case, collected from the _procés verbaux_, are as
-follows:—The deceased had naturally partaken of the alarm which had
-diffused itself throughout France in consequence of the events of the
-revolution of 1830. Some of his most intimate friends declared that,
-for some time previously to his death, his mind had been filled with
-the most gloomy forebodings as to what this new order of things would
-bring about. On the morning of the 27th, his servant went, as usual,
-to his bed-room door about eight o’clock; but receiving no answer on
-knocking, he became alarmed. Madame de Feuchéres then accompanied the
-valet to the door of the room, which was fastened on the inside; and
-receiving no reply after calling to the duke in a loud voice, she
-ordered it to be broken open. On entering the apartment, the body of
-the deceased was found suspended from the fastening at the top of the
-window-sash by means of a linen handkerchief, attached to another which
-completely encircled the neck. The head was inclined a little to the
-chest; the tongue protruded from the mouth; the face was discoloured;
-a mucous discharge issued from the mouth and nostrils; the arms hung
-down; the fists were clenched. The extremities of both feet touched
-the carpet of the room, the point of suspension being about six feet
-and a half from the floor; the heels were elevated, and the knees half
-bent. The deceased was partly undressed; the legs were uncovered, and
-had some marks of injury on them. Among other points of circumstantial
-evidence, it was remarked that a chair stood near the window to which
-the deceased was suspended, and the bed looked as if it had been lain
-on.
-
-The medical witnesses, who examined the body soon after its discovery,
-stated that they found it cold, and the extremities rigid, from which
-they inferred that the deceased had been dead eight or ten hours. This
-would have fixed the time of his death at midnight of August 26th. The
-body underwent a second examination, a report of which was furnished
-to the legal authorities, on the following day. Five medical men were
-present at the inspection; and they gave it as their opinion, from the
-_post mortem_ appearances—1st, that the deceased had died by hanging;
-and, 2ndly, from the absence of all marks of violence or resistance
-about the person or clothes of the deceased, and other facts, that he
-had destroyed himself. They considered that the contusion on one arm,
-and the excoriations observed on both legs, must have arisen from the
-rubbing of these parts against the projecting rail of the chair near
-the window. The mark on the neck of the deceased they described to be
-large, oblique, and extending upwards to the mastoid process.
-
-General evidence was given to shew that the duke had meditated
-self-destruction, and had conversed about it with some of the
-witnesses. On the morning of the 28th, some fragments of paper, which
-had been written on, were taken from the grate of his chamber; these
-were carefully put together by one of the legal inspectors; and among a
-few disjointed sentences, indicating despair and a dread of impending
-danger, were the following:—“It is only left for me to die in wishing
-prosperity to the French people and my country. Adieu for ever!” Here
-followed his signature, and a request to be interred at Vincennes, near
-the body of his son, the Duke d’Enghien. It is necessary to observe,
-that no noise or disturbance was heard in the bed-room on the night of
-the deceased’s death.
-
-On the other side it was contended that the duke was not unusually
-melancholy before his death; that the supposition of suicide was
-inadmissible in a moral point of view, and indeed was physically
-impossible, from the circumstances. One person argued that he could not
-have made the knots seen in the handkerchiefs; another, that he could
-not have reached so high above his head to have suspended himself,
-and that the chair could not have been used in any manner to assist
-him; while a third affirmed, that a person might be suspended in the
-position in which the body was discovered, without death ensuing. The
-circumstance of the door being fastened on the inside, was accounted
-for by supposing that the bolt had been pushed to from the outside.
-The duke had been heard to condemn suicide; he had made an appointment
-for the following day; and had attended to many little circumstances,
-such as winding up his watch the night previously, and noting his
-losses at play;—facts which were forcibly urged as being opposed to the
-supposition of his having destroyed himself.
-
-To combat the medical evidence, it was assumed that the deceased was
-strangled or suffocated, and was afterwards hanged, by assassins.
-Several schemes were devised by the medical witnesses on this side of
-the question, to account for the manner in which the supposed murder
-was committed. According to some, a handkerchief might have been
-tightened round the deceased’s neck by one assassin, while another
-forcibly held his legs under the bed-clothes, by which the lesions
-already described would have been produced; or instead of being
-strangled by a handkerchief, he might have been suffocated by a pillow
-placed over his mouth.
-
-The body might then have been dragged across the room to be suspended;
-and if during this time the hand of one of the assassins had been
-rudely thrust between the cravat and the neck, the excoriation and mark
-seen on the skin might be easily accounted for.
-
-The counsel for the appellants remarked, that the want of a line in
-writing, to withdraw from all suspicion his attendants, and even Madame
-de Feuchéres, was remarkable, as this _latter precaution_ had suggested
-itself _to almost every suicide_. He condemned those engaged in the
-anatomical examination of the body, as having been guilty of culpable
-mismanagement. He ridiculed the idea that the duke, as reported by
-the two physicians consulted, had probably come to his death through
-asphyxia by strangulation. He contended that all the appearances on the
-skin of the neck, where no ecchymosis, _as is usual in persons hung
-alive_, was visible, _shewed that death had preceded the hanging of the
-body_.[71]
-
-Conflicting as the evidence was in this case, we think no impartial
-mind, after maturely considering all the physical facts and moral
-circumstances connected with the Prince de Condé’s death, can entertain
-any other opinion than that he sacrificed his own life. The case is one
-of great interest; and the minute particulars detailed in the French
-journal are worthy of the perusal of every medical man.
-
-It has been doubted whether voluntary strangulation was possible,
-but we have too many cases on record to allow us to question the
-probability of such an occurrence. An individual was found strangled
-in a hay-loft by a handkerchief which had been tightened by a stick.
-A Malay, who, on board of a man-of-war in the East Indies, had made
-repeated attempts to commit suicide, at last effected his purpose in
-the following manner:—He tied a handkerchief round his neck, and with
-a small stick twisted it several times, and then secured it behind his
-ear, to prevent its untwisting. Jealousy was the cause assigned for the
-suicide.
-
-General Pichegru was found strangled in prison during the consulate
-of Buonaparte. The case gave rise to various suspicions. The body was
-found lying in bed on the left side, in an easy attitude, with the
-knees bent, and the arms lying down by the side, with a black silk
-handkerchief twisted tightly round the neck, by means of a stick passed
-under it. The cheek was torn by the ends of the stick in its rotations.
-It was established that he had been guilty of suicide.
-
-A very important lesson is to be learned from the history of the
-following case, which Dr. Beck has published in his “Medical
-Jurisprudence.” This is but one of many cases in which the innocent
-have been accused, and have suffered for crimes of which it has been
-subsequently proved they were innocent.
-
-Marc Antoine Calas was the son of John Calas, a merchant of Toulouse,
-aged seventy years, of great probity, and a Protestant. He was
-twenty-eight years of age, of a robust habit, but melancholy turn
-of mind. He was a student of law, and becoming irritated at the
-difficulties he experienced (in consequence of not being a Catholic)
-concerning his licence, he resolved to hang himself. This he executed
-by fastening the cord to a billet of wood placed on the folding doors
-which led from his father’s shop to his storeroom. Two hours after, he
-was found lifeless. The parents unfortunately removed the cord from
-the body, and never exhibited it to shew in what manner his death
-was accomplished. No examination was made. The people, stimulated by
-religious prejudice, carried the body to the town-house, where it was
-the next day examined by two medical men, who, without viewing the
-cord, or the place where the death had been consummated, declared
-that he had been strangled. On the strength of this, the father was
-condemned by the parliament of Toulouse, in 1761, to be broken on the
-wheel. He expired with protestations to Heaven of his innocence.
-
-Reflection, however, returned when it was too late. It was recollected
-that the son had been of a melancholy turn of mind; that no noise had
-been heard in the house while the deed was doing; that his clothes
-were not in the least ruffled; that a single mark only was found from
-the cord, and which indicated suspension by suicide; and in addition
-to these, that the dress proper for the dead was found lying on the
-counter. Voltaire espoused the cause of the injured family, and
-attracted the eyes of all Europe to this judicial murder. The cause
-was carried up to the council of state, who, on the 19th May, 1765,
-reversed the decree of parliament, and vindicated the memory of John
-Calas.[72]
-
-Many cases occur in which it is impossible to decide whether the
-person was dead before being thrown into the water. The attention of
-the jurist ought to be directed to the condition of the ground in
-the neighbourhood of the pond, to ascertain whether any signs exist
-of a struggle having taken place. In the case of Mr. Taylor, who was
-murdered at Hornsey, in December, 1818, marks of footsteps, deep in the
-ground, were discovered near the New River; and on taking out the body,
-_the hands were found clenched, and contained grass, which he had torn
-from the bank_. The appearance of wounds on the body will often lead
-to, or assist in, the formation of a correct opinion, as to the cause
-of death. These facts are, however, very often fallacious. Instances
-have occurred in which persons determined upon suicide have endeavoured
-to kill themselves with sharp instruments, and not effecting their
-purpose, have subsequently thrown themselves into the water. Again,
-persons may, in the act of drowning themselves, receive severe
-injuries, by being propelled against rocks and stakes by the force of
-the current.
-
-A few years ago, a man, who had leaped from each of the three bridges
-with impunity, undertook to repeat the exploit for a wager. Having
-jumped from London Bridge, he sunk and was drowned. When the body
-was discovered, it appeared that both his arms were dislocated, in
-consequence of having descended with them in an horizontal instead of
-a perpendicular position. Persons have been discovered drowned with
-ligatures on their hands and feet, and the circumstance has naturally
-excited a suspicion as to whether they had committed suicide or had
-been murdered. Numerous cases prove that suicides do, occasionally,
-adopt such precautions, in order to ensure death. In June, 1816, the
-body of a gauging-instrument maker, who had been missing for some days
-from his home, was discovered floating down the Thames. On being taken
-out of the water, _the wrists were found tied together and made fast
-to his knees_, which were in like manner secured to each other. He had
-been deranged for two years. The cord was recognised as one which had
-been attached to his bed. He could swim well, and it was presumed that
-he had so tied himself, in order to prevent his using his legs and arms
-should his courage fail him after having plunged into the water.
-
-A man, with his wife and child, was reduced to great distress. On a
-certain day, he took an affectionate leave of his family, declaring
-he would not return until he had procured some employment by which he
-should be able to buy bread for them. On the following day, he was
-found drowned in the New River, with his hands and legs tied. A card
-with his address was found in his pocket.
-
-A gentleman was found in the Seine, at Paris, having his feet, wrists,
-and neck, tied with a cord. His neck, limbs, and hands, were bound by
-means of a rope with slip-knots, in order to put it out of his power
-to aid himself when in the water, and thereby to render certain the
-execution of his suicide.
-
-In the year 1832, the body of Elizabeth Martin was found dead in the
-water. A man of the name of Bayley was accused of the murder. They had
-been quarrelling, and were seen struggling with each other at the banks
-of the pond. He declared that she had fallen in accidentally. Her face
-was found turned downwards towards the bottom of the pond, _and one of
-her hands was found to be in her pocket_. The judge properly observed,
-that if the woman had fallen into the water as the prisoner stated,
-that she would have, undoubtedly, taken her hand from her pocket for
-the purpose of extricating herself. The man was convicted of the
-murder, and executed.
-
-There has been much discussion as to whether bodies sink or swim
-when thrown into the water after having been killed. Considerable
-discrepancy of opinion exists on this point. It has been maintained
-that strangled persons will float more readily than others, as many
-facts prove. Caracciolo, Admiral of the Neapolitan navy, was hanged by
-sentence of a court-martial. The body was committed to the deep in the
-usual manner; and thirteen days afterwards, while the king was walking
-on the deck of Lord Nelson’s ship, he suddenly exclaimed, with a yell
-of horror—“_Viene! viene!_” The admiral’s corpse, breast-high, was
-seen floating towards the ship. The shot which had been attached to
-the feet for the purpose of sinking not being sufficiently heavy. This
-phenomenon may have arisen from the evolution of gaseous matter, after
-the process of putrefaction had commenced, which notoriously renders
-the body specifically lighter than water.
-
-The apparitions that appeared at Portnedown Bridge, after the Irish
-massacre, and which excited such commotion at the time, were accounted
-for in a similar manner. It appears that, about twilight in the
-evening, a number of spirits became visible; one assumed the shape of
-a naked woman, waist-high, upright in the water, with elevated and
-closed hands, and looking as awful a spectre as the most superstitious
-person would wish to behold. Various sounds were also heard proceeding
-from the river, which caused no little alarm. The sounds were mere
-delusions, but that bodies were seen floating upright in the water
-there cannot be a doubt.
-
-“One day,” says Clarke, “leaning out of the cabin-window, by the side
-of an officer, who was employed in fishing, the corpse of a man, newly
-sewed up in a hammock, started half out of the water, and continued
-its course with the current towards the shore. Nothing could be more
-horrible; its head and shoulders were visible, turning first to
-one side, then to the other, with a solemn and awful movement, as
-if impressed with some dreadful secret of the deep, which from its
-watery grave it came upwards to reveal. Such sights became afterwards
-frequent, hardly a day passing without ushering the dead to the
-contemplation of the living, until at length they passed without
-exciting much observation.[73]
-
-In October, 1829, a female, who was an in-patient of St. Luke’s
-Hospital, was found dead in the bath of the institution. It appears
-that, for some time previously, she had been permitted the privileges
-allowed to patients exhibiting indications of convalescence, and had
-obtained access to the nurse’s room, in which the key of the bath
-was deposited. One afternoon, she secretly possessed herself of this
-key, and then immediately proceeded to make arrangements for the
-accomplishment of her purpose. In order to deceive the vigilance of the
-nurse, who was accustomed to lock the patients up at bed-time, she took
-off her clothes and disposed them about the room, in the usual manner,
-as if she had undressed. She then made up a bundle to resemble the
-human figure, and placed it inside the bed, filling her nightcap with
-handkerchiefs. So accurate was the deception that the other patients,
-who slept in the room with the deceased, readily answered that they
-were all present. The lunatic, after these preparations, must have
-stolen cautiously down to the bath. She was found, the next morning,
-dead, lying stretched out with her face downwards. The water of the
-bath was not deep, and, indeed, it is presumed, she must have forcibly
-maintained the position in which her body was found, in order to have
-effected her purpose. The door of the bath-room was locked inside, and
-the key was found in the deceased’s pocket.
-
-In a small village of Warwickshire, in the year 1800, a young
-gentleman suddenly disappeared on the evening previous to his intended
-marriage. After a lapse of some days, his body was found floating in
-a mill-stream, and it was generally concluded that he had committed
-suicide, though the cause for such a rash act could not be conjectured.
-Upon stripping the body, some marks of a suspicious nature were
-discovered upon the throat. A surgeon was sent for to decide whether
-death had taken place from any other cause than drowning, who, after
-a minute examination, gave it as his opinion that he had died by
-strangulation. Suspicion now fell upon a man of bad character, who
-had been seen the night the gentleman was first missed, running in
-great haste from the direction in which the body was afterwards found.
-He was apprehended, but, no evidence of guilt being elicited by the
-examination, was discharged, and the fate of the unfortunate young man
-remained buried in mystery. Ten years afterwards, the person suspected
-was convicted of sheep-stealing, and sentenced to transportation.
-While on board the hulks, he made a voluntary confession of having
-destroyed him, and declared that such was his remorse, and the horror
-of his conscience, that he earnestly desired to expiate his crime on
-the scaffold. He was tried for the alleged offence entirely on his own
-evidence, which was as follows:—
-
-Upon the evening of the fatal event, he was stealing potatoes from a
-field-garden belonging to the deceased, whom he unexpectedly saw coming
-over the gate to secure him, upon which he jumped over the hedge on
-the opposite side, and ran across the field to make his escape. The
-gentleman pursued him, and being an active young man, nearly overtook
-him; upon which he (the prisoner) attempted to leap the mill-stream,
-but the bank on the other side giving way, he fell back into the
-water. The young gentleman, instantly plunging into the water after
-him, strove to secure him. A desperate struggle now ensued, and the
-deceased had at one time got the prisoner down under him in the water,
-by which he was half drowned. At length he succeeded in overturning
-his antagonist, and, seizing him by the throat, held him fast in this
-manner under water, till he seemed to have no more power. He then left
-him, sprang out, and made his escape.
-
-The judge gave it as his opinion that the case amounted only to
-excusable homicide, and the man was acquitted.
-
-In forming an opinion as to the cause of death in doubtful cases of
-suicide, the following important points ought to be carefully kept in
-view:—
-
-1st. If the person had for some time laboured under melancholia; had met
-with losses, disappointments, or had suffered any acute chagrin.[74]
-2nd. If any of his family, associates, or connexions, had any interest
-in his death. 3rd. The season of the year should be taken into
-consideration; for we have observed, without being able to assign the
-reason, that suicide is more frequent during the solstices and the
-equinoxes. 4th. If the patient, instead of complaining, remains quiet,
-seeks for solitude, and refuses medical aid. And 5th. If there be any
-writing (as those who destroy themselves ordinarily express their last
-opinions or will) it will be one of the most satisfactory proofs that
-they have made away with themselves. Remains of poison found in their
-pockets, or in the apartment, are but an equivocal proof, and one which
-may attend upon homicide as well as on suicide.[75]
-
-In the course of judicial investigations, medical men are frequently
-called upon to decide in cases of suspicious death whether wounds
-discovered on the bodies of the deceased were self-inflicted. Before
-deciding questions of this character, the medical witness ought to take
-into consideration the following points:—1st, The situation of the
-wound; 2nd, its nature and extent; 3rd, the direction of the wound; and
-4th, the moral circumstances connected with the case.
-
-Generally speaking, those who commit suicide do not wound themselves on
-the posterior parts of the body; therefore injuries detected in such
-situations naturally excite suspicions as to the mode of death. The
-throat and chest are commonly selected when cutting instruments are
-used. When death has resulted from the discharge of a weapon introduced
-into the mouth, Dr. Smith says it may be taken for granted that the
-case is one of suicide. It is, however, possible, even under such
-circumstances, for a person to be assassinated in this way. When death
-has been caused by firearms, the fingers and hands of the deceased
-should be carefully examined, in order to detect the presence of
-discoloration. In several instances, a murder has been discovered by a
-careful examination of the wadding. In two cases on record, the wadding
-being examined, it was discovered to have been torn from paper found in
-the possession of the parties on whom suspicion had rested.
-
-Some time back, the body of a man was found lying on the high-road. The
-throat was severely cut, and he had evidently died from hemorrhage. A
-bloody knife was discovered at some distance from the body; and this,
-together with the circumstance of the pockets of the deceased having
-been rifled, led to a suspicion of murder. This idea was confirmed
-when the wound was examined. It was cut, not as is usual in suicide,
-by carrying the instrument from before backwards, but as the throats
-of sheep are cut. The knife had passed in deeply under and below the
-ear, and had been brought out by a semi-circular sweep in front, all
-the great vessels of the neck, with the œsophagus and trachea,
-having been divided from behind forwards. The nature of the wound
-rendered it at once improbable that it could have been self-inflicted;
-and it further served to detect the murderer, who was soon afterwards
-discovered, and executed.
-
-With reference to the _extent_ of the wound, the celebrated Earl of
-Essex’s case has often been quoted. He was found dead in the Tower,
-in 1683, and it was the generally received opinion that he had been
-murdered by persons hired by the Duke of York, afterwards King James
-II. Upon examining the wound, it was found that the jugular vessels,
-trachea, and œsophagus, were cut through to the very neck-bone.
-The verdict was suicide. In 1688, the matter was revived, and before a
-committee of the House of Lords,[76] it was proved that the razor with
-which the wound was inflicted was found on the left side of the body,
-while it was known that the Earl was left-handed. The edge of the razor
-was found notched; and it was also proved that the cravat worn by the
-deceased was cut through, and his right hand was wounded in five places.
-
-As there was much political feeling mixed up with this case, it was
-difficult to arrive at the truth. That many persons who have cut their
-throats have divided the neck to the vertebræ is a well-known fact.
-In the case of Mr. Calcraft, all the large vessels in the neck were
-divided, and the throat was cut through to the vertebral column.
-
-In the case of Sellis, much stress was laid by Sir E. Home on the
-wound being _regular_; he observes, “_any struggle would have made it
-irregular_.” Although there were points connected with this remarkable
-case which naturally tended to excite suspicion, we cannot but declare
-that the Duke of Cumberland most clearly vindicated himself from the
-foul charge which party feeling and private malevolence had endeavoured
-to establish against him.
-
-Many doubtful cases may be decided by taking into consideration the
-moral circumstances connected with them. A girl was discovered dead.
-Suspicion rested upon her mother, who had severely beaten the child. It
-was, however, clearly proved that the girl had been repeatedly heard
-to declare her intention to commit suicide. Persons should be examined
-as to the state of mind of the party found dead; whether he or she
-laboured under an hereditary predisposition to suicidal insanity, or
-had been exposed to the influence of causes likely to cause melancholy
-or a depressed state of feeling. If all these points be carefully
-considered, a fair conclusion may be arrived at in the majority
-of cases that occur, and which are made the subject of judicial
-investigation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-STATISTICS OF SUICIDE.
-
-
- Number of suicides in the chief capitals of Europe from 1813
- to 1831—Statistics of death from violence in London from 1828
- to 1832—Number of suicides in London for a century and a
- half—Suicides in Westminster from 1812 to 1836—Suicide more
- frequent among men than women—Mode of committing—Influence of
- age—Effect of the married state—Infantile suicides—M. Guerry
- on suicides in France—Cases—Suicide and murder—Suicide in
- Geneva.
-
-In Great Britain, owing to the neglect of statistical science, much
-difficulty has been experienced in obtaining anything like correct data
-respecting the number of suicides committed annually. For the details
-given in this chapter we are indebted to various authorities. Every
-work has been consulted which it was supposed would throw some light on
-the subject.
-
-
-_Number of Suicides in the chief Capitals of Europe._
-
-
- Places. Periods. Suicides. Proportion
- to Population.
-
- Berlin 1813-1822 360 1 in 750
- Copenhagen 1804-1806 100 1 — 1,000
- Naples 1828 330 1 — 1,100
- Hamburg 1822 59 1 — 1,800
- Berlin 1799-1808 60 1 — 2,300
- Paris 1836 341 1 — 2,700
- Milan 1827 37 1 — 3,200
- Berlin 1788-1797 35 1 — 4,500
- Vienna 1829 45 1 — 6,400
- Prague 1820 6 1 — 16,000
- Petersburg 1831 22 1 — 21,000
- London 1834 42 1 — 27,000
- Naples 1826 13 1 — 173,000
- Palermo 1831 2 1 — 180,000
-
-_Statistics of Suicide & Deaths from Violence in general, in London._
-
- 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832.
- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
-
- Suicide 41 35 25 48 52
- Executed 1 26 7 6 10
- Murdered 6 4 2 5 2
- Poisoned 7 7 4 7 4
- Found dead 15 6 13 5 5
- Drowned 150 36 97 131 149
- Burnt 47 53 61 35 36
- From famine 1 0 0 1 1
- From intoxication 7 3 4 0 1
- From suffocation 10 10 5 5 5
-
-_Number of Suicides in London during a Century and a half._
-
-
- From 1690 to 1699 236
- — 1700 — 1709 278
- — 1710 — 1719 301
- — 1720 — 1729 478
- — 1730 — 1739 501
- — 1740 — 1749 422
- — 1750 — 1759 363
- — 1760 — 1769 351
- — 1770 — 1779 339
- — 1780 — 1789 224
- — 1790 — 1799 274
- — 1800 — 1809 347
- — 1810 — 1819 363
- — 1820 — 1829 381
-
-_Suicides in Westminster, from 1812 to 1836._
-
- (Extract from Report of Medical Committee of the Statistical
- Society of London. April, 1837.)
-
-“The first statement to which the Committee will draw the attention
-of the Council is an account of the number of persons, male and
-female, who have committed suicide, and upon whom inquests have been
-held, within the city and liberty of Westminster, in each month, from
-January, 1812, to December, 1836, procured from Mr. Higg, the deputy
-coroner of Westminster; with other statements which the Committee had
-prepared from it.
-
-“The Committee deems it right to premise that caution must be used
-in drawing too general inferences from these statements, on account
-of the comparatively small number of cases to which they refer. The
-average annual number of suicides upon which inquests have been held in
-Westminster does not probably exceed one per cent. of the total number
-annually committed in Great Britain; hence the number committed in
-Westminster during twenty-five years, amounting to 656, is only about
-twenty-five per cent. of the whole number annually committed in Great
-Britain.
-
-“For some conclusions, however, they afford sufficient data, and these
-the Committee will proceed to notice.
-
-“It appears from the following abstract, No. 1, that suicides in
-Westminster are most prevalent in the three months of June, July, and
-March; but that the excess is on the part of the males, as the greatest
-number of female suicides was in January, September, and November.
-September, August, and October exhibit the smallest number of male and
-of total suicides; but February, March, and April, the smallest number
-among females.
-
-No. 1.
-
- _A Statement of the total number of Suicides of each Sex
- committed in Westminster in each month during the twenty-five
- years, from 1812 to 1836; also the per centage proportion of
- the whole number committed in each month; and the proportion
- which the number of each sex bears to the other._
-
- +----------------------------+------------------------+--------------------+
- │ Total Number of Suicides | Per Centage Proportion |Per Cent. Proportion|
- | from 1812 to 1816. |committed in each Month.| of Male to Female. |
- +----------------------------+------------------------+--------------------+
- | Male. Female. Total.| Male. Female. Total. | Male and Female. |
- |January 35 20 55 | 7.3 11.2 8.4 | 64 36 |
- |February 39 12 51 | 8.2 6.8 7.8 | 77 23 |
- |March 52 11 63 | 10.9 6.2 9.6 | 83 17 |
- |April 40 11 51 | 8.4 6.2 7.8 | 79 21 |
- |May 41 15 56 | 8.5 8.4 8.5 | 73 27 |
- |June 60 15 75 | 12.6 8.4 11.4 | 80 20 |
- |July 50 16 66 | 10.5 9.0 10.1 | 76 24 |
- |August 30 15 45 | 6.3 8.4 6.9 | 67 38 |
- |September 30 18 48 | 6.3 10.1 7.4 | 62 38 |
- |October 28 15 43 | 5.9 8.4 6.5 | 65 35 |
- |November 32 17 49 | 6.7 9.6 7.4 | 65 35 |
- |December 41 13 54 | 8.5 7.3 8.2 | 76 24 |
- | ---- --- --- | ---- --- --- | -- -- |
- | Total 478 178 656 | 100. 100. 100. | 73 27 |
- +----------------------------+------------------------+--------------------+
-
-“The last two columns in the above account shew more precisely the
-proportion of female to male suicides in each month.
-
-“The following statement shews the number of times, during the
-twenty-five years, that no suicide was committed during each month:—
-
-
- February .. Not once.
-
- January }
- March } Once.
- June }
-
- July Twice.
-
- May } Three
- August } times.
- December }
-
- April } Four times.
- October }
-
- September } Five times.
- November }
-
-“From No. 2 it appears that the average annual number of suicides in
-Westminster has been increasing in each quinquennial period; but No.
-3 shews that it has actually decreased with reference to the increase
-which has taken place in the population.
-
-
-No. 2.
-
-_A Statement of the Average Annual Number of Suicides, Male and Female,
-in each Quinquennial Period; also, the proportion per cent. which the
-two Sexes bore to each other in each period._
-
-
- +------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | Periods of Years.| Average Annual Number.|Proportion of each Sex.|
- +------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | | Male. Female. Total. | Male. Female. |
- | | | |
- | 1812 to 1816 | 18.2 7.6 25.8 | 70 30 |
- | 1817 —— 1821 | 15.0 5.2 20.2 | 74 26 |
- | 1822 —— 1826 | 16.4 7.4 23.8 | 69 31 |
- | 1827 —— 1831 | 22.0 7.8 29.8 | 78 22 |
- | 1832 —— 1836 | 24.0 7.9 31.9 | 76 24 |
- | +-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | Average of Total | 19.1 7.1 26.3 | 73 27 |
- +------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
-
-No. 3.
-
-_A Statement of the Population of the City and Liberty of Westminster,
-according to each census, and the proportion which the number of
-Suicides in the Quinquennial Period immediately following each census
-bore to the population._
-
- +--------+-----------+-------------------------------+------------------+
- | | | | Proportion |
- |Dates of|Population.| Suicides. | of Suicides |
- |Census. | | |to the Population.|
- | | | | One in |
- +--------+--------------------------+----------------+------------------+
- | | | Quinquennial | Average | |
- | | | Periods. | Annual Number. | |
- | | | | | |
- | 1811 | 160,801 | 1812 to 1816 | 25.8 | 6,232 |
- | 1821 | 181,444 | 1822 -- 1826 | 23.8 | 7,623 |
- | 1831 | 201,604 | 1832 -- 1836 | 31.6 | 6,379 |
- | +-----------+--------------+----------------+------------------+
- |Average | 181,283 | .. | 27.06 | 6,744 |
- +--------+-----------+--------------+----------------+------------------+
-
-“It must, however, be taken into consideration that suicides committed
-in Westminster may not belong to the population of the district,
-for that the proximity of the river, and other causes existing in
-Westminster, may attract persons residing in other parts of the town.
-Hence an increase or decrease of facilities for committing suicide in
-the surrounding districts, such as the formation of a canal, &c., will
-naturally affect the number of such deaths in Westminster.”[77]
-
-It has been clearly established that suicide is less frequent among
-women than men. In early life, death by hanging is preferred; in
-middle life, firearms are had recourse to; and in more advanced years,
-strangulation again becomes the fashionable mode of terminating life.
-
-
- Years of Age. Pistol. Hanging.
- Between 10 and 20[78] 61 68
- 28 -- 30 283 51
- 49 -- 50 182 94
- 60 -- 70 150 188
- 80 -- 90 161 256
-
-In an analysis of 525 cases of suicide in Prussia, the following was
-the result:—
-
- Hanging 234
- Shooting 163
- Drowning 60
- Cutting throat 17
- Stabbing 20
- Jumping out of window 19
- Poison 10
- Opening artery 2
- ---
- 525
-
-Marriage is to a certain extent a preventive of suicide; it has been
-satisfactorily established that among the men two-thirds who destroy
-themselves are bachelors.
-
-In M. A. Guerry’s able “Essai sur la Statisque Morale de la France,”
-published in 1833, we find some valuable statistical facts relating to
-suicide in France.
-
-It appears on evidence of the most authentic description, that, from
-the year 1827 to that of 1830, there were committed throughout France
-no less than 6900 suicides! that is to say, an average of nearly 1800
-per annum! It should, however, be remembered, that this calculation
-is founded only upon judicial documents, in which are included merely
-those cases of suicide in which death has followed, or in which legal
-proceedings were taken; so that it is not improbable that many more
-attempts were made to perpetrate this crime of which the public is
-quite ignorant.
-
-Taking up this fact, let us consider that the number of crimes against
-the person amounts yearly in France to 1900. Now, it appears that more
-than 600 of these crimes consist of attempts on the lives of others; so
-that the conclusion cannot be resisted, that every time an individual
-in France meets with a violent death, in any other way but by accident
-or mere homicide, there are three chances to one that he has committed
-suicide.
-
-M. Guerry makes a transition to the geographical position of this
-crime throughout the several arbitrary divisions, and he finds the
-state of the case to be as follows:—
-
-Out of every hundred suicides which take place on the average every
-year, there are committed in the
-
- Suicides.
- Northern division 51
- Southern — 11
- Eastern — 16
- Western — 13
- Central — 9
-
-
-Another view of the proportion of suicides in France is, that which
-takes place in the number of them, as compared with the amount of the
-population. It is as follows:—
-
- _Suicides in proportion to Population._
-
- Northern division 1 in 9,853
- Eastern — 1 in 21,734
- Central — 1 in 27,393
- Western — 1 in 30,499
- Southern — 1 in 30,876
-
-It is proper to bear in mind, that in the single department of the
-Seine, there are perpetrated every year nearly the sixth part of
-the whole number of suicides which take place in all the eighty-six
-departments of France. It is said, however, that the greater portion
-of those persons who commit suicide in this department are altogether
-strangers to the capital. We come, then, to this conclusion, that of
-the thousand individuals who are guilty of the crime of suicide, no
-less than five hundred and five take place in the department of the
-north; one hundred and sixty-eight occur in the southern division;
-sixty-five in the western; and fifty-two in the central; a distribution
-which shews that there is, if not the same proportion, certainly the
-same order, as the distribution of suicides in the five divisions in
-respect of the amount of population.
-
-In the explanation which is appended to the table just alluded to, the
-author shews, that of the suicides committed in the department of the
-Seine, where they are most numerous, there appears to be one suicide
-for every 3,600 the inhabitants; whilst in the department of the Haute
-Soire, where the crime is less frequent, this proportion does not
-amount to more than one in 163,000 inhabitants.
-
-A singularly curious inference is to be drawn from the consideration
-of the facts presented in another of M. Guerry’s graphic
-illustrations—viz., that which arises from the circumstance, that from
-whatever confine of France an inquirer proceeds to the capital, he will
-find, as he approaches it, that the number of suicides increases by
-a regular gradation; so that in those departments which are near the
-Seine and Maine, the traveller will discover that more suicides have
-been committed than in those more remote from the metropolis, such
-as the departments of the Lower Seine, of Aube and Soiret. The same
-observation applies as forcibly to Marseilles, which is in some measure
-to be considered the capital of certain departments in the south of
-France. The more these districts are in the vicinity of Marseilles, the
-greater the amount is there of suicides as compared with the number of
-the population.
-
-A curious fact has been elicited in the examination of the French
-registers of crime, from which it appears that those divisions of the
-kingdom of France in which the most frequent attempts have been made to
-commit murder are those divisions exactly where the crime of suicide is
-most rare; and it has been further proved that precisely the reverse of
-this law takes place in other departments; namely, that where suicides
-are numerous in proportion to the population, there the number of
-murders committed by individuals on others is considerably diminished.
-One peculiarity is mentioned by M. Guerry as being connected with
-cases of suicide, which is, that we are much oftener enlightened as
-to the cause of it than we are upon the motives of most other crimes,
-and that it is rarely the case that any person sets about the crime
-of self-destruction without leaving in writing, or in some other way,
-the expression of his last wishes, together with an explanation of the
-causes of the rash act, which he most generally seeks to justify.
-
-Holcroft, in speaking of the number of suicides in Paris, observes, “I
-am not well informed on the subject, but I doubt if as many suicides be
-committed through all Great Britain _in a year, as in Paris alone in a
-month_. It is the practice of the French police to stifle inquiry and
-conceal facts, whenever they are of a disagreeable nature; for they tax
-its omnipotence, to something little short of which it pretends: all
-things are under its protection; its eye is everywhere; the assaulted
-cannot sink; the culprit cannot escape; its guardian arm is stretched
-out so effectually to save that none are in danger. Such are its high
-claims and the daily assertion it repeats; they are the necessary
-results of despotism, which, ever on the alarm, will in everything
-interfere.
-
-“The Parisians are in general themselves so ignorant that the things
-which they see produce only a momentary impression; none but men of
-superior minds collect facts and deduce consequences; the rest discern
-with great quickness, but they forget with greater; and it is chiefly
-from this forgetfulness that their gaiety of heart is derived.
-
-“In England, misfortunes, so far from being concealed, are sought after
-with eagerness by people who are paid for the bad news they bring,
-and by whom it is sometimes greatly exaggerated. If the tale do not
-astonish, it is scarcely worthy to be reported in our newspapers, and
-the tales in these newspapers circulate through Europe. This is a
-benefit when truth is not falsified.
-
-“Of the suicides which are daily happening in France, I, who read the
-daily journals, saw only two noticed; and these I was surprised to see.
-One was an officer in the army who pistolled himself at the public
-office of the war minister; and the other a poor wretch who, at the
-moment before he threw himself from the upper story of one of the high
-houses in Paris, called out in mercy to the passengers, _Garde l’eau!_
-the phrase used by the Parisians when they throw water out of a window.
-I was told of another suicide of the same kind, and with the same
-humane caution, while I was at Paris.
-
-“I likewise saw the body of a man borne through the streets, who,
-after having breakfasted at a hut in _les Champs Elysées_, put an end
-to his existence. Before doing so, he told the people that he had been
-a subaltern officer of a regiment then reduced; and that all means of
-procuring a livelihood was lost.
-
-“Nine conscripts who had for a time concealed themselves, but who were
-at last discovered, being determined not to serve, encouraged each
-other rather to die, and voluntarily ended life by drowning themselves
-together.
-
-“I was passing _le Pont des Tuileries_ after dark, and saw a man
-surrounded by other men. They had deterred him on the bridge from
-jumping over; but they could not prevail on him to tell his name, or to
-go home. He appeared to be determined in his purpose; the only resource
-they had was, at last, to commit him to the guard; but unless his state
-of mind could be altered, safety like this was but merely temporary.
-
-“Another evening, on the same bridge, and about the same hour, a woman,
-standing near the centre parapet, attracted my attention by her look,
-and manner in which she seemed to be examining the river. I stopped;
-she desisted, but did not remove. I was uncertain what her intentions
-might be, and she appeared to shun notice. Two other passengers,
-guessing my doubts, halted; but either their fears were not so strong
-as mine, or their patience was less; they stood a few minutes and
-left. I felt as if I did not dare to go, yet could not decide how to
-act, from the fear of doing wrong. At length the woman moved towards
-the end of the bridge, and I was obliged to leave her to her fate.
-I was not certain her intentions were ill; to have charged her with
-such might deeply have insulted her. I walked home, however, in a most
-dissatisfied state of mind; at one minute, proving to myself I could
-not act otherwise, and at another, making self-accusations for having
-deserted the duties of humanity.
-
-“The number of suicides that really happen in Paris must exceed,
-no man can say how much, those that are actually known. The bodies
-exposed at _La Morgue_ are most of them brought from _St. Cloud_; the
-distance to which by water must be above three, perhaps four miles.
-At the bridge of _St. Cloud_ the fishermen nightly spread their nets;
-and in the morning, with the fish, these bodies are drawn up; but as
-an old inhabitant of _St. Cloud_, whom I strictly questioned on the
-subject, assured me the nets were only suffered to be down a stated
-number of hours, according to the season, certainly not upon an average
-half a day; and in proof of what he said, he observed to me that this
-regulation must take place, or the navigation of the river would be
-impeded. Hence, by the most moderate calculation, the number of bodies
-that escape the nets must at least equal the number of those that are
-caught.
-
-“I was told that the government had lately refused the accustomed fee
-to the fishermen for each corpse they brought, and that they would not
-continue to drag up the dead bodies, affirming that the money they
-had before received was insufficient to pay the damage their nets had
-sustained.”
-
-The following statistical facts with reference to suicide in Geneva may
-be relied upon:—
-
-By the laws of the canton, each case of violent death is investigated
-by a police magistrate, and the documents are sent to the
-“Procureur-Generale,” and carefully preserved. M. Prevost has examined
-these documents, collected between 1825 and 1834 inclusively, with a
-view to investigating the causes of suicide, and of diminishing them if
-possible. The following are the most important results:—
-
-
-1.—_Age._
-
- Ages. No. of Cases in 10 years. Men. Women.
- From 50 to 60 34 25 9
- 20 to 30 30 22 8
- 60 to 70 19 10 9
- 30 to 40 18 15 3
- 40 to 50 15 13 2
- 70 to 80 9 6 3
- 10 to 20 5 3 2
- 80 to 90 3 1 2
-
-
-From this table it appears that suicides are most frequent between 50
-and 60 years of age. The age when the passions are the strongest (from
-20 to 30) is, as might be expected, high in the scale; that of youth
-and old age low, from the young being strangers to the cares of life,
-and the old few in number when compared with the population.
-
-
-2.—_Sex, and State of Marriage or Celibacy._
-
-There are more suicides among men than women, in the proportion of
-95 to 38, or about three to one; and more unmarried than married,
-or in the state of widowhood, in the proportion of 70 to 63, or
-about seven to six. Notwithstanding this, the female suicides are
-more numerous among the married and widows than among the unmarried,
-in the proportion of 21 to 17. But among men the proportions are
-reversed,—that is, 42 to 53; so that, on the whole, suicides are more
-frequent among the unmarried than amongst those who are or have been
-married. This will not surprise those who know the energy, courage,
-and patience of women under misfortune; men more readily give way
-to despair, and to vices consequent upon it. Men also have means of
-destruction, as firearms, &c., more readily at hand.
-
-
-3.—_Occupations._
-
-The number of suicides are in proportion to the number of the
-individuals engaged in various trades, except among the agricultural
-population, where the proportion is very small. Thus the agricultural
-population of the canton is 18,000, among whom, during ten years,
-there have been but ten suicides; whereas, if they had been in the
-same proportion to the whole number as was found in other occupations,
-they would have amounted to thirty-nine. Constant occupation and hard
-yet healthy work render them less sensible to the cares of life. There
-is also a somewhat larger proportion of suicides among the educated
-classes, who are engaged in literary pursuits or the higher branches of
-commerce.
-
-4.—_Religion._
-
-The relative proportion of Protestants to Catholics in the canton of
-Geneva is, according to the census of 1834, as 77 to 56. Thus—
-
-
- Of 133 inhabitants there are,
- Protestants 77
- Catholics 56
- ---
- 133
-
- Of 133 cases of suicide there are,
- Protestants 107
- Catholics 26
- ---
- 133
-
-This result should attract the attention of those who are interested in
-the moral and religious education of Protestants.
-
-
-5.—_Means of Destruction._
-
- Drowning 55
- Firearms 31
- Strangulation 18
- Voluntary falls 15
- Cutting instruments 7
- Poison 7
- ---
- 133
-
-In a small province, with a lake and two rapid rivers, it is not
-surprising that drowning should be the most frequent mode of suicide;
-next to this is death by firearms, which is accounted for by all the
-men having firearms, as they are in the militia. Whilst the men have
-used firearms and cutting instruments, the women have almost alone had
-recourse to poisons and voluntary falls.
-
-
-6.—_Seasons._
-
-The seasons sensibly influence the number of suicides. There are more
-almost constantly in April. Of 133 suicides there were in—
-
- April 19
- June 17
- August 17
- July 15
- October 14
- May 13
- March 10
- November 9
- September 6
- January 5
- February 5
- December 3
-
-The spring appears to have an unfavourable effect; and during the great
-heats, there are more suicides than during the cold weather. It is
-curious that many suicides happened on the same day or week. Thus, on
-April 9th, 1830, there were two suicides, and several others on the
-previous and subsequent days; on the 20th of May, 1830, there were two
-suicides; on the 28th and 29th of March, 1831, two; and the same on the
-3rd and 4th of July of the same year. On the 20th of April, 1833, there
-were two; and on the 5th of July, 1833, two others. Some atmospheric
-changes may account for this, though meteorological tables did not
-satisfactorily explain them.
-
-
-7.—_Presumed Motives._
-
- Physical disease 34
- Insanity 24
- Losses of property 19
- Domestic grief 15
- Melancholy without known cause 13
- Bad conduct. Drunkenness 10
- Fear of punishment. Remorse 6
- Disappointment in love 6
- Gambling 4
- Mysterious 2
-
-
-8.—_Relation of Suicides to Population and to Deaths._
-
-The number of suicides is to the whole number of deaths as 1 to 90-1/8;
-and to the whole population as 1 to 3·985; the mean population of the
-canton during the last ten years being 53,000—
-
- In 1825 6 Suicides.
- 1826 6 ”
- 1827 9 ”
- 1828 13 ”
- 1829 13 ”
- 1830 16 ”
- 1831 18 ”
- 1832 12 ”
- 1833 24 ”
- 1834 16 ”
- —-
- 133
-
-From this table it appears that the number of suicides has gradually
-increased from six as high as twenty-four in eight years. The last
-year, it decreased to sixteen; and it is fervently hoped that this
-deduction may be maintained, and that the increase may not be so
-frightfully rapid as it appears to have been. It must, however, be
-taken into account, that the population was, in 1822, 51,113, and in
-1834, 56,655. The police also are more active, and inquests are held
-more regularly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-APPEARANCES PRESENTED AFTER DEATH IN THOSE WHO HAVE COMMITTED SUICIDE.
-
-
- Thickness of cranium—State of membranes and vessels of
- brain—Osseous excrescences—Appearances discovered in one
- thousand three hundred and thirty-three cases—Lesions of the
- lungs, heart, stomach, and intestines—Effect of long-continued
- indigestion.
-
-As in cases of insanity, the morbid appearances discovered in the
-bodies of suicides are varied and contradictory. Nothing has yet been
-detected which can lead the pathologist to a correct conclusion as to
-the nature of the organic change which precedes and accompanies the
-suicidal mania.
-
-The cranium has in many cases been found preternaturally thick, and in
-others the reverse. Greeding and Gall give their testimony in favour of
-the skull’s thickness. Out of 216 examined, a preternatural thickness
-of cranium was found in 167. Out of 100 who died of furious mania, 78
-had the skull thick, and 20 very thin. Out of 30 fatuous patients, 21
-had thick crania, and six thin. The thickness of the cranial bones in
-melancholy and maniacal patients, and in old people, was supposed by
-Dr. Gall to be connected with diminished size of the brain, to which
-the inner table of the cranial bone accommodated itself; and together
-with this thickness, he considered there was also thickness of the
-membranes, and ossification of the blood-vessels.
-
-Malformations of the cranium are often detected. Osiander relates
-the case of an old man who had suffered for a considerable time from
-dreadful headache, and who, weary of life, hanged himself. On examining
-the head, small osseous excrescences were found near the carotid
-foramen. Lancisi refers to a case of hypochondriasis and suicide, in
-which, after death, a sharp long excrescence was found near the apex of
-the lambdoid suture.
-
-From an examination of the particulars of 1333 cases of persons who
-have committed suicide, and who have been examined after death, the
-following analysis is made. The particulars of the cases referred
-to are recorded in the works of Pinel, Esquirol, Falret, Foderé,
-Arntzenius, Schlegel, Burrows, Haslam, &c.
-
- Thickness of cranium 150
- No apparent structural change 100
- Bony excrescences 50
- Tumours in brain 10
- Simple congestion 300
- Disease of membranes 170
- Disease of lungs 100
- Softening of brain 100
- Appearances of inflammation in brain 90
- Disease of stomach 100
- Disease of intestines 50
- Disease of liver 80
- Suppressed natural secretions 15
- Disease of heart 10
- Syphilitic disease 8
- ----
- 1333
-
-Accretions of the membranes of the brain are often found in suicides.
-The dura mater is often ossified, and the pia mater inflamed, and the
-arachnoid thickened. Osiander considers congestion of the vessels of
-the brain a frequent cause of suicide.
-
-Auenbrugger refers to the case of a man who had suffered for a long
-duration severe headache, and who committed suicide. After death, a
-fissure was found in the middle of the pons varolii.
-
-Lesions of the lungs are among the common morbid appearances in the
-bodies of lunatics. Esquirol states that one fourth of the melancholic
-die of consumption.
-
-The heart is sometimes found seriously disorganized. The stomach,
-liver, and intestines, are the most frequent seats of morbid phenomena
-in these cases. It is difficult, however, to say whether they ought
-to be considered as the effect or cause of the suicidal disposition.
-In many cases of gastric disease, the brain is also found organically
-affected. How is it possible for us to say which organ was primarily
-affected? The stomach, intestines, and liver, may be originally the
-seat of the irritation, and the brain may be sympathetically deranged.
-This is often the case. Again, the patient may have laboured under a
-severe mental ailment, which may give rise to disease of the splanchnic
-viscera. Severe and long-continued indigestion, from whatever cause
-it may originate, will, in certain dispositions, produce the suicidal
-mania. Very few cases are examined in which we are not able to detect
-some disease of the gastric organ or its appendages.
-
-It is not our wish to throw discredit on, or to underrate the value of,
-morbid anatomy; but, with reference to the peculiar branch of inquiry
-now under investigation, we must confess that very little practical
-importance can be attached to the structural lesions which the industry
-and scalpel of the anatomists have enabled them to discover in the
-bodies of those who have committed suicide. The morbid appearances are
-so varied and capricious that they cannot lead to a sound conclusion
-as to the exact seat of the disease. In many cases, the brain is
-apparently free from structural derangement; and yet, reasoning
-physiologically, we must believe that in every case the sentient organ
-must be affected, either primarily or secondarily. There are many
-instances in which there cannot be a doubt but that the cerebral organ
-is the seat of the disease, but in which, after death, no vestige of
-the malady can be discovered!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-SINGULAR CASES OF SUICIDE.
-
-
- Introduction—Contempt of death—Eustace Budgel—M. de Boissy
- and his wife—Mutual suicides from disappointed love—Suicide
- from mortification—Mutual suicide from poverty—A French lady
- while out shooting—A fisherman after praying—Determination
- to commit if not cured—Extraordinary case of suicide after
- seduction—Madame C. from remorse—M. de Pontalba after trying
- to murder his daughter-in-law—Young lady in a pet—Sir George
- Dunbar—James Sutherland while George III. was passing—Lancet
- given by a wife to her husband to kill himself—Servant
- girl—Curious verses by a suicide—Robber on being recognised—A
- man who ordered a candle to be made of his fat—After
- gaming—Writing whilst dying—From misfortune just at a moment
- of relief—Curious papers written by a suicide—By heating a
- barrel in the fire—By tearing out the brains—Sisters by the
- injunction of their eldest sister—Mutual from poverty—Girl
- from a dream—Three servants in one pond—Indifference as to
- mode—By starvation—A man forty-five days without eating—Mutual
- of two boys after dining at a restaurateur’s—By putting head
- under the ice—By a pair of spectacles—By jumping amongst
- the bears—Young lady from gambling—Verses by a suicide—To
- obtain salvation—A lover after accidentally shooting his
- mistress—Mutual attempt at suicide—M. Kleist and Madame
- Vogle—Richard Smith and wife—Love and suicide—Bishop
- of Grenoble—Suicide in a pail of water—Mutual of two
- soldiers—Lord Scarborough—A man who advertised to kill himself
- for benefit of family—The case of Creech, and the romantic
- history of Madame de Monier—Suicide of M. ——, after threatening to
- kill his brother—Two young men—Two lovers—Homicide and suicide
- from jealousy—Cure of penchant for—Attempt to, prevented—Man
- in a belfry—Attempt at—The extraordinary case of Lovat by
- crucifixion.
-
-In the preceding chapters we have detailed the history of many
-remarkable cases of self-destruction. It is melancholy to consider
-that the principle of life with which God has endowed us for high and
-noble purposes should have been sacrificed with that apparent coolness
-and self-possession which was manifested in many of the instances
-recorded in this work.
-
- “How we abuse that article our life! Some people pluck it
- Out with a knife; some blow it up with powder; others duck it;—
- One thing is sure, and Horace
- Has already said it for us,—
- Sooner or later, all must kick the inevitable bucket.”
-
-A gladiatorial contempt of death is becoming one of the most alarming
-features of the time; in this respect we appear ambitious to imitate
-the conduct of the French sophists, and seek, in acts of desperation,
-a notoriety that nothing else can give us. In investigating, as we
-have endeavoured to do, the motives that have led to this heinous
-offence, we have in many cases been unsuccessful in tracing the act
-to any definite principle. Either no reasons have been assigned or
-the accounts of the cases transmitted to us have been imperfect.
-These individuals stand apart from the rest of the world, and exhibit
-an anomaly in the last act of life totally irreconcilable to all
-acknowledged principles of reason and human action. Eccentric in their
-lives, they have been desirous of manifesting the ruling passion strong
-in death. This mental idiosyncracy may be, and no doubt often is, the
-result of original constitution, aided in its development by the moral
-atmosphere in which the person is placed, as well as by education and
-other circumstances which are known to influence the formation of the
-mind and character.
-
-The singular facts adduced in this chapter are only brought forward
-as evidence of that anomalous condition of the mind referred to which
-leads to suicide; at the same time the instances will afford to the
-metaphysician valuable materials to assist him in his investigations
-into the philosophy of the human understanding. Some of the cases
-related, of course, admit of elucidation, but the majority will be
-found to puzzle the ingenuity even of those who pride themselves on
-their capacity of understanding what is beyond the ken of ordinary
-mortals.
-
-Eustace Budgel was a man of much literary fame at the beginning of the
-last century, the relation and friend of Addison, and a distinguished
-writer in the periodical publications of that day. He was born to
-a good fortune, and held a considerable place under government
-whilst Addison lived, who kept him in some order as to his political
-character. But having lost all court favour after Addison’s decease,
-and being a man of great expense and vanity, having also sunk a large
-sum of money in the South Sea scheme, and having involved himself in
-a number of fruitless litigations, he became highly distressed in his
-circumstances. This, added to the chagrin of disappointed ambition and
-to other matters, determined him to make away with himself. He had
-always thought but lightly of revelation, and after Addison’s death
-became an avowed free-thinker, which laxity of principle strongly
-concurred in disposing him to adopt this fatal resolution. Accordingly,
-after having been visibly agitated and almost distracted for several
-days, he took a boat, and ordered the waterman to go through London
-bridge. While the boat was under the bridge, Budgel threw himself
-overboard, having had the previous caution to fill his pockets with
-stones. This happened in the year 1737. It was said to have been
-Budgel’s opinion, “that when life becomes uneasy to support, and is
-overwhelmed with clouds and sorrows, man has a natural right to deprive
-himself of it, as it is better not to live than to live in pain.” A
-man of unsettled principles easily persuades himself into the notion
-of suicide when he is actually suffering from some violence of his
-passions, even though he had not imbibed it before. For whenever the
-passions attempt to reason, it is only on the delusive suggestions
-of their own perturbed feelings. The morning before Budgel carried
-his deadly intentions into execution, he endeavoured to persuade his
-daughter to accompany him in his death. His only argument to her was,
-that her life was not worth holding; but she thought otherwise, and
-refused to concur in the sacrifice. A slip of paper was left on his
-writing-table, containing these few words, as an apology for his rash
-act:—
-
- “What Cato did and Addison approved
- Cannot be wrong.”
-
-Monsieur de Boissy, a French dramatic writer and satirist, being
-reduced to great indigence, resolved to commit suicide. As he
-considered this action in no other light than as a friendly relief from
-further misery, he not only persuaded his wife to bear him company,
-but prevailed on her not to leave their child of five years old behind
-them, to the mercy of that world in which they had experienced so
-little sympathy and happiness. Nothing now remained but to fix on
-the mode of their death. They at length agreed to starve themselves.
-This not only seemed to them the most natural consequence of their
-condition, but also saved them from committing a violence either on
-their child, themselves, or each other, of which perhaps neither Boissy
-nor his wife found themselves capable. They determined therefore to
-wait with unshaken constancy the arrival of death under the meagre form
-of famine; and accordingly they shut themselves up in the solitude of
-their apartment, where, on account of their distresses, they had little
-reason to dread the interruption of company. They began, and resolutely
-persisted in their plan of starving themselves to death with their
-child. If any one called by chance at their apartment, they found it
-locked, and receiving no answer, it was concluded that nobody was at
-home. A friend, however, from that kind of instinct perhaps with which
-the spirit of friendship abounds, began to apprehend that something
-must be much amiss with Boissy, as he could neither find him at home,
-nor get intelligence concerning him. Under much anxiety he returned
-once more to his apartment; and, whether from hearing any groans from
-within, or suspecting something was wrong, he ventured to break open
-the door. Boissy and his wife had been so much in earnest, that it was
-now three days since they had taken any sustenance, and they were so
-far on their way to their intended home, that they were in sight, as it
-were, of the gates of death. The friend, entering into the room where
-this scene of death was going forward, found the miserable pair in such
-a situation as to be insensible of his intrusion. Boissy and his wife
-had no eyes but for each other, and were not sitting in, but rather
-supported from falling on the ground by two chairs set opposite to each
-other. Their hands were locked together, and in their ghastly looks
-was painted a kind of rueful compassion for their child, which hung at
-the mother’s knee, and seemed as if looking up to her for nourishment,
-in its natural tenaciousness of life. This group of wretchedness did
-not less shock than afflict his friend. But soon collecting from
-circumstances what it must mean, his first care was not to expostulate
-with Boissy or his wife, but to engage them to receive his succours, in
-which he found no small difficulty. Their resolution had been taken in
-earnest. They had got over the worst, and were in sight of their port.
-Their friend, however, took the right way of reconciling them to live
-by making the child join in the intercession. The child, who could have
-none of the prejudices or reasons they might have for not retracting,
-held up his little hands, and in concert with him entreated his parents
-to consent to live. Nature did not plead in vain. They were gradually
-restored to life, and provided with everything that could make them in
-good humour with its return.
-
-Euphrosine Lemoine was the daughter of a bourgeoise of the Faubourg
-St. Antoine. She loved, and had admitted to secret interviews, a
-young cabinetmaker of the neighbourhood. Her parents, however, had
-long intended her to marry Mr. B——, a man of some property. She
-reluctantly consented—pronounced the “_fatal yes_;” and the young man
-prudently left Paris for some years. In 1836 he yielded to the desire
-of once more seeing her he had loved. They met, and the husband was
-dishonoured. This was followed by an elopement; but the husband, who
-still loved his wife in spite of her crimes, discovered their retreat,
-and by the intervention of friends and of the police a reconciliation
-was effected—in vain. They again eloped, but only to perish together;
-and they were found dead, eight days after, locked in each other’s
-arms, in a miserable apartment they had hired for the purpose. Before
-the suicide, one of them had sketched with coal on the wall of their
-retreat two flaming hearts, and beneath, this inscription—“We have
-sworn eternal love, and death, terrible death, shall find us united.”
-
-A boatman discovered in the Seine a mass which the stream seemed to
-roll along with difficulty; he found it was two bodies, a young woman
-about twenty, tastefully dressed, and a young man in the uniform of the
-eighth hussars. The left hand and foot of one victim were laid to the
-right hand and foot of the other. A bit of paper, carefully wrapped
-up in parchment to preserve it from the water, told their names and
-motives:—
-
-“O you, whoever you may be, compassionate souls, who shall find these
-two bodies united, know that we loved each other with the most ardent
-affection, and that we have perished together, that we may be eternally
-united. Know, compassionate souls, that our last desire is, that you
-should place us, united as we are, in the same grave. Man should not
-separate those whom death has joined.
-
- (Signed), “FLORINE. GOYON.”
-
-
-Some years ago, a light was observed in the church of Rueil. This
-singular appearance occasioned a search; on the approach of the
-authorities the light was extinguished, but a woman’s stays were found
-on the pavement. The beadle of the church was met, apparently much
-agitated. On a further search, the proprietress of the stays was found
-concealed in a press under the _draps mortuaires_, (the parish pall.)
-The unhappy man, on the detection of this profanation, drowned himself.
-
-M. Malglaive, a half-pay officer, lately employed in a public office,
-had suffered some unexpected pecuniary losses. One of his friends
-received a note from him by the twopenny post, requesting him to call
-at his lodgings, where he would find a packet addressed to him. On
-proceeding there, and opening the packet, he found a letter in these
-words:—
-
-“When you shall have received this letter, my poor Eleanore and I will
-be no more. Be so good as to have our door opened; you will find our
-eyes closed for ever. We are weary of misfortunes, and don’t see how we
-can do better than end them. Satisfied of the courage and attachment
-of my excellent wife, I was certain that she would adopt my views, and
-take her share in my design.”
-
-These young people (for the husband was but thirty-four and the wife
-twenty-eight) had taken the most minute precautions to render the
-effect of the fumes of charcoal certain; but a brace of loaded pistols
-was placed on the night table, to be used if the charcoal had failed.
-
-Madame de F—— killed herself in the park of her chateau, with _her own_
-fowling-piece, which she took out on pretence of going shooting, as she
-was in the habit of doing. She loaded it with six balls, and placing
-the muzzle to her breast, discharged it. The only cause assigned is the
-vexation she and M. de F—— felt at her having no children to inherit
-their large fortune.
-
-A fisherman with a large family, residing at Vellon d’Auffes, near
-Marseilles, had been driven by domestic trouble to form a design of
-suicide, which he had long announced. One Sunday he climbed a high
-rock in the neighbourhood, where, in the sight of his friends below,
-with a crucifix in his hands, he was evidently saying his last prayer,
-preparatory to suicide. One of the neighbours, guessing his intentions,
-reached the spot suddenly, and seized him; a struggle ensued on the
-edge of the precipice; the unhappy man prevailed, and, escaping from
-the arms of his friendly antagonist, flung himself over.
-
-Voltaire relates the particulars of the following singular case:—An
-Englishman of the name of Bacon Morris, a half-pay officer, and a man
-of much intellect, called on Voltaire at Paris. The man was afflicted
-with a cruel malady, for which he was led to suppose there was no cure.
-After a certain number of visits, he one day called on the philosopher,
-with a purse and a couple of papers in his hand. “One of these
-papers,” he said, addressing Voltaire, “contains my will, the other my
-epitaph; and this bag of money is intended to defray the expenses of
-my funeral. I am resolved to try for fifteen days what can be effected
-by regimen and the remedies prescribed, in order to render life less
-insupportable; and if I succeed not, I am determined to kill myself.
-You will bury me in what manner you please; my epitaph is short.” He
-then read it; it consisted of the following two words from Petronius,
-“Valete, curæ”—“Farewell, care.” “Fortunately,” says Voltaire, “for him
-and myself, who loved him, he was cured, and did not kill himself.”
-
-Two young people—Auguste, aged twenty-six, and Henriette, aged
-eighteen—had long loved each other, but the parents of the girl would
-not consent to the match. In this difficulty the young man wrote to
-Henriette:—
-
-“Men are inexorable. Well, let us set them at defiance. God is
-all-powerful; our marriage shall be celebrated in his presence; and
-to-morrow, if you love me, we will write, in our blood, at the foot of
-the cross, our marriage vow.”
-
-This proposition turned the weak girl’s head, and she consented. They
-proceeded one night to a field near St. Denis, where there was a cross.
-On their way they made incisions in both their arms, to procure the
-blood in which the following _acte de mariage_ was written:—
-
-“O great God, who governs the destinies of mankind, take us under thy
-holy protection! As man will not unite us, we come on our knees to
-implore thy sanction to our indissoluble union. O God, take pity on two
-of thy poor children! Assemble all thy heavenly choir, that on so happy
-a day they may partake our transports, and be witnesses of the holy joy
-that shines in our hearts. O God! O ye angels of heaven and saints of
-Paradise! look down upon a happiness which even the blessed may envy.
-
-“And you, shades of our parents, come to this affecting ceremony, come
-and give us your approbation and your blessing. It is in the presence
-of you all that we, Pierre Auguste and Marie Henriette, swear to belong
-to each other, and to each other only, and to be faithful to each other
-to the hour of dissolution. Yes, we swear it—we swear it with one
-voice. You are our witnesses, and we are united for life and for death.
-
- (Signed in letters of blood), “PIERRE AUGUSTE.
- “MARIE HENRIETTE.”
-
-The very day after this visionary marriage it was dissolved by the
-suicide of the unfortunate Henriette. The moment her fault had become
-irreparable, her betrayer abandoned her, and the poor creature threw
-herself into the Seine. On the body was found the foregoing singular
-_acte de mariage_, to which she had subjoined, with a feeble hand, the
-following note:—
-
-“He has dishonoured me—the monster! He deceived me by pretences which
-went to my heart; but it is he who is to be pitied—wretch that he is!”
-
-A young woman, of a highly honourable commercial family, put an end to
-herself, overwhelmed with the idea of having forfeited the esteem of
-her husband. _Rosalie_ had from her youth been destined to be the wife
-of M. C——, a gentleman of her own station in life. Their union, though
-not distinguished by any transports of love, was soberly and rationally
-happy, and they had two children.
-
-Unfortunately, Madame C—— was obliged by affairs of business to go into
-the country while her husband remained in Paris. During this absence,
-she appears to have formed a guilty passion, (the circumstances of
-which have not been revealed;) but on her return home, the remorse
-of her conscience so preyed upon her spirits as to be at last
-unsupportable, and, after a long and painful struggle, she resolved
-upon suicide. Just before the fatal act, she wrote a long letter to her
-sister, of which we can only spare room for the most striking passages:—
-
-“I have resolved to terminate my existence to-day; but I have not had,
-during the whole morning, resolution to leave my poor little children,
-who are unconscious of their mother’s agony.... Forgive, my dear
-sister, the grief that my death is about to cause you. If my excellent
-husband has offended you, forgive him.... If I had appreciated his
-worth, I should not be the wretch I am: my negligence towards him
-began my misfortune, but I had nothing to reproach myself with till my
-fatal journey to Sarcelles—that journey was my ruin!... If I had your
-virtues, I should have been the happiest of women; but I allowed myself
-to be bewildered by a sentiment which I had not before known, and in my
-culpable frenzy I was guilty before I intended it. O, my God! may my
-repentance be accepted, and may thy goodness inspire my husband with
-a peculiar, an exalted degree of parental affection for those unhappy
-and innocent children. Protect them, O, my God, and grant that they may
-not curse the memory of their unhappy mother, who was guilty without
-intending it.
-
-“And you, O my dearest Louis, forgive your wretched wife, who offers
-you this her last farewell.”
-
-One may judge the consternation which this affecting letter spread in
-the family. The sister, on receiving this letter, hastened with Dr.
-Bouillet to Mr. C—— ’s house: it was too late—they found the poor woman
-in the last agonies of death, whilst her little children were playing
-about the adjoining room, indulging in the sports of their age.
-
-M. de Pontalba was one of the great proprietors of France. His son had
-been a page of Napoleon’s, and afterwards a distinguished officer,
-aide-de-camp to Marshal Ney, and a protégé of the Duke of Elchingen.
-He married the daughter of Madame d’Almonaster, and for some time they
-lived happily; but on the death of her mother, Madame de Pontalba began
-to indulge in such extravagances that even the enormous fortune of the
-Pontalbas was unequal to it. This led to some remonstrance on the part
-of her husband, on the morning after which she disappeared from the
-hotel, and neither he nor his children had any clue to her retreat. At
-last, after an interval of some months, a letter arrived from her to
-her husband, dated New Orleans, in which she announced that she meant
-to apply for a divorce; but for eighteen months nothing more was heard
-of her, except by her _drafts_ for money. At last she returned, but
-only to afflict her family. Her son was at the Military Academy of St.
-Cyr. She induced him to elope, and the boy was plunged in every species
-of debauchery and expense. This afflicted, in the deepest manner, his
-grandfather, who revoked a bequest he had made him of about £4,000 a
-year, and seemed to apprehend from him nothing but future ruin and
-disgrace. The old man, eighty-two years of age, resided in his Chateau
-of Mont Levéque, whither, in October, 1834, Madame de Pontalba went to
-attempt a reconciliation with the wealthy senior. The day after her
-arrival she found she could make no impression on her father-in-law,
-and was about to return to Paris, when old M. de Pontalba, observing
-a moment when she was alone in her apartment, entered it with a brace
-of double-barrelled pistols, locked the door, and, approaching his
-astonished daughter-in-law, desired her to recommend herself to God,
-for that she had but few minutes to live; but he did not even allow
-her one minute—he fired immediately, and two balls entered her left
-breast. She started up and fled to a closet, her blood streaming about,
-and exclaiming that she would submit to any terms, if he would spare
-her. “_No, no! You must die!_” and he fired his second pistol. She had
-instinctively covered her heart with her hand; the hand was miserably
-fractured by the balls, but it saved her heart. She then escaped to
-another closet, where a third shot was fired at her without effect; and
-at last she rushed in despair to the door, and while M. de Pontalba was
-discharging his last barrel at her, she succeeded in opening it. The
-family, alarmed by the firing, arrived, and she was saved. The old man,
-on seeing that she was beyond his reach, returned to his apartment,
-and blew out his brains. It seemed clear that he had resolved to make
-a sacrifice of the short remnant of his own life, in order to release
-his son and his grandson from their unfortunate connexion with Madame
-de Pontalba. But he failed—none of _her_ wounds were mortal; and within
-a month after, Madame de Pontalba, perfectly recovered, in high health
-and spirits, radiant, and crowned with flowers, was to be seen at all
-the fêtes and concerts of the capital.
-
-A wealthy inhabitant of St. Denis arrived from a long journey, in
-which he had occasion to carry a brace of pistols; these he deposited,
-loaded, on a table in his bed-chamber, and sat down to dinner with his
-family and some friends, invited to celebrate his return. Hardly had
-dinner begun when a discussion arose between the father and his eldest
-daughter, about twenty years of age. This young woman had always shewn
-great jealousy of her younger sister, of whom she pretended her father
-was fonder than of her. On this occasion the same feeling broke out,
-and after some strong exhibition of ill-temper on her part, her father
-said, “Nay, if you are sulky, you had better go to bed.” The girl got
-up immediately, went to her father’s bed-room, took one of the pistols,
-shot herself, and expired in a few hours in great agony.
-
-Sir George Dunbar, Baronet, Major in the 14th Light Dragoons, quartered
-at Norwich, unhappily got involved in a dispute with his fellow
-officers. He was a man of quick sensibility, which may have betrayed
-him into error on the occasion; but whichever party was to blame,
-the quarrel was of a most violent nature, and he returned home much
-bruised from blows received in the scuffle. The next day, repairing
-to the mess-room, he declared to the other officers, “That, if he had
-offended any of them, he was ready to make an apology; or, if that
-was not thought sufficient, to give them honourable satisfaction.”
-This proposal was refused, and the officers insisted “That he must
-sell out, for that, as he had abused the whole regiment, nothing else
-would or could satisfy them.” To this, Sir George replied, “That he
-would live and die in the regiment, of which he had been an officer
-for twenty years, and that a pistol should end the dispute.” Here
-ended all communication, but the business made a most deep impression
-on his mind. For two successive days he neither took food nor slept;
-and his melancholy appearance filled his family with the most lively
-apprehensions. Lady Dunbar locked up his razors, pistols, &c., and
-watched him with unceasing vigilance. Her distress at seeing him so
-wretched was very great, and in the night she moaned very much, and was
-quite restless. Sir George said, “Maria, you disturb me; I will get
-up;” which he immediately did, put on his watch-coat, and laid down
-on the floor. Lady Dunbar then endeavoured to conceal the anguish of
-her mind, in hopes to pacify him, and, being overcome with watching,
-fell asleep. Sir George, as soon as he perceived it, left the room,
-and at about five or six in the morning walked out. Her ladyship,
-when she awoke, being much alarmed at his absence, eagerly inquired
-for him, and was told he had taken a morning walk, having a violent
-headache, and thinking the air would do him good. This, however, proved
-only a pretence; for he had gone to purchase a case of pistols, and
-stood by while the bullets were casting, which, with the pistols, he
-brought home, concealed under his watch-coat. On his return, he went
-to Lady Dunbar, who took hold of his hand, observing at the same time,
-“How cold you are!” To which he answered, “Yes; I shall be better
-presently.” She then proposed to make breakfast, but he declined it,
-saying he had a letter to write first, and that he would ring to let
-her know when he had finished it. He then parted from her, after
-pressing her hand very hard; went to his study, wrote his will, and
-instantly after blew out his brains. Lady Dunbar, who heard the report
-of the pistol, ran down into the room, and fell insensible on his
-body, which lay extended on the floor, and from which she was taken up
-covered with his blood, and immediately removed to a friend’s house.
-They were a very happy couple, and she had accompanied him in all his
-campaigns.
-
-As George III. was passing in his carriage through the park to St.
-James’s, a gentleman dressed in black, standing in the green park,
-close to the rails, just as the carriage came opposite to where he
-stood, was observed to pull a paper hastily from his pocket, which
-he stuck on the rails, addressed to the king, threw off his hat,
-discharged a pistol in his own bosom, and instantly fell. Though
-surrounded with people collected to see the king pass, the rash act
-was so suddenly perpetrated, that no one suspected his fatal purpose
-till he had accomplished it. He expired immediately. In his left hand
-was a letter addressed “To the coroner who shall take an inquest on
-James Sutherland.” This unfortunate gentleman was judge-advocate at
-Minorca during the governorship of General Murray, with whom he had a
-law suit which terminated in his favour. The general, however, got him
-suspended and recalled. This, and the failure of some applications
-to government, had greatly deranged his mind. He was very genteelly
-dressed, but had only two-pence and some letters in his pocket; the
-letters were carried to the Secretary of State’s Office. He left a
-singular paper behind him, expressive of being in a sound mind, and
-that the act was deliberate.
-
-The following case is mentioned by Dr. A. T. Thomson, as illustrative
-of the extraordinary determination often exhibited by those resolved
-on self-destruction. A gentleman, who had long enjoyed an unblemished
-reputation, was appointed the treasurer of a society; but having
-unfortunately fallen into pecuniary difficulties, he not only applied
-the funds of the society to his own purposes, but forged some bills.
-As the punishment of the latter crime was penal at that period, on
-being arrested, he made an attempt upon his life, but did not succeed.
-His prior good character, and the respect in which he had been held,
-prevented him from being immediately sent to jail; and he was permitted
-to remain in the custody of the officer of justice who arrested him.
-The attempt which he had made upon his life rendered it requisite
-that every implement which could be employed by the suicide should
-be withheld from him; but in other respects, as much indulgence was
-extended to him as possible, under the circumstances of the case. His
-wife also was permitted to visit him, but she was searched before
-entering his apartment. He was locked up every night, and he was awoke
-in the morning by an officer, at a certain hour. On the third morning
-after his arrest, the officer, as usual, entered his room, and called
-to him, but received no answer; he then approached the bed, and found
-that his prisoner was dead. A medical man was immediately sent for. It
-appeared that this gentleman had studied anatomy, and knew how to use a
-lancet; and as he had a thorough conviction that he should be hanged,
-he had persuaded his wife to bring a lancet to him in her mouth. After
-being locked up for the night, he undressed himself, and opened the
-femoral artery, the blood from which he allowed to flow into the pan of
-the night chair, until, as was supposed, he became faint. He then bound
-a handkerchief round the upper part of the thigh, and placed himself in
-bed, in the position in which he was discovered. Notwithstanding his
-great loss of blood, he contrived so effectually to stem the further
-flow, that none was seen on the floor of the room, and only a few spots
-on the sheets of the bed.”
-
-A servant girl of Mursley, Bucks., committed suicide while her master
-and his men were weeding in the field, by taking a cord and tying it
-tight round the upper part of her left thigh, and with a fleam and
-stick used in bleeding cattle, making a deep incision through the
-artery. She bled to death before any assistance could be procured.
-
-John Upson, of Woodbridge, in Suffolk, a glover, who was committed to
-the castle for felony a few days before, hanged himself in his own room
-with a garter. The following verses were written in a prayer-book lying
-by him:—
-
- “Farewell, vain world, I’ve had enough of thee,
- And now am careless what thou say’st of me;
- Thy smiles I court not, nor thy frowns I fear,
- My cares are past, my heart lies easy here.
- What faults they find in me take care to shun,
- And look at home: enough is to be done.
-
- “June 26, 1774. POOR JOHN THE GLOVER.”
-
-Mr. Brower, a print-cutter, near Aldersgate-street, was attacked on
-the road to Enfield by a single highwayman, whom he recollected to
-be a tradesman in the city, and called him by his name. The robber
-immediately shot himself through the head.
-
-The case of a man is recorded in a French paper who burnt with one of
-the strongest passions of which we ever heard an account. His mistress
-having proved unfaithful to him, he called up his servant, informed him
-that it was his intention to kill himself, and requested that, after
-his death, he would make a candle of his fat, and carry it lighted to
-his mistress. He then wrote a letter, in which he told her that as he
-had long burnt for her, she might now see that his flames were real;
-for the candle by which she would read the note was composed of part of
-his miserable body. After this he committed suicide.
-
-Lieutenant Colonel Mautren, of the Prussian Hussars, having been
-stripped, at the gaming table, of all his property, even to his watch
-and the rings he wore, returned home. Next day he disposed of his
-commission; and having offered marriage to a respectable female whom
-he had seduced, a clergyman was sent for, and the ceremony performed.
-He then retired to a private room, and while some friends were
-felicitating the bride on her good fortune, the report of a pistol
-announced the catastrophe that had taken place. The company hastened
-to the room; but the Colonel was no more. On the table was a letter to
-his wife, mentioning the cause of his death and inclosing the amount of
-the sale of his commission.
-
-The particulars of the following case were read by M. Gerard de Gray,
-at the _Société de Médecine_. A young man, having spent in the capital
-all his finances, returned home to recruit his purse; but failing in
-his object, he resolved to put an end to himself. He made no secret of
-his determination. On the 16th of August he carried it into execution.
-His bed-room was about nine feet square, and a little more than six in
-height. On every aperture in it by which the air might possibly have
-admittance, he pasted paper, and about five in the afternoon lighted
-a brazier of coals, which he set on the floor close by his bed. He
-then left the apartment, carefully closing the door after him. At six,
-he said to an old lady, “My brazier is now ready—I go to die.” On
-the following morning, the family having become alarmed, the door of
-the chamber was forced open. An insupportable vapour issued from the
-place, and the body of the unfortunate youth was found stretched across
-the bed. On the floor, the brazier still occupied the place already
-mentioned; it was of considerable capacity, and seemed to have been
-lighted with paper. Near the body were placed two volumes of an old
-Encyclopædia; one of them at the foot of the bed, open at the article
-Ecstasy; the other near the right hand displayed the article Death. On
-the latter volume was a pencil and a bit of paper, with the words, _Je
-meurs avec calme et bonheur_, clearly written, with the date annexed;
-but beneath that there appeared, in characters very difficult to be
-read, the following words: _Au moment de l’agonie j’aurais voulu m’être
-procuré une sensation agréable_. It would appear that the deceased
-immediately on writing the scrawl, had fallen into the position in
-which he was found. The attitude did not betoken any struggle at the
-last moment; yet it seems probable, from the signs of sickness of the
-stomach, and the mention of agony in the last phrase, that life did
-not become extinct without some painful sensations.
-
-Madame Augine having been personally attached to the late Queen of
-France, expected to suffer under the execrable tyranny of Robespierre.
-She often declared to her sister, Madame Campan, that she never would
-wait the execution of the order of arrest, and that she was determined
-to die rather than fall into the hands of the executioner. Madame
-Campan endeavoured, by the principles of morality and philosophy, to
-persuade her sister to abandon this desperate resolution; and in her
-last visit, as if she had foreseen the fate of this unfortunate woman,
-she added, “Wait the future with resignation; some fortunate occurrence
-may turn aside the fate you fear, even at the moment you may believe
-the danger to be greatest.” Soon afterwards the guards appeared before
-the house where Madame Augine resided, to take her to prison. Firm in
-her resolution to avoid the ignominy of execution, she ran to the top
-of the house, threw herself from the balcony, and was taken up dead. As
-they were carrying her corpse to the grave, the attendants were obliged
-to turn aside to let pass the cart which conveyed Robespierre to the
-scaffold!
-
-In the year 1600, on the 10th of April, a person of the name of William
-Dorrington threw himself from the top of St. Sepulchre’s church, in
-London, having previously left on the leads or roof a paper of which
-the following is a copy:—
-
-“Let no other man be troubled for that which is my own fault; John
-Bunkley and his fellows, by perjury and other bad means, have brought
-me to this end. God forgive it them, and I do. And, O Lord, forgive
-me this cruel deed upon my own body, which I utterly detest, and most
-humbly pray him to cast it behind him; and that of his most exceeding
-and infinite mercy he will forgive it me, with all my other sins. But
-surely, after they had slandered me, every day that I lived was to me a
-hundred deaths, which caused me rather to die with infamy than to live
-in infamy and torment.
-
-“Oh, summa Deitas, quæ cœlis et superis presides, meis medere
-miseris, ut spretis inferis, letis superis, reis dona veniam.[79]
-
-“Trusting in his only passion and merits of Jesus Christ, and
-confessing my exceeding great sins, I say—‘Master, have mercy upon me!’”
-
-This paper was folded up in form of a letter, and indorsed, “Oh, let me
-live, and I will call upon thy name!”
-
-Thomas Davers, who built at a vast expense a little fort on the River
-Thames, near Blackwall, known by the name of Davers’s Folly, after
-passing through a series of misfortunes, chiefly owing to an unhappy
-turn of mind, put an end to his miserable life. Some few hours before
-his death, he was seen to write the following card:—“Descended from
-an ancient and honourable family, I have, for fifteen years past,
-suffered more indigence than ever gentleman submitted to; neglected by
-my acquaintance, traduced by my enemies, and insulted by the vulgar, I
-am so reduced, worn down and tired, that I have nothing left but that
-lasting repose, the joint and dernier inheritance of all.
-
- “Of laudanum an ample dose
- Must all my present ills compose;
- But the best laudanum of all
- I want (not resolution) but a ball.
-
- “N. B. Advertise this. T. D.”
-
-A farmer near Allandale, in Northumberland, procured a gun-barrel,
-which he loaded with powder and shot, and having placed the stock
-end in the fire, he leaned with his belly against the other. In this
-position he awaited the dreadful moment. When the barrel became hot, an
-explosion took place, by which he was shot through the body. He had,
-some time before, been in the habit of excessive drinking, which had
-impaired his intellects, and probably produced a derangement which led
-to the commission of the deed.
-
-Mr. Henry Grymes, of Virginia, U. S., whilst labouring under the
-influence of delirium, broke his skull with a stone. After having
-shattered it, he took out a piece about three inches long, and two
-broad. Concluding that this would not put a period to his existence, he
-thrust his fingers into his head, and tore out a considerable quantity
-of his brains. Instead of immediate death, _he instantly returned to
-the full exercise of reason!_ walked home, and lived to the second
-evening following. He appeared very penitent and rational to the last
-moment of his life; and in the meantime gave to his friends the above
-statement of the horrid transaction. The cause of this derangement is
-believed to have been a disappointment in marriage. Through the whole
-of his life he supported an unsullied character.
-
-“A blacksmith charged an old gun-barrel with a brace of bullets, and,
-putting one end into the fire of his forge, tied a string to the handle
-of his bellows, by pulling which he could make them play whilst he was
-at a convenient distance, kneeling down; he then placed his head near
-the mouth of the barrel, and moving the bellows by means of the string,
-they blew up the fire, he keeping his head, with astonishing firmness
-and horrible deliberation, in that position till the further end of the
-barrel was so heated as to kindle the powder, whose explosion instantly
-drove the bullets through his brain. Though I know this happened
-literally as I relate it, yet there is something so extraordinary,
-and almost incredible, in the circumstance, that perhaps I should not
-have mentioned it, had it not been well attested, and known to the
-inhabitants of Geneva, and to all the English there.”[80]
-
-A Hanoverian, eighty years of age, resided at a country house near
-Berne, with his five daughters, the eldest of whom was aged thirty,
-and the youngest sixteen. The family were of very retired habits,
-but were governed chiefly by the eldest sister, who was noted for her
-imperious disposition, and opposition to religion. A young Englishman,
-who had been for some time an occasional visitor to the house, became
-smitten with one of the daughters; and one fine evening, as the five
-sisters were taking the air in a carriage in the avenues of the Eugi,
-they met him in his cabriolet, accompanied by a friend. After parading
-up and down for some time, an exchange of vehicles was proposed to and
-accepted by the young ladies, one of whom accompanied the Englishman,
-and his friend entered the carriage with the ladies. A similar change
-was again effected, until the Englishman found himself with the object
-of his affections, with whom he immediately decamped. The others,
-thinking he had returned to the house by another road, gave themselves
-no uneasiness, but continued their road homewards. On arriving,
-however, they found he had not returned. The eldest sister, becoming
-alarmed, sent and informed the police that her sister had been run away
-with; and the next day, news having been received that the runaways
-were at Fribourg, she immediately set out for that place, accompanied
-by one of her sisters. Before her departure, she told the two who
-remained, that if she did not return by a certain hour, it would be a
-proof that their family was dishonoured; in which case, it became the
-duty of them all to renounce life. She required, and even extorted,
-from them a solemn oath, that they would drown themselves if they (the
-two elder sisters) did not return at the hour mentioned. On arriving
-at Fribourg, and finding their sister, whom they could not persuade
-to return home, they two resolved upon putting their resolution into
-effect; for which purpose they repaired to the banks of the Sarine; but
-the younger, on arriving, finding her courage fail, exclaimed, “Kill
-me, sister; I can never throw myself into the river.” The eldest drew
-out a dagger, and was about to perpetrate the deed, when a peasant
-coming up, interrupted the design. She immediately despatched the
-peasant to prevent her other two sisters from putting their oath
-into effect; but the precaution was too late. After having prepared
-every necessary for their aged father during the day, they dressed
-themselves in their best apparel, and, on arriving at the banks of
-the Aar, fastened themselves with a shawl, and, embracing each other,
-precipitated themselves into the river, in which position their bodies
-were found some time afterwards.
-
-The particulars of the following extraordinary case we find recorded
-in the Annual Register for 1823. It appears that a man of the name
-of Spring and his paramour, Mary Gooch, had agreed to commit mutual
-suicide. For that purpose a large dose of laudanum was purchased; but
-the dose which Spring took was not sufficient for his purpose, and
-he recovered. The poor woman was successful in killing herself. The
-following is the evidence given by Spring at the coroner’s inquest:—
-
-“John Spring said, that he was present with the deceased in bed when
-she died, about seven o’clock on Friday morning; that she did not
-die in agony; that on the Wednesday evening the deceased and witness
-came to an agreement to buy some laudanum to take together, that
-they might both be found dead together in the same bed; that on the
-Thursday morning, he (the witness) went to the chemist’s and bought
-some laudanum; he thinks four ounces; that when he came in, Mary Gooch
-said, ‘Your heart has failed you; you have not bought it for me;’ that
-she got up and felt witness’s pocket. The deceased said, ‘You have got
-something here.’ Witness replied, ‘Oh, that will soon do our business,
-if we take it.’ She said, ‘Have you any money left of what I gave
-you to buy it with?’ Witness said, ‘Yes, there are some halfpence.’
-The deceased said she would purchase some oranges with them, to take
-after it, and would send for them; that she sent a boy of Webb’s, who
-returned with two oranges; that the deceased peeled them; that she
-took two wine glasses off the shelf, and placed hers on the box, and
-said, ‘Now let us take it.’ She poured half into one glass, and half
-into another. One glass she kept to herself, and the other she gave to
-witness. The deceased said, ‘Let us take hold of each other’s hands.’
-Witness said, ‘No, my dear; if we do, we shall not take it; let us
-turn back to back, and take it.’ Deceased and witness turned their
-backs to one another, and drank the contents of the glasses. After
-they had drunk the laudanum, the deceased said, ‘What shall we do with
-the bottle?’ Witness said, he would go and throw it away. She said,
-she would in the mean time wipe the glasses. He threw away the bottle,
-and the deceased had wiped the glasses by the time he came back. The
-deceased said, ‘Let us go to bed.’ They both went to bed together.
-The deceased afterwards got out of bed, placed a chair against the
-door, to fasten it, and drew the window blinds. The deceased then
-said, ‘Now we shall die happily together.’ This was between two and
-three o’clock. He asked the deceased how she came by the money she had
-given him; the deceased said, ‘That is of no consequence, and does not
-signify;’ the deceased and witness conversed together about various
-things, till eight o’clock. She said, she had sent her gown to her
-aunt’s, and that the money came from her. The laudanum did not take
-any effect till about two; she then began to sleep. The witness was
-sick about four, and the deceased was awake at that time. The deceased
-was not sick at all, and fell into a sound sleep at six. The witness
-awoke her between six and seven; the deceased then said, ‘How large
-your eyes look!’ Witness said to her, ‘Mary, I am afraid my laudanum
-will take no effect.’ The deceased said, ‘Oh dear! if I should die
-without you, and you are taken before a court of justice, I shall not
-die easy.’ Witness told her she might be quite happy, for, if it did
-not take effect, he would get up and buy some that would, as he would
-die with her. The deceased said, ‘My dear, pray give me that blue
-muslin handkerchief, that I may have it in my hand when I die. Pray,
-don’t you take anything; but let me die, and you will get over.’ She
-then laid her head on the shoulder of the witness, and died almost
-immediately. The body began to grow cold by the time he came in from
-the town, about half-past eight. The deceased had been in a bad state
-of mind ever since he had known her. She always appeared to wish to
-die, and had attempted to destroy herself before, when the witness was
-at a fair. About a month previous, the deceased having come home in
-an unhappy state of mind, got up about twelve at night, took a linen
-line, pinned her cap over her head, and went out of the house, taking
-a small chair with her. She had one end of a rope about her neck, and
-was about to throw it over the arm of an apple-tree, when he overtook
-her, brought her in, and took the rope from her. The deceased, all
-Wednesday evening, was very anxious to die, and wished witness to die
-with her. On Thursday, she expressed a desire that they should both die
-together. The witness had known the deceased ever since Michaelmas Bury
-fair. She had been very anxious about the payment of the half-year’s
-rent; the witness said, he could go to his friends and get it; deceased
-said, ‘If you go away, I shall be afraid that you will not come back
-again.’ It was not from want that they committed the act; it had been
-in contemplation some time.”
-
-A young lady, at a boarding school near Birmingham, had been set a
-task, and felt indignant at being obliged to learn it out of an old
-book, while some of the other scholars were indulged with new ones.
-She went next day to an old woman in the neighbourhood, and told her
-“that she had had a singular dream,—that she was dead, and had been
-carried to her grave by such and such young ladies,” naming some of
-her companions and young friends; and asked the old woman what she
-thought of it; who replied, “that she put no faith in dreams.” A few
-days after, when going a walk with the other scholars, she loitered
-behind, and making her escape from the party, drowned herself in a
-pool near the school. She left her hat (or bonnet) on the edge of the
-pool, wherein was pinned a letter for her parents, entreating their
-forgiveness of such a rash act. She therein requested to have for her
-bearers those whom she had said she dreamed had carried her to her
-grave; and enclosed some locks of her hair as mementos of friendship.
-She was only about eleven years of age, and the daughter of very
-respectable parents in the neighbourhood.
-
-Sophia Edwards and Mary West, two female-servants, in the family of
-the Rev. John Gibbons, of Brasted, in Kent, were left in care of the
-house for some weeks, in consequence of the absence of their master
-and mistress. During this time they had the misfortune to break some
-articles of furniture, and to spoil four dozen of knives and forks,
-by incautiously lighting a fire in an oven where they had been placed
-to keep them from rust. The unfortunate girls, however, bought other
-knives and forks. Upon the return of Mr. and Mrs. Gibbons, the servants
-were severely reprimanded for what had happened, and one of them
-received notice to leave her place. They both appeared to be very
-uncomfortable for two days afterwards; and, on the second day, the
-footman heard them in conversation respecting Martha Viner, a late
-servant in the same family, who had drowned herself in a pond in the
-garden, and observing one to the other, that she had done so through
-trouble. The elder then said to the younger—“We will have a swim
-to-night, Mary!” The other replied—“So we will, girl.” The footman
-thought they were jesting, and said—“Ay, and I will swim with you!”
-Sophia Edwards replied—“No, you shan’t; but I will have a swim, and
-afterwards I will haunt you.” After this conversation, they continued
-about their work as usual, and at six o’clock asked the footman to get
-tea for them. While he was in the pantry for that purpose, he heard
-the kitchen door shut; and on his return into the kitchen, they were
-both gone. The footman afterwards thought he heard them upstairs, and
-therefore took no notice of their absence, until eight o’clock, when
-he told his master and mistress. Search was made for them about the
-house, garden, and neighbourhood, during the whole night; and early
-next morning, the same pond was dragged which had so recently been the
-watery grave of Martha Viner, when both their bodies were found in it,
-lying close to each other.
-
-The following whimsical instance of indifference as to the mode of
-suicide is related in Sir John Hawkins’s History of the Science and
-Practice of Music, vol. v. 7:—“One Jeremiah Clarke, organist of St.
-Paul’s, an. dom. 1700, was at the house of a friend in the country,
-from whence he took an abrupt resolution of returning to London. His
-friend having observed marks of great dejection in his behaviour, and
-knowing him to be a man disappointed in love, furnished him not only
-with a horse, but a servant to take care of him. A fit of melancholy
-seizing him on the road, he alighted and went into a field, in the
-corner whereof was a pond, and also trees; where he began to debate
-with himself, whether he should then end his days by hanging or
-drowning. Not being able to resolve on either, he thought of making
-what he looked on as chance, the umpire. He tossed a piece of money
-into the air, which came down on its edge and stuck in the clay. Though
-the determination answered not his wishes, it was far from ambiguous,
-as it seemed to forbid both methods of destruction; and would have
-given unspeakable comfort to a mind less disordered than his. Being
-thus interrupted in his purpose, he returned, and mounting his horse,
-rode on to London, where, in a short time after, he shot himself.
-
-Falret relates the case of an apothecary who, on receiving a reproof
-from his sweetheart, went home and blew out his brains, having first
-written the following sentence on his door—“When a man knows not how to
-please his mistress, he ought to know how to die.”
-
-A German merchant, aged thirty-two, depressed by severe reverses
-of fortune, came to the resolution of starving himself to death.
-With this view he repaired, on the 15th of September, 1818, to an
-unfrequented wood, where he constructed a hut of boughs, and remained,
-without food, till the 3rd of October following. At this period, he
-was found, by the landlord of a public-house, still alive, but very
-feeble, speechless, and insensible. Broth, with the yolk of an egg,
-was administered to him; he swallowed some with difficulty, and died
-immediately.
-
-In the pocket of the unfortunate man was found a journal, written in
-pencil, singular of its kind, and remarkable as a narrative of his
-feelings and sentiments. It commences in these words:—“The generous
-philanthropist, who shall one day find me here after my death, is
-requested to inter me; and in consideration of this service, to keep my
-clothes, purse, knife, and letter-case. Moreover observe, that _I am no
-suicide_, but have died of hunger, because through wicked men I have
-lost the whole of my very considerable property, and am unwilling to
-become a burden to my friends.” The ensuing remark is dated September
-17th, the second day of abstinence:—“I yet live; but how I have been
-soaked during the night, and how cold it has been. O God! when will my
-sufferings terminate! No human being has for three days been seen here;
-only some birds.” The journal continues, “And again, three days, and I
-have been so soaked during the night, that my clothes to-day are not
-quite dry. How hard this is no one knows, and my last hour must soon
-arrive. Doubtlessly, during the heavy rain, a little water has got into
-my throat; but the thirst is not to be slaked with water; moreover, I
-have had none even of this for six days, since I am no longer able to
-move from the place. Yesterday, for the first time during the eternity
-which, alas! I have already passed here, a man approached me within
-eight or ten paces. He was certainly a shepherd. I saluted him in
-silence, and he returned it in the same manner; probably, he will find
-me after my death!”
-
-“Finally, I here protest before the all-wise God, that, notwithstanding
-all the misfortunes which I have suffered from my youth, I yet die
-very unwillingly, although necessity has imperiously driven me to it.
-Nevertheless, I pray for it. Father, forgive him; for he knows not what
-he does! More I cannot write for faintness and spasms; and this will be
-the last. Dated near the forest, by the side of the Goat public-house.
-
- “Sept. 29, 1818. J. F. N.”
-
-
-It is evident, from the above account, that consciousness and the
-power of writing remained till the _fourteenth_ day of abstinence.
-The operation of famine was aggravated by mental distress, and still
-more by exposure to the weather. This, indeed, seems to have produced
-his most urgent sufferings. Subsequent to the common cravings and
-debility of hunger, his first physical distress appears to have been
-the sensation of cold; then cold and thirst; lastly, faintness and
-spasm. In this case we find no symptoms of inflammation. A want of
-nervous energy, arising from the reduction in the quantity or quality
-of the blood, appears to have been the principal disease. The effort
-of swallowing, and the oppression of food on the exhausted stomach,
-completed the catastrophe.[81]
-
-There is an extraordinary instance of suicidal design recorded, and
-which is worth noticing, were it only to shew the extent to which the
-human powers can sustain life unaided by proper nourishment, even
-though the intelligent principle be subverted.
-
-An officer, having experienced many mortifications, fell into a state
-of deep melancholy. He resolved to die of famine; and he followed up
-his resolution so faithfully that he passed forty-five days without
-eating anything, except on the fifth day, when he asked for some
-distilled water, in which was mixed a quarter of a pint of spirits of
-aniseed. This lasted him three days. Upon being told that this quantity
-of spirit was too much, he then took in each glass of water no more
-than three drops of it, and the same quantity of fluid lasted him
-thirty-nine days. He then ceased drinking, and took nothing at all
-daring the last six days. On the thirty-sixth day, he was obliged to
-recline on a couch. Every request to induce him to break his resolution
-was useless, and he was regarded as already lost, when chance recalled
-within him a desire to live. Having seen a child with a slice of bread
-and butter, the sight excited in him so violent an appetite that he
-instantly asked for some soup. They gave him every two hours some
-spoonsful of rice bouillie, and by degrees more nourishing diet, and
-his health, though slowly, was established.[82]
-
-Two young men, mere youths, entered a _restaurant_, bespoke a dinner of
-unusual luxury and expense, and afterwards arrived punctually at the
-appointed hour to eat it. They did so, apparently with all the zest
-of youthful appetite and glee. They called for champagne, and quaffed
-it hand-in-hand. No symptom of sadness, thought, or reflection of any
-kind, was observed to mix with their mirth, which was loud, long, and
-unremitting. At last came the _café noir_, the cognac, and the bill;
-one of them was seen to point out the amount to the other, and then
-burst out afresh into violent laughter. Having swallowed each a cup of
-coffee to the dregs, the _garçon_ was ordered to request the company of
-the _restaurateur_ for a few minutes. He came immediately, expecting,
-perhaps, to receive the payment of his bill, minus some extra charge
-which the jocund but economical youths might deem exorbitant.
-
-Instead of this, however, the elder of the two informed him that the
-dinner had been excellent, which was the more fortunate, as it was
-decidedly the last that either of them should ever eat; that for his
-bill, he must of necessity excuse the payment of it, as, in fact, that
-neither of them possessed a single sous; that upon no other occasion
-would they have thus violated the customary _etiquette_ between guest
-and landlord; but that finding this world, with its toils and its
-troubles, unworthy of them, they had determined once more to enjoy a
-repast of which their poverty must for ever prevent the repetition,
-and then take leave of existence for ever! For the first part of this
-resolution, he declared that it had, thanks to the cook and his cellar,
-been achieved nobly; and for the last, it would soon follow, for the
-_café noir_, besides the little glass of his admirable cognac, had been
-medicated with that which would speedily settle all their accounts for
-them.
-
-The _restaurateur_ was enraged. He believed no part of the rhodomontade
-but that which declared their inability to discharge their bill, and he
-talked loudly in his turn of putting them into the hands of the police.
-At length, however, upon their offering to give up their address, he
-was induced to allow them to depart.
-
-On the following day, either the hope of obtaining his money or some
-vague fear that they might have been in earnest in the wild tale that
-they had told him, induced this man to go to the address they had left
-with him; and he there heard that the two unhappy boys had been that
-morning found lying together, hand-in-hand, on a bed hired a few weeks
-before by one of them. When they were discovered, they were already
-dead and cold.
-
-On a small table in the room lay many written papers, all expressing
-aspirations after greatness that should cost neither labour nor care,
-a profound contempt for those who were satisfied to live by the sweat
-of their brow, sundry quotations from Victor Hugo, and a request that
-their names and the manner of their death might be transmitted to the
-newspapers.
-
-Many are the cases of young men, calling themselves friends, who have
-thus encouraged each other to make their final exit from life, if not
-with applause, at least with effect. And more numerous still are the
-tales recounted of young men and women found dead, and locked in each
-other’s arms, fulfilling literally, and with most sad seriousness, the
-destiny sketched so merrily in an old song—
-
- “Gai, gai, marions-nous—
- Mettons-nous dans la misère;
- Gai, gai, marions-nous—
- Mettons-nous la corde au cou.”[83]
-
-A woman drowned herself by breaking a hole in the ice of a pond
-sufficiently large to admit her head, which she put into the water, so
-that her body remained quite dry.
-
-A Greenwich pensioner, who had his allowance stopped from some
-misconduct, committed suicide by stabbing himself with his spectacles,
-which he sharpened to a point for that purpose.
-
-A man, with a determination to sacrifice his life, threw himself among
-the bears in the _Jardin du Roi_, in Paris. A bear sprung immediately
-upon him, and before he could be rescued from Bruin’s grasp, he was so
-mutilated that he died a few hours afterwards. Prior to his death he
-expressed much pleasure at having effected his purpose.
-
-A young lady, at the age of nineteen, was extremely beautiful,
-in possession of a large fortune, and by no means deficient in
-understanding or wit; but was immoderately fond of play. She soon
-gambled away her whole fortune. Reflections on the past became
-bitter; anticipation of the future alarming; melancholy increased,
-and weariness of life succeeded. Being at Bath, in the year 1731, she
-was seen to retire to her chamber with her usual composure, and was
-found in the morning hanging by a gold and silver girdle to a closet
-door. Her youth, beauty, and distress, rendered her an object of
-pity to every one but a near relation, who, on hearing of her death,
-was inhuman enough to exclaim, in a punning style—“Then she has tied
-herself up from play.”
-
-On the morning of her death she left these lines in the window:—
-
- “O death, thou pleasing end of human woe!
- Thou cure for life! thou greatest good below!
- Still mayst thou fly the coward and the slave,
- And thy soft slumbers only bless the brave.”
-
-On reading which a gentleman wrote thus:—
-
- “O dice, ye vain diverters of our woe!
- Ye waste of life! ye greatest curse below!
- May ne’er good sense again become your slave,
- Nor your false charms allure and cheat the brave.”
-
-A man whose name and connexions were unknown, was found dead in his
-chamber at an inn, in Kent, with the following paper lying beside him:—
-
- Lost to the world, and by the world forsaken,
- A wretched creature,
- Who groaned under a weary life
- Upwards of thirty years, without knowing
- One happy hour.
- And all
- In consequence of one single error,
- Committed in early days,
- Though highly venial
- As being the mere effects of juvenile folly,
- And soon repented of.
- But, alas!
- The poor prodigal
- Had no kind father that would take him home,
- And welcome back his sad repentant virtue
- With fond forgiveness and the fatted calf.
- Here
- He sinks beneath his mighty load of ills,
- And with
- His miserable being lays them down,
- Heart-broken,
- At the age of fifty.
- Tender reader, give him a little earth
- For charity.
-
-A middle aged Frenchman, decently dressed, hanged himself in a
-public-house in Old Street Road. A letter written in French was found
-in his pocket, setting forth that some years ago, he dreamt he was
-to die that day, if not, he was to be damned; and therefore, for the
-salvation of his soul, he had thought it necessary to put an end to his
-life.
-
-A young gentleman, living in London, had paid his addresses to an
-agreeable young lady, won her heart, and obtained the consent of her
-father, to whom she was an only child. The old gentleman had a fancy to
-have them married at the same parish church where he himself had been,
-at a village in Westmoreland; and they accordingly set out alone, the
-father being at the time indisposed with the gout, in London.
-
-The bridegroom took only his man, and the bride her maid; and when they
-arrived at the place appointed, the bridegroom wrote the following
-letter to his wife’s father:—
-
-“SIR,—After a very pleasant journey hither, we are preparing for the
-happy hour in which I am to be your son. I assure you the bride carries
-it, in the eyes of the vicar who married you, much beyond her mother;
-though he says, your open sleeves, pantaloons, and shoulder-knot,
-made a much better shew than the finical dress I am in. However, I am
-contented to be the second fine man this village ever saw, and shall
-make it very merry before night, because I shall write from thence,
-Your most dutiful son,
-
- “T. D.”
-
-“P. S. The bride gives her duty, and is as handsome as an angel. I am
-the happiest man breathing.”
-
-
-The bridegroom’s servant knew his master would leave the place very
-soon after the wedding was over, and seeing him draw his pistols the
-night before, took an opportunity of going into his chamber and charged
-them.
-
-Upon their return from the garden they went into that room, and,
-after a little fond raillery on the subject of their courtship, the
-bridegroom took up one of the pistols, which he knew he had unloaded
-the night before, presented it to her, and said, with the most
-graceful air, whilst she looked pleased at his agreeable flattery,
-“Now, madam, repent of all those cruelties you have been guilty of
-towards me; consider, before you die, how often you have let a poor
-wretch freeze under your casement. You shall die, you tyrant! you shall
-die with all those instruments of death about you,—with that enchanting
-smile, those killing ringlets of your hair!”
-
-“Give fire,” said she, laughing. He did so, and shot her dead. Who can
-speak his condition? But he bore it so patiently as to call up his
-man. The poor wretch entered, and his master locked the door upon him.
-“Will,” said he, “did you charge these pistols?” He answered, “Yes;”
-upon which his master shot him dead with the undischarged instrument of
-death. After this, amidst a thousand broken sobs, piercing groans, and
-distracted motions, he wrote the following letter to the father of his
-dead mistress:—
-
-“SIR,—Two hours ago, I told you truly I was the happiest man alive.
-Your daughter lies dead at my feet, killed by my own hand through a
-mistake of my man’s charging my pistols unknown to me! I have murdered
-him for it. Such is my wedding-day. I will follow my wife to her grave;
-but before I throw myself upon my sword, I command my distraction
-so far as to explain my story to you. I fear my heart will not keep
-together till I have stabbed it. Poor, good old man, remember that he
-who killed your daughter died for it! In death I give you thanks, and
-pray for you though I dare not pray for myself. If it be possible, do
-not curse me. Farewell for ever!
-
- “T. D.”
-
-
-This being finished, he put an end to his life. The body of the servant
-was interred in the village where he was killed; and the young couple,
-attended by their maid, were brought to London, and privately interred
-in one grave, in the parish in which the unhappy father resided.
-
-The following case occurred in England not many years ago. A young
-couple, the wife aged sixteen and the husband nineteen, discovered,
-a few months after marriage, that money was much more easily spent
-than procured; and being unable to live in the style they wished, they
-determined, after having held a long consultation on the subject, that
-their best and only remedy was at once to put an end to their imaginary
-miseries by committing suicide. After dinner, the husband attended his
-usual business, and brought home with him at tea-time a quarter of a
-pound of sugar of lead, for the purpose of executing their design. The
-whole of this poison was dissolved in a pot of coffee, and carefully
-strained and sweetened, to render it more palatable. The young man
-then deliberately wrote a letter, explaining the circumstances to his
-father, to whom he had previously sent a message, requesting him to
-call in the evening. At the time appointed the husband and wife drank
-off the poison, and then, embracing each other, laid down to die.
-When they were discovered, all that they could be induced to say was
-the word “poison.” Medical assistance was immediately procured, but
-no persuasions could induce them to take an antidote, both of them
-heroically resolving to die. The young woman, however, reconsidered
-the point, and began to think that death was not so agreeable a thing
-as she first supposed; but, retaining her feelings of obedience strong
-in death, imploringly said to her husband, when she was pressed to
-take the medicine offered, “Shall I take it, dear?” To this he gave
-a direct negative, enforcing it with an oath; but her love of life
-triumphed over her sense of obedience to the commands of her lord, and
-she consented to swallow the antidote. The husband, however, was not
-so willing to venture upon the cares and vexations of the world, and
-obstinately persisted in dying; but as this was not thought prudent, he
-was made by physical force to swallow the medicine, and was restored to
-life, and is still in the land of the living.
-
-Instances of mutual suicide are by no means uncommon on the Continent,
-and were not unknown in ancient times. The inhabitants of England have
-not become as yet romantic enough for these exhibitions. The case
-of M. Kleist, the celebrated Prussian poet, and Madame Vogle, may
-be fresh in the minds of our readers. Madame Vogle, it is said, had
-suffered long under an incurable disorder; her physicians had declared
-her death inevitable; she herself came to a resolution to put an end
-to her existence. M. Kleist, the poet, and a friend of her family,
-had also determined to kill himself. These two unhappy beings, having
-confidentially communicated to each other their horrible resolution,
-resolved to carry it into effect at the same time. They repaired to the
-inn at Wilhemstadt, between Berlin and Potsdam, on the borders of the
-Sacred Lake. For one night and one day they were preparing themselves
-for death, by putting up prayers, singing, drinking wine and rum, and
-concluded by drinking sixteen cups of coffee. They wrote a letter to
-M. Vogle, to announce to him the resolution they had taken, and to
-beg him to come as speedily as possible, for the purpose of seeing
-their remains devoutly interred. After having despatched the letter to
-Berlin, they repaired to the bank of the Sacred Lake, where they sat
-down opposite to each other. M. Kleist then took a loaded pistol and
-shot Madame Vogle through the heart,—she instantly fell back dead; he
-then reloaded the pistol, and applying the muzzle to his own head, blew
-out his brains.
-
-A horrid scene of mixed murder and suicide, accompanied with great
-calmness in its execution, was exhibited in the year 1732, in the
-family of one Richard Smith, a bookbinder. This man being a prisoner
-for debt within the walls of the King’s Bench, was found hanging in his
-chamber, together with his wife; and their infant of two years old lay
-murdered in a cradle beside them. Smith left three letters behind him,
-one of which was addressed to his landlord, in which he says:—“He hopes
-effects enough will be found to discharge his lodgings, and recommends
-to his protection his ancient dog and cat.” A second was addressed to
-his cousin Brindley, and contained severe censure on the person through
-whose means he had been brought into difficulties, with a desire also
-that Brindley would make the third letter public, which was as follows:—
-
-“These actions, considered in all their circumstances, being somewhat
-uncommon, it may not be improper to give some account of the cause;
-and that it was an inveterate hatred we conceived against poverty and
-rags, evils that through a train of unlucky accidents were become
-inevitable. For we appeal to all that ever knew us, whether we were
-idle or extravagant, whether or no we have not taken as much pains
-to get our living as our neighbours, although not attended with the
-same success. We apprehend the taking our child’s life away to be a
-circumstance for which we shall be generally condemned; but for our
-own parts we are perfectly easy on that head. We are satisfied it is
-less cruelty to take the child with us, even supposing a state of
-annihilation as some dream of, than to leave her friendless in the
-world, exposed to ignorance and misery. Now in order to obviate some
-censures which may proceed either from ignorance or malice, we think it
-proper to inform the world, that we firmly believe the existence of an
-Almighty God; that this belief of ours is not an implicit faith, but
-deduced from the nature and reason of things. We believe the existence
-of an Almighty Being from the consideration of his wonderful works,
-from those innumerable celestial and glorious bodies, and from their
-wonderful order and harmony. We have also spent some time in viewing
-those wonders which are to be seen in the minute part of the world, and
-that with great pleasure and satisfaction. From all which particulars
-we are satisfied that such amazing things could not possibly be without
-a first mover,—without the existence of an Almighty Being. And as we
-know the wonderful God to be Almighty, so we cannot help believing that
-he is also good—not implacable, not like such wretches as men are,
-not taking delight in the misery of his creatures; for which reason
-we resign up our breath to him without any terrible apprehensions,
-submitting ourselves to those ways which in his goodness he shall
-please to appoint after death. We also believe in the existence of
-unbodied natures, and think we have reason for that belief, although
-we do not pretend to know their way of subsisting. We are not ignorant
-of those laws made _in terrorem_, but leave the disposal of our bodies
-to the wisdom of the coroner and his jury, the thing being indifferent
-to us where our bodies are laid. From hence it will appear how little
-anxious we are about a ‘_hic jacet_.’ We for our part neither expect
-nor desire such honours; but shall content ourselves with a borrowed
-epitaph, which we shall insert in this paper:
-
- ‘Without a name, for ever silent, dumb;
- Dust, ashes, nought else is within this tomb;
- Where we were born or bred it matters not;
- Who were our parents, or have us begot.
- We ‘were, but are not.’ Think no more of us,
- For as we are, so you’ll be turn’d to dust.’
-
-“It is the opinion of naturalists, that our bodies are at certain
-stages of life composed of new matter; so that a great many poor men
-have new bodies oftener than new clothes. Now, as divines are not
-able to inform us which of those several bodies shall rise at the
-resurrection, it is very probable that the deceased body may be for
-ever silent as well as any other.
-
- (Signed,) “RICHARD SMITH,
- “BRIGET SMITH.”
-
-
-A lady and gentleman visited an hotel in the neighbourhood of Paris,
-and ordered dinner to be prepared in a private room. The lady, who
-appeared only nineteen years of age, was most magnificently attired.
-The gentleman was observed to pay her marked attention, and addressed
-her with the most endearing epithets. The dinner consisted of every
-luxury of the season. After drinking a large quantity of wine, the
-gentleman requested that they should not be disturbed, and he was heard
-to lock the door. Half an hour afterwards, a report of a pistol was
-heard in the room. The master of the hotel was alarmed. The assistance
-of the police was obtained, and the door of the room in which the
-lady and gentleman had dined forced open. The lady was found on the
-floor dead, and the gentleman a short distance from her, in the last
-struggle of death. Two pistols were found near the bodies. It appeared
-that they had agreed to commit mutual suicide, and each being provided
-with a loaded pistol, fired at and killed each other. On the table
-was found a piece of paper, on which were written with a pencil the
-following words:—“We, H***d and Maria **, were enamoured of each other.
-Circumstances beyond the control of man prevent our alliance. We have
-no alternative but separation or death; and believing death to be one
-eternal dream of bliss, we, after much meditation, have determined to
-kill each other. We affix our signatures to this document.
-
- “H***D,
- “MARIA **.”
-
-
-Two devoted lovers, disappointed in obtaining the consent of their
-parents to their union, resolved upon dying. They experienced some
-difficulty in deciding how to effect their purpose. The lady expressed
-an abhorrence of pistols, and the gentleman was equally repugnant to
-the rope. After much hesitation, they agreed to throw themselves into
-the river, and stated their intention to a friend, who, thinking they
-were merely joking, observed—“Well, I think you will find the water
-very cold; I should advise you to put on warm clothing before you jump
-in.” In the evening they were missing, and on searching the river, they
-were discovered, tied to each other, quite dead.
-
-The suicide of Sir R. Croft has often been alluded to. He attended
-the late Princess Charlotte in her confinement, and her much lamented
-death, although not owing to any want of skill on his part, preyed
-much on his mind, and drove him to the rash act. He fancied he saw the
-spirit of the princess glide through his room. The sight of an open
-razor on the table first suggested the idea of self-destruction to
-him. He was a physician of great skill, and was much beloved by all who
-knew him.
-
-A bishop of Grenoble affords an instance of suicidal ingenuity. He
-took a rod on which his bed-curtains hung, and suspended it across by
-a stick, which communicated with the trigger of his fowling-piece. He
-then sat quietly down, with his feet hanging over the rod, and placing
-the muzzle of the gun in his mouth, held it fast. He had nothing more
-now to do than to drop his leg upon the rod, when the gun went off, and
-three bullets entered his brain.
-
-The fortitude which suicides display is amazing. A servant girl of the
-Dean of——, who had always borne a most excellent character, was accused
-by the family of theft. She immediately repaired to the wash-house,
-immersed her head in a pail of water, and was found dead in that
-position. What must have been the courage of this poor creature, who,
-when writhing under the lash of a false accusation, kept her head under
-water, despite the horrible sense of suffocation that must have come on!
-
-A French soldier of the name of Bordeaux, being determined to put an
-end to his life, persuaded a comrade, called Humain, to follow his
-example. They both repaired to an inn at St. Denis, and bespoke a good
-dinner. One of them went out to buy some powder and balls. They spent
-the day (Christmas) together with great cheerfulness, called for more
-wine; and, about four o’clock in the evening, blew out their brains,
-leaving some empty bottles, their will, a letter, and half-a-crown, in
-addition to the amount of their bill.
-
-The following letter was addressed by Bordeaux to the lieutenant of his
-troop, and was as follows:—
-
-“SIR,—During my residence at Guise, you honoured me with your
-friendship. It is time to thank you. You have often told me that
-I appeared displeased with my situation. I was sincere, but not
-absolutely true. I have since examined myself more seriously, and
-acknowledge that I am disgusted with every state of man, the whole
-world, and myself. From these discoveries a consequence should be
-drawn,—if disgusted with the whole, renounce the whole. The calculation
-is not long,—I have made it without the aid of geometry. In short, I
-am about putting an end to the existence that I have possessed for
-near twenty years, fifteen of which have been a burden to me; and from
-the moment that I have ended this letter, a few grains of powder will
-destroy this moving mass of flesh, which we vain mortals call the king
-of beings. I owe no one an excuse. I deserted. That was a crime; but
-I am going to punish it, and the law will be satisfied. I asked leave
-of absence from my superior officers, to have the pleasure of dying at
-my ease. They never condescended to give me an answer. This served to
-hasten my end. I wrote to Bord to send you some detached pieces I left
-at Guise, which I beg you will accept. You will find that they contain
-some well chosen literature. These pieces will solicit for me a place
-in your remembrance. Adieu, my dear lieutenant! Continue your esteem
-for St. Lambert and Dorat. As for the rest, skip from flower to flower,
-and acquire the sweets of all knowledge, and enjoy every pleasure.
-
- ‘Pour moi, j’arrive au trou,
- Qui n’echappe ni sage ni fou,
- Pour aller je ne sais où.’
-
-“If we exist after this life, and it is forbidden to quit it without
-permission, I will endeavour to procure one moment to inform you of it;
-if not, I shall advise all those who are unhappy, which is by far the
-greater part of mankind, to follow my example. When you receive this
-letter, I shall have been dead at least twenty-four hours.
-
- With esteem, &c.
- “BORDEAUX.”
-
-
-Lord Scarborough exhibited the same nonchalance in the act of killing
-himself as he did when he resigned his situation as master of the
-horse. He was reproached in the House of Peers with taking the king’s
-part because he had a good place at court. “My Lords,” said he, “to
-prove to you that my opinion is independent of my place, I resign it
-this moment.” He afterwards found himself in a perplexing dilemma
-between a mistress whom he loved, but to whom he had promised nothing,
-and a woman whom he esteemed, and to whom he had promised marriage.
-Not having sufficient resolution to decide which to choose, he killed
-himself to escape the embarrassment.
-
-Perhaps the coolest attempt at self-destruction on record, the _chef
-d’œuvre_ of a suicide, is one related by Foderé. An Englishman
-advertised extensively that he would on a certain day put himself to
-death in Covent Garden, for the benefit of his wife and family. Tickets
-of admission a guinea each.
-
-Voltaire states that Creech, the translator of Lucretius, wrote on
-the margin of the manuscript, “Remember to hang myself after my
-translation is finished,” and he accordingly did so.[84] Zimmerman
-asserts that he committed suicide in order to escape from the contempt
-of his countrymen, in consequence of the ill-success that attended the
-translation of Horace, which followed Lucretius. Mr. Jacob, however,
-observes, in reply to the statement of Zimmerman, that Creech did not
-hang himself until seventeen years after the appearance of his Horace.
-His death was attributed at the time to some love affair, or to his
-morose and splenetic temper.
-
-The history of the unfortunate _Madame de Monnier_ is full of interest.
-It has been asserted that her death was the result of an ardent passion
-for Mirabeau; but we think it has clearly been established that, at
-the time of her suicide, she had abandoned all claim to his affection,
-and had formed a strong attachment to a person who, although highly
-respectable in point of rank, was very inferior to herself. It is well
-known that Mirabeau had a _liaison_ with Madame de Monnier, the wife of
-the Marquis de Monnier, whom she abandoned. After residing seven years
-with her seducer, mutual jealousies and suspicions arose, and all
-intercourse between them ceased. After the death of her husband, the
-Marquis de Monnier, she became enamoured of M. Edme. Benoit de Poterat,
-a retired captain of cavalry, a widower, thirty-five years of age.
-The lovers were mutually captivated, and they agreed to marry. Before
-this happy event, however, could be arranged, the ill health of M. de
-Poterat forced him to quit the country, and Madame de Monnier resolved
-to terminate her own existence. She often conversed with her intimate
-friend Dr. Ysabeau on the effects of suffocation from charcoal wood.
-She asked whether death necessarily ensued? The doctor replied, that
-when suffocation was gradual and incomplete, instances had been known
-of persons saved by the instinctive effort of introducing air into the
-room. On the death of M. de Poterat, which took place on the 8th of
-September, 1789, Madame de Monnier was overcome with grief. Dr. Ysabeau
-and his wife did all they could to console her, but without effect.
-Being alone one day, she collected her papers, tied them in bundles,
-sealed them, wrote a letter containing her last directions, and entered
-a closet, the smallness and closeness of which she considered well
-suited to the design she had long resolved to carry into execution.
-She then closed and carefully calked the door and the window. Two
-chafing dishes full of charcoal, which she had just lighted, were then
-placed by her, one on each side of the arm chair upon which she seated
-herself. In order to prevent her purpose from being counteracted by
-any instinctive effort of nature, she bound her legs, first under and
-then above her clothes. She then tied one of her arms to the chair, and
-fixed the other, and in this position calmly awaited death. When it was
-discovered that she had attempted suicide, M. Bousseau, Procureur du
-Roi of the Bailliage, proceeded to the house, attended by a surgeon,
-who, without adopting the most simple means of resuscitation, commenced
-opening the body, on the supposition that she was _enceinte_. In the
-meanwhile, a messenger was dispatched for Dr. Ysabeau, who rode full
-gallop towards Madame de Monnier’s house; but he arrived too late; the
-operation had been performed, and life was extinct. From the symptoms
-which were present before the ignorant and barbarous surgeon commenced
-the operation, Dr. Ysabeau expressed a firm belief that he could have
-restored her to animation.[85]
-
-M.——, aged twenty-seven, a native of Burgundy, who was equally favoured
-by nature and by fortune, fell passionately in love with a young lady.
-For a long time he solicited in vain the consent of his parents to the
-match, but at length love triumphed. Scarcely a month had elapsed after
-his marriage, when he was seized with a lowness of spirits, a disgust
-of life, and a frightful desire to commit suicide. Everything which
-the tenderness of a young and loving wife, and the solicitude of the
-whole family, by whom he was loved, could suggest, was done to disperse
-these gloomy ideas, and reconcile him to life; but the unfortunate
-fellow was too deeply sunk in his melancholy. He at length quitted
-Burgundy, and went to Paris with his brother to consult a physician.
-The day after he had arrived, he went to M. Esquirol, made known his
-sad state to him, assuring him that his weariness of life was not the
-result of any physical disease, of any disappointment, or of any moral
-pain; affirming, on the contrary, that he was surrounded with nothing
-but subjects of contentment. His brother confirmed this declaration.
-He left M. Esquirol, and promised to return the next day and commit
-himself to his care in his establishment. The next day arrived, the
-young man went out at six o’clock in the morning, purchased a pair of
-pistols, and returned at seven. He then proposed to his brother to set
-out together for Rouen; but he reminded him of the promise he had given
-to M. Esquirol, adding, to prevent his changing his mind, that he had
-months suitable to go. At that instant M.—— took out his two pistols,
-and placing the mouth of one of them at his brother’s forehead, said,
-“If you do not consent to go with me immediately, I will instantly blow
-out your brains with this pistol, and afterwards kill myself with the
-other.” The brother, on hearing this, fell at his feet in a swoon, and
-when he recovered, he no longer saw his unfortunate relative who had
-threatened him, and he trembled lest he should have gone to some secret
-place to terminate his life. He at once gave notice to the police, and
-demanded that the most active of their body should be sent in search of
-him. On his part, he neglected nothing which could give him any clue to
-his discovery; he inquired of his friends and his acquaintances, but
-heard nothing of him until the next day, when he received intelligence
-from the police that the body of a man shot through the head, had been
-found in the forest of Seuart. It was that of his unfortunate brother.
-
-M. Escousse, author of a drama called Faruck le Maure, about twenty,
-and M. Lebras, about fifteen, both united by the closest ties of
-friendship, and each of a melancholy turn of mind, committed suicide
-at Paris. They had often complained of the miseries of this world, and
-talked of the necessity of quitting it. M. Escousse wrote the following
-note to his friends:—“I shall expect you at half-past eleven o’clock;
-the curtain will be raised; come, and we will at length arrive at the
-_dénouement_.” The young Lebras arrived at the appointed time, the
-charcoal was ignited, and the two friends expired together.
-
-A young woman of Marseilles, remarkable for her beauty, formed a
-connexion with a cabinetmaker, whose parents objected to their union.
-They were found quite dead, clasped in each other’s arms, having been
-suffocated by a quantity of burning charcoal. They were both dressed in
-the most elegant manner, and must have spent many hours at their toilet
-preparing for their last adieu.
-
-The following case related by Gall cannot easily be paralleled. The
-first lieutenant of a company in which a man named Prochaska served
-became enamoured of the wife of the latter; but she resisted all his
-entreaties. The officer, irritated by this obstinacy, was guilty of
-some injustice to the husband. Prochaska appeared dejected and morose,
-but the following day he appeared at the dinner table and seemed
-quite tranquil. A few days afterwards he and his wife attended the
-confessional and took the sacrament. He dined in good spirits, and
-took a few glasses of wine. In the evening, he and his wife went out
-to walk, and he expressed himself in terms of great affection for her.
-He asked her, however, if she had made a candid and full confession to
-the priest; and on being answered in the affirmative, he coolly plunged
-a poniard in her breast; seeing that she was not instantly dispatched,
-he cut her throat across, in order to release her from her sufferings.
-He now repaired to his house, and seizing his two children, who were
-in bed asleep, he actually hacked them in pieces with a hatchet.
-Having committed these three murders, he repaired to the main guard,
-and with the most perfect coolness and deliberation detailed the whole
-particulars of the bloody deed. He concluded in these words:—“_Let the
-lieutenant now make love to my wife if he pleases!_” Shortly after
-this, he stabbed himself to the heart.
-
-A young lady threatened, without ceasing, to kill herself, and made
-many attempts at it. An old uncle with whom she lived, tired by her
-repeated menaces, proposed a walk in the country; and taking her to
-the brink of a piece of water, he commenced undressing himself. “Now,
-niece,” said he, “throw yourself into the water, and I will follow
-after you.” He continued pressing her, and pushed her towards it; but
-after some struggling, she cried out that she was unwilling to die, and
-would never more talk of killing herself.
-
-A young woman, married to a churlish husband, and who, although the
-mother of many children, was unhappy in domestic life, determined to
-fall by her own hands. She threw herself into a part of the river
-sufficiently deep for the execution of her project, but a man,
-passing by, drew her out, and compelled her to go home. The necessary
-attentions were paid her, and she recovered; but it was observed that
-she stood in much dread of water, and felt a pain even in going into a
-bath. She, besides, had a fit of melancholy at the time in which she
-endeavoured to drown herself. This fit lasted two or three months; it
-was followed by a month of great excitement, and then she remained calm
-during the remainder of the year.
-
-The bell of the church at Fressonville, in Picardy, was heard to sound
-at an unusual hour, and in a very extraordinary manner. The people
-hastened to make inquiry, and found a man suspended from the clapper.
-He was immediately cut down, and after some time restored to life. No
-motives are assigned for the act.
-
-A person of melancholy temperament, and who detested his parents on
-account of their injustice towards him, had recourse to the chase as
-a diversion from his domestic sorrows. One day, being weary, he lay
-down in the shade by the side of his weapon and his dog, the faithful
-companion of his misfortunes, and fell into a profound sleep. He awoke
-in an agitated state of mind, and the idea occurred to him of making an
-eternal sleep follow the temporary one he had so much enjoyed. Pleased
-with this, he got up, increased the charge of his fowling-piece, and
-was about to blow out his brains, when he sensibly reflected in this
-manner—“What! am I about to shorten my days because my unjust and
-unnatural parents deprive me of their property? This is to give them
-their utmost desire, and to abandon to them that which they cannot take
-from me.”
-
-Matthew Lovat was born at Casale, a hamlet belonging to the parish
-of Soldo, in the territory of Belluno. His father’s name was Mark,
-and being in poor circumstances, the son was employed in the coarsest
-labours of husbandry. His education and habits must have been in
-accordance with his station; but it appears that, being attracted by
-the comfortable and easy circumstances of the rector and curate,
-the only persons in the parish who lived without manual labour, he
-placed himself under the latter with the desire of entering the
-priesthood. From him he learned to read and write a little, but he
-was too poor to gratify this inclination, and betook himself to the
-trade of a shoemaker. Whether this disappointment had any effect on
-Lovat we cannot tell, but he never became expert at his trade, and was
-distinguished for his gloominess and silence. When he grew older, he
-became subject to attacks of giddiness in the head in the spring, and
-to eruptions of a leprous character. Except this gloominess and his
-great attention to religious exercises, nothing remarkable was noticed
-about Lovat until July, 1802. At this period he performed an operation
-upon himself, which subjected him so much to the ridicule of his
-neighbours that he was compelled to remain within doors, and to refrain
-even from going to mass. He left the village in November, and went to
-Venice, where he had a younger brother, who recommended him to a widow,
-with whom he lodged until the 21st of September in the following year,
-working regularly as a shoemaker, and without exhibiting any signs of
-insanity. On that day he made his first attempt to crucify himself.
-Having constructed a cross out of the wood of his bed, he proceeded
-to nail himself to it in the middle of the street, called the Cross
-of Biri, and was only prevented by some persons who seized him as he
-was about to drive the nail through his left foot. He was interrogated
-as to his motives, but would give no answer, except on one occasion,
-when he said that the day was the festival of St. Matthew, and that
-he could not explain further. A few days after this had happened, he
-left Venice, and went to his native village, but returned soon after,
-and continued working at his trade for nearly three years without
-exhibiting further signs of his malady. Having taken a room in a third
-story in the street Delle Monache, his old delusion again seized him,
-and he commenced making at his leisure hours the machine on which he
-intended to accomplish his purpose, and providing the nails, ropes,
-bands, crown of thorns, &c. He perceived that it would be difficult
-to nail himself firmly to the cross, and therefore made a net, which
-he fastened over it, securing it at the bottom of the upright beam a
-little below the bracket he had placed for his feet, and at the ends of
-the two arms. The whole apparatus was securely tied by two ropes, one
-from the net, and the other from the place where the beams intersected
-each other. These ropes were fastened to the bar above the window, and
-were just sufficiently long to allow the cross to lie horizontally upon
-the floor of his apartment. Having finished these preparations, he next
-put on his crown of thorns, some of which entered his forehead; and
-then, having stripped himself naked, he girded his loins with a white
-handkerchief. He then introduced himself into the net, and seating
-himself on the cross, drove a nail through the palm of his right hand
-by striking its head against the floor until the point appeared on the
-other side. He now placed his feet on the bracket he had prepared for
-them, and with a mallet drove a nail completely through them both,
-entering a hole he had previously made to receive it, and fastening
-them to the wood. He next tied himself to the cross by a piece of
-cord round his waist, and wounded himself in the side with a knife
-which he used in his trade. The wound was inflicted two inches below
-the left hypochondre, towards the internal angle of the abdominal
-cavity, but did not injure any of the parts which the cavity contains.
-Several scratches were observed on his breast, which appeared to have
-been done by the knife in probing for a place which should present no
-obstruction. The knife, according to Lovat, represented _the spear of
-passion_.
-
-All this he accomplished in the interior of his apartment, but it was
-now necessary to shew himself in public. To accomplish this, he had
-placed the foot of the cross upon the window sill, which was very
-low, and by pressing his fingers against the floor, he gradually drew
-himself forward, until the foot of the cross overbalancing the head,
-the whole machine tilted out of the window, and hung by the two ropes
-which were fastened to the beam. He then, by way of finishing, nailed
-his right hand to the arm of the cross, but could not succeed in fixing
-his left, although the nail by which it was to have been fixed was
-driven through it, and half of it came out of the other side.
-
-This took place at eight o’clock in the morning. Some persons by whom
-he was perceived ran up stairs, disengaged him from the cross, and put
-him to bed. A surgeon in the neighbourhood who was called in ordered
-his feet to be put in water, introduced some tow into the wound in the
-hypochondre, which he said did not reach the cavity, and prescribed
-some cordial.
-
-Luckily, Dr. Bergierri, to whom we are indebted for the particulars
-of this case, was passing near, and came immediately to the house.
-When he arrived, his feet, from which but a small quantity of blood
-had flowed, were still in water; his eyes were shut; he gave no answer
-to the questions of those around him; his pulse was convulsive; his
-respiration difficult; he was, in fact, in a state which required the
-most prompt means of assistance. Having obtained permission of the
-director of police, who had come to the spot to ascertain what had
-happened, he had him removed by water to the Imperial Clinical School
-at the Hospital of St. Luke and St. John, of which he then had the
-superintendence. The only observation Lovat made while being conveyed
-was to his brother Angelo, who was lamenting his extravagance; he
-replied, “_Alas! I am very unfortunate_.” His wounds were examined
-afresh on his arrival at the hospital, and it was quite evident that
-the nails had entered at the palm of the hand, and passing between the
-bones of the metacarpus without doing them much injury, had gone out of
-the back. The nail which fastened the feet first entered the right foot
-between the second and third bones of the metatarsus, and then passed
-between the first and second of the left foot, laying them open and
-grazing them. The wound in the hypochondre was found to extend to the
-point of the cavity.
-
-The patient all this time was quite docile, and did everything that was
-required of him. The wounds in the extremities were treated with fresh
-oil of sweet almonds and bread and milk poultices, renewed several
-times a day. Some ounces of the mixture cardiaca opiata and a little
-very weak lemonade were taken at intervals during the first six days.
-On the fifth day the wounds of the extremities suppurated, and on the
-eighth, that in the hypochondre was perfectly healed.
-
-Dr. Bergierri frequently questioned him as to the motives he had
-in crucifying himself, and always received the same answer—“_The
-pride of man must be mortified; it must expire on the cross_.” Lovat
-seldom spoke; he sat with his eyes closed, and a gloomy expression of
-countenance. The impression on his mind that he must crucify himself
-was very deep. He seemed fully persuaded that this was an obligation
-imposed on him by the will of the Deity, and wished to inform the
-tribunal of justice that this was his destiny, in order that they might
-not suspect that he had received his death from any other hand than his
-own. He had expressed these ideas on a paper which he wrote before his
-attempt, and which afterwards fell into the hands of Dr. B.
-
-He did not complain much of pain during the first seven days, but
-on the morning of the eighth he suffered severely; this, however,
-was soon removed by the remedies had recourse to. In the course of a
-short time Lovat was completely restored to bodily health, but his
-mind retained until his death the same melancholy caste, although he
-never had another opportunity of putting his sanguinary project into
-execution.[86]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-CAN SUICIDE BE PREVENTED BY LEGISLATIVE ENACTMENTS?—INFLUENCE OF MORAL
-INSTRUCTION.—CONCLUSION.
-
-
- The legitimate object of punishment—The argument of
- Beccaria—A legal solecism—A suicide not amenable to human
- tribunals—Evidence at coroners’ courts, _ex-parte_—The old
- law of no advantage—No penal law will restrain a man from
- the commission of suicide—Verdict of _felo-de-se_ punishes
- the innocent, and therefore unjust—Are suicides insane, and
- therefore not responsible agents?—The man who reasons himself
- into suicide not of sound mind—Rational mode of preventing
- suicide by promoting religious education.
-
-The only legitimate object for which punishment can be inflicted is
-the prevention of crime. “Am I to be hanged for stealing a sheep?”
-said a criminal at the Old Bailey, addressing the bench. “No,” replied
-the judge; “you are not to be hanged for stealing a sheep, but _that
-sheep may not be stolen_.” Every punishment, argues Beccaria, which
-does not arise from absolute necessity is unjust. There should be a
-fixed proportion between crimes and punishments. Crimes are only to be
-estimated by the injury done to society; and the end of punishment is,
-to prevent the criminal from doing further injury, as well as to induce
-others from committing similar offences.
-
-The act of suicide ought not to be considered as a crime in the
-legal definition of the term. It is not an offence that can be
-deemed cognizable by the civil magistrate. It is to be considered a
-sinful and vicious action. To punish suicide as a crime is to commit
-a solecism in legislation. The unfortunate individual, by the very
-act of suicide, places himself beyond the vengeance of the law; he
-has anticipated its operation; he has rendered himself amenable to
-the highest tribunal—viz., that of his Creator; no penal enactments,
-however stringent, can affect him. What is the operation of the law
-under these circumstances? A verdict of _felo-de-se_ is returned, and
-the innocent relations of the suicide are disgraced and branded with
-infamy, and that too on evidence of an _ex-parte_ nature. It is unjust,
-inhuman, unnatural, and unchristian, that the law should punish the
-innocent family of the man who, in a moment of frenzy, terminates his
-own miserable existence. It was clearly established, that before the
-alteration in the law respecting suicide, the fear of being buried
-in a cross-road, and having a stake driven through the body, had
-no beneficial effect in decreasing the number of suicides; and the
-verdict of _felo-de-se_, now occasionally returned, is productive of no
-advantage whatever, and only injures the surviving relatives.
-
-When a man contemplates an outrage of the law, the fear of the
-punishment awarded for the offence may deter him from its commission;
-but the unhappy person whose desperate circumstances impel him to
-sacrifice his own life can be influenced by no such fear. His whole
-mind is absorbed in the consideration of his own miseries, and he even
-cuts asunder those ties that ought to bind him closely and tenderly to
-the world he is about to leave. If an affectionate wife and endearing
-family have no influence in deterring a man from suicide, is it
-reasonable to suppose that he will be influenced by penal laws?
-
-If the view which has been taken in this work of the cause of
-suicide be a correct one, no stronger argument can be urged for the
-impropriety of bringing the strong arm of the law to bear upon those
-who court a voluntary death. In the majority of cases, it will be
-found that some heavy calamity has fastened itself upon the mind,
-and the spirits have been extremely depressed. The individual loses
-all pleasure in society; hope vanishes, and despair renders life
-intolerable, and death an apparent relief. The evidence which is
-generally submitted to a coroner’s jury is of necessity imperfect;
-and although the suicide may, to all appearance, be in possession of
-his right reason, and have exhibited at the moment of killing himself
-the greatest calmness, coolness, and self-possession, this would not
-justify the coroner or jury in concluding that derangement of mind was
-not present.
-
-If the mind be overpowered by “grief, sickness, infirmity, or other
-accident,” as Sir Mathew Hale expresses it, the law presumes the
-existence of lunacy. Any passion that powerfully exercises the mind,
-and prevents the reasoning faculty from performing its duty, causes
-temporary derangement. It is not necessary in order to establish the
-presence of insanity to prove the person to be labouring under a
-delusion of intellect—a false creation of the mind. A man may allow
-his imagination to dwell upon an idea until it acquires an unhealthy
-ascendency over the intellect, and in this way a person may commit
-suicide from an habitual belief in the justifiableness of the act.[87]
-If a man, by a distorted process of reasoning, argues himself into a
-conviction of the propriety of adopting a particular course of conduct,
-without any reference to the necessary result of that train of thought,
-it is certainly no evidence of his being in possession of a sound mind.
-A person may reason himself into a belief that murder, under certain
-circumstances not authorized by the law, is perfectly just and proper.
-The circumstance of his allowing his mind to reason on the subject
-is a _prima facie_ case against his sanity; at least it demonstrates
-a great weakness of the moral constitution. A man’s _morale_ must be
-in an imperfect state of development who reasons himself into the
-conviction that self-murder is under any circumstances justifiable.
-
-We dwell at some length on this subject, because we feel assured that
-juries do not pay sufficient attention to the influence of passion in
-overclouding the understanding. If the notion that in every case of
-suicide the intellectual or moral faculties are perverted, be generally
-received, it will at once do away with the verdict of _felo-de-se_.
-Should the jury entertain a doubt as to the presence of derangement,
-(and such cases may present themselves,) it is their duty, in
-accordance with the well-known principle of British jurisprudence, to
-give the person the benefit of that doubt; and thus a verdict of lunacy
-may be conscientiously returned in every case of this description.
-
-Having, we think, clearly established that no penal law can act
-beneficially in preventing self-destruction,—first, because it would
-punish the _innocent_ for the crimes of the _guilty_; and, secondly,
-that, owing to insanity being present in every instance, the person
-determined on suicide is indifferent as to the consequences of his
-action,—it becomes our province to consider what are the legitimate
-means of staying the progress of an offence that undermines the
-foundation of society and social happiness.
-
-In the prevention of suicide, too much stress cannot be laid on the
-importance of adopting a well-regulated, enlarged, and philosophic
-system of education, by which all the _moral_ as well as the
-intellectual faculties will be expanded and disciplined. The education
-of the intellect without any reference to the moral feelings is a
-species of instruction calculated to do an immense amount of injury.
-The tuition that addresses itself exclusively to the perceptive and
-reflective faculties is not the kind of education that will elevate
-the moral character of a people. Religion must be made the basis of
-all secular knowledge. We must be led to believe that the education
-which fits the possessor for another world is vastly superior to
-that which has relation only to the concerns of this life. We are no
-opponents to the diffusion of knowledge; but we are to that description
-of information which has only reference “to the life that is, and not
-to that which is to be.” Such a system of instruction is of necessity
-defective, because it is partial in its operation. Teach a man his
-duty to God, as well as his obligations to his fellow-men; lead him to
-believe that his life is not his own; that disappointment and misery
-is the penalty of Adam’s transgression, and one from which there is
-no hope of escaping; and, above all, inculcate a resignation to the
-decrees of Divine Providence. When life becomes a burden, when the
-mind is sinking under the weight of accumulated misfortunes, and no
-gleam of hope penetrates through the vista of futurity to gladden the
-heart, the intellect says, “Commit suicide, and escape from a world of
-wretchedness and woe;” the moral principle says, “Live; it is your duty
-to bear with resignation the afflictions that overwhelm you; let the
-moral influence of your example be reflected in the characters of those
-by whom you are surrounded.”
-
-If we are justified in maintaining that the majority of the cases
-of suicide result from a vitiated condition of the moral principle,
-then it is certainly a legitimate mode of preventing the commission
-of the offence to elevate the character of man as a moral being. It
-is no legitimate argument against this position to maintain that
-insanity in all its phases marches side by side with civilization and
-refinement; but it must not be forgotten that a people may be refined
-and civilized, using these terms in their ordinary signification, who
-have not a just conception of their duties as members of a Christian
-community. Let the education of the _heart_ go side by side with the
-education of the _head_; inculcate the ennobling thought, that we
-live not for ourselves, but for others; that it is an evidence of
-true Christian courage to face bravely the ills of life, to bear with
-impunity “the whips and scorns of time, the oppressor’s wrong, and the
-proud man’s contumely;” and we disseminate principles which will give
-expansion to those faculties that alone can fortify the mind against
-the commission of a crime alike repugnant to all human and Divine laws.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[1] Cæsar’s reply on being told of Cato’s death was reported
-to be—“Cato, I envy thee thy death, for thou hast envied me the
-preservation of thy life;” on which Plutarch remarks, “Had Cato
-suffered himself to be preserved by Cæsar, it is likely he would not so
-much have impaired his own honour, as augmented the other’s clemency
-and glory.” But Cato’s own idea was, that it was an insupportable
-instance of Cæsar’s tyranny and usurpation that he should “pretend” to
-shew clemency in saving lives over whom he had no legal authority.
-
-[2] The affection and resolution of an obscure private soldier was
-very remarkable, who, standing before Otho with his drawn sword, spoke
-thus—“Behold in my action an instance of the unshaken fidelity of all
-your soldiery. There is not one of us but would strive thus to preserve
-thee,” and immediately he stabbed himself to the heart. Many private
-soldiers, after Otho’s death, gave the same proof of fidelity to their
-deceased lord.—_Plutarch’s Life of Otho._
-
-[3] It is said that the night before the battle the same spectre
-appeared to Brutus, but vanished without saying anything.
-
-[4] Tac. An. xvi.
-
-[5] At Anchiale, there was a monument erected to the memory of
-Sardanapalus. It consisted of an image carved in stone work, and having
-the thumb and the finger of the right hand joined, as if making some
-sound or noise with them. On the monument was inscribed these words in
-Assyrian characters: “Sardanapalus, the son of Anacyndarax, founded
-Anchiale and Tyre in one day. Eat, drink, and be merry. As for the
-rest, it is not worth the snap of the finger.”
-
-[6] Varro _de Ling. Lat._, lib. iv.
-
-[7] 1 Samuel, xxxi.
-
-[8] This is the only case of suicide recorded in the New Testament.
-Judas’s conduct is condemned in the strongest language; he is called in
-the Gospel of St. John (vi. 70,) “a devil, and the son of perdition;”
-and in the first chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, at the 25th
-verse, after the account given of his violent death, he is said to have
-gone _to his own peculiar place_. (Εἰς τὸν τόπον τὸν ἴδιον.)
-
-Virgil thus alludes to the “place of punishment” allotted to those who
-sacrifice wantonly their own lives:—
-
- “Proxima deinde tenent mæsti loca, qui sibi letum
- Insontes peperêre manu, lucemque perosi
- Projecêre animas. Quàm vellent æthere in alto
- Nunc et pauperiem et duros perferre labores!
- Fas obstat. Tristique palus inamabilis undâ
- Alligat, et novies Styx interfusa coërcet.”
-
- (ÆNEIS, lib. vi. ver. 434 et seq.)
-
- “The next in place and punishment are they
- Who prodigally throw their souls away:
- Fools, who, repining at their wretched state,
- And loathing anxious life, suborn their fate:
- With late repentance now they would retrieve
- The bodies they forsook, and wish to live;
- Their pains and poverty desire to bear,
- To view the light of heaven and breathe the vital air.
- But fate forbids, the Stygian floods oppose,
- And with nine circling streams the captive souls inclose.”
-
- (DRYDEN.)
-
-[9] Macc. i. 6.
-
-[10] There is something sublime in the stern copiousness with which the
-stoics dwelt particularly on the facility with which suicide may be
-committed. “Ante omnia cavi, ne quis vos teneret invitos: PATET EXITUS.
-Si pugnare non vultis, licet fugere. Ideoque ex omnibus rebus, quas
-esse vobis necessarias volui, nihil feci facilius, quam mori. Attendite
-modo et videbitis quam brevis ad libertatem et quam expedita ducat
-via. Non tam longas in exitu vobis quam intrantibus, moras posui,”
-&c.—_Seneca de Providentia_, in fine. Vide epistle lxx.
-
-[11] Epistles xii. and lxx.; and De Irâ, lib. iii.
-
-[12] Corpus Juris Civilis, lib. xlviii. tit. xxi. parag. 3.
-
-[13] Vide Potter’s Antiquities.
-
-[14] Universal Geography, vol. iii. p. 155.
-
-[15] It is generally believed that Rousseau killed himself by taking
-arsenic; but this has been denied. Judging from the character and
-disposition of the man, we should feel disposed to credit the statement
-respecting his voluntary death. Rousseau always maintained that
-the following stanza of Tasso had a direct application to him, and
-accurately described his feelings and position in the world—
-
- “Still, still ’tis mine with grief and shame to rove,
- A dire example of disastrous love;
- While keen remorse for ever breaks my rest,
- And raging furies haunt my conscious breast,
- The lonely shades with terror must I view,
- The shades shall every dreadful thought renew:
- The rising sun shall equal horrors yield,
- The sun that first the dire event revealed;
- Still must I view myself with hateful eye,
- And seek, though vainly, from myself to fly.”
-
-[16] _Duverger de Haurane_, abbot of St. Cyran, regarded as the founder
-of Port Royal, wrote, in the year 1608, a treatise on suicide, which
-has, says Voltaire, become one of the scarcest books in Europe.
-
-He says the decalogue forbids us to kill. In this precept, self-murder
-seems no less to be comprised than murder of our neighbour. But if
-there are cases in which it is allowable to kill our neighbour, there
-likewise are cases in which it is allowable to kill ourselves. We must
-not make an attempt upon our lives until we have consulted reason. The
-public authority, which holds the place of God, may dispose of our
-lives. The reason of man may likewise hold the place of the reason of
-God,—it is a ray of the eternal light.
-
-Voltaire, disposed as he was to advocate the right of committing
-suicide whenever a man considered death preferable to a dishonourable
-life, had sufficient sagacity to see through the glaring sophistry of
-St. Cyran’s reasoning on this point. The same author says, “A man may
-kill himself for the good of his prince, for that of his country, or
-for that of his relations.”
-
-[17] It is evident that the great dramatist considered that suicide was
-opposed to the divine will.
-
- “Against self-slaughter
- There is a prohibition so divine,
- That cravens my weak hand.”
-
-Again, he says—
-
- “Or that the Everlasting had not fixed
- His canon ’gainst self-slaughter!”
-
-[18] Warder’s “Letters from the Northumberland.”
-
-[19] London Medical and Surgical Journal, vol. v. p. 51.
-
-[20] In a table given by Professor Caspar, of Berlin, one hundred and
-three cases of suicide are attributed to mental affections; thirty of
-these may be classed under this head, and thirty-two under that of fear
-and despondency combined.
-
-[21] The massacre of St. Bartholomew lasted seven days, during which
-more than 5000 persons were slain in Paris, and from 40 to 50,000 in
-the country. During the execution, the king betrayed neither pity nor
-remorse, but fired with his long gun at the poor fugitives across the
-river; and on viewing the body of Coligni on a gibbet, he exulted with
-a fiendish malignity. In early life, this monster had been noted for
-his cruelty: nothing gave him greater pleasure than cutting off the
-heads of asses or pigs with a single blow from his _couteau de chasse_.
-After the massacre, he is said to have contracted a singularly wild
-expression of feature, and to have slept little and waked in agonies.
-He attributed his thirst for human blood to the circumstance of his
-mother having at an early period of his life familiarized his mind with
-the brutal sport of hunting bullocks, and with all kinds of cruelty. It
-is recorded that, when dying, he actually sweated blood.
-
-[22] Hist. Eccles. edit. Duaci, 1622, pp. 643-4.
-
-[23] Meaning the Duke of Gloucester.
-
-[24] King Henry, Act 3.
-
-[25] Dr. Johnson’s Rasselas.
-
-[26] Goëthe, in allusion to one of his own early attachments.
-
-[27] Love, it is said, often turns the brains of the Italians, even the
-men. M. Esquirol says, “Frenchmen seldom go mad from love. A Frenchman
-often kills himself in a sally of passion and feeling, but is seldom in
-love long enough to go mad about it.”
-
-[28] “Love.”
-
-[29] O’Meara’s “Voice from St. Helena,” vol. i. p. 57.
-
-[30] “Life of Napoleon,” vol. viii. p. 244.
-
-[31] It is worthy of remark that the judge who condemned, as well as
-the disciple who betrayed, our Saviour, were both driven by despair to
-suicide. The fate of Judas is recorded in the Gospel; the concluding
-scenes in the life of Pontius Pilate are related by two learned
-historians (_Josephus_ and _Eusebius_). The former says that “Pontius
-Pilate, after having exercised great cruelties in his government of
-Judæa, was, before the Roman Emperor (Caligula), stripped of all his
-dignities and fortunes, and banished to Gaul, where it is said he
-suffered such extreme hardships of body and despair of mind, that,
-after lingering for two years, he became his own executioner.”
-
-[32] Lessing.
-
-[33] On Lunatic Asylums.
-
-[34] Vide Mathews’ Life, by his widow, vol. ii. p. 158.
-
-[35] Dr. Haslam.
-
-[36] “Revue Médicale,” Dec. 1821.
-
-[37] Under the heathen mythology, it was believed that the struggles of
-death continued till Proserpine had cropped the hair on the crown of
-the head, as victims were treated at the altar. Virgil has preserved
-this opinion in the fourth book of the Æneid, where he gives so fine a
-picture of the dying agonies of Dido.
-
-[38] It is only by reasoning physiologically that we can conclude that
-the act of dying is not a painful process. In proportion as death
-seizes its victim, so must consciousness be suspended. What can be more
-painful to the beholder than to witness the convulsive struggles, and
-the foaming at the mouth, of a person in an epileptic fit, who, when
-restored to consciousness, has no recollection of what has occurred? He
-remembers the premonitory indications, and that is all. Death is but
-an epileptic struggle. A phenomenon attends the dying moment which we
-do not recollect to have seen noticed. A man who fell into the water,
-and who rose several times to the surface, had a consciousness of the
-hopelessness and awfulness of his situation; he felt that death was
-inevitable. With this conviction on his mind, he saw presented to him
-a picture of his past life; the minutest action in which he had been
-engaged was brought in a kind of tableau before him. Circumstances that
-had long been forgotten were conjured from his brain, and he had a
-bird’s-eye view of his past career. Possibly, this may occur to every
-person at the moment of dying. The expressions of those placed under
-such circumstances would indicate as much.
-
-[39] Foreign Quarterly Review, vol. xvi.
-
-[40] Vol. xxi. for 1837.
-
-[41] It is related by Lord Bacon, in his “Historia Vitæ et Mortis,”
-that a friend of his, who was particularly anxious to ascertain
-whether criminals suffered much pain in undergoing the sentence of
-the law, on one occasion suspended himself by the neck, having for
-that purpose thrown himself off a stool, on which he supposed he could
-readily remount, when he had carried his experiment sufficiently far
-to satisfy his curiosity. The report goes on to state, that the loss
-of consciousness which followed would have led to a fatal termination
-of the experiment, had not a friend accidentally entered the apartment
-in time to save the life of the adventurous experimentalist. Foderé
-relates a similar incident of one of his fellow-students. This young
-man, after an argument respecting the cause of death in hanging,
-resolved personally to gratify his curiosity, by passing a ligature
-round his neck, and attaching it to a hook behind the door. To
-accomplish this, he had raised himself on tip-toe, and now gradually
-brought his heels to the ground. He soon lost all consciousness,
-but was cut down by a companion, who discovered him, in a state of
-insensibility, very soon after the commencement of the experiment,
-and by the prompt application of remedial measures he was finally
-recovered. From cases of this description we learn that the first
-effect experienced in hanging is the appearance of a dazzling light
-before the eyes, accompanied by tingling in the ears. These sensations
-are, however, momentary, for insensibility and death rapidly close the
-scene.
-
-[42] Gazette Litteraire.
-
-[43] Foreign Literary Gazette.
-
-[44] In 1806, upwards of sixty voluntary deaths took place at Rouen,
-during June and July, the air being at that time remarkably humid and
-warm; and in July and August of the same year, more than three hundred
-were committed at Copenhagen, the constitution of the atmosphere
-presenting the same characteristics as it did at Rouen. The year 1793,
-presented in the town of Versailles alone the horrible spectacle of
-thirteen hundred suicides.
-
-[45] This was Philip Mordaunt, cousin-german to the celebrated Earl of
-Peterborough, so well known to all European courts, and who boasted of
-having seen more postillions and kings than any other man. Mordaunt
-was young, handsome, of noble blood, highly educated, and beloved by
-those who knew him. He resolved to die. Preparatory to his doing so,
-he wrote to his friends, paid his debts, and even made some verses on
-the occasion. He said his soul was tired of his body, and when we are
-dissatisfied with our abode, it is our duty to quit it. He put a pistol
-to his head and blew out his brains. An uninterrupted course of good
-fortune was the only motive that could be assigned for this suicide.
-
-[46] M. Falret.
-
-[47] Dict. des Sciences Med., vol. liii.
-
-[48] Previous to Cowper’s attempt at suicide, he had fallen into the
-company of two sophists, who both advanced claims to the right of
-self-destruction, and whose fallacious arguments won him to their
-pernicious views, which were, besides, aided by his recollection of
-a certain book containing similar reasoning, which, however weak in
-itself, now seemed to his disordered mind irrefragable.
-
-[49] Dr. J. Johnson.
-
-[50] Vide Dr. Conolly.
-
-[51] Wordsworth.
-
-[52] The _possunt quia posse videuntur_ feeling is not sufficiently
-encouraged by medical philosophers in treating mental affections.
-
-[53] History of Music.
-
-[54] Edinburgh Medical Trans.
-
-[55] Lib. xii. cap. 51.
-
-[56] When Pope was on his death-bed, Bolingbroke observed to the
-weeping attendants, “I have known Pope these thirty years; he was the
-kindest-hearted man in the world.”
-
-[57] Prior to the more urgent symptoms developing themselves, he
-appeared to be endeavouring to recollect Dr. B., and addressed him as
-Dr. Death.
-
-[58] A medical student, twenty years of age, was seized with mania,
-arising from the presence of worms in the intestines. He felt the most
-acute pains in the different regions of his body, appearing to him
-as if persons were driving arrows into him, more particularly in the
-palms of his hands and soles of his feet. This caused him to utter most
-distressing cries, to seek to be alone, and prevented him from walking.
-The intolerable pains and madness left him as soon as the worms were
-expelled.
-
-[59] “When powerful feelings or passions are in active operation, in
-the insane or in the sane, they draw the muscles of the face into
-particular forms; and, if they continue for a length of time to be
-greatly predominant, they impress upon the countenance an appearance
-indicative of the character. This is felt and acted upon unconsciously
-in the common intercourse of life. A good countenance is a letter of
-recommendation; and we have, in spite of ourselves, an unfavourable
-feeling towards a stranger where this is absent. Now in the generality
-of suicidal cases, the desponding feelings are in constant and active
-operation; hence there is usually a melancholy and gloomy expression of
-countenance. This arises from no mysterious cause peculiar to insanity,
-but is perfectly intelligible on common physiognomical principles; but
-there are numerous instances where the most experienced physician would
-be unable to detect, by inspection only, the slightest mark of either a
-disposition to suicide or insanity. The absence of this expression must
-not, therefore, induce us to suppose that this disposition does not
-exist.”—SIR W. ELLIS.
-
-[60] Ellis on Insanity.
-
-[61] Indications of Insanity.
-
-[62] Journ. Gen. de Médecine, Juillet, 1822.
-
-[63] “Pain is an evil; death, the deprivation of every hope or comfort
-in this life. No man in his senses will burn, drown, or stab himself;
-for these all produce what are called evils; neither can any of these
-actions be executed without the probability of pain in the convulsive
-action or struggles of death. As no rational being will voluntarily
-give himself pain, or deprive himself of life, which certainly, while
-human beings preserve their senses, must be acknowledged evils, it
-follows that every one who commits suicide is indubitably _non compos
-mentis_, not able to reason justly, but is under the influence of false
-images of the mind; and therefore suicide _should ever be considered an
-act of insanity_.”—DR. ROWLEY.
-
-[64] Lowness of spirits ought to be regarded and treated as insanity,
-says Ellis, and not dreaded as its forerunner. For it is at this stage
-that suicide is resorted to. Should this not be the case, specific
-hallucinations may speedily appear, and the agony of mind will be
-endured as a consequence of bankruptcy, the unfaithfulness of a friend,
-the persecutions of enemies, or the ravages of an incurable disease.
-No demonstration of the untenableness of such grounds, no picture of
-brighter and happier circumstances, will avail to refute or encourage.
-The sufferer clings to his hoarded misery. There is generally great
-loss of physical strength in cases of this kind, and the pale emaciated
-countenance, dull and sunken eye, and listless dejected form, tell as
-plainly as the querulous complaint, or the long intricate description
-of sorrows and anticipated evils, to what class the patient belongs.
-
-[65] Vide Lord Dover’s Life of Frederick, and Ray on Med. Juris.
-
-[66] Dr. J. Johnson.
-
-[67] Hill on Insanity.
-
-[68] This was no doubt an hallucination of the senses. On another
-occasion, when in the House of Commons, Lord Castlereagh fancied
-he saw the same “Radiant Boy.” Does not this fact establish that
-his lordship’s senses were not always in a healthy condition? It is
-possible that when impelled to suicide he laboured under some mental
-delusion.
-
-[69] Notes to Metzger.
-
-[70] Annales de Hyg. pub. et de Méd. Lég. tom. v. p. 156.
-
-[71] We have availed ourselves of Dr. Taylor’s translation of the
-particulars of the prince’s death, which are recorded with much
-minuteness in the “Annales d’Hygiène Publique, et de Médecine Légale.”
-
-[72] Foderé, vol. iii. p. 167; from the Causes Célèbres. See also
-Grimm’s Historical and Literary Memoirs, (from 1753 to 1769,) vol. ii.
-pp. 41, 117, and 166.
-
-[73] Travels in Asia, Africa, &c.
-
-[74] To which may be added, anticipation of punishment, or disgrace
-from misconduct.
-
-[75] Méd. Légale, iv. § 948; and Smith on Med. Jurisprudence.
-
-[76] The committee made no report. Lord Delamere undertook to draw it
-up, but before he did so, parliament was prorogued. Bishop Burnet, who
-has given the particulars of the case with great minuteness, says, he
-had no doubt that the Earl of Essex committed suicide. He was subject
-to fits of deep melancholy, and maintained the lawfulness of suicide.
-This is also Hume’s opinion.
-
-[77] This is confirmed by the fact that within the jurisdiction of the
-metropolitan police, the two districts in which the greatest number of
-suicides were committed or attempted, in 1836 or 1837, were those of
-the Regent’s Park and Stepney, through both of which the Regent’s Canal
-runs. This circumstance tends to shew that drowning is the mode of
-suicide most frequently resorted to in London, and that a canal offers
-greater facilities for that purpose than the river.
-
-[78] The disposition to suicide may be manifested very early in life.
-M. Falret knew a boy, twelve years old, who hanged himself because
-he was only twelfth in his class. A similar case occurred at the
-Westminster school about seventeen years ago. Harriet Cooper, of Huden
-Hill, Rowly-Regis, aged ten years and two months, upon being reproved
-for a trifling fault, went upstairs, after exhibiting symptoms of grief
-by sighing and sobbing, and hung herself with a pair of cotton braces
-from the rail of a tent bed. A girl named Green, eleven years old,
-drowned herself in the New River, from the fear of correction for a
-trifling fault. Dr. Schlegel states, on the authority of Casper, that
-in Berlin, between the years 1812 and 1821, no less than thirty-one
-children, of twelve years of age and under, committed suicide, either
-because they were tired of existence or had suffered some trifling
-chastisement.
-
-[79] “Oh, supreme God, who inhabitest the highest heavens, heal my
-afflictions; as with the wretched in hell, the joyful in heaven, shew
-mercy to the guilty.”
-
-[80] Dr. Moore’s Travels through France, vol. i. let. 32.
-
-[81] Hufeland’s Journal.
-
-[82] Hist. de l’Acad. Roy., 1769.
-
-[83] Paris and the Parisians, by Mrs. Trollope.
-
-[84] Voltaire observes, that if Creech had been translating Ovid, he
-would not have committed suicide.
-
-[85] We refer our readers, for a minute and deeply interesting account
-of this unfortunate woman’s career, to a work from which we have
-gleaned the above facts; the particulars of her life will be perused
-with great interest.—Vide “Memoirs of Mirabeau, by himself,” vol.
-iii. chap. xi.
-
-[86] Vide Frontispiece.
-
-[87] A singular case of this kind was brought under the notice of the
-Westminster Medical Society by Dr. Stone, as an argument in favour of
-the possibility of a person committing suicide when in possession of a
-sane mind.
-
-
-
-T. C. Savill, Printer, 107, St. Martin’s Lane, Charing Cross.
-
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Anatomy of Suicide, by Forbes Winslow</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The Anatomy of Suicide</p>
-<p>Author: Forbes Winslow</p>
-<p>Release Date: January 12, 2016 [eBook #50907]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ANATOMY OF SUICIDE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="center">E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Turgut Dincer,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/anatomyofsuicide00wins">
- https://archive.org/details/anatomyofsuicide00wins</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Transcriber's note:
- </td>
- <td>
- The original text contains some unpaired quotation marks
- which could not be corrected with cofidence.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" width="400" height="655" alt="" title="Vide p. 331." />
-<p class="right">Vide p. <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</p></div>
-
-<h1>
-<small><small>THE</small></small><br />
-
-ANATOMY OF SUICIDE:</h1>
-
-<p class="center"><small><small>BY</small></small><br />
-
-FORBES WINSLOW,<br />
-
-<small><small>MEMBER OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, LONDON;<br />
-AUTHOR OF “PHYSIC AND PHYSICIANS.”</small></small><br /><br /></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“But is there yet no other way, besides</div>
-<div class="line">These painful passages; how we may come</div>
-<div class="line">To death, and mix with our connatural dust?</div>
-<div class="line"></div>
-<div class="line">Nor love thy life, nor hate: but what thou liv’st</div>
-<div class="line">Live well; <span class="smcap">how long or short permit to Heaven</span>.”</div>
-<div class="line"><span class="smcap">Milton.</span><br /><br /></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="center"><small><span class="smcap">London:</span><br />
-HENRY RENSHAW, 356, STRAND.<br />
-<small>SOLD BY CARFRAE &amp; SON, EDINBURGH;<br />
-AND FANNIN &amp; CO., DUBLIN.<br />
-
-1840.</small></small></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="center">
-<small><small>TO</small></small><br />
-
-JAMES JOHNSON, ESQ., M.D.<br />
-
-<small><small>PHYSICIAN EXTRAORDINARY TO THE LATE KING,<br />
-ETC. ETC.</small></small><br />
-
-<small><b>This Work is dedicated,</b></small><br />
-
-<small><small>AS A TESTIMONY OF RESPECT FOR HIS HIGH PROFESSIONAL ATTAINMENTS,<br />
-
-AND AS AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE<br />
-
-ADVANTAGES DERIVED FROM A PERUSAL OF THE MANY ABLE WORKS<br />
-
-WITH WHICH HE HAS ENRICHED<br />
-
-THE MEDICAL LITERATURE OF HIS COUNTRY.</small></small></p>
-
-<p><small><i>London,—May, 1840.</i></small></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p>This treatise had its origin in the following circumstance:—A
-few months ago, the author had the honour of reading
-before the <i>Westminster Medical Society</i>, a paper on “Suicide
-Medically considered,” which giving rise to an animated
-discussion, and evolving an expression of the opinions of
-several eminent professional men, excited at the time much
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>It was the author’s object in his paper to establish a fact,
-he believes, of primary importance,—that the disposition to
-commit self-destruction is, to a great extent, amenable to
-those principles which regulate our treatment of ordinary
-disease; and that, to a degree more than is generally supposed,
-it originates in derangement of the brain and abdominal
-viscera.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding, however, these points were not considered
-with the minuteness commensurate with their value, the discussion
-which followed the author’s communication afforded
-him great satisfaction. It tended to strengthen in his mind
-an opinion previously formed, that the members of the medical
-profession were inferior to no other class in a knowledge of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">vi</a></span>
-those higher branches of philosophy that give dignity and
-elevation to human character.</p>
-
-<p>To explain more fully the author’s views on the subject of
-Suicide is the object of the present work, which is, strange to
-say, the first in England that has been exclusively devoted
-to this important and interesting branch of inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto suicide has been the theme of the novel and the
-drama, and has never, with the exception of an incidental
-notice in works on medical jurisprudence, been considered in
-this country in reference to its pathological and physiological
-character.</p>
-
-<p>That an intimate acquaintance with this branch of knowledge
-is highly important to the medical philosopher, few will
-deny; that it is a subject of general and painful interest,
-all must admit. The apparent coolness with which suicide
-is often committed has induced many to suppose that the
-unfortunate perpetrator was at the time in possession of a
-sound mind; and it is this idea which has induced the profession
-to conceive the subject as one foreign to their pursuits,
-and belonging rather to the province of the moral philosopher.
-How far the author has succeeded in disproving
-this opinion, it is for others to decide.</p>
-
-<p>He takes this opportunity of acknowledging the assistance
-he has received from the writings of Pinel, Esquirol, Falret,
-Fodére, Arnold, Crichton, Willis, Black, Haslam, Burrows,
-Conolly, Pritchard, Mayo, Ellis, Paris, Smith, Beck, Taylor,
-and Ray. To the pages of Dr. Johnson’s Medico-chirurgical
-Review, the Medical Gazette, the Lancet, and British and
-Foreign Medical Review, he is also largely indebted.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, the author, conscious of its imperfections,
-claims for his work no other praise than that it is the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">vii</a></span>
-attempt in this country to reflect light on a branch of medical
-and moral philosophy, the importance of which is only equalled
-by the difficulties impeding its investigation. He will feel himself
-amply repaid, should his introductory essay (for such only
-can it be considered) stimulate others more competent than
-himself to prosecute the inquiry which he has commenced.
-Their success will afford him much satisfaction and pleasure;
-for in the attainment of their endeavours will his hopes be
-fulfilled, and his ambition gratified.<br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="smcap padl2">London,—May, 1840.</span></small></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">viii/ix</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<table summary="CONTENTS" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="2">CHAPTER I.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">SUICIDES OF THE ANCIENTS.—ANCIENT LAWS AND OPINIONS
-ON THE SUBJECT OF SUICIDE.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Examples of antiquity no defence of suicide—Causes of ancient suicides—The
-suicides of Asdrubal, Nicocles, Isocrates, Demosthenes, Hannibal,
-Mithridates, the inhabitants of the city of Xanthus, Cato, Charondas,
-Lycurgus, Codrus, Themistocles, Emperor Otho, Brutus and Cassius,
-Mark Antony and Cleopatra, Petronius, Lucan, Lucius Vetus, Sardanapalus,
-M. Curtius, Empedocles, Theoxena—Noble resistance of Josephus—Scripture
-suicides: Samson, Saul, Ahitophel, Judas Iscariot,
-Eleazar, Razis—Doctrines of the stoics, Seneca, Epictetus, Zeno—Opinions
-of Cicero, Pliny, on suicide—Ancient laws on suicide</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_1">1</a>-29</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1 padt1" colspan="1">CHAPTER II.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">WRITERS IN DEFENCE OF SUICIDE.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Opinions of Hume—Effect of his writings—Case of suicide caused by—The
-doctrines of Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Montaigne examined—Origin
-of Dr. Donne’s celebrated work—Madame de Staël’s recantation—Robert
-of Normandy, Gibbon, Sir T. More, and Robeck’s opinions
-considered</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_30">30</a>-35</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER III.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">SUICIDE A CRIME AGAINST GOD AND MAN.—IT IS NOT AN
-ACT OF COURAGE.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">The sin of suicide—The notions of Paley on the subject—Voltaire’s opinion—Is
-suicide self-murder?—Is it forbidden in Scripture?—Shakspeare’s
-views on the subject—The alliance between suicide and murder—Has a
-<span class="pagenum2">x</span>
-man a right to sacrifice his own life?—Everything held upon trust—Suicide
-a sin against ourselves and neighbour—It is not an act of courage—Opinion
-of Q. Curtius on the subject—Buonaparte’s denunciation
-of suicide—Dryden’s description of the suicide in another world</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_36">36</a>-44</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER IV.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">ON THE INFLUENCE OF CERTAIN MENTAL STATES IN INDUCING
-THE DISPOSITION TO SUICIDE.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Moral causes of disease—Neglect of psychological medicine—Mental philosophy
-a branch of medical study—Moral causes of suicide—Tables of
-Falret, &amp;c.—Influence of remorse—Simon Brown, Charles IX. of France—Massacre
-of St. Bartholomew—Terrible death of Cardinal Beaufort, from
-remorse—The Chevalier de S——. Influence of disappointed love—Suicide
-from love—Two singular cases—Effects of jealousy—Othello—Suicide
-from this passion—The French opera dancer—Suicide from
-wounded vanity—False pride—The remarkable case of Villeneuve, as
-related by Buonaparte—Buonaparte’s attempt at suicide—Ambition—Despair,
-cases of suicide from—The Abbé de Rancé—Suicide from blind
-impulse—Cases—Mathews, the comedian—Opinion of Esquirol on the
-subject—Ennui, birth of—Common cause of suicide in France—Effect
-of speculating in stocks—Defective education—Diffusion of knowledge—“Socialism”
-a cause of self-destruction—Suicide common in Germany—Werter—Goëthe’s
-attempt at suicide—Influence of his writings on Hackman—Suicide
-from reading Tom Paine’s “Age of Reason”—Suicide to
-avoid punishment—Most remarkable illustrations—Political excitement—Nervous
-irritation—Love of notoriety—Hereditary disposition—Is death
-painful? fully considered, with cases—Influence of irreligion</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_45">45</a>-107</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER V.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">IMITATIVE, OR EPIDEMIC SUICIDE.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Persons who act from impulse liable to be influenced—Principle of imitation,
-a natural instinct—Cases related by Cabanis and Tissot—The suicidal
-barbers—Epidemic suicide at the Hôtel des Invalids—Sydenham’s
-epidemic—The ladies of Miletus—Dr. Parrish’s case—Are insanity and
-suicide contagious?</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_108">108</a>-114</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER VI.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">SUICIDE FROM FASCINATION.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Singular motives for committing suicide—A man who delighted in torturing
-himself—A dangerous experiment—Pleasures of carnage—Disposition
-<span class="pagenum2">xi</span>
-to leap from precipices—Lord Byron’s allusion to the influence of fascination—Miss
-Moyes and the Monument—A man who could not trust
-himself with a razor—Esquirol’s opinion of such cases—Danger of ascending
-elevated places</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_115">115</a>-120</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER VII.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">OF THE ENTHUSIASM AND MENTAL IRRITABILITY WHICH, IF
-ENCOURAGED, WOULD LEAD TO SUICIDE.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Connexion between genius and insanity—Authors of fiction often feel what
-they write—Metastasio in tears—The enthusiasm of Pope, Alfieri, Dryden—Effects
-of the first reading of Telemachus and Tasso on Madame
-Roland’s mind—Raffaelle and his celebrated picture of the Transfiguration—The
-convulsions of Malbranche—Beattie’s Essay on Truth—Influence
-of intense study on Boerrhave’s mind—The demon of Spinello and
-Luther—Bourdaloue and his violin—Byron’s sensitiveness—Men do not
-always practise what they preach—Cases of Smollett, La Fontaine, Sir
-Thomas More, Zimmerman—Tasso’s spectre—Johnson’s superstition—Concluding
-remarks</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_121">121</a>-129</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER VIII.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">PHYSICAL CAUSES OF SUICIDE.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Influence of climate—The foggy climate of England does not increase the
-number of suicides—Average number of suicides in each month, from
-1817 to 1826—Influence of seasons—Suicides at Rouen—The English
-not a suicidal people—Philip Mordaunt’s singular reasons for self-destruction—Causes
-of French suicides—Influence of physical pain—Unnatural
-vices—Suicide the effect of intoxication—Influence of hepatic disease
-on the mind—Melancholy and hypochondriasis, Burton’s account
-of—Cowper’s case of suicide—Particulars of his extreme depression of
-spirits—Byron and Burns’s melancholy from stomach and liver derangement—Influence
-of bodily disease on the mind—Importance of paying
-attention to it—A case of insanity from gastric irritation—Dr. Johnson’s
-hypochondria—Hereditary suicide, illustrated by cases—Suicide from
-blows on the head, and from moral shocks communicated to the brain—Dr.
-G. Mantell’s valuable observations and cases demonstrative of the
-point—Concluding remarks</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_130">130</a>-161</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum3">xii</span>CHAPTER IX.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="2">MORAL TREATMENT OF SUICIDAL MANIA.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Diseases of the brain not dissimilar to affections of other organs—Early
-symptoms of insanity—The good effects of having plenty to do—Occupation—Dr.
-Johnson’s opinion on the subject—The pleasure derived
-from cultivating a taste for the beauties of nature—Effect of volition on
-diseases of the mind—Silent grief injurious to mental health—Treatment
-of <i>ennui</i>—The time of danger, not the time of disease—The Walcheren
-expedition—The retreat of the ten thousand Greeks under Xenophon—Influence
-of music on the mind in the cure of disease—Cure of epidemic
-suicide—Buonaparte’s remedy—How the women of Miletus were cured
-of the disposition to suicide, and other illustrations—Cases shewing how
-easily the disposition to suicide may be diverted—On the cure of insanity
-by stratagems—On the importance of removing the suicidal patient from
-his own home—On the regulation of the passions</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_162">162</a>-194</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="2">CHAPTER X.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="2">PHYSICAL TREATMENT OF THE SUICIDAL DISPOSITION.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">On the dependence of irritability of temper on physical disease—Voltaire and
-an Englishman agree to commit suicide—The reasons that induced Voltaire
-to change his mind—The ferocity of Robespierre accounted for—The
-state of his body after death—The petulance of Pope dependent on
-physical causes—Suicide from cerebral congestion, treatment of—Advantages
-of bloodletting, with cases—Damien insane—Cold applied to the
-head, of benefit—Good effects of purgation—Suicide caused by a tapeworm—Early
-indications of the disposition to suicide—The suicidal eye—Of
-the importance of carefully watching persons disposed to suicide—Cunning
-of such patients—Numerous illustrations—The fondness for a
-particular mode of death—Dr. Burrows’ extraordinary case—Dr. Conolly
-on the treatment of suicide—Cases shewing the advantage of confinement</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_195">195</a>-220</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="2">IS THE ACT OF SUICIDE THE RESULT OF INSANITY?</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">The instinct of self-preservation—The love of life—Dr. Wolcott’s death-bed—Anecdote
-of the Duke de Montebello—Louis XI. of France—Singular
-<span class="pagenum2">xiii</span>
-death of a celebrated lawyer—Dr. Johnson’s horror of dying—The
-organ of destruction universal—Illustrations of its influence—Sir W. Scott,
-on the motives that influence men in battle—Have we any test of insanity?—Mental
-derangement not a specific disease—Importance of
-keeping this in view—Insanity not always easily detected—Is lowness of
-spirits an evidence of derangement?—The cunning of lunatics—Esquirol’s
-opinion that insanity is always present—Moral insanity—The remarkable
-case of Frederick of Prussia—Suicide often the first symptom of insanity—Cases
-in which persons have been restored to reason from loss of blood,
-after attempting suicide—The cases of Cato, Sir Samuel Romilly, Lord
-Castlereagh, Colton, and Chatterton, examined—Concluding remarks</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_221">221</a>-245</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="2">CHAPTER XII.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="2">SUICIDE IN CONNEXION WITH MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">The importance of medical evidence—The questions which medical men have
-to consider in these cases—Signs of death from strangulation—Singular
-positions in which the bodies of those who have committed suicide have
-been found—The particulars of the Prince de Conde’s case—On the possibility
-of voluntary strangulation—General Pichegru’s singular case—The
-melancholy history of Marc Antonie Calas—How to discover whether
-a person was dead before thrown into water—Singular cases—Admiral
-Caracciolo—Drowning in a bath—The points to keep in view in cases
-of suspicious death—Was Sellis murdered?—Death from wounds—The
-case of the Earl of Essex</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_246">246</a>-264</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1">CHAPTER XIII.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">STATISTICS OF SUICIDE.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Number of suicides in the chief capitals of Europe from 1813 to 1831—Statistics
-of death from violence in London from 1828 to 1832—Number
-of suicides in London for a century and a half—Suicides in Westminster
-from 1812 to 1836—Suicide more frequent among men than women—Mode
-of committing—Influence of age—Effect of the married state—Infantile
-suicides—M. Guerry on suicides in France—Cases—Suicide
-and murder—Suicide in Geneva</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_265">265</a>-279</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1"><span class="pagenum3">xiv</span>CHAPTER XIV.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="1">APPEARANCES PRESENTED AFTER DEATH IN THOSE WHO
-HAVE COMMITTED SUICIDE.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Thickness of cranium—State of membranes and vessels of brain—Osseous
-excrescences—Appearances discovered in one thousand three hundred and
-thirty-eight cases—Lesions of the lungs, heart, stomach, and intestines—Effect
-of long-continued indigestion</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p. 280-282</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1 padt1" colspan="1">CHAPTER XV.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">SINGULAR CASES OF SUICIDE.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">Introduction—Contempt of death—Eustace Budgel—M. de Boissy and his
-wife—Mutual suicides from disappointed love—Suicide from mortification—Mutual
-suicide from poverty—A French lady while out shooting—A
-fisherman after praying—Determination to commit if not cured—Extraordinary
-case after seduction—Madame C. from remorse—M. de
-Pontalba after trying to murder his daughter-in-law—Young lady in a pet—Sir
-George Dunbar—James Sutherland while George III. was passing—Lancet
-given by a wife to her husband to kill himself—Servant girl—Curious
-verses by a suicide—Robber on being recognised—A man who
-ordered a candle to be made of his fat—After gaming—Writing whilst
-dying—From misfortune just at a moment of relief—Curious papers
-written by a suicide—By heating a barrel in the fire—By tearing out the
-brains—Sisters by the injunction of their eldest sister—Mutual from
-poverty—Girl from a dream—Three servants in one pond—Indifference
-as to mode—By starvation—A man forty-five days without eating—Mutual
-of two boys after dining at a restaurateur’s—By putting head under
-the ice—By a pair of spectacles—By jumping amongst the bears—Young
-lady from gambling—Verses by a suicide—To obtain salvation—A lover
-after accidentally shooting his mistress—Mutual attempt—M. Kleist and
-Madame Vogle—Richard Smith and wife—Love and suicide—Bishop of
-Grenoble—Suicide in a pail of water—Mutual suicide of two soldiers—Lord
-Scarborough—A man who advertised to kill himself for benefit of
-family—The case of Creech, and the romantic history of Madame de
-Monier—Suicide of M. ——, after threatening to kill his brother—Two
-young men—Two lovers—Homicide and suicide from jealousy—Cure of
-penchant for suicide—Attempt at prevented—Man in a belfry—Attempt
-at—The extraordinary case of Lovat by crucifixion</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_283">283</a>-334</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padt1 padb1" colspan="1"><span class="pagenum3">xv</span>CHAPTER XVI.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc padb1" colspan="1">CAN SUICIDE BE PREVENTED BY LEGISLATIVE ENACTMENTS?—INFLUENCE
-OF MORAL INSTRUCTION.—CONCLUSION.</td><td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td><p class="indent">The legitimate object of punishment—The argument of Beccaria—A legal
-solecism—A suicide not amenable to human tribunals—Evidence at
-coroners’ courts <i>ex-parte</i>—The old law of no advantage—No penal-law
-will restrain a man from the commission of suicide.—Verdict of <i>felo-de-se</i>
-punishes the innocent, and therefore unjust—All suicides insane, and
-therefore not responsible agents—The man who reasons himself into
-suicide not of sound mind—Rational mode of preventing suicide by promoting
-religious education</p></td>
-<td class="tdr vertb">p.&nbsp;<a href="#Page_335">335</a>-340</td>
-</tr></table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">xvi</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>ERRATA.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent"><small>Page 46, for “mens conscia” &amp;c. read <i>mens sana in corpore sano</i>, and for
-“Horace” read <span class="smcap">Juvenal</span>.</small></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center f2">ANATOMY OF SUICIDE.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br /><br />
-
-<small>SUICIDES OF THE ANCIENTS.—ANCIENT LAWS AND
-OPINIONS ON THE SUBJECT OF SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Examples of antiquity no defence of suicide—Causes of ancient suicides—The
-suicides of Asdrubal, Nicocles, Isocrates, Demosthenes, Hannibal,
-Mithridates, the inhabitants of the city of Xanthus, Cato, Charondas,
-Lycurgus, Codrus, Themistocles, Emperor Otho, Brutus and Cassius,
-Mark Antony and Cleopatra, Petronius, Lucan, Lucius Vetus, Sardanapalus,
-M. Curtius, Empedocles, Theoxena—Noble resistance of Josephus—Scripture
-suicides: Samson, Saul, Ahitophel, Judas Iscariot,
-Eleazar, Razis—Doctrines of the stoics, Seneca, Epictetus, Zeno—Opinions
-of Cicero, Pliny, on suicide—Ancient laws on suicide.</p>
-
-<p>Human actions are more under the influence of example than
-precept; consequently, suicide has often been justified by an
-appeal to the laws and customs of past ages. An undue
-reverence for the authority of antiquity induces us to rely
-more upon what has been said or done in former times, than
-upon the dictates of our own feelings and judgement. Many
-have formed the most extravagant notions of honour, liberty,
-and courage, and, under the impression that they were
-imitating the noble example of some ancient hero, have
-sacrificed their lives. They urge in their defence that
-suicide has been enjoined by positive laws, and allowed by
-ancient custom; that the greatest and bravest nation in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-world practised it; and that the most wise and virtuous
-sect of philosophers taught that it was an evidence of
-courage, magnanimity, and virtue. There is no mode of
-reasoning so fallacious as that which is constantly appealing
-to examples. A man who has made up his mind to the
-adoption of a particular course can easily discover reasons
-to justify himself in carrying out his preconceived opinions.
-If a contemplated action, abstractedly considered, be good,
-cases may be of service in illustrating it. There must be
-some test by which to form a correct estimate of the justness
-or lawfulness of human actions; and until we are agreed
-as to what ought to constitute that standard, examples are perfectly
-useless. No inferences deduced from the consideration
-of the suicides of antiquity can be logically applied to modern
-instances. We live under a Christian dispensation. Our notions
-of death, of honour, and of courage, are, in many respects,
-so dissimilar from those which the ancients entertained, that
-the subject of suicide is placed entirely on a different basis.
-In the early periods of history, self-destruction was considered
-as an evidence of courage; death was preferred to dishonour.
-These principles were inculcated by celebrated philosophers,
-who exercised a great influence over the minds of the people;
-and, in many instances, the act of self-immolation constituted
-a part of their religion. Is it, then, to be wondered at, that
-so many men, eminent for their genius, and renowned for
-their valour, should, under such circumstances, have sacrificed
-themselves?</p>
-
-<p>The famous suicides of antiquity generally resulted from
-one of three causes:—First, it was practised by those who
-wished to avoid pain and personal suffering of body and mind;
-secondly, when a person considered the act as a necessary
-vindication of his honour; and thirdly, when life was sacrificed
-as an example to others.</p>
-
-<p>The first class is the most excusable of the three. Pain,
-physical or mental, puts a man’s courage severely to the test.
-He may have to choose between the alternative of years of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-unmitigated anguish, or an immediate release from torture.
-Need we feel surprise at many resorting to the latter alternative,
-when they have been taught to believe death either to
-be an eternal sleep, or a sure entrance into regions of happiness!</p>
-
-<p>How many instances have we on record of persons who
-have dispatched themselves to avoid falling into the hands of
-an enemy! The case of the wife of Asdrubal, the Carthaginian
-general, is a famous instance of the kind. Asdrubal
-had deserted his post, and had fled to Scipio; and during
-his absence his wife took shelter with her troops in the
-temple, which she set on fire. She then attired herself in
-her richest robes, and holding her two children in her hands,
-addressed Scipio—who had surrounded the building with his
-troops—in the following language:—“You, O Roman, are
-only acting according to the laws of open war; but may the
-gods of Carthage, and those in concert with them, punish
-that false wretch who, by such a base desertion, has betrayed
-his country, his gods, his wife, his children! Let him adorn
-thy gay triumph; let him suffer in the sight of all Rome
-those indignities and tortures he so justly merits!”</p>
-
-<p>The case of Nicocles, King of Paphos, in Cyprus, who
-committed suicide in conjunction with his wife and daughter,
-on the approach of King Ptolemy, is another in point.
-Isocrates, the celebrated Athenian orator, starved himself to
-death, sooner than submit to the dominion of Philip of
-Macedon. Demosthenes also poisoned himself, when Antipater,
-Alexander’s ambassador, required the Athenians to
-deliver up their orators, fearful of being subjected to slavery
-and disgrace.</p>
-
-<p>The persecution to which the Romans subjected Hannibal,
-after he was oppressed with years and sunk in obscurity,
-impelled him to have recourse to the poison which he always
-kept about him in a ring, against sudden emergencies.
-Mithridates took poison, and administered the same to his
-wives and daughters, in order to escape being taken prisoner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-by Pompey, before whose victorious arms he had been compelled
-to fly.</p>
-
-<p>The case of the inhabitants of the city of Xanthus is another
-remarkable instance of the determination exhibited by thousands
-of persons, resolved sooner to die by their own hands
-than submit to the dominion of a conqueror. Notwithstanding
-the proffered clemency of Brutus, who not only wept at the
-dreadful scene he witnessed, but commanded his soldiers to
-extinguish the fire, and even offered a reward for every inhabitant
-whose life was saved, the people were so eager for
-death that they rushed into the flames with exclamations of
-delight, and forceably drove back the soldiers who were sent
-by Brutus for the purpose of saving their lives.</p>
-
-<p>The example of Cato is applauded by some writers as a
-proof of magnanimity; the action was the reverse; it was
-the effect of pride and timidity. If ever Rome required his
-experience and patriotic counsels it was at that very period.
-To desert the duty which Rome had a right to demand by a
-voluntary death was the meanest conduct in his character.
-It stamped an indelible stain on his reputation, which only a
-supposition that his intellect was impaired could rationally
-excuse. It was not the virtuous Cato who had stemmed the
-torrent of tyranny, who had crushed the Cataline conspiracy,
-who had given the most noble examples of virtuous resolution
-and rectitude in moral conduct, but the enfeebled Cato, sinking
-under the accumulation of evils, whose soul was depressed
-with suspense and distracting passions, waiting an opportunity
-for revenge, or preparing to finish his life on the first
-disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>If such examples were admitted magnanimous, in any
-serious quarrel or war, where success could not be commanded,
-it might be considered laudable to commit suicide.
-The consequences of such reasoning would be obvious. On
-such occasions, countries would lose their bravest generals, private
-families their noblest and most experienced supporters.</p>
-
-<p>“If I cannot acquire what I wish,” says Cato, “I will kill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-myself; I will not live to grace Cæsar’s triumph, though I
-know Cæsar to be the most generous and clement of conquerors;
-I cannot consent to receive Cæsar’s favours. My
-pride is wounded; my fears destroy all tranquillity; my body
-is sinking under adversity; I will not dedicate my services to
-my distressed country under the auspices of successful Cæsar.
-I will plunge a sword into my bosom, and commit an injustice
-to myself, which through a long life I never committed to
-others. From the uniformity of my former patriotic character,
-writers, without deep reasoning, will paint this concluding
-action in glowing colours; they will give additional lustre to
-an immortal reputation.” Such, we conceive, were the secret
-springs of action in Cato’s mind; such were the contending
-passions which excited the delirium. It was not the placid,
-judicious Cato of former years, but the depressed Cato, <i>impos
-mentis</i>, committing a rash action, contrary to all his former
-great reasoning, and virtuous persevering conduct. It was,
-in fact, Cato’s act of insanity; it was not dying to serve
-his country, but to effectually rob Cæsar of his eminent
-services; it therefore appears more the effect of private
-pique and despondency than a demonstration of public virtue
-or courage. Had all others concerned in that civil war followed
-this extraordinary example, the country would have
-been robbed of many of its brightest ornaments. Cato could
-not say with Horace, “Dulce et decorum est pro patria
-mori,” for it was not for his countrymen that he died, but to
-gratify a selfish caprice, a personal resentment and hatred to
-Cæsar and his power. Had Cæsar attacked the city while
-Cato enjoyed a vigour of mind and body, and when the
-citizens were better disciplined and less corrupt, he would
-have despised such inglorious conduct; he would rather have
-hoped for some future opportunity to dispel the dark clouds
-overwhelming the distracted country.</p>
-
-<p>Physicians have frequent opportunities of observing the
-diminution of human courage and wisdom from long con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>tinued
-misfortunes, or bodily infirmities. The most lively,
-spirited, and enterprising, have become depressed from reiterated
-disappointment; cowardice and despair have succeeded
-to the most unquestionable bravery and ambition. The man
-is then changed; his blood is changed; and with these his
-former sentiments. The timidity is no longer Cato’s, but
-belongs to the miserable <i>debilitated body</i> of Cato, which had
-lost that <i>vigorous soul</i> that so eminently distinguished on other
-important occasions this excellent and divine patriot.</p>
-
-<p>La Motte observes, with reference to Cato’s death—</p>
-
-<p>
-“Stern Cato, with more equal soul,
-Had bowed to Cæsar’s wide control,
-With Rome, had to her conqueror bowed,
-But that his spirit, rough and proud,
-Had not the courage to await
-A pardoned foe’s too humbling fate.”
-</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire, in alluding to the lines quoted above, says, “It
-was, I believe, because Cato’s soul was always equal, and retained
-to the last its love for his country and her laws, that
-he chose rather to perish with her than to crouch to the
-tyrant. He died as he had lived.</p>
-
-<p>“Incapable of surrendering, and to whom? to the enemy
-of Rome—to the man who had forcibly robbed the public
-treasury in order to make war upon his fellow citizens, and
-enslave them by means of their own money. A pardoned
-foe! It seems as if La Motte Houdart was speaking of some
-revolted subject who might have obtained his Majesty’s pardon
-by letters in chancery. It seems (continues Voltaire)
-rather absurd to say that Cato slew himself through weakness.
-None but a strong mind can thus surmount the most powerful
-instinct of nature. This strength is sometimes that of
-frenzy; but a frantic man is not weak.”</p>
-
-<p>In forming an estimate of the condition of Cato’s mind,
-we must not look at him as delineated by the dramatist and
-poet, but as exhibited by the historian and philosopher.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-Our notions of Cato are too often based on Addison’s, and not
-Plutarch’s description of his character. That Cato was one
-of the most complete and perfect examples in antiquity of
-private manners and of public spirit cannot be questioned;
-and therefore, in this respect, worthy to be held up as an
-example. Sallust thus eulogizes Cato:—“His glory can neither
-be increased by flattery nor lessened by detraction. He was
-one who chose to be, rather than to appear good. He was
-the very image of virtue, and in all points of disposition
-more like the gods than men. He never did right that he
-might seem to do right, but because he could not do otherwise.
-That only seemed to be reasonable which was just. Free
-from all human vices, he was superior to the vicissitudes of
-fortune.” It was the dignity of Cato’s life that stamped a
-celebrity on the mode of his death.</p>
-
-<p>In forming a judgment of the motives which led this distinguished
-man to sacrifice his life, we must look at him
-in connexion with his great enemy, Cæsar. He was not
-only opposed to him on public, but on private grounds.
-Cæsar’s intimacy with Servilia, Cato’s sister, was the ground
-of much conversation at Rome. During one of the debates
-concerning the Cataline conspiracy, Cæsar received a letter
-whilst he was in the senate house. Cato, who had intimated
-that Cæsar had been privy to Cataline’s proceedings, and
-believing that the letter might refer to the subject, from the
-manner in which Cæsar endeavoured to conceal it, demanded
-that it should be handed over to him. The letter was accordingly
-handed to Cato, when, perceiving that it was a letter
-from Servilia to Cæsar, full of protestations of love to his
-deadliest enemy, he threw it at Cæsar in a great rage, and
-called him a drunkard. This, added to the circumstance of
-Cæsar’s complete triumph over him, induced Cato to put an
-end to his own life. He did not commit suicide to defeat
-usurpation, or to preserve the liberties and laws of Rome,
-but it was done when he despaired of his country. It arose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-from his horror of tyranny, and the feeling of intolerable
-shame at the prospect of a long life under an arbitrary master.
-The superstructure of years was in a moment levelled to the
-dust. He had to choose between death or slavery. After
-the defeat at Thapsus, and hearing that Cæsar was marching
-against him, Lucius Cæsar offered to intercede for Cato.
-His answer was as follows:—“If I would save my life, I
-ought to go myself; but I will not be beholden to the tyrant
-for any act of his injustice; and ’tis unjust for him to pretend
-to pardon those as a lord over whom he has no lawful
-power.” Although it was evident he was bent upon suicide,
-he persuaded his son to go to Cæsar, and cautioned his
-friend Statilius, whom Plutarch calls “a known Cæsar-hater,”
-not to kill himself, but to submit to the conqueror.
-He then entered into a discussion concerning liberty, which
-he carried on so violently that his friends were apprehensive
-that he would lay hands on himself. In consequence of this,
-his son removed his sword. Cato is then represented as
-reading Plato’s Phædo, and then calling for his sword, which
-they refused to bring him. He called a second and third
-time, and in a fit of rage he struck the servant, and wounded
-him, and by doing so, injured his own hand, which prevented
-him from effectually killing himself with his weapon. After
-he had stabbed himself, his wound was dressed; but so determined
-was he to sacrifice his life, that he tore open the
-wound forcibly, and pulled his bowels out, and thus effected
-his purpose.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></p>
-
-<p>It has been said that Addison approved of Cato’s self-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span>murder.
-This does not appear to be the fact, if we are to
-judge from the words which he has put in the mouth of the
-dying hero—</p>
-
-<p>
-“I am sick to death; oh, when shall I get loose
-From this vain world, the abode of guilt and sorrow!
-And yet methinks a beam of light breaks in
-On my departing soul. Alas, I fear
-I have been too hasty! O ye powers that search
-The heart of man, and weigh his inmost thoughts,
-If I have done amiss, impute it not:
-The best may err, but you are good, and—(<i>dies.</i>)”
-</p>
-
-<p>Two celebrated instances amongst the Grecians of men
-who voluntarily sacrificed their lives in order to maintain the
-dignity and importance of their own institutions, are exhibited
-in the cases of Charondas and Lycurgus. The former, in
-order to encourage a proper freedom of debate, had made it
-death to come armed into the assembly of the states. One
-day, coming himself in haste to a convention without having first
-laid aside his sword, he was rebuked by some one present, as
-a transgressor of his own laws. Stung with the justice of the
-imputation, he instantly plunged the sword into his own heart,
-both as a sacrifice to the violated majesty of the law, and a
-tremendous example of disinterested justice; trusting, moreover,
-thus to seal with his own blood a strict observance in
-others of his wholesome institutions.</p>
-
-<p>When Lycurgus had accomplished his great work of legislation
-in Sparta, he took the following method of rendering
-his system unchangeable and immortal. He stated that it
-was necessary that he should consult the Delphian oracle relative
-to his new laws. He then made all the Spartan magistrates
-and people take a solemn oath that they would observe
-and keep his laws inviolate “till his return.” He accordingly
-went to consult the oracle, and having sent back the answer
-in writing to Sparta, “That the laws were excellent, and
-would render the people great and happy who should observe
-them,” he resolved never to return himself, in order that the
-people might never be absolved from their oath. He ac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>cordingly
-starved himself to death. Plutarch considers that
-Lycurgus reasoned himself into the act, under the belief that
-a good statesman and patriot should seek to make his death
-itself in some way useful to his country. The same authority
-considers that he intended the mode of his death to be a practical
-illustration of the great principle which pervaded the
-whole code of his laws, which was—<i>temperance</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Alike honourable, in a worldly point of view, was the death
-of Codrus, King of Athens. The oracle was consulted with
-reference to the condition of the country. That nation was
-predicted to be prosperous whose king should be first slain
-by the enemy. Codrus disguised himself as a private soldier,
-and entered the enemy’s camp, where he contrived to pick a
-quarrel with the first man he met, whom he permitted to slay
-him; thus, for the good of his country, courting his own death.</p>
-
-<p>Themistocles is said to have poisoned himself rather than
-lead on the Persian army against his own countrymen,
-although fame, wealth, and honour were within his grasp.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor Otho, to avoid the further sacrifice of life in
-the imperial contest, resolved to die by his own hands, notwithstanding
-his troops implored and beseeched him to lead
-them on to a second engagement in which victory was almost
-certain. King Otho’s answer to the demand of his soldiers
-is considered to embody the spirit of true Roman heroism—“Deny
-me not the glory of laying down my own life to preserve
-yours. The more hope there is left, the more honourable
-is my early retirement; since it is by my death alone
-that I can prevent the further effusion of Roman blood, and
-restore peace and tranquillity to a distracted empire, by
-being ready to die for its peace and security.”<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">2</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span></p>
-<p>Two of the most distinguished men of antiquity who sacrificed
-their own lives were Brutus and Cassius. Before their
-battle with Cæsar on the plains of Philippi, these two warriors
-had a conversation on suicide. Cassius asked Brutus what
-his opinions were on the subject of self-destruction, provided
-fortune did not favour them in the contest in which they
-were about to be engaged. Brutus replied, that formerly he
-had embraced such sentiments as induced him to condemn
-Cato for killing himself; he deemed it an act of irreverence
-towards the gods, and that it was no evidence of courage. But
-he continues, “Now, in the midst of dangers, I am quite of
-another mind.” He then proceeds to tell Cassius of his determination
-to surrender up his life “on the Ides of March.” He
-states no particular reasons for having changed his opinions
-on the subject of suicide. The issue of the battle is well
-known. Many things conspired to damp the courage of
-Cassius and Brutus. In imitation of Cæsar, Brutus made a
-public lustration for his army in the field, and during the ceremony
-an unlucky omen is said to have happened to Cassius.
-The garland he was to wear at the sacrifice was given to him
-the wrong side outwards; the person, also, who bore the
-golden image before Cassius stumbled, and the image fell to
-the ground. Several birds of prey hovered about his camp,
-and swarms of bees were seen within the trenches. Cassius,
-believing in the Epicurean philosophy, considered all these
-circumstances as disheartening omens of his fate. After the
-defeat of Cassius, he ordered his freedman to kill him, which
-he did by severing his head from his body.</p>
-
-<p>Plutarch makes Brutus die most stoically. After having
-taken an affectionate leave of his friends, and having assured
-them that he was only angry with fortune for his country’s
-sake, since he esteemed himself in his death more happy than
-his conquerors, he advised them to provide for their own safety.
-He then retired, and, with the assistance of Strato, he ran his
-sword through his body. Dion Cassius (Lib. xlvii.) represents
-Brutus as far from acting the stoic at his last moments.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-He is said just before his death to have quoted the following
-passage from Euripides—“O wretched virtue! thou art a
-bare name! I mistook thee for a substance; but thou thyself
-art the slave of fortune.”</p>
-
-<p>In considering the motives that induced Brutus to destroy
-himself, we must not forget to take into calculation the effect
-which the apparition he saw previous to the battle of Philippi
-must have had on his mind. Brutus was naturally watchful,
-sparing in his diet, and allowed himself but little time for
-sleep. He never retired to rest, day or night, until he had
-arranged all his business. At this time, involved as he was in
-the operations of war, and solicitous for the event, he only
-slumbered a little after supper, and spent the remainder of the
-night in attending to his most urgent affairs. When these
-were dispatched, he occupied himself in reading till the third
-watch, when the tribunes and centurions came to him for
-orders. Thus, a little before he left Asia, he was sitting alone
-in his tent, by a dim light, at a late hour. The whole army
-lay in sleep and silence, while Brutus, wrapped in meditation,
-thought he perceived something enter his tent; turning towards
-the door, he saw a monstrous and horrible spectre
-standing by the side of his bed. “What art thou?” said he,
-boldly. The spectre answered, “I am thy evil genius, Brutus!
-Thou wilt see me at Philippi.” To which he calmly replied,
-“I’ll meet thee there.” In the morning he communicated to
-Cassius what he had seen. Cassius, who was an Epicurean,
-had often disputed with Brutus on the subject of apparitions.
-He said, when he had heard the statement of Brutus, that the
-spectre was not a spirit, but a real being; and argued at considerable
-length on the subject, and induced the general to
-think that his fate was decided. There can be no doubt but
-that this singular presentiment co-operated with other circumstances
-in inducing Brutus to fall by his own hands.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">3</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span></p>
-<p>Amongst the ancient suicides, those of Mark Antony and
-Cleopatra deserve especial consideration. It is not our purpose
-to enter into an elaborate history of these celebrated characters,
-but merely to refer to those circumstances that had an
-immediate connexion with their last moments.</p>
-
-<p>Three circumstances acted powerfully on Antony’s mind in
-inducing him to seek a voluntary death. The first was his
-having been defeated by Cæsar; the second, the idea that
-Cleopatra had betrayed him; and the third was the belief in
-Cleopatra’s death.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Antony was defeated, the unhappy queen fled
-to her monument, ordered all the doors to be barred, and commanded
-that Antony should be informed that she was dead.
-He was overwhelmed with grief, and retiring to his chamber,
-opened his coat of mail, and ordered his faithful servant Eros
-(who had been engaged to kill him whenever he should think
-it necessary) to dispatch him. Eros drew his sword, and, instead
-of killing his master, ran it through his own body, and
-fell dead at Antony’s feet. Antony then plunged his sword
-into his bowels, and threw himself on the couch. The wound
-was not, however, immediately fatal. In a short period after,
-Diomedes, Cleopatra’s servant, came to Antony with a request
-that he would instantly repair to her chamber. His delight
-was unbounded when he heard that Cleopatra was alive, and
-he directly ordered his servant to carry him to her. As she
-would not allow the doors to be opened, Antony was drawn
-up to her window by a cord. He was suspended for a considerable
-time in the air stretching out his hands to Cleopatra.
-Notwithstanding she exerted all her strength, strained every
-nerve, and distorted her features in endeavouring to draw him
-up, it was with the greatest difficulty it was effected. Cleopatra
-laid him on the bed, and, standing over him, so extreme
-was her anguish, that she rent her clothes, and beat and
-wounded her breast. After Antony’s death, when Cleopatra
-heard that Cæsar had dispatched Gallus to take her prisoner,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-and that he had effected an entrance into the monument, <i>she
-attempted to stab herself with a dagger which she always carried
-about with her for that purpose</i>. When she heard that it was
-Cæsar’s intention to send her into Syria, she asked permission
-to visit Antony’s tomb, over which she poured forth most
-bitter lamentations. “Hide me, hide me,” she exclaimed,
-“with thee in the grave; for life, since <i>thou</i> hast left it, has
-been misery to <i>me</i>.” After crowning the tomb with flowers,
-she kissed it, and ordered a bath to be prepared. She then
-sat down to a magnificent supper; after which, a peasant came
-to the gate with a small basket of figs covered with leaves,
-which was admitted into the monument. Amongst the figs
-and under the leaves was concealed the asp, which Cleopatra
-applied to her bosom. She was found dead, attired in one
-of her most gorgeous dresses, decorated with brilliants, and
-lying on her golden bed.</p>
-
-<p>Few of the illustrious men of antiquity have exhibited such
-philosophic coolness as Petronius, after he had determined to
-sacrifice his life. The levity which distinguished his voluntary
-death was in accordance with the gaiety and frivolity of his
-life. The capricious friendship of a Nero had been withdrawn
-from him, and in consequence he had determined on his own
-death. This <i>arbiter elegantiarum</i> during life, determined to
-indulge in a luxurious refinement of that death he was preparing
-to encounter. Being well aware he could not long
-escape from the murderous edict, after a fall from the summit
-of imperial favour, he opened and closed his veins at pleasure.
-He slept during the intervals, or sauntered about and enjoyed
-the delights of conversation with his friends; but his discourse
-was not of so elevated a character as that attributed to Seneca
-or Socrates.</p>
-
-<p>The poet Lucan exhibited great apparent serenity at the
-approach of death. After the veins of his arm had been
-voluntarily opened, and he had lost a large quantity of blood,
-he felt his hands and his legs losing their vitality. As the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-hour of death approached, he commenced repeating several
-lines out of his own Pharsalia, descriptive of a person similarly
-situated to himself. These lines he repeated until he died.</p>
-
-<p>Cocceius Nerva starved himself to death in the reign of
-Tiberius. It was said that he was displeased with the state of
-public affairs, and had made up his mind to die whilst his own
-integrity remained unsullied.</p>
-
-<p>During the bloody reign of Nero, many singular suicides
-took place. The particulars attending the deaths of Lucius
-Vetus, his mother-in-law Sextia, and Pollutia his daughter,
-are worth recording. After Lucius had distributed all his
-wealth among his domestics, requesting them to remove everything
-from his house excepting three couches, he, with his
-mother-in-law and daughter, retired into the same chamber,
-opened a vein with the same lancet, and after, reclining each
-on a separate couch, waited calmly the approach of death.
-His eyes, and those of his mother-in-law, were both fixed on
-the daughter, while the daughter’s wandered from one to
-the other. It was the earnest prayer of each of them to
-die first, and to leave the others in the act of expiring.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></p>
-
-<p>When the throne of Sardanapalus was endangered, he conceived
-a magnificent and truly luxurious mode of committing
-suicide, quite in character with the extravagance and dissoluteness
-of his former life. He erected a funeral pile of great
-height in his palace, and adorned it with the most sumptuous
-and costly ornaments. In the middle of this building was a
-chamber of one hundred feet in length, built of wood, in
-which a number of golden couches and tables were spread.
-On one of these he reclined with his wife, his numerous concubines
-occupying the rest. The building was encompassed
-round at some distance with large beams and thick wood, to
-prevent all egress from the place. Much combustible matter, and
-an immense pile of wood were also placed within, together with
-an infinite quantity of gold and silver, royal vestments, costly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-apparel, rich furniture, curious ornaments, and all the apparatus
-of luxury and magnificence. All being arranged, this
-splendid funeral pile was set on fire, and continued burning
-until the fifteenth day; during which time Sardanapalus
-revelled in all kinds of sensualities. The multitude without
-were in astonishment at the tremendous scene, and at the
-immense clouds of incense and smoke which issued with the
-flames. It was stated that the king was engaged in offering
-some extraordinary sacrifices; while the attendants within
-alone knew that this dissolute prince was putting such a
-splendid end to his effeminate life.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">5</a></p>
-
-<p>There has been some dispute as to the death of Marcus
-Curtius. Plutarch attributes his death to accident, but
-Procillius considers that it was voluntary. He says, the earth
-having opened at a particular time, the Aruspices declared it
-necessary, for the safety of the republic, that the bravest man
-in the city should throw himself into the gulf; whereupon
-Curtius, mounting his horse, leaped armed into it, and the
-gulf immediately closed. But Livy and Dionysius relate
-the circumstance in a different manner. They say that
-Curtius was a Sabine, who, having at first repulsed the
-Romans, but being in his turn overpowered by Romulus, and
-endeavouring to make good his retreat, fell into the lake,
-which from that time bore his name. The lake was situated
-almost in the centre of the Roman forum. Some writers
-consider the name was derived from Curtius the Consul, because
-he caused it to be walled in after it had been struck
-with lightning.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></p>
-
-<p>The death of the celebrated philosopher and poet, Em<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>pedocles,
-of Sicily, was remarkable. Wishing to be believed
-a god, and that his death might be unknown, he threw himself
-into the crater of Mount Ætna, and perished in the
-flames. The mode of his death was not discovered until
-some time afterwards, when one of his sandals was thrown
-up from the volcano.</p>
-
-<p>Ancient history affords us many noble examples of individuals
-who preferred voluntary death to dishonour and loss
-of character. If ever self-murder could be considered as in
-the slightest degree justifiable, it would be under such circumstances.
-Who cannot but honour the conduct of the noble
-virgins of Macedon, who threw themselves into the wells, and
-courted death, sooner than submit to the dishonourable proposals
-of the Roman governor! When Theoxena was pursued
-by the emissaries of Philip, king of Macedon, who had
-been guilty of murdering her first husband, she produced a
-dagger and a box of poison, and placing them before the
-crew of the ship in which she was endeavouring to make
-her escape, she said, “Death is now our only remedy and
-means of vengeance; let each take the method that best
-pleases himself of avoiding the tyrant’s pride, cruelty, and
-lust. Come on, my brave companions and family, seize the
-sword or drink of the cup, as you prefer an instantaneous or
-gradual death.” Some fell on the sword, others drank the
-poison until death was effected. After Theoxena had accomplished
-her designs, she threw herself into the arms of her
-husband, and they both plunged into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The resistance which Josephus made to the importunities
-of his soldiers to fall by his own hand sooner than surrender
-to the enemy, is perhaps the most noble instance of the kind
-on record. After the success of the Romans in Judæa, Josephus,
-who commanded the Jewish army, wished to deliver
-himself up to his conquerors; he was encouraged to this
-by certain dreams and visions. When Josephus’s intention
-was known, the soldiers flocked round him, and expressed
-their indignation at his intention. They urged him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-to fall by his own sword, and to let them follow his example,
-sooner than abandon the field. To this appeal Josephus
-replies, “Oh, my friends, why are you so earnest to kill yourselves?
-why do you set your soul and body, which are such
-dear companions, at such variance? It is a brave thing to
-die in war, but it should be by the hands of the enemy. It
-is a foolish thing to do that for ourselves, which we quarrel
-with them for doing to us. It is a brave thing to die for
-liberty; but still it should be in battle, and by those who would
-take that liberty from us. He is equally a coward who will
-not die when he is obliged to die. What are we afraid of,
-when we will not go up and meet the Romans? Is it death?
-Why then inflict it on ourselves? You say, We must be
-slaves. Are we then in a clear state of liberty at present?
-Self-murder is a crime most remote from the common nature
-of all animals, and an instance of impiety against God our
-Creator.”</p>
-
-<p>Josephus, in the spirit of a true philosopher, urged his
-soldiers to abandon the notion of suicide; but instead of being
-calmed by his discourse, they became enraged, and rushed
-on him. Fearing that the case was hopeless, Josephus prevailed
-upon them to listen to the following proposal. He
-persuaded them to draw lots; the man on whom the first
-lot fell was to be killed by him who had the second, and the
-second by the third, and so on. In this way no soldier would
-perish by his own hand, except the last man. Lots were
-accordingly drawn; Josephus drew his with the rest. He
-who had the first lot willingly submitted his neck to him who
-had the second. It happened that Josephus and a soldier
-were left to draw lots; and as the general was desirous neither
-to imbrue his own hand in the blood of his countryman, nor
-to be condemned by lot himself, he persuaded the soldier to
-trust his fidelity, and to live as well as himself. Thus ended
-this tragical scene, and Josephus immediately surrendered
-himself up to Vespasian.</p>
-
-<p>The first instance of suicide recorded in Scripture is that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-of Samson. After suffering many indignities from the hands
-of the Philistines, his anger was roused to the highest pitch,
-and, resting against the pillars that supported the building in
-which the lords of the Philistines and an infinite number of
-others were assembled, he offered up the following prayer:
-“O Lord God, remember me, I pray thee, and strengthen
-me, I pray thee, only this once, O God, that I may at once
-be avenged of the Philistines for my two eyes;” and taking
-hold of the pillars, he said, “Let me die with the Philistines:
-and he bowed himself with all his might, and the
-house fell upon the lords and all that were therein; so that
-the dead which he slew at his death were more than they
-which he slew in his life.”</p>
-
-<p>In Samson’s case, there is nothing said in Scripture either
-to condemn or justify the act; but it appears evident from
-the whole history of the last events of his life, that he
-was but an instrument in the hands of God for the accomplishment
-of his wise purposes. The glory of God had been
-violated in the person of Samson; he had been subjected by
-the Philistines to great indignities; and it was to demonstrate
-the power of God in the destruction of his enemies that
-Samson’s life was sacrificed. Samson is, then, to be considered
-as a martyr to his religion and his God.</p>
-
-<p>The case of Saul has also been cited. It is thus referred to
-in Scripture:—“And the battle went sore against Saul, and
-the archers hit him, and he was sore wounded of the archers.
-Then said Saul unto his armourbearer, Draw thy sword, and
-thrust me through therewith, lest these uncircumcised come
-and thrust me through, and abuse me. But his armourbearer
-would not, for he was sore afraid; therefore Saul took
-a sword and fell upon it. And when his armourbearer saw
-that Saul was dead, he fell likewise upon his sword and died
-with him.”<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></p>
-
-<p>It must be recollected that the Jews considered that a man
-was justified in committing suicide to prevent his falling into
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>the enemy’s hand, and on this account Saul was commended
-for killing himself. But there was nothing glorious in Saul’s
-death. His army was defeated by the Philistines, and Saul
-sounded a retreat; and as he was making his ignominious
-flight, an arrow from the ranks of the enemy hit him, and it
-was then that he implored his armourbearer to dispatch him.</p>
-
-<p>Much has been made of the self murder of Ahitophel.
-Donne has referred to it at some length. He says that in
-this case there can be “no room for excuse.” Ahitophel
-was considered one of the wisest counsellors of his age. He
-joined Absalom in his rebellion against his lawful prince,
-David; and when he saw that it was God’s determination to
-defeat his counsel, and that his advice for the first time was
-neglected, he became full of secret indignation and disappointment;
-and in order to avoid the consequences of his
-own utter despair and ruin, for his perfidy, he hanged himself.
-Nothing can be urged in justification of this act. The
-facts are presented to us in biblical history; and we are left
-to form our own judgment upon the course which this “Machiavellian
-counsellor,” as he has been termed, thought proper
-to adopt.</p>
-
-<p>Donne has also cited the case of Judas Iscariot.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">8</a> He must
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>have been sadly in want of sound illustrations to have brought
-forward the instance of this traitor as a justification of the act
-of suicide. Judas has been considered by some writers as a
-martyr. Petilian said “that Judas, and all who killed themselves
-through remorse of sin, ought to be accounted martyrs,
-because they punish in themselves what they grieve to have
-committed.” To whom Augustine replies, “Thou hast said,
-that the traitor perished by the rope, and has left a rope behind
-him for such as himself. But we have nothing to do
-with him. We do not venerate those as martyrs who hang
-themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>The case, mentioned by the same authority, of Eleazar, the
-brother of Judas Maccabeus, taken from the book of the
-Maccabees, is said to be one of voluntary suicide, and where
-self-destruction was laudable. Eleazar sacrificed his own life
-for the purpose of destroying King Antiochus, and therefore
-his suicide is to be considered as a voluntary sacrifice for the
-good of his country.</p>
-
-<p>The self-destruction of Razis is full of horror, and can only
-be quoted as an evidence of the act of a madman. When the
-tower in which Razis was fighting against the enemy of
-Nicanor was set on fire, he fell on his own sword, “Choosing
-rather,” says the text, “to die manfully than fall into the hands
-of the wicked, to be abused otherwise than beseemed his noble
-birth; but missing his stroke through haste, the multitude also
-rushing within doors, he ran boldly up to the wall, and cast
-himself down manfully among the thickest of them; but they
-quickly giving back, and a space being made, he fell down in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>midst of a void place. Nevertheless, while there was yet breath
-within him, being inflamed with anger, he rose up; and though
-his blood gushed out like spouts of water, and his wounds were
-grievous, yet he ran through in the midst of the throng, and
-standing on a steep rock, when, as his blood was not quite
-gone, he plucked out his bowels, and taking them in both his
-hands, he cast them upon the throng, and calling upon the
-Lord of life and spirit to restore him them again, he thus
-died.”<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">9</a></p>
-
-<p>Having considered the remarkable suicides of antiquity, we
-will now briefly allude to those doctrines and opinions of the
-celebrated philosophers of ancient times, which must of necessity
-have tended to create this recklessness of human life.</p>
-
-<p>The doctrines inculcated by the stoical philosophers, or the
-disciples of Zeno, must have increased the crime of suicide.
-“A stoical wise man is ever ready to die for his country or his
-friends. A wise man will never look upon death as an evil;
-that he will despise it, and be ready to undergo it at any time.”
-“A wise man,” says Diog. Laertius, in his life of Zeno, when
-expounding the stoical philosophy, “will quit life, when oppressed
-with severe pain, or when deprived of any of his senses,
-or when labouring under desperate diseases.” It is astonishing
-that a sect of philosophers who inculcated that pain was no
-evil, should so often have practised suicide. Much as we
-would condemn such principles, still we must admit that most
-of the admired characters of antiquity belonged to this celebrated
-sect—men distinguished for their wisdom, learning, and
-the strictness of their morals. Cato was a stoic, and he put
-into practice the principles of the sect to which he belonged.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">10</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Among the philosophers of antiquity, Seneca stands preeminently
-forward as the defender of suicide. He says,
-“Does life please you? live on. Does it not? go from whence
-you came. No vast wound is necessary; a mere puncture will
-secure your liberty. It is a bad thing (you say) to be under
-the necessity of living; but there is no necessity in the case.
-Thanks be to the gods, nobody can be compelled to live.”<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">11</a>
-These were the principles of the “wise Seneca,” and yet he
-wanted the courage to commit suicide when put to the test.
-He says, “Being emaciated by a severe illness, I often thought
-of suicide, but was recalled by the old age of a most indulgent
-father; for I considered not how resolutely ‘I’ could encounter
-death, but how ‘he’ could bear up under my loss.”
-This is not, however, the only instance in which Seneca
-yielded his stoical principles to the dictates of natural affection
-and rational judgment.</p>
-
-<p>Among other distinguished philosophers who advocated
-suicide was Epictetus. Although a stoic, he did not blindly
-follow the doctrines of Zeno. Epictetus considered that it
-was the duty of man to suffer to almost any extent before he
-sacrificed his own life. “If you like not life, you may leave
-it; the door is open; get you gone! But a little smoke ought
-not to frighten you away; it should be endured, and will
-thereby be often surmounted.”</p>
-
-<p>Epictetus followed strictly his own principles: in this respect
-he was superior to Seneca. Seneca was born in the lap
-of good fortune; Epictetus was a slave, and had to pass
-through the rugged paths of adversity, bodily pain, and
-penury. Seneca was banished from Rome for an intrigue;
-Epictetus was sent into exile for being a man of learning and
-a philosopher.</p>
-
-<p>When Epictetus was beaten unmercifully by his master, he
-said, with great composure, “You will certainly break my
-leg.” He did so; and the philosopher calmly rejoined, “Did
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>I not tell you you would do it?” This was in the true spirit
-of stoical philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>Marcus Aurelius Antoninus was, perhaps, one of the brightest
-ornaments of the sect of stoics. He carried into the minutest
-concern of life the doctrine of Zeno. “He was,” says Gibbon,
-“severe to himself, indulgent to the imperfections of others,
-just and beneficent to all mankind.”</p>
-
-<p>Zeno, the founder of the sect of stoical philosophers, acted
-up to the principles which he inculcated to his disciples. His
-suicide is recorded to be as follows:—As he was going out of
-his school one day, at the age of ninety-eight, he fell down,
-put a finger out of joint, went home, and hanged himself.</p>
-
-<p>Cleanthes, also, the successor of Zeno, followed the example
-of his master in philosophy, by shortening the period of his
-life in the following manner:—After having used abstinence
-for two days, by the advice of his physician, for the cure of a
-trifling indisposition under which he was labouring, he had
-permission to return to his former diet; but he refused all
-sustenance, saying, “<i>that as he had advanced so far on his
-journey towards death, he would not retreat</i>.” He accordingly
-starved himself to death.</p>
-
-<p>Among the most distinguished orators of antiquity who
-spoke in favour of suicide stands Cicero. During his banishment
-he would have actually destroyed himself, if it had not
-been for his natural timidity and want of resolution. He
-writes to his brother Quintus, “The tears of my friends have
-prevented me from flying to death as my refuge.”</p>
-
-<p>Pliny was an advocate of suicide. In a chapter entitled
-“On God,” he writes thus—“The chief comfort of man in his
-imperfect state is this, that even the Deity cannot do all things.
-For instance, he cannot put himself to death when he pleases,
-which is the greatest indulgence he has given to man amid
-the severe evils of life.” Pliny belonged to the Epicureans,
-and his notions are in accordance with the doctrines of that
-sect.</p>
-
-<p>Pliny the younger appears to have had different notions on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-the subject. When lamenting the death of a dear friend,
-Corellius Rufus, who had killed himself, he says, “He is
-dead—dead by his own hand, which agonizes my grief; for
-that is the most lamentable kind of death which neither proceeds
-from nature nor from fate.” The whole epistle from
-which the above extract is made indicates a noble and feeling
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>It appears that the Roman laws respecting suicide were of
-a fiscal nature. They viewed the act not as a crime abstractedly,
-but considered how far the circumstance affected
-the state or treasury. In some portion of the Roman empire
-the magistrate had the power of granting or refusing permission
-to commit suicide. If the decision was given
-against the applicant, and he persisted in sacrificing his life,
-disgrace and ignominy were heaped upon his body, and
-it was buried in the most humiliating manner. The tenour
-of the law relating to suicide laid down in “Justinian’s
-Digests” is to the following effect:—“Those who, being
-actually accused, or who being caught in any crime, and
-dreading a prosecution, made way with themselves, were
-to have their effects confiscated. But this confiscation was
-no punishment of suicide, <i>as a crime in itself</i>, being then
-only to take place when the crime committed incurred
-the confiscation of property, and when the person accused
-of it would have been found guilty. For which reason
-the heirs-at-law were permitted (if they thought proper)
-to try the cause as though the accused person, who had
-put a period to his life, had been still living; and if his
-innocence could be proved, they were still entitled to his
-effects. But if any one killed himself, either through weariness
-of life, or an impatience under pain or ill health, for a
-load of private debt, or for any other reason not affecting the
-state or public treasury, the property of the deceased flowed
-in its natural channel. In the case of an attempted but incomplete
-suicide, where a man was under no accusation, a
-distinction was made as to the causes impelling to it, before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-the question as to its punishment was to be determined. If
-it proceeded not from weariness of life, or an impatience under
-the pressure of some calamity, the attempter was to suffer the
-same punishment as if he had effected his purpose; and for
-this reason, because he who without reason spared not his
-own life, would not be likely to spare another man’s.”<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">12</a></p>
-
-<p>If a prisoner committed suicide, the jailor authorized to
-protect him was punished very severely. The Roman law
-made a distinction between soldiers and civilians. If a
-soldier attempted to take away his life, and it could not be
-proved that he was suffering at the time from great grief,
-misfortune, madness, &amp;c., it was deemed a capital offence,
-and death was the punishment. And even in cases where
-it was established that the act was the result of mental perturbation,
-he was dismissed from the service with ignominy
-and disgrace.</p>
-
-<p>During the pure ages of the Roman Republic, when religion
-was reverenced, when the gods were looked up to with
-respect as the disposers of all events, suicide was but little
-known. But when the philosophy of Greece was introduced
-into the Roman Empire, and the manners of the people became
-corrupted and degenerated, the crime increased to an
-alarming extent. This indifference to life was also augmented
-by the spread of stoical and epicurean principles. The stoic
-was taught to believe his life his own; that he was the sole
-arbiter of his existence; and that he could live or die as he
-pleased. The same principles were inculcated by the epicurean
-philosophy. Is it, then, to be wondered at, that
-suicide should be of common occurrence, when such degrading
-principles had taken possession of the minds of the
-people?</p>
-
-<p>By the law of Thebes, the person who committed suicide
-was deprived of his funeral rites, and his name and memory
-were branded with infamy. The Athenian law was equally
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>severe: the hand of the self-murderer was cut off, and buried
-apart from his body, as having been an enemy and traitor to
-it. The Greeks considered suicide as a most heinous crime.
-The bodies of suicides, according to the Grecian custom, were
-not burned to ashes, but were immediately buried. They
-considered it a pollution of the holy element of fire to consume
-in it the carcases of those who had been guilty of self-murder.
-Suicides were classed “with the public or private
-enemy; with the traitor, and conspirator against his country;
-with the tyrant, the sacrilegious wretch, and such grievous
-offenders whose punishment was impalement alive on a
-cross.”<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">13</a></p>
-
-<p>These laws, however, fell into disuse, as appears evident
-from the circumstance of there being so many cases of suicide
-which escaped this treatment.</p>
-
-<p>In the island of Ceos the magistrates had the power of
-deciding whether a person had sufficient reasons for killing
-himself. A poison was kept for that purpose, which was
-given to the applicant who made out his case before the
-magistracy.</p>
-
-<p>The same custom was followed among the Massilians, the
-ancient inhabitants of Marseilles. A preparation of hemlock
-was kept in readiness, and the senate, on hearing the merits
-of the case, had the power to decide whether the applicant had
-good and substantial reasons for committing suicide. There
-was, no doubt, much good effected by this regulation, as it
-clearly acknowledged the principle that the power of a man
-over his own life rested not in himself, but in the voice of the
-magistrate, who alone was to determine how his life or death
-might affect the state.</p>
-
-<p>Libanius, of Antioch, who flourished towards the end of the
-fourth century, has very happily ridiculed the practice to
-which we have alluded. In some imaginary pleadings before
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>the senate, he advocates the cause of a man who wishes to
-swallow the hemlock draught, that he may be freed from the
-garrulity of a loquacious wife. “Truly,” says he, “if our
-legislator had not been addicted too much to law making, I
-should have been under no necessity of proving before you
-the expediency of my departure, but a rope and the first tree
-would have given me peace and quiet. But since he, determining
-we should be slaves, has deprived us even of the liberty
-of dying when we please, and has enchained us with decrees
-on this business, I imprecate the author and obey his mandates,
-in thus laying my complaints and my request before you.”
-He then, with considerable eloquence and humour, advocates
-the cause of the “envious man,” who wishes to taste the
-“suicidal draught” because his neighbour’s wealth had increased
-beyond his own. “Let the wretch,” he says, “recite
-his calamities, let the senate bestow the antidote, and let grief
-be dissolved in death.”</p>
-
-<p>Libanius then pleads in behalf of Timon, the man hater,
-who begs permission to dispatch himself because he was
-bound by profession to hate all mankind, but he could not help
-loving Alcibiades.</p>
-
-<p>It is a singular circumstance connected with the subject of
-suicide, that authors who have written in its defence should
-quote the cases referred to in this chapter in justification of
-their views. They have not taken into consideration the
-peculiar customs, habits, and religion of the people, which of
-course must have greatly influenced their actions. How absurd
-would it be for us to take the authority of antiquity as
-an infallible rule of conduct. The Massagetes considered
-those unhappy who died a natural death, and therefore eat
-their dearest friends when they grew old. The Libarenians
-broke their necks down a precipice. The Bactrians were
-thrown alive to the dogs. The Scythians buried the dearest
-friends of the deceased with them alive, or killed them on the
-funeral pile. The Roman people, when sunk in vice and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-licentiousness, considered it a mark of courage and honour to
-fall by their own hands, and suicide was a common occurrence
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>“In the beginning of the spring,” says Malt. Brun, “a
-shocking ceremony takes place at Cola Bhairava, in the
-mountains between the rivers Taptæ and Nerbuddah. It is
-the practice of some persons of the lowest tribes in Berar to
-make vows of suicide, in return for answers which their
-prayers are believed to have received from their idols. This
-is the place where such vows are performed in the beginning
-of spring, when eight or ten victims generally throw themselves
-from a precipice. The ceremony gives rise to an
-annual fair, and some trade.”<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">14</a></p>
-
-<p>No just distinction can be drawn between these customs.
-The Indian widow, in obedience to the religion of her country,
-ascends the funeral pile of her husband, and is burnt to
-death. Thousands annually sacrifice their lives by throwing
-themselves under the wheels of their idol Juggernaut. Strong
-feelings of religion impel them to this; they become excluded
-from society, they lose caste, and are subjected to all
-kinds of persecution if they do not bow to the customs of the
-country. What legitimate argument can be deduced from
-these facts in favour of suicide? And yet these cases are
-considered to constitute a justification of the stoical dogma,
-that we have a right when we please to put an end to our
-own existence. Desperate indeed must be the circumstances
-of those who are compelled to found their reasoning on so
-flimsy a basis.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br /><br />
-
-<small>WRITERS IN DEFENCE OF SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Opinions of Hume—Effect of his writings—Case of suicide caused by—The
-doctrines of Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Montaigne examined—Origin
-of Dr. Donne’s celebrated work—Madame de Staël’s recantation—Robert
-of Normandy, Gibbon, Sir T. More, and Robeck’s opinions
-considered.</p>
-
-<p>It will be foreign to my purpose to enter elaborately into an
-examination of the opinions of those who have thought proper
-to justify the commission of suicide. The arguments which
-have been advanced by Hume, Donne, Rousseau, Madame
-de Staël, Montesquieu, Montaigne, Gibbon, Voltaire, and
-Robeck, are founded on such gross and apparent fallacies,
-that they carry with them their own refutation.</p>
-
-<p>Hume, whose pen was always ready to support opinions at
-variance with the precepts of the Christian religion, wrote an
-essay on the subject of suicide. He has endeavoured to shew
-that self-murder is consistent with our duty to God, our
-neighbour, and ourselves. Referring to the first of these
-three heads, he says—“As, on the one hand, the elements and
-other inanimate parts of creation carry on their action without
-regard to the particular interests and situation of men, so men
-are entrusted to their own judgment and discretion in the
-various shades of matter, and may employ every faculty with
-which they are endowed in order to provide for their ease,
-happiness, or preservation.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If an action be clearly shewn to be an infringement of the
-laws of God, it certainly cannot be one which he has left us
-to exercise at discretion. All the laws of religion and morality
-are so many abridgments of man’s liberty, in the exercise of
-his judgment and discretion for his own happiness. Hume
-then proceeds to examine whether suicide be a breach of duty
-to our neighbour and society. He observes—“A man who
-retires from life does no harm to society,—he only ceases to
-do good; which, if it be an injury, is of the lowest kind.” The
-man who sacrifices his own life does a <i>great injury</i> to society.
-There are very few men in the world who have no relations
-or connexions, and he entails upon these the opprobrium that
-society attaches to the crime of suicide. Independently of
-this, his example acts injuriously on the minds of others, who
-may not have such good reasons for suicide as he has. “I
-believe,” continues Hume, “that no man ever threw away life
-while it was worth keeping. For such is our natural horror
-of death, that small motives will never be able to reconcile us
-to it.” He might as well have stated that such is our horror of
-poverty that no man ever threw away <i>riches</i> which were worth
-keeping. The fallacy consists in drawing a conclusion from a
-mind supposed in its right state, in which every faculty, propensity,
-and aversion has its due proportion of strength; and
-in which the natural horror of death will secure a man from
-throwing away a life which is worth keeping: and this conclusion
-is applied to a <i>depraved</i> state of mind, in which it can
-by no means hold.</p>
-
-<p>The same author asserts, “That it would be no crime in me
-to divert the Nile or Danube from its course, if I could;
-where, then, is the crime of turning a few ounces of blood out
-of its natural channel?” The argument is too puerile to merit
-refutation. He must first establish that no injury would
-accrue from diverting the course of the Nile and Danube,
-before any argument can be deduced from it which is worth
-one moment’s consideration.</p>
-
-<p>It has been asserted, and remains uncontradicted, that Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-Hume lent his “Essay on Suicide” to a friend, who on returning
-it told him it was a most excellent performance, and
-pleased him better than anything he had read for a long
-time. In order to give Hume a practical exhibition of the
-effects of his defence of suicide, his friend shot himself the
-day after returning him his Essay.</p>
-
-<p>If, in any one instance, suicide might admit of something
-like an apology, it would have been in this—if the detestable
-author of this abominable treatise had, on receiving the melancholy
-intelligence, committed it to the flames, and terminated
-his own pernicious existence by a cord. But the
-cold-blooded infidel was too cowardly to execute summary
-justice on himself. With a truly diabolical spirit, his delight
-was to scatter firebrands among the people, and say, “Am I
-not in sport?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hume is the hero of modern infidels, because he is the
-only one among them whose life was not disgraced by the
-grossest of vices; for this, his selfish and avaricious spirit
-affords, perhaps, the true reason. It is well known that Hume,
-in more than one instance, sacrificed his principles (if he had
-any) to views of emolument at the suggestion of the booksellers.
-It has been said that he was scarcely guilty of a
-good or benevolent action. His treatment of Rousseau was
-unfeeling in the extreme; and an intimate friend of the
-essayist affirms, that “his heart was as hard and cold as
-marble.”</p>
-
-<p>Montesquieu’s arguments in favour of suicide appear to
-border very closely on those advanced by Hume. They
-will be found in a letter written in the character of a Persian
-resident in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Rousseau<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> in his “Nouvelle Heloïse” observes, “The more
-I reflect upon it (suicide), the more I find that the question
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>reduces itself to this fundamental proposition:—To seek one’s
-own good, and avoid one’s own harm in that which hurts not
-another, is the law of nature.” Rousseau must first clearly
-establish that what he terms “seeking one’s own good” will
-not be productive of injury to others. According to the
-notion of what the majority of men conceive to be their
-good, much evil would result from allowing mankind to act
-under the influence of their own feelings and judgment.
-What one man considers “good,” another considers evil;
-and what often appears to be very beneficial to ourselves, if
-examined fairly, will be found to be the very reverse.</p>
-
-<p>Montaigne’s arguments are borrowed from ancient writers
-in defence of suicide. He assumes at the commencement
-that suicide is not an evil. He says, that pain, and the fear
-of suffering a worse death, is an excusable incitement to
-suicide. The whole that he has advanced is but a string of
-sophistries.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Donne has entered more fully into the defence of suicide
-than any other writer. The whole of his work appears to be
-written for the purpose of demonstrating that it is praiseworthy
-to shew a contempt of life in the discharge of our duty, and
-in the execution of noble and beneficent enterprises.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Donne was probably drawn to the contemplation of
-this subject by his own sufferings. While he was secretary to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>Lord Chancellor Egerton, he married a young lady of rank
-superior to his own, which gave offence to his patron, and he
-was consequently dismissed from office. He suffered extreme
-poverty with his wife and children; and in a letter, in which
-he adverts to the illness of a daughter whom he tenderly
-loved, he says that he dares not expect relief, even from
-death, as he cannot afford the expense of a funeral. He
-afterwards took orders, and was promoted to the deanery of
-St. Paul’s. In the early part of his life, and probably during
-the period of his sufferings, he wrote his book, entitled,
-“Βιαθανατος, <i>A Declaration of that paradox or thesis, that
-self-homicide is not so naturally sin that it may never be otherwise</i>.”
-He did not publish it. He desired <i>it to be remembered,
-that it was written by Jack Donne, not by Dr. Donne</i>; and it
-was published many years after his death, by his son, a dissipated
-young man, tempted by his necessities to forget his
-father’s prohibition.</p>
-
-<p><i>Madame de Staël</i> attempted to justify suicide in her work
-on the passions, but she, greatly to her honour, published her
-celebrated “Reflections on Suicide,” which was written as a
-recantation of some opinions on the subject incidentally expressed
-in the work alluded to. She expresses the change in
-her sentiments on this subject in the following curious manner:—“J’ai
-l’acte du suicide, dans mon ouvrage sur l’influence
-des passions, et je me suis repentie depuis de cétte parole
-inconsiderée. J’etois alors dans tout l’orgueil et la vivacité de
-la première jeunesse; mais à quoi servirait-il de vivre, si ce
-n’était dans l’espoir de s’ameliorer.”</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Staël has treated the subject with considerable
-ingenuity and ability, and with a great deal of eloquence,
-but she has hardly enforced sufficiently the arguments against
-this crime which may be deduced from the use of that portion
-of existence we pass upon earth. We are wise and good
-just in proportion as we consider and treat life and all its incidents
-as moral means to a great end. Upon every moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-of time an eternity is dependent; and whenever we sacrifice a
-moment, we throw away an instrument by which we might
-have created an eternity of happiness.</p>
-
-<p>All mankind are not placed upon an equality. Some experience
-pleasure, others pain, privation or suffering; the tools
-with which we are to work may be inconvenient or burthensome,
-or light and pleasant; but they must be the most useful
-and efficacious, or they would not be put into our hands; at
-any rate, they are all we have. We cannot fix too deeply on
-our minds the truth that life is not an absolute, but a relative
-existence, as in its relation to the eternity with which it is
-connected, consists all its value and importance.</p>
-
-<p><i>Robert of Normandy</i>, surnamed the Devil, sacrificed his
-own life, and before doing so he wrote a work in defence of
-suicide, in which he argued that there was no law that forbids
-a person to deprive himself of life; that the love of life is to
-be subservient to that of happiness; that our body is a mean
-and contemptible machine, the preservation of which we
-ought not so highly to value; if the human soul be mortal,
-it receives but a slight injury, but if immortal, the greatest
-advantage; a benefit ceases to be one when it becomes troublesome,
-and then surely a man ought to be allowed to resign
-it; a voluntary death is often the only method of avoiding the
-greatest crime; and finally, that suicide is justified by the
-example of most nations in the world. Such is the substance
-of the arguments in favour of suicide urged by Robert of
-Normandy, and worthy of his celebrated namesake.</p>
-
-<p>Gibbon and Sir Thomas More are cited as champions in
-favour of suicide; but there is nothing which these authors
-have advanced that merits a separate consideration.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br /><br />
-
-<small>SUICIDE A CRIME AGAINST GOD AND MAN.—IT IS NOT
-AN ACT OF COURAGE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">The sin of suicide—The notions of Paley on the subject—Voltaire’s opinion—Is
-suicide self-murder?—Is it forbidden in Scripture?—Shakspeare’s
-views on the subject—The alliance between suicide and murder—Has a
-man a right to sacrifice his own life?—Everything held upon trust—Suicide
-a sin against ourselves and neighbour—It is not an act of courage—Opinion
-of Q. Curtius on the subject—Buonaparte’s denunciation
-of suicide—Dryden’s description of the suicide in another world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Among</span> the black catalogue of human offences, there is not,
-indeed, any that more powerfully affects the mind, that more
-outrages all the feelings of the heart, than the crime of suicide.
-Our laws have branded it with infamy, and the industry
-which is exerted by surviving relatives to conceal its perpetration
-evinces that the shame which is attached to it is of
-that foul and contagious character, that even the innocent
-consider themselves infected by its malignity.</p>
-
-<p>Much discussion has taken place as to whether self-murder
-is expressly forbidden in the Old or New Testament.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">16</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>Paley, who is a high authority on all questions connected
-with moral philosophy, denies that it is. He considers that
-the article in the decalogue so often brought forward, “Thou
-shalt do no murder,” is inconclusive. “I acknowledge (he
-observes) that there is to be found neither any express determination
-of the question, nor sufficient evidence to prove that
-the case of suicide was in the contemplation of the law which
-prohibits murder. Any inference, therefore, which we deduce
-from Scripture, can be sustained only by <i>construction and
-implication</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>To maintain that God has not forbidden us to destroy the
-work of his hands, because self-murder is not particularly
-specified, is to leave us at liberty to commit many other
-offences which are not named among the prohibitions, but
-which are included under general heads. When God said to
-Noah, “Whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man shall his blood
-be shed, for in the image of God made he man,” it is evident
-that, whatever meaning we may attach to the last words,
-in whatever sense man is said to be made in the image of
-God, the reason of the prohibition holds as strong against
-self-murder as against any other kind of murder. If I am
-commanded not to shed the blood of another man because he
-is made in the <i>image of God</i>, I am not justified in shedding
-my own blood, as I stand in the same relation to the Deity
-as my fellow-men. But there is a particular reason why suicide
-is not any where expressly forbidden by <i>name</i>; that is,
-that whatever sins and offences God, as a lawgiver, prohibits,
-he does so with a penalty; he affixes such a punishment to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>such a crime, and he who transgresses is to undergo the determined
-punishment in this world or in the next. Neither
-God nor the magistrate can prohibit self-murder with any
-penalty that can affect the criminal himself; because of his
-very crime, he escapes all temporal punishment in person—he
-has anticipated the operation of the law. In fact, he has,
-in his own person, acted the part of the criminal, judge, jury,
-and executioner; he is dead before the law can take any cognizance
-of his offence. No law can be enacted to any purpose
-without a penalty; where, therefore, there can be no
-penalty, there can be no law. Self-murder prevents all penalty,
-and therefore wants no particular prohibition; it must therefore
-be included under general commands, and forbidden
-as a <i>sin</i>, which it is only in the power of God to take cognizance
-of, in another world.</p>
-
-<p>Again, doubtlessly the inspired writer considered suicide of
-such an atrocious nature that the warnings of conscience
-were sufficient to prevent its frequency, and because the
-voice of nature instinctively cries out against it.</p>
-
-<p>That the act of suicide must be most offensive in the sight
-of God is evident, since it is that which most directly violates
-those laws by which his providence has formed, and still
-directs, the universe. If any one principle in man is instinctive
-and implanted in him by the hand of nature, it is that of self
-preservation. Different religions and different codes have
-marked out particular duties, and proscribed particular crimes;
-in this, every religion unites, every society concurs, and every
-individual acknowledges within his own bosom the sacred
-command. If, therefore, to disobey the ordinances of God
-must be sinful in his sight, if ever the ordinances of men are
-to be respected, what must be the guilt of that person who
-violates the first law of nature, who disregards the principle
-that holds human society together, that fits us for every duty,
-and prompts us in the performance of them!</p>
-
-<p>But it is not merely against the ordinance of his Creator that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-the self-murderer offends,<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">17</a> he is guilty of a breach of duty to
-his neighbour. He plants a dagger not merely in his own
-breast, but in that of his dearest, his tenderest connexions.
-He wantonly sports with the pangs of sensibility, and covers
-with the blush of shame the cheek of innocence. With a
-degree of ingratitude which excites our abhorrence, he clouds
-with sorrow the future existence of those by whom he was
-most tenderly beloved, and affixes a mark of ignominy on his
-unfortunate descendants. He disobeys the first of social laws,
-that order by which God appropriated his labours to the
-welfare of society, and, because he fancies he can no longer
-exist with comfort to himself, disregards all the duties which
-he owes to others.</p>
-
-<p>The alliance between suicide and the murder of others is a
-closer one than is generally supposed. How many instances
-are recorded in which suicide and homicide have been conjoined!
-He who will not scruple to take away his own life,
-will not require much reasoning to impel him to sacrifice
-another’s. We refer to the cases of Mithridates, king of Pontus,
-and Nicocles, as illustrative of this position. Many modern
-instances are recorded of the same character.</p>
-
-<p>It was maintained by Marcus Aurelius, that there was no
-more of evil in parting from life than in going out of a smoky
-chamber; and Rousseau asks, “Why should we be permitted
-to cut off a leg, if we may not equally take away life? has not
-the will of God given us both?” Madame de Staël very properly
-observes that the following passage in Scripture replies
-to this sophism—“If thy hand offend thee, cut it off; if thine
-eye offend thee, pluck it out and cast it from thee.” Temp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>tation
-is evidently referred to in the above passage, but it may
-consistently be used in refutation of Rousseau’s illogical argument.
-Although a man may use any means placed in his
-power for the removal of physical evils, he is distinctly prohibited
-from destroying his existence.</p>
-
-<p>The interrogatory argument, if it can be so denominated,
-which is so often used in justification of suicide—“Cannot a
-man do what he likes with his own?”—is based upon an absurd
-and gross fallacy. Man, during his residence on this earth,
-is but a trustee; his wealth, his talents, his time, and his
-very life, are but trust property. He can call nothing truly his
-own; he is held accountable for the most apparently trivial
-action he performs. Life is given to him for noble purposes;
-it is an emanation from the Deity himself; and no circumstances
-would justify us in asserting that our very existence
-is placed at our own disposal. How truly has the noble poet
-observed, when alluding to the tenure upon which we hold
-everything during this life—</p>
-
-<p>
-“Can despots compass aught that hails their sway,
-Or call one solid span of earth their own,
-Save that wherein at last they crumble bone by bone?”
-</p>
-
-<p>This life is one of privation. We are born to misery; we
-are led to expect disappointment at every step we take;
-blighted expectations, ruined hopes, pain, mental and bodily,
-constitute a part and parcel of our very existence. No man
-was more overwhelmed with any species of misfortune than
-Job; he was emphatically styled “<i>the man of grief</i>;” and
-when, prostrated to the earth by the most poignant misery,
-his wife exhorted him to quit life,—to “curse God, and die,”—he
-replied, “What, shall I receive good from the hand of God,
-and not evil?”</p>
-
-<p>No suffering, however acute, could for one moment justify
-the commission of self-murder. “The concluding scene in
-the life of Jesus Christ,” says Madame de Staël, with a fervid
-eloquence which does her immortal honour, “seems peculiarly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-intended to confute those who contend for the right of destroying
-life to escape misfortune. The dread of suffering
-seized him who had willingly devoted himself to death
-for the good of mankind. He prayed a long time to his
-Father in the Mount of Olives, and his countenance was
-shaded by the anguish of death. ‘My Father,’ he cried, ‘if
-it be possible, let this cup pass from me.’ Thrice with tears
-was this prayer repeated. All the sorrows of our nature had
-passed through his divine mind; like us, he feared the violence
-of men; like us, perhaps, regretted those whom he cherished
-and loved, his mother and his disciples; like us, he loved this
-earth, and the celestial pleasures resulting from active benevolence,
-for which he incessantly thanked his Father. But,
-not able to avert the destined chalice, he cried, ‘Oh, my
-Father, let thy will be done,’ and resigned himself into the
-hands of his enemies. What more can be sought for in the
-gospel respecting resignation to grief, and the duty of supporting
-it with fortitude and patience.” Poets and orators
-have entered into a chivalrous rivalry to celebrate the character
-of the “bold man struggling with the storms of fate.” That
-adversity refines and ennobles our nature there cannot be a
-doubt. The most beautiful features of the human mind are
-developed in suffering; the ordeal through which we pass,
-however repugnant and abhorrent it may be to our feelings,
-produces a moral regeneration in the character. We come
-out of the “fiery furnace,” like gold and silver, deprived of
-much of our dross; and life, youthful and innocent life, again
-dawns upon us and gladdens our hearts.</p>
-
-<p>Suicide is an injury to our neighbour and to society. As
-long as life lasts,—no matter what amount of misery a person
-may suffer,—he has it in his power to contribute to the happiness
-of others. By mitigating the distresses of others, his own
-will be subdued. Let a man writhing under the torture of
-the gout be brought into contact with a person suffering from
-the intense agony of tic doloureux, and he will have a prac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>tical
-illustration of the fact, that there are others in the world
-worse off than himself.</p>
-
-<p>Suicide has been defended as an act of courage. Courage,
-forsooth! If ever there is an act of cowardice, it is that exhibited
-by the person who, to escape from the disappointments
-and vexations of the world, wantonly puts an end to his
-existence. The man of courage will defy the opinions and
-scorns of the world, when he knows himself to be in the right;
-will be above sinking under the petty misfortunes that assail
-him; will make circumstances bow to him; will court difficulties
-and dangers, in order to shew that he is able to master
-them.</p>
-
-<p>It was a noble sentiment which Q. Curtius put into the
-mouth of Darius, after every ray of hope had abandoned
-him:—“I will wait,” cried the king, addressing his attendants,
-“the issue of my fate. You wonder, perhaps, that I do not
-terminate my own life; but I choose rather to die by another’s
-crime than by my own.” The sentiments of Cleomenes,
-king of Sparta, expressed when his fortunes appeared most
-desperate, are equally noble and magnanimous. Being much
-urged by a friend to dispatch himself, he replied—“By
-seeking this easy and ready kind of death, you think to appear
-brave and courageous; but better men than you and I have
-been oppressed by fortune, and borne down by multitudes.
-He that sinks under toil, or yields to affliction, or is overcome
-by the opinions and reproaches of men, gives way, in fact, to
-his own effeminacy and cowardice. A voluntary death is
-never to be chosen as a relief from action, but as exemplary
-in itself, it being base to live or die only for ourselves. The
-death to which you now invite us is only proposed as a release
-from present misery, but conveys with it no signs of bravery
-or prospects of advantage.”</p>
-
-<p>Euripides put the following words in the mouth of Hercules:
-“I have considered, and, though oppressed with misfortunes, I
-have determined thus: Let no one depart out of life through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-fear of what may happen to him; for he who is not able to resist
-evils will fly, like a coward, from the darts of the enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>When Buonaparte was told of the prevalent opinion, that he
-ought not to have survived his political downfall, he calmly
-replied—“No, no; I have not enough of the Roman in me
-to destroy myself.” After reasoning, with considerable ingenuity,
-on the subject of suicide, he concluded by giving
-expression to this decided opinion:—“Suicide is a crime the
-most revolting to my feelings; nor does any reason present
-itself to my understanding by which it can be justified. It
-certainly originates in that species of fear which we denominate
-cowardice, (<i>poltronnerie</i>.) For what claim can that man
-have to courage who trembles at the frowns of fortune? True
-heroism consists in becoming superior to the ills of life, in
-whatever shape they may challenge him to the combat.” He
-might have added—“Tu ne cede malis, sed contrà audentior
-ito.” On another occasion, when talking on the subject of
-suicide, Buonaparte observed, “If Marius had slain himself
-in the marshes of Minturnæ, he never would have stood the
-seventh time for consul.” After having been some time at St.
-Helena, he one day spoke further on the subject of suicide.
-He observed:—“With respect to the English language, I have
-been very diligent. I now read your newspapers with ease;
-and must own that they afford me no inconsiderable amusement.
-They are occasionally inconsistent, and sometimes abusive.
-In one paper I am called a <i>Lear</i>; in another, a <i>tyrant</i>; in a
-third, a <i>monster</i>; and in one of them—which I really did not
-expect—I am described as a <i>coward</i>. But it turned out, after
-all, that the writer did not accuse me of avoiding danger in
-the field of battle, or flying from an enemy, or fearing to look
-at the menaces of fate and fortune. It did not charge me
-with wanting presence of mind in the hurry of battle, and in
-the suspense of conflicting armies; no such thing. I wanted
-courage, it seems, because I did not coolly take a dose of
-poison, or throw myself into the sea, or blow out my brains.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-The editor most certainly misunderstands me; I have, at
-least, too much courage for that.”<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">18</a></p>
-
-<p>We think it has decidedly been established in the preceding
-observations that suicide is a crime clearly prohibited in the
-Bible; that it is, in every sense of the term, self-murder;
-and that our duty to our Creator, to ourselves, and to society,
-loudly calls upon us to denounce it, and hold it up to the
-scorn and reprobation of mankind. How terrifically has
-Dryden, in his Fables, portrayed the condition of the unfortunate
-suicide in another world:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“The slayer of himself, too, saw I there:</div>
-<div class="line">The gore, congealed, was clotted in his hair.</div>
-<div class="line">With eyes half closed, and mouth wide ope, he lay,</div>
-<div class="line">And grim as when he breathed his sullen soul away.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br /><br />
-
-<small>ON THE INFLUENCE OF CERTAIN MENTAL STATES IN
-INDUCING THE DISPOSITION TO SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Moral causes of disease—Neglect of psychological medicine—Mental philosophy
-a branch of medical study—Moral causes of suicide—Tables of
-Falret, &amp;c.—Influence of remorse—Simon Brown, Charles IX. of France—Massacre
-of St. Bartholomew—Terrible death of Cardinal Beaufort, from
-remorse—The Chevalier de S——. Influence of disappointed love—Suicide
-from love—Two singular cases—Effects of jealousy—Othello—Suicide
-from this passion—The French opera dancer—Suicide from
-wounded vanity—False pride—The remarkable case of Villeneuve, as
-related by Buonaparte—Buonaparte’s attempt at suicide—Ambition—Despair,
-cases of suicide from—The Abbé de Rancé—Suicide from blind
-impulse—Cases—Mathews, the comedian—Opinion of Esquirol on the
-subject—Ennui, birth of—Common cause of suicide in France—Effect
-of speculating in stocks—Defective education—Diffusion of knowledge—“Socialism”
-a cause of self-destruction—Suicide common in Germany—Werter—Goëthe’s
-attempt at suicide—Influence of his writings on Hackman—Suicide
-from reading Tom Paine’s “Age of Reason”—Suicide to
-avoid punishment—Most remarkable illustrations—Political excitement—Nervous
-irritation—Love of notoriety—Hereditary disposition—Is death
-painful? fully considered, with cases—Influence of irreligion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> our voyage through life, the passions are said to be the
-gales that swell the canvass of the mental bark; they obstruct
-or accelerate its course, and render the passage favourable or
-full of danger, in proportion as they blow steadily from a
-proper point, or are adverse or tempestuous. Like the wind
-itself, the passions are engines of mighty power and of high
-importance. Without them we cannot proceed, and with them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-we may be shipwrecked and lost. Curbed in and regulated,
-they constitute the source of our most elevated happiness; but
-when not subdued, they drive the vessel on the rocks and
-quicksands of life, and ruin us.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“How few beneath auspicious planets born</div>
-<div class="line">With swelling sails make good the promis’d port,</div>
-<div class="line">With all their wishes freighted.”</div>
-<div class="line i15"><span class="smcap">Young.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“In this country,” Dr. J. Johnson justly observes, “where
-man’s relations with the world around him are multiplied beyond
-all example in any other country, in consequence of the
-intensity of interest attached to politics, religion, amusement,
-literature, and the arts; where the temporal concerns of an
-immense proportion of the population are in a perpetual
-state of vacillation; where spiritual affairs excite in the
-minds of many great anxiety; and where speculative risks
-are daily involving in difficulties all classes of society,—the
-operation of physical causes in the production of disease
-dwindles into complete insignificance when compared with
-that of anxiety and perturbation of mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mens conscia recti in corpore sano,” is Horace’s well-known
-description of the happy man. Lucretius appears to
-have formed a correct estimate of the most important bodily
-and mental conditions on which our happiness depends:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“O wretched mortals! race perverse and blind!</div>
-<div class="line">Through what dread, dark, what perilous pursuits</div>
-<div class="line">Pass ye this round of being! Know ye not,</div>
-<div class="line">Of all ye toil for, Nature nothing asks,</div>
-<div class="line">But for the <i>body</i> freedom from disease,</div>
-<div class="line">And sweet unanxious quiet for the mind?”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Like human beings, the sciences are closely connected with,
-and are mutually dependent upon, one another. The link in
-the chain may not be apparent, but it has a real and palpable
-existence. Medical and moral science are more nearly allied
-than we should, <i>à priori</i>, conclude. We speak of the science
-of medicine, not the practice of it; for, like judgment and wit,
-or, as the author of the School for Scandal ironically observes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-like <i>man and wife</i>, how seldom are they seen in happy union.
-Garth feelingly alludes to this unnatural divorce:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“The healing art now, sick’ning, hangs its head,</div>
-<div class="line">And, once a <i>science</i>, has become a <i>trade</i>.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Psychological medicine has been sadly neglected. We recoil
-from the study of mental philosophy as if we were encroaching
-on holy ground. So great is the prejudice against this branch
-of science, that it has been observed, that to recommend a man
-to study metaphysics was a delicate mode of suggesting the
-propriety of confining him in a lunatic asylum!</p>
-
-<p>In order to become a useful physician, it is necessary to become
-a good metaphysician; so says a competent authority.
-It was not, however, Dr. Cullen’s intention to recommend that
-species of philosophy which confounds the mind without enlightening
-it, and which, like an <i>ignis fatuus</i>, dazzles only to lead
-us from the truth. To the medical man we can conceive no preliminary
-study more productive of advantage than that which
-tends to call into exercise the latent principle of thought, and
-to accustom the mind to close, rigid, and accurate observation.
-The science of mind, when properly investigated, teaches us
-the laws of our mental frame, and shews us the origin of our
-various modes and habits of thought and feeling—how they
-operate upon one another, and how they are cultivated and
-repressed; it disciplines us in the art of induction, and guards
-us against the many sources of fallacy in the practice of
-making inferences; it gives precision and accuracy to our investigations,
-by instructing us in the nicer discriminations of
-truth and falsehood.</p>
-
-<p>The value of mental philosophy as a branch of education will
-be properly appreciated when we consider that this ennobling
-principle was given to us for the purpose of directing and controlling
-our powers and animal propensities, and bringing them
-into that subjection whereby they become beneficial to the
-individual and to the world at large, enabling him to exchange
-with others those results which the power of his own and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-gigantic efforts of other minds have developed; maintaining
-and perpetuating the most dignified and exalted state of happiness,
-the attribute of social life; unfolding not only treasures
-which the concentrated powers of individuals are enabled to
-discover, but developing those more quiet and unobtrusive
-characteristics of virtuous life, those social affections, which
-are alone calculated to make our present state of being happy.</p>
-
-<p>Independently of the utility of the study, what a world of
-delight is open to the mind of that man who has devoted
-some portion of his time to the investigation of his mental
-organization! In him we may truly behold—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i6">“Nature, gentle, kind,</div>
-<div class="line">By culture tamed, by liberty refreshed,</div>
-<div class="line">And all the radiant fruits of truth matured.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>When we take into consideration the tremendous influence
-which the different mental emotions have over the bodily
-functions, when we perceive that violent excitement of mind
-will not only give rise to serious functional disorder, but actual
-organic disease, leading to the commission of suicide, how
-necessary does it appear that he to whose care is entrusted
-the lives of his fellow-creatures, should have made this department
-of philosophy a matter of serious consideration! It is no
-logical argument against the study of mental science, to urge
-that we are in total ignorance of the nature or constitution of
-the human understanding. We know nothing of the nature of
-objects which are cognizable to sense, and which can be
-submitted to actual experiment, and yet we are not deterred
-from the investigation of their properties and mutual influences.
-The passions are to be considered, in a medical
-point of view, as a part of our constitution. They stimulate
-or depress the mind, as food and drink do the body. Employed
-occasionally, and in moderation, both may be of use
-to us, and are given to us by nature for this purpose; but
-when urged to excess, the system is thrown off its balance,
-and disease is the result.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the medical philosopher, nothing can be more deeply
-interesting than to trace the reciprocity of action existing
-between different mental conditions, and affections of particular
-organs. Thus the passion of fear, when excited, has a
-sensible influence on the action of the heart; and when the
-disease of this organ takes place independently of any mental
-agitation, the passion of fear is powerfully roused. Anger
-affects the liver and confines the bowels, and frequently gives
-rise to an attack of jaundice; and in hepatic and intestinal
-disease, how irritable the temper is!</p>
-
-<p>Hope, or the anticipation of pleasure, affects the respiration;
-and how often do we see patients, in the last stage of
-pulmonary disease, entertaining sanguine expectations of
-recovery to the very last!</p>
-
-<p>As the passions exercise so despotic a tyranny over the physical
-economy, it is natural to expect that the crime of suicide
-should often be traced to the influence of mental causes. In
-many cases, it is difficult to discover whether the brain, the
-seat of the passions, be primarily or secondarily affected.
-Often the cause of irritation is situated at some distance from
-the cerebral organ; but when the fountain-head of the nervous
-system becomes deranged, it will react on the bodily functions,
-and produce serious disease long after the original cause of
-excitement is removed. It is not our intention to attempt to
-explain the <i>modus operandi</i> of mental causes in the production
-of the suicidal disposition. That such effects result from an
-undue excitement of the mind cannot for one moment be questioned.
-Independently of mental perturbation giving rise to
-maniacal suicide, there are certain conditions of mind, dependent
-upon acquired or hereditary disposition, or arising
-from a defective expansion of the intellectual faculties, which
-originate the desire for self-destruction. These states will all
-be alluded to in the course of the present inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>Some idea of the influence of certain mental states on the
-body will be obtained by an examination of the various tables
-which have been published, in this and other countries, re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>specting
-the causes of suicide, as far as they could be ascertained.</p>
-
-<p>The following suicides were committed in London, between
-the years 1770 and 1830:<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">19</a>—</p>
-
-<table summary="causes" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc"><i>Indication of Causes.</i></td><td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Women.</i></td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Poverty</td><td class="tdr">905</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">511</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Domestic grief</td><td class="tdr">728</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">524</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Reverse of fortune</td><td class="tdr">322</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">283</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Drunkenness and misconduct</td><td class="tdr">287</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">208</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Gambling</td><td class="tdr">155</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">141</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Dishonour and calumny</td><td class="tdr">125</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">95</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disappointed ambition</td><td class="tdr">122</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">410</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Grief from love</td><td class="tdr">97</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">157</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Envy and jealousy</td><td class="tdr">94</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">53</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Wounded self-love</td><td class="tdr">53</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">53</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Remorse</td><td class="tdr">49</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">37</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Fanaticism</td><td class="tdr">16</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">1</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Misanthropy</td><td class="tdr">3</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">3</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Causes unknown</td><td class="tdr">1381</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">377</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td><td class="tdr">——</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">——</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">Total</td><td class="tdr">4337</td><td><a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">20</a></td><td class="tdr">2853</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>According to a table formed by Falret of the suicides
-which took place between 1794 and 1823, the following
-results appear:—Of 6782 cases, 254 were from disappointed
-love, and of this number 157 were women; 92 were from
-jealousy; 125 from being calumniated; 49 from a desire,
-without the means, of vindicating their characters; 122 from
-disappointed ambition; 322 from reverses of fortune; 16 from
-wounded vanity; 155 from gambling; 288 from crime and
-remorse; 723 from domestic distress; 905 from poverty; 16
-from fanaticism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In preparing the present work, we have endeavoured to obtain
-access to documents which would throw some light on
-the probable origin of the many cases of self-destruction
-which have taken place within the last four or five years.
-In many cases we could obtain no insight into the motives of
-the individuals; but in nine-tenths of those whose histories we
-succeeded in making ourselves somewhat conversant with, we
-found that mental causes played a very conspicuous part in
-the drama. Our experience on this point accords with that of
-many distinguished French physicians who have devoted their
-time and talents to the consideration of the subject.</p>
-
-<p>In considering the influence of mental causes, we shall in
-the first instance point out the effects of certain passions and
-dispositions of the individual on the body; then investigate
-the operation of education, irreligion, and certain unhealthy
-conditions of the mind which predispose the individual to
-derangement and suicide.</p>
-
-<p>There is no passion of the mind which so readily drives a
-person to suicide as remorse. In these cases, there is generally
-a shipwreck of all hope. To live is horror; the infuriated
-sufferer feels himself an outcast from God and man; and
-though his judgment may still be correct upon other subjects,
-it is completely overpowered upon that of his actual distress,
-and all he thinks of and aims at is to withdraw with as much
-speed as possible from the present state of torture, totally
-regardless of the future.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“I would not if I could be blest,</div>
-<div class="line">I want no other paradise but rest.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The most painfully interesting and melancholy cases of insanity
-are those in which remorse has taken possession of the
-mind. Simon Brown, the dissenting clergyman, fancied that
-he had been deprived by the Almighty of his immortal soul,
-in consequence of having accidentally taken away the life of
-a highwayman, although it was done in the act of resistance
-to his threatened violence, and in protection of his own
-person. Whilst kneeling upon the wretch whom he had suc<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>ceeded
-in throwing upon the ground, he suddenly discovered
-that his prostrate enemy was deprived of life. This unexpected
-circumstance produced so violent an impression upon
-his nervous system, that he was overpowered by the idea of
-an involuntary homicide, and for this imaginary crime fancied
-himself ever afterwards condemned to one of the most dreadful
-punishments that could be inflicted upon a human being.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady was one morning requested by her mother to
-stay at home; notwithstanding which, she was tempted to go
-out. Upon her return to her domestic roof, she found that
-the parent whom she had so recently disobliged had expired
-in her absence. The awful spectacle of a mother’s corpse,
-connected with the filial disobedience which had almost immediately
-preceded, shook her reason from its seat, and she
-has ever since continued in a state of mental derangement.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that the solitary hours of Charles the Ninth of
-France were rendered horrible by the repetition of the shrieks
-and cries which had assailed his ears during the massacre of
-St. Bartholomew.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">21</a></p>
-
-<p>The death of Cardinal Beaufort is represented as truly
-terrible. The consciousness of having murdered the Duke of
-Gloucester is said to have rendered Beaufort’s death one of the
-most terrific scenes ever witnessed. Despair, in its worst form,
-appeared to take possession of his mind at the last moment.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-His concluding words, as recorded by Harpsfield,<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> were—“And
-must I then die? Will not all my riches save me? I could
-purchase the kingdom, if that would save my life. What! is
-there no bribing of death? When my nephew, the Duke of
-Bedford, died, I thought my happiness and my authority
-greatly increased; but the Duke of Gloucester’s death raised
-me in fancy to a level with kings, and I thought of nothing
-but accumulating still greater wealth, to purchase at last the
-triple crown. Alas! how are my hopes disappointed! Wherefore,
-O my friends, let me earnestly beseech you to pray for
-me, and recommend my departing soul to God!” A few
-minutes before his death, his mind appeared to be undergoing
-the tortures of the damned. He held up his two hands, and
-cried—“Away! away!—why thus do ye look at me?” It
-was evident he saw some horrible spectre by his bed-side.
-This last scene in the Cardinal’s life has been most ably delineated
-by the immortal Shakspeare:—<br /><br /></p>
-
-<table summary="Shakspeare" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Scene</span>—<i>The Cardinal’s Bed-chamber</i>.<br /><br /></td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">King Henry</span>, <span class="smcap">Salisbury</span>, and <span class="smcap">Warwick</span>.<br /><br /></td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>King Hen.</i></td><td class="tdl">How fares my Lord? Speak, Beaufort, to thy sovereign.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Cardinal.</i></td><td class="tdl">If thou be’st Death, I’ll give thee England’s treasure,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Enough to purchase such another island,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">So thou wilt let me live, and feel no pain.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>King Hen.</i></td><td class="tdl">Ah! what a sign it is of evil life</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">When death’s approach is seen so terrible.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Warwick.</i></td><td class="tdl">Beaufort, it is thy sovereign speaks to thee.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Cardinal.</i></td><td class="tdl">Bring me unto my trial when you will.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Died he<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">23</a> not in his bed? Where should he die?</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Can I make men live whe’er they will or no?</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">O, torture me no more, I will confess—</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Alive again? then shew me where he is:</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">I’ll give a thousand pound to look upon him—</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">He hath no eyes, the dust hath blinded them.—</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Comb down his hair; look! look! it stands upright,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Like lime-twigs set to catch my winged soul.—</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-Give me some drink, and bid the apothecary</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Bring the strong poison that I bought of him.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>King Hen.</i></td><td class="tdl">O thou eternal Mover of the Heav’ns,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Look with a gentle eye upon this wretch.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">O, beat away the busy meddling fiend,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">That lays strong siege unto this wretch’s soul,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">And from his bosom purge this black despair.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Warwick.</i></td><td class="tdl">See how the pangs of death do make him grin!</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Salisbury.</i></td><td class="tdl">Disturb him not; let him pass peaceably.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>King Hen.</i></td><td class="tdl">Peace to his soul, if God’s good pleasure be!</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Lord Cardinal, if thou think’st on heaven’s bliss,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Lift up thy hand, make signal of thy hope.—</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">He dies, and makes no sign—O God, forgive him!</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Warwick.</i></td><td class="tdl">So bad a death argues a monstrous life.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>King Hen.</i></td><td class="tdl">Forbear to judge, for we are sinners all.—</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">Close up his eyes, and draw the curtain close,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl">And let us all to meditation.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">24</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>M. Guillon relates the following remarkable case:—“The
-Chevalier de S—— had been engaged in seventeen ‘affairs
-of honour,’ in each of which his adversary fell. But the
-images of his murdered rivals began to haunt him night and
-day; and at length he fancied he heard nothing but the
-wailings and upbraidings of seventeen families—one demanding
-a father, another a son, another a brother, another a husband,
-&amp;c. Harassed by these imaginary followers, he incarcerated
-himself in the monastery of La Trappe; but the
-French revolution threw open this asylum, and turned the
-chevalier once more into the world. He was now no longer
-able to bear the remorse of his own conscience, or, as he imagined,
-the sight of seventeen murdered men, and therefore
-put himself to death. It is evident that insanity was the consequence
-of the remorse, and the cause of the suicide.</p>
-
-<p>“No disease of the imagination is so difficult to cure as that
-which is complicated with the idea of guilt: fancy and conscience
-then act interchangeably upon us, and so often shift
-their places, that the illusions of one are not distinguished from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>the dictates of the other. If fancy presents images not moral
-or religious, the mind drives them away when they give pain;
-but when melancholy notions take the form of duty, they lay
-hold on the faculties without opposition, because we are
-afraid to exclude or banish them.”<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">25</a></p>
-
-<p>How accurately has the poet depicted the tortures, the
-sleeplessness, of a guilty conscience:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Though thy slumber may be deep,</div>
-<div class="line">Yet thy spirit shall not sleep;</div>
-<div class="line">There are shades which will not vanish,</div>
-<div class="line">There are thoughts thou canst not banish;</div>
-<div class="line">By a power to thee unknown,</div>
-<div class="line">Thou canst never be alone;</div>
-<div class="line">Thou art wrapt as with a shroud,</div>
-<div class="line">Thou art gathered in a cloud;</div>
-<div class="line">And for ever shalt thou dwell</div>
-<div class="line">In the spirit of this spell.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A woman with her husband had been employed in a French
-hospital as servants for a considerable time. Having left
-their situations, the wife, <i>thirty years</i> afterwards, declared she
-heard a voice within, commanding her to repair instantly to
-the chief commissioner of police, and confess the thefts she
-had committed during the time she was at the hospital. The
-fact was, that she had been guilty of appropriating occasionally
-to her own use a portion of the food supplied for the
-patients attached to the Institution. The commissioner
-listened to the woman’s story, and her demand that she should
-be punished, but refused to take any cognizance of the
-offence. She returned home, and for some time was extremely
-dejected. She became so miserable that existence was no
-longer desirable; and as the legal tribunals refused to punish
-her, she determined on suicide, which she committed at the
-age of fifty-one.</p>
-
-<p>It is admitted, by almost universal consent, that there is no
-affection of the mind that exerts so tremendous an influence
-over the human race as that of love.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“To love, and feel ourselves beloved,”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>is said to constitute the height of human happiness. This
-sacred sentiment, which some have debased by the term passion,
-when unrequited and irregulated, produces the most
-baneful influence upon the system.</p>
-
-<p>“A youthful passion, which is conceived and cherished
-without any certain object, may be compared to a shell thrown
-from a mortar by night: it rises calmly in a brilliant track,
-and seems to mix, and even to dwell for a moment with the
-stars of heaven; but at length it falls—it bursts—consuming
-and destroying all around, even as itself expires.”<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">26</a></p>
-
-<p>From the constitution of woman, from the peculiar position
-which she of necessity holds in society, we should, <i>à priori</i>,
-have concluded that in her we should see manifested this
-sentiment in all its purity and strength. Such is the fact.
-A woman’s life is said to be but the history of her affections.
-It is the soul within her soul; the pulse within her heart;
-the life blood along her veins, “blending with every atom of
-her frame.” Separated from the bustle of active life—isolated
-like a sweet and rare exotic flower from the world, it is natural
-to expect that the mind should dwell with earnestness
-upon that which is to constitute almost its very being, and
-apart from which it has no existence.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Alas! the love of woman, it is known</div>
-<div class="line">To be a lovely and a fearful thing;</div>
-<div class="line">For all of theirs upon that die is thrown;</div>
-<div class="line">And if ’tis lost, life hath no more to bring</div>
-<div class="line">To them, but mockeries of the past alone.”</div>
-<div class="line i15"><span class="smcap">Byron.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The term “broken heart” is not a mere poetical image.
-Cases are recorded in which that organ has been ruptured in
-consequence of disappointed hope. Let those who are sceptical
-as to the fact that physical disease so often results from
-blighted affection, visit the wards of our public and private
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>asylums. In those dreary regions of misery they will have
-an opportunity of witnessing the wreck of many a form that
-was once beauteous and happy. Ask their history, and you
-will be told of holy and sincere affection nipped in the bud—of
-wild and passionate love strangled at its birth—of the death
-of all human hopes, of a severance from those about whom
-every fibre of the soul had entwined itself. Silent and sullen
-grief, black despair,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“And laughter loud, amidst severest woe,”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>are the painful images that meet the eye at every step we
-take through these “hells upon earth.”<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">27</a></p>
-
-<p>In this country, the great majority of the cases of insanity
-among women, in our establishments devoted to the reception
-of the insane, can clearly be traced to unrequited and disappointed
-affection. This is not to be wondered at, if we consider
-the present artificial state of society. We make “merchandize
-of love;” both men and women are estimated, not
-by their mental endowments, not by their moral worth, not
-by their capacity of making the domestic fire-side happy, but
-by the length of their respective purses. Instead of seeking
-for a heart, we look for a dowry. Money is preferred to
-intellect; pure and unadulterated affection dwindles into
-nothingness when placed in the same scale with titles and
-worldly honours,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“And Mammon wins his way</div>
-<div class="line">Where seraphs might despair.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>How little do those who ought to be influenced by more
-elevated motives calculate the seeds of wretchedness and
-misery which they are sowing for those who, by nature, have
-a right to demand that they should be actuated by other
-principles!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i5">“Shall I be won</div>
-<div class="line">Because I’m valued as a <i>money-bag</i>?</div>
-<div class="line">For that I bring to him who winneth me,”<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">28</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>says Catherine, in the spirit of honest indignation. It should
-be remembered that “wedlock joins nothing, if it joins not
-hearts.”</p>
-
-<p>How many melancholy cases of suicide can clearly be
-traced to this cause! Death is considered preferable to a long
-life of unmitigated sorrow. When the heart is seared, when
-there exists no “green spot in memory’s dreary waste,”—when
-all hope is banished from the mind, and wretched
-loneliness and desolation take up their residence in the heart,
-need it excite surprise that the quiet and rest of the grave is
-eagerly longed for! If a mind thus worked upon be not
-influenced by religious principles, self-destruction is the idea
-constantly present to the imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the sufferings, however, to which we are exposed
-during our sojourn below, nothing is so truly overwhelming
-and irreparable as the death of one with whom all our early
-associations are inseparably linked—one endeared to us by
-the most pleasing recollections. Death leaves a blank in our
-existence; a cold shuddering shoots through the frame, a mist
-flits before our eyes, darkening the face of nature, when the
-heart that mingled all its feelings with ours lies, cold and insensible,
-in the silent grave.</p>
-
-<p>As long as life lasts, there is hope; but death snatches every
-ray of consolation from the mind. The only prop that supported
-us is removed, and the mansion crumbles to the dust;
-the mind becomes utterly and hopelessly wrecked. To say
-that this is but the effect on understandings constitutionally
-weak, is to say what facts will not establish. The most elevated
-and best cultivated minds are often the most sensitively
-alive to such impressions.</p>
-
-<p>The following case made considerable noise at Lyons, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>1770. A young gentleman of rank, of handsome exterior,
-possessing considerable mental endowments, and most respectably
-connected, fell in love with a young lady, who, like
-himself, possessed a handsome person, in union with accomplishments
-of a high order. They met; the passion was reciprocal,
-and the gentleman accordingly made an application
-to her parents to be allowed to consummate their bliss by
-marriage. The parents, as parents sometimes do under these
-circumstances, refused compliance. The gentleman took it
-greatly to heart; it preyed much upon his mind, and in the
-midst of his grief he burst a blood-vessel. His case was given
-over by the medical men. The young lady, on being made
-acquainted with his condition, paid him a clandestine visit,
-and they then agreed to destroy themselves. Accordingly
-the lady brought with her, on her next visit, two pistols and
-two daggers, in order that, if the pistols missed, the daggers
-might the next moment pierce their hearts. They embraced
-each other for the last time. Rose-coloured ribbons were
-tied to the triggers of the pistols; the lover holding the ribbon
-of his mistress’ pistol, while she held the ribbon of his;
-both fired at a given signal, and both fell at the same instant
-dead on the floor!</p>
-
-<p>The case now about to be recorded presents some peculiarly
-interesting features. An English lady, moving in the
-first circles of society, went, in company with her friends, to
-the opera at Paris. In the next box sat a gentleman, who
-appeared, from the notice he took of the lady, to be enamoured
-of her. The lady expressed herself annoyed at the
-observation which she had attracted, and moved to another
-part of the box. The gentleman followed the carriage home,
-and insisted upon addressing the lady, declaring that he had
-had the pleasure of meeting her elsewhere, and that one
-minute’s conversation would convince her of the fact, and do
-away with the unfavourable impression which his apparent
-rudeness might have made upon her mind. As his request<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-did not appear at the moment unreasonable, she consented
-to see him for a minute by herself. In that short space
-of time he made a fervent declaration of his affection; acknowledged
-that desperation had compelled him to have
-recourse to a <i>ruse</i> to obtain an interview, and that, unless she
-looked favourably on his pretensions, he would kill her and
-then himself. The lady expressed her indignation at the
-deceit he had practised, and said, with considerable firmness,
-that he must quit the house. He did so, retired to his home,
-and with a lancet opened a vein in his arm. He collected a
-portion of blood in a cup, and with it wrote a note to the
-lady, telling her that his blood was flowing fast from his body,
-and it should continue to flow until she consented to listen
-to his proposals. The lady, on the receipt of the note, sent
-her servant to see the gentleman, and found him, as he represented,
-actually bleeding to death. On the entreaty of
-the lady, the arm was bound up and his life saved. On
-writing to the lady, under the impression that she would now
-accept his addresses, he was amazed on receiving a cool refusal,
-and a request that he would not trouble her with any
-more letters. Again driven to desperation, he resolved effectually
-to kill himself. He accordingly loaded a pistol and
-directed his steps towards the residence of his fair amorosa,
-when, knocking at the door, he gained admission, and immediately
-blew out his brains. The intelligence was communicated
-to the lady, she became dreadfully excited, and a severe
-attack of nervous fever followed. When the acute symptoms
-subsided, her mind was completely deranged. Her insanity
-took a peculiar turn. She fancied she heard a voice commanding
-her to commit suicide, and yet she appeared to be
-possessed of sufficient reason to know that she was desirous of
-doing what she ought to be restrained from accomplishing.
-Every now and then she would exclaim, “Take away the
-pistol! I won’t hang myself! I won’t take poison!” Under
-the impression that she would kill herself, she was carefully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-watched; but notwithstanding the vigilance which was exercised
-she had sufficient cunning to conceal a knife, with
-which, during the temporary absence of the attendant, she
-stabbed herself in the abdomen, and died in a few hours.
-It appears that the idea that she had caused the death of another,
-and that she had it in her power to save his life by
-complying with his wishes, produced the derangement of
-mind under which she was labouring at the time of her death;
-and yet she did not manifest, and it was evident to everybody
-that she had not, the slightest affection for the gentleman
-who professed so much to admire her. Possessing naturally a
-sensitive mind, it was easily excited. The peculiar circumstances
-connected with her mental derangement were sufficient
-to account for the delusions under which she laboured.
-Altogether the case is full of interest.</p>
-
-<p>Few passions tend more to distract and unsettle the mind
-than that of jealousy. Insanity and suicide often owe their
-origin to this feeling. One of the most terrific pictures of the
-dire effects of this “green-eyed monster” on the mind is delineated
-in the character of Othello. In the Moor of Venice
-we witness a fearful struggle between fond and passionate love
-and this corroding mental emotion. Worked upon by the
-villainous artifices of Iago, Othello is led to doubt the constancy
-of Desdemona’s affection; the very doubt urges him
-almost to the brink of madness; but when he feels assured of
-her guilt, and sees the gulf into which he has been hurled,
-and the utter hopelessness of his condition, he abandons himself
-to despair. Nothing which the master spirit of Shakspeare
-ever penned can equal the exquisitely touching and melting
-pathos of the speech of the Moor when he becomes perfectly
-conscious of the wreck of one around whom every tendril of
-his heart had indissolubly interwoven itself. To be forcibly
-severed from one dearer to us than our own existence is a
-misfortune that requires much philosophy to bear up against;
-to be torn from a beloved object by death, to feel that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-earth encloses in its cold embrace the idol of our affections,
-freezes the heart; but to be separated from one who has forfeited
-all claim to our affection and friendship, and who still
-lives, but lives in dishonour, must be a refinement of human
-misery. Need we then wonder that, when influenced by such
-feelings, Othello should thus give expression to the overflowings
-of his soul:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i6">“Oh now, for ever,</div>
-<div class="line">Farewell the tranquil mind! farewell content!</div>
-<div class="line">Farewell the plumed troop, and the big wars,</div>
-<div class="line">That make ambition virtue! Oh, farewell!</div>
-<div class="line">Farewell the neighing steed, and the shrill trump,</div>
-<div class="line">The spirit-stirring drum, th’ ear-piercing fife,</div>
-<div class="line">The royal banner, and all quality,</div>
-<div class="line">Pride, pomp, and circumstance of glorious war!</div>
-<div class="line">And, oh, you mortal engines, whose rude throats</div>
-<div class="line">Th’ immortal Jove’s dread clamours counterfeit,</div>
-<div class="line">Farewell! Othello’s occupation’s gone!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It is under the infliction of such a concentration of misery
-that many a mind is shattered, and that death is courted as
-the only relief within its grasp. Othello, having discovered
-when it was too late that he had wrongly suspected Desdemona,
-and had sacrificed the life of the sweetest creature on
-earth, a combination of passions drives him to distraction, and
-under their influence he plunges the dagger into his heart.
-Jealousy was not, as some have supposed, the exclusive cause
-of Othello’s suicide.</p>
-
-<p>The following singular case attracted considerable notice
-fifteen years ago. A woman was subjected to much maltreatment
-by her husband. She was jealous of his attentions
-to one of the servants, and she had frequently declared, that
-if he persisted in insulting her under her own roof she would
-either cause his or her own death. On one occasion she was
-more than usually violent, and expressed her determination to
-ruin him. Fearful that she would carry her threat into execution,
-he had her placed in a room where there was no fur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>niture,
-and nothing that she could use for the purpose of self-destruction.
-Her rage was greatly increased by this barbarous
-treatment, and her screams were sufficiently loud to alarm the
-whole neighbourhood. As her husband refused to release her
-from confinement, she determined no longer to submit to his
-brutal control, and resolved to commit suicide. Having no
-instrument that she could use, she felt some difficulty in effecting
-her purpose. She held her breath for some time, but that
-did not succeed. She then tried to strangle herself with her
-hands, but that mode was equally unsuccessful. Her determination
-was so resolutely fixed, that in desperation she tore
-her hair out by the roots. Still death did not come to her
-relief. In vain she searched in every corner of the room for
-something with which she might effectually take away her life.
-Just as she was beginning to give up the idea as hopeless, her
-eye caught a sight of the glass in the window; she instantly
-broke a pane, and with a piece of it endeavoured to cut her
-throat; and yet she could not succeed in effecting her horrid
-purpose. At last, as a dernier resort, she resolved to swallow
-a piece of the broken glass, hoping by this means to choke
-herself. She did so, and the glass stuck in her throat, and
-produced the most excruciating agony. Her groans became
-audible; the husband became alarmed, and opened the door,
-when he found his wife apparently in the last struggles of
-death. Medical relief was immediately obtained, and although
-everything that surgical ingenuity could suggest was had recourse
-to, she died, a melancholy spectacle of the effects of
-unsubdued passion.</p>
-
-<p>The two following cases shew how trifling a cause often
-incites to self-destruction:—</p>
-
-<p>Madame N——, a once famous dancer at the French
-opera-house, was taken to task by her husband for not acquitting
-herself so well in the ballet as she usually did. She exhibited
-indications of passion at the, as she thought, unmerited
-reproof. When she arrived home, she resolved to die, but was
-much puzzled to effect her purpose. The next morning, she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-purchased a potent poison, but when she returned to her home
-she found that her husband looked suspiciously at her, and
-appeared to watch her movements. She then made up her
-mind to take the fatal draught in the evening, as she was
-going in the carriage to the opera. She accordingly did so;
-the poison did not have an immediate effect. The ballet
-commenced, and Madame N—— was led on the stage; and
-it was not until she had commenced dancing that she began
-to feel the draught producing the desired effect. She complained
-of illness, and was removed to her dressing-room,
-where she expired in the arms of her husband, confessing
-that she had, in a fit of chagrin at his rebuke, swallowed
-poison!</p>
-
-<p>A young gentleman, of considerable promise, of high
-natural and acquired attainments, had been solicited to make
-a speech at a public meeting, which was to take place in the
-town in which he resided. As he had never attempted to
-address extemporaneously a public body, he expressed himself
-extremely nervous as to the result, and asked permission
-to withdraw his name from the published list of speakers.
-This wish was not, however, complied with, as it was thought
-that when the critical moment arrived he would not be found
-wanting even in the art of public speaking. He had prepared
-himself with considerable care for the attempt. His
-name was announced from the chair; when he rose for the
-purpose of delivering his sentiments. The exordium was
-spoken without any hesitation; and his friends felt assured
-that he would acquit himself with great credit. He had not,
-however, advanced much beyond his prefatory observations,
-when he hesitated, and found himself incapable of proceeding.
-He then sat down, evidently excessively mortified. In this
-state he retired to a room where the members of the committee
-had previously met, and cut his throat with his penknife.
-He wounded the carotid artery, and died in a few
-minutes.</p>
-
-<p>A case of suicide from mortified pride, somewhat similar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-to the last, occurred some years ago in London. A gentleman,
-whose imagination was much more active than his
-judgment, conceived that he was possessed of histrionic
-powers equal to those which were exhibited by the immortal
-Garrick. A manager of a London theatre, to whom he
-was introduced, allowed him to make his débût at his theatre.
-As is often the case, the public formed a different estimate of
-his abilities to that which the vanity of the young aspirant had
-induced him to form; and the consequence was, that he was
-well hissed and hooted for his presumption in attempting a
-character for which his talents so little adapted him. Being
-naturally sensitive, his failure preyed on his mind; and under
-the influence of the mortification, he hung himself, leaving
-in his room the following laconic epistle, addressed to his
-mother:—</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My Dear Mother</span>,—All my hopes have been ruined.
-I fancied myself a man of genius; the reality has proved me
-to be a fool. I die, because life is no longer to be supported.
-Look charitably on this last action of my life. Adieu!”</p>
-
-<p>A common cause of suicide is the feeling of false pride.
-The only reason assigned for the desperate act of Elizabeth
-Moyes, who threw herself from the Monument, was, that,
-owing to the reduced circumstances of her father, (a baker,)
-it was determined that she should procure a situation at a
-confectioner’s, and support herself. This she allowed to prey
-upon her mind, although she expressed a concurrence in the
-propriety of the course suggested. How true it is—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Abstract what others feel, what others think,</div>
-<div class="line">All pleasures sicken, and all glories sink.”</div>
-<div class="line i15"><span class="smcap">Pope.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Owing to the fictitious notions abroad in society, the ridiculously
-false views which are taken of worldly honours, the
-ideas which a sickly sentimentality infuses into the mind, this
-feeling is engendered, to an alarming extent, through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-different ranks of society. This constitutes one great element
-which is undermining and disorganizing our social condition.
-A fictitious value is affixed to wealth and position in the
-world; it is estimated for itself alone, all other considerations
-being placed out of view.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">
-“None think the great unhappy but the great.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Vatel committed suicide because he was not able to prepare
-as sumptuous an entertainment as he wished for his guests.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot conceive how this evil is to be obviated, unless it
-be possible to revolutionize the ideas which are generally
-attached to fame and worldly grandeur. It is difficult to
-persuade such persons that the end of fame is merely</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“To have, when the original is dust,</div>
-<div class="line">A name, a wretched picture, and worse bust.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>There is a nameless, undefinable something, that the world
-is taught to sigh after—is always in search of; a moral
-<i>ignis fatuus</i>, which is dazzling to lead it from the road which
-points to true and unsophisticated happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Persons naturally proud are less able than others to bear
-up against the distresses of life; they are more severely galled
-by the yoke of adversity; and hence this passion often produces
-mental derangement. Such characters exhibit a
-morbid desire for praise; it acts like moral nourishment to
-their souls; it is a stimulus that is almost necessary to their
-very being, forgetting that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Praise too dearly loved, or warmly sought,</div>
-<div class="line">Enfeebles all eternal weight of thought;</div>
-<div class="line">’Till the fond soul, within itself unblest,</div>
-<div class="line"><i>Leans for all pleasure on another’s breast</i>.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Dr. Reid justly observes, that “he who enters most deeply
-into the misfortunes of others, will be best able to bear his
-own. A practical benevolence, by habitually urging us to
-disinterested exertion, tends to alienate the attention from
-any single train of ideas, which, if favoured by indolence and
-self contemplation, might be in danger of monopolizing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-mind, and occasions us to lose a sense of our personal concerns
-in an enlarged and liberal sympathy with the general
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>Villeneuve, the celebrated French admiral, when he was
-taken prisoner and brought to England, was so much grieved
-at his defeat that he studied anatomy in order to destroy
-himself. For this purpose he bought some anatomical plates
-of the heart, and compared them with his own body, in order
-to ascertain the exact situation of that organ. On his arrival
-in France, Buonaparte ordered that he should remain at
-Rennes, and not proceed to Paris. Villeneuve, afraid of
-being tried by a court-martial for disobedience of orders, and
-consequently losing his fleet, (for Napoleon had ordered him
-not to sail or to engage the English,) determined to destroy
-himself; and accordingly took his plates and compared them
-with the position of his heart. Exactly in the centre he
-made a mark with a large pin; then fixed it, as near as he
-could judge, in the same spot in his own breast, and shoved
-it on to its head; it penetrated his heart, and he expired.
-When the room was opened, he was found dead, the pin
-through his breast, and a mark in the plate corresponding
-with the wound.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">29</a></p>
-
-<p>It has been said that after the death of Josephine, and
-when Buonaparte was overwhelmed with misfortunes, he
-attempted suicide. Those who consider Napoleon immaculate
-deny the accuracy of the charge. But in order to
-give the reader an opportunity of judging for himself, we
-lay before him Sir Walter Scott’s account of the transaction
-referred to. “Buonaparte,” he observes, “belonged
-to the Roman school of philosophy; and it is confidently
-reported by Baron Fane, his secretary—though not universally
-believed—that he designed to escape from life by an act of
-suicide. The Emperor, according to this account, had
-carried with him, ever since his retreat from Moscow, a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>packet containing a preparation of opium, made up in the
-same manner with that used by Condorcet, for self-destruction.
-His valet-de-chambre, in the night of the 12th or 13th of
-April, heard him arise, and pour something into a glass
-of water, drink, and return to bed. In a short time afterwards
-the man’s attention was called by sobs and stifled
-groans; an alarm took place in the chateau; some of the
-principal persons were roused, and repaired to Napoleon’s
-chamber. Yvan, the surgeon who had procured him the
-poison, was also summoned; but hearing the Emperor complain
-that the operation of the potion was not quick enough,
-he was seized with a panic of terror, and fled from the palace
-at full gallop. Napoleon took the remedies recommended,
-and a long fit of stupor ensued, with profuse perspiration.
-He awakened much exhausted, and surprised at finding himself
-still alive. He said aloud, after a few moments’ reflection,
-‘Fate will not have it so;’ and afterwards appeared reconciled
-to undergo his destiny without similar attempts at personal
-violence.” Napoleon’s illness was, at the time, imputed
-to indigestion. A general of the highest distinction transacted
-business with Napoleon on the morning of the 13th of April.
-He seemed pale and dejected, as from recent and exhausting
-illness. His only dress was a night-gown and slippers; and
-he drank, from time to time, a quantity of ptisan, or some
-such liquid, which was placed beside him, saying he had
-suffered severely during the night, but that his complaint had
-left him.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">30</a></p>
-
-<p>We cannot conceive a more piteous condition than that of a
-man of great ambition without the powers of mind which are
-indispensable for its gratification. In him a constant contest
-is going on between an intellect constitutionally weak, and a
-desire to distinguish himself in some particular department of
-life. How often a man so unhappily organized ends his
-career in a mad-house, or terminates his miserable existence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>by suicide! Let men be taught to make correct estimates of
-their own capabilities, to curb in the imagination, to cease
-“building castles in the air,” if we wish to advance their
-mental and bodily health. “<i>Ne sutor ultra crepidam</i>,” said
-Apelles to the cobbler. A young man who “penned a stanza
-when he ought to engross,” blew out his brains because
-he had failed in inducing a London publisher to purchase an
-epic poem which he had written, and which he had the
-vanity to conceive was equal to Paradise Lost, forgetting that,
-in order to be a poet,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i3">“Nature’s kindling breath</div>
-<div class="line">Must fire the chosen genius; nature’s hand</div>
-<div class="line">Must string his nerves and imp his eagle wings.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>That this state of mind predisposes and often leads to the
-commission of suicide, numerous cases testify.</p>
-
-<p>Despair often drives men to suicide. The dread of
-poverty and want; the hopes in which we often injudiciously
-place too much of our happiness entirely blasted;
-either honest or false pride humbled by public or private
-contempt; ambitious views suddenly and unexpectedly disappointed;
-pains of the body, the loss of those dear and
-near to us,—tend to originate this feeling, and induce the
-unhappy person to seek relief in self-murder.</p>
-
-<p>How terrible is the situation of the man exposed to the
-influence of this passion, and deprived of the cheering and
-elevating influence of hope! We had an opportunity, some
-years back, of witnessing the case of a maniac, whose derangement
-of mind consisted in his having abandoned himself
-completely to despair. He laboured under no distinct or
-prominent delusion, but his mental alienation consisted in
-the total absence of all prospect of relief. The iron had
-entered his very soul; he appeared as if the hand of a relentless
-destiny had written on the threshold of his door, as on
-the gate of the Inferno of Dante, the heart-rending sentence,
-“Abandon all hope!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A woman is seduced by some heartless and profligate wretch;
-she is in a short time forsaken and left to her fate. Her mind
-recurs to the past; she recalls to recollection her once happy
-state of innocence and peace. Scorned by the world, shunned
-by her relations and friends, she is driven to a state of agonizing
-distraction. Despair, in its worst features, takes possession
-of her mind, and under this feeling she puts an end to her
-existence. A man under the operation of this passion wrote
-as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“It has pleased the Almighty to weaken my understanding,
-to undermine my reason, and to render me unfit for the discharge
-of my duty. My blood rolls in billows and torrents of
-despair. It must have vent. How? I possess a place to
-which I am a dishonour, inasmuch as I am incapable of discharging
-it properly; I prevent some better man from doing
-it more justice. This piece of bread which I lament is all
-that I have to support myself and family; even this I do not
-merit; I eat it in sin, and yet I live. Killing thought! which
-a conscience hitherto uncorrupted inspires. I have a wife,
-also, and my child reproaches me with its existence. But
-you do not know, my dear friends, that if my unhappy life is
-not speedily ended, my weak head will require all your care,
-and I shall become a burthen rather than an assistance to
-you. It is better that I yield myself a timely sacrifice to
-misfortune, than, by permitting the delusion to continue longer,
-I consume the last farthing of my wife’s inheritance. It is a
-duty of every person to do that which his situation requires;
-reason commands it, religion approves. My life, such as it is,
-is a mere animal life, devoid of reason; in my mind, a life
-which stands in opposition to duty is moral death, and worse
-than that which is natural. In favour of the few whose life I
-cannot render happy, it is at least my duty not to become an
-oppression. I ought to relieve them from a weight which
-sooner or later cannot fail to crush them.”</p>
-
-<p>This unfortunate man, after penning the above account
-of his morbid feelings, sent his wife to church on Sunday,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-May 13th, 1783; and after writing an addition to his journal,
-took a pair of scissors and attempted, although unsuccessfully,
-to terminate his life by cutting his throat. He then opened
-the arteries at the wrists, and again failed in destroying himself;
-he staggered to the window, and saw his wife returning
-home, upon which he seized a knife used for killing deer, and
-stabbed himself in the heart. He was lying weltering in his
-blood when his wife came in, but was not quite dead. M. le
-Clarc, who relates the case, observes, that he was a man of
-understanding, and of a lively wit. He possessed a great deal
-of theoretical learning; his heart was incorruptibly honest.
-Like every calm and determined self-murderer, he was proud;
-but his pride was not the pride of rank, of riches, or of learning,
-but that divine pride which arises from a consciousness
-of incorruptible honesty, and of being possessed of good
-powers of mind. The office he held was that of an assistant
-judge in a small college of justice at Insterberg. His mother
-had been once deranged in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>Few persons have given a more striking example of this
-passion than the Abbé de Rancé, when first touched with remorse
-for the enormity of his past life, and before the disturbed
-state of his mind had settled into that turn for religious
-seclusion and mortification which produced the appalling
-austerities of La Trappe. “To a state of frantic despair,”
-says Don Lancelot, in his letter to La Mère Angelique of
-Port Royal, “succeeded a black melancholy. He sent away
-all his friends, and shut himself up in his mansion at Veret,
-where he would not see a creature. His whole soul, nay, even
-his bodily wants, seemed wholly absorbed in a deep and settled
-gloom. Shut up in a single room, he even forgot to eat and
-drink; and when the servant reminded him that it was bed-time,
-he started as from a deep reverie, and seemed unconscious
-that it was not still morning. When he was better, he
-would often wander in the woods for the entire day, wholly
-regardless of the weather. A faithful servant, who sometimes
-followed him by stealth, often watched him standing for hours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-together in one place, the snow and the rain beating on his
-head, whilst he, unconscious of his position, was wholly absorbed
-in painful recollections. Then, at the fall of a leaf, or the noise
-of the deer, he would awake as from a slumber, and, wringing
-his hands, hasten to bury himself in a thicker part of the
-wood, or else throw himself prostrate, with his face in the
-snow, and groan bitterly.”<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">31</a></p>
-
-<p>How many commit suicide from what is termed a <i>blind
-impulse</i>! They fancy that an internal voice tells them to kill
-themselves; and considering it impossible to resist what they
-term a destiny, they do so. A gentleman, a merchant of the
-city of London, had been exposed to great mental perturbation;
-his nervous system had received a severe shock. He
-suffered extremely from a dread of going mad. As he was
-walking home one afternoon, he heard a voice say, “Kill
-thyself!” “Commit suicide!” and from that moment he could
-not banish the idea from his mind. Two or three times he
-was on the eve of obeying the mandate of this internal voice;
-but he fortunately possessed sufficient resolution to resist
-the temptation. In this state of mind he consulted a physician,
-who ordered him to be cupped in the neighbourhood
-of the head. His bowels were attended to, and he was recommended
-to visit some friends in the north of Scotland, and
-to banish from his mind all ideas connected with business.
-He followed the advice of his judicious physician, and in a
-short time he completely recovered.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of health apparently perfect and uniform, a man
-was attacked with a sudden disposition to destroy. He seized
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>a stick, raised it, struck indiscriminately and broke everything
-that presented itself to him. After some seconds, the stick fell
-from his hands, and he appeared restored to himself. The man
-knew nothing of what he had just done. He was reproached,
-he was shewn the remnants of the things that he had broken;
-he thought they were ridiculing him, and he was greatly irritated.
-He was again seized with frenzy, and killed a person.
-He was taken before a court of justice, acquitted on the
-ground of insanity, and placed in an hospital. This disposition
-to destroy returned at distant intervals; it then
-came on more frequently; and finally, changed into fits of
-epilepsy. A person seized with this morbid desire is not
-always unconscious of the approach of the disposition; he
-has sometimes a presentiment of it, perceives its danger,
-seeks to combat it, and frequently succeeds in effecting his
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p>A labourer, at the end of his day’s work, felt himself
-seized with an irresistible desire of running; he rushed upon
-the quay, which goes from the Louvre to the Grève: every
-obstacle was overcome. An attempt was made to stop him,
-but it was not successful. At last he dexterously engaged one
-of his arms in the wheel of a carriage, which happened to be
-within his reach. Thus withheld, he recovered his breath,
-became calm, and appeared to have no idea of what
-had occurred. This feeling was again manifested, and
-he was properly sent by his friends to an hospital, when
-it was discovered that he had a disease of the spinal
-marrow.</p>
-
-<p>A man arrived upon the Pont Neuf; he rushed violently
-to the parapet, and precipitated himself into the Seine.
-He was seen by some of the bystanders, who drew him out of
-the water and saved his life. After some days of complete
-restoration, his friends asked him the reason of his strange
-conduct. He replied, “I cannot give any account. I am in
-the happiest situation in the world. I have only to play with
-fortune and with men. I have never been ill. I do not know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-what troubles may come upon me. I can only recollect my
-arrival on the Pont Neuf, and my recall to life.”</p>
-
-<p>The particulars of the following fact are recorded in Mrs.
-Mathews’ life of her husband. Mathews the comedian had
-lived for some days a vapid and inactive life. His spirit had
-been pressed down, “cabin’d, cribb’d, confin’d.” In this state
-of mind, a party of gentlemen called upon him, and proposed
-a day’s excursion. Accordingly, they all mounted their
-horses. Mrs. Mathews says—“My husband’s depressed
-spirits were exhilarated by the beauty of the weather, and the
-prospect of a day’s pleasure (free from the restraint of a room,
-listening to truisms) in the open air, where he would have
-uncontrolled power to gaze upon his idol, Nature, in her most
-beautiful form. He had not ridden out of the city for some
-weeks, and was in a state of childish delight and excitement.
-At this moment his eyes turned upon one of the party, a very
-little man, who was perched on a very tall horse, and who
-seemed unusually grave and important. Mr. Mathews
-looked at him for a moment; and the next, knocked him off
-with a smart blow, felling him to the ground. The whole
-party were struck with horror; but no one felt more shocked
-than he who had committed the outrage. He dismounted,
-picked up the little victim to his unaccountable freak, declared
-himself unable to give any motive for the action, but
-that it was an impulse he could not resist; and afterwards, in
-relating this extraordinary incident, he declared his conviction
-that it was done in a moment of frenzy, induced by the too
-sudden reaction from previous stagnation of all freedom and
-amusement.”</p>
-
-<p>A young woman, about twenty years of age, who had been
-insane but a short time, and appeared to be recovering, after
-having assisted to whitewash and clean a ward in an asylum
-in which she was confined, was sitting, in the evening, taking
-tea with the nurse and several other inmates. She took advantage
-of the opportunity when the nurse went to the cupboard
-for some sugar to seize a knife with which some bread<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-had just been cut; and in the presence of the whole party, in
-an instant, before her hand could be arrested, cut her throat
-in so dreadful a manner that she died almost immediately.</p>
-
-<p>A patient in the Asylum at Wakefield, the wife of a
-labourer, a kind-hearted and clever woman, was afflicted with
-such a propensity to destroy that she was almost constantly
-obliged to be kept in confinement; and when at liberty, she
-could not resist the pleasure of breaking anything she met
-with. In one instance, she saw some tea-cups on a table,
-and for some time walked backwards and forwards, and
-checked the inclination; but eventually the temptation proved
-too strong, and she swept them at once on to the floor. She
-afterwards regretted the circumstance; but the impulse was
-too powerful to be resisted.</p>
-
-<p>A monomaniac (says Esquirol) heard a voice within him
-repeat these words—“<i>Kill thyself! kill thyself!</i>” He therefore
-committed suicide, in obedience to this superior power,
-whose order he dare not withstand.</p>
-
-<p>A man, under a religious hallucination, believed himself to
-be in communication with the Deity. He fancied he heard a
-celestial voice saying—“<i>My son, come and seat thyself by my
-side.</i>” He opened the window to obey the invitation, fell
-down, and fractured his leg. When he was carried to his
-bed, he expressed the greatest astonishment on finding that
-he had precipitated himself from the window.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady of considerable beauty was accosted in the
-street by a strange gentleman. She took no notice at first of
-the unwarrantable liberty; but on finding that he persisted in
-following her, she attempted, by quickening her pace, to
-escape. Being extremely timid, and having naturally a very
-nervous temperament, she was much excited. The person
-in the garb of a gentleman followed her for nearly a mile,
-and when he saw that she was home, he suddenly turned
-down a street, and disappeared. The young lady expressed
-herself extremely ill soon after she entered the house. A
-physician was sent for, who declared his astonishment at her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-severe illness from a cause so trifling. During the following
-night she manifested indications of mental derangement,
-with a disposition to commit suicide. A strait-waistcoat was
-procured, and all apprehensions of her succeeding in gratifying
-the propensity of self-destruction was removed. Some
-weeks elapsed before she recovered. To all appearance she
-was perfectly well. She had no recollection of what had
-transpired, and expressed herself amazed when she was told
-that she had wished to kill herself. Two months after she
-left her bed she was missed. Search was made in every
-direction, but in vain. After the lapse of two days, she was
-discovered floating in a pond of water several miles from her
-home. In her pocket was discovered a piece of paper, on
-which were written the following lines:—“Oh, the misery
-and wretchedness I have experienced for the last month no
-one but myself can tell. A demon haunts me—life is insupportable.
-A voice tells me that I am destined to fall by my
-own hands. I leave this world for another, where I hope to
-enjoy more happiness. Adieu.”</p>
-
-<p>We have no doubt that in this case, although the acute
-symptoms of insanity had subsided, she had not recovered
-completely her sane state of mind. None but those conversant
-with the subject of mental derangement would believe
-that so trifling a circumstance as that of being spoken to in the
-street would have produced so violent an attack of maniacal
-delirium as was witnessed in the case of this poor girl.</p>
-
-<p>M. Esquirol states that he has never seen an unequivocal
-instance of any individual drawn to the commission of suicide
-by a kind of irresistible impulse, independently of any secret
-grievance, real or imaginary. Could the secret feelings of
-these suicides be accurately ascertained, there would generally,
-if not always, be found some lurking source of discontent,
-real or fanciful, in the breast, which serve as
-motives to their suicidal propensity. Many instances are on
-record, it is true, where men have put a period to their
-existence without any apparent visible cause or motive; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-as Rousseau has justly observed, “<i>Le bonheur n’a point
-d’enseigne exterieur: pour en juger, il faudrait lire dans le c[oe]ur
-de l’homme heureux</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Individuals,” says Esquirol, “who appear outwardly the
-residence of happiness, are often inwardly the focus of chagrin,
-and tortured with distracting passions. That man can destroy
-his own life, being at the same time happy in his mind, is a
-phenomenon which human reason cannot comprehend.”</p>
-
-<p>A diseased temperament, a serious lesion of one or more of
-the viscera, a gradual exhaustion of the energies of the system,
-may so aggravate the miseries of life as to hasten the period
-of voluntary death. But how are we to account for the irresistible
-propensity to suicide which sometimes exists, independent
-of any apparent mental or physical ailments? A
-melancholic, whose case was published in Fourcroy’s Medical
-Journal of 1792, once said, “I am in prosperous circumstances;
-I have a wife and a child who constitute my happiness;
-I cannot complain of bad health, and still I feel a horrible
-propensity to throw myself into the Seine.” His declaration
-was too fatally verified in the event. Crichton was
-once consulted upon the case of a young man, twenty-four
-years of age, in full vigour and health, who was tormented
-by periodical accessions of these gloomy feelings and propensities.
-At those times he meditated his own destruction.
-But on a nearer view of the fatal act, he shrunk back into
-himself, and recoiled with horror from its execution. Without
-relinquishing his project, he never had the courage to
-accomplish it. “It is in cases like these,” says Crichton,
-“that energetic measures of coercion, and the effectual excitement
-of terror, should lend their aid to the powers of
-medicine and regimen.”</p>
-
-<p>In many cases of suicide, the act is preceded by a long
-train of perverted reasoning. These individuals become taciturn,
-morose, pusillanimous, and distrustful. The future
-presents itself to their view under the most unfavourable
-aspect, and despair becomes painted on their countenances.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-Their eyes become hollow; they complain of sleeplessness,
-and are disturbed by frightful dreams. The bowels are in an
-inactive state; the functions of the liver become to a certain
-extent suspended. It is in this state that they contemplate
-the idea of suicide; and the diaries which some have kept of
-their sensations and thoughts disclose the various kinds of
-death which they have contemplated and rejected, one after
-another, often for reasons the most preposterous and ridiculous.
-It is singular that in these journals they generally
-endeavour to hide their despondency and their mental aberration,
-while their moral and intellectual weakness is sure
-to be betrayed. They often accuse themselves of insanity,
-and bewail their unhappy lot; others argue most ingeniously
-in favour of their meditated suicide. Others again, subdued
-as it were by the force of the moral and religious principles
-which they have imbibed, represent to themselves that the
-act they contemplate is contrary to the moral end for which
-man was created—fatal to the welfare and happiness of their
-families. Then ensues a conflict in their breasts. If reason
-and religion prevail, the project is abandoned,—sometimes
-abandoned altogether. If otherwise, the suicide is committed.
-Falret knew the case of a woman who exhibited a tendency
-to suicide, but who was delivered for a period from the commission
-of the crime by the principles of religion in which
-her mind had been educated. A long period elapsed before
-she could reconcile herself to the act of suicide, and then she
-argued herself into it by the following piece of sophistry:—“There
-are no general rules without exceptions; and I am
-the precise exception in this case: therefore I may commit
-suicide without violating my religious principles.”</p>
-
-<p>Having once conceived the idea of suicide, the mind is
-often rendered so miserable in consequence of it, that the
-person rushes into the arms of death in order to escape
-from the terrible state of anticipation. Others meditate on the
-bloody deed for years. Rousseau, after drawing a piteous
-portrait of his proscribed and solitary condition, and of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-state of his health, adds, “<i>Puisque mon corps n’est plus pour
-moi qu’un embarras, un obstacle à mon repos, cherchons donc
-à m’en degager le plus tôt que je pourrai</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Tedium vitæ</i>, or <i>ennui</i>, is said to be a frequent cause of
-suicide. We have heard of an Englishman who hanged himself
-in order to avoid the trouble of pulling off and on his
-clothes. Goëthe knew a gardener, and the overseer of some
-extensive pleasure-grounds, who once splenetically exclaimed,
-“Shall I see these clouds for ever passing, then, from east to
-west?” So singularly developed was this weariness of life,
-this feeling of satiety, in one of our distinguished men, that
-it is said of him that he viewed with dissatisfaction the return
-of spring, and wished, by way of change, that everything
-would, for once, be red instead of green.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">32</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“—— Within that ample nich,</div>
-<div class="line">With every quaint device of splendour rich,</div>
-<div class="line">Yon phantom, who, from vulgar eyes withdrawn,</div>
-<div class="line">Appears to stretch in one eternal yawn:</div>
-<div class="line">Of empire here he holds the tottering helm,</div>
-<div class="line">Prime-minister in Spleen’s discordant realm,</div>
-<div class="line">The pillar of her spreading state, and more,</div>
-<div class="line">Her darling offspring, whom on earth she bore.</div>
-<div class="line">For, as on earth his wayward mother strayed,</div>
-<div class="line">Grandeur, with eyes of fire, her form surveyed,</div>
-<div class="line">And with strong passion starting from his throne,</div>
-<div class="line">Unloos’d the sullen queen’s reluctant zone.</div>
-<div class="line">From his embrace, conceived in moody joy,</div>
-<div class="line">Rose the round image of a bloated boy:</div>
-<div class="line">His nurse was, Indolence; his tutor, Pomp,</div>
-<div class="line">Who kept the child from every childish romp.</div>
-<div class="line">They rear’d their nursling to the bulk you see,</div>
-<div class="line">And his proud parents called their imp—<i>Ennui</i>.”</div>
-<div class="line i10"><i>Hayley’s Triumphs of Temper.</i></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It is rare for an Englishman to commit suicide from ennui.
-The English are different in this respect from the French
-people. The causes which lead to suicide in this country,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>are those connected with sudden reverse of fortune, or grievous
-disappointments, which are allowed to prey upon the mind
-until the individual seeks relief in the arms of death. In
-great commercial communities, where men may be reduced,
-in a few minutes, from affluence to beggary; where the hopes
-and aspirations of years are levelled in a moment to the dust,
-and the individual finds himself exposed to the insulting pity
-of friends, and the searching curiosity of the public, we need
-not feel surprise, when all these circumstances rush upon
-a man’s mind in the sudden convulsion and turbulence of its
-elements, that he should welcome the only escape from the
-abyss into which he has been hurled.</p>
-
-<p>It has been stated, by a competent authority, that the week
-following the drawing of the last lottery in England, no less
-than fifty suicides were committed!</p>
-
-<p><i>M. Gase</i>, in a memoir read before the <i>Academie Royale
-de Médecine</i>, traces the increase of suicide in Paris to the
-spirit of gambling which the Parisians so passionately indulge
-in. The extended system of speculation in this
-country approximates in its pernicious effects on the constitution
-to those which have been considered to result
-from gambling. The following case, which was communicated
-to a popular journal, by Dr. J. Johnson, forcibly illustrates
-how the constitution may be undermined by rash,
-inconsiderate conduct, during the excitement arising from
-temporary circumstances:—</p>
-
-<p>One day, on the Stock Exchange, when the rumours of
-failings at home and commotions abroad were producing
-such alarming vacillations in the public funds that the whole
-property of a gentleman of high probity, temperance, and respectability,
-was in momentary jeopardy, he found himself in
-so terrible a state of nervous agitation that he was obliged to
-leave the scene of confusion, and apply to wine, though quite
-unaccustomed to more than a glass or two after dinner. To
-his utmost surprise, the wine had no apparent effect, though
-he drank glass after glass, in rapid succession, until he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-finished a whole bottle. Not the slightest inebriating influence
-was induced by this unusual quantity taken before
-dinner. His nervous agitation was, however, calmed, and he
-went back to the Exchange, and transacted business with
-steadiness, composure, and equanimity. None of the ordinary
-effects of wine were produced at the time, but a few days
-afterwards he was seized with a severe attack of indigestion,
-a malady by which he had never been previously affected.
-This case shews that although mental agitation masks, or
-even prevents, the usual effects of wine, and other stimulants,
-at the time, and thus enables, and indeed induces, men to
-take more than under ordinary circumstances, yet the
-ulterior effects are greatly worse on the constitution than if
-the stimulants had produced the usual excitement at the
-moment of their reception into the stomach. It is thus, we
-have no doubt, that the nervous system of thousands in this
-country is ruined, and, in numerous cases, the seeds of suicidal
-derangement sown, and that without the victims being
-conscious of the channel through which they have been
-poisoned.</p>
-
-<p>Defective education is a frequent cause of suicide. At the
-present day, the ornamental has taken the place of the substantial;
-the showy and specious, the situation of the solid
-and virtuous. The endowments of the mind and cultivation
-of the heart are forced to yield to the external accomplishments
-and graces of the body, and polished manners are too
-generally preferred to sound morals. The importance of
-fashion is inculcated in opposition to reason; religion is made
-to bow down before the shrine of honour; and the fear of the
-world is taught to supersede the fear of God. But what
-superstructure can be raised on so sandy a foundation? It
-can support no incumbent weight; and, in consequence, it
-cannot be deemed surprising that an inundation of folly and
-vice, like a sweeping torrent, should bear down all before it.
-The dignity of personal worth and character is a point too
-little considered. Brilliant parts supersede sound judgment;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-and disinterested virtue, integrity, and public spirit, are out
-of character in a nation immersed in voluptuousness. Education
-of a light and frivolous character leads to a vacuity of
-serious thoughts and solid principles of conduct. Luxury
-and profligacy, in all ages, have operated injuriously on the
-human mind. Cato the elder observes that there could be
-no friendship in a man whose palate had quicker sensations
-than his brain and heart. The man who has no internal
-sources of enjoyment to fly to when others fail,—he whose
-happiness consists in an indulgence in the pleasures of the
-senses, when these ephemeral sources of gratification are
-removed, will, to avoid the vacuum which is made in his
-existence, readily terminate his own life.</p>
-
-<p>There cannot be a doubt but that the general diffusion of
-knowledge, and the desire to place within the command of the
-humblest person the advantages of education, have not a little
-tended to promote the crime of suicide. It may be opposed
-to all our <i>à priori</i> reasoning to suppose that, in proportion as
-the intellect becomes expanded, knowledge and civilization
-diffused, the desire to commit self-murder would be engendered.
-It is an indisputable fact, that insanity, in all its variations, is in
-a ratio to the refinement and civilization of a country. “It
-is clearly proved,” says Brown, “that in Finéstre, where the
-people are in a deplorable state of ignorance, and education is
-entirely neglected, only twelve in a hundred of the inhabitants
-being able to write or read, few suicides occur, at least
-only in the proportion of one in 25,000. In Paris, that focus
-of all that is brilliant and imposing in science and literature,
-the crime is of common occurrence. In Coréze, where only
-twelve in the hundred can read or write, one suicide in
-47,000 occurs; and in the High Loire one in 163,000. On
-the other hand, in Oise and Lower Seine, both places in
-possession of the highest degree of general instruction, and of
-the means of advancing in improvement, suicides occur in
-every 5000 or 9000 inhabitants. In the north of France,
-Catholicism has been nearly extirpated, and there suicide and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-crime predominate; south of the Loire, on the contrary, it
-still retains a strong hold of the affections of the people, and
-there suicide, and its sinister crimes or maladies are comparatively
-rare. This affords a noble proof that the effects of
-Christianity, in whatever form and under whatever circumstances,
-are peace and joy.”<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">33</a></p>
-
-<p>It is our firm belief that the increase of suicide in this
-country is to a certain extent to be traced to the atrocious
-doctrines promulgated with such zeal by the sect of modern
-infidels, who falsely denominate themselves <i>Socialists</i>; a class
-whose opinions are subversive of all morality and Christianity,
-and which sap the foundation of society itself. It is natural
-to expect when such principles of infidelity are inculcated,
-when men are taught to believe in the non-existence of a
-God, and to consider they are not accountable agents, and
-are under the operation of an organization over which they
-have no control, that they should look with philosophic
-indifference on suicide, and consider it as a justifiable mode
-of putting an end to the misery and wretchedness engendered
-by their own opinions. Such doctrines must of necessity be
-productive of great evil to society; and it becomes the duty
-of every Christian and well-wisher to his fellow-men to hold
-them up to reprobation. The opinions of Owen strike at the
-root of all order, and of all virtue, social and public, and
-break down every barrier of law and restraint, making the
-passions the only standard of right and wrong—the animal
-appetites the only test of virtue and vice.</p>
-
-<p>In the Bishop of Exeter’s able speech in the House of Lords,
-on the subject of Socialism, he stated that cases of suicide under
-circumstances of the most dreadful suffering had occurred,
-which had been brought about by Mr. Owen’s pernicious
-doctrines. The learned prelate related the particulars of the
-following case:—Mr. Parke, a most respectable inhabitant of
-Wolverhampton, had an apprentice, who had been in the habit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>of attending Socialists’ meetings, and hearing their lectures.
-He purchased all their publications, and his master’s shop not
-being of that kind to furnish them, he was obliged to go
-elsewhere to obtain them. He dined and drank tea as usual
-with Mr. Parke on the Sunday, and left after tea to attend
-St. George’s Church. Not coming home at the usual hour,
-his master sat up for him until 12 o’clock, when, as he had
-not returned, he concluded that his relations had detained
-him. He was, however, found dead, in a sort of lumber room,
-the next morning. Two bottles of poison were lying by his
-side; the one which occasioned his death contained prussic
-acid; the other, nux vomica: near him were lying four letters,
-one addressed to his father, another to Mr. Parke, a third to
-the jury, and a fourth containing his creed; in all of which he
-expressed his disbelief in the Bible, considering it “the most
-dangerous book that ever was written,” and if ever such a
-person as Jesus Christ lived, he was the weakest man he ever
-heard of. In one of the letters he also stated that he had
-been nurtured in superstition, (meaning, that he had been
-brought up as a member of the church of England,) and that
-when he read Owen’s works he “shuddered at their common
-sense.” He denied all belief in a future state of retribution;
-and as he considered apprenticeship slavery, he thought it
-more prudent to suffer pain for a moment than to endure six
-years’ servitude. He earnestly entreated the jury not to bring
-in a verdict of insanity.</p>
-
-<p>It appears from a letter to the Bishop of Exeter, written by
-the unfortunate youth’s uncle, that he had been from infancy
-an exceedingly lively boy; between him and his parents the
-most glowing affection, as well as the most boundless confidence,
-existed; but the fatal poison of Socialism changed a
-confiding heart into a cold concentration of selfishness.
-After the verdict of the jury, the uncle declared aloud, before
-a crowded room, in a most vehement manner, that, were he in
-the presence of the Queen, he would proclaim Owen as the
-murderer of his nephew.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The indifference with which self-murder is looked at in
-Germany is to be ascribed in a great measure to the popular
-productions of that country. We are reluctant to denounce
-as undoubted causes of suicide the works of men of splendid
-talents; but in such a case it would be wrong, it would be
-criminal, to mince the matter, and plead any excuse for so
-detestable a work as Werter, which has unhinged the minds
-of thousands, before they were aware of its impoisoned and
-insidious tendency. That it is the work of a man of genius
-only makes its blackening influence the stronger; as the fascination
-of the style, and the intense interest of the narrative,
-operate like an infernal spell to smooth the road to self-destruction.
-Its leading theme is, that human passions, and
-particularly love, are immediately inspired by Heaven; and
-that it would be wrong—nay, that it is impossible—to
-resist them; and consequently, if a lover meets with disappointment,
-his only virtuous course is suicide, which is
-triumphantly catalogued among the virtues, as it was by the
-heathen morality of the ancients.</p>
-
-<p>This work, together with Foscolo’s imitation of it, the
-“<i>Ultime Lettere di Jacopo Ortis</i>,” and all publications of a
-similar character, ought to be repudiated by every sound
-thinking man. Resistance to the dictates of passion, when it
-prompts to crime and suicide, is a most deadly sin against
-Werterism; whilst, obeying the passions to the letter, even if
-they incite to criminal love or self-murder, gives to its disciple
-the stamp of one of the virtuous who have courageously braved
-the laws of good order, fearlessly dared to trample under foot
-all the commands of God and man, and stood forth as the
-redoubted champions of human supremacy and the glorious
-right of self-destruction. Such are the principles of the miscreants
-who wish to prove that suicide is a virtue; and, with
-the sentiments found in the pages of Werter, they rush headlong
-and unthinkingly into a deep and awful futurity.</p>
-
-<p>It is not generally known that Goëthe, the author of the
-work alluded to, attempted suicide. He considered the death<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-of the Emperor Otho as worthy of imitation. In contemplating
-the feelings which influenced that monarch, he says
-he convinced himself that if he could not proceed as Otho had
-done, he was not entitled to resolve on renouncing life. He
-adds, “By this conviction, I saved myself from the purpose,
-or indeed, more properly speaking, from the whim, of suicide.
-Among a considerable collection of arms, I possessed a costly
-well-ground dagger. This I laid down nightly by my side;
-and, before extinguishing the light, I tried whether I could
-succeed (<i>à la Otho</i>) in sending the sharp point an inch or two
-deep into my heart. But as I truly never could succeed, I at
-last took to laughing at myself, threw away all these hypochondriacal
-crotchets, and determined to live.”</p>
-
-<p>In the melancholy case of Hackman and Miss Ray,
-the following is the substance of a correspondence which
-passed between them on the subject of Werter. Hackman
-was refused the sight of this book by Miss R., who had a copy
-of the French translation, because, as she expresses herself,
-she saw too great a similarity between her lover and Werter,
-not only in point of situation, but in the impetuosity of their
-tempers. “The book you mention,” says Miss R., “is just
-the only book you should never read. On my knees, I beg
-you never to read it! Perhaps you have read it; perhaps—I
-am distracted! Heaven only knows to whom I may be
-writing this letter.” To this, Hackman, who was in Ireland,
-replies: “Nonsense! to say it will make me unhappy, or that
-I shall not be able to read it. Must I pistol myself because a
-thick-blooded German has been fool enough to set the example,
-or because a German novelist has feigned such a
-story.” Werter was read, and the effect was most injurious on
-his mind. Whilst confined in Newgate, he wrote the following
-letter:—“Among my papers you will see, my friend, some
-lines I wrote on reading Goëthe’s Werter, translated from
-German into French, which, whilst I was in Ireland, Miss R.
-refused to lend me. When I returned to England, I made
-her let me read it. But I never shewed her these lines,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-for fear they should make her uneasy. Unhappy Werter!
-still less pretence hadst thou for suicide than I. After finally
-seeing thy Charlotte married to another—marrying her thyself—hadst
-thou a right over thy existence, because she was
-not thy wife? Yet wast thou less barbarous than I; for thou
-didst not seek to die in her presence,—but neither didst thou
-doubt her love. We can neither of us hope for pardon!”</p>
-
-<p>The lines were these, supposed to be found, after Werter’s
-death, upon the ground by the pistol—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“If chance some kindred spirit should relate</div>
-<div class="line">To future times unhappy Werter’s fate;</div>
-<div class="line">Should in some pitying, almost pardoning age,</div>
-<div class="line">Consign my sorrows to some weeping page;</div>
-<div class="line">And should the affecting page be haply read</div>
-<div class="line">By some new Charlotte—mine will then be dead.</div>
-<div class="line">(Yes; she shall die—sole solace of my love!</div>
-<div class="line">And we shall meet—for so she said—above.)</div>
-<div class="line">O Charlotte! (Martha—by whatever name,</div>
-<div class="line">Thy faithful Werter hands thee down to fame,)</div>
-<div class="line">O be thou sure thy Werter never knows</div>
-<div class="line">The fatal story of my kindred woes!</div>
-<div class="line">O do not, fair one,—by my shocking end</div>
-<div class="line">I charge thee!—do not let thy feeling friend</div>
-<div class="line">Shed his sad sorrows o’er my tearful tale:</div>
-<div class="line">Example, spite of precept, may prevail.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It may be mentioned, as a fact corroborating the opinion,
-that productions of an infidel character have a tendency to
-originate a disposition to suicide by weakening the moral principles;
-that when the celebrated and notorious Tom Paine’s
-“Age of Reason” was first published, the papers of the day
-recorded many cases of self-murder committed by persons who
-avowed that the idea never entered their heads until they had
-become familiar with the works of the above-mentioned writer.
-An individual, zealous in the diffusion of Paine’s principles,
-purchased several hundred copies of his work, which he most
-industriously circulated, gratuitously, in quarters where he
-knew the doctrines of Christianity had already obtained a
-footing. A copy of the “Age of Reason,” elegantly bound,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-was received by a young lady who was acting in the capacity
-of a governess in the family of a gentleman of great respectability.
-The lady had no conception from whom the present
-came, and having heard of the book, she felt a curiosity to
-become acquainted with the doctrines which it inculcated. The
-circumstance of her having received the book was not mentioned
-to any member of the family with whom she resided; and
-in the evening, when she retired to her own room, she read it
-with great attention. The family noticed, in a few weeks, a
-perceptible alteration in the appearance of the young lady.
-She became extremely thoughtful and contemplative. Her
-health also appeared sensibly affected. The mother of the
-children whom she was instructing took advantage of the first
-opportunity of speaking to her on the subject. She expressed
-herself very unhappy in her mind, but refused to disclose the
-cause of her mental uneasiness. It was thought she had
-formed an attachment, and was suffering from the effects of disappointed
-affection. She was questioned on these points, but
-persisted in concealing the circumstances which had been
-operating so injuriously on her mind. The mental dejection
-increased, and the result was, an alarming attack of nervous
-fever, of which she was cured by an able physician with
-much difficulty. When convalescent, she was noticed one
-day busily employed in writing, and when interrupted,
-shewed great anxiety to secrete the piece of paper on which
-she had been transcribing her thoughts. In the course of
-the evening of the same day, a deep groan was heard to
-issue from her room. The servant immediately entered,
-when, to her great horror, she saw the governess on the
-floor with a terrible gash in her throat. Assistance was
-directly obtained, but, alas! not in time to save the life of the
-poor unfortunate girl. On searching her desk, a sheet of
-paper was discovered, on which she had disclosed her reasons
-for the rash act. She said, that from the moment she read
-the “Age of Reason,” her mind became unsettled. Her previous
-religious impressions were undermined; in proportion as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-she was induced to imbibe the doctrines of Tom Paine, so she
-became miserable and wretched. From one error she fell into
-another, until she actually believed that death was annihilation;
-and although she appeared firmly rooted in this belief, she
-expressed herself horrified beyond all expression at the bare
-idea of dissolution. For some time prior to her illness, she had
-felt an impulse to sacrifice her life, but had not the courage to
-perform the act. After her recovery, she felt the impulse renewed
-with increased strength, until, with a hope of escaping
-from an accumulation of misery which was weighing her to
-the earth, she determined to commit suicide. She also, in
-the document referred to, asked her friends to forgive her, and
-to take warning from her fate.</p>
-
-<p>That many rush into suicide in order to escape the just and
-legal punishment of their crimes cannot be a matter of doubt.
-Many under such circumstances are influenced by a fear of
-public exposure, and prefer death to the idea of being compelled
-to undergo the ordeal of a trial in a court of justice.
-The following case is but the type of many that could be related:—</p>
-
-<p>A young man of family, the Hon. Mr. ——, staying at an
-inn in Portsmouth, previously to sailing for India, where he
-was going out as an aide-de-camp to General——, with a
-party of friends, also officers, joined company at supper one
-evening with Mr. Bradbury, the clown of Covent Garden
-Theatre, a person of very gentlemanlike exterior and manners,
-and ambitious of the society of gentlemen. He was in the
-habit of using a very magnificent and curious snuff-box, and
-on this occasion it was much admired by the party, and
-handed round for inspection from one to the other. Mr.
-Bradbury soon after left the inn, and retired to his lodging,
-when he missed his box, and immediately returned to inquire
-for it. The gentlemen with whom he had spent the evening
-had all retired to bed; but he left word with the porter to
-mention to the officers early the next day that he had left the
-box, and to request them to restore it to him when found.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The next morning, Mr. Bradbury again hastened to the inn,
-anxious to recover his property, and met on his way the Hon.
-Mr. ——, and communicated his loss to him; when he was
-informed by that gentleman that a similar circumstance had
-occurred to himself, his bed-room having been robbed the
-night before of his gold watch, chain, and seals, &amp;c., and that
-he was on his way to a Jew in the town to apprize him of the
-robbery, in order that if such articles should be offered for
-sale, he might stop them and detain the person who presented
-them. This was very extraordinary! Mr. Bradbury then
-met the other gentlemen of the party, and was told by them
-that their rooms had also been robbed, one of bank notes to a
-great amount, another of a gold watch, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Mr. —— was violently infuriated by his loss;
-and as he was bound to sail from Portsmouth when the
-ship was ready, he naturally dreaded being compelled to depart
-without his property. He hinted, too, that he had certain
-suspicions of certain people. An officer was sent for
-from London. This man came down promptly, to the great
-satisfaction of the Hon. Mr. ——; and after searching the
-house and their trunks, Rivett (the officer) addressed the
-gentlemen, observing, that there was yet a duty unperformed,
-and which was a painful one to him—he must search the
-<i>persons</i> of all present, and as the Hon. Mr. —— ’s trunks had
-been the first to be inspected, perhaps he would allow him to
-examine him at once. To this he agreed; but the next
-moment he was observed to look very ill. Rivett was proceeding
-to search him, as a matter of course, when he
-requested that everybody would leave the room, except the
-officer and Mr. Bradbury, which request was immediately
-complied with. He then fell upon his knees, entreated for
-mercy, and placed Mr. Bradbury’s box in his hand, begging
-him to forgive him and spare his life. Rivett upon this proceeded
-to search him, but he resisted; the object was effected
-by force, and the greater part of the property found that had
-been stolen in the house. The officer, conceiving that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-had not got the whole of the bank notes, inquired of Mr. —— where
-the remainder was; when he pointed to a pocket-book
-which was under the foot of the bed; and while Rivett
-relaxed his hold of him, and was in the act of stooping to
-pick up the book, Mr. —— caught up a razor and cut his
-throat. Rivett and Mr. Bradbury seized an arm each, and
-forced the razor from him; but he was so determined on self-destruction,
-that he twisted his head about violently in different
-ways, in order to make the wound larger and more
-fatal. To prevent him from continuing this, he was braced
-up with linen round his neck so tightly that he could not
-move it. A surgeon of the town, with two assistants, came,
-and after seeing the wound, gave it as their opinion that it
-was possible for him to recover, and by the assistance of some
-powerful soldiers holding him, they dressed the wound. His
-clothes were then cut off, and he was carried down stairs into
-another room. During this operation he coughed violently;
-but whether naturally or by design, to make his wound worse,
-was not ascertained. It had, however, the effect of setting
-his wound bleeding again, and the dressing was obliged to
-be repeated.</p>
-
-<p>The sequel of this distressing case was of an equally melancholy
-character.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Mr. Bradbury was standing close to the unfortunate
-young man when he committed the sudden attempt upon his
-own life. The horror of the act, and the shocking appearance
-of his lacerated throat, the blood from which flowed out
-upon Mr. Bradbury, in short, this heart-rending result of the
-previous agitation and discovery, acted upon the sensibility of
-Mr. Bradbury to such an extent as to deprive him of reason.
-This fact was noticeable two days after the above scene, by
-his entering a church, and after the service was ended, going
-into the vestry, and requesting the clergyman to pray for him,
-as he intended to cut his throat! This distemper of mind
-was not too great at first to admit of partial control; but it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-daily increased, and ultimately caused him to be placed under
-restraint.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">34</a></p>
-
-<p>A woman, about thirty-six years of age, who had been well
-educated, but whose conduct had not been exempt from some
-irregularities, in consequence of intemperance and manifold
-disappointments, became affected with madness. She was
-by turns furious and melancholic, and conceived she had
-murdered one of her children, for which she ought to suffer
-death. She detailed the manner in which she had destroyed
-the child, and the motives which actuated her, so circumstantially,
-and with so much plausibility and feeling, that if it
-had not been known that her child was living, the physician
-under whose care she was placed might have been deceived.
-By her own hands she had repeatedly endeavoured to terminate
-her existence, but was prevented by constant vigilance
-and due restraint. Her disposition to suicide was afterwards
-relinquished; but she still persisted that for the murder of the
-child she ought to suffer death, and requested to be sent to
-Newgate, in order to be tried, and undergo the sentence of
-the law; indeed, she appeared to derive consolation from the
-hope of becoming a public example, and expiating her supposed
-crime on the scaffold. While in this state, and with a
-hope of convincing her of its safety, the child was brought to
-visit her. When she beheld it, there was a temporary burst
-of maternal affection; she kissed it, and for a few moments
-appeared to be delighted: but a look of suspicion quickly
-succeeded, and this was shortly followed by a frown of indignation,
-which rendered the removal of the child a measure of
-wholesome necessity. Perhaps in no instance was the buoyancy
-of madness more conspicuous over reason, recollection,
-and feeling. She insisted they had attempted to impose on
-her a strange child, which bore a faint resemblance to her
-own; however, by such subterfuges she was not to be de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>ceived;
-she had strangled the child until life had totally departed,
-and it was not in the order of nature that it should
-exist again. The effect of this interview was an exasperation
-of her disorder: she became more cunning and malignant,
-and her desire for an ignominious death was augmented. To
-render this more certain, and accelerate her projected happiness,
-she enticed into her apartment a young female patient
-to whom she appeared to be attached, and having previously
-platted some threads of her bed-quilt into a cord, she fixed it
-round the neck of the young woman, and proceeded to
-strangle her. Fortunately, some person entered the room and
-unloosed the cord in time to save her. When this unhappy
-maniac was questioned concerning the motive which induced
-her to attempt the destruction of a person for whom she had
-manifested kindness, she very calmly replied, that as the
-murder of her own child was disbelieved, she wished to exhibit
-a convincing proof of the ferocity of her nature, that she
-might instantly be conveyed to Newgate and hanged, which
-she desired as the greatest blessing. With considerable satisfaction,
-we may add, that in a few months, notwithstanding her
-derangement had been of three years’ duration, this woman
-perfectly recovered, and for a considerable time performed the
-duties of an important and respectable office.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">35</a></p>
-
-<p>The great increase of the crime of suicide has been referred
-by many able physicians of the present day to the political
-excitement to which the minds of the people have been exposed
-of late years. In despotic countries, suicide and insanity
-are seldom heard of: the passions are checked by the
-nature of the government; the imagination is not elevated
-to an unhealthy standard; every man is compelled to follow
-the calling in life to which he is born, and for which he has
-capacity; and on this account the evil and corrupt dispositions
-of the mind are, to a certain extent, kept in abeyance.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-In republican governments, the greatest latitude is allowed to
-the turbulent passions; all mankind are theoretically placed
-on an equality; the man whose “talk is of bullocks” considers
-himself as fit to carry on the complicated business of
-government as he whose education, associations, and experience
-tend to qualify him for the duties of a legislator.</p>
-
-<p>In proportion as men are exposed to the influence of causes
-which excite the passions, so will they become predisposed to
-mental derangement in all its forms. The French and
-American revolutions increased considerably the crime of
-suicide. It has been said that during the “reign of terror”
-statistical evidence does not shew that self-murder was more
-common than at any other period. Perhaps the alleged unfrequency
-of suicide may be attributed to the circumstance of
-the French people having been so busy in killing others that
-they had no time to think of killing themselves. More than
-the average number of suicides may not have really occurred
-during the crisis of the Revolution, but it is an undisputed
-fact that, both before and after that political convulsion, self-destruction
-prevailed to an alarming extent. Disappointed
-hopes, wounded pride and vanity, blighted ambition, loss of
-property, death of friends, disgust of life, all came into active
-operation after the turbulence and bloodshed of the Revolution
-had somewhat subsided: these passions, working upon minds
-easily excited, and not under the benign influence of religion,
-it was almost natural to expect that great recklessness of life
-should be exhibited. Such facts demonstrate to us the folly
-of uselessly exciting the passions of the people, and raising in
-their minds exaggerated expectations from political changes.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency of refined sensibility to become wound up in
-a paroxysm, terminating in suicidal attempts, is strikingly
-illustrated in a case reported by Dr. Burrows:—</p>
-
-<p>“A gentleman of a family of rank, and distinguished for
-talent, married early in life the object of his most ardent affections.
-He possessed extreme sensibility, with a most highly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-cultivated and refined mind. It may be remarked, as a constitutional
-peculiarity, that his natural pulse did not exceed forty
-beats in a minute. When anything suddenly occurred to
-agitate him, it produced an attack of fever, and his pulse was
-accelerated in an astonishing degree. Though in ordinary
-affairs he was a man of firm resolution and great spirit, yet
-when this fit happened, he was seized with such a panic, or impulse,
-that he knew not what he did, and he was unnerved
-for days. His lady being well acquainted with the infirmities
-of his constitution, rendered him, by her good sense and
-soothing, a happier man than he had previously been. Most
-unfortunately, she died in the first year of her marriage. His
-grief at her loss was excessive; and even when time had
-abated its poignancy, he continued very miserable. His
-thoughts were always reverting to the virtues of her whom he
-had lost, and the comparative happiness he had enjoyed in her
-society. He tried everything to divert his melancholy; but
-these impulses would follow reflection; and then his ideas
-adverted to self-destruction. He reasoned with himself upon
-the subject till, he confessed, he had become an infidel in
-religion, and could no longer view the act as wicked. I had,”
-said Dr. Burrows, “an opportunity of knowing the exact state
-of his mind during this struggle, from perusing some notes
-which he had written, describing it. He expressed himself
-with the utmost tenderness and affection with respect to his
-departed wife, and of his intention of soon joining her by a
-voluntary death; not, however, in heaven, but in Elysium.
-One night, after having been occupied in reading to some
-dear relations, and apparently much enjoying the subject, he
-retired to his chamber. He undressed, and dismissed his
-valet. His gloomy reflections recurred. One of these
-strange impulses came over him. He seized a pistol, and
-discharged it: it failed of effect. He fired another: he
-wounded himself severely, but not mortally; neither was the
-effusion of blood great. He then called for assistance. Little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-constitutional disturbance followed, and the wound readily
-healed. It was during the time he was confined from the
-effects of this wound that Dr. Burrows was consulted. He
-could not detect the slightest aberration of the mind, nor was
-there a trait in his countenance of a propensity to commit
-suicide. He freely conversed on his past and present situation
-and opinions; was perfectly ready to submit to any
-supervision Dr. Burrows might advise, or plan that might be
-suggested, to bring him into a better and happier state of
-mind. By degrees, he acquired more composure. He afterwards
-travelled for a year and a half on the Continent. Upon
-his return, he seemed much improved in general appearance.
-Nothing, however, conquered his constitutional susceptibility.”</p>
-
-<p>That the <span class="smcap lowercase">LOVE OF NOTORIETY</span> often impels to suicide there
-cannot be a doubt. The man who was killed by attaching
-himself to a rocket, and he who threw himself into the crater
-of Mount Vesuvius, were, no doubt, stimulated by a desire for
-posthumous fame. Shortly after the suicide at the Monument,
-a boy made an unsuccessful endeavour to poison himself; and
-on being questioned as to his motives, he said, “I wished to
-be talked of, like the woman who killed herself at the Monument!”
-How strange and anomalous are the motives which
-influence human actions!</p>
-
-<p>Many are induced to think of suicide from the circumstance
-of their being conscious that they labour under an
-hereditary disposition to insanity. We know the case of a lady
-whose mind has been dwelling upon the subject of suicide for
-some time, and she has told her friends repeatedly that she
-feels assured she shall commit some rash act. “The disposition
-to suicide and insanity is in the family, and how can I
-fight against my physical organization?” Such is the mode
-of reasoning she adopts whenever urgently persuaded to
-banish from her mind the horrid sensations which are embittering
-her life.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman, in full possession of his reasoning faculties,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-and a man of considerable powers of intellect, said to us one
-day, in a conversation we had with him on the subject of suicide,
-“You may probably smile when I tell you that, happy
-and contented as I appear to be in my mind at this moment,
-I feel assured I shall fall by my own hands.” Upon our asking
-him why he thought so, he replied, that a relation of his had
-killed himself some years previously, and that he laboured under
-an hereditary predisposition which nothing would subdue.</p>
-
-<p>A woman, thirty-five years of age, placed herself, in 1821,
-under the care of M. Falret, for symptoms of phthisis. When
-nineteen years old, the death of an uncle, by his own hands,
-made a deep impression on her mind. She heard that insanity
-was hereditary, and the idea pursued her that she
-should one day fall into this melancholy condition. She confessed
-her apprehensions only to the priests, who endeavoured
-to dissipate the mournful impression. In this state she
-continued for two years, when the death of her reputed
-father, also by suicide, riveted the conviction on her mind
-that her own doom was sealed. She was convinced that <i>her
-blood was corrupted</i>; and this idea appeared to be confirmed
-by other circumstances. Tortured by this notion, she resolved
-to drown herself. After leaving a letter in her chamber,
-apprising her friends of the manner of her meditated
-death, she plunged into the river; but being immediately
-taken out, she was restored to life. The night following this
-attempt, she was harassed with a pain in her head, and after
-a short sleep, awoke, incapable of recognising any of the
-friends about her. She was evidently delirious, but made no
-allusion to her former melancholy impressions. Although previously
-religious and well-behaved, she uttered nothing but
-obscenities. This delirious excitement continued three days,
-and was succeeded by melancholy and a disposition to suicide.
-Headache again came on, with nausea and bilious vomitings,
-which, however, soon subsided. She became considerably
-emaciated after this, and looked the picture of despair; in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-fact, she could not look into the glass at herself without terror.
-Once more she wished the aid of religion, which afforded her
-some consolation, but was insufficient to dissipate entirely her
-sufferings. Meanwhile, her mother revealed to her the secret
-that her real father was still alive; and, after considerable
-scepticism on the point, she consented to an interview with
-him. The physical resemblance was so striking, that all
-doubt was instantly removed from her mind. From that moment
-all idea of suicide vanished; her spirits and health
-became progressively re-established. Fourteen years, says
-Falret, have now elapsed since the attempt at self-destruction.
-She is the mother of three children, and, during her married
-state, has been reduced to the greatest penury and distress;
-but has never, since the period alluded to, entertained the
-remotest idea of suicide; on the contrary, she has proved an
-exemplary wife and affectionate parent, having the full possession
-of her intellectual faculties.<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">36</a></p>
-
-<p>Everything that tends to throw the mind off its healthy
-balance will, of course, predispose to suicide. Excessive devotion
-of the attention to any particular branch of study, or
-to business, often originates cerebral disease and suicidal
-mania. In alluding to the injurious effects of excessive study,
-Marcilius Ficinus, as quoted by Burton, justly observes—“Other
-men look to their tools: a painter will wash his
-pencils; a smith will look to his hammer, anvil, and forge; a
-husbandman will mend his plough-irons and grind his hatchet,
-if it be dull; a falconer or huntsman will have an especial care
-of his hawks, hounds, horses, and dogs; a musician will string
-and unstring his lute,—only scholars neglect that instrument
-(their <i>brain</i> and <i>spirit</i>, I mean) which they daily use, and by
-which they range over all the world, and which by much study
-is consumed.”</p>
-
-<p>The melancholy case of William Eyton Tooke, Esq., who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>committed suicide some years ago, will illustrate the operation
-of the cause referred to.</p>
-
-<p>“This gentleman,” says a relative, in a letter to the <i>Times</i>
-newspaper, explanatory of the causes of Mr. T.’s death, “from
-a very early period of life, devoted himself to the most abstruse
-inquiries into moral and political philosophy, and has
-thus fallen a victim to the absorbing and exclusive nature of
-the pursuit.” One of the witnesses who was examined at
-the inquest stated, that the deceased was of an exceedingly
-studious turn, and had for many months past been directing
-his attention particularly to commercial subjects. This subject
-was his constant study, and the theme of his conversation.
-It seemed to engross the whole of his attention, and
-his health, both bodily and mentally, was evidently impaired
-by it. A short period before his death, he was heard frequently
-to say, placing his hand upon his head, “This subject
-is too much for me; my head is distracted!” It was
-under the influence of this over-excited state of brain that he
-committed suicide.</p>
-
-<p>It has been observed, in another part of this work, that
-many commit suicide from the notion that death from natural
-causes is attended with considerable agony.<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">37</a> This is the
-generally received notion, but it is an erroneous one. Those
-who have often witnessed the act of dying allow that it is not
-a painful process. In some delicate and irritable persons, a
-kind of struggle is indeed sometimes excited when respiration
-becomes difficult; but more frequently the dying obviously
-suffer nothing, and express no uneasiness. Dr. Ferriar says,
-“In those who die of chronic diseases, the gradation is slow
-and distinct. Consumptive patients are sometimes in a dying
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>state for several days; they appear at such times to suffer
-little, but to languish for complete dissolution; nay, I have
-known them express great uneasiness when they have been
-recalled from the commencement of insensibility, by the cries
-of their friends, or the efforts of the attendants to alleviate
-pain. In observing persons in this situation, I have always
-been impressed with an idea that the approach of natural
-death produces a sensation similar to that of falling asleep.
-The disturbance of respiration is the only apparent source of
-uneasiness to the dying; and sensibility seems to be impaired
-just in proportion to the decrease of that function. Besides,
-both the impressions of present objects and those recalled by
-memory are influenced by the extreme debility of the patient,
-whose wish is for absolute rest. I could never see the close
-of life under these circumstances without recollecting those
-beautiful lines of Spencer—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Sleep after toil, port after stormy seas,</div>
-<div class="line">Ease after war, death after life, doth greatly please.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Professor Hufeland, on the subject of death, observes, “that
-many fear death less than the operation of dying.” People,
-he continues, “form the most singular conceptions of the last
-struggle—the separation of the soul from the body, and the
-like; but this is all void of foundation. No man certainly
-ever felt what death is; and insensibly as we enter life, equally
-insensibly do we leave it. The beginning and the end are
-here united. My proofs are as follows:—First, man can have
-no sensation of dying; for to die means nothing more than
-to lose the vital powers; and it is the vital power which is the
-medium of communication between the soul and the body. In
-proportion as the vital power decreases, we lose the power of
-sensation and consciousness; and we cannot lose life without,
-at the same time, or rather before, losing our vital sensation,
-which requires the assistance of the tenderest organs. We
-are taught also by experience that all those who ever passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-through the first stage of death, and were again brought to
-life, unanimously asserted that they felt nothing of dying, but
-sunk at once into a state of insensibility.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">38</a></p>
-
-<p>“Let us not be led into a mistake by the convulsive throbs,
-the rattling in the throat, and the apparent pangs of death,
-which are exhibited by many persons when in a dying state.
-These symptoms are painful only to the spectators, and not to
-the dying, who are not sensible of them. The case here is
-the same as if one, from the dreadful contortions of a person
-in an epileptic fit, should form a conclusion respecting his
-internal feelings: from what affects us so much, he suffers
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Let one always consider life, as it really is, a mean state,
-which is not an object itself, but a medium for obtaining an
-object, as the multifarious imperfections of it sufficiently prove:
-as a period of trial and preparation, a fragment of existence,
-through which we are to be fitted for, and transmitted to,
-other periods. Can the idea, then, of really making this
-transition—of ascending to another from this mean state, this
-doubtful, problematical existence, which never affords complete
-satisfaction—ever excite terror? With courage and confidence
-we may, therefore, resign ourselves to the will of that Supreme
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>Being who, without our consent, placed us in this sublunary
-theatre, and give up to his management the future direction
-of our fate.</p>
-
-<p>“Remembrance of the past, of that circle of friends who
-were nearest, and always will be dearest to our hearts, and
-who, as it were, now smile upon us with a friendly look of
-invitation from that distant country beyond the grave, will
-also tend very much to allay the fear of death.”</p>
-
-<p>We recollect attending the case of a young lady labouring
-under a disease which produced extreme mental and
-physical suffering, who exhibited, a short period before her
-death, some singular phenomena. This lady had not been
-seen to smile, or to shew any indication of freedom from
-pain, for some weeks prior to dissolution. Two hours before
-she died, the symptoms became suddenly altered in
-character. Every sign of pain vanished; her limbs, from
-being subject to violent spasmodic contractions, became natural
-in their appearance; her face, which had been distorted, was
-calm and tranquil. All her friends supposed that the crisis
-of the disease had arrived, and that it had taken a favourable
-turn, and delight and joy were manifested by all who were
-allowed access to her chamber, and who were made acquainted
-with the change which had taken place. She conversed most
-freely, and smiled as if in a happy condition. We must confess
-that the case puzzled us, and that we were for a short time
-induced to entertain sanguine hopes of her ultimate recovery.
-But, alas! how fragile are all our best hopes! For two hours
-we sat by the bed, watching the patient’s countenance with
-great anxiety. Every unfavourable indication had vanished;
-her face was illuminated by the sweetest smile that ever played
-on the human countenance. During the conversation we had
-with her, she gave a slight start, and said, in a tone of great
-earnestness, “Did you see that?” Her face became suddenly
-altered; an expression of deep anguish fixed itself upon
-her features, and her eyes became more than ordinarily brilliant.
-We replied, “What?” She answered, “Oh! you must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-have seen it. How terrible it looked as it glided over the bed.
-Again I see it,” she vociferated, with an unearthly scream,
-“I am ready!” and, without a groan, her spirit took its
-flight!</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Symonds recollects to have heard a young man, who
-had been but little conversant with any but civic scenes, discourse
-most eloquently, a short period before his death, of
-sylvan glen and bosky dells, purling streams and happy valleys,
-as if his spirit had been already luxuriating itself in the
-gardens of Elysium. Nothing more frequently prognosticates
-the approach of death than the appearance of a spectre at the
-bed-side of the patient. In some cases, the mind, when in a
-happy frame, dwells with delight on the contemplation of the
-last struggle, and has a foretaste of that heavenly joy which
-is the reward of a well-spent life. The spirits of good men
-and of angels are said to hover round the departing soul of
-the Christian, as if waiting to bear it to the mansions of
-bliss:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Saw you not even now a blessed troop</div>
-<div class="line">Invite me to a banquet, whose bright faces</div>
-<div class="line">Cast thousand beams upon me, like the sun?</div>
-<div class="line">They promised me eternal happiness;</div>
-<div class="line">And brought me garlands, Griffith, which I feel</div>
-<div class="line">I am not worthy yet to wear.”</div>
-<div class="line i10"><span class="smcap">King Henry VIII.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Many have, under the notion that the fear of death is beneficial
-to the mind, done their best to keep the idea constantly
-before them.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“If I must die, I’ll snatch at anything</div>
-<div class="line">That may but mind me of my latest breath;</div>
-<div class="line">Death’s-heads, graves, knells, blacks, tombs, all these shall bring</div>
-<div class="line">Into my soul such useful thoughts of death,</div>
-<div class="line">That this sable king of fears</div>
-<div class="line">Shall not catch me unawares.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Young raised about him an artificial idea of death; he
-darkened his sepulchral study, placing a skull on his table
-by lamp-light. At the end of an avenue in his garden was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-placed on a seat an admirable chiaro-oscuro, which when
-approached presented only a painted surface, with an inscription,
-alluding to the deception of the things of this
-world.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. J. Donne, the celebrated English divine and poet, is said
-to have longed for the hour of dissolution. Previous to his death,
-he gave instructions for a monument, which his friends had declared
-their intention to erect to his memory. A carver made
-him in wood the figure of an urn, and having secured the services
-of a painter, the Doctor ordered the urn to be brought
-into his chamber. Having taken off his clothes, he procured a
-white sheet, which was put on him, and tied with knots at his
-hands and feet. In this state he stood upon the urn, with his
-eyes closed, and a portion of the sheet turned aside in order
-to shew his lean, pale, and death-like face. In this posture, the
-painter sketched him; and when the monument was finished,
-it was placed by his bed-side, and was hourly the source of
-contemplation until his death.</p>
-
-<p>The “lightening up before death,” so often perceptible, is
-but the result of venous blood being sent to the brain. When
-respiration becomes imperfect, the blood does not undergo
-the proper chemical change in the lungs (arterialization), and
-its effect on the sentient organ is such as is occasionally
-witnessed prior to dissolution. Abernethy considers the sensations
-of the dying similar to those experienced by persons
-labouring under delirium. He relates the case of a man who
-appeared, during his delirious state, to meet with old acquaintances.
-The companions of his youthful days flocked once
-more around him—old associations were revived. “How
-are you, my dear fellow?” he exclaimed. “It is long since we
-met. Give us your fist, my hearty. Now, that is a good joke;
-I never heard a better. Ah! ah! ah!”</p>
-
-<p>We had once the painful duty of watching the expiring
-struggles of a man whose life had been one long career of vice
-and debauchery. His death was truly appalling. It was
-evident, from the expressions which escaped him when dying,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-that his mind had a vivid conception of the scenes in which
-he had played so conspicuous a part. “Now for the dice!” he
-exclaimed, with the fury of a maniac. “That’s mine! No! all,
-all is gone! More wine, d—— you; more wine! Oh! how
-they rattle! Fiends, fiends, assail me! I say, you cheat!
-the cards are marked! Now the chains rattle! O death!
-O death!” and with a terrific groan he breathed his last.</p>
-
-<p>Among the causes which operate in producing the disposition
-to commit suicide, we must not omit to mention those
-connected with erroneous religious notions. M. Falret justly
-remarks, that the religious system of the Druids, Odin, and
-Mahomet, by inspiring a contempt for death, have made many
-suicides. The man who believes that death is an eternal
-sleep, scorns to hold up against calamity, and prefers annihilation.
-The sceptic also often frees himself by self-destruction
-from the agony of doubting. The maxim of the Stoics, that
-man should live only so long as he ought, not so long as he is
-able, is, we may observe, the very parent of suicide. The
-Brahmin, looking on death as the very entrance into life, and
-thinking a natural death dishonourable, is eager at all times to
-get rid of life. The Epicureans and Peripatetics ridiculed
-suicide, as being death caused by fear of death. M. Falret,
-however, goes perhaps too far when he asserts that the noble
-manner in which the gladiators died in public, not only familiarized
-the Romans with death, but rendered the thoughts of
-it rather agreeable than otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>Misinterpretations of passages of scripture will sometimes
-lead those who are piously inclined to commit suicide. M.
-Gillet hung himself at the age of seventy-five, having left in
-his own handwriting the following apology:—“Jesus Christ
-has said, that when a tree is old and can no longer bear fruit,
-it is good that it should be destroyed.” (He had more than
-once attempted his life before the fatal act.) Dr. Burrows
-attended a nobleman who, for fear of being poisoned, though
-he pretended it was in imitation of our Saviour’s fast, took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-nothing but strawberries and water for three weeks, and these
-in very moderate quantities. He never voluntarily abandoned
-his resolution. He was at length compelled to take some
-nutriment, but not until inanition had gone too far; and he
-died completely attenuated. When sound religious principles
-produce a struggle in the mind which is beginning to aberrate,
-the contest generally ends in suicide.</p>
-
-<p>Some murder themselves to get rid of the horrid thoughts
-of suicide; whilst others brood over them like Rousseau,
-for months and for years, and at length perpetrate the very
-action which they dread. A countryman of Rousseau’s, who
-advocated suicide as a duty, and who spent the greater part
-of a long life in writing a large folio volume to prove the
-soundness of his doctrine, thought it his duty, after he had
-completed his work, to give a practical illustration of his
-principles, and, accordingly, at the age of seventy, threw himself
-into the Lake of Geneva, and was drowned.</p>
-
-<p>It may appear strange that religion, the greatest blessing
-bestowed by Heaven on man, should ever prove a cause of one
-of his severest calamities. But perhaps it would be more
-accurate to impute such unhappy effects to fanaticism, or to the
-total want of religion.</p>
-
-<p>Instances very frequently occur in practice in which
-patients have appeared, some suddenly, and others gradually,
-to be seized with a species of religious horror, despairing of
-salvation, asserting that they had committed sins which never
-could be forgiven, who had never previously appeared to be
-under religious impressions. Some of these have been visited
-by divines of various denominations, and been induced to
-hear sermons and read books well calculated to dispel gloomy
-apprehensions, and excite religious hope and confidence.
-With some this has succeeded, especially when conjoined with
-medical aid; but it has been observed, that in the cases of
-those who have recovered, the patients have <i>emerged</i> precisely
-as they <i>immerged</i>; for as they before were unconcerned about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-religious matters, so they remained after their recovery; thus
-the indisposition has been very erroneously imputed to religion
-when it has no kind of affinity to, or concern with it. Such
-cases almost invariably exhibit the same symptoms, which
-generally turn on these points—despair of temporal support,
-or despair of final salvation. But the medical practitioner,
-and not the divine, is the proper person to be consulted in
-such cases; and, however the mind may be affected in them,
-the patient is to be relieved by means of medicine. It may
-be added, that the agonies of mind under which some persons
-labour who are called fanatically mad arise from a sense of
-moral turpitude, independent of any peculiar religious tenets
-or opinions.</p>
-
-<p>The true doctrines of Christianity, when properly inculcated,
-never excite a gloomy state of mind. “To be religious,” says
-South, “it is not necessary to be dull.” Cowper (perhaps,
-however, the most miserable and melancholy of men) beautifully
-says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“True piety is cheerful as the day,</div>
-<div class="line">Will weep indeed, and heave a pitying groan,</div>
-<div class="line">For others’ woes, but smile upon her own.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br /><br />
-
-<small>IMITATIVE, OR EPIDEMIC SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Persons who act from impulse liable to be influenced—Principle of imitation,
-a natural instinct—Cases related by Cabanis and Tissot—The suicidal
-barbers—Epidemic suicide at the Hôtel des Invalides—Sydenham’s
-epidemic—The ladies of Miletus—Dr. Parrish’s case—Are insanity and
-suicide contagious?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> most singular feature connected with the subject of
-suicide is, that the disposition to sacrifice life has, at different
-periods, been known to prevail epidemically, from a perversion,
-as it has been supposed, of the natural instinct of imitation.
-This is not only the case with reference to suicide, but
-is witnessed also in cases of murder. The atrocities of the
-French Revolution are, to a certain extent, to be traced to
-the influence of this imitative principle. Persons whose feelings
-are not thoroughly under their command, who act from
-impulse and not from reflection, are very prone to be
-operated upon by the cause referred to. Man has been defined
-an imitative animal; and in many instances we witness
-this propensity controlling almost irresistibly the actions of
-the individual. Tissot relates the case of a young woman
-in whom this faculty was so strongly developed that she
-could not avoid doing everything she saw others do. Cabanis
-gives the account of a man in whom the tendency to imitate
-was so strongly marked, and active, from disease, that “he
-experienced insupportable suffering” when he was prevented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-from yielding to its impulses. A woman, in the ward of an
-hospital, will be seized with an epileptic fit; in the course of
-a short period, other cases will occur in the same ward. A
-child was brought into one of our metropolitan hospitals,
-labouring under a violent attack of convulsions. She had not
-been in the house five minutes before three children who
-were present were seized with spasmodic convulsions of a
-similar character. The commission of a great and extraordinary
-crime produces not unfrequently the mania of imitation
-in the district in which it happened. A criminal was
-executed at Paris, not many years ago, for murder. A
-few weeks afterwards, another murder was perpetrated; and
-when the young man was asked to assign a reason for taking
-away the life of a fellow-creature, he replied, that he was
-not instigated by any feeling of malice, but, after having
-witnessed the execution, he felt a desire, over which he had
-no control, to commit a similar crime, and had no rest until
-he had gratified his feelings. It is only on the same principle
-that we can account for the following singular case of suicide.
-It is related by Sir Charles Bell, in his “Institutes of Surgery.”
-The surgeon of the Middlesex Hospital who preceded
-Sir Charles Bell went into a barber’s shop, in the
-neighbourhood of the institution, to be shaved. As the
-barber was operating upon his chin, the conversation turned
-upon the case of a man who had been admitted the previous
-day into the hospital, and who had attempted, unsuccessfully,
-to kill himself, by cutting his throat. “He could easily have
-managed it,” said the surgeon, in rather a jocular strain,
-“had he been acquainted with the situation of the carotid
-artery. He did not cut in the proper place.” “Where
-should he have cut?” asked the barber, quietly. The surgeon,
-not suspecting what was passing through the barber’s
-mind, gave a popular lecture on the anatomy of the neck—pointed
-out the exact position of the large vessels, and shewed
-where they could easily be wounded. After the conversation,
-the barber made some excuse for leaving the room; and, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-returning as soon as was expected, the surgeon went to look
-for him, when he was discovered in the yard, behind the
-house, with his head nearly severed from his body!</p>
-
-<p>The following case is, perhaps, more strange and inexplicable
-than the one just related. The brother of a hairdresser and
-barber had killed himself by blowing out his brains. The
-circumstance appeared to affect seriously the mind of his
-relative. He left his business for a few days; and then
-returned, apparently more tranquil in his mind. In the
-morning, several persons came in to be shaved; and, all at
-once, he felt a strong, and almost overwhelming, inclination
-to cut some one’s throat. He fought manfully, however,
-against this horrid desire. During the whole of the earlier
-part of the day, he had been able to resist the gratification of
-the feeling. Every time he placed the razor in contact with
-the throat, he fancied he heard a voice within him exclaim,
-“Kill him! kill him!” In the afternoon, an elderly gentleman
-came into the shop to be shaved; and when the barber
-had nearly concluded the operation, he was again seized with
-the desire; and, before he could summon courage enough to
-suppress it, he gave the man’s throat a tremendous gash;
-fortunately, however, the wound was not fatal.</p>
-
-<p>Gall informs us of a man who, on reading in the newspapers
-the particulars of a case of murder, perpetrated under
-circumstances of peculiar atrocity, was instantly seized with
-a desire to murder his servant, and would have done so, had
-he not given his intended victim timely warning to escape.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago, a man hung himself on the threshold of
-one of the doors of the corridor at the <i>Hôtel des Invalides</i>.
-No suicide had occurred in the establishment for two years
-previously; but in the succeeding fortnight, five invalids
-hung themselves on the same cross bar, and the governor was
-obliged to shut up the passage.</p>
-
-<p>Sydenham informs us that, at Mansfield, in a particular
-year, in the month of June, suicide prevailed to an alarming
-degree, from a cause wholly unaccountable. The same thing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-happened at Rouen, in 1806; at Stuttgard, in the summer of
-1811; and at a village of St. Pierre Montjean, in the Valais,
-in the year 1813. One of the most remarkable epidemics of
-the kind was that which prevailed at Versailles in the year
-1793. The number of suicides within the year was 1300—a
-number out of all proportion to the population of the town.</p>
-
-<p>In the olden time, the ladies of Miletus, in a fit of melancholy
-for the absence of their husbands and lovers, resolved
-to hang themselves, and vied with each other in the alacrity
-with which they did the deed. In the time of the Ptolemies,
-a stoic philosopher pleaded so eloquently, one day, to an
-Alexandrian audience on the advantages of suicide, that he
-inspired his hearers with his principles, and a great number
-voluntarily sacrificed their lives.</p>
-
-<p>A clergyman, master of a very large and popular school,
-the locality of which, for obvious reasons, it would not do to
-specify, recently informed one of his friends that he had discovered
-a new pupil in the act of practising a disgraceful
-vice. “Send him home to his parents, and say nothing about
-it,” was the friend’s judicious recommendation. The schoolmaster,
-however, placed great confidence in his own eloquence
-and the corrective powers of the birch. He assembled his
-boys, made an excellent harangue on the guilt of the delinquent,
-and gave him a sound flogging. The example of
-crime proved more influential than the example of punishment,
-and the vice spread so rapidly that the whole school
-was broken up in consequence.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">39</a></p>
-
-<p>The particulars of the following case are recorded in the
-“American Journal of the Medical Sciences,” by Dr. Parrish.
-He says, “I was called to visit a child in the family of
-J. S., a respectable gentleman residing in my neighbourhood.
-On my arrival, at 3 <span class="smcap">P. M.</span>, I found, on going into the
-chamber of my patient, that death had occurred. The patient
-was a girl in her fifteenth year, who had been carefully
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>brought up by a family with whom she had lived between
-seven and eight years. She had generally enjoyed good
-health, with the exception of occasional attacks of sickness of
-the stomach, and headache. She had just passed the age of
-puberty, and possessed a docile disposition. Her situation in
-life, as far as could be ascertained, was in every respect agreeable,
-and congenial to her wishes.</p>
-
-<p>“On the morning of the day of her death, she was engaged
-as usual in the domestic concerns of the family until
-eight o’clock, when she was observed in the yard vomiting.
-Upon inquiring into the history of the case, I found that
-early in the morning on which the patient died, she had held
-a conversation with a little girl residing in the next house, in
-which she mentioned having lately read in a newspaper of a
-man who had been unfortunate in his business, and had taken
-arsenic to destroy himself; she also spoke of an apothecary’s
-shop near by, and said she frequently went there.</p>
-
-<p>“The narration of this conversation afforded strong suspicion
-to my mind that she had committed suicide; a suspicion
-which was strengthened by the fact, that a few months previous
-I had been called upon to visit a person residing in the
-same house, who had suffered for some years under mental
-derangement, and had recently been discharged from the
-insane hospital near Frankford; he had taken laudanum, with
-the intent of destroying himself.</p>
-
-<p>“This circumstance would naturally produce a strong impression
-upon the mind of the child, which was increased, no
-doubt, by the reading of the case detailed in the newspaper.
-In this way the desire to commit a similar act was kindled up
-in the mind of the deluded girl, and thus, by that inexplicable
-connexion which, in some instances at least, appears to exist
-between the knowledge of such a horrible act and the desire
-to perform it, she was almost irresistibly impelled to the deed.</p>
-
-<p>“This case is stated as affording strong testimony in favour
-of a principle which is now beginning to attract the attention
-of medical men—viz., that the publicity which is given to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-cases of suicide, in the newspapers and by other means, forms
-one of the strongest incentives to the commission of the act, in
-those who have a secret disposition to destroy themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“If this be the fact, a high responsibility rests upon physicians,
-so to influence public opinion, and more especially
-editors, as to prevent the narration of the circumstances connected
-with the death of this unfortunate class. No good can
-certainly arise (to the public) from the exposure of facts which
-ought to remain concealed in the bosom of distressed families;
-while there is reason to believe the list of victims to suicide
-is annually very much swelled from the course which is now
-so generally pursued.”<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">40</a></p>
-
-<p>It has been noticed that certain atmospherical phenomena
-have attended or preceded the suicidal epidemics that have
-prevailed at various periods. Whether these electrical conditions
-of the air are in any way connected with this peculiar
-form of contagious malady is a point not easily to be decided.
-A certain degree of atmospherical moisture appears
-to favour the spread of the suicidal disposition; but this may
-result from the well known influence of moist air on the disposition
-of the mind, and may operate by causing a degree of
-mental despondency and lassitude, very favourable to the development
-of the suicidal mania, particularly after the occurrence
-of any very remarkable case of self-destruction. It is
-notorious that nothing is so likely to unsettle the mind,
-especially if an hereditary disposition be present, than
-constantly associating with lunatics, and allowing the mind
-to dwell for any length of time on the subject of insanity.
-If actual mental derangement does not result from an exposure
-to the causes referred to, a certain degree of eccentricity
-bordering on the confines of aberration is generally perceptible.
-With our present amount of knowledge of the subtle
-principle of contagion, it is difficult to say whether an effluvium
-may not be generated in such cases which, under certain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span>conditions of the system, may communicate disease. We
-cannot possibly say that this is not the case. If we are justified,
-which we by no means are willing to admit, in the opinion
-that the disposition to suicide and insanity may be propagated
-by contagion, using this term in its usual acceptation, it is a
-great consolation to the mind to think that only occasionally
-does the disease exhibit the slightest approach to virulence,
-and that, unlike many of the admitted contagious maladies,
-we may approach the patient without much fear or apprehension.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br /><br />
-
-<small>SUICIDE FROM FASCINATION.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Singular motives for committing suicide—A man who delighted in torturing
-himself—A dangerous experiment—Pleasures of carnage—Disposition
-to leap from precipices—Lord Byron’s allusion to the influence of fascination—Miss
-Moyes and the Monument—A man who could not trust
-himself with a razor—Esquirol’s opinion of such cases—Danger of ascending
-elevated places.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">How</span> strange, extraordinary, and inexplicable are the motives
-which often lead to the commission of suicide! Many have
-been induced to rush into the arms of death in order to avoid
-the pain which they fancy accompanies dissolution. “<i>Hic,
-rogo, non furor est, ne moriare mori?</i>” Others have been apparently
-led to the perpetration of the crime by a desire to
-ascertain what sensations attended the act of dying; whilst
-some have been influenced by a feeling of fascination, and
-have stated that they experienced ecstatic delight at the idea
-of self-immolation.</p>
-
-<p>The case of a man is recorded who felt the most exquisite
-delight in torturing himself. He had often expressed a wish
-to be hanged, from the notion that this Newgate mode of terminating
-life must give rise to sensations of great pleasure.
-The idea occurred to him one day of trying the experiment.
-He procured a piece of cord, attached it to the ceiling, and suspended
-himself from it; fortunately for the poor infatuated
-man, the servant entered the room a few minutes afterwards,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-and cut him down. Life was not extinct. The man expressed
-that he felt, during the few moments that he was
-hanging, a thrilling delight, which no language that he could
-use could convey anything like an adequate expression of.
-There was no doubt that this man laboured under an abnormal
-condition of the mind, which, if not amounting to insanity,
-certainly approached very nearly the confines of that disease.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">41</a></p>
-
-<p>A woman was admitted some years back into one of our
-metropolitan hospitals who had a propensity to cut her
-person with every sharp instrument that she could procure.
-It was not her intention to kill herself; and when reasoned
-with on the folly of her actions, she observed that she was impelled
-by no other motive than the fascinating pleasure she
-experienced whenever she succeeded in drawing blood.</p>
-
-<p>A lady, a passenger on board of a ship bound for the East
-Indies, was frequently heard to express a wish to know what
-feeling a person experienced in the act of being drowned.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span>She fancied the sensations must be of a pleasurable character.
-Her fellow-passengers laughed at her whenever she alluded
-to the matter. Having introduced the subject again during
-dinner, she observed, “Well, I intend to try the experiment
-to-morrow morning.” The threat only excited the merriment
-of those who heard it. In the morning, whilst the passengers
-were on deck, the lady plunged into the sea, to the astonishment
-of everybody. Luckily for her, the ship was becalmed,
-and her life was saved.</p>
-
-<p>An extraordinary young man, who lived at Paris, and who
-was passionately fond of mechanics, shut himself up one
-evening in his apartment, and bound not only his chest and
-stomach, but also his arms, legs, and thighs, with ropes full of
-knots, the ends of which he fastened to hooks in the wall.
-After having passed a considerable part of the night in this
-situation, he wished to disengage himself, but attempted it
-in vain. Some neighbouring females, who were up, heard
-his cries, and, calling for assistance, they forced open the door
-of his room, when they found him swinging in the air, with
-only one arm extricated. He was immediately carried to the
-lieutenant-general of the police for examination, when he declared
-that he had often put similar trials into execution, as
-he experienced <i>indescribable pleasure in them</i>. He confessed
-that at first he felt pain, but that after the cords became tight
-to a certain degree, he was soon rewarded by the most exquisite
-sensations of pleasure.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">42</a></p>
-
-<p>“As the chill dews of evening were surrounding
-our bivouac,” says the author of the “Recollections of
-the Peninsula,” “a staff officer, with a courier, came
-galloping into it, and alighted at the quarters of our general.
-It was soon known amongst us that a severe and sanguinary
-action had been fought by our brother soldiers at
-Talavera. Disjointed rumours spoke of a dear-bought field,
-a heavy loss, and a subsequent retreat. I well remember how
-we all gathered round our fires to listen, to conjecture, and to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>talk about this glorious, but bloody event. We regretted that
-we had borne no share in the honours of such a day; and <i>we
-talked with an undefined pleasure about the carnage</i>. Yes!
-strange as it may appear, soldiers, and not they alone, talk of
-the danger of battle fields with a sensation which partakes
-of pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p>A watchmaker of Aberdeen, who had been looking over
-the precipices of Loch-na-Gair, suddenly felt a desire to precipitate
-himself from the height, and having first taken a step
-or two back for the purpose, he flung himself off.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman travelling through Switzerland, with his wife,
-came to an eminence commanding an extensive and beautiful
-view of the surrounding country. He went, accompanied by
-his wife, to the edge of a mountainous cliff, and, turning
-round to his lady, he observed—“I have lived long enough!”
-and in a moment threw himself down the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>It was a notion of this kind which induced Lord Byron to
-observe that he believed no man ever took a razor into his
-hand who did not at the same time think how easily he
-might sever the silver cord of life. The noble poet evidently
-alludes, in the following stanzas, to the strange and unaccountable
-influence of fascination in exciting the mind to
-commit suicide:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“A sleep without dreams, after a rough day</div>
-<div class="line">Of toil, is what we covet most, and yet</div>
-<div class="line">How clay shrinks back from more quiescent clay!</div>
-<div class="line">The very suicide that pays his debts</div>
-<div class="line">At once, without instalments, (an old way</div>
-<div class="line">Of paying debts, which creditors regret,)</div>
-<div class="line">Lets out impatiently his rushing breath,</div>
-<div class="line">Less from disgust of life than dread of death.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">’Tis round him, near him, there, everywhere;</div>
-<div class="line">And there’s a courage which grows out of fear,</div>
-<div class="line">Perhaps of all most desperate, which will dare</div>
-<div class="line">The <i>worst</i> to know it:—when the mountains rear</div>
-<div class="line">Their peaks beneath your human foot, and there</div>
-<div class="line">You look down o’er the precipice, and drear</div>
-<div class="line">The gulf of rock yawns,—you can’t gaze a minute</div>
-<div class="line">Without an awful wish to plunge within it!</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span></div>
-<div class="line">’Tis true, you don’t—but, pale and struck with terror,</div>
-<div class="line">Retire: but look into your past impression!</div>
-<div class="line">And you will find, though shuddering at the mirror</div>
-<div class="line">Of your own thoughts, in all their self-confession,</div>
-<div class="line">The lurking bias, be it truth or error,</div>
-<div class="line">To the <i>unknown</i>; a secret prepossession,</div>
-<div class="line">To plunge with all your fears—but where? You know not,</div>
-<div class="line">And that’s the reason why you do—or do not.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A gentleman with whom we are acquainted, informed us
-that, a few days after Miss Moyes had thrown herself from the
-Monument, a friend of his had the curiosity to visit the spot,
-and on looking down the awful height from which this poor
-unfortunate girl had precipitated herself, he felt suddenly an
-attack of giddiness, which was succeeded in a moment by one
-of the most pleasurable sensations he had ever experienced,
-accompanied with a desire to jump off. He was not influenced,
-apparently, by any other motive than that of a
-wish to gratify a feeling of ecstasy which for a minute suspended
-all the operations of the mind. A gentleman who
-was by him asked him a question with reference to the height
-of the Monument, and this circumstance recalling him to the
-exercise of his reasoning faculties, he immediately left the
-spot, shuddering at the recollection of the idea which had
-momentarily flashed across his mind.</p>
-
-<p>The case is related of a man who had this feeling so
-strongly manifested that he never dared trust himself with
-a razor. He was not devoid of religious feeling, and was
-most happy in his domestic relations. On occasions which
-required the exercise of moral resolution, he was never
-found wanting. He declared his life would not be safe for a
-day if he were permitted to shave himself. Such instances
-are by no means uncommon, and require much ingenuity to
-account satisfactorily for them, unless they be referred to the
-effect of fascination.</p>
-
-<p>Andral observes, “that there are many men perfectly
-rational, and completely undisturbed by care or pain, who,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-singular to state, have been suddenly seized by a headlong,
-groundless inclination to destroy themselves. There are
-hundreds who cannot approach the brink of a cliff, or ascend
-a lofty tower, without experiencing an almost invincible desire
-to precipitate themselves to the bottom, from which fate they
-only save themselves by an instantaneous effort to retire from
-the temptation. I knew a gentleman who, while shaving
-himself one day, alone, was three times so vehemently urged
-to plunge the razor into his throat, that he was at length
-compelled to throw the instrument from him, in absolute
-horror and dismay. In rational men, however, these trying
-and dangerous moments are but of very short duration.”</p>
-
-<p>A sailor informed us that he had often, when at the top of
-the mast, felt disposed to precipitate himself from the giddy
-eminence, influenced by no other motive than that of pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases, what course is the medical man to pursue?
-It is difficult to give any instructions for the treatment of such
-cases of mental idiosyncrasy. Persons who are subject to
-feelings of this character should be advised to avoid ascending
-elevated places.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br /><br />
-
-<small>OF THE ENTHUSIASM AND MENTAL IRRITABILITY
-WHICH, IF ENCOURAGED, WOULD LEAD TO SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Connexion between genius and insanity—Authors of fiction often feel what
-they write—Metastasio in tears—The enthusiasm of Pope, Alfieri, Dryden—Effects
-of the first reading of Telemachus and Tasso on Madame
-Roland’s mind—Raffaelle and his celebrated picture of the Transfiguration—The
-convulsions of Malbranche—Beattie’s Essay on Truth—Influence
-of intense study on Boerrhave’s mind—The demon of Spinello and
-Luther—Bourdaloue and his violin—Byron’s sensitiveness—Men do not
-always practise what they preach—Cases of Smollett, La Fontaine, Sir
-Thomas More, Zimmerman—Tasso’s spectre—Johnson’s superstition—Concluding
-remarks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> has been observed that the act of suicide may often
-originate in a feeling analogous to the enthusiasm exhibited
-by men of great genius and sensibility. This mental idiosyncrasy,
-which borders so closely on the confines of insanity,
-has been compared to the narrow bridge of Al Sirat, which
-leads the followers of Mahomet from earth to heaven, but by
-so narrow a path that the passenger is in momentary danger
-of falling into the dismal gulf which yawns beneath him.
-This abnormal condition of the nervous system is, to a certain
-extent, dependent on natural organic structure, aided materially
-by an unhealthy exercise of the imaginative faculty.
-Fielding spoke but the history of his own sensations when he
-declared that he “had no doubt but the most pathetic scenes
-had been writ with tears.” Metastasio was found weeping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-over his Olympiad. He says: “When I apply with attention,
-the nerves of my sensorium are put into a violent tumult;
-I grow as red as a drunkard, and am obliged to quit my work.”
-Pope could not proceed with certain passages of his translation
-of Homer without shedding tears. Alfieri declares that he
-frequently penned the most tender passages in his plays
-“under a paroxysm of enthusiasm, and whilst shedding tears.”
-Dryden was seized with violent tremors during the composition
-of his celebrated ode. Rousseau, in conceiving the
-first idea of his Essay on the Arts, became almost delirious
-with enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>Madame Roland has thus powerfully described the ideal
-presence in her first readings of Telemachus and Tasso:—“My
-respiration rose, I felt a rapid fire colouring my face,
-and my voice changing had betrayed my agitation. I was
-Eucharis for Telemachus, and Emenia for Tancred. Having
-my reason during this perfect transformation, I did not yet think
-that I myself was anything for any one: the whole had no
-connexion with myself. I sought for nothing around me; I
-was they; I saw only the objects which existed for them; it
-was a dream without being awakened.”</p>
-
-<p>Raffaelle says, alluding to his celebrated picture, the Transfiguration—“When
-I have stood looking at that picture, from
-figure to figure, the eagerness, the spirit, the close unaffected
-attention of each figure to the principal action, my thoughts
-have carried me away, that I have forgot myself, and for that
-time might be looked upon as an enthusiastic madman; for I
-could really fancy the whole action was passing before my
-eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>Malbranche was seized with violent palpitations of the heart
-when reading Descartes’s Treatise on Man:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“With curious art, the brain too finely wrought</div>
-<div class="line">Preys on itself, and is destroyed by thought;</div>
-<div class="line">Constant attention wears the active mind,</div>
-<div class="line">Blots out her powers, and leaves a blank behind.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Intense occupation of mind to any particular branch of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-study, often brings the mind on the verge of madness. “Since
-the ‘Essay on Truth’ was printed in quarto,” says Dr. Beattie,
-“I have never <i>dared</i> to read it over. I durst not even read
-the sheets to see whether there were any errors in the print,
-and was obliged to get a friend to do that office for me.
-These studies came, in time, to have dreadful effects upon my
-nervous system; and I cannot read what I then wrote without
-some degree of horror, because it recalls to my mind the
-horrors that I have sometimes felt after passing a long evening
-in these severe studies.”</p>
-
-<p>Boerrhave has related of himself that, having imprudently
-indulged in intense thought on a particular subject, he did
-not close his eyes for six weeks afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>Spinello, having painted the fall of the rebellious angels,
-had so strongly imagined the illusion, and more particularly
-the terrible features of Lucifer, that he was himself struck
-with such horror as to have been long afflicted with the
-presence of the demon to which his genius had given birth.
-Swedenburg saw a terrestrial heaven in the glittering streets
-of his New Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p>Malbranche declared he heard the voice of God distinctly
-within him. Pascal often was seen to rush suddenly from his
-chair at the appearance of a fiery gulf by his side. Luther
-maintained that during his confinement the devil used to visit
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Hudibras says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Did not the devil appear to Martin</div>
-<div class="line">Luther, in Germany, for certain?”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>He declares that he had many a contest with his satanic
-majesty, and that he had always the best of the argument. At
-one time, the devil so enraged Luther that he threw the ink-stand
-at him, an action which the German commentators
-greatly applaud, from a conviction that there is nothing which
-the devil abhors more than ink.</p>
-
-<p>Descartes, after long confinement, was followed by an invisible
-person, calling upon him to pursue the search of truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mozart’s sensibility to music was connected with so susceptible
-a nervous system that, in his childhood, the sound of
-a trumpet would turn him pale, and almost induce convulsions.
-Dr. Conolly relates an amusing anecdote of the celebrated
-Bourdaloue. It is said that the composition of his eloquent
-sermons so excited his mind that he was unable to deliver
-them until he discovered some mode of allaying his excitement.
-“His attendants one day were both scandalized and
-alarmed, on proceeding to his apartment, for the purpose of
-accompanying him to the cathedral, by hearing the sound of a
-fiddle, on which was played a very lively tune. After their
-first consternation, they ventured to look through the keyhole,
-and were still more shocked to behold the great divine
-dancing about, without his gown and canonicals, to his own
-inspiring music. Of course, they concluded him to be mad.
-But, when they knocked, the music ceased; and after a short
-and anxious interval, he met them with a composed dress and
-manner; and, observing some signs of astonishment in the
-party, explained to them that without his music and his
-exercise he should have been unable to undertake the duties
-of the day.”</p>
-
-<p>In the character of Lord Byron we have an apt illustration
-of the kind of mental irritability and morbid sensitiveness of
-feeling that so often incites to acts of desperation. It has been
-said that the noble poet was the child of passion, born in
-bitterness and “nurtured in convulsion.” The true state of
-his mind can best be divined from the delineation of his own
-sensations as given in Childe Harold:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i8">“I have thought</div>
-<div class="line">Too long and darkly, till my brain became</div>
-<div class="line">In its own eddy boiling, and orwrought</div>
-<div class="line">A whirling gulf of phantasy and flame:</div>
-<div class="line">And thus untaught in youth my heart to tame,</div>
-<div class="line">My springs of life were poisoned.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Byron was subject to attacks of epilepsy; and perhaps this
-fact may account for much of the spleen and irritability which
-he manifested through life, and which made him so many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-enemies. It also teaches us an important lesson. We are too
-apt to form our estimate of character without taking into consideration
-all those circumstances which are known materially
-to influence human thought and actions. The state of the
-organization and the health ought to be maturely weighed
-before we pronounce authoritatively as to the motives of individuals,
-or denounce them for not acting or thinking according
-to what our preconceived opinions have taught us to
-consider as orthodox. Byron’s mind was morbidly alive to
-impressions. The most trifling circumstance would cause him
-to swoon. At Bologna, in 1819, he describes one of his convulsive
-attacks:—“Last night I went to the representation of
-Alfieri’s Myrrha, the last two acts of which threw me into convulsions;
-I don’t mean by that word lady’s hysterics, but an
-agony of reluctant tears, and the choking shudder which I
-do not often undergo for fiction.” He was seized in a similar
-manner at seeing Kean in Sir Giles Overreach; he was carried
-out of the theatre in convulsions. From early life, Byron
-exhibited this abnormal excitability. There can be no doubt
-that it was but the natural effect of a peculiar condition of
-nervous function; but, instead of endeavouring to subdue the
-feeling, he did his best to encourage it, and to fan the fire into
-a flame. He appears to have been tortured by horrid dreams.
-He says in his Journal—“I awoke from a dream: well, have
-not others dreamed? Such a dream! But she did not overtake
-me! I wish the dead would rest for ever. Ugh! how
-my blood is chilled! I do not like this dream; I hate its
-foregone conclusion.”</p>
-
-<p>The “Bride of Abydos” was written to distract the poet’s
-mind from his dreams. He was in such a nervous state at this
-period, that he says if he had not done something, he must
-have gone mad, or have eat his own heart.</p>
-
-<p>Stendhal, alluding to Byron’s apparent remorse, asks, “Is it
-not possible that Byron might have had some guilty stain on
-his conscience, similar to that which wrecked Othello’s fame?
-Can it be, have we sometimes exclaimed, that, in a frenzy of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-pride or jealousy, he had shortened the days of some fair Grecian
-slave, faithless to her vows?”<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">43</a></p>
-
-<p>It is not just to form our opinions of the character of men by
-their writings or actions. In the mass, we are ready to admit
-that we have no other criteria by which to be guided; but we
-may charitably consider that Byron was not himself the “dark
-original he drew.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“O memory! torture me no more:</div>
-<div class="line i1">The present’s all o’ercast—</div>
-<div class="line">My hopes of future bliss are o’er;</div>
-<div class="line i1">In mercy, veil the past.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Such were his feelings at the age of seventeen.</p>
-
-<p>La Fontaine penned tales fertile in intrigues, and yet he
-was never known, says D’Israeli, to have been engaged in a
-single amour. Smollett was anything but what his writings
-would lead us to expect. Cowley boasted of his mistresses, and
-wanted the courage to address one. Burton declaimed against
-melancholy, and yet he was the most miserable of men. Sir
-Thomas More preached in favour of toleration, yet in practice
-was a fierce persecutor. Zimmerman, whilst he was inculcating
-beautiful lessons of benevolence, was by his tyranny
-driving his son into madness, and leaving his daughter an
-outcast from home. Goëthe says, “Zimmerman’s harshness
-towards his children was the effect of hypochondria, a sort of
-madness or moral assassination, to which he himself fell a
-victim after sacrificing his offspring.”</p>
-
-<p>Byron occasionally fancied he was visited by a spectre,
-which he confesses was but the effect of an overstimulated
-brain.</p>
-
-<p>Tasso, whose fine imagination the passions of hopeless love,
-and of grief occasioned by ill treatment, disordered, was in
-daily communication with a spirit. This circumstance is
-alluded to in the following anecdote of him, prefixed to
-Hoole’s translation of his “<i>La Gierusalemme Liberata</i>.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span></p>
-<p>“In this place (at Bisaccio, near Naples) Manso had an
-opportunity of examining the singular effects of Tasso’s melancholy,
-and often disputed with him concerning a familiar
-spirit, with which he pretended to converse. Manso endeavoured
-in vain to persuade his friend that the whole was the
-illusion of a disturbed imagination; but the latter was strenuous
-in maintaining the reality of what he asserted; and to
-convince Manso, desired him to be present at one of these
-mysterious conversations. Manso had the complaisance to
-meet him next day; and while they were engaged in discourse,
-on a sudden he observed that Tasso kept his eyes fixed
-upon a window, and remained in a manner immovable. He
-called him by his name several times, but received no answer.
-At last Tasso cried out, ‘There is the friendly spirit, who is
-come to converse with me. Look, and you will be convinced
-of the truth of all that I have said.’ Manso heard him with
-surprise; he looked, but saw nothing except the sunbeams
-darting through the window: he cast his eyes all over the
-room, but could perceive nothing, and was just going to ask
-where the pretended spirit was, when he heard Tasso speak
-with great earnestness, sometimes putting questions to the
-spirit, and sometimes giving answers, delivering the whole in
-such a pleasing manner, and with such elevated expressions,
-that he listened with admiration, and had not the least inclination
-to interrupt him. At last the uncommon conversation
-ended with the departure of the spirit, as appeared by Tasso’s
-words, who, turning to Manso, asked him if his doubts were
-removed? Manso was more amazed than ever; he scarce
-knew what to think of his friend’s situation, and waved any
-further conversation on the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>Boswell says, Dr. Johnson mentioned a thing as not unfrequent,
-of which he (Boswell) had never heard before,—being
-called, that is, hearing one’s name pronounced, by the
-voice of a known person at a great distance, far beyond
-the possibility of being reached by any sound, uttered by
-human organs. An acquaintance, on whose veracity Boswell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-says he could place every dependence, told him that, walking
-home one evening to Kilmarnock, he heard himself called
-from a wood, by the voice of a brother who had gone to
-America, and the next packet brought the account of that
-brother’s death. Macbean asserted that this inexplicable
-<i>calling</i> was a thing very well known. Dr. Johnson said, that
-one day at Oxford, as he was turning the key of his chambers,
-he heard distinctly his mother call <i>Sam!</i> She was then
-at Lichfield; but nothing ensued.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds gives an amusing instance of Dr.
-Johnson’s eccentricity. He says, “When he and I took a
-journey into the west, we visited the late Mr. Banks, of Dorsetshire.
-The conversation turning upon pictures, which Johnson
-could not well see, he retired to a corner of the room,
-stretching out his right leg as far as he could reach before
-him, then bringing up his left leg, and stretching his right
-still further on. The old gentleman observing him, went up to
-him, and in a very courteous manner assured him that, though
-it was not a new house, the flooring was perfectly safe. The
-Doctor started from his reverie, like a person waked out of a
-sleep, but spoke not a word.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Johnson had one peculiarity, says Boswell, of which
-none of his friends dared to ask an explanation. This was an
-anxious care to go out or in at a door or passage by a certain
-number of steps from a certain point, so that either his right
-or left foot should constantly make the first actual movement.
-Thus, upon innumerable occasions, Boswell has seen him
-suddenly stop, and then seem to count his steps with deep
-earnestness; and when he had neglected, or gone wrong in
-this sort of magical movement, he has been noticed to go
-back again, put himself in a proper posture to recommence
-the ceremony, and having gone through it, break from his
-abstraction, briskly walk on, and join his companions.</p>
-
-<p>An inordinate cultivation of any one faculty of the mind,
-but more particularly the imagination, will tend to produce
-the peculiarities which have been illustrated in this chapter.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-A person who accustoms himself to live in a world created by
-his own fancy—who surrounds himself with flimsy idealities—will,
-in the course of time, cease to sympathize with the gross
-realities of life. The imaginary intelligences which his own
-morbid mind has called into existence will exercise a terrific
-influence over him. A German poet commenced writing a
-poem on the Deity. He allowed his mind to dwell so intensely
-on the subject, that he fancied he was commanded to “flee
-from a world of sin and iniquity;” to effect which, he cut his
-throat, and was found dead in bed, with the razor in one hand
-and a portion of his poem in the other. The apparitions
-which the monomaniac fancies to haunt him are as real and
-sensible existences to him, as objects are to persons who
-have a healthy use of the media through which ideas obtain
-access to the mind. Mr. Calcraft, the late member of parliament,
-committed suicide. He imagined that a strange unearthly-looking
-being sat night and day perched at the top
-of his bed, watching with earnestness his every movement.
-This, which to all around him was an hallucination, to him
-<i>was</i> a reality. It is possible for a person of vivid imagination
-to conjure into apparent existence the most grotesque images
-of the fancy, by allowing the mind to dwell with intenseness
-on a particular train of thought, and by perfectly abstracting
-the attention from all materiality.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br /><br />
-
-<small>PHYSICAL CAUSES OF SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="Indent f85">Influence of climate—The foggy climate of England does not increase the
-number of suicides—Average number of suicides in each month, from
-1817 to 1826—Influence of seasons—Suicides at Rouen—The English
-not a suicidal people—Philip Mordaunt’s singular reasons for self-destruction—Causes
-of French suicides—Influence of physical pain—Unnatural
-vices—Suicide the effect of intoxication—Influence of hepatic disease
-on the mind—Melancholy and hypochondriasis, Burton’s account
-of—Cowper’s case of suicide—Particulars of his extreme depression of
-spirits—Byron and Burns’s melancholy from stomach and liver derangement—Influence
-of bodily disease on the mind—Importance of paying
-attention to it—A case of insanity from gastric irritation—Dr. Johnson’s
-hypochondria—Hereditary suicide, illustrated by cases—Suicide from
-blows on the head, and from moral shocks communicated to the brain—Dr.
-G. Mantell’s valuable observations and cases demonstrative of the
-point—Concluding remarks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> following are the physical causes which are commonly
-found to operate in producing the suicidal disposition—viz.,
-climate, seasons, hereditary predisposition, cerebral injuries,
-physical suffering, disease of the stomach and liver complicated
-with melancholia and hypochondriasis, insanity, suppressed
-secretions, intoxication, unnatural vices, and derangement
-of the <i>primæ viæ</i>. These causes can only act by
-influencing sympathetically the brain and nervous system,
-and in that way interfering with the healthy operations of
-the mind. Much will, of course, depend upon the physical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-conformation of the individual exposed to such agents.
-Should he labour under an hereditary predisposition to insanity,
-or to suicidal delirium, a very trifling corporeal derangement
-may call into existence the self-destructive propensity,
-and <i>vice versa</i>. It will be our object to consider
-<i>seriatim</i> all the physical agents just enumerated.</p>
-
-<p>Among the causes of suicide, the foggy climate of England
-has been brought prominently forward. The specious and
-inaccurate conclusions of Montesquieu on this point have
-misled the public mind. The climate of Holland is much
-more gloomy than that of England, and yet in that country
-suicide is by no means common. The reader will perceive
-from the following tabular statement that the popular notion
-of the month of November being the “suicide’s month” is
-founded on erroneous <i>data</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The average number of suicides in each month, from 1817
-to 1826, was as follows:—</p>
-
-<table summary="average number of suicides" width="40%"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">January</td><td class="tdr">213</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">February</td><td class="tdr">218</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">March</td><td class="tdr">275</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">April</td><td class="tdr">374</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">May</td><td class="tdr">328</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">June</td><td class="tdr">336</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">July</td><td class="tdr">301</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">August</td><td class="tdr">296</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">September</td><td class="tdr">246</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">October</td><td class="tdr">198</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">November</td><td class="tdr">131</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">December</td><td class="tdr">217</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">——</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">3133</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>It has been clearly established that in all the European
-capitals, when anything approaching to correct statistical
-evidence can be procured, the <i>maximum</i> of suicide is in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-months of June and July; the <i>minimum</i> in October and
-November. Temperature appears to exercise a much more
-decided influence than the circumstances of moisture and
-dryness, storms or serenity. M. Villeneuve has observed a
-warm, humid, and cloudy atmosphere to produce a marked
-bad effect at Paris; and that so long as the barometer indicated
-stormy weather, this effect continued.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">44</a> Contrary, however, to
-the opinion of Villeneuve, it appears that by far the fewer
-number of suicides occur in the autumn and winter at Paris,
-than in the spring and summer.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Number of suicides for seven years.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="number of suicides for seven years." width="40%"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">In Spring</td><td class="tdr">997</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">In Summer</td><td class="tdr">933</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">In Autumn</td><td class="tdr">627</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">In Winter</td><td class="tdr">648</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>When the thermometer of Fahrenheit ranges from 80° to 90°
-suicide is most prevalent.</p>
-
-<p>The English have been accused by foreigners of being the
-<i>beau-ideal</i> of a suicidal people. The charge is almost too
-ridiculous to merit serious refutation. It has clearly been
-established that where there is one suicide in London, there
-are five in Paris. In the year 1810, the number of suicides
-committed in London amounted to 188; the population of
-Paris being near 400,000 less than that of London. From
-the year 1827 to 1830, no less than 6900 suicides occurred;
-that is, an average of nearly 1800 per annum. Out of 120,000
-persons who ensured their lives in the London Equitable
-Insurance Company, the number of suicides in twenty years
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span>was only fifteen; so much for the English being <i>par excellence</i>
-disposed to suicide.</p>
-
-<p>The causes which frequently lead to self-destruction in
-France are, defective religious education, <i>ennui</i>, and loss at dice
-or cards. In considering the circumstances which produce this
-disparity in the number of voluntary deaths in the two countries,
-we must bear in mind the moral and religious habits of
-the people. When Christianity is not acknowledged as a
-matter of vital importance in the affairs of man; when morality
-is considered only as a conventional term, conveying no
-definite idea to the mind, it is natural that there should exist,
-co-relative with this tone of feeling, a marked recklessness of
-human life. Some notion may be formed of the state of religious
-feeling in Paris, when our readers are informed of the
-existence in the French metropolis of a “society for the
-mutual encouragement of suicide,” all the members of which,
-on joining it, swear to terminate their existence by their own
-hands, when life becomes insupportable.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Schlegel dwells at much length on the abandoned
-state of Paris, and after giving us some important statistical
-evidence, he alludes to the gross immorality of the people, and
-denounces the French capital as “a suffocating boiling cauldron,
-in which, as in the stew of Macbeth’s witches, there
-simmer, with a modicum of virtue, all kinds of passions, vices,
-and crimes.”</p>
-
-<p>Alluding to the peculiarities of the French people, particularly
-their indifference to human life, an eminent writer
-observes, speaking of their notions of suicide, that a Frenchman
-asks you to see him “go off,” as if death were a place in
-the <i>malle poste</i>. “Will you dine with me to-day?” said a
-Frenchman to a friend. “With the greatest pleasure;—yet,
-now I think of it, I am particularly engaged to shoot myself;
-one cannot get off <i>such</i> an engagement.” This is not the suicide
-<i>à la mode</i> with us. We ape at no such extra civilization
-and refinement. We can be romantic without blowing out our
-brains. English lovers do not, when “the course of true love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>”
-does not run smooth, retire to some sequestered spot, and
-rush into the next world by a brace of pistols tied with cherry-coloured
-ribbons. When we do shoot ourselves, it is done
-with true English gravity. It is no joke with us. We have no
-inherent predilection for the act; no “hereditary imperfection
-of the nervous juices,” as Montesquieu, with all the impudence
-and gravity of a philosopher, asserts, forcing us to commit
-suicide. “Life,” said a man who had exhausted all his external
-sources of enjoyment, and had no internal ones to fly to,
-“has given me a headache; and I want a good sleep in the
-churchyard to set me to rights,” to procure which, he deliberately
-shot himself.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">45</a></p>
-
-<p>A late French writer thus attempts to account for the prevalence
-of suicide in France:—“The external circumstances
-which tend to suggest the idea of suicide are very numerous,
-at the present day, in France; but more particularly so in the
-capital. The high development of civilization and refinement
-which prevails here—the clash of interests—the repeated
-political changes—all contribute to keep the moral feelings in
-a perpetual state of tension. Life does not roll on among us
-in a peaceful and steady current; it rushes forward with the
-force and precipitation of a torrent. In the terrible <i>mêlée</i>, it
-often happens that the little minority, which has obtained a
-footing high above the multitude for a time, falls down as
-suddenly as they have risen. The struggles of life are full of
-miscalculations, disappointments, despair, and disgust. Hence
-the general source of our frequent suicides. But there are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>other causes in operation; and not the least, the strange turn
-that plays and spectacles have lately taken. The public taste
-has undergone a complete revolution in this respect. Nothing
-is more patronized now at the theatre than the display
-of crime unpunished, human misery unconsoled, and a low
-literature, impregnated by a spurious philosophy, declaiming
-against society, against domestic life, against virtue itself;
-applauding the vengeance of the assassin, and recognising
-genius only as it is seen in company with spleen, poison, and
-pistols. We appeal to all who read the novels of the present
-day, and who visit the theatres, whether what we say is not
-the fact.”</p>
-
-<p>It has been questioned whether physical suffering often
-originates the desire for suicide. Too many lamentable cases
-are on record to prevent us from coming to an opposite conclusion.
-Esquirol has justly observed, that “He who has no
-intervals of ease from corporeal pain; who sees no prospects
-of relief from his cruel malady, fails at length in resignation,
-and destroys his life in order to put a period to his sufferings.
-He calculates that the pain of dying is but momentary, and
-commits the act in a cool and meditated despair. It is the
-same in respect to <i>moral</i> condition, that drives the hypochondriac
-to suicide, who is firmly persuaded that his sufferings
-are beyond imagining; that they are irremediable, either
-from some fatal peculiarity in his own constitution, or the
-ignorance of his physicians. It is a remarkable feature in
-hypochondriasis, and in no other disease, that there is such a
-fear of death and a desire to die combined. Both fears proceed
-from the same pusillanimity. Finally, it may be remarked
-that the hypochondriac talks most of death; often wishes his
-attendants to perform the friendly office; even makes attempts
-on his own life, but rarely accomplishes the act. The most
-trifling motive, the most frivolous pretext, is a sufficient
-excuse for procrastinating, from day to day, the threatened
-catastrophe.”</p>
-
-<p>The following case occurred in a provincial mad-house, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-France. An apothecary who was confined there was haunted
-with <i>ennui</i>, and was always begging his companions to put
-him to death. At length, an insane patient was admitted,
-who instantly complied with the apothecary’s request. They
-both watched an opportunity, got out of a window in the
-back yard, and from thence into the kitchen. They pitched
-upon the cook’s chopper, and the apothecary laying his head
-on a block, his companion deliberately and effectually severed
-it from his body. He was seized, and examined before a tribunal,
-where he candidly confessed the whole transaction, and
-observed that he would again perform the same friendly office
-for any unhappy wretch who was tired of his existence!<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">46</a></p>
-
-<p>Lucinius Cæcinius, the prætor, subdued by the pain and
-<i>ennui</i> of a tedious disease, swallowed opium. Dr. Haslam
-relates the case of a gentleman who destroyed himself to
-avoid the tortures of the gout. It is recorded that the pain
-of the same disease drove Servius the grammarian to take
-poison. Pliny informs us that one of his friends, Corellius
-Rufus, having in vain sought relief from the pangs of a disease
-under which he was labouring, starved himself to death
-at the age of sixty-seven. It is related of Pomponius Atticus
-and the philosopher Cleanthes, that they both starved themselves
-to death in order to get rid of physical pain. In the
-course of these attempts, the corporeal sufferings were removed—probably
-in consequence of the great exhaustion and
-attenuation; but both individuals persevered till death took
-place, observing that as this final ordeal must one day be
-undergone, they would not now retrace their steps or give up
-the undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>Few, perhaps, are aware how frequently suicide results
-from the habit of indulging, in early youth, in a certain secret
-vice which, we are afraid, is practised to an enormous extent
-in our public schools. A feeling of false delicacy has operated
-with medical men in inducing them to refrain from dwelling
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span>upon the destructive consequences of this habit, both to the
-moral and physical constitution, as openly and honestly as
-the importance of the subject imperatively demands.</p>
-
-<p>Medical men are, in the most enlarged acceptation of the
-term, guardians of the public health; and no fastidious desire
-to avoid saying what might possibly offend the taste of
-some, ought to keep them from discharging what may be
-termed a sacred duty. The physical disease, particularly
-that connected with the nervous system, engendered by the
-pernicious practice alluded to, frequently leads to the act of
-self-destruction. We have before us the cases of many suicides
-in whom the disposition may clearly be traced to this cause.
-This habit most seriously affects the brain and nervous system;
-and insanity, hypochondriasis, and melancholia, in their worst
-forms, are frequently the baneful consequences.</p>
-
-<p>If disease, structural or functional, of the abdominal viscera
-gives rise to the disposition to commit suicide, it will not require
-much ingenuity to establish the fact that the habitual
-indulgence in intoxicating liquors may originate a similar
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p>It has been already established by statistical evidence, that,
-in a very large proportion of the cases of insanity admitted
-into the asylums and hospitals devoted to the reception of
-this unhappy class of patients, the mental impairment can
-clearly be traced to habits of intemperance.</p>
-
-<p>The brain and nervous system become materially affected
-in those who indulge frequently in “potations pottle deep.”
-Delirium tremens, softening of the cerebral substance, palsy,
-epilepsy, extreme hypochondriasis, are daily witnessed as the
-melancholy effects of intoxication.</p>
-
-<p>M. Falret knew the case of a man who always felt disposed
-to cut his throat when under the influence of spirits. No
-reasoning could induce him to abstain from his favourite
-draught. The inevitable consequences were pointed out to
-him; he was reasoned with, and threatened with confinement
-in a mad-house; but nothing had the desired effect. One<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-Sunday evening, after having drunk several glasses of spirits,
-although not sufficient to produce complete inebriation, he
-stabbed himself to the heart, and died in a few minutes.</p>
-
-<p>Incurable indigestion and organic disease of the liver are
-very commonly met with in habitual drunkards. In such
-persons, the constitution of the mind appears to undergo a
-complete change. At first it may not be perceptible, and
-the patient may not be conscious of it himself, but the mental
-disease will, sooner or later, unequivocally evince itself.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases, the medical man has fearful odds to contend
-against.</p>
-
-<p>A young man, who had become insane in consequence of
-long continued intoxication, made violent efforts to maim himself,
-and especially to pull out his right eye, which appeared
-to give him great offence. Rest, temperance, seclusion, the
-application of half a dozen leeches to the temple, and a few
-doses of opening medicine, restored him, in about a fortnight,
-to the full possession of his faculties.</p>
-
-<p>Many cases of suicide, in those who have a natural predisposition
-to it, arise from the brain sympathizing with the
-liver; nor can this be a matter of surprise to any one who
-has felt the depression of spirits incident to disease of that
-organ. So many cases have occurred from this cause, that
-some writers, from not finding, on subsequent dissection, any
-organic lesion of the brain, have referred it to diseased viscera
-only. But as we find that the insanity ceases when the
-liver is restored to health, there is no reason for supposing
-that the mental alienation is, in these instances, any other
-than the effect of disease of the brain.</p>
-
-<p>J. C., about fifty years of age, was insane for two years.
-He was formerly in respectable circumstances, and employed
-in the situation of writer in an office. He made several attempts
-on his life. He had been in the habit of drinking
-spirits very freely, and had a disease of the liver which appeared
-of some standing. At the time of his admission into
-Hanwell asylum, under the care of Sir W. Ellis, he was in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-most emaciated state; his legs scarcely able to support him.
-His face and body also were covered with an eruption; tongue
-furred; his stools very dark: he was much depressed, and
-always moaning most piteously; complained of heat and
-numbness in his head, and pain in all his limbs. Leeches and
-cold lotions were applied to his head, his bowels opened by
-calomel and colocynth, and he went into the warm bath every
-other day. He was much relieved by these means. He still
-continued, however, to moan as before. His tongue remained
-furred, and stools unhealthy. He took five grains of blue pill
-every alternate night for some time. These were then left off
-awhile; no improvement taking place, he began the pills again,
-and continued them for two months, with evident advantage.
-His tongue was clean; he was less depressed; became strong,
-and gained flesh; the biliary secretions were much improved.
-He is now occupied in the office; and every day, as the action
-of the liver seems to improve, his mind makes a corresponding
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>There is no more frequent cause of suicide than visceral
-derangement, leading to melancholia and hypochondriasis.
-It has been a matter of dispute with medical men whether
-hypochondriacal affections have their origin in the mental or
-physical portion of the economy. Many maintain that the
-mind is the seat of the disease; others, that the liver and stomach
-are primarily affected, and the brain only secondarily.
-In this disputed point, as in most others, truth will generally
-be found to lie between the two extremities. That cases of
-hypochondria and melancholia can clearly be traced to purely
-mental irritation cannot for one moment be disputed; and that
-there are many instances in which the derangement appears
-to have commenced in one of the gastric organs, is as equally
-self-evident. Whatever may be the origin of these affections,
-there can be no doubt of their producing most disastrous consequences.
-Burton’s account of the horrors of hypochondria
-is truly graphic. “As the rain,” says Austin, “penetrates
-the stone, so does this passion of melancholy penetrate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-the mind. It commonly accompanies men to their graves.
-Physicians may ease, but they cannot cure it; it may lie hid
-for a time, but it will return again, as violent as ever, on slight
-occasions, as well as on casual excesses. Its humour is like
-Mercury’s weather-beaten statue, which had once been gilt; the
-surface was clean and uniform, but in the chinks there was still
-a remnant of gold: and in the purest bodies, if once tainted
-by hypochondria, there will be some relics of melancholy
-still left, not so easily to be rooted out. Seldom does this disease
-produce death, except (which is the most grievous calamity
-of all) when these patients make away with themselves—a
-thing familiar enough amongst them, when they are driven
-to do violence to themselves to escape from present insufferable
-pain. They can take no rest in the night, or, if they
-slumber, fearful dreams astonish them. Their soul abhorreth
-all meat, and they are brought to death’s door, being bound in
-misery and in iron. Like Job, they curse their stars, for Job
-was melancholy to despair, and almost to madness. They are
-weary of the sun, and yet afraid to die, <i>vivere nolunt et mori
-nesciunt</i>. And then, like Æsop’s fishes, they leap from the
-frying pan into the fire, when they hope to be cured by means
-of physic—a miserable end to the disease; when ultimately left
-to their fate by a jury of physicians, are furiously disposed; and
-there remains no more to such persons, if that heavenly physician,
-by his grace and mercy, (whose aid alone avails,) do
-not heal and help them. One day of such grief as theirs is as
-a hundred years: it is a plague of the sense, a convulsion of
-the soul, an epitome of hell; and if there be a hell upon
-earth, it is to be found in a melancholy man’s heart. No
-bodily torture is like unto it; all other griefs are swallowed
-up in this great Euripus. I say the melancholy man then is
-the cream and quintessence of human adversity. All other
-diseases are trifles to hypochondria; it is the pith and marrow
-of them all! A melancholy man is the true Prometheus,
-bound to Caucasus; the true Tityrus, whose bowels are still
-devoured by a vulture.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Dull melancholy——</div>
-<div class="line">She’ll make you start at ev’ry noise you hear,</div>
-<div class="line">And visions strange shall to your eyes appear.</div>
-<div class="line">Her voice is low, and gives a hollow sound;</div>
-<div class="line">She hates the light, and is in darkness found;</div>
-<div class="line">Or sits by blinking lamps, or taper small,</div>
-<div class="line">Which various shadows make against the wall.</div>
-<div class="line">She loves nought else but noise which discord makes,</div>
-<div class="line">As croaking frogs whose dwelling is in lakes;</div>
-<div class="line">The raven hoarse, the mandrake’s hollow groan,</div>
-<div class="line">And shrieking owls, that fly i’th’ night alone;</div>
-<div class="line">The tolling bell, which for the dead rings out,</div>
-<div class="line">A mill, where rushing waters run about.</div>
-<div class="line">She loves to walk in the still moonshine light,</div>
-<div class="line">And in a thick dark grove she takes delight;</div>
-<div class="line">In hollow caves, thatch’d houses, and low cells,</div>
-<div class="line">She loves to live, and there alone she dwells.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“There are individuals who, from various physical or moral
-causes,” says Esquirol, “fall into a state of corporeal torpor
-and mental depression. They complain of want of appetite,
-dull pain in the head, sense of heat in the stomach and
-viscera, borborygmi, and constipation of the bowels; while
-they exhibit little or no indication of disease. In the female
-sex, the natural secretions become suspended. As the complaint
-advances, the features alter, and the countenance exhibits
-anxiety; the complexion becomes pale or sallow; there
-is a sense of tightness, or even pain, in the epigastrium; a
-kind of compression in the head, which prevents them from
-fixing their attention, or arranging their thoughts; a general
-torpor or lassitude, which keeps them inactive. They dislike
-to move out, and love to loll about on a sofa; they are irritated
-if you advise them to take exercise; they abandon their
-ordinary avocations, neglect their domestic concerns, become
-indifferent to their nearest connexions; in short, they will
-neither converse, nor study, nor read, nor write, shunning society,
-and being impatient of the inquiries and importunities
-of friends. In this state they become filled with gloomy ideas
-(<i>idées noires</i>), despair of ever being better, desire or even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-invoke death, and sometimes destroy themselves, from a conviction
-that they are no longer capable of fulfilling their duties
-in society. These people are perfectly sane on all subjects of
-conversation; their impulse to suicide being strong in proportion
-to the activity of their former avocations, and the
-importance of their former duties. I have seen their disease
-(for it is a disease) continue for months, and even years. I
-have seen it alternate with mania and with perfect health.
-I have seen patients who would be six months of the year
-maniacal or in sound health, and the other six months tormented
-with these gloomy ideas and impulses to suicide.”</p>
-
-<p>In confirmation of this view of Esquirol’s, the following cases
-are related:<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">47</a>—A gentleman of apparently sound constitution,
-aged 32, was married to a woman whom he affectionately
-loved. His affairs became deranged a few years after his
-marriage, which greatly discouraged him, and rendered him
-inactive, but without apparently affecting his health. He
-now embarked in a speculation which promised much advantage,
-and at first applied himself to business with unremitting
-assiduity. In the course of a month he encountered
-some difficulties, which depressed him beyond measure. He
-considered himself ruined, refused to quit his bed, and
-would not superintend his workmen, from a conviction that
-he was no longer capable of directing their operations. He
-complained of headache, heat in his stomach, &amp;c. His
-affection for his wife and children, his pecuniary interests, all
-failed to rouse him from this moral and physical prostration.
-He reasoned sanely on the critical state of his affairs, and yet
-made no effort to rescue himself from his difficulties. Eight
-days passed in this way, when all at once he sprung from his
-bed in perfect integrity of mind and body. He resumed instantaneously
-all his activity for business, all his affection for
-his family. The same state, however, recurred ten or twelve
-times since, at irregular intervals, caused in general by trifling
-contrarieties of business, which, under other circumstances,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>would be considered as nothing. During several of these
-paroxysms he had impulses to suicide; but this dreaded catastrophe
-has not yet taken place.</p>
-
-<p>A female was admitted into the Salpetriere on the 23d of
-September, 1819, in the 34th year of her age, and fourteen
-years after marriage. At the age of 21 she had a child, after
-which she was affected with an ulcer in the foot, which was
-healed in six months. From this time she was troubled with
-cardialgia, at first slight, but afterwards with intense pain and
-vomiting of her food. At the age of 33 she became irresolute
-in her ideas and actions. She expressed an aversion for
-those things which she had been previously pleased with, and
-was occasionally incoherent. After suffering from other derangements
-of her general health, she abandoned her household
-affairs, became quite despondent, and tried more than
-once to commit suicide. In this state she was admitted into
-the hospital, and was put upon diluents, low diet, &amp;c. As
-she shewed indications of having recovered, she was allowed
-to return to her family; but in a short period she was harassed
-with gloomy ideas, despaired of recovery, and expressed a
-desire to quit life, the duties of which she said she was no
-longer able to fulfil.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of Cowper, we have a melancholy instance of
-hypochondriasis leading to suicidal mental derangement.
-That the poet’s mind was unsound when he attempted to
-kill himself, must be evident to those who are conversant with
-the history of his life. He never appears to have been free
-from hypochondriacal disorder. In a letter to Lady Hesketh,
-he says, “Could I be translated to paradise, unless I could
-leave my body behind me, my melancholy would cleave to
-me there.” A friend procured him the situation of reading
-clerk to the House of Lords, forgetting that the nervous
-shyness which made a public exhibition of himself “mortal
-poison,” would render it impossible for him ever to discharge
-the duties of his office. This difficulty presented itself to the
-mind of the poet, and gloom instantly enveloped his facul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>ties.
-At his request, his situation was changed to that of
-clerk of the journals; but even before he could be installed
-into office he was threatened with a public examination
-before the House. This made him completely wretched; he
-had not resolution to decline what he had not strength to do:
-the interest of his friend, and his own reputation and want of
-support, pressed him forward to an attempt which he knew
-from the first could never succeed. In this miserable state,
-like Goldsmith’s traveller,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“To stop too fearful, and too faint to go,”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>he attended every day for six months at the office where he
-was to examine the journals in preparation for his trust. His
-feelings were like those of a man at the place of execution,
-every time he entered the office door; and he only gazed
-mechanically at the books, without drawing from them the
-least portion of information he wanted. As the time of his
-examination approached, his agony became more and more
-intense; he hoped and believed that madness would come to
-relieve him; he attempted also to make up his mind to suicide,
-though his conscience bore stern testimony against it;
-he could not by any argument persuade himself that it was
-right; but his desperation prevailed, and he procured from
-an apothecary the means of self-destruction. On the day
-before his public appearance was to be made, he happened to
-notice a letter in the newspaper, which to his disordered mind
-seemed like a malignant libel on himself. He immediately
-threw down the paper, and rushed into the fields, determined
-to die in a ditch; but the thought struck him that he might
-escape from the country. With the same violence he proceeded
-to make hasty preparations for his flight; but while
-he was engaged in packing his portmanteau his mind changed,
-and he threw himself into a coach, ordering the man to drive
-to the Tower wharf, intending to throw himself into the river,
-and not reflecting that it would be impossible to accomplish
-his purpose, in that public spot, unobserved. On approaching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-the water, he found a porter seated upon some goods; he
-then returned to the coach, and drove home to his lodgings
-in the Temple. On the way, he attempted to drink the laudanum,
-but as often as he raised it, a convulsive agitation of
-his frame prevented its reaching his lips; and thus, regretting
-the loss of the opportunity, but unable to avail himself of it,
-he arrived half dead with anguish at his apartments. He
-then closed the door and threw himself on the bed, with the
-laudanum near him, trying to lash himself up to the deed;
-but a voice within seemed constantly to forbid it; and as
-often as he extended his hand to the poison, his fingers were
-contracted, and held back by spasms. At this time some of
-the inmates of the place came in, but he concealed his agitation;
-and as soon as he was left alone, a change came over
-him, and so detestable did the deed appear, that he threw
-away the laudanum, and dashed the phial to pieces. The
-rest of the day was spent in heavy insensibility, and at night
-he slept as usual; but on waking at three in the morning,
-<i>he took his penknife and laid with his weight upon it, the point
-being directed towards his heart</i>. It was broken, and would
-not penetrate. At day-break he rose, and passing a strong
-garter round his neck, fastened it to the frame of his bed.
-This gave way with his weight; but on securing it to the door,
-he was more successful, and remained suspended until he
-had lost all consciousness of existence. After a time, the
-garter broke, and he fell to the floor, so that his life was
-saved; but the conflict had been greater than his reason
-could endure. He felt a contempt for himself not to be expressed
-or imagined. Whenever he went into the street, it
-seemed as if every eye flashed upon him with indignation and
-scorn. He felt as if he had offended God so deeply that his
-guilt could never be forgiven, and his whole heart was filled
-with pangs of tumultuous despair.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">48</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span></p>
-<p>When Cowper had once admitted the thought of self-destruction,
-he could not go into the street without meeting
-with something to tempt or drive him to the act. It seemed to
-him as if the whole world had conspired to make death by his
-own hand inevitable. When he ventured into the streets, after
-the failure of all his efforts, a ghastly shame and alarmed
-suspicion were his torments; and perhaps nothing in Cowper’s
-autobiography goes deeper into the heart than the following
-description of his sufferings.</p>
-
-<p>“I never went into the street but I thought the people
-stood and laughed at me, and held me in contempt; and could
-hardly persuade myself but that the voice of conscience was
-loud enough for any one to hear it. They who knew me,
-appeared to avoid me, and if they spoke to me, seemed to
-do it in scorn. I bought a ballad of one who was singing
-it in the street, because I thought it was written on me.
-I dined alone, either at a tavern, where I went in the dark,
-or at the chop-house, where I always took care to hide myself
-in the darkest corner of the room. I slept generally an hour
-in the evening, but it was only to be terrified in dreams; and
-when I awoke, it was some time before I could steadily walk
-through the passage into the dining-room. I reeled and
-staggered like a drunken man. The eyes of man I did not
-fear; but when I thought that the eyes of God were upon me,
-(which I felt assured of,) it gave me the most intolerable
-anguish. If, for a moment, a book or a companion stole away
-my attention from myself, a flash from hell seemed to be
-thrown into my mind immediately; and I said within myself,
-‘What are these things to me, who am damned?’”</p>
-
-<p>Cowper is not the only instance, however, of a man of exquisite
-taste and genius whose life has been rendered miserable
-by hypochondria. We have alluded elsewhere to Byron’s
-morbid sensitiveness, and the reader’s attention is now called to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>the influence of hypochondriasis on the poet’s mind. He says
-in his journal, “What can be the reason I awake every
-morning in actual despair and despondency?” He had a great
-apprehension of insanity. In order to overcome his melancholy,
-considering that his diet had much to do with it, he
-put himself under a strict regimen, avoiding most scrupulously
-all animal food. He states that his diet for a week consisted
-of tea and six dry biscuits per diem. After having indulged
-in an ordinary dinner, he writes, “I wish to God I had not
-dined now; it kills me with heaviness; and yet it was but a
-pint of bucellas, and fish. Oh, my head! how it aches!—the
-horrors of indigestion!” Again he says, “This head was
-given me to ache with.” After a severe fit of indigestion, he
-writes, “I’ve no more charity than a vinegar cruet. Would
-that I were an ostrich, and dieted on fire-irons! O fool! I
-shall go mad!”</p>
-
-<p>Burns suffered much from indigestion, producing hypochondria.
-Writing to his friend, Mr. Cunningham, he says,
-“Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased? Canst thou
-speak peace and rest to a soul tost on a sea of troubles, without
-one friendly star to guide her course, and dreading that
-the next surge may overwhelm her? Canst thou give to a
-frame tremblingly alive to the tortures of suspense the stability
-and hardihood of a rock that braves the blast? If thou canst
-not do the least of these, why wouldst thou disturb me in my
-miseries with thy inquiries after me?” From early life, the
-poet was subject to a disordered stomach, a disposition to
-headache, and irregular action of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>He describes, in one of his letters, the horrors of his complaint:—“I
-have been for some time pining under secret
-wretchedness. The pang of disappointment, the sting of
-pride, and some wandering stabs of remorse, settle on my life
-like vultures, when my attention is not called away by the
-claims of society, or the vagaries of the muse. Even in the
-hour of social mirth my gaiety is the madness of an intoxicated
-criminal under the hands of an executioner. My con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span>stitution
-was blasted <i>ab origine</i> with a deep incurable taint of
-melancholy that poisoned my existence.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more interesting to a physician who is endowed
-with only a moderate share of the spirit of observation
-than to watch the progress of hypochondriasis in a number of
-patients, especially in regard to its effect on the mind. They
-always struggle, more or less in the beginning, with the lowness
-and dejection which affect them; and it is not until many a
-severe contest has taken place between their natural good sense
-and the involuntary suggestions which arise from the obscure
-and painful feelings of the diseased nerves, that a firm belief
-in the reality of such thoughts gains a full conquest over their
-judgment. A firm belief in any one perception never takes
-place until it has acquired a certain degree of force; and as all
-impressions which arise from the viscera of the abdomen are
-naturally obscure, we see the reason why these must continue
-for a great length of time, or be often repeated, before they can
-withdraw a person’s attention from the ordinary impression of
-external objects, which are clear and distinct, and before they
-acquire such a degree of vividness as to destroy the operations
-of reason.</p>
-
-<p>We meet every day with hypochondriacs in whom the disease
-is just beginning to be formed, and who, being possessed
-of a good understanding, seem unwilling to tell, even to
-their medical friends, the singular, and often melancholy,
-thoughts with which they are tormented. They acknowledge
-them to be unreasonable, and yet insist that they
-cannot help believing in them. A very curious display of
-this kind of struggle between the habitudes of reason and the
-approach of delirium is to be found in the diary of an hypochondriac,
-from which we make the following extract:—</p>
-
-<p>“On the 14th of November, the idea that some person
-intended to kill me sprung up suddenly and involuntarily in
-my mind, and yet, I must confess, there was no reason why I
-should have harboured this thought, for I am convinced that
-no one ever formed such a cruel design against me. People<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-who had a stick in their hands I looked on as murderers. As
-I was walking out of town, a countryman happened to follow
-me, and I was instantly filled with the greatest apprehension,
-and stood still to let him pass. I asked the fellow in a
-threatening voice, and with a view of intimidating him from
-his purpose, what was the name of the town before us. The
-man answered my question and walked on, and I found great
-relief, because he was no longer behind me.</p>
-
-<p>“In the evening, I observed some water in the glass out of
-which I commonly drink, and I instantly believed it was
-poisoned. I therefore washed it carefully out, and yet I
-knew, at the same time, that I myself had left the water in it.</p>
-
-<p>“18th November.—At particular periods I believe all
-mankind have conspired to murder me. I think I am deprived
-of my office; that I am doomed to die of hunger; and,
-to add to all this, I am tormented with horrid doubts concerning
-futurity, and these thoughts persecute me like furies.
-Those whom I used to love most, I now hate. I avoid my
-best friends, and my dear wife appears to me a much worse
-kind of woman than she really is.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot describe the exertion it requires to conquer in
-society the aversion I feel to my fellow-creatures, and to
-prevent my ill-humour from breaking out against the most
-innocent people. When it really does so, I spare no one. I
-am sorry for it afterwards, but then I am too proud to
-acknowledge my error.</p>
-
-<p>“I find myself so enraged on seeing a stupid, vacant countenance,
-that I have almost an irresistible inclination to box
-the person’s ears to whom it belongs: the refraining from it
-is a severe effort.</p>
-
-<p>“20th November.—A boy with a face like a satyr met me,
-and occasioned me the greatest uneasiness. Although he
-did nothing to displease me, I was forced to go to him, and
-tell him that I was sure he would die on the gallows.</p>
-
-<p>“23rd November.—My sensibility is often extreme, and
-then my best friends become insupportable to me. To their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-expressions of regard I am either purposely cold or else I
-answer by rude and offensive speeches. I can seldom explain
-to myself the reason of this too great sensibility. If two
-people whisper to each other in my presence, I grow uneasy,
-and lose all command of mind, because I think they are
-speaking ill of me; and I often assume a satirical manner in
-company, in order to frighten them. Anxiety, dreadful
-anxiety, seizes me, if a person overlooks my hand at cards, or
-if a person sits down beside me when I am playing the harpsichord.”</p>
-
-<p>“From numerous facts which have come within my own
-observation,” says a distinguished living medical authority,<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">49</a> “I
-am convinced that many strange antipathies, disgusts, caprices
-of temper, and eccentricities which are considered solely as obliquities
-of intellect, have their source in corporeal disorder.</p>
-
-<p>“The great majority of these complaints, which are considered
-as purely mental, such as irascibility, melancholy, timidity,
-and irresolution, might be greatly remedied, if not entirely
-removed, by a proper system of temperance, and with very
-little medicine. There is no accounting for the magic-like
-spell which annihilates for a time the whole energy of the mind,
-and renders the victim of dyspepsia afraid of his own shadow,
-or of things, if possible, more unsubstantial than shadows.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not likely that the great men of the earth should be
-exempt from these visitations any more than the little; and if
-so, we may reasonably conclude, that there are other things
-beside ‘conscience’ which ‘make cowards of us all,’ and
-that, by a temporary gastric irritation, many an ‘enterprise
-of vast pith and moment’ has had ‘its current turned away,’
-and ‘lost the name of action.’</p>
-
-<p>“The philosopher and the metaphysician, who know but
-little of these reciprocities of mind and matter, have drawn
-many a false conclusion from, and erected many a baseless
-hypothesis on, the actions of men. Many a happy thought
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span>has sprung from an empty stomach; many a terrible and merciless
-edict has gone forth in consequence of an irritated gastric
-nerve. Thus health may make the same man a hero in the
-field whom dyspepsia may render imbecile in the cabinet.”</p>
-
-<p>The following case will shew how powerfully indigestion
-may affect the mind’s operations:—</p>
-
-<p>A young lady, after eating some heavy paste, was attacked
-by a sensation of burning heat at the pit of the stomach,
-which increased till the whole of the upper part of the body,
-both externally and internally, appeared to her to be all in
-flames. She rose up suddenly, left the dinner table, and ran
-into the street, from which she was immediately brought back.
-She soon came to herself, and thus described her horrible
-ideas. She declared that she had been very wicked, and had
-been dragged into the flames of hell. She continued in a
-precarious situation for some time. Whenever she experienced
-the burning sensation of which she first complained,
-the same dreadful thoughts occurred to her mind. She seized
-hold of whatever was nearest to prevent her from being
-forced away; and such was her alarm that she dreaded to be
-alone. This lady had long been distressed by family concerns,
-and harassed by restless and sleepless nights, which
-greatly affected her health.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Johnson used to declare that he inherited “a vile
-melancholy” from his father, which made him “mad all his
-life, or, at least, not sober.” Insanity was his constant
-terror. Boswell says that, at the period when this great
-philosopher was giving to the world proofs of no ordinary
-vigour of understanding, he actually fancied himself insane,
-or in a state as nearly as possible approaching to it.</p>
-
-<p>Murphy says, “For many years before Johnson’s death, so
-terrible was the prospect of final dissolution that when he was
-not disposed to enter into the conversation which was going
-forward, he sat in his chair, repeating the well-known lines of
-Shakspeare—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“To die, and go we know not where.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Like Metastasio, he would not, if he could help it, permit
-the word death to be pronounced in his presence. Boswell
-once introduced the topic in the course of conversation, which
-made Johnson highly indignant. He observed, that he never
-had a moment in which it was not terrible to him.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four days before he died, he declared that he
-would give one of his legs for a year more of life. The
-ruling passion was exhibited strong in death. At Dr. Johnson’s
-own suggestion, the surgeon was making slight punctures
-in the legs, with the hope of relieving his dropsical
-affection, when he cried out, “Deeper! deeper! <i>I want length
-of life</i>, and you are afraid of giving me pain, which I do not
-value.” If we had not a thorough conviction that this fear
-of death was but the result of physical disease, which no moral
-and religious principles could subdue, Dr. Johnson’s conduct
-towards the end of his life would excite a feeling in our mind
-towards him very opposite to that of respect.</p>
-
-<p>With reference to suicide, there is no fact that has been
-more clearly established than that of its hereditary character.
-Of all diseases to which the various organs are subject,
-there are none more generally transmitted from one generation
-to another than affections of the brain. It is not
-necessary that the disposition to suicide should manifest
-itself in every generation; it often passes over one, and
-appears in the next, like insanity unattended with this
-propensity. But if the members of the family so predisposed
-are carefully examined, it will be found that the
-various shades and gradations of the malady will be easily
-perceptible. Some are distinguished for their flightiness of
-manner, others for their strange eccentricity, likings and dislikings,
-irregularity of their passions, capricious and excitable
-temperament, hypochondriasis and melancholia. These are
-often but the minute shades and variations of an hereditary
-disposition to suicidal madness. A gentleman suddenly, and
-without any apparent reason, cut his throat. The father had
-always been a man of strong passions, easily roused, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-so, was extremely violent. The brother was a man of impulse;
-he always acted by fits and starts, and therefore never
-could be depended upon. The sister had a strange, unnatural,
-and superstitious horror of particular colours and odours. A
-yellow dress caused a feeling approaching to syncope, and the
-smell of hay produced great nervous excitement. The grandfather
-had been convicted of homicide, and had been confined
-for two years in a mad-house.</p>
-
-<p>Andral relates the case of a father who died from the
-effects of disease of the brain; the mother died sane. They
-had six children, three boys and three girls. Of the boys, the
-eldest was a man of original mind; the second was very extravagant
-in his habits, and was ultimately confined in a mad-house;
-the third was extremely violent in his temper. Of the
-girls, one had fits of apoplexy, and became insane; the other
-died at her accouchement, with symptoms of derangement;
-the third died of cholera, not, however, until she exhibited
-indications of mental aberration.</p>
-
-<p>A case more singular than the last is recorded. All the
-members of a particular family, being hereditarily disposed,
-exhibited, when they arrived at a certain age, a desire to
-commit self-destruction. It required no exciting cause to
-develope the fatal disposition. No wish was expressed, or
-attempt made, to overpower the suicidal inclination, and the
-greatest industry and ingenuity were exercised by the parties
-in order to effect their purpose. In two cases, the propensity
-was subdued by proper medical and moral treatment; but, just
-in proportion to its being suppressed, did the idea of suicide
-appear to fix itself resolutely in the mind. The desire came
-upon the individuals like the attacks of intermittent fever.</p>
-
-<p>A. K., a man aged 57, was twice married. He was a shoe-maker
-by trade; but not having received any education, his
-wife was compelled to attend to all his accounts. He had
-experienced, when young, a blow on the head, which occasionally
-gave him pain. He became very intemperate in his
-habits, and at particular intervals he exhibited an uncontrol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span>lable
-temper, quarrelled with everybody, neglected his business,
-abused his wife, and became extravagant and melancholy.
-During the paroxysm he would exclaim—“<i>Oh, my unlucky
-head! I am again a lost man!</i>” When the attack subsided, he
-returned to his business, was affectionate to his wife and
-family, most humbly begged her pardon for having ill-treated
-her, and expressed the greatest contrition for his conduct.
-These attacks came on at regular intervals. He procured a
-piece of rope for the purpose of hanging himself, and for some
-months carried it about with him in his pocket for that purpose.
-During one of his fits he effected his object. His
-grandfather had strangled himself, and his brother and sister
-had attempted suicide.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Gall knew several families in which the suicidal propensity
-prevailed through several generations. Among the
-cases he mentions is the following very remarkable one:—“The
-Sieur Ganthier, the owner of various houses built
-without the barriers of Paris, to be used as <i>entrepôts</i> of goods,
-left seven children, and a fortune of about two millions of
-francs to be divided among them. All remained at Paris, or
-in the neighbourhood, and preserved their patrimony; some
-even increased it by commercial speculations. None of them
-met with any real misfortunes, but all enjoyed good health,
-a competency, and general esteem. All, however, were possessed
-with a rage for suicide, and all seven succumbed to it
-within the space of thirty or forty years. Some hanged, some
-drowned themselves, and others blew out their brains. One
-of the first two had invited sixteen persons to dine with him
-one Sunday. The company collected, the dinner was served,
-and the guests were at the table. The master of the house
-was called, but did not answer; he was found hanging in the
-garret. Scarcely an hour before, he was quietly giving orders
-to the servants, and chattering with his friends. The last,
-the owner of a house in the Rue de Richelieu, having raised
-his house two stories, became frightened at the expense,
-imagined himself ruined, and was anxious to kill himself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-Thrice they prevented him; but soon after, he was found dead,
-having shot himself. The estate, after all the debts were paid,
-amounted to three hundred thousand francs, and he might
-have been forty-five years old at the time of his death.”</p>
-
-<p>Falret, whose researches have thrown much light on this
-affection, believes that it is more disposed to be hereditary
-than any other kind of insanity. He saw a mother and
-her daughter attacked with suicidal melancholy, and the
-grandmother of the latter was at Charenton for the same
-cause. An individual, he says, committed suicide in Paris.
-His brother, who came to attend the funeral, cried out on
-seeing the body—“What fatality! My father and uncle
-both destroyed themselves; my brother has imitated their
-example; and twenty times during my journey hither I
-thought of throwing myself into the Seine!”</p>
-
-<p>Gall also relates the case of a dyer, of a very taciturn humour,
-who had five sons and a daughter. The eldest son, after
-being settled in a prosperous business with a family around
-him, succeeded, after many attempts, in killing himself by
-jumping from the third story of his house. The second son,
-who was rather taciturn, had some domestic troubles, lost part
-of his fortune at play, and strangled himself at the age of
-thirty-five. The third threw himself from the window into
-his garden, but did not hurt himself; he pretended he was
-trying to fly. The fourth tried one day to fire a pistol down
-his throat, but was prevented. The fifth was of a bilious,
-melancholic temperament, quiet, and devoted to business; he
-and his sister shewed no signs of being affected with their
-brothers’ malady. One of their cousins committed suicide.</p>
-
-<p>Among the physical causes of self-destruction, insidious
-affections of the brain must stand prominently forward. It is
-not often that the physician is permitted to examine after death
-the state of this organ; but there can be no doubt that, in the
-great majority of instances, the brain will be found to have
-undergone a serious structural alteration. “During the last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-twenty-five years,” says Dr. G. Mantell, “many cases of suicide
-have come under my notice in which the mental hallucination
-which led to self-destruction has depended on lesions
-of the brain, occasioned by slight or neglected injuries of the
-head, to which neither the patient nor his friends attached
-any importance. In several instances of self-destruction,
-without any assignable moral cause, and in which no previous
-signs of fatuity or insanity were manifested, I have found,
-upon a post mortem examination, either circumscribed induration
-or softening of the brain, or thickening and adhesions
-of some portions of its membranes. The conviction
-was forced upon my mind that very many of the <i>so called</i>
-nervous or hypochondriacal affections, which are generally
-considered as imaginary and dependent on mental emotions,
-are ascribable to physical causes, and frequently originate
-from slight lesions of the brain.”</p>
-
-<p>The learned doctor relates the following cases in illustration
-of his views:—</p>
-
-<p>“A respectable tradesman, between fifty and sixty years of
-age, of temperate habits, was knocked down during an electioneering
-contest, and struck his head on the ground. He
-was stunned for a few minutes by the shock, and slightly
-bruised above the right temple, but experienced no further
-inconvenience, and the circumstance was considered of no
-consequence.</p>
-
-<p>“About six months after the event, he was seized, one
-evening, with rigors and a pain over the right brow; a smart
-reaction took place, which terminated in perspiration, and
-the following morning, the symptoms disappeared. A similar
-paroxysm came on daily for five or six days; the attack was
-considered intermittent, and, I believe, bark was freely administered.
-At the end of a week, the patient was well. After
-this period, he was subject to occasional pain over the right
-brow, accompanied with great mental despondency, the prevailing
-apprehension being that of eternal damnation. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span>
-state would continue for an uncertain time, the duration
-varying from a few days to three weeks; and by slow degrees
-he would lose all trace of disease, regain his accustomed
-cheerfulness, and be able to transact the affairs of an extensive
-business.</p>
-
-<p>“About two years from the occurrence of the accident, I
-saw him, at the request of his friends, while he was labouring
-under great despondency, which his relations assured me
-arose from some religious opinions he had imbibed; and I
-found that the medical treatment had been in accordance
-with such a notion. My inquiries led to the detection of the
-injury he had received two years previously, but neither the
-patient nor his friends would allow that there was any connexion
-between the blow and the symptoms under which he
-now suffered. Both general and local bleeding appeared to
-me necessary; a strict regimen was adopted, and he regained
-his usual flow of spirits, and expressed himself much better
-than he had been for years. The occasional use of leeches,
-and a rigid abstinence from fermented liquors, spirits, and
-stimuli of all kinds, maintained this favourable condition for
-a considerable time; but his occupation led him to occasional
-excess in diet, and a moderate quantity of wine or beer
-invariably brought on despondency and its accompanying
-hallucination; in other words, when the system was kept in a
-tranquil state, the cerebral functions were not impaired; but
-when excited, the morbid manifestations of the mind were
-produced.</p>
-
-<p>“During one of these attacks he cut his throat, and expired
-in the course of a few hours. A short time previous to his
-death, when greatly exhausted by the loss of blood from his
-wound, his intellect was unclouded, and he expressed to me
-his astonishment at what he had done, and assured me he had
-no reason for acting thus; but it was an impulse which he
-could not resist.</p>
-
-<p>“The only abnormal appearance upon inspecting the body
-after death was, a circumscribed adhesion of the dura mater<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-to the pia mater, to the extent of about two inches in diameter,
-over the upper and anterior portion of the right hemisphere
-of the brain, opposite to the spot where the blow of the
-head had been inflicted some years previously.</p>
-
-<p>“I will not presume to offer any comment on a case which I
-am well aware presents nothing unusual, my only object being
-that of calling particular attention to those slight injuries of
-the head which, although unmarked by any striking symptoms
-at the moment of their occurrence, may give rise to the most
-distressing results years after their infliction, and when the
-original cause of disordered action is forgotten, and can no
-longer be detected; and of pointing out the possibility that
-many cases of suicide, apparently referrible to moral causes
-only, may be found to result solely from physical derangement
-of the organ through which the manifestations of the mind
-must be displayed. It is under circumstances of this kind
-that the medical philosopher, in his painful duty of exploring
-the relics of mortality, may have the high gratification of protecting
-the memory of an unfortunate individual from the
-censure of a world but too apt to judge harshly, and thus
-afford a lasting consolation to those by whom that memory
-will be cherished and revered.”</p>
-
-<p>No complaints can be more insidious than those connected
-with the brain. An apparently slight blow on the head in
-early life has been known, if not to give rise at the time to
-actual disease of the sentient organ, to predispose the person
-to attacks of cerebral derangement when exposed to the influence
-of causes so trivial as to be incapable, under any other
-circumstances, of producing any effect. The following case
-will demonstrate that moral irritation may derange the structure
-of the brain as effectually as any physical injury:—</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman in early life was exposed for a few weeks to an
-amount of mental excitement almost sufficient to bring on a
-severe maniacal attack. He complained for some time of a
-sensation in his head as if some person was hammering on his
-brain. In the course of a few years he apparently recovered.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-During a tour through Italy, he had a renewal of his old sensation,
-and became liable to head-aches, giddiness, and severe
-attacks of indigestion. He placed himself under the
-care of an Italian physician of eminence, who did his best
-to restore him to health. Instead of improving, the symptoms
-of his disease became more apparent; and one morning he
-was found dead on the floor of his dressing-room, having with
-a penknife effectually divided the carotid artery. On examining
-the brain, extensive <i>ramollissement</i> was discovered.
-In this case the structural disease originated in a <i>moral shock</i>,
-the effects of which remained suspended for some years, and
-then gave rise to the train of symptoms that drove the unfortunate
-man to terminate his life. It is one of the most important
-facts connected with this subject, that mental excitement
-may produce as extensive and serious organic disease as
-that which so commonly follows the receipt of physical injury.
-With a knowledge of this fact, how cautious we ought to be in
-pronouncing an opinion as to the absence of disease of the
-brain in cases of suicide resulting from an apparently trifling
-departure from mental quietude, without being intimate with
-the previous history of the individual.</p>
-
-<p>“The English,” says Montesquieu, “frequently destroy
-themselves without any apparent cause to determine them to
-such an act, and even in the midst of prosperity. Among
-the Romans, suicide was the effect of education; it depended
-upon their customs and manner of thinking: with the English,
-it is the effect of disease, and depending upon the physical
-condition of the system.” A young man, twenty-two years
-of age, was intended by his parents for the church. He disliked
-the profession exceedingly, and absolutely refused to
-take orders. For this act, at once of integrity and disobedience,
-he was forced to quit his father’s house, and to exert
-his inexperienced energies for a precarious subsistence. He
-turned his thoughts to several different employments; and,
-at length, he went to reside with a family, where he was
-treated with great kindness, and where he appeared to enjoy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-a degree of tranquillity. His enjoyment, however, was not
-of long continuance, for his imagination was assailed by
-gloomy and distressing reflections. His life became more and
-more burdensome to him, and he considered by what method
-he should put an end to it. He one day formed the resolution
-of precipitating himself from the top of the house,
-but his courage failed him, and the execution of the project
-was postponed. Some days after, he took up a pistol with
-the same design of self-destruction. His perplexities and
-terrors returned. A friend of this unhappy youth called
-upon Pinel one day to inform him of the projected tragedy.
-Every means of prevention were adopted that prudence could
-suggest, but the most pressing solicitations and friendly remonstrances
-were in vain. The propensity to suicide unceasingly
-haunted him, and he precipitately quitted the family
-from whom he had experienced so many proofs of friendship
-and attachment. Financial considerations prohibited the
-suggestion of a distant voyage or a change of climate. He
-was therefore advised, as the best substitute, some constant
-and laborious employment. The young melancholic, sensibly
-alive to the horror of his situation, entered fully into Pinel’s
-views, and procured an engagement at Bled Harbour, where
-he mingled with the other labourers with a full determination
-to deserve his stipulated wages. But, completely fatigued
-and exhausted by the exertion of the first two days of his
-engagement, he was obliged to have recourse to some other
-expedient. He entered into the employment of a master-mason,
-in the neighbourhood of Paris, to whom his services
-were peculiarly acceptable, as he devoted his leisure hours to
-the instruction of an only son. No situation, apparently,
-could have been more suitable to his case than one of this
-kind, admitting of alternate mental and bodily exercise.
-Wholesome food, comfortable lodgings, and every attention
-due to misfortune, seemed rather to aggravate than to divert
-his gloomy propensities. After the expiration of a fortnight,
-he returned to his friend, and, with tears in his eyes, ac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>quainted
-him with the internal struggles which he felt, and
-the insuperable disgust of life, which bore him irresistibly
-to self-destruction. The reproaches of his friend affected
-him exceedingly, and, in a state of the utmost anxiety and
-despair, he silently withdrew, probably to terminate a hated
-existence by throwing himself into the Seine.</p>
-
-<p>When laying down rules for the physical treatment of suicide,
-we have developed our view as to the influence of derangement
-of the <i>primæ viæ</i>, suppressed secretions, &amp;c., on the healthy
-state of the mind; and we have only to refer the reader to that
-portion of the work for information on these points. In discussing
-the important question whether suicide invariably
-results from mental derangement, numerous instances have
-been brought forward that may be undoubtedly traced to that
-cause, therefore it will not be necessary to recapitulate in this
-chapter what has been there advanced.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br /><br />
-
-<small>MORAL TREATMENT OF SUICIDAL MANIA.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Diseases of the brain not dissimilar to affections of other organs—Early
-symptoms of insanity—The good effects of having plenty to do—Occupation—Dr.
-Johnson’s opinion on the subject—The pleasure derived
-from cultivating a taste for the beauties of nature—Effect of volition on
-diseases of the mind—Silent grief injurious to mental health—Treatment
-of <i>ennui</i>—The time of danger, not the time of disease—The Walcheren
-expedition—The retreat of the ten thousand Greeks under Xenophon—Influence
-of music on the mind in the cure of disease—Cure of epidemic
-suicide—Buonaparte’s remedy—How the women of Myletus were cured
-of the disposition to suicide, and other illustrations—Cases shewing how
-easily the disposition to suicide may be diverted—On the cure of insanity
-by stratagems—On the importance of removing the suicidal patient from
-his own home—On the regulation of the passions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> treating this most important class of affections, we must
-dismiss from our minds all those pre-conceived notions which
-we have been led to form of what constitutes mental derangement.
-We must view the subject as medical philosophers in
-the most liberal acceptation of the term, and not as <i>nisi prius</i>
-barristers; we must consider ourselves at the bed-side of a
-suffering patient, demanding from our skill that relief which
-he is led to believe we have in our power to afford, and not
-as in a court of justice, undergoing an examination at the
-hands of a lawyer anxious to establish his case; and, above all,
-we must apply to the disease of the brain and its disordered
-manifestations those pathological principles which guide us in
-the elucidation of the affections of other organs. If we con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>sider
-insanity not as a specific disease invariably exhibiting
-the same phenomena, but as it really is, the effect of a disordered
-condition of the sentient organ, having an incipient, as
-well as an advanced stage, we may, by a judicious application
-of the principles of therapeutics, succeed in many cases in
-crushing the disposition to suicide before it has taken a formidable
-hold of the constitution. In the great majority of cases
-the premonitory indications are well marked and unequivocal.
-The experienced physician and accurate observer will be able
-to detect, before the mental alienation becomes apparent to
-others, the early dawnings of derangement. He knows that
-it is frequently manifested by some change in the person’s
-usual healthy habits of thinking and acting,—by the exhibition
-of odd fancies and whims. Although surrounded by everything
-calculated to contribute to his happiness, he is the most miserable
-of human beings. Trifles annoy and irritate him; he
-sees in his dearest friends his deadliest enemies; talks of conspiracies,
-of plots, and stratagems; becomes suspicious of
-everything and everybody; his former objects of pleasure
-afford him no delight; he avoids society, and is occasionally
-heard muttering strange things to himself. In the majority of
-cases these are the early dawnings of cerebral disease leading
-to unequivocal insanity, and yet so tied down are we to definitions,
-arbitrary standards and poetical tests, that we will not
-admit derangement of mind to be present until the symptoms
-are so self evident and glaring that the condition of the mind
-becomes apparent to the most superficial observer. When this
-view of insanity is recognised as orthodox, and moral treatment
-adopted in the early stages of the disease, much good
-may be expected to result.</p>
-
-<p>How often do we see in society, and during the intercourse
-of private friendship, individuals complaining of the severest
-mental sufferings, the effect of morbid alterations of feeling
-almost in every respect similar to insanity, dependent upon
-the same causes, manifesting the same symptoms, and removed
-by the same remedial agents. How are these mental ailments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-treated? The poor sufferer is perhaps smiled at; he is considered
-to be fanciful, and no regard is paid to the cerebral
-affection. The disease is allowed to advance until other
-faculties of the mind are implicated, and then the mental
-alienation exhibits itself so unequivocally that no one doubts
-its existence.</p>
-
-<p>The success of the mental treatment of suicide will be
-mainly dependent on our paying strict attention to those
-apparently trifling alterations of temper and disposition,
-those deviations from the usual mode of thinking and acting,
-which so often predicate the presence of the incipient stage
-of insanity. An invincible love of solitude exhibited in a
-patient considered as labouring under an hypochondriacal
-affection, and who, when induced to converse, complains
-of being constantly pestered with one or two trains of ideas
-from which he cannot for a moment escape, although his
-efforts are great and unremitting, let his friends beware.
-These changes are, however, but rarely noticed, until some
-alarming event causes every friend to lament the want of timely
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>Occupation is an infallible specific for many of the imaginary
-and real ills of life. In cases where the mind is sinking
-under the influence of its own weight, and the fancy is allowed
-to dwell uninterruptedly on the ideas of its own creation, until
-the individual believes himself to stand apart from all the
-world, the very personification of human misery and wretchedness,
-the physician can recommend no better remedy than
-constant and steady occupation for the mind and body. Burton
-concludes his able work on Melancholy with this valuable
-piece of advice:—“Be not solitary; be not idle.” Dr. Reid
-recommended a patient, labouring under great mental depression,
-to engage in the composition of a novel, which, during
-the time he was occupied in the task, effected much good.
-By interesting himself in the distresses of fictitious beings, he
-diverted his attention from sufferings which were no less the
-offspring of the imagination.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It has been suggested with great truth that the habit of
-gaming, prevalent as it is among persons in the upper ranks
-of life, is not to be attributed exclusively to a feeling of avarice.
-The man who is surrounded by everything to make his
-condition in life happy, as far as wealth is concerned, does not
-fly to dice for the purpose of aggrandisement, but he does so
-to seek refuge from the miseries of indolence and vacuity;
-from the gnawings of his own mind; from an eager desire to
-expose himself to that mental agitation which nature tells him
-is so necessary to make life supportable. “A woman is happier
-than a man,” says Dr. Johnson, “because she can hem a
-pocket-handkerchief.”</p>
-
-<p>Our faculties, like the vulture of Prometheus, devour our
-souls, if they have no action beyond ourselves. “Real lassitude
-is always mingled with grief,” says an eminent female
-genius; and Madame de Staël considers the observation a
-profound one.</p>
-
-<p>“The man in the Spectator who hanged himself to avoid
-the intolerable annoyance of having to tie his garters every
-day of his life, is but a satire on the misery of many who,
-having no useful occupation, find the flight of time marked
-only by the swift repetition of petty troubles.</p>
-
-<p>“The restlessness of Rousseau, his discontented and morbidly
-irritable disposition, was closely allied to insanity;
-and the painful struggles of Lord Byron, when ‘came the
-fit again,’ are detailed in words which shew too plainly how
-they disturbed and threatened the integrity of his judgment.
-In such natures, every strong emotion, or the occurrence of
-disease, may destroy the delicate balance, and make a ruin of
-a mind which even in ruins continues to excite a mournful
-admiration. The diversion of social intercourse, which to
-other men is necessary to prevent mental torpor, becomes to
-them a source of irritation by impeding the workings of their
-imagination: they find that, when alone, all the nobler aspirations
-of the soul are free, and images of beauty, and virtue,
-and wisdom, occupy the mind. Society transforms them into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-a being they despise, deprives them of all their high and
-valued thoughts, and it enables them to feel what slight circumstances,
-acting on the man without, may affect the man
-within. But the pleasures of solitude are transient; their
-train is followed by baseless fancies, by fears undefined, by
-griefs unexpressed, and black despondency, from which society
-can alone relieve. We learn, from observing such effects,
-arising from such causes, the advantage of mixed and varied
-occupations, suited to a being not made solely for contemplation
-or for action; and we may gather rules from these observations,
-the application of which to minds in a morbid state is
-very direct.”<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">50</a></p>
-
-<p>With no less beauty than truth has the author of Rasselas
-depicted the insanity of the astronomer as gradually declining
-under the sanative influence of society and mental gratification.
-The sage confesses, that since he has mixed in the
-gay scenes of life, and divided his hours by a succession of
-amusements, he found the notion of his influence over the
-skies gradually fade away, and began to trust less to an
-opinion which he could never prove to others, and which
-he now found subject to variations from causes in which
-reason had no part. “If,” says he, “I am accidentally left
-alone for a few hours, my inveterate persuasion rushes upon
-my soul, and my thoughts are chained down by an uncontrollable
-violence; but they are soon disentangled by the
-prince’s conversation, and are instantaneously released by the
-entrance of Pekuah. I am like a man habitually afraid of
-spectres, who is set at ease by a lamp, and wonders at the
-dread which harassed him in the dark.”</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to lay down general rules for the treatment of
-particular cases of melancholia with a tendency to suicide.
-Travelling, agreeable society, works of light literature, should
-be had recourse to, in order to dispel all gloomy apprehensions
-from the mind.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span></p>
-<p>In persons predisposed to insanity, or who manifest some
-slight indication of disease, how important it is to endeavour
-to call into exercise the higher faculties of the mind,—the
-judgment and reasoning powers,—and thus preserve the intellectual
-faculties in a healthy state of equilibrium. There is
-much wisdom in Lord Bacon’s advice, that “if a man’s wits
-be wandering, he should study the mathematics.” The patient
-should be taught to derive a pleasure from the contemplation
-of those objects that afford variety, and that are always
-within his reach. A beneficent Creator has wisely placed
-around us endless sources of the purest and most elevating
-enjoyments. In a ratio to our intellectual attainments, so are
-we enabled to derive pleasure from circumstances that appear
-trifling and foolish to others. Mungo Park could, in the solitude
-of an African desert, when exposed to the most distressing
-circumstances, derive a most exquisite pleasure from the
-sight of a small flower. How fully can we enter into the
-feelings of the man who, after being prostrated to the earth
-by an accumulation of worldly disappointments, yet spoke in
-a tone of noble triumph at his having retained, amidst the
-wreck of all his hopes, a perception of the beauties of nature!</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“I care not, Fortune, what you me deny;—</div>
-<div class="line i1">You cannot rob me of free Nature’s grace;</div>
-<div class="line">You cannot shut the windows of the sky,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Through which Aurora shews her bright’ning face;</div>
-<div class="line i1">You cannot bar my constant feet to trace</div>
-<div class="line">The woods and lawns by living stream at eve:</div>
-<div class="line i1">Let health my nerves and finer fibres brace,</div>
-<div class="line">And I these toys to the great children leave:</div>
-<div class="line">Of fancy, reason, virtue, nought can me bereave.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A devotion to the common pleasures of sense is better than
-a state of absolute indifference; for even if these give no kind
-of pleasure, whilst all higher pursuits are neglected, there is
-danger lest a man become of the same opinion as Dr. Darwin’s
-patient, “that all which life affords is a ride out in the
-morning, and a warm parlour and a pack of cards in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-afternoon;” and, like him, finding these pleasures not inexhaustible,
-should shoot himself because he has nothing
-better to do!</p>
-
-<p>The miserable man should endeavour to make himself
-practically acquainted with the distresses of others. However
-desperate the circumstances of a person may be, he
-may still have it in his power to whisper a word of consolation
-to one whose situation may be more humiliating than
-his own.</p>
-
-<p>Human nature is accused of much more selfishness than it
-has any just claim to; a thousand kindly emotions break in
-upon and redeem our daily and interested life.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i5">“The poorest poor</div>
-<div class="line">Long for a moment in a weary life</div>
-<div class="line">When they can know and feel that they have been</div>
-<div class="line">Themselves the fathers and the dealers out</div>
-<div class="line">Of some small blessings; have been kind to such</div>
-<div class="line">As needed kindness; for this single cause,</div>
-<div class="line">That we have all one human heart.”<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">51</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>How few have anything like a proper conception of the
-power which the will can be made to exercise over the physical
-and mental ailments.<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">52</a> The stimuli which we all more or
-less have at command, if properly directed, will often subdue
-the early dawnings of disease, which, if permitted to take its
-own course, would have assumed a most formidable character.
-It is our duty to combat with the first menace of disordered
-feeling. Once the enemy is allowed to take up a favourable
-position, it will be fruitless to enter single-handed into the
-contest. “I will be good,” says the child, when he sees the
-rod ready to direct the will into the way of goodness; and
-“I will be cheerful,” ought the dull and dyspeptic to say, who
-observes a cloud of hypochondriacal fancies ready to burst
-upon his head. It may be said it is useless to struggle against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>the natural tendencies of the mind and body, or to declare
-war with habits which have become firmly rooted in the constitution.
-In reply to this we would say, let not the patient
-yield to the influence of those causes which have formed
-the habit; let him not hug to his bosom the viper which
-is preying upon his mind; let him not exclaim to gloom,
-“Henceforth be thou my god.”</p>
-
-<p>The hypochondriac may say, when advised to rouse himself
-from his state of mental despondency, and to exhibit the
-attributes of a free agent—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Go, you may call it madness, folly;</div>
-<div class="line i1">You shall not chase my gloom away:</div>
-<div class="line">There’s such a charm in melancholy,</div>
-<div class="line i1">I would not, if I could, be gay.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>But it is exercising a <i>conscientious duty</i> to resist the encroachments
-of those ideal pleasures which sap the foundation of our
-moral constitution.</p>
-
-<p>I am inclined to concur in the opinion expressed by the
-late Dr. Uwins, that when melancholy is stripped of all its
-ornamental and poetical accompaniments, it will be found to
-be based in a great measure upon pride, selfishness, and indolence.
-This benevolent physician observes—“I cannot
-conceive a more delightful spectacle than that of an individual,
-whose constitutional cast is melancholy, warring against his
-temperament, and determining to enter with hilarity into the
-scenes and circumstances of social life.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Haindorft, in his German translation of Dr. Reid’s
-“Essay on Hypochondriasis,” in alluding to the possibility of
-the patient labouring under hypochondria being able, by an
-exercise of the power of volition, to control his morbid sensations,
-justly observes—“We should have fewer disorders of
-the mind if we could acquire more power of volition, and endeavour,
-by our own energy, to disperse the clouds which occasionally
-arise within our own horizon; if we <i>resolutely tore the
-first threads of the net</i> which gloom and ill-humour may cast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-around us, and made an effort to drive away the melancholy
-images of a morbid imagination by incessant occupation.
-How beneficial would it be to mankind if this truth were universally
-acknowledged and acted upon—viz., that our state of
-health, mental as well as bodily, principally depends upon
-ourselves!”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“By <i>seeming gay</i>, we grow to what we seem.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It was the remark of a man of great observation and knowledge
-of the world—“Only wear a mask for a fortnight, and
-you will not know it from your real face.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am determined to believe myself a happy man,” said a
-poor fellow, sunk in the lowest stage of melancholy, to Esquirol;
-and he did endeavour to triumph over his gloomy apprehensions,
-and for a short period he enjoyed the sunny
-aspect of life; but not having sufficient resolution to continue
-this effort of volition, he again gave way to despair.</p>
-
-<p>A thousand years before the Christian era, there were, at
-the two extremities of Egypt, temples devoted to Saturn, to
-which those labouring under hypochondriasis resorted in quest
-of relief. Some cunning priests, profiting by the credulity
-of these patients, associated with the pretended miracles
-of their powerless divinities and barren mysteries, natural
-means by which they always solaced their patients, and succeeded
-often in effecting cures by amusing the mind, and
-withdrawing the attention from the contemplation of physical
-suffering. The patients were religiously subjected to a variety
-of diversions and recreative exercises. Voluptuous paintings
-and seducing images were exposed to their view; agreeable
-songs and melodious sounds perpetually charmed their ears;
-gardens of flowers and ornamental groves furnished delightful
-walks and delicious perfumes. Every moment was consecrated
-to some diverting scene and amusement, which had a
-most beneficial result on the diseased mind, interrupted the
-train of melancholy thought, dissipated sorrow, and wrought
-the most salutary changes on the body through the agency<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-of the mind. The Egyptian physicians recommended their
-patients to repair to these famous temples, as the faculty of
-the present day suggest a trip to a fashionable spa.</p>
-
-<p>That many suicides result from an indulgence in long-continued
-and corroding grief must be apparent to all who have
-given this subject any consideration. The medical man will
-find it difficult to manage such patients. Everything should
-be done to rouse the person from his state of mental abstraction.
-The immortal poet had a just conception of the baneful
-influence of silent grief on the mind and body; he makes
-Malcolm say, imploringly, to Macbeth,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak</div>
-<div class="line">Whispers the o’er-wrought heart, and bids it break.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>An eminent London physician communicated to me the
-particulars of the following case:—A young lady, connected
-with a family of rank, and possessing great accomplishments,
-had formed, unknown to her parents, a secret attachment to a
-gentleman who often visited the house. When it was discovered,
-he was requested to abandon all notions of the lady,
-as it was the determination of her relations to refuse their
-consent to an alliance with him. Both parties took it much
-to heart. The lady suffered from a severe attack of nervous
-disorder, which terminated in suicidal mania. She endeavoured
-several times to jump out of the window, and would
-have done so had she not been most carefully watched. Her
-symptoms were most distressing. The mind appeared to be
-weighed down to the earth by an accumulation of misery and
-wretchedness, which she was unable to shake off. “Oh!
-could I but be happy!” she would exclaim. “Will no one
-come to my relief? What can I do?” She would walk about
-the room, occasionally giving utterance to expressions similar
-to those just quoted. More than once she observed, that,
-could she cry, she felt assured her mind would be relieved;
-but not a tear could she shed. After a fearful struggle for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-some time, one evening, as she was retiring to rest, she burst
-into a flood of tears. The effect was most beneficial; from
-that moment she began to recover. The copious lachrymal
-secretion had the effect of relieving the cerebral congestion,
-and in this way the brain was restored to the performance of
-its healthy functions.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to lay down any particular instructions for the
-treatment of <i>ennui</i>. How is it possible to restore enjoyment
-to a man who has quite exhausted it? In such cases the advice
-which Fénélon gives to Dionysius the tyrant, by the
-mouth of Diogenes, will naturally apply,—“To restore his
-appetite, he must be made to feel hunger; and to make his
-splendid palace tolerable to him, he must be put into my
-tub, which is at present empty.”</p>
-
-<p>A lady became insane in consequence of a sudden and unexpected
-acquisition of wealth. In a few months she was reduced,
-by the failure of the house in which all her property
-was embarked, to complete indigence. Being compelled to
-work for her daily bread, her reason was soon restored. The
-great preservative from <i>tedium vitæ</i> is, in keeping the mind
-and body in a state of healthy activity. How true it is—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i2">“That many ills o’er which man grieves,</div>
-<div class="line">And still more woman, spring from not employing</div>
-<div class="line">Some hours to make the remnant worth enjoying.”</div>
-<div class="line i15"><span class="smcap">Byron.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>In the army, it is proverbial that the time of fatigue and
-danger is not the time of disease; it is during the inactive and
-listless months of a campaign that crowds of patients pass to
-the hospitals. In both these cases it is the active exercise of
-the mind giving strength to the brain, and through it, healthy
-vigour to the body, which produces the effect. Shakspeare
-has not been unobservant of the consequences of excitement
-of mind on the bodily functions. In King Henry IV., when
-Northumberland is told of the fatal tidings from Shrewsbury,
-and is informed of the death of his son Percy, he breaks out,—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“For this I shall have time enough to mourn.</div>
-<div class="line">In poison there is physic; and these news</div>
-<div class="line">That would, had I been well, have made me sick,</div>
-<div class="line"><i>Being sick, have in some measure made me well</i>:</div>
-<div class="line">And as a wretch whose fever-weakened joints,</div>
-<div class="line">Like strengthless hinges, buckle under life,</div>
-<div class="line">Impatient of his fit, breaks like a fire</div>
-<div class="line">Out of his keeper’s arms; <i>even so my limbs</i>,</div>
-<div class="line">Weakened with grief, being now enraged with grief,</div>
-<div class="line">Are thrice themselves.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>In illustration of the same principle, we have only to refer
-our readers to the ever-memorable Walcheren expedition. It
-has been stated that while our troops and seamen were
-actively engaged in the siege and bombardment of Flushing,
-exposed to intense heat, heavy rains, and poisonous exhalations
-from the malarious soil, inundated by the turbid waters
-of the Scheldt, scarcely a man was on the sick list; the excitement
-of warfare, the prospects of victory, and the expectation
-of booty, completely fortifying the body against all the
-potent causes of disease that environed the camp and the
-fleet.</p>
-
-<p>In the celebrated retreat of the “Ten thousand Greeks”
-under Xenophon, the troops were subjected to great mental
-despondency. They had to cross rapid rivers, penetrate
-gloomy forests, drag their weary way over vast and burning
-deserts, scale the summits of rugged mountains, and wade
-through deep snows and pestilent morasses, in continual fear
-of death or capture. It was a sense of the despondency which
-misfortune was producing among the troops that induced
-Xenophon, in his address to his companions on the fearful
-night which preceded the murder of Clearchus, to say, “The
-soldiers have at present nothing before their eyes but misfortune.
-If any one can persuade them to turn <i>their thoughts
-into action</i> it would greatly encourage them.” It was to effect
-this purpose that the consummate general ordered everything
-in the camp, except the sword, to be abandoned. He inspired
-the hopes of his soldiers, roused their minds into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-activity, and thus prevented the development of serious disease
-among the troops.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Anson says, in speaking of the ravages which the
-scurvy made under his command, that “whatever discouraged
-the seamen, or damped their hopes, never failed to add new
-vigour to the distemper; for it usually killed those who were
-in the last stages of it, and confined those to their hammocks
-who before were capable of some kind of duty.”</p>
-
-<p>In certain diseases of the nervous system, particularly when
-associated with morbid conditions of the mind leading to
-suicide, the influence of music may be had recourse to with
-great advantage to the patient. The ancients, who paid more
-attention to the moral treatment of disease than the moderns
-have done, had a just appreciation of the beneficial effect of
-music on the nervous system. The learned Dr. Bianchini
-has collected all the passages found in ancient authors relative
-to the medical application of music; and from these it appears
-that it was used as a remedy by the Egyptians, Hebrews,
-Greeks, and Romans, not only in chronic, but in acute cases
-of disease.</p>
-
-<p>M. Burette, in his able and scientific work on music, allows
-it to be possible, and even probable, that music, by the impressions
-it makes upon the nerves, may be of use in the
-cure of certain maladies; yet he by no means supposes the
-music of the ancients possessed this power in a greater degree
-than that of the moderns. Homer attributes the cessation
-of the plague among the Greeks, at the siege of Troy, to
-music:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“With hymns divine the joyous banquet ends,</div>
-<div class="line">The pæans lengthened till the sun descends:</div>
-<div class="line">The Greeks, restored, the grateful rites prolong;</div>
-<div class="line">Apollo listens and approves the song.”</div>
-<div class="line i15"><span class="smcap">Pope.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>In the Memoirs of the French Academy of Sciences, for
-1707 and 1708, there are many accounts of cases of disease
-which, after having long resisted and baffled the most effi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span>cacious
-remedies, had yielded under the influence of the
-soft impressions of harmony; and M. de Mairan, in the same
-records, published in 1735, has entered very fully into the
-consideration of the <i>modus operandi</i> of music on the body
-in health and disease.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of music on the system is explained in two different
-ways. The monotony of the sound is supposed to have
-a soothing influence over the mind, similar to what is known
-to result from the gurgle of a mimic cataract of some mountain
-rill, or to a distant waterfall. How often has the music
-caused by the waves gently dashing upon the beach excited
-sleep, when all our narcotics have failed in producing a similar
-effect. This soporific effect of the repetition or monotony
-of sound is beautifully alluded to by Mackenzie, in his Man
-of Feeling. When his hero, Mr. Harley, arrives in London,
-he finds that the noise and varied excitement of the metropolis
-increase his nervous state of habit, and prevent him
-from sleeping. Ordinary narcotics produce no effect upon
-him, and he must have continued to suffer from watchfulness
-if he had not happily touched his shoe-buckle, which lay
-upon the table, when the vibration produced a monotonous
-sound so closely resembling the voice of his good aunt, who
-nightly read him asleep in the country, that from that time
-he regularly applied to the same narcotic, and always slept
-soundly. Music acts, secondly, by causing an association of
-agreeable ideas. A lady who was confined in an asylum in
-the vicinity of London, and who had been separated for some
-months from her home, and from all she held dear, was pronounced
-partially convalescent. She was, however, still
-melancholy; and it was suggested by her father that a piece,
-of which she was passionately fond, and which was associated
-with the happiest period of her life, should be played within
-her hearing. This wish was complied with; the effect produced
-was highly gratifying. For the first few minutes, no
-notice was taken of the music; in a short period, however, a
-smile was seen to play upon a countenance where all had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-been dark and gloomy for months. As the music proceeded,
-the effect became more sensible and powerful; ideas of a most
-pleasurable kind appeared to rush upon a mind which had
-previously been a blank; a chord had been touched which
-thrilled through her, until she appeared absorbed in the pleasing
-associations which the favourite air had conjured to her
-recollection. The past was no longer forgotten, and she for
-the first time gave evidence of being conscious of the situation
-in which she was in. A fatal blow had been given to the
-disease, and in a short period she was considered sufficiently
-recovered to be allowed to return home to the bosom of her
-family.</p>
-
-<p>The disease of Saul was alleviated by David’s harp.
-Aristotle maintains that actual madness in horses may be
-cured by the melody of lutes. “Experience has proved,”
-says Gibbon, “that the mechanical operation of sounds, by
-quickening the circulation of the blood and spirits, will act on
-the human machine more forcibly than the eloquence of
-reason and honour.” In illustration of the above observation
-the following fact may be adduced:—At the battle of Quebec,
-in April, 1760, while the troops were retreating in great confusion,
-the general complained to a field-officer of Fraser’s
-regiment of the bad behaviour of his corps. “Sir,” he
-answered, in great warmth, “you did very wrong in forbidding
-the bagpipes to play this morning; nothing encourages
-Highlanders so much in the day of action,—nay, even now
-the pipes would be of use.” “Let them blow, then, like the
-devil,” replied the General, “if it will bring back the men.”
-The bagpipes were ordered to play a favourite martial air.
-The Highlanders, the moment they heard the music, returned
-and formed with alacrity, and fought like infuriated
-lions.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of music over animals is known to be very
-great. Burney says that an officer, being shut up in the
-Bastille, had his lute allowed him; upon which, after a trial
-or two, the mice came issuing from their holes, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-spiders, suspending themselves from their threads, assembled
-round him to enjoy the melody.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">53</a></p>
-
-<p>Falret alludes particularly to the benefit which often accrues
-from music in peculiar disorders of the nervous system attended
-with a disposition to suicide. So exalted an idea
-had M. Appert of its effects on the mind, that he has observed,
-alluding to criminals, “<i>that the man sensible to the
-influence of harmony is not irretrievably lost</i>.” A young lady
-passionately fond of music manifested an inclination to kill
-herself; she was sent by her family to an hospital, where she
-was carefully watched. The idea of suicide was not, however,
-removed until she was allowed the use of her favourite instrument,
-the harp. The good effect was soon perceptible;
-her melancholy gradually subsided, and with it the suicidal
-disposition. She expressed to her friends how grateful she
-felt that she was allowed to indulge in her favourite amusement,
-and was conscious of the benefits which she had derived
-from it.</p>
-
-<p>The progress of epidemic suicide has been stayed by having
-recourse to measures which have powerfully affected the
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p>The young women of Marseilles, at one period, were seized
-with a propensity to commit suicide. In order to prevent
-the contagion from spreading, a law was passed to the effect
-that the body of every female who was guilty of self-murder
-should be publicly exposed after death. The beneficial result
-of this law became immediately apparent; the epidemic was
-stopped; the sense of shame prevailed over the recklessness
-of human life.</p>
-
-<p>In the French army, during the reign of Napoleon Buonaparte,
-a grenadier killed himself. This suicide was followed
-by another case, and it was feared that the disposition would
-assume an epidemic character. Buonaparte saw the necessity
-of prompt and decisive measures, and with a view of striking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span>terror in the minds of the soldiers, and putting a stop at once
-to the spread of what appeared to be a contagious malady, he
-issued the following “order of the day,” dated <i>St. Cloud,
-22 Floreal, an</i> X.:—</p>
-
-<p>“The grenadier Groblin has committed suicide, from a
-disappointment in love. He was, in other respects, a worthy
-man. This is the second event of the kind that has happened
-in this corps within a month. The First Consul directs
-that it shall be notified in the order of the day of the guard,
-that a soldier ought to know how to overcome the grief and
-melancholy of his passions; that there is as much true
-courage in bearing mental affliction manfully as in remaining
-unmoved under the fire of a battery. To abandon oneself
-to grief without resisting, and to kill oneself in order to
-escape from it, is like abandoning the field of battle before
-being conquered.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“Signed,<span class="h">xxxxxxxxxxx</span>“<span class="smcap">Napoleon</span>,<br />
-“<span class="smcap">Bessieres</span>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The effect of this masterly appeal to the courage of the
-French soldiery was truly magical. The disposition was
-completely quelled, and no case of suicide occurred for a
-considerable time afterwards. The course which Napoleon
-adopted shewed his great knowledge of human nature, as well
-as the thorough insight he had obtained into the character of
-the people over whose minds he exercised so tremendous an
-influence.</p>
-
-<p>An account of the punishment inflicted on the women of
-Miletus, a city of Ionia, who were seized with an epidemic
-suicide, is transmitted to us in the writings of Plutarch.
-He says, “The Milesian virgins were at one time possessed
-with an uncommon rage for suicide. All desire of life
-seemed suddenly to leave them, and they rushed on death
-(by the help of the halter) with an impetuous fury. The tears
-and entreaties of parents and friends were of no avail; and if
-they were prevented by force for awhile, they evaded all the
-attention and vigilance of their observers, and found means to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-perpetrate the horrid deed. Some ascribed this extraordinary
-species of desperation and frenzy to certain occult and maddening
-qualities of the air at that season, somehow or other
-peculiarly injurious to the female frame and texture, both of
-body and mind, (since the men were not visibly affected by it;)
-while the superstitious considered it as a calamity sent from
-the gods, and therefore beyond the power of human remedy.
-But whatever was the cause, the effect was visible and important,
-and could not be suffered to rage long without manifest
-injury to the state. While speculative men, therefore,
-were attempting to account for the phenomena, the active
-magistrate was endeavouring to arrest the progress of the
-contagion, for which purpose the following decree was issued;—“That
-the body of every young woman who hanged
-herself should be dragged naked through the streets by the
-same rope with which she committed the deed.” This wise
-edict had in a short time the desired effect. Plutarch adds—“The
-fear of shame and ignominy is an argument of a good
-and virtuous mind; and they who regarded not pain and
-death, which are usually esteemed the most dreadful of evils,
-could not, however, endure the thoughts of having their dead
-bodies exposed to indignity and shame.”</p>
-
-<p>In the Magdalen Asylum, at Edinburgh, a girl was seized
-with typhus fever, at the time that it was raging in the city, and
-though she was instantly removed, as well as all her bed-clothes
-&amp;c., two more were seized next day, and an alarm or panic
-was soon spread over the whole house. Next day, no fewer
-than sixteen were in the sick-room, and in the course of four
-days, out of a community of less than fifty individuals, twenty-two
-were apparently labouring under decided fever. It now
-struck Dr. Hamilton that there was mad delusion in all this,
-and that the disease arose as much from panic and irritation
-as from any other causes. Acting on this belief, he went to
-the sick-room, and told the girls that such a rapid spread of the
-disease was entirely unprecedented; that they were under the
-delusion of yielding to their fears, and of imitating others who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-were now undergoing all the tortures of bleeding, blistering,
-and purging, in Queensbury Hospital. He assured them that
-the fumigation and other precautions must have destroyed the
-contagion, and that if they would only keep a good heart and
-dismiss their fears, he would pledge himself the fever would
-soon disappear. The effect of the Doctor’s speech was magical.
-All apprehension was instantly banished from the mind, the
-cheering influence of hope was inspired, moral courage was
-developed, and the progress of the pestilence stopped. Not
-one case of fever occurred afterwards, and those who had the
-fever at the time perfectly recovered.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">54</a></p>
-
-<p>It is only on the same principle that we can account for the
-success which Dr. A. T. Thompson met with in the treatment
-of the following case of whooping-cough, which had been kept
-up by habit. The patient, a young boy, was threatened with
-the application of a large blister; although it was not applied,
-but merely placed within his view, yet the dread of it completely
-removed the cough. Boerrhave cured epilepsy in a
-whole school, by marching into it at the moment of the expected
-attack with a red-hot poker, which he threatened to
-thrust down the throats of those who should have a fit.</p>
-
-<p>A remarkable instance of epidemic suicide occurred as far
-back as the reign of Tarquinius Priscus, which as it required,
-so it received, an effectual check by the spirited introduction
-of an extraordinary mode of punishment. After this king
-had employed the Roman people in successful wars abroad, he
-filled up their leisure at home in works of less apparent
-honour, though of greater utility. These were to cut drains
-and common sewers of immense size and durability. When
-the soldiers disdained these servile offices, and saw no end to
-their labours, many of them committed suicide by throwing
-themselves off the Capitoline Hill. Others followed their
-example, until the contagion spread through the whole of the
-men. The king, in order to strike terror into the minds of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span>those who might contemplate self-destruction, issued an order
-commanding the bodies of those who should commit suicide
-to be nailed on crosses, and then exposed as spectacles to the
-rest of the citizens, and left a prey to the fowls of the air.
-The feeling of shame and horror had the effect of checking
-the disposition to sacrifice life, and thus the king’s purpose
-was effected.</p>
-
-<p>Whether any measures of a similar character could be
-adopted in cases where the disposition to suicide has a tendency
-to assume an epidemic form is a matter of considerable
-doubt.</p>
-
-<p>Experience has established the effect of some simple remedies
-in preventing the return of paroxysms of melancholia with a
-propensity to suicide. But it has likewise, and not unfrequently,
-evinced their insufficiency, and at the same time the
-influence of a strong and deeply impressed emotion in producing
-a solid and durable change. A man who worked at
-a sedentary trade consulted Pinel, about the end of October,
-1783, for dyspepsia and great depression of spirits. He knew
-of no cause to which he could ascribe his indisposition. His
-unhappiness at length increased to such a pitch that he felt
-an invincible propensity to throw himself into the Seine.
-Unequivocal symptoms of a disordered stomach induced Pinel
-to prescribe some opening medicines, and for some days occasional
-draughts of whey. His bowels were effectually opened,
-and he suffered but little from his propensity to self-destruction
-during the remainder of the winter. Fine weather
-appeared to restore him completely, and his cure was considered
-as perfect. Towards the decline of autumn, however,
-his melancholia returned. Nature assumed to him a dark and
-dismal aspect, and his propensity to throw himself into the
-Seine returned with redoubled force. The only circumstance
-that in any degree restrained the horrid impulse was, the idea
-of leaving unprotected a wife and child, whom he tenderly
-loved. This struggle between the feelings of nature and his
-delirious frenzy was not permitted to continue long; for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-most unequivocal proofs soon after appeared of his having
-executed his fatal project.</p>
-
-<p>A literary gentleman, devoted to the pleasures of the
-table, and who had lately recovered from a fever, experienced
-in the autumnal season all the horrors of the propensity to
-suicide. He weighed with shocking calmness the choice
-of various methods to accomplish the deed of death. A visit
-which he paid to London appears to have developed, with a
-new degree of energy, his profound melancholy, and his immovable
-resolution to abridge his term of life. He chose an
-advanced hour of the night, and went towards one of the
-bridges of that capital for the purpose of precipitating himself
-into the Thames; but at the moment of his arrival at the
-destined spot, he was attacked by some robbers. Though he
-had little or no money about him, he felt extremely indignant
-at this treatment, and used every effort to make his escape,
-which, however, he did not accomplish before he had been
-exceedingly terrified. Left by his assailants, he returned to
-his lodgings, having forgot the original object of his sally.
-This rencontre seems to have caused a thorough revolution
-in the state of his mind. His cure was complete.</p>
-
-<p>A watchmaker was for a long time harassed by the propensity
-to suicide. He once so far gave way to the horrid
-impulse, that he withdrew to his house in the country, where
-he expected to meet no obstacle to the execution of his
-project. Here he took a pistol, and retired to an adjoining
-wood, with the full intent of perpetrating the fatal deed;
-but missing his aim, the contents of the piece entered his
-cheek. Violent hæmorrhage ensued. He was discovered,
-and conveyed to his own house. During the healing of the
-wound, which was long protracted, an important change took
-place in the state of his mind. Whether from the agitation
-produced by the above tragic attempt, from the enormous loss
-of blood which it occasioned, or from any other cause, he
-never afterwards shewed the least inclination to put an end to
-his existence. This case, though by no means an example<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-for imitation, is well calculated to shew that sudden terror, or
-any other lively or deep impression, may divert, and even
-destroy, the fatal propensity to suicide.</p>
-
-<p>A few years ago, an officer went into Hyde Park with an
-intention of shooting himself. He applied a pistol to his
-forehead; the priming flashed, but no discharge followed. A
-man of poor appearance, whom the officer had not observed,
-or perhaps thought unworthy of his notice, instantly ran up, and
-wrested the pistol from his hands. The other drew his sword,
-and was about to stab his deliverer, who, with much spirit,
-replied, “Stab me, Sir, if you think proper; I fear death as
-little as you, but I have more courage. More than twenty
-years I have lived in affliction and penury, and I yet trust in
-God for comfort and support.” The officer was struck with
-these spirited words, continued speechless and motionless for
-a short time, and then, bursting into tears, gave his purse to
-the honest man. He then inquired into his story, and became
-his private friend and benefactor; but he made the poor man
-swear that he would never make inquiries concerning himself,
-or seem to know him, if chance should ever bring them in
-sight of each other.</p>
-
-<p>A female patient, who had often threatened to destroy herself,
-one day assured M. Esquirol that she was about to do it.
-“Very well,” he answered; “it is nothing to me; and your
-husband will be delivered of a great torment.” She instantly
-ceased the preparations she was making to accomplish the act,
-and never spoke of committing it again.</p>
-
-<p>How easily lunatics may be diverted from their purpose by
-presence of mind, an intimacy with their character, and the
-tact to employ the destructive feeling by which they are
-actuated as the means of protection, is well exemplified in an
-anecdote related by Dr. Fox. He had accompanied a suicidal
-and furious maniac, who was at the time calm, to the upper
-story of his asylum to enjoy the prospect beyond the walls.
-In returning, the spiral staircase struck the eye of the patient;
-the opportunity roused the half-slumbering propensity, and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-fit of frenzy ensued. His eyes glared, his teeth ground against
-each other; he panted like a bloodhound for his prey, and
-seizing the Doctor by the collar, howled into his ears, “You
-jump down, and I will jump after you.” The Doctor for the
-moment was petrified with horror; he was alone with a
-powerful man, frenzied by insanity; to escape was out of the
-question; to attempt to overcome him by force was still more
-futile: in a moment he hit upon a stratagem. Turning to the
-infuriated madman, he exclaimed, with a look of coolness and
-collectedness, “Bah! my child could jump from this place; it
-requires no nouse to do that; the thing is to jump up—that is
-the difficulty.” The madman listened with attention to what
-the Doctor said, and then observed, “But you cannot do so,
-can you?” The Doctor replied, he could, and they both hurried
-down to put the boast to the proof, and the sanguinary
-threat was forgotten before they reached the lobby.</p>
-
-<p>Physicians not practically acquainted with the treatment of
-insanity are too much inclined to believe that it is fruitless
-to attempt to reason a madman out of his morbid delusion,
-and that to have recourse to a trick in order to dispel the
-mental illusion is a species of practice unbecoming the dignity
-of a professional gentleman. Numerous cases are recorded in
-which patients have been cured of monomania by a well-contrived
-artifice; and in many cases of suicidal insanity,
-when other treatment fails, the medical man may have recourse
-to this mode of cure without any danger of sinking
-himself in public or professional estimation. The following
-cases are illustrations of the foregoing remark:—</p>
-
-<p>A celebrated watchmaker, at Paris, was infatuated with the
-chimera of perpetual motion, and to effect this discovery he
-set to work with indefatigable ardour. From unremitting
-attention to the object of his enthusiasm coinciding with the
-influence of revolutionary disturbances, his imagination was
-greatly heated, his sleep was interrupted, and, at length, a
-complete derangement of the understanding took place. His
-case was marked by a most whimsical illusion of the imagin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span>ation.
-He fancied that he had lost his head on the scaffold;
-that it had been thrown promiscuously among the heads of
-many other victims; that the judges, having repented of their
-cruel sentence, had ordered them to be restored to their owners,
-and placed upon their respective shoulders; but that, in
-consequence of an unfortunate mistake, the gentleman who
-had the management of the business had placed upon his
-shoulders the head of one of his unhappy companions.
-The idea of this whimsical exchange occupied his thoughts
-night and day, on account of which his relations sent
-him to the Hôtel Dieu; and from thence he was transferred
-to the Asylum de Bicêtre. Nothing could equal the
-extravagant overflowings of his heated brain. He sung,
-cried, or danced incessantly; and as there appeared no propensity
-in him to commit acts of violence or disturbance, he
-was allowed to go about the hospital without control, in order
-to expend, by evaporation, the effervescent excess of his
-spirits. “Look at these teeth,” he constantly cried; “mine
-were exceedingly handsome; these are rotten and decayed.
-My mouth was sound and healthy; this is foul and diseased.
-What a difference between this hair and that of my own
-head!” To this state of delirious gaiety, however, succeeded
-that of furious madness. He broke to pieces, or otherwise
-destroyed, whatever was within the reach or power of his mischievous
-propensity. Close confinement became indispensable.
-Towards the approach of winter, his violence abated;
-and, although he continued to be extravagant in his ideas, he
-was never afterwards dangerous. He was therefore permitted,
-whenever he felt disposed, to go to the inner court. The
-idea of perpetual motion frequently recurred to him in the
-midst of his wanderings; and he chalked on all the walls
-and doors as he passed the various designs by which his
-wondrous piece of mechanism was to be constructed. The
-method best calculated to cure so whimsical an illusion appeared
-to be that of encouraging his prosecution of it to
-satiety. His friends were accordingly requested to send him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-his tools, with materials to work upon, and other requisites,
-such as plates of copper and steel, watch-wheels, &amp;c. The
-governor permitted him to fix up a work-bench in his apartment.
-His zeal was now redoubled; his whole attention was
-rivetted upon his favourite pursuit. He forgot his meals.
-After about a month’s labour, which he sustained with a constancy
-that deserved better success, our artist began to think
-that he had followed a false route. He broke into a thousand
-fragments the piece of machinery which he had fabricated at
-so much expense of time, thought, and labour; entered on
-the construction of another upon a new plan, and laboured
-with equal pertinacity for an additional fortnight. The various
-parts being completed, he brought them together, and fancied
-that he saw a perfect harmony amongst them. The whole
-was now finally adjusted; his anxiety was indescribable; motion
-succeeded; it continued for some time, and he supposed
-it capable of continuing for ever. He was elevated to the
-highest pitch of enjoyment and triumph, and ran as quick as
-lightning into the interior of the hospital, crying out, like another
-Archimedes, “At length I have solved this famous
-problem, which has puzzled so many men celebrated for their
-wisdom and talents.” But, grievous to say, he was disconcerted
-in the midst of his triumph. The wheels stopped; the
-perpetual motion ceased! His intoxication of joy was succeeded
-by disappointment and confusion. But to avoid a
-humiliating and mortifying confession, he declared that he
-could easily remove the impediment; but tired of that kind
-of employment, he was determined for the future to devote
-his whole time and attention to his business. There still remained
-another maniacal impression to be counteracted,—that
-of the imaginary exchange of his head, which unceasingly
-recurred to him. A keen and an unanswerable stroke
-of pleasantry seemed best adapted to correct this fantastic
-whim. Another convalescent, of a gay and facetious humour,
-instructed in the part he should play in this comedy, adroitly
-turned the conversation to the subject of the famous miracle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-of Saint Denis. Our mechanician strongly maintained the
-possibility of the fact, and sought to confirm it by an application
-of it to his own case. The other set up a loud laugh,
-and replied, with a tone of the keenest ridicule, “Madman
-as thou art, how could Saint Denis kiss his own head? Was it
-with his heels?” This equally unexpected and unanswerable
-retort forcibly struck the maniac. He retired confused,
-amidst the peals of laughter which were provoked at his expense,
-and never afterwards mentioned the exchange of his
-head. Close attention to his trade for some months completed
-the restoration of his intellect. He was sent to his
-family in perfect health, and has now for more than five
-years pursued his business without a return of his complaint.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cox recollects a singular instance of a deranged idea in
-a maniac being corrected by a very simple stratagem. The
-patient asserted that he was the Holy Ghost; a gentleman
-present immediately exclaimed, “You the Holy Ghost!
-What proof have you to produce?” “I know that I am,” was
-his answer. The gentleman said, “How is this possible?
-There is but one Holy Ghost, is there? How then can you
-be the Holy Ghost, and I be so too?” He appeared surprised
-and puzzled, and, after a short pause, said, “But are
-<i>you</i> the Holy Ghost?” When the other observed, “Did you
-not know that I was?” his answer was, “I did not know it
-before. Why, then, I cannot be the Holy Ghost.”</p>
-
-<p>A Portuguese nobleman became melancholy, and fancied
-that God would never forgive his sins. Various means were
-tried to subdue this morbid impression, but in vain, until the
-following artifice was adopted, which proved successful in
-restoring the lunatic to reason. During midnight, a person
-dressed as an angel was made to enter his bed-room, having a
-drawn sword in its right hand, and a lighted torch in the
-other. The imaginary angelic being addressed the monomaniac
-by name, who, rising from his bed, spoke to the supposed
-angel, beseeching it to tell him whether his sins would ever
-be forgiven; upon which the angel replied, “Be comforted,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-your sins are forgiven.” The poor man’s delight knew no
-bounds. He rose from his bed, summoned every one in the
-house to his presence, and explained to them all that had
-passed. From that moment the man rapidly recovered in
-bodily health, and his delusion has completely vanished.</p>
-
-<p>A man fancied he was dead, refused to eat, and importuned
-his parents to bury him. By the advice of his physician,
-he was wrapped in a winding-sheet, laid upon a bier,
-and in this way he was carried on the shoulders of four men
-to the churchyard. On their way, two or three pleasant
-fellows (appointed for that purpose) meeting the hearse,
-demanded in a commanding tone of voice to know whose body
-they had in the coffin. They replied it was a young man’s,
-and mentioned his name. “Surely,” said one of them, “the
-world is well rid of him; for he was a man who led a bad and
-vicious life, and his friends have good reasons to rejoice that
-he has thus ended his days, otherwise he would have died an
-ignominious death on the scaffold.” The young man overheard
-this observation, at which he felt extremely indignant;
-but feeling that it was not consistent with propriety or the
-laws of nature for a dead man on his way to his last home to
-exhibit any indications of passion, he satisfied himself by
-coolly replying, “That they were wicked men to do him
-that wrong, and that if he had been alive he would teach them
-to speak better of the dead.” “It is well,” said one of the
-men in reply, “that you are no more; both for yourself and
-family. You were a mean, pitiful scoundrel, guilty of every
-abomination, and the world is rejoiced that you no longer
-live.” This was too much for the patience of the dead man to
-endure, and feeling that he could no longer suffer such unjust
-aspersions to be cast on his character, he leaped from the
-coffin, procured the first stick he could lay hands on, and commenced
-belabouring his vile accusers. As it may be supposed,
-they gave him plenty to do, and by the time he had gratified
-his indignation, and well chastised his calumniators, he had
-become completely exhausted. In this state he was taken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-home, and in a few days he was completely cured of the
-morbid idea which had taken possession of his imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Menecrates, as we learn from Ælian,<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">55</a> become so mad, as
-seriously to believe himself the son of Jupiter, and to request
-of Philip of Macedon that he might be treated as a god.
-But it is not always that the man thus deranged falls into
-such good hands as those of the Macedonian monarch; for
-Philip humorously determining to make the madman’s disease
-work its own cure, gave orders immediately that his
-request should be complied with, and invited him to a grand
-entertainment, at which was a separate table for the new divinity,
-served with the most costly perfumes and incense, but
-with nothing else. Menecrates was at first highly delighted,
-and received the worship that was paid to him with the
-greatest complacency; but growing hungry by degrees over
-the empty viands that were offered him, while every other
-guest was indulged with substantial dainties, he at length
-keenly felt himself to be a man, and stole away from the court
-in his right senses.</p>
-
-<p>Many cases of suicidal insanity have been cured by removing
-the persons so unhappily afflicted from their own homes,
-friends, and relations. In these cases the physician has no
-little difficulty in persuading the friends of the invalid that a
-separation from old associations is absolutely indispensable;
-that without it, a return to sanity cannot be reasonably expected.
-When Dr. Willis undertook the cure of George III.,
-he insisted, in the first instance, in dismissing all the old
-servants, changing the furniture, and removing everything
-from the king’s sight that might tend to awaken in his mind
-ideas of the past. The success that attended his treatment is
-said mainly to have depended on this circumstance.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. ——, forty-seven years old, of a neuro-sanguineous
-temperament, was happy in his domestic circle, and his busi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span>ness
-had prospered until the year, 1830, from which period he
-was much harassed in the management of his affairs. In December,
-1831, after a very trifling loss, he grew sorrowful and
-melancholy; his face was flushed, his eyes became blood-shot,
-his breathing was difficult, and he shed tears, incessantly repeating
-that he was lost. On the next and following days, he
-made several attempts to commit suicide, so that they were
-obliged to cover his apartment with wadding. He wished to
-strangle himself, tried to swallow his tongue, filled his mouth
-with his fist in hopes of suffocating himself, and then refused
-all nourishment. At the expiration of six days, the patient was
-brought to Paris, and entrusted to Esquirol’s care. From the
-moment of his arrival all desire to commit suicide vanished,
-and the patient appeared restored to reason. “The impression
-that I received,” said he, “on finding myself transported
-to a strange house cured me.” In fact, sleep, appetite, and a
-return of connected, and sometimes lively conversation, induced
-the belief that a cure was effected. Three weeks seemed
-enough for convalescence, when his wife and son came to fetch
-him. They passed two days at Paris to finish some business
-there, and then returned to the country. Scarcely had he
-arrived at his home when he felt himself impelled by the same
-desires, in consequence of which, he returned to Paris, transacted
-some business whilst he remained there, and appeared
-perfectly well. On returning to his home again, he made
-fresh attempts to commit suicide, struck his son, and those
-who waited upon him, and endangered the life of his wife.
-Neither the grief of his family, the watch placed over him,
-nor the pretended authority of those about him, could overcome
-these feelings. The patient passed several days without
-food; he tore up his linen to make a cord to hang himself,
-tied it round his neck, and got upon his bed in order to
-throw himself upon the floor; and at last, deceiving the
-watchfulness of his relations, escaped to throw himself into the
-river. He was immediately put into a carriage, and accompanied
-by his wife; but, notwithstanding the strait-waistcoat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-he left no means untried to kill himself. On arriving at Paris,
-and being again confined, he became perfectly reasonable, and
-made no attempt to destroy himself during the six weeks that
-his second confinement lasted. There was reason to believe
-his cure complete. If he was asked why he did not overcome
-his terrible impressions at his own house as he did at Paris,
-he answered in an evasive manner, affirming that this time
-the trial had been long enough, that he was cured, and that
-he insisted upon returning home. “Deprived of my wife
-and son,” said he, “I am the most unhappy of men, and I
-cannot live.” “But if you are so unhappy here,” said Esquirol
-to him one day, “why do you not try to destroy yourself,
-as it is very easy to do so?” “I know not,” he replied; “but
-I am cured, and I wish to live.” This patient enjoyed the
-greatest liberty, and although no apparent precaution was
-taken to prevent his destroying himself, he never made the
-least attempt. He afterwards ceased to talk unreasonably;
-but Esquirol was never able to obtain an avowal of the motives
-which induced him to commit suicide at his own house,
-whilst he thought no more of it as soon as he came amongst
-strangers. On returning to his home for the fourth time,
-although he was able to transact important business, the same
-phenomena returned with equal violence.</p>
-
-<p>M. ——, twenty-seven years old, after experiencing
-some reverses of fortune, became maniacal, with a tendency
-to commit suicide. The elevated situation of the room which
-he inhabited, the position of the staircase, the reiterated
-visits of his friends, “who came to contemplate his misfortunes,”
-and the despair of his wife, were so many circumstances
-which induced him to terminate his existence; and
-although he avowed that he had no motive for so doing, and
-that he was ashamed, and considered himself criminal for
-having attempted it, he left no means untried for more than a
-month to effect that end. When he was taken away from
-his home, and lodged in a ground-floor which led into a
-garden, the idea no longer harassed him. “It would be of no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-use,” he said; “I could never kill myself here; every precaution
-is taken to prevent me.”</p>
-
-<p>A baker’s wife, of a lymphatic temperament, experienced a
-violent fit of jealousy, which caused her much distress, and induced
-her to watch her husband’s steps, who vented his discontent
-in threats and reproaches. At last, this unhappy woman,
-being unable to bear the feeling any longer, threw herself out
-of the window. Her husband ran to pick her up, and bestowed
-marks of the most attentive kindness upon her. “It is
-useless,” she said; “you have a wife no longer.” She refused
-every kind of nourishment, and neither the solicitations,
-tears, prayers of her relations, and those of her husband,
-who never quitted her room, were able to overcome her resolution.
-After seven days of total abstinence, Esquirol was
-called in. They hid from him the cause of the disease, but he
-observed that every time her husband approached the bed, her
-face became convulsed. The patient was told that she was
-about to be sent into the country, but that it was necessary
-for her to take a little nourishment in order to support the
-journey. A little broth which was offered her was accepted;
-but notwithstanding her attempts, she could only swallow a
-few drops. She tried again the following morning, but she
-expired in the course of the day. “Had this woman,” says
-Esquirol, “been removed from her home immediately after
-the accident, there is little doubt but she would have been
-restored. How could she desire to live, her distress being
-continually aggravated by the presence of her husband?”</p>
-
-<p>The chief means of controlling the passions, and of keeping
-them within just bounds, is to form a proper estimate of the
-things of this life, of the relation of our present to a future
-state of existence, and of the influence which our actions in
-this world will have upon our happiness hereafter. Such a
-right estimate every rational man will labour to attain. He
-will endeavour, by correcting error, and acquiring such habits
-as are consistent with just sentiments, to withdraw the nourishment
-from the very root of passion, rather than be for ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-fruitlessly occupied in merely pruning the luxuriance of some
-of its branches.</p>
-
-<p>It may be useful to impress strongly upon the minds of
-those who have not sufficient command over their feelings, the
-persuasion that the indulgence of any passion to excess, and
-especially of the selfish and malevolent ones, is likely to be injurious
-to health, will certainly be destructive of serenity and
-comfort; and of course, by diminishing happiness, will frustrate
-its own aim and intention, and may, by repetition, acquire
-accumulated force and facility of excitement, become
-at length unconquerable and habitual, and according to its
-nature, violence, and frequency, will, in a greater or less degree,
-be subversive of happiness, and leave them more or less
-open to the attacks of insanity.</p>
-
-<p>Such persons will therefore see it highly expedient, while
-under the influence of these impressions, to do all in their
-power to avoid them; to compare their urgent and apparent
-importance when they occur, with the probable diminution
-of the comfort and health of body and mind which they
-might induce; and to lay it down as a rule never to indulge
-any passion whatever, till, independently of moral considerations,
-and the notions of duty and obligation, they have deliberately
-reflected, whether the importance of the cause will
-be a sufficient counterbalance to the certain pain inflicted
-and the injury which may be thence derived to their health of
-body and ease and soundness of mind. A habit of such
-deliberation once acquired,—and it may be acquired by diligence
-and resolution,—will entirely put an end to exorbitant
-excitement, since by checking the very beginnings of emotion,
-its growth and progress will be altogether prevented.</p>
-
-<p>And as every one has some weak point on which he is more
-open to a successful attack, some constitutional or habitual
-feeling, the approaches of which he cannot easily withstand, all
-persons who are convinced of the expediency and necessity of
-subduing their passions, if they would consult their own ease,
-will be aware of the importance of keeping a diligent watch,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-and placing a strong guard, upon the one that most easily
-and successfully besets them.</p>
-
-<p>And whoever would secure a reasonable portion of present
-happiness will be sensible of the necessity of learning the art
-of contentment, which, difficult as it may seem to those who
-have not used themselves to check the wanderings of imagination,
-and to keep their desires within prudent bounds, not
-only appears indispensable, but easy, to the man who feels a
-lively and practical conviction of its wonderful tendency to
-multiply the sum of actual enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>With the same view of promoting and securing their own
-present felicity, such persons will see the propriety of acquiring
-habits of good nature, and of cultivating the emotions of benevolence.
-And as virtue seldom fails to bring her own
-dowry, contentedness and benevolence will infallibly introduce
-habits of cheerfulness, which, while they improve our happiness,
-act as powerful preservatives against disease, and as
-determined enemies of insanity.</p>
-<hr />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br /><br />
-
-<small>PHYSICAL TREATMENT OF THE SUICIDAL DISPOSITION.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">On the dependence of irritability of temper on physical disease—Voltaire and
-an Englishman agree to commit suicide—The reasons that induced Voltaire
-to change his mind—The ferocity of Robespierre accounted for—The
-state of his body after death—The petulance of Pope dependent on
-physical causes—Suicide from cerebral congestion, treatment of—Advantages
-of bloodletting, with cases—Damien insane—Cold applied to the
-head, of benefit—Good effects of purgation—Suicide caused by a tape-worm—Early
-indications of the disposition to suicide—The suicidal eye—Of
-the importance of carefully watching persons disposed to suicide—Cunning
-of such patients—Numerous illustrations—The fondness for a
-particular mode of death—Dr. Burrows’ extraordinary case—Dr. Conolly
-on the treatment of suicide—Cases shewing the advantage of confinement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Medical</span> men have not considered with that degree of attention
-commensurate with its importance the relationship between
-physical derangement and those apparently trifling
-mental ailments which so often, if not subdued, lead to the
-commission of suicide. The origin of self-destruction is more
-frequently dependent upon derangement of the <i>primæ viæ</i>
-than is generally imagined. Every one must, in his own
-person, be aware of the influence of indigestion, and what is
-termed bilious disorder, upon the spirits. An inactive condition
-of the bowels is a common cause of mental disquietude.
-Voltaire, who was a man of great observation, appears to have
-paid considerable attention to this connexion. He advises a
-person who intends to ask a favour of a prime minister, or a
-minister’s secretary, or a secretary’s mistress, to be careful to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-approach them after they have had a comfortable evacuation
-from the bowels. Dryden invariably dosed himself before
-sitting down to compose. He says—“If you wish to have
-fairy flights of fancy, you must purge the belly.” Carneades,
-the celebrated disputant of antiquity, was in the habit of
-taking white helebore, (a purgative,) preparatory to his refuting
-the dogmas of the Stoics. Lord Byron says, in one of his letters,
-“I am suffering from what my physician terms ‘gastric
-irritation,’ and my spirits are sadly depressed. I have taken
-a brisk cathartic, and to-morrow ‘Richard will be himself
-again.’” The following anecdote is recorded of Voltaire:—“An
-English gentleman of fortune had been sitting many hours
-with this great wit and censurer of human character. Their
-discourse related chiefly to the depravity of human nature,
-tyranny and oppression of kings, poverty, wretchedness, and
-misfortune, the pain of disease, particularly the gravel, gout,
-and stone. They worked themselves up to such a pitch of
-imaginary evils that they proposed next morning to commit
-suicide together. The Englishman, firm to his resolution,
-rose, and expected Voltaire to perform his promise, to whom
-the genius replied, “<i>Ah! monsieur, pardonnez moi, j’ai bien
-dormi, mon lavement a bien operé, et le soleil est tout-à-fait clair
-aujourd’hui</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>We knew a gentleman whose temper was not controllable if
-he allowed himself to pass a day without his accustomed evacuation
-from the bowels. Pinel records the particulars of the
-case of a man who had fits of mental derangement whenever
-the action of the bowels became irregular.</p>
-
-<p>The blood-thirsty miscreant Robespierre is said to have
-been of a “<i>costive habit, and to have been much subjected to derangement
-of the liver</i>.” After death, it is said that “his
-bowels were found one adherent mass.” It is indeed interesting
-to consider, both morally and medically, how far these
-morbid ailments influenced this monster in the bloody career
-in which he was engaged.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no question but that the morbid irritability<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-which many of our men of genius have manifested was but
-the effect of a derangement of the physical frame acting upon
-a mind naturally sensitive to such impressions.</p>
-
-<p>Much of the petulance, personality, and malignity of Pope
-was dependent upon causes over which he had no control—viz.,
-disease of the stomach and liver, producing hypochondriasis.
-It has been well observed by Madden, “Who knows
-under what paroxysms of mental irritation caused by that disease
-(indigestion), which more than any other domineers over
-the feelings of the sufferer, he might have written those bitter
-sarcasms which he levelled against his literary opponents?
-Who knows in what moment of bodily pain his irascibility
-might have taken the form of unjustifiable satire, or his
-morbid sensibility assumed the sickly shape of petulance and
-peevishness? Who knows how the strength of the strong
-mind might have been cast down by his sufferings, when ‘he
-descended to the artifice’ of imposing on a bookseller, and
-of ‘writing those letters for effect which he published by
-subterfuge?’ Who that has observed how the vacillating
-conduct of the dyspeptic invalid imitates the vagaries of this
-proteiform malady can wonder at his capriciousness, or be
-surprised at the anomaly of bitterness on the tongue, and benevolence
-in the heart, of the same individual?”<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">56</a></p>
-
-<p>That Pope was a severe sufferer from bodily disease will
-appear evident from the following account given by Dr.
-Johnson of the poet. He says, “Pope’s constitution, which
-was originally feeble, became so debilitated that he stood in
-perpetual need of female attendance; and so great was his
-sensibility of cold that he wore a fur doublet under a shirt of
-very coarse warm linen. When he rose, he invested himself
-in a bodice made of stiff canvass, being scarcely able to hold
-himself erect till it was laced; and he then put on a flannel
-waistcoat. His legs were so slender that he enlarged their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span>bulk with three pairs of stockings, which were drawn off and
-on by the maid, for he was not able to dress or undress himself,
-and he neither went to bed nor rose without help.”</p>
-
-<p>His frequent attacks of indigestion made him at times a
-perfect picture of misery and wretchedness. It clothed everything
-with a gloomy aspect, made him quarrel with his friends
-and domestics, and he has been known to say that he sighed
-for death as a reprieve from mental and bodily agony. Sir
-Samuel Garth was frequently consulted when he had these
-attacks; and it was only by exacting a strict attention to diet
-and exhibiting medicine that he was enabled to restore the
-mind of the poet to a healthy tone.</p>
-
-<p>This physical ailment, as it often does when long continued,
-ultimately affected the cerebral functions. At times he
-had symptoms of pressure on the brain, or at least of an unequal
-and imperfect distribution of blood to that organ. Spence
-says, he frequently complained of seeing everything in the
-room as through a curtain, and on other occasions, of seeing
-false colours on certain objects. At another period, on a sick-bed,
-he asked Dodsley what arm it was that had the appearance
-of coming out from the wall.</p>
-
-<p>When the disposition to suicide is present, the physician
-should carefully ascertain whether the patient is not labouring
-under cerebral congestion, or a determination of blood to the
-head. The loss of a small quantity of blood has frequently
-been known to remove the propensity to self-destruction. A
-case is referred to by Schlegel of a woman who was liable to
-periodical fits of suicidal mania whenever she allowed a redundancy
-of blood to accumulate in the system. On two
-occasions she attempted suicide. On the first indications of a
-return of her delirium, she was generally bled, and relief was
-instantaneously afforded.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman who had received, during the peninsular campaign,
-a sabre cut in the head, felt for some years, whenever
-he was exposed to great mental excitement, or allowed himself
-to over-indulge in the use of spirits, a kind of suicidal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span>
-delirium. Twice he was detected in the act of attempting to
-commit suicide, and was fortunately prevented from doing so.
-The local abstraction of blood from the neighbourhood of the
-head was the only remedy which appeared to subdue the disposition.</p>
-
-<p>The cases which are related in another chapter of individuals
-who were insane at the moment when the act of self-destruction
-was attempted, but who recovered the use of their
-reasoning after having inflicted a wound attended with loss of
-blood, fully testify the importance of general and local depletion
-in certain cases of cerebral disease attended by this unfortunate
-propensity.</p>
-
-<p>A blow on the head has been known to develope this feeling.
-The affection of the sentient organ may remain latent
-for many years, and then suddenly manifest itself. A man
-had received, when young, a kick from a horse, which produced
-at the time no very urgent symptoms. Six years after
-the accident, he, without giving any indications of previous
-derangement of mind, cut his throat. Upon examining the
-brain, it was found extensively diseased.</p>
-
-<p>A man, feeling the suicidal disposition, bled himself from
-the arm, and recovered.</p>
-
-<p>It will not be proper in all cases to abstract blood; for the
-destructive propensity has been known to exist where there
-has been a deficiency of blood in the brain. The practitioner
-should examine the condition of the patient thoroughly before
-he recommends active depletion. Sixty per cent. of the cases
-of suicide will, however, be found with cerebral disease either
-of a primary or secondary nature; and to that organ the medical
-man’s attention should be particularly directed.</p>
-
-<p>The following case happily illustrates the benefits which
-are sometimes derived from the local abstraction of blood in
-certain cases of temporary insanity, accompanied with a disposition
-to commit suicide. “A gentleman,” says Dr. Burrows,
-“of a very irascible and impetuous disposition, with
-whom I was intimate, experienced in a public meeting a re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span>buke
-which exceedingly mortified him, and made so deep an
-impression upon his mind, that he was quite miserable. At
-night, instead of going to bed, he roamed abroad; and at
-length, early in the morning, without knowing whither he
-went, he found himself near a sheet of water. The view of
-it at once determined him to drown himself, and he accordingly
-plunged in. The action was perceived, and he was
-rescued from the water, insensible, and immediately conveyed
-to a place where means of resuscitation were adopted.
-As his address was found in his pocket, a communication was
-directly made to his family, and Dr. Burrows was called in to
-see the patient. He found him in a state of insensibility.
-As soon as consciousness returned, he was dressed, put into
-a coach, and Dr. B. accompanied him to his residence. As
-yet, he had not spoken, neither did he appear to observe anything.
-The motion of the carriage on the stones seemed to
-rouse him, and he looked about. He took no notice of those
-who were in the carriage with him. He soon became violent;
-his eyes were wild, and rolled in their sockets; his face
-became flushed; the vessels of the forehead were excessively
-distended, and all the symptoms of genuine delirium came on.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">57</a>
-Dr. Burrows ascribed the symptoms to a violent reaction in
-the vascular system from the state of collapse it had sustained,
-and ordered the oppressed vessels of the head to be relieved
-by the application of cupping glasses, and the abstraction of
-sixteen ounces of blood; the head to be kept cool, and
-enemata to be administered until the bowels were well
-cleansed out. After these operations, he soon became passive
-and disposed to sleep. He slept six hours, and awoke
-tolerably composed, but not quite coherent. He took light
-nourishment, and at night awoke perfectly collected, but exceedingly
-low. The next day he was well, but languid. An
-explanation was given him, which removed the impression
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span>that the offensive part of the speech had given him, and he
-by degrees recovered his usual state of mind.”</p>
-
-<p>We are inclined to believe, with D’Israeli, “that there are
-crimes for which men are hanged, but of which they might
-easily have been cured by physical means.” Damien, who
-attempted the assassination of Louis XV., and who in consequence
-was subjected to the most refined tortures, persisted
-to the last in declaring that if he had been bled, as he wished
-and implored to be, the morning previously, he never would
-have endeavoured to take the life of the king.</p>
-
-<p>Gaubius relates the case of a lady of a too inflammable constitution,
-whom her husband had reduced to a model of decorum
-by phlebotomy.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of April, M. Delormel was called to Madame
-Chatelain, at the Chateau de Armanvillers, who, according to
-the statement of the physician in attendance, was “melancholic,
-hypochondriacal, and insane.” She had made several
-attempts to commit suicide, and was carefully guarded. She
-had been bled, purged, and well dosed with anti-spasmodics,
-but to no purpose. M. Delormel examined the patient very
-carefully, and came to a conclusion respecting her case very
-different from that which had been formed by the other physicians
-who had seen her. The lady was thirty-seven years
-of age, of a very neuro-sanguineous temperament, active in
-body, and most amiable in disposition. For more than two
-years she had complained of burning heat in her stomach and
-bowels; digestion was painful, and constipation habitual. The
-catameniæ were irregular; she was much emaciated, and the
-symptoms of melancholia and hypochondriasis were well
-marked.</p>
-
-<p>Madame C. could not bear to see her husband and children,
-to whom she had, when in good health, been affectionately
-attached. Her chief desire was solitude, and the predominant
-idea was the conviction of approaching death. From an attentive
-examination of the case, it was pronounced one of
-chronic gastro-enteritis. Eighty leeches were applied to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-abdomen, proper medicines were administered, her diet regulated,
-and in less than a month she was completely restored to
-health of body and mind.</p>
-
-<p>When it is evident that the patient is suffering from cerebral
-congestion, and yet general bleeding is inadmissible,
-the application of cold to the head by means of a shower bath
-has often been productive of much good. A young lady who
-laboured under the disposition to suicide consulted an eminent
-living physician, communicating to him the particulars of her
-malady, bitterly lamenting the unfortunate feeling that was
-undermining her health. After trying various remedies without
-effecting much relief, a cold shower bath was recommended
-every morning. In the course of ten days, the desire to
-commit self-destruction was entirely removed, and never afterwards
-returned.</p>
-
-<p>A timely-administered purge has been known to dispel the
-desire of self-destruction. Esquirol knew a man who was decidedly
-insane whenever he allowed his bowels to be in an
-inactive condition.</p>
-
-<p>A patient of Falret had well-marked suicidal delirium. So
-urgent were the symptoms, that he was placed under restraint
-and carefully watched. Active cathartics were administered,
-and Falret states that the largest tape-worm he ever saw was
-evacuated. The idea of suicide soon vanished, and the man
-was restored in perfect health to his friends and family.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">58</a></p>
-
-<p>Foderé examined the bodies of three persons in one family
-who fell by their own hands, and in the three cases considerable
-disease was discovered in the intestinal canal, which had
-been irritating the brain and disturbing its manifestations.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span></p>
-<p>In the instances just referred to, the indication of physical
-disease of the <i>primæ viæ</i> were but trifling during life.</p>
-
-<p>Disease of the stomach and liver frequently incite to suicide;
-hepatic affections notoriously disturb the equilibrium of
-the mind. Many a case exhibiting an inclination to suicide
-has been cured by a few doses of blue pill. The physician
-should direct his attention to the condition of the uterine
-function and the state of the skin. During the puerperal
-state, a tendency to suicide is often manifested.</p>
-
-<p>A lady, shortly after her accouchement, expressed, with great
-determination, her intention to kill herself. Her bowels had
-not been properly attended to, and a brisk cathartic was
-given. This entirely removed the suicidal disposition.</p>
-
-<p>Any irregularity in the action of the uterine organ may
-give rise to the same inclination. Under such circumstances,
-emmenagogues will do much good.</p>
-
-<p>German writers dwell much upon the connexion between
-suicide and derangement of the cutaneous secretion. That
-this function should also be attended to there cannot be a doubt,
-although we cannot call to mind any cases of suicide which
-could be directly traced to suppressed perspiration.</p>
-
-<p>In some cases, a blister applied and kept open in the neighbourhood
-of the head has effected much good. In other instances,
-issues have been beneficial, particularly in persons
-subject to cerebral congestion. There is, however, a condition
-of brain accompanying the suicidal disposition which may
-be denominated a state of <i>cerebral irritation</i>, in which bleeding
-or depletion would be injurious. In such cases, friction on the
-spine, and the administration of anti-spasmodics, gentle aperients,
-and alteratives, will be serviceable.</p>
-
-<p>Sufficient attention is not paid to those precursory symptoms
-which indicate the existence of a disposition to suicide. In
-two-thirds of the cases that occur, the act is preceded by premonitory
-signs, which, if attended to, will prevent the developement
-of the propensity.</p>
-
-<p>With very few exceptions, the mental symptoms are those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-which are principally manifested in these cases. Lowness of
-spirits, a love of solitude, an indisposition to follow any occupation
-which requires exercise of the mind, are generally exhibited.
-The person’s suspicions become roused; he fancies
-his dearest friends are regardless of his interests, or are plotting
-against his life. He takes no pleasure in the family
-circle. He may be suffering from some evident physical
-malady, acting through sympathy on the brain, and deranging
-its functions; and then he will often refer to his disease, and
-express his utter hopelessness of ever being cured. There is
-an expression of countenance generally present in a person
-who meditates suicide, which, if once seen, cannot easily be
-forgotten. Suicidal mania is easily recognised by the experienced
-physician. The surgeon of a large establishment in the
-environs of the metropolis informed me, that in six cases out
-of ten he could detect, by the appearance of the eye, the existence
-of the desire to commit self-destruction. A young
-gentleman, a few days previously, had been admitted into the
-house as a patient. The surgeon, after examining and prescribing
-for the lunatic, said to one of the keepers, “You must
-watch Mr. —— carefully, for I feel assured he will attempt his
-life.” Everything with which he might injure himself, were
-he so disposed, was taken from him; but it appears that he had
-resolved to make away with himself, and had carefully concealed
-a pen-knife in his boot. On the evening of the day on
-which he was admitted he made a dreadful gash in his throat,
-but failed in injuring any large vessel. He confessed that he
-had determined to sacrifice his life; he said, “It has been
-pre-ordained that I should fall by my own hands, and I am only
-fulfilling my destiny by cutting my throat!” Shortly after
-this he was removed; and as we have been subsequently informed,
-sufficient care not being taken of him, he eventually
-succeeded in killing himself.</p>
-
-<p>How difficult it is for the medical man to persuade the
-friends of a person who has evinced a disposition to suicide, of
-the absolute necessity of his being confined and carefully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-watched! A physician, dining with a friend, met by accident
-a young lady who had exhibited, for a few days previously,
-a shrewdness of manner that attracted the notice of
-those with whom she associated. He also observed a wildness
-and incoherence about her ideas; but what particularly
-struck his attention was, the peculiar expression of countenance
-which so often denotes the presence of suicidal mania.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">59</a>
-He felt convinced in his own mind that the lady meditated
-self-destruction; and so firmly persuaded was he of the fact,
-that he seriously spoke to the gentleman at whose table he
-was dining on the subject, and urged him, as he was intimately
-acquainted with the young lady’s family, to suggest
-the propriety of having medical advice, and of carefully watching
-the movements of the lady. This suggestion was treated
-with ridicule, and of course the subject was not broached
-again. Two days after the conversation took place, intelligence
-was brought that the lady had taken a large dose of
-laudanum, and had died from its effects! A little prudent
-caution might have saved the life of this poor unfortunate being.</p>
-
-<p>In cases in which the disposition to suicide has been
-evinced, the patient ought to be carefully watched, and, under
-some circumstances, placed under restraint. Men who talk
-loudly of the effects of moral coercion, and who repudiate the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span>idea of strait-waistcoats &amp;c., have had but little practical
-experience of the treatment of the insane. Moral discipline
-has done much good. Deeply should we regret to see the system
-which has been in force within our own recollection
-again introduced into our lunatic asylums. In endeavouring
-to avoid Scylla we have fallen into Charybdis. How many
-lives are lost in consequence of the patients not being properly
-secured when they have exhibited a desire to commit
-self-destruction.</p>
-
-<p>A lady who had attempted to destroy herself was very properly
-sent to an asylum. Having expressed a determination to
-avail herself of the first opportunity for carrying her intentions
-into execution, she was most carefully guarded. She was never
-allowed to be out of sight; a trustworthy nurse always kept
-by her side; and in the course of time she was pronounced
-recovered. But as it was not considered prudent to send her
-home at once, she was separated from the other inmates of
-the house, and allowed to reside with the surgeon and
-matron of the establishment. Even under these circumstances
-it was thought better not to allow her to be wholly by
-herself, fearful that the disposition might again suddenly develope
-itself. She resided with the surgeon for some weeks,
-and appeared completely well. She expressed much astonishment
-when told that she had attempted her own life; she was
-apparently horrified at the idea. She was sitting with the
-matron one morning after breakfast; the surgeon was going
-round the asylum, when a child was heard to cry up stairs, as
-if it had received some injury. The matron immediately left
-the room; she was not absent three minutes, and when she
-returned she was astonished to find the young lady had
-vanished. Immediate search was made for her, but she was not
-to be found, when, looking behind the curtain in the parlour,
-the lady was discovered hanging to the cornice! In that short
-space of time she had succeeded in suspending herself, and
-was quite dead. Of course we cannot determine whether she
-had recovered, and this was but a sudden recurrence of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-suicidal mania, or whether she had cunningly concealed her
-ailment for the purpose of throwing her attendant off her
-guard, and thus being enabled to effect her dreadful purpose.
-We should be more disposed to accede to the latter solution of
-the question, knowing the extreme cunning of such lunatics,
-and the ingenious stratagems they often have recourse to in
-order to accomplish any mischievous object they have in view.</p>
-
-<p>A person who manifested indications of mental aberration
-was found in the act of hanging himself. Upon being detected,
-he promised most solemnly to abandon his rash resolution.
-He attempted a second time to kill himself by cutting
-his throat, but the wound was not fatal. He was now
-placed under the care of a gentleman who had devoted much
-attention to the treatment of insanity; and, knowing his propensity,
-the keeper received strict injunctions to watch his
-movements carefully. Everything by which he could injure
-himself was removed from his room, he was shaved every day
-by a barber, and no instrument of any kind was allowed to
-be in his possession. He was confined for nine months; and
-it appeared, from what afterwards occurred, that he had,
-during the whole of this period, been absorbed in the one idea
-of how he should contrive to commit suicide. He was discovered
-one morning hanging by the neck from the bedstead,
-quite dead. How he got possession of the cord which
-suspended him, puzzled everybody acquainted with the history
-of the case. At last the enigma was solved. It appears
-that parcels of books and newspapers had occasionally been
-sent to him by his family, tied with twine; and he had carefully,
-and unknown to the keeper, concealed each piece,
-until he had collected a quantity to constitute a cord sufficiently
-strong with which to hang himself. For nine months
-this idea had exclusive possession of his mind; and although
-he exhibited no apparent symptoms of insanity, he had
-evidently been contemplating suicide for the period already
-specified.</p>
-
-<p>A female had made repeated attempts, during her residence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-in the asylum at Wakefield, to hang herself, but had been so
-watched that she had not succeeded. One evening, the
-servant, on going to remove all her clothes out of her bed-room,
-thought she saw something bright on the top of one of her
-under garments; upon examination, this was found to be a
-pin. She had contrived just before bed-time to take off her
-garter; and, knowing that her pockets as well as her clothes
-would all be removed, she contrived to pin it within her dress,
-so high up that it would not easily be perceived. Very providentially,
-the brightness of the metal discovered it, and she
-was again prevented from accomplishing her purpose. By
-degrees the propensity wore off; and after a residence of
-eighteen years in the Hanwell Asylum, Sir W. Ellis found
-her a few years ago, living, though upwards of eighty years of
-age, in a comparatively tranquil state, waiting her removal in
-the ordinary course of nature.</p>
-
-<p>When persons determined on suicide find that they are
-unceasingly watched, and so carefully secured that they have
-no opportunity of executing their design, they will assume a
-most cheerful manner for days and weeks together, in order to
-lull suspicion; and when a favourable opportunity offers, it is
-never neglected.</p>
-
-<p>A man who had long been in a state of despondency, and
-had made many attempts to hang himself, but had always
-been prevented, very suddenly appeared much better. He
-became apparently cheerful, and being desirous of employment,
-was sent out with a large party into the hay-field. He
-continued in this and other out-door occupations for some
-time, gradually improving. One evening, on returning from
-the field, when the rest of the party went in to tea, (which
-they were allowed when hay-making,) he told the farming
-man that he did not feel thirsty, and as it was very warm he
-would rather remain at the door. He was left there. A
-short time afterwards his keeper came down to inquire for
-him, and being told where he had been left, immediately
-exclaimed, “Then he has hung himself!” It was also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-singularly impressed upon his mind, that it was in one particular
-out-house that he had done it. There he went, and
-found him suspended and dead, as he expected.</p>
-
-<p>“A noble lord,” (says Dr. Rowley,) “whose family I had the
-honour to attend, had received, it is said, some little reproof
-from a great personage, concerning a military omission. It
-seized his lordship’s mind so seriously, that on examination it
-was evident to me that suicide was intended. All weapons
-and dangerous means whatever were removed. It being a
-circumstance of delicacy, I sent for his lordship’s son, then
-about eighteen, from Westminster school, communicated my
-apprehensions, and requested his constant attendance on his
-noble parent. This the young man executed for several days,
-and prevented the commission of the crime apprehended. In
-my absence a few hours in the country, a very eminent,
-learned, and indeed remarkably sagacious physician, but my
-mortal and vindictive enemy, was called in. I had, contrary
-to medical <i>etiquette</i>, enforced the necessity of promptly
-bleeding a most noble lady in an apoplexy, which saved life,
-but brought down invectives, hatred, and vengeance on me.
-Whether out of opposition to my vigilance, or from malicious
-motives, it would be difficult to determine, but the noble lord
-was liberated from all restraint, and my apprehensions treated
-by injurious insinuations and with contempt. Thirty-six
-hours had scarcely elapsed before the noble lord put a period
-to his existence, by a sword he had concealed, which had been
-a present from Prince Ferdinand: he wounded his breast in
-two places, but the third thrust pierced his heart. Thus
-perished a nobleman, whose liberality, feelings, and many
-virtues, did honour to human nature, and who might, in all
-probability, have been now living, had not medical arrogance
-and illiberality, merely from personal ambition, dictated
-error, at the risk of human destruction! <i>Horridum! valde
-horridum!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The physician should constantly bear in mind this important
-fact connected with the suicidal disposition—viz., that those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-determined upon self-destruction often resolve to kill themselves
-in a particular manner, and however anxious they may
-be to quit life, they have been known to wait for months and
-years, until they have had an opportunity of effecting their
-purpose according to their own preconceived notions. A
-man who has attempted to drown himself will not readily be
-induced to cut his throat, and <i>vice versa</i>. A morbid idea is
-frequently associated in the maniac’s mind with a particular
-kind of death, and if he be removed from all objects likely
-to awaken this notion, the inclination to suicide may be
-removed.</p>
-
-<p>An old man, upwards of seventy years of age, who had
-a market garden, near the asylum at Wakefield, consulted
-the late Sir W. Ellis as to the best mode of destroying himself,
-as he had made up his mind not to live any longer. He
-said he had thought of hanging himself, if Sir William could
-not recommend an easier death. The physician talked to him
-some time upon the heinousness of the crime he contemplated,
-and endeavoured to shew him that hanging was a most horrible
-death, from the suffocation that must be felt. His conversation
-was attended with little success. Finding that the
-chylopoietic viscera were a good deal disordered, he prescribed
-for him, and sent to inform his wife that he ought never to be
-left alone. The medicine had the effect of restoring the
-secretions to a healthy action, and he got better. Sir William
-heard no more of him for some time, when he was at length
-informed that he was discovered dead in a little shed in his
-garden, where he used to keep his tools. But so fixed was
-the mode in his mind, by which he was determined to accomplish
-his death, that, though the place was so low he could
-not stand upright in it, and he had not a rope or a string with
-which he could suspend himself, he contrived to effect his
-purpose by getting a willow twig, and making it into a noose,
-which he fastened to one of the rafters. He stooped to put
-his head through it, and then pushing his feet from under
-him, suspended himself until he died. Now, if he had not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-made up his mind to destroy himself in this particular way,
-he might have accomplished it with much greater ease by
-drowning himself in the pond in his garden, or by cutting his
-throat with his garden knife, which he always had about him;
-but neither of these was the mode he previously intended.</p>
-
-<p>It may be practically useful to all who have the immediate
-care of suicidal patients to bear this in mind; and if the medical
-man can find out that any particular plan is contemplated,
-he ought to be especially careful to remove the means of accomplishing
-it out of the patient’s reach, and to prevent him
-having an opportunity of carrying it into execution.<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">60</a></p>
-
-<p>“A medical friend,” says Dr. Burrows, “who had much
-enjoyed life, and never met with any circumstances to occasion
-him particular disquietude, when at the age of forty-five
-became very dyspeptic, low-spirited, and restless. He gradually
-shunned society; but still, though with great reluctance,
-pursued his professional avocations. This depression
-increased so much that he often told his wife that he should
-consult me. (He knew very well that both his father and
-grandfather had destroyed themselves.)</p>
-
-<p>“One morning he kept in bed much longer than usual, and
-a relation calling, went up, without being announced, to see
-him. He seemed composed, at length complained of being
-very faint, and upon raising him up, blood was perceived on
-his hands. Upon examination it was discovered, at the
-moment his friend entered the chamber, he was employed in
-opening the femoral artery; that there had been considerable
-hemorrhage from the small vessels he had divided. I
-saw him within an hour afterwards. He had recovered from
-the syncope, and expressed great sorrow for what he had
-done; described with minuteness his case; lamented he had
-not seen me sooner, but that he could not muster sufficient
-resolution; consented to place himself under my superintendence;
-and, in fact, to follow all my directions.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span></p>
-<p>“I placed him in charge of a careful keeper. It was agreed
-that he should be removed into lodgings in the environs of
-town; and he therefore submitted to the necessary medical
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>“He remained two days at home, till lodgings could be
-procured, during which he was calm and rational; but there
-existed the suicidal eye, which sufficiently denoted that he
-was not to be trusted.</p>
-
-<p>“On the third morning, his keeper, having a violent attack
-of rheumatism in his right arm, could not shave him, and
-another person was obliged to be trusted. This person, unfortunately,
-laid the razor on the dressing-table; and, while
-his face was turned away, and the keeper was heating some
-water a few feet from the table, the patient suddenly jumped
-up, seized the razor, and in a moment applied it to his throat,
-and effectually divided the carotid artery.”</p>
-
-<p>A case somewhat similar we find recorded by the same
-authority. Major—— had been wounded at the battle
-of Waterloo. He had since recovered his health, but a great
-depression of spirits followed. The maniacal diathesis was
-hereditary. By degrees he became more desponding, his ideas
-wandered, and at length a suicidal propensity was evident.
-On visiting him, Dr. Burrows strongly urged the necessity of
-placing him under the supervision of an experienced keeper;
-but here, as in too many cases, his family opposed this advice,
-and would not permit proper restraint, but put him
-under the care of a nurse only. In the evening, he retired
-early to bed. The nurse went to tea in his chamber, supposing
-her charge to be asleep. The patient watched the
-opportunity, jumped out of bed, seized a knife on the table,
-wounded, and would have effectually cut his throat, had not
-the nurse interposed.</p>
-
-<p>“A clergyman in Warwickshire told me,” says Dr. Conolly,
-“that he was requested, some years ago, to interfere respecting
-certain measures proper for securing a neighbour who had
-exhibited unquestionable symptoms of insanity. His neigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span>bour,
-however, was not to be met with on the day when it
-was intended to remove him, and when he reappeared, which
-was either the next day or in a day or two afterwards, he was
-quite in a sound state, in which condition he has lived with
-great comfort up to the present time. On the other hand, an
-instance came under my own observation in which a gentleman
-had shewn many proofs of disordered mind for the space
-of three or four months, and his actions becoming dangerous,
-it was resolved to remove him. About two hours before I
-was to call for him, he was so quiet and orderly in a conversation
-with the old family-apothecary, that the latter
-gentleman rode off to the relations of the patient, relenting
-all the way concerning the proposed restraint, and purposing
-to solicit its postponement; in which attempt he was only
-prevented by being overtaken by a messenger before he had
-ridden half a mile, who came to inform him that his apparently
-tranquil patient had nearly blown up his house and his whole
-family with gunpowder, having for that purpose thrown a
-pound and a half of it into the fire, sitting by to see it explode.
-In another case, a gentleman had made repeated
-attempts at self-destruction, but seemed to have got well, and
-was no longer much looked after; yet after living comfortably
-at home for a little while, and having passed a cheerful evening
-in reading to his wife, he concluded it, when she had
-retired, by hanging himself in the parlour.</p>
-
-<p>“These lamentable accidents are, of course, always productive
-of disagreeable feelings in the mind of a practitioner;
-but never more so than when he has been too confident of
-the absence of danger. It is questionable, perhaps, whether
-there are not, in all these cases, certain means of which prudence
-might avail itself, for the purpose of ascertaining the
-exact state of the supposed convalescent’s mind, as well as the
-existence of such intentions in a lunatic as are inconsistent
-with the safety of other persons, or with the preservation of
-his own existence. The lunatic may maintain a very guarded
-silence on these matters so long as they remain quite unsus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span>pected,
-but is not very well able, in general, to prevent his
-intentions becoming visible to those who have begun to
-suspect him. These intentions, too, are generally associated
-with certain recollections, or certain topics, or certain antipathies
-or prepossessions, which may be found out and
-brought into the conversation; in which case, the lunatic can
-seldom conceal his agitation, his superstitious belief, his anger,
-or his inly-cherished hope of full revenge. Indeed, he is
-often in no degree solicitous to conceal his feelings. There
-cannot be anywhere a more harmless person than Jonathan
-Martin; his manners are mild, his occupations are of the
-most peaceful description, his language is strikingly simple
-and unassuming; but take up the Bible, and you have touched
-the chord of his insanity; you find that, to destroy the noblest
-monuments of ancient piety and munificence seems to him a
-work to which God has especially called him. The effect of
-possessing a key to the excited feelings of a lunatic is, indeed,
-always surprising to those unaccustomed to their peculiarities.
-You walk with a man who seems to delight in the simplest
-pleasures of a state of innocence; he admires the flowers of
-the field and the beauty of the sky, or he dwells with satisfaction
-on the contemplation of whatever is generous and
-good; nothing can exceed the mildness of his manner: but
-a single word calculated to rouse a morbid train of ideas, a
-name, the reminiscence of a place, or any trifling inadvertency,
-will convert this placid being into a demon; the
-tones of his voice, his gestures, his countenance, his language,
-assume, in a moment, the expression of a fiend; and you
-discover that opportunity alone is wanting to effect some
-dreadful crime. The discovery of such a design is certainly
-not always so easy, but wherever suspicion exists, strict
-superintendence is warranted, or various degrees of restraint
-must be determined upon, and steadily adhered to.”<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">61</a></p>
-
-<p>The following cases will shew the necessity of guarding
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span>a person by the strictest surveillance from the moment that
-he evinces the slightest symptom of mental alienation, when
-it manifests itself by incongruous expressions or attempts at
-self-destruction. This precept should be engraven on the
-mind of every medical man, and no feeling of false delicacy
-should prevent his communicating his suspicions and wishes
-the moment he considers measures of precaution necessary.
-In these cases, the loss of an hour may make all the difference
-between life and death.</p>
-
-<p>M. Piorry was called to the Hôtel de Bibliothèque, where
-he found a man of athletic form and military appearance in a
-state of complete insensibility. He manifested all the indications
-of apoplexy or epilepsy. Some time elapsed before
-the physician could ascertain what was the matter; he could
-not obtain any satisfactory answers to his repeated questions.
-At last the patient made Piorry understand that he had
-swallowed a key. Professor Roux was sent for, who, after
-considerable difficulty, succeeded in extracting the foreign
-body from the œsophagus, along with an oblong piece of
-copper attached by a chain to the handle of the instrument.
-On the succeeding night he made fresh attempts to destroy
-himself; first by hanging with the bed-clothes, and, on that
-mode not proving successful, he endeavoured to strangle himself
-by squeezing two chairs against his neck. Thwarted in
-effecting his design, he again swallowed the key, and he was
-nearly dead when he was discovered, and the key extracted
-from his throat. He was now confined in a strait-waistcoat,
-and was subjected to proper medical treatment. In the course
-of a short period, all disposition to suicide was removed, and
-his mind was restored to perfect integrity.<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">62</a></p>
-
-<p>A soldier, who was greatly beloved in his regiment for his
-exemplary conduct and amiable qualities, became affected
-with suicidal melancholy, and fired a pistol into his mouth.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span>The havoc made was dreadful; but by great exertions on the
-part of M. Petit, who attended the case, his life was preserved.
-During his confinement, he manifested great anxiety for his
-recovery, and expressed himself horrified that he should ever
-have attempted to commit self-destruction. The surgeon and
-his friends entertained every hope that all suicidal tendency
-was dissipated. The result, however, proved that the whole
-was a manœuvre on the part of the patient to lull suspicion
-to rest, and when he had succeeded by this dissimulation in
-throwing his friends off their guard, he put an effectual period
-to his existence whilst in the wards of the hospital.</p>
-
-<p>The following case exhibits some practical points exceedingly
-worthy of record, and displays besides, in a remarkable
-degree, the control a lunatic disposed to suicide acquires over
-himself, his conversation, and conduct, when he wishes to lull
-suspicion to sleep. In this instance, says Dr. Burrows, who
-relates the particulars of the case, a most judicious physician,
-and those in whom he had confidence, all experienced in
-the phases of this wonderful malady, insanity, and its no less
-wonderful concomitant, suicide, were completely deceived.</p>
-
-<p>A medical friend of the Doctor’s, travelling over Shooter’s
-Hill, observed a gentleman walking up it, his carriage following
-him. When opposite to each other, the stranger suddenly
-fell on his knees in the dirt, and lifted up his hands, as
-if in earnest prayer. The friend stopped his post-chaise at so
-extraordinary a sight, and soon found by his looks and manners
-that the poor gentleman was insane. He immediately
-accompanied him back to London, and placed him under Dr.
-B.’s care till his relations were informed of his state.</p>
-
-<p>The history of the case was this:—The patient was a
-cavalry officer of rank, aged thirty-five, and had particularly
-distinguished himself at the recent battle of Waterloo. On
-that occasion he had two horses killed under him, and was
-himself wounded in four places. He was first struck on the
-crown of his helmet by the splinter of a shell, which wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-the scalp and stunned him; he was next shot through the
-fleshy part of the thigh by a grape shot, which at the same
-time killed his first horse; from these two wounds he lost
-much blood. Whilst lying under his second horse, he was
-pierced in the groin by a lance; and in this helpless condition
-he received from a French drummer, who was rifling the dead
-and dying, a violent blow on the temple from the butt-end of
-a musket, from the effects of which, he remained some time
-insensible. He was afterwards conveyed in a most deplorable
-state as a prisoner within the French lines, and though
-released the same evening by the victorious allies, a long while
-elapsed before his wounds and exhausted condition received
-any attention.</p>
-
-<p>He inherited a predisposition to insanity, and was naturally
-reserved, diffident, and taciturn, but affectionate and
-generous.</p>
-
-<p>When he recovered from his wounds, he often complained
-of pains in his head; and it was observed that his temper
-became fretful and suspicious; that he slept ill, was depressed
-in spirits, and courted solitude. These symptoms increased
-latterly. At length he imagined himself the sport of his
-brother officers, and many other delusions arose.</p>
-
-<p>There was a moral cause likewise operating which, on a
-constitution that had recently received so severe a shock, no
-doubt greatly influenced his disorder. He had applied for
-promotion in consequence of his sufferings in the service.
-This was withheld, as he thought, ungraciously, and too
-long; and when he was raised a step, his mind was already
-too much disturbed duly to appreciate it. The anniversary
-of the glorious battle of Waterloo was just passed, and the
-recollection of it was painful to him. In this state he came
-to town.</p>
-
-<p>He was exceedingly sober and temperate by habit; but
-during the day before, with a brother officer, he was persuaded
-to commit an unusual excess in wine, with the hope of raising
-his spirits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This proved a match to the mine. It exploded, and his
-intellects became completely deranged.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Burrows found him with his countenance very wild, the
-eyes injected and pupils contracted, pulse quick and weak,
-tongue white, and great thirst. He had had no sleep for five
-nights. Sometimes exalted, violent, and loquacious; sometimes
-depressed and taciturn. He was rather languid, which
-was imputed to his having lost full twenty ounces of blood
-from the rupture of an hæmorrhoidal vessel.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to detail the medical treatment adopted,
-but we will proceed to those points in the case which are
-relevant.</p>
-
-<p>He was placed in lodgings with a careful attendant. In
-about three weeks he was nearly well, when unluckily a whitlow
-formed on his finger, and as one of his delusions was that
-he was rotten in every part, it was the cause, besides pain, of
-considerable irritation, and it broke his rest; other delusions
-returned, but subsided with the pain of the whitlow, and he
-again greatly improved.</p>
-
-<p>In six weeks he was so well that the Doctor took his leave,
-advising him to travel during the remainder of the autumn.
-The next day some domestic occurrence occasioned violent
-irritation, and he again relapsed into despondency, unattended
-by paroxysms of violence; but he shortly recovered.</p>
-
-<p>However, instead of going into the country and varying the
-scene, his lady brought him into town and permitted unrestricted
-intercourse with his relations, &amp;c. He grew quarrelsome,
-suspicious, and very low-spirited, and began to abuse
-his wife. It was then earnestly recommended that he should
-be completely separated from all intercourse with her and his
-connexions, but the advice was disregarded.</p>
-
-<p>A boil now formed on his body. This irritated him more
-than the whitlow, and his delusions about his rottenness were
-more prominent than ever; but when the boil suppurated and
-discharged, his mind again improved.</p>
-
-<p>No persuasion could induce his friends to give him exercise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-or diversion, or change the scene. He therefore sat all day
-brooding over his fantasies, and reading religious books; for
-now there was added to his delusions an impression that he
-was very wicked, and had neglected his religious duties. His
-face, too, assumed the suicidal expression.</p>
-
-<p>A month afterwards, a consultation with two eminent physicians
-confirmed Dr. Burrows’ opinion of the treatment to be
-pursued. But, notwithstanding this consultation, all remedial
-aid was neglected, and he was allowed to follow his own
-inclinations, both in religious matters and in totally secluding
-himself. In about three weeks all the symptoms were so much
-increased that he was sent to a private asylum. A few days
-afterwards, while walking out, he tried to drown himself, but
-was rescued by his keeper. He continued in this desponding
-state some months, when, rather suddenly, he appeared much
-better; and continuing to improve, his physician thought him
-well, and he returned home. Two days only had passed,
-when he called on the same physician, acknowledged that he
-was as bad as ever, and entreated earnestly that he might
-again be received into his house. He was so on that day.
-The next day he poisoned himself and died.</p>
-
-<p>It proved, that he had never abandoned the desire of committing
-suicide; but he so well concealed it, and otherwise
-conducted himself, as to lead to the conclusion that he had
-recovered. It was, in fact, a scheme, the sole object of which
-was to get out and buy laudanum. Having procured a sufficient
-quantity, but anxious to save his wife the agony of witnessing
-the act he meditated, he preferred returning to the
-asylum to execute it.</p>
-
-<p>A few general principles have been laid down in this
-chapter to direct the practitioner in the management of
-certain cases of suicidal insanity. The success of the treatment
-will in a great measure be dependent on the physician
-making himself acquainted with the minute history of each
-case submitted to his professional care. No particular rules
-can be adduced that will be applicable to all cases of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</a></span>
-description; much must be left to the judgment of the medical
-man. The physician should, however, never forget that
-whatever apparently may be the physical disturbance going
-on in the system, the brain, and the brain alone, is the seat of
-the disease in all cases of suicide, and to the condition of that
-organ most particular attention ought to be paid.</p>
-<hr />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br /><br />
-
-<small>IS THE ACT OF SUICIDE THE RESULT OF INSANITY?</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">The instinct of self-preservation—The love of life—Dr. Wolcott’s death-bed—Anecdote
-of the Duke de Montebello—Louis XI. of France—Singular
-death of a celebrated lawyer—Dr. Johnson’s horror of dying—The
-organ of destruction universal—Illustrations of its influence—Sir W. Scott,
-on the motives that influence men in battle—Have we any test of insanity?—Mental
-derangement not a specific disease—Importance of
-keeping this in view—Insanity not always easily detected—Is lowness of
-spirits an evidence of derangement?—The cunning of lunatics—Esquirol’s
-opinion that insanity is always present—Moral insanity—The remarkable
-case of Frederick of Prussia—Suicide often the first symptom of insanity—Cases
-in which persons have been restored to reason from loss of blood,
-after attempting suicide—The cases of Cato, Sir Samuel Romilly, Lord
-Castlereagh, Colton, and Chatterton examined—Concluding remarks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nature</span> has ordained no law more universal in its influence
-than the desire which all animated beings display, and which
-is indeed the governing principle in the greater part of their
-actions, to preserve their existence, and to secure themselves
-from the influence of circumstances that bring it into danger.
-That “no man ever yet hated his own flesh, but nourisheth it
-and cherisheth it,” is an axiom laid down in scripture, and one
-founded on reason and observation.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">63</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</a></span></p>
-<p>One of our poets, in alluding to this subject, after declaring
-life to be the dream of a shadow, “a weak-built isthmus between
-two eternities, so frail that it can neither sustain wind
-nor wave,” yet avers his preference of a few days’, nay, a few
-hours’ longer residence upon earth to all the fame that wealth
-and honour could bestow—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Fain would I see that prodigal</div>
-<div class="line">Who his to-morrow would bestow</div>
-<div class="line">For all old Homer’s life, e’er since he died till now.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“Is there anything on earth I can do for you?” said Taylor
-to Wolcott, as he lay on his death-bed. The <i>passion for life</i>
-dictated the answer, “Give me back my youth?” These were
-the last words of the celebrated Peter Pindar.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Johnson had a superstitious fear of death. Boswell
-asked him whether we might not fortify the mind for the approach
-of death. Johnson answered in a passion, “No, Sir,
-let it alone! It matters not how a man dies, but how he lives.
-The act of dying is not of importance; it lasts so short a time.”
-But when Boswell persisted in the conversation, Johnson was
-thrown into such a state of agitation that he thundered out,
-“Give us no more of this;” and turning to Boswell, he said,
-with great earnestness, “Don’t let us meet to-morrow!”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i4">“O thou strong heart!</div>
-<div class="line">There’s such a covenant ’twixt the world and thee,</div>
-<div class="line">They’re loath to break!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>There is an anecdote recorded of one of the favourite marshals
-of Napoleon, the Duke de Montebello, which finely
-illustrates the strength of this instinctive principle. During a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-battle in the south of Germany, the duke was struck by a
-cannon-ball, and so severely wounded that there was no hope
-of his surviving. Summoning the surgeon to his side, he
-ordered the wounds to be dressed; and when help was declared
-to be unavailing, the dying officer, excited into frenzy
-by the love of life, burned with vindictive anger against the
-medical attendant, threatening the heaviest penalties if his
-art should bring no relief. The dying marshal demanded that
-Napoleon should be sent for, as one who had power to save,
-whose words could stop the effusion of blood from the wounds,
-and awe nature itself into submission. Napoleon arrived in
-time to witness the last fearful struggle of expiring nature, and
-to hear his favourite marshal exclaim, as the lamp of life was
-just being extinguished, “Save me, Napoleon!”</p>
-
-<p>The following case, which occurred in humble life, illustrates
-the same principle:—A man on the point of death
-vowed he would not die, cursing his physician, who announced
-the near termination of his life, and insisted that he would
-live in defiance of the laws of nature.</p>
-
-<p>It is recorded of Louis XI. of France, that so desperately
-did he cling to life when everything warned him to prepare
-for death, that he, in accordance with the barbarous physiology
-of that age, had the veins of children opened, and
-greedily drank their blood, hoping in that way to fan the
-dying embers of life into a flame!</p>
-
-<p>A once celebrated member of the English bar, whose
-strong original powers of mind had been obscured and enfeebled
-by the gross sensuality of his habits, in the extremity
-of his last illness, when the shadows of death were fast
-coming over him, with a blasphemous audacity, swore by
-his Creator that he <i>would not die</i>. In this state of morbid
-and impious rage he struggled out of his bed, tottered down
-the stairs, and fell lifeless in the passage. From the exclamation
-of this unfortunate man, it would seem as if he fancied
-that he held the reins of life in his hands, and could arrest at
-will the rapidity of its descending career.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Spence says, that “Salvini was an odd sort of man, subject
-to gross absences, and a very great sloven. His behaviour in
-his last hour was as odd as any of his behaviour in all his
-lifetime before could have been. Just as he was departing,
-he cried out in great passion, “<i>Je ne veux pas mourir, absolument!</i>”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“The weariest and most loathed worldly life</div>
-<div class="line">That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment, can lay on man,</div>
-<div class="line">Is paradise to what we fear of death.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It is not our intention to consider this subject phrenologically.
-That we have all certain good and evil propensities
-inherent in our nature, developed in various degrees in different
-individuals, is admitted by the anti-phrenologist, as well
-as by the most zealous advocate of that science. We need no
-phrenology to tell us, that “the heart of man is deceitful above
-all things, and desperately wicked:” scripture makes us acquainted
-with this fact. It is useful to look at the dark as
-well as the bright side of human nature. Without, then, using
-<i>terms</i> which might be considered objectionable, there can be
-no doubt of the existence in the human mind of a propensity
-to destroy, varying in degree from the simple pleasure of
-viewing the destruction of human life, to the most impassioned
-desire to kill others or oneself. This is a natural propensity,
-and, when not subdued by the higher faculties of the
-mind, it exhibits itself in the form of unequivocal insanity.
-This feeling to destroy may exist in conjunction with a consciousness
-on the part of the individual that he is about to
-commit a crime opposed to the laws of God and man. Dr.
-Gall relates many particulars of cases in which this natural
-propensity became morbidly developed. A student shocked
-his fellow-pupils by the extreme pleasure he took in tormenting
-insects, birds, and brutes. It was to gratify this inclination,
-he confessed, that he studied surgery. A man had so strong
-an inclination to kill that he became an executioner; and a
-Dutchman paid his butcher, who furnished ships with extensive
-supplies of meat, for being allowed to slaughter the oxen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-In these cases we see this natural feeling inordinately developed.
-Subject such persons to the operation of causes
-likely to excite this extra-developed propensity, and they will
-murder others or themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Gall mentions the case of a person at Vienna who, after
-witnessing an execution, was seized with a propensity to kill;
-at the same time, he had a clear consciousness of his situation.
-He wept bitterly, struck his head, wrung his hands, and cried
-to his friends to take care and get out of his way. Pinel
-mentions the case of a man, exhibiting no apparent unsoundness
-of intellect, who confessed that he had a propensity
-to kill. He nearly murdered his wife, and then attempted
-several times to destroy himself.</p>
-
-<p>In 1805, a man was tried at Norwich for wounding his wife
-and cutting his child’s throat. He had been known to tie
-himself with ropes for a week to prevent his doing mischief
-to others and to himself. A man exposed to a sudden reverse
-of fortune was heard to exclaim, “Do, for God’s sake, get me
-confined; for if I am at liberty I shall destroy myself and
-wife! I shall do it, unless all means of destruction are removed;
-and therefore do have me put under restraint. Something
-above tells me I shall do it; and I shall!”</p>
-
-<p>Whenever the mind is exposed to the influence of excited
-feeling, and the operation of the reasoning powers are suspended,
-we see the faculty alluded to developed according to
-the constitution of the individual. On the field of battle,
-striking examples occur of the various energies of this inclination.
-One soldier at the appearance of blood experiences the
-intoxication of carnage; another will swoon at the same sight.
-Sir Walter Scott, in the poem in which he has referred to the
-battle of Bannockburn, alludes to the various feelings that influence
-the mind in the heat of an engagement; and it will be
-perceived that he directs particular attention to those who
-are influenced by no other motive than the pleasure they derive
-from sacrificing human life:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“But, oh! amid that waste of life,</div>
-<div class="line">What various motives fired the strife!</div>
-<div class="line">The aspiring noble <i>bled for fame</i>,</div>
-<div class="line">The patriot for his country’s claim;</div>
-<div class="line">This knight his youthful strength to prove,</div>
-<div class="line">And that to earn his lady’s love;</div>
-<div class="line"><i>Some fought for ruffian thirst of blood</i>;</div>
-<div class="line">From habit some, or hardihood;</div>
-<div class="line">But ruffian stern, and soldier good,</div>
-<div class="line i1">The noble and the slave,</div>
-<div class="line">From various cause the same wild road</div>
-<div class="line">On the same bloody morning trode</div>
-<div class="line i1">To that dark inn, the grave.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>What conclusion are we justified in drawing from the facts
-just related? Certainly, that there is in us all a disposition to
-destroy, which is in some wisely and providentially restrained.
-If this view of the matter be correct, we do not think that we
-should be wrong in concluding that by far the great majority
-of cases of suicide result from a morbid development of this
-natural feeling, consequent upon a primary or secondary affection
-of the brain. This subject is of great interest in a medico-legal
-point of view, and is well deserving of serious consideration.</p>
-
-<p>Is the act of suicide an evidence of mental derangement?
-Before this question can be satisfactorily answered, it would
-be necessary for us to consider that <i>vexata questio</i>—what is
-insanity? Have we an unfailing standard to which to appeal;
-an infallible <i>test</i> by which we can ascertain, with anything
-like a proximity to truth, the sanity of any mind? Perhaps,
-if we were to assert that we considered it impossible to point
-out the line of demarcation which separates the confines of a
-sane and insane condition of the mind, we might lay ourselves
-open to an attack. Again, were we bold enough to proclaim
-our non-adherence to what is considered as the orthodox faith
-in this matter, and assert that we viewed every departure from
-a healthy tone of mind, whether in its intellectual or moral
-manifestations, as an evidence of insanity, we might still more
-expose ourselves to the merciless lash of the critic; yet these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-are the opinions to which we should feel most disposed to give
-our assent. We must make a marked distinction between insanity
-considered as a <i>legal</i> and as a <i>medical</i> question; and
-it is greatly owing to our not keeping this essential difference
-in mind that so much useless reasoning and vituperation
-has arisen. The man who is daily exposed to the
-kind and cheering influence of friendship, and who fancies
-himself alone in the world, without one human being to sympathize
-with him in his afflictions, is as essentially mad as he
-is who imagines himself to be made of glass, and is fearful of
-sitting down lest he should injure his brittle glutei muscles.
-A poet of antiquity wrote a book describing the miseries
-of the world, and destroyed himself at the conclusion of the
-task.</p>
-
-<p>“No man who is oppressed with grief,” Crichton justly
-observes, “and who is constantly preyed on by mental and
-bodily pain, can be supposed capable of exercising his judgment
-at all times correctly; a fresh misfortune, imaginary or
-real, excites an irresistible desire of relief. Tired out, hopeless,
-dismayed by the threatening aspect of many a bursting
-cloud; discerning nothing, whichever way he looks, but a
-dreary and comfortless life, how can he be supposed capable
-of taking a clear, calm, and comprehensive view of the obligations
-he owes to his Creator or society, or of reflecting
-on the sudden vicissitudes which daily occur in human life,
-and on which every man may safely form some hope, even in
-the most distressed situation? The wretchedness of life is
-the only picture present to the mind of one in whom grief has
-terminated in such a state of deep melancholy; the only objects
-of comparison are the misery of existence on the one
-hand, and the relief he can obtain by withdrawing himself
-from it on the other.”</p>
-
-<p>Insanity results from a disease of the brain. Although
-after death, in many cases, no appreciable structural lesion can
-be detected in the cerebral mass, it would be illogical for us
-to conclude that the sentient organ has not been physically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-affected. Derangement of mind is but the effect of physical
-disease, and, like all other diseases, it has an early as well as
-an advanced stage. Medical men have not paid sufficient
-attention to the premonitory indications of mental alienation.
-Having erected an arbitrary standard of derangement in their
-own minds, they have been disposed to consider no deviation
-from mental soundness as insanity, unless it exhibited the symptoms
-which their preconceived ideas had led them to suppose
-necessary, in order to constitute that disease. They have
-argued as if insanity were a specific disease invariably manifesting
-the same phenomena, and in this way definitions have
-been framed, by which the soundness of the intellect has been
-tested. It is hardly necessary to say how fallacious all such
-tests must be. The brain, like every other organ, is liable to
-a variety of diseases, in all of which the mental faculties are
-more or less affected. The danger of attempting to erect an
-arbitrary standard of insanity is this: it induces us to overlook
-the incipient symptoms of mental derangement, and to consider
-no deviation from soundness of intellect as insanity which
-does not come within the scope of our definition. The early
-symptoms of mental aberration are as much an evidence of the
-presence of insanity, as when the disease is more advanced,
-and the indications become so apparent that no one hesitates
-in pronouncing the individual mad. Medical men who have
-maintained that the act of suicide is not invariably the result
-of insanity have argued as if the mental ailment was always
-self-evident and easily detected; whereas, those who have
-had any experience in the matter know full well, that occasionally
-there are no diseases more difficult of detection than
-those which relate to a morbid condition of the mind. If an
-act of suicide has been committed, and the individual at the
-moment of perpetrating it did not manifest evident symptoms
-of insanity, the conclusion drawn is, that he was perfectly sane
-at the time. That the facts of the case do not warrant this
-inference must be apparent to those who consider the subject
-in an enlarged point of view. If we examine attentively the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-majority of cases of suicide, we shall find that the unfortunate
-persons have laboured, either for some time previously or at the
-very moment, under depression of spirits, anxiety of mind, and
-other symptoms of cerebral derangement. Very few cases of
-suicide take place in which you cannot trace the existence of
-previous mental depression, produced either by physical or
-moral agents. It may be said that lowness of spirits is not
-insanity; certainly not, according to the <i>legal</i> definition of the
-term; but we may always be assured, that if mental anxiety
-or perturbation be more than commensurate with the exciting
-cause, it may be presumed that the individual is labouring
-under the incipient indications of insanity.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">64</a> This view of
-the case is strengthened if an hereditary predisposition to the
-disease should also be present.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be said,” says Esquirol, “that there are individuals
-who, in the midst of affluence, grandeur, and pleasures, and in
-the full enjoyment of reason, have suddenly put an end to their
-existence, immediately after parting with their friends in good
-spirits, or after having written letters on business with perfect
-correctness. Can these be said to be insane when they commit
-suicide? Yes; most undoubtedly. Do not monomaniacs appear
-perfectly sane on all other subjects, till the particular idea
-is started which forms the burden of their hallucination? Are
-they not capable of curbing the expression of their delirium,
-and dissembling their aberration of intellect? It is the same
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</a></span>with sane individuals, over whom the suicidal idea tyrannizes.
-A physical pain, an unexpected impression, a moral affection, a
-recollection, an indiscreet proposition, the perusal of a passage
-in writing, will occasionally revive the thought and provoke
-the act of suicide, although the individual the instant before
-should be in perfect integrity of mind and body.”</p>
-
-<p>In general, most persons actually insane wish not only to be
-esteemed free from the malady, but to be considered as possessing
-considerable intellectual endowments; hence, <i>real</i> lunatics
-seldom allow the existence of their lunacy; but are always
-endeavouring to conceal from observation those lapses of
-thought, memory, and expression, which are tending every
-moment to betray them, and of the presence of which they are
-much oftener conscious than is generally apprehended or believed.
-Alexander Cruden, when suffering under his second
-and last attack of mental aberration, upon being asked whether
-he ever was mad, replied: “I am as mad now as I was formerly,
-and as mad then as I am now, that is to say, <i>not mad
-at any time</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Again, medical men who have reasoned against this opinion
-have forgotten entirely one peculiar, and a very remarkable
-feature of insanity—viz., the singular cunning of lunatics;
-how extremely difficult it is in many cases where <i>we know</i> the
-individual to be unquestionably mad, to make his delusion
-apparent. The case of the lunatic who indicted Dr. Monro
-for confining him in his asylum has often been cited. He
-brought an action against the Doctor at Westminster; and,
-although the man was subjected to a most severe examination
-and cross-examination, his insanity could not be detected.
-The trial was on the eve of being concluded, when Dr. Sims
-entered the court, and knowing the man’s peculiar delusion,
-he was requested to ask him a question. He did so, and his
-insanity instantly became apparent. He brought another action
-against Dr. Monro in the city of London, and, knowing that
-he had failed before by acknowledging his love for an imaginary
-princess, so remarkable a degree of cunning did he exhibit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-that one of the severest examinations to which a man was
-ever subjected in a court of justice could not induce the
-lunatic to disclose the delusion under which he was known to
-labour. This curious feature of insanity must be taken into
-consideration in forming an estimate of the presence of derangement
-in cases of suicide, and we must not hastily conclude,
-because insanity is not <i>self-evident</i>, that it does not exist.</p>
-
-<p>A merchant, fifty-five years of age, of a strong constitution,
-although of a lymphatic temperament, mild and gentle
-in his disposition, the father of a numerous family, and who had
-acquired a considerable fortune in business, experienced some
-domestic troubles, not sufficiently serious, however, to affect
-any one of a resolute character. About a year ago, he formed
-a large establishment for one of his sons, and shortly afterwards
-became very active, and expressed, contrary to his
-usual habits, the delight which he felt at his increasing prosperity.
-He was also more frequently absent from his warehouse
-and business than usual. But notwithstanding these
-trifling changes, neither his family, nor any of his friends or
-neighbours, suspected any disorder of his reason. One day,
-whilst he was from home, a travelling merchant brought to
-his house two pictures, and asked fifty louis for them, which
-he said was the price agreed on by a very respectable gentleman
-who had given his name and address. His son sent
-away both the pictures and the seller. On his return, the
-father did not mention his purchase; but the children began
-the conversation, alluding to the roguery of the merchant,
-and their refusal to pay him. The father became very angry,
-asserting that the pictures were very beautiful, that they were
-not dear, and that he was determined to purchase them. In
-the evening, the dispute became warmer, the patient flew into
-a passion, uttered threats, and at last became delirious. On
-the next day, he was confided to Esquirol’s care. His children,
-frightened at their father’s illness, and alarmed at the
-purchase which he had made, looked through their accounts;
-and great was their astonishment at seeing the bad state of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</a></span>
-their books, the numerous blanks which they presented, and
-the immense deficiency of cash. This irregularity had existed
-for more than six months. Had this discussion not taken
-place, one of the most honourable mercantile houses would
-have been compromised in a few days; for a bill of exchange
-of a considerable amount had become due, and no means
-had been taken to provide for it.</p>
-
-<p>A patient has been known to weep, and affect the deepest
-contrition for attempting suicide, when it has been proved
-that all the time he was meditating on the means of accomplishing
-his design. A workman was admitted into a French
-hospital, having a third time attempted his life. He appeared
-deeply mortified and broken-hearted that he should have suffered
-a relapse, and was much affected by the remonstrances
-of his physician. He promised faithfully, in tears, to abandon
-his rash resolve. Ten minutes afterwards, whilst on his road
-home, he perceived a piece of cord; he seized it, made a
-noose, put his head into it, and suspended himself from the
-branch of a tree, where he was found dead! Cases illustrative
-of the same fact are mentioned in another part of this
-work.</p>
-
-<p>Again, we must bear in mind that insanity is often as much
-a disease of the <i>moral</i> as of the intellectual faculties, and that
-it is possible for the intellect to be perfectly sound, and yet
-for insanity to be present. Moral derangement has not met
-with that consideration from the profession which its importance
-demands. Insanity often consists in a vitiated condition
-of the moral principle, independently of any delusion
-of the intellect; and in many cases of suicide, if we investigate
-their history, we shall find that the alienation has been of
-this character. A man, whose disposition naturally disposed
-him to vice, fancied that he had been guilty of committing
-a nameless offence, and, whilst labouring under this idea,
-blew out his brains. In this case, the intellect was unaffected;
-the derangement consisted in a perversion of the moral powers.
-Senile insanity, which has been recognised in our courts of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-law, is a derangement of the moral constitution. In cases of
-this description, it is possible for the person to be conscious
-of his infirmity, and to confess, with great apparent regret,
-his inability to control his feelings. “I am impotent, and not
-fit to live,” said a man, and accordingly cut his throat. If
-we admit the existence of an insanity which consists solely
-in a perversion of the moral powers, then we should hesitate
-in pronouncing <i>ex cathedrâ</i> that insanity is not present because
-no derangement of the intellectual faculties can be perceived.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. T. Mayo observes, that “no intellectual delusion need
-be present when self-destruction is coveted. But there must
-be an extinction of that moral sense which revolts from it
-on grounds independent of fear. Owing, however, to the
-systematic neglect of moral symptoms, the suicide is seldom
-recognised as possessing this destructive tendency until he has
-made an attempt upon his life; often, therefore, until all measures
-must be too late.”</p>
-
-<p>A very common feature of moral mania is a deep perversion
-of the social affections, whereby the feelings of kindness and
-attachment that flow from the relations of father, husband, and
-child, are replaced by a perpetual inclination to tease, worry,
-and embitter the existence of others. The ordinary scene of
-its manifestations is the patient’s own domestic circle, the
-peace and happiness of which are effectually destroyed by the
-outbreakings of his ungovernable temper, and even by acts
-of brutal ferocity. Frederic William of Prussia, father of
-Frederic the Great, undoubtedly laboured under this form of
-moral mania; and it furnishes a satisfactory explanation of
-his brutal treatment of his son, and his utter disregard of the
-feelings or comfort of any other member of his family. About
-a dozen years before his death, his health gave way under his
-constant debauches in drunkenness; he became hypochondriacal,
-and redoubled his usual religious austerities. He
-forbade his family to talk of any subject but religion, read
-them daily sermons, and compelled them to sing, punishing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-with the utmost severity any inattention to these exercises.
-The prince and his elder sister soon began to attract a proportionate
-share of his hostility. He obliged them to eat and
-drink unwholesome or nauseous articles, and would even spit
-in their dishes, addressing them only in the language of
-invective, and at times endeavouring to strike them with his
-crutch. About this time he attempted to strangle himself,
-and would have accomplished his design had not the queen
-come to his rescue. His brutality towards the prince arrived
-to such a pitch that he one morning seized him by the
-collar as he entered his bed-chamber, and began to beat
-him with a cane in the most cruel manner, till obliged
-to desist from pure exhaustion. On another occasion, shortly
-after, he seized his son by the hair, and threw him on the
-ground, beating him till he was tired, when he dragged him
-to a window, apparently for the purpose of throwing him out.
-A servant hearing the cries of the prince, came to his assistance,
-and delivered him from his hands. Not satisfied with
-treating him in this barbarous manner, he connived at the
-prince’s attempts to escape from his tyranny, in order that he
-might procure from a court-martial a sentence of death; and
-this even he was anxious to anticipate by endeavouring to
-run him through the body with his sword. Not succeeding
-in procuring his death by judicial proceedings, he kept him in
-confinement, and turned all his thoughts towards converting
-him to Christianity. At this time, we first find mention of
-any delusion connected with his son, though it probably
-existed before. In his correspondence with the chaplain to
-whom he had entrusted the charge of converting the prince,
-he speaks of him as one who had committed many and
-heinous sins against God and the king, as having a hardened
-heart, and being in the fangs of Satan. Even after he became
-satisfied with the repentance of the prince, he shewed no disposition
-to relax the severities of his confinement. He was
-kept in a miserable room, deprived of all the comforts and
-many of the necessaries of life, denied the use of pens, ink, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-paper, and allowed scarcely food enough to prevent starvation.
-His treatment of the princess was no less barbarous. She
-was also confined, and every effort used to make her situation
-thoroughly wretched, and though, after a few years, he relaxed
-his persecution of his children, the general tenour of his
-conduct towards his family and others evinced little improvement
-in his disorder, till the day of his death.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">65</a></p>
-
-<p>In considering this point it is important to remember that
-<i>the attempt at self-destruction is</i> <span class="smcap">OFTEN</span> <i>the</i> <span class="smcap">FIRST</span> <i>distinct overt
-act of insanity</i>. A young lady of delicate constitution, but
-previously in apparent health, started up one day from the
-tea-table, rushed to the window, and endeavoured to throw
-herself out. It required several persons to restrain her until
-a strait-waistcoat could be procured. She remained insane
-from that time until the day of her death, with very partial
-glimmerings of reason. “Fortunately,” says Mr. Chevalier,
-who relates the case, “her life was not long protracted.”</p>
-
-<p>It has been inferred, that when an unsuccessful act of
-suicide has been committed, and the person expresses his
-regret for what he has been guilty of, that we are justified in
-concluding that the mind was sane when the suicide was
-attempted. The effort which Sir Samuel Romilly is said
-to have made to stop the hemorrhage after having cut his
-throat, has been cited by a celebrated living authority as an
-evidence of his previous sanity.<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">66</a> We must bear in mind that
-many cases of suicide result from derangement of mind
-dependent on cerebral congestion.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases, we can imagine a person insane when the
-act of self-destruction is attempted, and sane immediately
-afterwards. The loss of blood which a person would sustain
-from an extensive wound of the throat, particularly when, as
-is often the case, some large vessel is wounded, would instantly
-relieve the brain of the superabundant blood which had been
-oppressing it, and deranging its manifestations, and thus
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</a></span>producing a return of sanity. That this was the fact in Sir
-Samuel Romilly’s case is evident from its history. There
-cannot be a shadow of doubt that he was insane when he cut
-his throat; and his apparent desire to live after the act was
-committed, may be attributed to the relief which he had
-derived from the loss of blood.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. T. Miller, of Spalding, in a fit of delirium, cut his
-throat so dreadfully that after languishing three days, he died.
-He manifested during this interval the utmost contrition for
-his offence, declaring he knew not what he had done until he
-found the blood streaming from his wound. He dictated his
-will, and talked rationally with his friends till his dissolution.<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">67</a></p>
-
-<p>A merchant in the city, not many months back, met with
-some losses in business. His mind became affected to a certain
-extent; he felt a strong desire to kill himself; but being a
-man of education and enlarged capacity, he fought most resolutely
-against this inclination. He had been exposed during
-one day to the influence of circumstances which caused great
-mental depression. He said to his head-clerk, previously to
-his leaving his counting-house, that his head felt heavy and
-oppressed, and he had a <i>presentiment</i> that something would
-happen before the morning. The clerk suggested the propriety
-of his having medical advice, but he did not think
-proper to do so. In this state he went to bed. In the middle
-of the night he awoke in a state of extreme agitation; no
-language could convey an adequate idea of his feelings,
-and suicide was the only act which held out the hope of
-relief. In this state he rose from his bed, called up the
-servants, and commanded them to run for the surgeon. A
-professional gentleman who lived close by was soon in attendance,
-and the moment he entered the room the patient
-exclaimed, “Bleed me, or I shall cut my throat!” The operation
-was instantly performed, and as the blood flowed from
-the vein the patient exclaimed, “Thank God! I have been
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</a></span>saved from committing self-murder.” Every disposition to
-suicide was immediately removed.</p>
-
-<p>The following is an extract of a letter found in the pocket
-of Captain Aitkins, of the Pembroke Fusileers, who committed
-suicide:—“As some inquiry may be instituted as to
-the cause of my death, I think it necessary to state that it was
-inflicted by my own hand, partly from pecuniary embarrassment,
-and partly from the effect of <i>strong nervous malady</i>,
-which has fixed itself on my spirits so as to render life insupportable.”
-In this case we have no hesitation in asserting,
-that if the brain could have been relieved of the unnatural
-weight which oppressed it, this poor man would not have
-stained his hand with his own blood.</p>
-
-<p>In many cases the delusion of the intellect is so self-evident
-that no one questions the existence of insanity. A
-respectable Scotch merchant, near Pimlico, committed suicide
-by cutting his throat. He fancied the devil was in him; he
-asserted he could feel him in his throat. On examining his
-room after his death, two wills were discovered, in one of
-which he desires his executors to employ a surgeon to open
-his body, that the devil might be found, secured, and destroyed;
-and in this way, he says, he will be prevented from
-injuring any one else.</p>
-
-<p>Many other cases could be cited in which the act of suicide
-was clearly traceable to mental derangement, were it considered
-necessary further to illustrate this point. Much evil
-has resulted from the opinions which the profession have entertained
-relative to the absence of insanity in cases of those
-who have exhibited a disposition to destroy themselves. In
-this matter, the principle which the great Edmund Burke
-applied to politics is equally applicable to medicine—“We
-had better be blamed for too anxious apprehension, than be
-ruined by too confident a security.”</p>
-
-<p>It is a safe doctrine always to presume the presence of insanity
-in those who have exhibited a desire to commit suicide.
-A person who has once attempted to take away his life cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</a></span>
-be trusted, notwithstanding he manifest the usual evidences
-of a sane intellect. It is astonishing to consider the ingenious
-tricks and stratagems to which a person whose mind is bent on
-self-destruction will have recourse in order to effect his purpose.
-We find recorded the case of a woman who was tried for her life,
-and who, in order that she might escape from the hands of the
-executioner, applied a hundred leeches to her body, hoping to
-bleed to death. Another female exposed herself to a swarm
-of bees; and we read of an apothecary who endeavoured to
-beat out his brains with his own pestle.</p>
-
-<p>A builder, who had been found fault with by his employer,
-became melancholy, and finally determined upon self-destruction.
-He hurried to a steep part of the high road, where
-vehicles of all descriptions were compelled to put on the drag
-in the descent. Here he waited until a heavily loaded wagon
-reached the spot, when he seized hold of one of the wheels
-that was not locked, and applying his body to the circumference,
-was instantly crushed.</p>
-
-<p>A woman cut her throat severely, but not fatally. Her
-friends could not be prevailed on to believe that she was insane.
-She recovered, but shewed such evidences of that unhappy
-condition, through the whole progress of her cure, as
-were sufficiently unambiguous to every competent judge. She
-had speculated unsuccessfully in the lottery, and it was insisted
-that the rash act was solely to be ascribed to her disappointment
-in this venture. Soon after her recovery, and when
-her affairs had assumed a more comfortable train, she went up
-one day into her bed-room, and being thought to stay longer
-than was necessary, a person went to see after her, and found
-her sitting before a dressing-glass, with a basin under her chin,
-and a knife in her hand, cutting her throat again, as deliberately
-as a surgeon would have performed an operation. She
-recovered this time also, and afterwards made a third and
-successful attempt.</p>
-
-<p>A maniac who was extremely turbulent, and had evinced
-a strong propensity to destroy himself, was confined, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-everything taken from him which could be imagined in
-any way capable of being instrumental for such a purpose.
-He was remarked on one occasion to be unusually quiet, and
-on his keeper looking through an aperture in his apartment,
-he discovered him scooping out his eyes with a bit of broken
-china found by him in the mattress, which he had torn to
-pieces; and with his face full in the glare of the sun, he had
-completely accomplished this horrid act before the door
-could be opened to secure him.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman of some political consequence in France had
-an attack of apoplexy, from which he recovered by copious
-bloodletting. Some years afterwards, he had a fall from his
-horse, and was wounded severely in his head, the injury occasioning
-fever and delirium of some weeks’ duration. After
-this accident, he evinced some marks of mental aberration. He
-threw up his post under government, and retired to his
-chateau in the country, for the purpose of concocting, as he
-said, a scheme for <i>uniting the people of all nations</i>. To prepare
-a suitable edifice for this philanthropic union, he began
-to pull down his chateau; but being interrupted by his friends,
-he came to Paris, and one day jumped off the Pont-Neuf into
-the middle of the Seine. He swam manfully, and reached
-the shore in safety. He was so proud of this exploit that he
-considered himself invulnerable, and began next day to run
-in the way of carriages or fiacres he met in the street, calling to
-the drivers that they need not mind him, as he could not be
-injured! He was seized and carried home, but in a day or
-two jumped out of the chamber window into the street. He
-was then placed in M. Esquirol’s establishment, and considered
-as an incurable maniac.</p>
-
-<p>During the French revolution, a case of mania without
-delirium gave rise to an extraordinary scene at the Asylum
-de Bicêtre. The mob, after the massacre of the prisons,
-broke like madmen into the above hospital, under pretence of
-emancipating certain victims of the old tyranny, whom it had
-endeavoured to confound with the maniacal residents of that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</a></span>
-house. They proceeded in arms from cell to cell, interrogating
-the prisoners, and passing such of them as were manifestly
-insane. A maniac, bound in chains, arrested their
-attention by the most bitter complaints which he preferred,
-with apparent justice and rationality. “Is it not shameful,”
-said he, “that I should be bound in chains, and confounded
-with madmen.” He defied them to accuse him of any act of
-impropriety or extravagance. “It is an instance of the most
-flagrant injustice!” He conjured the strangers to put an end
-to such oppression, and to become his liberators. His complaints
-excited amongst the armed mob loud murmurs and
-imprecations against the governor of the hospital. They immediately
-sent for that gentleman, and, with their sabres at
-his breast, demanded an explanation of his conduct. When
-he attempted to justify himself, they imposed silence upon
-him. To no purpose did he adduce, from his own experience,
-similar instances of maniacs who were free from delirium,
-but at the same time extremely dangerous from their
-outrageous passions. They answered him only with abuse;
-and had it not been for the courage of his wife, who protected
-him with her own person, he would have been sacrificed
-to their fury. They commanded him to release the
-maniac, whom they led in triumph with reiterated shouts
-of “Vive la République!” The sight of so many armed men,
-their loud and confused shouts, and their faces flushed with
-wine, roused the madman’s fury. He seized with a vigorous
-grasp the sabre of his next neighbour, brandished it about
-with great violence, and wounded several of his liberators.
-Had he not been promptly mastered, he would soon have
-made them repent their ill-timed humanity. The savage mob
-then thought proper to lead him back to his cell, and, with
-shame and reluctance, yielded to the voice of justice and experience.</p>
-
-<p>Many modern and ancient cases of suicide have been referred
-to in support of the opinion that insanity is not necessarily present
-under such circumstances. The conclusions drawn from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-history of ancient cases, such as Cato, Cleopatra, Cassius, &amp;c.,
-cannot fairly be made use of in the present inquiry; and yet
-if we examine these instances, which have been so triumphantly
-brought forward as incontrovertible proofs that it is possible
-for a person with a mind perfectly unclouded and free from
-even the semblance of aberration to commit suicide, we
-shall discover that they are not such good illustrations in support
-of the doctrines which they who cite them are anxious
-to uphold.</p>
-
-<p>The suicide of Cato has often been referred to, and is considered
-a most apt and conclusive instance in point. We
-admit this case is one of great importance, inasmuch as it has
-been held up as an example to others of a man who sacrificed
-his own life to promote the interests of his country. How
-many have been induced to plunge recklessly into another
-world in imitation of the conduct of the Roman hero!</p>
-
-<p>Was Cato perfectly sane when he sacrificed his life? We
-are disposed to think not. His whole conduct immediately
-preceding the last fatal act of his life evinces the extreme
-mental agitation under which he laboured; despair had taken
-possession of his faculties; the ambition and the hopes of
-years were prostrated in a moment to the dust, and to escape
-from a long life of tyranny, he perished on his own sword.</p>
-
-<p>Many modern cases have been cited as evidence of the
-coolness and collectedness which many have exhibited in the
-act of suicide. The Rev. Mr. Colton, the accomplished author
-of “Lacon,” is said to have been sane when he committed self-destruction.
-He shot himself with a pistol after having written
-the following apophthegm: “When life is unbearable, death is
-desirable, and suicide justifiable.” The last few weeks of
-Colton’s life were embittered by acute mental and physical
-suffering. He was involved in great pecuniary difficulties,
-and was dependent for the necessaries of life on the charity of
-his friends. Independently of this, he laboured under a very
-painful disease, and it was when exposed to this combination
-of misery that he committed suicide. His biographer states<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</a></span>
-that there was no doubt of Colton’s insanity at the time of his
-death; it was evident to all who were about him. The
-evidence in Sir Samuel Romilly’s case is as strongly corroborative
-of his derangement as in that of poor Colton’s. At the
-time, he was suffering from the loss of a wife to whom he was
-most dotingly attached, and the cerebral derangement was so
-apparent that his physician ordered him to be cupped in the
-nape of the neck a short period previously to his killing
-himself. Lord Castlereagh’s insanity was also clearly manifested.
-His whole conduct on the day he cut his throat led
-irresistibly to the conclusion that he was not in his right senses.
-His strange manner was noticed some time previously in the
-House of Commons. The Duke of Wellington saw the necessity
-of medical advice, and had a physician sent to him; in fact,
-the evidence was as strong as evidence could be, and no one
-at the time questioned the correctness of the verdict. There
-were many peculiar circumstances connected with his lordship’s
-early history which ought to be borne in mind before we conclude
-that he was of sane mind at the moment of his suicide.</p>
-
-<p>It is now more than thirty-five years ago that the following
-singular circumstance occurred to the Marquis of Londonderry:
-He was on a visit to a gentleman in the north of Ireland.
-The mansion was such a one as spectres are fabled to inhabit.
-The apartment, also, which was appropriated to his lordship
-was calculated to foster such a tone of feeling from its antique
-character; from the dark and richly carved panels of its
-wainscot; from its yawning chimney, looking like the entrance
-to a tomb; from the portraits of grim men and women arrayed
-in orderly procession along the walls, and scowling a contemptuous
-enmity against the degenerate invader of their
-gloomy bowers and venerable halls; and from the vast, dusky,
-ponderous, and complicated draperies that concealed the windows,
-and hung with the gloomy grandeur of funeral trappings
-about the hearse-like piece of furniture that was
-destined for his bed. Lord Londonderry examined his
-chamber; he made himself acquainted with the forms and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</a></span>
-faces of the ancient possessors of the mansion as they sat
-upright in their ebony frames to receive his salutation; and
-then, after dismissing his valet, he retired to bed. His candle
-had not long been extinguished when he perceived a light
-gleaming on the draperies of the lofty canopy over his head.
-Conscious that there was no fire in his grate; that the curtains
-were closed; that the chamber had been in perfect
-darkness but a few minutes previously, he supposed that some
-intruder must have entered into his apartment; and, turning
-round hastily to the side from whence the light proceeded, he,
-to his infinite astonishment, saw not the form of any human
-visitor, but the figure of a fair boy surrounded by a halo of
-glory. The spirit stood at some distance from his bed. Certain
-that his own faculties were not deceiving him, but suspecting
-he might be imposed on by the ingenuity of some of the
-numerous guests who were then inmates of the castle, Lord
-Londonderry advanced towards the figure; it retreated before
-him; as he advanced, the apparition retired, until it entered
-the gloomy arch of the capacious chimney, and then sunk
-into the earth. Lord Londonderry returned to his bed, but
-not to rest; his mind was harassed by the consideration of
-the extraordinary event which had occurred to him. Was it
-real, or the effect of an excited imagination? The mystery
-was not so easily solved.</p>
-
-<p>He resolved in the morning to make no allusion to what
-had occurred the previous night, until he had watched carefully
-the faces of all the family, to discover whether any
-deception had been practised. When the guests assembled at
-breakfast, his lordship searched in vain for those latent smiles,
-those conscious looks, that silent communication between
-parties, by which the authors and abettors of such domestic
-conspiracies are generally betrayed. Everything apparently
-proceeded in its ordinary course; the conversation was animated
-and uninterrupted, and no indication was given that
-any one present had been engaged in the trick. At last, the
-hero of the tale found himself compelled to narrate the sin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</a></span>gular
-event of the preceding night. He related every particular
-connected with the appearance of the spectre. It
-excited much interest among the auditors, and various were
-the explanations offered. At last, the gentleman who owned
-the castle interrupted the various surmises by observing that
-“the circumstance which had just been recounted must
-naturally appear very extraordinary to those who have not
-been inmates long at the castle, and are not conversant with
-the legends of his family;” then, turning to Lord Londonderry,
-he said, “You have seen the Radiant Boy. Be content; it is
-an omen of prosperous fortunes. I would rather that this subject
-should not again be mentioned.”<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">68</a></p>
-
-<p>The case of Chatterton—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i4">“The marvellous boy,</div>
-<div class="line">The sleepless soul that perish’d in his pride”—</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>has been adduced; but no one acquainted with the history
-of this unfortunate youth would doubt for one moment that
-he was insane. Chatterton possessed naturally acute sensibilities;
-he was unquestionably a man of genius. When
-the forgery of Rowley’s poems was detected, his mind received
-a severe shock; friend after friend forsook him. All
-his bright and cheering hopes were levelled to the earth; his
-character for integrity was gone; the world, which had been
-so eager to court his society and friendship, turned its back
-upon him; misfortunes followed in rapid succession, until he
-was frenzied by mental agony and physical suffering. At the
-time of his death he was in want of the common necessaries
-of life, realizing the affecting picture of the poet—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Homeless, near a thousand homes he stood,</div>
-<div class="line">And near a thousand tables pined and wanted food.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Under such circumstances, it is not surprising that poor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</a></span>Chatterton’s mind should have been overthrown, and that he
-should have been led to commit suicide. A few days before
-his death, he wrote to his mother in these terms:—“I am
-about to quit for ever my ungrateful country. I shall exchange
-it for the deserts of Africa, where tigers are a thousand
-times more merciful than man.” A very important fact
-connected with Chatterton’s case ought to be borne in mind—viz.,
-that insanity was in his family.</p>
-
-<p>We have entered at some length into the consideration of this
-question, because we felt it to be one of great importance.
-In forming an estimate of the condition of a person’s mind
-who has committed suicide, the coroner and jury should make
-particular inquiries into the following points:—First, as to
-state of mind for some time prior to the act. In many, and
-in fact, in all cases, if proper evidence can be obtained, it will
-be discovered that the person has laboured under depression
-of spirits, either resulting from physical or mental causes.
-Inquiry should be instituted as to the presence of any disease
-of the stomach or liver which may have operated injuriously
-on the mind. In many cases it will be found that the suicide
-has received at some period of his life a blow on his head,
-giving rise to cerebral injury, which may remain latent for a
-great length of time, and suddenly manifest itself. Is insanity,
-particularly suicidal insanity, in the family? What was the
-person’s natural character? Was he liable to sudden bursts of
-passion? Had his mind been dwelling on the subject of
-suicide? Was he monomaniacal, or remarkable for any peculiar
-eccentricity? All these various but important questions
-should be carefully sifted, should the coroner entertain any
-doubts as to the presence of mental derangement in such
-cases. In another chapter we have considered the unjustifiableness
-of a jury ever returning a verdict of <i>felo-de-se</i>.</p>
-<hr />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br /><br />
-
-<small>SUICIDE IN CONNEXION WITH MEDICAL
-JURISPRUDENCE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">The importance of medical evidence—The questions which medical men have
-to consider in these cases—Signs of death from strangulation—Singular
-positions in which the bodies of those who have committed suicide have
-been found—The particulars of the Prince de Condé’s case—On the possibility
-of voluntary strangulation—General Pichegru’s singular case—The
-melancholy history of Marc Antonie Calas—How to discover whether
-a person was dead before thrown into water—Singular cases—Admiral
-Caracciolo—Drowning in a bath—The points to keep in view in cases
-of suspicious death—Was Sellis murdered?—Death from wounds—The
-case of the Earl of Essex.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Medical</span> men are frequently called upon in our courts of law
-to give evidence in cases where it is doubtful whether persons
-found dead were murdered or committed suicide. The questions
-involved in these judicial inquiries are of great public
-importance, and it is the sacred duty of medical men, for the
-sake of their own characters, and for a much higher consideration—for
-the ends of justice, to make themselves thoroughly
-conversant with all the evidence which can be brought to bear
-in the elucidation of such important questions. Our criminal
-annals are replete with illustrations in which individuals accused
-of the atrocious crime of murder have been saved from
-a dreadful and ignominious death by medical evidence. Cases
-also are recorded in which death has been ascribed to suicide,
-but which after investigation have been proved to have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-effected by other hands. In doubtful cases of this description,
-the evidence of the medical man is of the highest
-importance; without it, in the great majority of cases, justice
-would be defeated.</p>
-
-<p>In the cases of persons found hanging, two questions naturally
-suggest themselves to the mind:—1. Whether the individual
-was suspended before or after death. 2. Whether it was
-an act of suicide or murder. It is possible, and such cases
-have occurred, that a person may have been hanged up after
-having been murdered, or may have endeavoured to destroy
-himself by firearms, or by cutting his throat, and suspend himself
-afterwards, not being able to effect his purpose in any other
-way. In the first case we might mistake murder for suicide;
-and in the second, suicide for assassination. The following
-are the signs of death from strangulation:—The countenance
-is livid and distorted; the eyes protrude, and are often suffused
-with blood; the tongue projects and is wounded by the
-teeth. If the rope be placed below the cricoid cartilage, the
-tongue will protrude; but if it presses above the thyroid cartilage,
-the tongue will not be seen in the position described. It
-was formerly the generally received opinion that persons who
-were hanged died of apoplexy; but the experiments of Sir
-B. Brodie and other physiologists clearly prove that death is
-owing to suffocation. The livid or depressed circle which
-the rope is said to make round the neck is pronounced by
-M. Klein to be an uncertain sign; he saw fifteen cases of suicide
-in which it was not discovered. Remer, of Breslaw, who has
-recently directed his mind to the consideration of this important
-point, found, out of one hundred cases of persons who
-died from strangulation, eighty-nine with sugillation on the
-neck in an evident manner. In addition to the signs mentioned,
-others have been enumerated. The fingers are said to
-be found bent, the nails blue, hands nearly closed, with swelling
-of the chest, shoulders, arms, and hands.</p>
-
-<p>If the body be not suspended, but touches, more or less, the
-ground or floor, while the cord is not tight enough for the pur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</a></span>pose
-of strangulation, and there be no manifestations of any
-other means of death, there can hardly be room to doubt as to
-self-murder. It is true that the mere resting of the toes
-takes away but little of the character of suspension, but we
-may meet with stronger cases. A few years ago, a man, aged
-seventy-five, destroyed himself at Castle Cary, in the morning,
-by fixing a cord round his neck while sitting on the
-bed-side, and leaning forward till his purpose was accomplished.
-His wife, who had for years been bedridden, and was
-therefore not likely to have been very fast asleep, was in the
-room during the transaction, and knew nothing of what was
-going on. A prisoner hung himself in a gaol by fastening the
-cord to one of the window-bars, and pushing himself away
-from it with his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Persons have both wounded and hung themselves. This
-may be effected by placing the cord in a wrong position, which
-would protract the person’s sufferings, and compel him to struggle
-and make violent efforts to kill himself. Ballard relates,
-that a young priest, having first cut his throat to a certain
-extent, hung himself with his robe.<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">69</a> In cases like these there
-can be little difficulty in ascertaining the real cause of death.</p>
-
-<p>In a memoir published in a French journal,<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">70</a> there are
-related several instances of self-destruction by hanging, where
-the bodies were found in the most extraordinary positions and
-attitudes. A man was discovered in a granary hanging by a cotton
-handkerchief, made fast to a rope which stretched across;
-the knees were bent, so that the legs formed a right angle backwards;
-the feet were suspended on a heap of grain, over
-which the knees hung at a distance of a few inches. A prisoner
-was found suspended in a vertical position, with his
-heels resting on a window-stool. An Englishman, a prisoner
-in Paris, hung himself in his cell, which was an apartment
-with an arched roof, and at the lower part of it was a grated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</a></span>window, the highest part of which was not near the height of
-a man. Nevertheless, he hung himself to this grating, and was
-found almost sitting down, with his legs stretched out before,
-and his hips within a foot and a half of the ground. Another
-case is related of a man whose attitude was similar to the case
-first described. He had suspended himself to a large iron
-pin driven into the wall to support the bed-curtains, and his
-feet, bent at a right angle, rested on the bed, while his knees
-approached it within a few inches. A female suspended herself
-so low that, in order to accomplish her purpose, she was
-obliged to stretch out her legs, one before resting on the heel,
-the other behind resting on the toes. A female was found
-stretched at the foot of her bed, the legs, thighs, and left hip
-lying on the floor; the upper part of the body was raised, and
-suspended by a cord fixed to the neck, and fastened to the
-hospital bed.</p>
-
-<p>A patient in La Charité was found one morning hanging by
-the rope which was attached to the head of his bed. He had
-fastened this by a loop round his neck, but his body was so retained,
-that when discovered he was on his knees by the side
-of his bed.</p>
-
-<p>In 1832, at the west end of the town, a man was found
-hanging in his room, with his knees bent forwards and his feet
-resting upon the floor. He had evidently been dead for some
-time, since cadaverous rigidity had already commenced. The
-manner in which this man had committed suicide was as follows:—He
-had made a slip knot with one end of his apron,
-(he was a working mechanic,) and having placed his neck in
-this, he threw the other end of the apron over the top of the
-door, and shutting the door behind him, he had succeeded in
-wedging it in firmly. At the same moment he had probably
-raised himself on tip-toe, and then allowed himself to fall; in
-this way he died. The weight of his body had apparently
-sufficed to drag down a part of the apron, for it seemed as if
-it had been very much stretched.</p>
-
-<p>In October, 1833, a gentleman who was employed as an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</a></span>
-assistant in a respectable school in the neighbourhood of London,
-was discovered by some of his pupils, one morning, in a sitting
-posture, on a dark part of a staircase of the house. Upon examining
-further, it was ascertained that he was completely dead,
-and that he was suspended to the banisters by a cravat firmly tied
-round his neck. The deceased had evidently made two similar
-attempts at self-destruction before he succeeded, as part of a
-silk pocket-handkerchief and his braces were found suspended
-to other parts of the banisters. It seemed scarcely possible to
-those who discovered him that the deceased could really have
-accomplished suicide by hanging in such a situation, for his
-body was resting entirely on the stairs, and, making every
-allowance for the slipping of the ligature by which he was
-suspended, still his feet must have been throughout in contact
-with the stair.</p>
-
-<p>There have been few medico-legal investigations of late
-years which have excited greater interest than the case of the
-Duke de Bourbon, in France.</p>
-
-<p>On the 27th August, 1830, the duke was found suspended
-in his bed-room, in the chateau of St. Leu. An inquest was
-held the same morning on the body, and from the evidence of
-the witnesses, as well as from the reports of the physicians and
-surgeons who examined it, a verdict was returned to the
-effect that the duke had committed suicide in a fit of temporary
-insanity. This event did not excite much notice until
-the contents of his will were made public.</p>
-
-<p>The deceased, it appears, had made his will in favour of the
-Baroness de Feuchéres, a female who had lived with him for
-some years, bequeathing to her the whole of his immense estates,
-and leaving the Duke d’Aumale, the youngest son of the king
-of the French, residuary legatee. The Princes de Rohan, heirs
-by collateral descent to the deceased, thus finding themselves
-deprived of an expected inheritance, attempted to set aside the
-will, alleging that undue influence had been exercised over
-him. The cause came on for hearing before the First Chamber
-of the Civil Tribunal of Paris, in December, 1831, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</a></span>
-excited considerable attention, not so much in consequence of
-the dispute concerning the validity of the will, as of the question
-which was raised during the trial,—whether the duke had
-committed suicide, or whether he had been murdered, and
-afterwards suspended, in order to defeat the ends of justice.</p>
-
-<p>The facts of the case, collected from the <i>procés verbaux</i>,
-are as follows:—The deceased had naturally partaken of the
-alarm which had diffused itself throughout France in consequence
-of the events of the revolution of 1830. Some of his
-most intimate friends declared that, for some time previously
-to his death, his mind had been filled with the most gloomy
-forebodings as to what this new order of things would bring
-about. On the morning of the 27th, his servant went, as
-usual, to his bed-room door about eight o’clock; but receiving
-no answer on knocking, he became alarmed. Madame de
-Feuchéres then accompanied the valet to the door of the
-room, which was fastened on the inside; and receiving no
-reply after calling to the duke in a loud voice, she ordered it
-to be broken open. On entering the apartment, the body of
-the deceased was found suspended from the fastening at the
-top of the window-sash by means of a linen handkerchief,
-attached to another which completely encircled the neck.
-The head was inclined a little to the chest; the tongue protruded
-from the mouth; the face was discoloured; a mucous
-discharge issued from the mouth and nostrils; the arms hung
-down; the fists were clenched. The extremities of both feet
-touched the carpet of the room, the point of suspension being
-about six feet and a half from the floor; the heels were elevated,
-and the knees half bent. The deceased was partly
-undressed; the legs were uncovered, and had some marks of
-injury on them. Among other points of circumstantial evidence,
-it was remarked that a chair stood near the window to
-which the deceased was suspended, and the bed looked as if
-it had been lain on.</p>
-
-<p>The medical witnesses, who examined the body soon after
-its discovery, stated that they found it cold, and the extremi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</a></span>ties
-rigid, from which they inferred that the deceased had
-been dead eight or ten hours. This would have fixed the
-time of his death at midnight of August 26th. The body
-underwent a second examination, a report of which was furnished
-to the legal authorities, on the following day. Five
-medical men were present at the inspection; and they gave it
-as their opinion, from the <i>post mortem</i> appearances—1st, that
-the deceased had died by hanging; and, 2ndly, from the absence
-of all marks of violence or resistance about the person
-or clothes of the deceased, and other facts, that he had destroyed
-himself. They considered that the contusion on one
-arm, and the excoriations observed on both legs, must have
-arisen from the rubbing of these parts against the projecting
-rail of the chair near the window. The mark on the neck of
-the deceased they described to be large, oblique, and extending
-upwards to the mastoid process.</p>
-
-<p>General evidence was given to shew that the duke had meditated
-self-destruction, and had conversed about it with some
-of the witnesses. On the morning of the 28th, some fragments
-of paper, which had been written on, were taken from
-the grate of his chamber; these were carefully put together
-by one of the legal inspectors; and among a few disjointed
-sentences, indicating despair and a dread of impending
-danger, were the following:—“It is only left for me to die
-in wishing prosperity to the French people and my country.
-Adieu for ever!” Here followed his signature, and a request
-to be interred at Vincennes, near the body of his son, the
-Duke d’Enghien. It is necessary to observe, that no noise or
-disturbance was heard in the bedroom on the night of the
-deceased’s death.</p>
-
-<p>On the other side it was contended that the duke was not
-unusually melancholy before his death; that the supposition
-of suicide was inadmissible in a moral point of view, and
-indeed was physically impossible, from the circumstances.
-One person argued that he could not have made the knots
-seen in the handkerchiefs; another, that he could not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</a></span>
-reached so high above his head to have suspended himself,
-and that the chair could not have been used in any manner
-to assist him; while a third affirmed, that a person might be
-suspended in the position in which the body was discovered,
-without death ensuing. The circumstance of the door being
-fastened on the inside, was accounted for by supposing that
-the bolt had been pushed to from the outside. The duke had
-been heard to condemn suicide; he had made an appointment
-for the following day; and had attended to many little
-circumstances, such as winding up his watch the night previously,
-and noting his losses at play;—facts which were
-forcibly urged as being opposed to the supposition of his
-having destroyed himself.</p>
-
-<p>To combat the medical evidence, it was assumed that the
-deceased was strangled or suffocated, and was afterwards
-hanged, by assassins. Several schemes were devised by the
-medical witnesses on this side of the question, to account for
-the manner in which the supposed murder was committed.
-According to some, a handkerchief might have been tightened
-round the deceased’s neck by one assassin, while another forcibly
-held his legs under the bed-clothes, by which the lesions
-already described would have been produced; or instead of
-being strangled by a handkerchief, he might have been suffocated
-by a pillow placed over his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>The body might then have been dragged across the room
-to be suspended; and if during this time the hand of one of
-the assassins had been rudely thrust between the cravat and
-the neck, the excoriation and mark seen on the skin might be
-easily accounted for.</p>
-
-<p>The counsel for the appellants remarked, that the want of
-a line in writing, to withdraw from all suspicion his attendants,
-and even Madame de Feuchéres, was remarkable, as
-this <i>latter precaution</i> had suggested itself <i>to almost every suicide</i>.
-He condemned those engaged in the anatomical examination
-of the body, as having been guilty of culpable
-mismanagement. He ridiculed the idea that the duke, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">254</a></span>
-reported by the two physicians consulted, had probably come
-to his death through asphyxia by strangulation. He contended
-that all the appearances on the skin of the neck,
-where no ecchymosis, <i>as is usual in persons hung alive</i>, was
-visible, <i>shewed that death had preceded the hanging of the
-body</i>.<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">71</a></p>
-
-<p>Conflicting as the evidence was in this case, we think no
-impartial mind, after maturely considering all the physical
-facts and moral circumstances connected with the Prince de
-Condé’s death, can entertain any other opinion than that he
-sacrificed his own life. The case is one of great interest;
-and the minute particulars detailed in the French journal are
-worthy of the perusal of every medical man.</p>
-
-<p>It has been doubted whether voluntary strangulation was
-possible, but we have too many cases on record to allow us
-to question the probability of such an occurrence. An individual
-was found strangled in a hay-loft by a handkerchief
-which had been tightened by a stick. A Malay, who, on
-board of a man-of-war in the East Indies, had made repeated
-attempts to commit suicide, at last effected his purpose in the
-following manner:—He tied a handkerchief round his neck,
-and with a small stick twisted it several times, and then secured
-it behind his ear, to prevent its untwisting. Jealousy
-was the cause assigned for the suicide.</p>
-
-<p>General Pichegru was found strangled in prison during the
-consulate of Buonaparte. The case gave rise to various suspicions.
-The body was found lying in bed on the left side,
-in an easy attitude, with the knees bent, and the arms lying
-down by the side, with a black silk handkerchief twisted
-tightly round the neck, by means of a stick passed under it.
-The cheek was torn by the ends of the stick in its rotations.
-It was established that he had been guilty of suicide.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">255</a></span></p>
-<p>A very important lesson is to be learned from the history
-of the following case, which Dr. Beck has published in his
-“Medical Jurisprudence.” This is but one of many cases in
-which the innocent have been accused, and have suffered for
-crimes of which it has been subsequently proved they were
-innocent.</p>
-
-<p>Marc Antoine Calas was the son of John Calas, a merchant
-of Toulouse, aged seventy years, of great probity,
-and a Protestant. He was twenty-eight years of age, of
-a robust habit, but melancholy turn of mind. He was a
-student of law, and becoming irritated at the difficulties he
-experienced (in consequence of not being a Catholic) concerning
-his licence, he resolved to hang himself. This he
-executed by fastening the cord to a billet of wood placed on
-the folding doors which led from his father’s shop to his storeroom.
-Two hours after, he was found lifeless. The parents
-unfortunately removed the cord from the body, and never
-exhibited it to shew in what manner his death was accomplished.
-No examination was made. The people, stimulated
-by religious prejudice, carried the body to the town-house,
-where it was the next day examined by two medical men,
-who, without viewing the cord, or the place where the death
-had been consummated, declared that he had been strangled.
-On the strength of this, the father was condemned by the
-parliament of Toulouse, in 1761, to be broken on the wheel.
-He expired with protestations to Heaven of his innocence.</p>
-
-<p>Reflection, however, returned when it was too late. It was
-recollected that the son had been of a melancholy turn of
-mind; that no noise had been heard in the house while the
-deed was doing; that his clothes were not in the least ruffled;
-that a single mark only was found from the cord, and which
-indicated suspension by suicide; and in addition to these,
-that the dress proper for the dead was found lying on the
-counter. Voltaire espoused the cause of the injured family,
-and attracted the eyes of all Europe to this judicial murder.
-The cause was carried up to the council of state, who, on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">256</a></span>
-19th May, 1765, reversed the decree of parliament, and vindicated
-the memory of John Calas.<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">72</a></p>
-
-<p>Many cases occur in which it is impossible to decide
-whether the person was dead before being thrown into the
-water. The attention of the jurist ought to be directed to
-the condition of the ground in the neighbourhood of the
-pond, to ascertain whether any signs exist of a struggle
-having taken place. In the case of Mr. Taylor, who was
-murdered at Hornsey, in December, 1818, marks of footsteps,
-deep in the ground, were discovered near the New River;
-and on taking out the body, <i>the hands were found clenched,
-and contained grass, which he had torn from the bank</i>. The
-appearance of wounds on the body will often lead to, or assist
-in, the formation of a correct opinion, as to the cause of
-death. These facts are, however, very often fallacious.
-Instances have occurred in which persons determined upon
-suicide have endeavoured to kill themselves with sharp instruments,
-and not effecting their purpose, have subsequently
-thrown themselves into the water. Again, persons may, in
-the act of drowning themselves, receive severe injuries, by
-being propelled against rocks and stakes by the force of the
-current.</p>
-
-<p>A few years ago, a man, who had leaped from each of the
-three bridges with impunity, undertook to repeat the exploit
-for a wager. Having jumped from London Bridge, he sunk
-and was drowned. When the body was discovered, it appeared
-that both his arms were dislocated, in consequence of
-having descended with them in an horizontal instead of a perpendicular
-position. Persons have been discovered drowned
-with ligatures on their hands and feet, and the circumstance
-has naturally excited a suspicion as to whether they had
-committed suicide or had been murdered. Numerous cases
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">257</a></span>prove that suicides do, occasionally, adopt such precautions,
-in order to ensure death. In June, 1816, the body of a
-gauging-instrument maker, who had been missing for some
-days from his home, was discovered floating down the Thames.
-On being taken out of the water, <i>the wrists were found tied
-together and made fast to his knees</i>, which were in like manner
-secured to each other. He had been deranged for two years.
-The cord was recognised as one which had been attached to
-his bed. He could swim well, and it was presumed that he
-had so tied himself, in order to prevent his using his legs and
-arms should his courage fail him after having plunged into
-the water.</p>
-
-<p>A man, with his wife and child, was reduced to great
-distress. On a certain day, he took an affectionate leave of
-his family, declaring he would not return until he had procured
-some employment by which he should be able to buy bread
-for them. On the following day, he was found drowned in
-the New River, with his hands and legs tied. A card with
-his address was found in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman was found in the Seine, at Paris, having his
-feet, wrists, and neck, tied with a cord. His neck, limbs,
-and hands, were bound by means of a rope with slip-knots, in
-order to put it out of his power to aid himself when in the
-water, and thereby to render certain the execution of his
-suicide.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1832, the body of Elizabeth Martin was found
-dead in the water. A man of the name of Bayley was accused
-of the murder. They had been quarrelling, and were seen
-struggling with each other at the banks of the pond. He
-declared that she had fallen in accidentally. Her face was
-found turned downwards towards the bottom of the pond,
-<i>and one of her hands was found to be in her pocket</i>. The judge
-properly observed, that if the woman had fallen into the
-water as the prisoner stated, that she would have, undoubtedly,
-taken her hand from her pocket for the purpose of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-extricating herself. The man was convicted of the murder,
-and executed.</p>
-
-<p>There has been much discussion as to whether bodies sink
-or swim when thrown into the water after having been killed.
-Considerable discrepancy of opinion exists on this point. It
-has been maintained that strangled persons will float more
-readily than others, as many facts prove. Caracciolo, Admiral
-of the Neapolitan navy, was hanged by sentence of a court-martial.
-The body was committed to the deep in the usual
-manner; and thirteen days afterwards, while the king was
-walking on the deck of Lord Nelson’s ship, he suddenly exclaimed,
-with a yell of horror—“<i>Viene! viene!</i>” The admiral’s
-corpse, breast-high, was seen floating towards the ship. The
-shot which had been attached to the feet for the purpose of
-sinking not being sufficiently heavy. This phenomenon
-may have arisen from the evolution of gaseous matter, after
-the process of putrefaction had commenced, which notoriously
-renders the body specifically lighter than water.</p>
-
-<p>The apparitions that appeared at Portnedown Bridge, after
-the Irish massacre, and which excited such commotion at the
-time, were accounted for in a similar manner. It appears
-that, about twilight in the evening, a number of spirits became
-visible; one assumed the shape of a naked woman, waist-high,
-upright in the water, with elevated and closed hands, and
-looking as awful a spectre as the most superstitious person
-would wish to behold. Various sounds were also heard proceeding
-from the river, which caused no little alarm. The
-sounds were mere delusions, but that bodies were seen
-floating upright in the water there cannot be a doubt.</p>
-
-<p>“One day,” says Clarke, “leaning out of the cabin-window,
-by the side of an officer, who was employed in fishing, the
-corpse of a man, newly sewed up in a hammock, started half
-out of the water, and continued its course with the current
-towards the shore. Nothing could be more horrible; its head
-and shoulders were visible, turning first to one side, then to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">259</a></span>
-the other, with a solemn and awful movement, as if impressed
-with some dreadful secret of the deep, which from its watery
-grave it came upwards to reveal. Such sights became afterwards
-frequent, hardly a day passing without ushering the
-dead to the contemplation of the living, until at length they
-passed without exciting much observation.<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">73</a></p>
-
-<p>In October, 1829, a female, who was an in-patient of St.
-Luke’s Hospital, was found dead in the bath of the institution.
-It appears that, for some time previously, she had been
-permitted the privileges allowed to patients exhibiting indications
-of convalescence, and had obtained access to the
-nurse’s room, in which the key of the bath was deposited.
-One afternoon, she secretly possessed herself of this key, and
-then immediately proceeded to make arrangements for the
-accomplishment of her purpose. In order to deceive the
-vigilance of the nurse, who was accustomed to lock the
-patients up at bed-time, she took off her clothes and disposed
-them about the room, in the usual manner, as if she had
-undressed. She then made up a bundle to resemble the
-human figure, and placed it inside the bed, filling her nightcap
-with handkerchiefs. So accurate was the deception that
-the other patients, who slept in the room with the deceased,
-readily answered that they were all present. The lunatic,
-after these preparations, must have stolen cautiously down to
-the bath. She was found, the next morning, dead, lying
-stretched out with her face downwards. The water of the
-bath was not deep, and, indeed, it is presumed, she must
-have forcibly maintained the position in which her body was
-found, in order to have effected her purpose. The door of
-the bath-room was locked inside, and the key was found in
-the deceased’s pocket.</p>
-
-<p>In a small village of Warwickshire, in the year 1800, a
-young gentleman suddenly disappeared on the evening previous
-to his intended marriage. After a lapse of some days,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">260</a></span>his body was found floating in a mill-stream, and it was
-generally concluded that he had committed suicide, though
-the cause for such a rash act could not be conjectured. Upon
-stripping the body, some marks of a suspicious nature were
-discovered upon the throat. A surgeon was sent for to decide
-whether death had taken place from any other cause than
-drowning, who, after a minute examination, gave it as his
-opinion that he had died by strangulation. Suspicion now
-fell upon a man of bad character, who had been seen the night
-the gentleman was first missed, running in great haste from
-the direction in which the body was afterwards found. He
-was apprehended, but, no evidence of guilt being elicited by
-the examination, was discharged, and the fate of the unfortunate
-young man remained buried in mystery. Ten years
-afterwards, the person suspected was convicted of sheep-stealing,
-and sentenced to transportation. While on board
-the hulks, he made a voluntary confession of having destroyed
-him, and declared that such was his remorse, and
-the horror of his conscience, that he earnestly desired to
-expiate his crime on the scaffold. He was tried for the
-alleged offence entirely on his own evidence, which was as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p>Upon the evening of the fatal event, he was stealing
-potatoes from a field-garden belonging to the deceased, whom
-he unexpectedly saw coming over the gate to secure him,
-upon which he jumped over the hedge on the opposite side,
-and ran across the field to make his escape. The gentleman
-pursued him, and being an active young man, nearly overtook
-him; upon which he (the prisoner) attempted to leap the mill-stream,
-but the bank on the other side giving way, he fell back
-into the water. The young gentleman, instantly plunging
-into the water after him, strove to secure him. A desperate
-struggle now ensued, and the deceased had at one time got
-the prisoner down under him in the water, by which he was
-half drowned. At length he succeeded in overturning his
-antagonist, and, seizing him by the throat, held him fast in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-this manner under water, till he seemed to have no more
-power. He then left him, sprang out, and made his escape.</p>
-
-<p>The judge gave it as his opinion that the case amounted
-only to excusable homicide, and the man was acquitted.</p>
-
-<p>In forming an opinion as to the cause of death in doubtful
-cases of suicide, the following important points ought to be
-carefully kept in view:—</p>
-
-<p>1st. If the person had for some time laboured under melancholia;
-had met with losses, disappointments, or had suffered
-any acute chagrin.<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">74</a> 2nd. If any of his family, associates, or
-connexions, had any interest in his death. 3rd. The season
-of the year should be taken into consideration; for we have
-observed, without being able to assign the reason, that suicide
-is more frequent during the solstices and the equinoxes. 4th.
-If the patient, instead of complaining, remains quiet, seeks for
-solitude, and refuses medical aid. And 5th. If there be any
-writing (as those who destroy themselves ordinarily express
-their last opinions or will) it will be one of the most satisfactory
-proofs that they have made away with themselves.
-Remains of poison found in their pockets, or in the apartment,
-are but an equivocal proof, and one which may attend
-upon homicide as well as on suicide.<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">75</a></p>
-
-<p>In the course of judicial investigations, medical men are
-frequently called upon to decide in cases of suspicious death
-whether wounds discovered on the bodies of the deceased
-were self-inflicted. Before deciding questions of this character,
-the medical witness ought to take into consideration the
-following points:—1st, The situation of the wound; 2nd, its
-nature and extent; 3rd, the direction of the wound; and 4th,
-the moral circumstances connected with the case.</p>
-
-<p>Generally speaking, those who commit suicide do not
-wound themselves on the posterior parts of the body; therefore
-injuries detected in such situations naturally excite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">262</a></span>suspicions as to the mode of death. The throat and chest
-are commonly selected when cutting instruments are used.
-When death has resulted from the discharge of a weapon
-introduced into the mouth, Dr. Smith says it may be taken
-for granted that the case is one of suicide. It is, however,
-possible, even under such circumstances, for a person
-to be assassinated in this way. When death has been
-caused by firearms, the fingers and hands of the deceased
-should be carefully examined, in order to detect the presence of
-discoloration. In several instances, a murder has been discovered
-by a careful examination of the wadding. In two
-cases on record, the wadding being examined, it was discovered
-to have been torn from paper found in the possession
-of the parties on whom suspicion had rested.</p>
-
-<p>Some time back, the body of a man was found lying on the
-high-road. The throat was severely cut, and he had evidently
-died from hemorrhage. A bloody knife was discovered at
-some distance from the body; and this, together with the
-circumstance of the pockets of the deceased having been
-rifled, led to a suspicion of murder. This idea was confirmed
-when the wound was examined. It was cut, not as is usual
-in suicide, by carrying the instrument from before backwards,
-but as the throats of sheep are cut. The knife had
-passed in deeply under and below the ear, and had been
-brought out by a semi-circular sweep in front, all the great
-vessels of the neck, with the œsophagus and trachea, having
-been divided from behind forwards. The nature of the
-wound rendered it at once improbable that it could have
-been self-inflicted; and it further served to detect the murderer,
-who was soon afterwards discovered, and executed.</p>
-
-<p>With reference to the <i>extent</i> of the wound, the celebrated
-Earl of Essex’s case has often been quoted. He was found
-dead in the Tower, in 1683, and it was the generally received
-opinion that he had been murdered by persons hired by the
-Duke of York, afterwards King James II. Upon examining
-the wound, it was found that the jugular vessels, trachea, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">263</a></span>
-œsophagus, were cut through to the very neck-bone. The
-verdict was suicide. In 1688, the matter was revived, and
-before a committee of the House of Lords,<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">76</a> it was proved that
-the razor with which the wound was inflicted was found on
-the left side of the body, while it was known that the Earl
-was left-handed. The edge of the razor was found notched;
-and it was also proved that the cravat worn by the deceased
-was cut through, and his right hand was wounded in five
-places.</p>
-
-<p>As there was much political feeling mixed up with this case,
-it was difficult to arrive at the truth. That many persons
-who have cut their throats have divided the neck to the
-vertebræ is a well-known fact. In the case of Mr. Calcraft,
-all the large vessels in the neck were divided, and the throat
-was cut through to the vertebral column.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of Sellis, much stress was laid by Sir E.
-Home on the wound being <i>regular</i>; he observes, “<i>any struggle
-would have made it irregular</i>.” Although there were points
-connected with this remarkable case which naturally tended
-to excite suspicion, we cannot but declare that the Duke of
-Cumberland most clearly vindicated himself from the foul
-charge which party feeling and private malevolence had
-endeavoured to establish against him.</p>
-
-<p>Many doubtful cases may be decided by taking into consideration
-the moral circumstances connected with them. A
-girl was discovered dead. Suspicion rested upon her mother,
-who had severely beaten the child. It was, however, clearly
-proved that the girl had been repeatedly heard to declare her
-intention to commit suicide. Persons should be examined as
-to the state of mind of the party found dead; whether he or
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">264</a></span>she laboured under an hereditary predisposition to suicidal
-insanity, or had been exposed to the influence of causes likely
-to cause melancholy or a depressed state of feeling. If all
-these points be carefully considered, a fair conclusion may be
-arrived at in the majority of cases that occur, and which are
-made the subject of judicial investigation.</p>
-<hr />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">265</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br /><br />
-
-<small>STATISTICS OF SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Number of suicides in the chief capitals of Europe from 1813 to 1831—Statistics
-of death from violence in London from 1828 to 1832—Number
-of suicides in London for a century and a half—Suicides in Westminster
-from 1812 to 1836—Suicide more frequent among men than women—Mode
-of committing—Influence of age—Effect of the married state—Infantile
-suicides—M. Guerry on suicides in France—Cases—Suicide
-and murder—Suicide in Geneva.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> Great Britain, owing to the neglect of statistical science,
-much difficulty has been experienced in obtaining anything
-like correct data respecting the number of suicides committed
-annually. For the details given in this chapter we are indebted
-to various authorities. Every work has been consulted which
-it was supposed would throw some light on the subject.</p>
-
-<table summary="Number of Suicides" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="5"><i>Number of Suicides in the chief Capitals of Europe.</i></td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">Places.</td><td class="tdc">Periods.</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Suicides.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Proportion<br />&nbsp;to Population.&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Berlin</td><td class="tdl">1813-1822</td><td class="tdr padr2">360</td><td class="tdr">1&nbsp;&nbsp;in</td><td class="tdr">750</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padr2">Copenhagen</td><td class="tdl">1804-1806</td><td class="tdr padr2">100</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">1,000</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Naples</td><td class="tdl">1828</td><td class="tdr padr2">330</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">1,100</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Hamburg</td><td class="tdl">1822</td><td class="tdr padr2">59</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">1,800</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Berlin</td><td class="tdl">1799-1808</td><td class="tdr padr2">60</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">2,300</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Paris</td><td class="tdl">1836</td><td class="tdr padr2">341</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">2,700</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Milan</td><td class="tdl">1827</td><td class="tdr padr2">37</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">3,200</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Berlin</td><td class="tdl">1788-1797</td><td class="tdr padr2">35</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">4,500</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Vienna</td><td class="tdl">1829</td><td class="tdr padr2">45</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">6,400</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Prague</td><td class="tdl">1820</td><td class="tdr padr2">6</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">16,000</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Petersburg</td><td class="tdl">1831</td><td class="tdr padr2">22</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">21,000</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">London</td><td class="tdl">1834</td><td class="tdr padr2">42</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">27,000</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Naples</td><td class="tdl">1826</td><td class="tdr padr2">13</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">173,000</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Palermo</td><td class="tdl">1831</td><td class="tdr padr2">2</td><td class="tdr">1 —</td><td class="tdr">180,000</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">266</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center f85 padt1"><i>Statistics of Suicide &amp; Deaths from Violence in general, in London.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="from Violence" border="0"><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;1828.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;1829.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;1830.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;1831.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;1832.&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">——-</td><td class="tdc">——-</td><td class="tdc">——-</td><td class="tdc">——-</td><td class="tdc">——-</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Suicide</td><td class="tdr">41</td><td class="tdr">35</td><td class="tdr">25</td><td class="tdr">48</td><td class="tdr">52</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Executed</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">26</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Murdered</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">2</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Poisoned</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">4</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Found dead</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">13</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">5</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Drowned</td><td class="tdr">150</td><td class="tdr">36</td><td class="tdr">97</td><td class="tdr">131</td><td class="tdr">149</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Burnt</td><td class="tdr">47</td><td class="tdr">53</td><td class="tdr">61</td><td class="tdr">35</td><td class="tdr">36</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">From famine</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">1</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">From intoxication</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">3</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">1</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">From suffocation</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">5</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center f85 padt1"><i>Number of Suicides in London during a Century and a half.</i></p>
-
-<table style="border-collapse: collapse;" summary="during a Century and a half." border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdr">&nbsp;From 1690 to 1699</td><td class="tdr br padl05 padr05">236</td><td class="tdr">&nbsp;From 1760 to 1769</td><td class="tdr padl05 padr05">351</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1700 — 1709</td><td class="tdr br padr05">278</td><td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1770 — 1779</td><td class="tdr padr05">339</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1710 — 1719</td><td class="tdr br padr05">301</td><td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1780 — 1789</td><td class="tdr padr05">224</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1720 — 1729</td><td class="tdr br padr05">478</td><td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1790 — 1799</td><td class="tdr padr05">274</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1730 — 1739</td><td class="tdr br padr05">501</td><td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1800 — 1809</td><td class="tdr padr05">347</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1740 — 1749</td><td class="tdr br padr05">422</td><td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1810 — 1819</td><td class="tdr padr05">363</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1750 — 1759</td><td class="tdr br padr05">363</td><td class="tdr">—&nbsp; 1820 — 1829</td><td class="tdr padr05">381</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center padt1"><i>Suicides in Westminster, from 1812 to 1836.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center f85">(Extract from Report of Medical Committee of the Statistical Society of
-London. April, 1837.)</p>
-
-<p>“The first statement to which the Committee will draw the
-attention of the Council is an account of the number of persons,
-male and female, who have committed suicide, and upon
-whom inquests have been held, within the city and liberty
-of Westminster, in each month, from January, 1812, to December,
-1836, procured from Mr. Higg, the deputy coroner
-of Westminster; with other statements which the Committee
-had prepared from it.</p>
-
-<p>“The Committee deems it right to premise that caution
-must be used in drawing too general inferences from these
-statements, on account of the comparatively small number of
-cases to which they refer. The average annual number of
-suicides upon which inquests have been held in Westminster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</a></span>
-does not probably exceed one per cent. of the total number
-annually committed in Great Britain; hence the number committed
-in Westminster during twenty-five years, amounting to
-656, is only about twenty-five per cent. of the whole number
-annually committed in Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>“For some conclusions, however, they afford sufficient data,
-and these the Committee will proceed to notice.</p>
-
-<p>“It appears from the following abstract, No. 1, that suicides
-in Westminster are most prevalent in the three months of
-June, July, and March; but that the excess is on the part of
-the males, as the greatest number of female suicides was in
-January, September, and November. September, August,
-and October exhibit the smallest number of male and of total
-suicides; but February, March, and April, the smallest number
-among females.</p>
-
-<p class="center">No. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="indent f85"><i>A Statement of the total number of Suicides of each Sex committed in Westminster
-in each month during the twenty-five years, from 1812 to 1836; also
-the per centage proportion of the whole number committed in each month;
-and the proportion which the number of each sex bears to the other.</i><br /><br /></p>
-
-<table style="border-collapse: collapse;" summary="during a Century and a half." border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc bt bl bb" colspan="4">Total Number of Suicides from 1812 to 1816.</td><td class="tdc bt bl bb" colspan="3">Per Centage Proportion
-committed in each Month.</td><td class="tdc bt bl br bb" colspan="2">Per Cent. Proportion of Male to Female.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Male.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Female.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc br">&nbsp;Total.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;&nbsp;Male.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Female.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc br">&nbsp;Total.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc br" colspan="2">&nbsp;Male&nbsp;and&nbsp;Female.&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">January</td><td class="tdc">35</td><td class="tdc">20</td><td class="tdc br">55</td><td class="tdr padr1">7.3</td><td class="tdr padr1">11.2</td><td class="tdr br padr1">8.4</td><td class="tdc">64</td><td class="tdc br">36</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">February</td><td class="tdc">39</td><td class="tdc">12</td><td class="tdc br">51</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.2</td><td class="tdr padr1">6.8</td><td class="tdr br padr1">7.8</td><td class="tdc">77</td><td class="tdc br">23</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">March</td><td class="tdc">52</td><td class="tdc">11</td><td class="tdc br">63</td><td class="tdr padr1">10.9</td><td class="tdr padr1">6.2</td><td class="tdr br padr1">9.6</td><td class="tdc">83</td><td class="tdc br">17</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">April</td><td class="tdc">40</td><td class="tdc">11</td><td class="tdc br">51</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.4</td><td class="tdr padr1">6.2</td><td class="tdr br padr1">7.8</td><td class="tdc">79</td><td class="tdc br">21</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">May</td><td class="tdc">41</td><td class="tdc">15</td><td class="tdc br">56</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.5</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.4</td><td class="tdr br padr1">8.5</td><td class="tdc">73</td><td class="tdc br">27</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">June</td><td class="tdc">60</td><td class="tdc">15</td><td class="tdc br">75</td><td class="tdr padr1">12.6</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.4</td><td class="tdr br padr1">11.4</td><td class="tdc">80</td><td class="tdc br">20</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">July</td><td class="tdc">50</td><td class="tdc">16</td><td class="tdc br">66</td><td class="tdr padr1">10.5</td><td class="tdr padr1">9.0</td><td class="tdr br padr1">10.1</td><td class="tdc">76</td><td class="tdc br">24</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">August</td><td class="tdc">30</td><td class="tdc">15</td><td class="tdc br">45</td><td class="tdr padr1">6.3</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.4</td><td class="tdr br padr1">6.9</td><td class="tdc">67</td><td class="tdc br">38</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">September</td><td class="tdc">30</td><td class="tdc">18</td><td class="tdc br">48</td><td class="tdr padr1">6.3</td><td class="tdr padr1">10.1</td><td class="tdr br padr1">7.4</td><td class="tdc">62</td><td class="tdc br">38</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">October</td><td class="tdc">28</td><td class="tdc">15</td><td class="tdc br">43</td><td class="tdr padr1">5.9</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.4</td><td class="tdr br padr1">6.5</td><td class="tdc">65</td><td class="tdc br">35</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">November</td><td class="tdc">32</td><td class="tdc">17</td><td class="tdc br">49</td><td class="tdr padr1">6.7</td><td class="tdr padr1">9.6</td><td class="tdr br padr1">7.4</td><td class="tdc">65</td><td class="tdc br">35</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl">December</td><td class="tdc">41</td><td class="tdc">13</td><td class="tdc br">54</td><td class="tdr padr1">8.5</td><td class="tdr padr1">7.3</td><td class="tdr br padr1">8.2</td><td class="tdc">76</td><td class="tdc br">24</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc padr05">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdc padr05">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdr br padr2">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdr padr1">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdr padr1">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdr br padr1">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc br">&mdash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl bl bb">Total</td><td class="tdc bb padr05">478</td><td class="tdc bb padr05">178</td><td class="tdc br bb padr05">656</td><td class="tdr bb padr2">100.</td><td class="tdr bb padr2">100.</td><td class="tdr br bb padr2">100.</td><td class="tdc bb">73</td><td class="tdc br bb">27</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><br />“The last two columns in the above account shew more
-precisely the proportion of female to male suicides in each
-month.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The following statement shews the number of times,
-during the twenty-five years, that no suicide was committed
-during each month:—<br /><br /></p>
-
-<table summary="each month" border="0"><tr>
-<td>February</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Not&nbsp;once.</td><td class="tdl padl05">July</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Twice.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl bl padl05">April</td><td class="tdc f2" rowspan="2">}</td><td rowspan="2">Four times.</td></tr><tr>
-<td>January</td><td class="tdc f3 padb02" rowspan="3">}</td><td rowspan="3">Once</td><td class="tdl padl05">May</td><td class="tdc f3 padb02" rowspan="3">}</td><td rowspan="3">Three<br />times.</td><td class="tdl bl padl05">October</td></tr><tr>
-<td>March</td><td class="tdl padl05">August</td><td class="tdl bl padl05">September</td><td class="tdc f2" rowspan="2">}</td><td rowspan="2">Five times.</td></tr><tr>
-<td>June</td><td class="tdl padl05">December</td><td class="tdl bl padl05">November</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><br />“From No. 2 it appears that the average annual number of
-suicides in Westminster has been increasing in each quinquennial
-period; but No. 3 shews that it has actually decreased
-with reference to the increase which has taken place
-in the population.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">No. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="indent f85"><i>A Statement of the Average Annual Number of Suicides, Male and Female,
-in each Quinquennial Period; also, the proportion per cent. which the two
-Sexes bore to each other in each period.</i><br /><br /></p>
-
-<table summary="Average Annual Number of Suicides" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl bt bb">&nbsp;Periods of Years.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl bt bb" colspan="3">&nbsp;Average Annual Number.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl bt bb br" colspan="2">&nbsp;Proportion of each Sex.&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl">Male.</td><td class="tdc bl">Female.</td><td class="tdc bl">Total.</td><td class="tdc bl">Male.</td><td class="tdc bl br">Female.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1812 to 1816</td><td class="tdc bl">18.2</td><td class="tdc bl">7.6</td><td class="tdc bl">25.8</td><td class="tdc bl">70</td><td class="tdc bl br">30</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1817 — 1821</td><td class="tdc bl">15.0</td><td class="tdc bl">5.2</td><td class="tdc bl">20.2</td><td class="tdc bl">74</td><td class="tdc bl br">26</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1822 — 1826</td><td class="tdc bl">16.4</td><td class="tdc bl">7.4</td><td class="tdc bl">23.8</td><td class="tdc bl">69</td><td class="tdc bl br">31</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1827 — 1831</td><td class="tdc bl">22.0</td><td class="tdc bl">7.8</td><td class="tdc bl">29.8</td><td class="tdc bl">78</td><td class="tdc bl br">22</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1832 — 1836</td><td class="tdc bl">24.0</td><td class="tdc bl">7.9</td><td class="tdc bl">31.9</td><td class="tdc bl">76</td><td class="tdc bl br">24</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl br">&mdash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl bb">Average of Total</td><td class="tdc bl bb">19.1</td><td class="tdc bl bb">7.1</td><td class="tdc bl bb">26.3</td><td class="tdc bl bb">73</td><td class="tdc bl br bb">27</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center"><br /><br />No. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="indent f85"><i>A Statement of the Population of the City and Liberty of Westminster, according
-to each census, and the proportion which the number of Suicides
-in the Quinquennial Period immediately following each census bore to the
-population.</i><br /><br /></p>
-
-<table summary="Quinquennial Period" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl bb bt">&nbsp;Dates&nbsp;of&nbsp;<br />Census.</td><td class="tdc bl bb bt">&nbsp;Population.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl bb bt" colspan="2">Suicides.</td><td class="tdc bl bb bt br">&nbsp;Proportion of Suicides&nbsp;<br />to the Population.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl">Quinquennial Periods.</td><td class="tdc bl">Average<br />Annual Number.</td><td class="tdc bl br">One in</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1811</td><td class="tdc bl">160,801</td><td class="tdc bl">1812 to 1816</td><td class="tdc bl">25.8</td><td class="tdc bl br">6,232</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1821</td><td class="tdc bl">181,444</td><td class="tdc bl">1822 — 1826</td><td class="tdc bl">23.8</td><td class="tdc bl br">7,623</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">1831</td><td class="tdc bl">201,604</td><td class="tdc bl">1832 — 1836</td><td class="tdc bl">31.6</td><td class="tdc bl br">6,379</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td class="tdc bl br">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc bl bb">Average</td><td class="tdc bl bb">181,283</td><td class="tdc bl bb">..</td><td class="tdc bl bb">&nbsp;&nbsp;27.06</td><td class="tdc bl br bb">6,700</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</a></span></p>
-
-<p><br />“It must, however, be taken into consideration that suicides
-committed in Westminster may not belong to the population
-of the district, for that the proximity of the river, and other
-causes existing in Westminster, may attract persons residing
-in other parts of the town. Hence an increase or decrease of
-facilities for committing suicide in the surrounding districts,
-such as the formation of a canal, &amp;c., will naturally affect the
-number of such deaths in Westminster.”<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">77</a></p>
-
-<p>It has been clearly established that suicide is less frequent
-among women than men. In early life, death by hanging is
-preferred; in middle life, firearms are had recourse to; and in
-more advanced years, strangulation again becomes the fashionable
-mode of terminating life.</p>
-
-<table summary="no suicide" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">Years of Age.</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Pistol.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Hanging.&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">Between</td><td class="tdc">10&nbsp;and&nbsp;20</td><td><a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">78</a></td><td class="tdr padr1">61</td><td class="tdr padr2">68</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc">28 — 30</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr1">283</td><td class="tdr padr2">51</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc">49 — 50</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr1">182</td><td class="tdr padr2">94</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc">60 — 70</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr1">150</td><td class="tdr padr2">188</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc">80 — 90</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr1">161</td><td class="tdr padr2">256</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">270</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In an analysis of 525 cases of suicide in Prussia, the following
-was the result:—</p>
-
-<table summary="cases of suicide" width="50%" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Hanging</td><td class="tdr">234</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Shooting</td><td class="tdr">163</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Drowning</td><td class="tdr">60</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Cutting throat</td><td class="tdr">17</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Stabbing</td><td class="tdr">20</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Jumping out of window</td><td class="tdr">19</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Poison</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Opening artery</td><td class="tdr">2</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">&mdash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">525</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Marriage is to a certain extent a preventive of suicide; it
-has been satisfactorily established that among the men two-thirds
-who destroy themselves are bachelors.</p>
-
-<p>In M. A. Guerry’s able “Essai sur la Statisque Morale de la
-France,” published in 1833, we find some valuable statistical
-facts relating to suicide in France.</p>
-
-<p>It appears on evidence of the most authentic description,
-that, from the year 1827 to that of 1830, there were committed
-throughout France no less than 6900 suicides! that is to say,
-an average of nearly 1800 per annum! It should, however,
-be remembered, that this calculation is founded only upon
-judicial documents, in which are included merely those cases
-of suicide in which death has followed, or in which legal proceedings
-were taken; so that it is not improbable that many
-more attempts were made to perpetrate this crime of which
-the public is quite ignorant.</p>
-
-<p>Taking up this fact, let us consider that the number of
-crimes against the person amounts yearly in France to 1900.
-Now, it appears that more than 600 of these crimes consist of
-attempts on the lives of others; so that the conclusion cannot
-be resisted, that every time an individual in France meets
-with a violent death, in any other way but by accident or
-mere homicide, there are three chances to one that he has
-committed suicide.</p>
-
-<p>M. Guerry makes a transition to the geographical position<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">271</a></span>
-of this crime throughout the several arbitrary divisions, and
-he finds the state of the case to be as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>Out of every hundred suicides which take place on the
-average every year, there are committed in the</p>
-
-<table summary="cases of suicide" border="0"><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">Suicides.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Northern</td><td class="tdl">division&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr2">51</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Southern</td><td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdr padr2">11</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Eastern</td><td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdr padr2">16</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Western</td><td class="tdc">&mdash;</td><td class="tdr padr2">13</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Central</td><td class="tdc">&mdash;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr2">9</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Another view of the proportion of suicides in France is,
-that which takes place in the number of them, as compared
-with the amount of the population. It is as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class="center f85"><i>Suicides in proportion to Population.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="suicides in France" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Northern</td><td class="tdr padr2">division</td><td class="tdr padr05">1 in</td><td class="tdr">9,853</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Eastern</td><td class="tdc padr2">&mdash;</td><td class="tdr padr05">1 in</td><td class="tdr">21,734</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Central</td><td class="tdc padr2">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc padr05">1 in</td><td class="tdr">27,393</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Western</td><td class="tdc padr2">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc padr05">1 in</td><td class="tdr">30,499</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Southern</td><td class="tdc padr2">&mdash;</td><td class="tdc padr05">1 in</td><td class="tdr">30,876</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>It is proper to bear in mind, that in the single department
-of the Seine, there are perpetrated every year nearly the sixth
-part of the whole number of suicides which take place in all
-the eighty-six departments of France. It is said, however,
-that the greater portion of those persons who commit suicide
-in this department are altogether strangers to the capital.
-We come, then, to this conclusion, that of the thousand individuals
-who are guilty of the crime of suicide, no less
-than five hundred and five take place in the department of
-the north; one hundred and sixty-eight occur in the southern
-division; sixty-five in the western; and fifty-two in the central;
-a distribution which shews that there is, if not the same proportion,
-certainly the same order, as the distribution of suicides
-in the five divisions in respect of the amount of population.</p>
-
-<p>In the explanation which is appended to the table just
-alluded to, the author shews, that of the suicides committed
-in the department of the Seine, where they are most numerous,
-there appears to be one suicide for every 3,600 the inha<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">272</a></span>bitants;
-whilst in the department of the Haute Soire, where
-the crime is less frequent, this proportion does not amount to
-more than one in 163,000 inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>A singularly curious inference is to be drawn from the consideration
-of the facts presented in another of M. Guerry’s graphic
-illustrations—viz., that which arises from the circumstance,
-that from whatever confine of France an inquirer proceeds to
-the capital, he will find, as he approaches it, that the number
-of suicides increases by a regular gradation; so that in those
-departments which are near the Seine and Maine, the traveller
-will discover that more suicides have been committed than in
-those more remote from the metropolis, such as the departments
-of the Lower Seine, of Aube and Soiret. The same
-observation applies as forcibly to Marseilles, which is in some
-measure to be considered the capital of certain departments
-in the south of France. The more these districts are in the
-vicinity of Marseilles, the greater the amount is there of suicides
-as compared with the number of the population.</p>
-
-<p>A curious fact has been elicited in the examination of the
-French registers of crime, from which it appears that those
-divisions of the kingdom of France in which the most frequent
-attempts have been made to commit murder are those divisions
-exactly where the crime of suicide is most rare; and it
-has been further proved that precisely the reverse of this law
-takes place in other departments; namely, that where suicides
-are numerous in proportion to the population, there the
-number of murders committed by individuals on others is
-considerably diminished. One peculiarity is mentioned by
-M. Guerry as being connected with cases of suicide, which
-is, that we are much oftener enlightened as to the cause of it
-than we are upon the motives of most other crimes, and that
-it is rarely the case that any person sets about the crime of
-self-destruction without leaving in writing, or in some other
-way, the expression of his last wishes, together with an explanation
-of the causes of the rash act, which he most generally
-seeks to justify.</p>
-
-<p>Holcroft, in speaking of the number of suicides in Paris,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">273</a></span>
-observes, “I am not well informed on the subject, but
-I doubt if as many suicides be committed through all
-Great Britain <i>in a year, as in Paris alone in a month</i>. It
-is the practice of the French police to stifle inquiry and conceal
-facts, whenever they are of a disagreeable nature; for
-they tax its omnipotence, to something little short of which it
-pretends: all things are under its protection; its eye is everywhere;
-the assaulted cannot sink; the culprit cannot escape;
-its guardian arm is stretched out so effectually to save that
-none are in danger. Such are its high claims and the daily
-assertion it repeats; they are the necessary results of despotism,
-which, ever on the alarm, will in everything interfere.</p>
-
-<p>“The Parisians are in general themselves so ignorant that the
-things which they see produce only a momentary impression;
-none but men of superior minds collect facts and deduce
-consequences; the rest discern with great quickness, but they
-forget with greater; and it is chiefly from this forgetfulness
-that their gaiety of heart is derived.</p>
-
-<p>“In England, misfortunes, so far from being concealed, are
-sought after with eagerness by people who are paid for the
-bad news they bring, and by whom it is sometimes greatly
-exaggerated. If the tale do not astonish, it is scarcely worthy
-to be reported in our newspapers, and the tales in these newspapers
-circulate through Europe. This is a benefit when
-truth is not falsified.</p>
-
-<p>“Of the suicides which are daily happening in France,
-I, who read the daily journals, saw only two noticed; and
-these I was surprised to see. One was an officer in the army
-who pistolled himself at the public office of the war minister;
-and the other a poor wretch who, at the moment before he
-threw himself from the upper story of one of the high houses
-in Paris, called out in mercy to the passengers, <i>Garde l’eau!</i>
-the phrase used by the Parisians when they throw water out
-of a window. I was told of another suicide of the same
-kind, and with the same humane caution, while I was at Paris.</p>
-
-<p>“I likewise saw the body of a man borne through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">274</a></span>
-streets, who, after having breakfasted at a hut in <i>les Champs
-Elysées</i>, put an end to his existence. Before doing so, he
-told the people that he had been a subaltern officer of a regiment
-then reduced; and that all means of procuring a livelihood
-was lost.</p>
-
-<p>“Nine conscripts who had for a time concealed themselves,
-but who were at last discovered, being determined not to serve,
-encouraged each other rather to die, and voluntarily ended
-life by drowning themselves together.</p>
-
-<p>“I was passing <i>le Pont des Tuileries</i> after dark, and saw a
-man surrounded by other men. They had deterred him on the
-bridge from jumping over; but they could not prevail on him
-to tell his name, or to go home. He appeared to be determined
-in his purpose; the only resource they had was, at last,
-to commit him to the guard; but unless his state of mind
-could be altered, safety like this was but merely temporary.</p>
-
-<p>“Another evening, on the same bridge, and about the same
-hour, a woman, standing near the centre parapet, attracted my
-attention by her look, and manner in which she seemed to be
-examining the river. I stopped; she desisted, but did not
-remove. I was uncertain what her intentions might be, and
-she appeared to shun notice. Two other passengers, guessing
-my doubts, halted; but either their fears were not so strong as
-mine, or their patience was less; they stood a few minutes
-and left. I felt as if I did not dare to go, yet could not
-decide how to act, from the fear of doing wrong. At length
-the woman moved towards the end of the bridge, and I was
-obliged to leave her to her fate. I was not certain her intentions
-were ill; to have charged her with such might deeply
-have insulted her. I walked home, however, in a most dissatisfied
-state of mind; at one minute, proving to myself I
-could not act otherwise, and at another, making self-accusations
-for having deserted the duties of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“The number of suicides that really happen in Paris must
-exceed, no man can say how much, those that are actually
-known. The bodies exposed at <i>La Morgue</i> are most of them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">275</a></span>
-brought from <i>St. Cloud</i>; the distance to which by water
-must be above three, perhaps four miles. At the bridge of
-<i>St. Cloud</i> the fishermen nightly spread their nets; and in
-the morning, with the fish, these bodies are drawn up; but
-as an old inhabitant of <i>St. Cloud</i>, whom I strictly questioned
-on the subject, assured me the nets were only suffered to be
-down a stated number of hours, according to the season, certainly
-not upon an average half a day; and in proof of what
-he said, he observed to me that this regulation must take place,
-or the navigation of the river would be impeded. Hence, by
-the most moderate calculation, the number of bodies that
-escape the nets must at least equal the number of those that
-are caught.</p>
-
-<p>“I was told that the government had lately refused the
-accustomed fee to the fishermen for each corpse they brought,
-and that they would not continue to drag up the dead bodies,
-affirming that the money they had before received was insufficient
-to pay the damage their nets had sustained.”</p>
-
-<p>The following statistical facts with reference to suicide in
-Geneva may be relied upon:—</p>
-
-<p>By the laws of the canton, each case of violent death is
-investigated by a police magistrate, and the documents are
-sent to the “Procureur-Generale,” and carefully preserved.
-M. Prevost has examined these documents, collected between
-1825 and 1834 inclusively, with a view to investigating the
-causes of suicide, and of diminishing them if possible. The
-following are the most important results:—</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">1.—<i>Age.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="Age"><tr>
-<td class="tdc padl2">Ages.</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;No.&nbsp;of&nbsp;Cases&nbsp;in&nbsp;10 years.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Men.&nbsp;</td><td class="tdc">&nbsp;Women.&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">From 50 to 60</td><td class="tdr padr5">34</td><td class="tdr padr1">25</td><td class="tdr padr2">9</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">20 to 30</td><td class="tdr padr5">30</td><td class="tdr padr1">22</td><td class="tdr padr2">8</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">60 to 70</td><td class="tdr padr5">19</td><td class="tdr padr1">10</td><td class="tdr padr2">9</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">30 to 40</td><td class="tdr padr5">18</td><td class="tdr padr1">15</td><td class="tdr padr2">3</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">40 to 50</td><td class="tdr padr5">15</td><td class="tdr padr1">13</td><td class="tdr padr2">2</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">70 to 80</td><td class="tdr padr5">9</td><td class="tdr padr1">6</td><td class="tdr padr2">3</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">10 to 20</td><td class="tdr padr5">5</td><td class="tdr padr1">3</td><td class="tdr padr2">2</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr">80 to 90</td><td class="tdr padr5">3</td><td class="tdr padr1">1</td><td class="tdr padr2">2</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">276</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From this table it appears that suicides are most frequent
-between 50 and 60 years of age. The age when the passions
-are the strongest (from 20 to 30) is, as might be expected,
-high in the scale; that of youth and old age low, from the
-young being strangers to the cares of life, and the old few in
-number when compared with the population.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">2.—<i>Sex, and State of Marriage or Celibacy.</i></p>
-
-<p>There are more suicides among men than women, in the
-proportion of 95 to 38, or about three to one; and more
-unmarried than married, or in the state of widowhood, in the
-proportion of 70 to 63, or about seven to six. Notwithstanding
-this, the female suicides are more numerous among the
-married and widows than among the unmarried, in the proportion
-of 21 to 17. But among men the proportions are
-reversed,—that is, 42 to 53; so that, on the whole, suicides are
-more frequent among the unmarried than amongst those who
-are or have been married. This will not surprise those who
-know the energy, courage, and patience of women under
-misfortune; men more readily give way to despair, and to
-vices consequent upon it. Men also have means of destruction,
-as firearms, &amp;c., more readily at hand.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">3.—<i>Occupations.</i></p>
-
-<p>The number of suicides are in proportion to the number of the
-individuals engaged in various trades, except among the agricultural
-population, where the proportion is very small. Thus
-the agricultural population of the canton is 18,000, among whom,
-during ten years, there have been but ten suicides; whereas,
-if they had been in the same proportion to the whole number
-as was found in other occupations, they would have amounted
-to thirty-nine. Constant occupation and hard yet healthy
-work render them less sensible to the cares of life. There
-is also a somewhat larger proportion of suicides among the
-educated classes, who are engaged in literary pursuits or the
-higher branches of commerce.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">277</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">4.—<i>Religion.</i></p>
-
-<p>The relative proportion of Protestants to Catholics in the
-canton of Geneva is, according to the census of 1834, as 77
-to 56. Thus—</p>
-
-<table summary="religions" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Of 133 inhabitants there are,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tdl" colspan="2">&nbsp;&nbsp;Of 133 cases of suicide there are,</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padl2">Protestants</td><td class="tdr">77</td><td class="tdl padl2">Protestants</td><td class="tdr">107</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padl2">Catholics</td><td class="tdr">56</td><td class="tdl padl2">Catholics</td><td class="tdr">26</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">&mdash;&ndash;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">&mdash;&ndash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">133</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">133</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>This result should attract the attention of those who are interested
-in the moral and religious education of Protestants.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">5.—<i>Means of Destruction.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="Means of Destruction" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Drowning</td><td class="tdr">55</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Firearms</td><td class="tdr">31</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Strangulation</td><td class="tdr">18</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Voluntary falls</td><td class="tdr">15</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padr2">Cutting&nbsp;instruments</td><td class="tdr">7</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Poison</td><td class="tdr">7</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">&mdash;&ndash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">133</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>In a small province, with a lake and two rapid rivers, it is
-not surprising that drowning should be the most frequent
-mode of suicide; next to this is death by firearms, which is
-accounted for by all the men having firearms, as they are in
-the militia. Whilst the men have used firearms and cutting
-instruments, the women have almost alone had recourse to
-poisons and voluntary falls.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">6.—<i>Seasons.</i></p>
-
-<p>The seasons sensibly influence the number of suicides.
-There are more almost constantly in April. Of 133 suicides
-there were in—</p>
-
-<table summary="seasons" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">April</td><td class="tdr padr1">19</td><td class="tdl padl1 bl">March</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">June</td><td class="tdr padr1">17</td><td class="tdl padl1 bl">November</td><td class="tdr">9</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padr2">August</td><td class="tdr padr1">17</td><td class="tdl bl padl1 padr2">September</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">July</td><td class="tdr padr1">15</td><td class="tdl padl1 bl">January</td><td class="tdr">5</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">October</td><td class="tdr padr1">14</td><td class="tdl padl1 bl">February</td><td class="tdr">5</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">May</td><td class="tdr padr1">13</td><td class="tdl padl1 bl">December</td><td class="tdr">3</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">278</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The spring appears to have an unfavourable effect; and
-during the great heats, there are more suicides than during
-the cold weather. It is curious that many suicides happened
-on the same day or week. Thus, on April 9th, 1830, there
-were two suicides, and several others on the previous and
-subsequent days; on the 20th of May, 1830, there were two
-suicides; on the 28th and 29th of March, 1831, two; and
-the same on the 3rd and 4th of July of the same year. On
-the 20th of April, 1833, there were two; and on the 5th of
-July, 1833, two others. Some atmospheric changes may
-account for this, though meteorological tables did not satisfactorily
-explain them.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">7.—<i>Presumed Motives.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="Presumed Motives" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Physical disease</td><td class="tdr padr1">34</td><td class="tdl bl padl1">Bad conduct. Drunkenness</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Insanity</td><td class="tdr padr1">24</td><td class="tdl bl padl1 padr1">Fear of punishment. Remorse</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Losses of property</td><td class="tdr padr1">19</td><td class="tdl bl padl1">Disappointment in love</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Domestic grief</td><td class="tdr padr1">15</td><td class="tdl bl padl1">Gambling</td><td class="tdr">4</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padr1">Melancholy without known cause</td><td class="tdr padr1">13</td><td class="tdl bl padl1">Mysterious</td><td class="tdr">2</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center padt1">8.—<i>Relation of Suicides to Population and to Deaths.</i></p>
-
-<p>The number of suicides is to the whole number of deaths
-as 1 to 90-1/8; and to the whole population as 1 to 3·985; the
-mean population of the canton during the last ten years
-being 53,000—</p>
-
-<table summary="Population and to Deaths" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">In 1825</td><td class="tdr padr1">6</td><td class="tdc">Suicides.</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1826</td><td class="tdr padr1">6</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1827</td><td class="tdr padr1">9</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1828</td><td class="tdr padr1">13</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1829</td><td class="tdr padr1">13</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1830</td><td class="tdr padr1">16</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1831</td><td class="tdr padr1">18</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1832</td><td class="tdr padr1">12</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1833</td><td class="tdr padr1">24</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdr padr2">1834</td><td class="tdr padr1">16</td><td class="tdc">”</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr1">&mdash;&ndash;</td><td>&nbsp;</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr padr1">133</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">279</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From this table it appears that the number of suicides has
-gradually increased from six as high as twenty-four in eight
-years. The last year, it decreased to sixteen; and it is fervently
-hoped that this deduction may be maintained, and
-that the increase may not be so frightfully rapid as it appears
-to have been. It must, however, be taken into account, that
-the population was, in 1822, 51,113, and in 1834, 56,655.
-The police also are more active, and inquests are held more
-regularly.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">280</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br /><br />
-
-<small>APPEARANCES PRESENTED AFTER DEATH IN THOSE
-WHO HAVE COMMITTED SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Thickness of cranium—State of membranes and vessels of brain—Osseous
-excrescences—Appearances discovered in one thousand three hundred and
-thirty-three cases—Lesions of the lungs, heart, stomach, and intestines—Effect
-of long-continued indigestion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> in cases of insanity, the morbid appearances discovered in
-the bodies of suicides are varied and contradictory. Nothing
-has yet been detected which can lead the pathologist to a correct
-conclusion as to the nature of the organic change which
-precedes and accompanies the suicidal mania.</p>
-
-<p>The cranium has in many cases been found preternaturally
-thick, and in others the reverse. Greeding and Gall give their
-testimony in favour of the skull’s thickness. Out of 216 examined,
-a preternatural thickness of cranium was found in 167.
-Out of 100 who died of furious mania, 78 had the skull thick,
-and 20 very thin. Out of 30 fatuous patients, 21 had thick
-crania, and six thin. The thickness of the cranial bones in
-melancholy and maniacal patients, and in old people, was
-supposed by Dr. Gall to be connected with diminished size of
-the brain, to which the inner table of the cranial bone accommodated
-itself; and together with this thickness, he considered
-there was also thickness of the membranes, and ossification of
-the blood-vessels.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">281</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Malformations of the cranium are often detected. Osiander
-relates the case of an old man who had suffered for a considerable
-time from dreadful headache, and who, weary of
-life, hanged himself. On examining the head, small osseous
-excrescences were found near the carotid foramen. Lancisi
-refers to a case of hypochondriasis and suicide, in which, after
-death, a sharp long excrescence was found near the apex of
-the lambdoid suture.</p>
-
-<p>From an examination of the particulars of 1333 cases of
-persons who have committed suicide, and who have been examined
-after death, the following analysis is made. The particulars
-of the cases referred to are recorded in the works of
-Pinel, Esquirol, Falret, Foderé, Arntzenius, Schlegel, Burrows,
-Haslam, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<table summary="examination of the particulars" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Thickness of cranium</td><td class="tdr">150</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">No apparent structural change</td><td class="tdr">100</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Bony excrescences</td><td class="tdr">50</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Tumours in brain</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Simple congestion</td><td class="tdr">300</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disease of membranes</td><td class="tdr">170</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disease of lungs</td><td class="tdr">100</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Softening of brain</td><td class="tdr">100</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl padr2">Appearances of inflammation in brain</td><td class="tdr">90</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disease of stomach</td><td class="tdr">100</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disease of intestines</td><td class="tdr">50</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disease of liver</td><td class="tdr">80</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Suppressed natural secretions</td><td class="tdr">15</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Disease of heart</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr><tr>
-<td class="tdl">Syphilitic disease</td><td class="tdr">8</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr><tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr">1333</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Accretions of the membranes of the brain are often found in
-suicides. The dura mater is often ossified, and the pia mater
-inflamed, and the arachnoid thickened. Osiander considers
-congestion of the vessels of the brain a frequent cause of
-suicide.</p>
-
-<p>Auenbrugger refers to the case of a man who had suffered
-for a long duration severe headache, and who committed suicide.
-After death, a fissure was found in the middle of the
-pons varolii.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">282</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Lesions of the lungs are among the common morbid appearances
-in the bodies of lunatics. Esquirol states that one
-fourth of the melancholic die of consumption.</p>
-
-<p>The heart is sometimes found seriously disorganized. The
-stomach, liver, and intestines, are the most frequent seats of
-morbid phenomena in these cases. It is difficult, however, to
-say whether they ought to be considered as the effect or cause
-of the suicidal disposition. In many cases of gastric disease,
-the brain is also found organically affected. How is it possible
-for us to say which organ was primarily affected? The stomach,
-intestines, and liver, may be originally the seat of the
-irritation, and the brain may be sympathetically deranged.
-This is often the case. Again, the patient may have laboured
-under a severe mental ailment, which may give rise to disease
-of the splanchnic viscera. Severe and long-continued
-indigestion, from whatever cause it may originate, will, in
-certain dispositions, produce the suicidal mania. Very few
-cases are examined in which we are not able to detect some
-disease of the gastric organ or its appendages.</p>
-
-<p>It is not our wish to throw discredit on, or to underrate the
-value of, morbid anatomy; but, with reference to the peculiar
-branch of inquiry now under investigation, we must confess
-that very little practical importance can be attached to the
-structural lesions which the industry and scalpel of the anatomists
-have enabled them to discover in the bodies of those
-who have committed suicide. The morbid appearances are so
-varied and capricious that they cannot lead to a sound conclusion
-as to the exact seat of the disease. In many cases, the
-brain is apparently free from structural derangement; and
-yet, reasoning physiologically, we must believe that in every
-case the sentient organ must be affected, either primarily or
-secondarily. There are many instances in which there cannot
-be a doubt but that the cerebral organ is the seat of the
-disease, but in which, after death, no vestige of the malady
-can be discovered!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">283</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br /><br />
-
-<small>SINGULAR CASES OF SUICIDE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">Introduction—Contempt of death—Eustace Budgel—M. de Boissy and his
-wife—Mutual suicides from disappointed love—Suicide from mortification—Mutual
-suicide from poverty—A French lady while out shooting—A
-fisherman after praying—Determination to commit if not cured—Extraordinary
-case of suicide after seduction—Madame C. from remorse—M. de
-Pontalba after trying to murder his daughter-in-law—Young lady in a pet—Sir
-George Dunbar—James Sutherland while George III. was passing—Lancet
-given by a wife to her husband to kill himself—Servant girl—Curious
-verses by a suicide—Robber on being recognised—A man who
-ordered a candle to be made of his fat—After gaming—Writing whilst
-dying—From misfortune just at a moment of relief—Curious papers
-written by a suicide—By heating a barrel in the fire—By tearing out the
-brains—Sisters by the injunction of their eldest sister—Mutual from
-poverty—Girl from a dream—Three servants in one pond—Indifference
-as to mode—By starvation—A man forty-five days without eating—Mutual
-of two boys after dining at a restaurateur’s—By putting head under
-the ice—By a pair of spectacles—By jumping amongst the bears—Young
-lady from gambling—Verses by a suicide—To obtain salvation—A lover
-after accidentally shooting his mistress—Mutual attempt at suicide—M.
-Kleist and Madame Vogle—Richard Smith and wife—Love and suicide—Bishop
-of Grenoble—Suicide in a pail of water—Mutual of two
-soldiers—Lord Scarborough—A man who advertised to kill himself for
-benefit of family—The case of Creech, and the romantic history of
-Madame de Monier—Suicide of M ——, after threatening to kill his brother—Two
-young men—Two lovers—Homicide and suicide from jealousy—Cure
-of penchant for—Attempt to, prevented—Man in a belfry—Attempt at—The
-extraordinary case of Lovat by crucifixion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the preceding chapters we have detailed the history of many
-remarkable cases of self-destruction. It is melancholy to con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">284</a></span>sider
-that the principle of life with which God has endowed
-us for high and noble purposes should have been sacrificed
-with that apparent coolness and self-possession which was
-manifested in many of the instances recorded in this work.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“How we abuse that article our life! Some people pluck it</div>
-<div class="line">Out with a knife; some blow it up with powder; others duck it;—</div>
-<div class="line i1">One thing is sure, and Horace</div>
-<div class="line i1">Has already said it for us,—</div>
-<div class="line">Sooner or later, all must kick the inevitable bucket.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A gladiatorial contempt of death is becoming one of the
-most alarming features of the time; in this respect we appear
-ambitious to imitate the conduct of the French sophists, and
-seek, in acts of desperation, a notoriety that nothing else
-can give us. In investigating, as we have endeavoured to do,
-the motives that have led to this heinous offence, we have in
-many cases been unsuccessful in tracing the act to any definite
-principle. Either no reasons have been assigned or the
-accounts of the cases transmitted to us have been imperfect.
-These individuals stand apart from the rest of the world, and
-exhibit an anomaly in the last act of life totally irreconcilable
-to all acknowledged principles of reason and human action.
-Eccentric in their lives, they have been desirous of manifesting
-the ruling passion strong in death. This mental idiosyncracy
-may be, and no doubt often is, the result of original constitution,
-aided in its development by the moral atmosphere in
-which the person is placed, as well as by education and other
-circumstances which are known to influence the formation of
-the mind and character.</p>
-
-<p>The singular facts adduced in this chapter are only brought
-forward as evidence of that anomalous condition of the mind
-referred to which leads to suicide; at the same time the
-instances will afford to the metaphysician valuable materials to
-assist him in his investigations into the philosophy of the
-human understanding. Some of the cases related, of course,
-admit of elucidation, but the majority will be found to puzzle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">285</a></span>
-the ingenuity even of those who pride themselves on their capacity
-of understanding what is beyond the ken of ordinary
-mortals.</p>
-
-<p>Eustace Budgel was a man of much literary fame at the
-beginning of the last century, the relation and friend of Addison,
-and a distinguished writer in the periodical publications
-of that day. He was born to a good fortune, and held a
-considerable place under government whilst Addison lived,
-who kept him in some order as to his political character. But
-having lost all court favour after Addison’s decease, and being
-a man of great expense and vanity, having also sunk a large
-sum of money in the South Sea scheme, and having involved
-himself in a number of fruitless litigations, he became highly
-distressed in his circumstances. This, added to the chagrin of
-disappointed ambition and to other matters, determined him to
-make away with himself. He had always thought but lightly
-of revelation, and after Addison’s death became an avowed
-free-thinker, which laxity of principle strongly concurred in
-disposing him to adopt this fatal resolution. Accordingly,
-after having been visibly agitated and almost distracted for
-several days, he took a boat, and ordered the waterman to go
-through London bridge. While the boat was under the
-bridge, Budgel threw himself overboard, having had the previous
-caution to fill his pockets with stones. This happened
-in the year 1737. It was said to have been Budgel’s opinion,
-“that when life becomes uneasy to support, and is overwhelmed
-with clouds and sorrows, man has a natural right to
-deprive himself of it, as it is better not to live than to live in
-pain.” A man of unsettled principles easily persuades himself
-into the notion of suicide when he is actually suffering from
-some violence of his passions, even though he had not imbibed
-it before. For whenever the passions attempt to reason, it is
-only on the delusive suggestions of their own perturbed feelings.
-The morning before Budgel carried his deadly intentions
-into execution, he endeavoured to persuade his daughter
-to accompany him in his death. His only argument to her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">286</a></span>
-was, that her life was not worth holding; but she thought
-otherwise, and refused to concur in the sacrifice. A slip of
-paper was left on his writing-table, containing these few
-words, as an apology for his rash act:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“What Cato did and Addison approved</div>
-<div class="line">Cannot be wrong.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Monsieur de Boissy, a French dramatic writer and satirist,
-being reduced to great indigence, resolved to commit suicide.
-As he considered this action in no other light than as a friendly
-relief from further misery, he not only persuaded his wife to
-bear him company, but prevailed on her not to leave their
-child of five years old behind them, to the mercy of that
-world in which they had experienced so little sympathy and
-happiness. Nothing now remained but to fix on the mode of
-their death. They at length agreed to starve themselves.
-This not only seemed to them the most natural consequence
-of their condition, but also saved them from committing a
-violence either on their child, themselves, or each other, of
-which perhaps neither Boissy nor his wife found themselves
-capable. They determined therefore to wait with unshaken
-constancy the arrival of death under the meagre form of
-famine; and accordingly they shut themselves up in the
-solitude of their apartment, where, on account of their distresses,
-they had little reason to dread the interruption of
-company. They began, and resolutely persisted in their plan
-of starving themselves to death with their child. If any one
-called by chance at their apartment, they found it locked, and
-receiving no answer, it was concluded that nobody was at
-home. A friend, however, from that kind of instinct perhaps
-with which the spirit of friendship abounds, began to apprehend
-that something must be much amiss with Boissy, as he
-could neither find him at home, nor get intelligence concerning
-him. Under much anxiety he returned once more
-to his apartment; and, whether from hearing any groans
-from within, or suspecting something was wrong, he ven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">287</a></span>tured
-to break open the door. Boissy and his wife had
-been so much in earnest, that it was now three days since
-they had taken any sustenance, and they were so far on their
-way to their intended home, that they were in sight, as it
-were, of the gates of death. The friend, entering into the
-room where this scene of death was going forward, found the
-miserable pair in such a situation as to be insensible of his intrusion.
-Boissy and his wife had no eyes but for each other,
-and were not sitting in, but rather supported from falling on
-the ground by two chairs set opposite to each other. Their
-hands were locked together, and in their ghastly looks was
-painted a kind of rueful compassion for their child, which
-hung at the mother’s knee, and seemed as if looking up to her
-for nourishment, in its natural tenaciousness of life. This
-group of wretchedness did not less shock than afflict his friend.
-But soon collecting from circumstances what it must mean, his
-first care was not to expostulate with Boissy or his wife, but
-to engage them to receive his succours, in which he found no
-small difficulty. Their resolution had been taken in earnest.
-They had got over the worst, and were in sight of their port.
-Their friend, however, took the right way of reconciling them
-to live by making the child join in the intercession. The child,
-who could have none of the prejudices or reasons they might
-have for not retracting, held up his little hands, and in concert
-with him entreated his parents to consent to live. Nature
-did not plead in vain. They were gradually restored to life,
-and provided with everything that could make them in good
-humour with its return.</p>
-
-<p>Euphrosine Lemoine was the daughter of a bourgeoise of
-the Faubourg St. Antoine. She loved, and had admitted to
-secret interviews, a young cabinetmaker of the neighbourhood.
-Her parents, however, had long intended her to marry Mr.
-B——, a man of some property. She reluctantly consented—pronounced
-the “<i>fatal yes</i>;” and the young man prudently left
-Paris for some years. In 1836 he yielded to the desire of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">288</a></span>
-once more seeing her he had loved. They met, and the
-husband was dishonoured. This was followed by an elopement;
-but the husband, who still loved his wife in spite of
-her crimes, discovered their retreat, and by the intervention
-of friends and of the police a reconciliation was effected—in
-vain. They again eloped, but only to perish together; and
-they were found dead, eight days after, locked in each other’s
-arms, in a miserable apartment they had hired for the purpose.
-Before the suicide, one of them had sketched with coal on the
-wall of their retreat two flaming hearts, and beneath, this inscription—“We
-have sworn eternal love, and death, terrible
-death, shall find us united.”</p>
-
-<p>A boatman discovered in the Seine a mass which the stream
-seemed to roll along with difficulty; he found it was two
-bodies, a young woman about twenty, tastefully dressed, and
-a young man in the uniform of the eighth hussars. The left
-hand and foot of one victim were laid to the right hand and
-foot of the other. A bit of paper, carefully wrapped up in
-parchment to preserve it from the water, told their names and
-motives:—</p>
-
-<p>“O you, whoever you may be, compassionate souls, who
-shall find these two bodies united, know that we loved each
-other with the most ardent affection, and that we have perished
-together, that we may be eternally united. Know, compassionate
-souls, that our last desire is, that you should place us,
-united as we are, in the same grave. Man should not separate
-those whom death has joined.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-(Signed), “<span class="smcap">Florine.</span> <span class="smcap">Goyon.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago, a light was observed in the church of
-Rueil. This singular appearance occasioned a search; on the
-approach of the authorities the light was extinguished, but a
-woman’s stays were found on the pavement. The beadle of
-the church was met, apparently much agitated. On a further
-search, the proprietress of the stays was found concealed in a
-press under the <i>draps mortuaires</i>, (the parish pall.) The un<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">289</a></span>happy
-man, on the detection of this profanation, drowned
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>M. Malglaive, a half-pay officer, lately employed in a public
-office, had suffered some unexpected pecuniary losses. One
-of his friends received a note from him by the twopenny post,
-requesting him to call at his lodgings, where he would find a
-packet addressed to him. On proceeding there, and opening
-the packet, he found a letter in these words:—</p>
-
-<p>“When you shall have received this letter, my poor Eleanore
-and I will be no more. Be so good as to have our door
-opened; you will find our eyes closed for ever. We are weary
-of misfortunes, and don’t see how we can do better than end
-them. Satisfied of the courage and attachment of my excellent
-wife, I was certain that she would adopt my views, and
-take her share in my design.”</p>
-
-<p>These young people (for the husband was but thirty-four
-and the wife twenty-eight) had taken the most minute precautions
-to render the effect of the fumes of charcoal certain;
-but a brace of loaded pistols was placed on the night table,
-to be used if the charcoal had failed.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de F—— killed herself in the park of her chateau,
-with <i>her own</i> fowling-piece, which she took out on pretence
-of going shooting, as she was in the habit of doing.
-She loaded it with six balls, and placing the muzzle to her
-breast, discharged it. The only cause assigned is the vexation
-she and M. de F—— felt at her having no children to inherit
-their large fortune.</p>
-
-<p>A fisherman with a large family, residing at Vellon d’Auffes,
-near Marseilles, had been driven by domestic trouble to form
-a design of suicide, which he had long announced. One
-Sunday he climbed a high rock in the neighbourhood, where,
-in the sight of his friends below, with a crucifix in his hands,
-he was evidently saying his last prayer, preparatory to suicide.
-One of the neighbours, guessing his intentions, reached the
-spot suddenly, and seized him; a struggle ensued on the edge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">290</a></span>
-of the precipice; the unhappy man prevailed, and, escaping
-from the arms of his friendly antagonist, flung himself over.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire relates the particulars of the following singular
-case:—An Englishman of the name of Bacon Morris, a half-pay
-officer, and a man of much intellect, called on Voltaire at
-Paris. The man was afflicted with a cruel malady, for which
-he was led to suppose there was no cure. After a certain
-number of visits, he one day called on the philosopher, with a
-purse and a couple of papers in his hand. “One of these
-papers,” he said, addressing Voltaire, “contains my will, the
-other my epitaph; and this bag of money is intended to defray
-the expenses of my funeral. I am resolved to try for
-fifteen days what can be effected by regimen and the remedies
-prescribed, in order to render life less insupportable; and if I
-succeed not, I am determined to kill myself. You will bury
-me in what manner you please; my epitaph is short.” He
-then read it; it consisted of the following two words from
-Petronius, “Valete, curæ”—“Farewell, care.” “Fortunately,”
-says Voltaire, “for him and myself, who loved him, he was
-cured, and did not kill himself.”</p>
-
-<p>Two young people—Auguste, aged twenty-six, and Henriette,
-aged eighteen—had long loved each other, but the
-parents of the girl would not consent to the match. In this
-difficulty the young man wrote to Henriette:—</p>
-
-<p>“Men are inexorable. Well, let us set them at defiance.
-God is all-powerful; our marriage shall be celebrated in his
-presence; and to-morrow, if you love me, we will write, in
-our blood, at the foot of the cross, our marriage vow.”</p>
-
-<p>This proposition turned the weak girl’s head, and she consented.
-They proceeded one night to a field near St. Denis,
-where there was a cross. On their way they made incisions
-in both their arms, to procure the blood in which the following
-<i>acte de mariage</i> was written:—</p>
-
-<p>“O great God, who governs the destinies of mankind, take
-us under thy holy protection! As man will not unite us, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">291</a></span>
-come on our knees to implore thy sanction to our indissoluble
-union. O God, take pity on two of thy poor children! Assemble
-all thy heavenly choir, that on so happy a day they
-may partake our transports, and be witnesses of the holy joy
-that shines in our hearts. O God! O ye angels of heaven
-and saints of Paradise! look down upon a happiness which
-even the blessed may envy.</p>
-
-<p>“And you, shades of our parents, come to this affecting
-ceremony, come and give us your approbation and your
-blessing. It is in the presence of you all that we, Pierre
-Auguste and Marie Henriette, swear to belong to each other,
-and to each other only, and to be faithful to each other to the
-hour of dissolution. Yes, we swear it—we swear it with one
-voice. You are our witnesses, and we are united for life and
-for death.</p>
-
-<p class="right">(Signed in letters of blood), “<span class="smcap">Pierre Auguste.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
-“<span class="smcap">Marie Henriette.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>The very day after this visionary marriage it was dissolved
-by the suicide of the unfortunate Henriette. The moment
-her fault had become irreparable, her betrayer abandoned her,
-and the poor creature threw herself into the Seine. On the
-body was found the foregoing singular <i>acte de mariage</i>, to
-which she had subjoined, with a feeble hand, the following
-note:—</p>
-
-<p>“He has dishonoured me—the monster! He deceived me
-by pretences which went to my heart; but it is he who is to
-be pitied—wretch that he is!”</p>
-
-<p>A young woman, of a highly honourable commercial family,
-put an end to herself, overwhelmed with the idea of having
-forfeited the esteem of her husband. <i>Rosalie</i> had from her
-youth been destined to be the wife of M. C——, a gentleman
-of her own station in life. Their union, though not distinguished
-by any transports of love, was soberly and rationally
-happy, and they had two children.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, Madame C—— was obliged by affairs of
-business to go into the country while her husband remained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">292</a></span>
-in Paris. During this absence, she appears to have formed a
-guilty passion, (the circumstances of which have not been revealed;)
-but on her return home, the remorse of her conscience
-so preyed upon her spirits as to be at last unsupportable, and,
-after a long and painful struggle, she resolved upon suicide.
-Just before the fatal act, she wrote a long letter to her sister, of
-which we can only spare room for the most striking passages:—</p>
-
-<p>“I have resolved to terminate my existence to-day; but I
-have not had, during the whole morning, resolution to leave
-my poor little children, who are unconscious of their mother’s
-agony.... Forgive, my dear sister, the grief that my
-death is about to cause you. If my excellent husband has
-offended you, forgive him.... If I had appreciated his
-worth, I should not be the wretch I am: my negligence
-towards him began my misfortune, but I had nothing to
-reproach myself with till my fatal journey to Sarcelles—that
-journey was my ruin!... If I had your virtues, I should
-have been the happiest of women; but I allowed myself to be
-bewildered by a sentiment which I had not before known,
-and in my culpable frenzy I was guilty before I intended it.
-O, my God! may my repentance be accepted, and may thy
-goodness inspire my husband with a peculiar, an exalted degree
-of parental affection for those unhappy and innocent children.
-Protect them, O, my God, and grant that they may not
-curse the memory of their unhappy mother, who was guilty
-without intending it.</p>
-
-<p>“And you, O my dearest Louis, forgive your wretched
-wife, who offers you this her last farewell.”</p>
-
-<p>One may judge the consternation which this affecting letter
-spread in the family. The sister, on receiving this letter,
-hastened with Dr. Bouillet to Mr. C—— ’s house: it was too
-late—they found the poor woman in the last agonies of death,
-whilst her little children were playing about the adjoining
-room, indulging in the sports of their age.</p>
-
-<p>M. de Pontalba was one of the great proprietors of France.
-His son had been a page of Napoleon’s, and afterwards a dis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">293</a></span>tinguished
-officer, aide-de-camp to Marshal Ney, and a protégé
-of the Duke of Elchingen. He married the daughter of
-Madame d’Almonaster, and for some time they lived happily;
-but on the death of her mother, Madame de Pontalba began to
-indulge in such extravagances that even the enormous fortune
-of the Pontalbas was unequal to it. This led to some
-remonstrance on the part of her husband, on the morning
-after which she disappeared from the hotel, and neither he
-nor his children had any clue to her retreat. At last, after
-an interval of some months, a letter arrived from her to her
-husband, dated New Orleans, in which she announced that
-she meant to apply for a divorce; but for eighteen months
-nothing more was heard of her, except by her <i>drafts</i> for
-money. At last she returned, but only to afflict her family.
-Her son was at the Military Academy of St. Cyr. She induced
-him to elope, and the boy was plunged in every species
-of debauchery and expense. This afflicted, in the deepest
-manner, his grandfather, who revoked a bequest he had made
-him of about £4,000 a year, and seemed to apprehend from
-him nothing but future ruin and disgrace. The old man,
-eighty-two years of age, resided in his Chateau of Mont
-Levéque, whither, in October, 1834, Madame de Pontalba
-went to attempt a reconciliation with the wealthy senior.
-The day after her arrival she found she could make no impression
-on her father-in-law, and was about to return to Paris,
-when old M. de Pontalba, observing a moment when she was
-alone in her apartment, entered it with a brace of double-barrelled
-pistols, locked the door, and, approaching his astonished
-daughter-in-law, desired her to recommend herself to God, for
-that she had but few minutes to live; but he did not even
-allow her one minute—he fired immediately, and two balls
-entered her left breast. She started up and fled to a closet, her
-blood streaming about, and exclaiming that she would submit
-to any terms, if he would spare her. “<i>No, no! You must die!</i>”
-and he fired his second pistol. She had instinctively covered
-her heart with her hand; the hand was miserably fractured by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">294</a></span>
-the balls, but it saved her heart. She then escaped to another
-closet, where a third shot was fired at her without effect; and
-at last she rushed in despair to the door, and while M. de
-Pontalba was discharging his last barrel at her, she succeeded
-in opening it. The family, alarmed by the firing, arrived, and
-she was saved. The old man, on seeing that she was beyond
-his reach, returned to his apartment, and blew out his brains.
-It seemed clear that he had resolved to make a sacrifice of the
-short remnant of his own life, in order to release his son and
-his grandson from their unfortunate connexion with Madame
-de Pontalba. But he failed—none of <i>her</i> wounds were
-mortal; and within a month after, Madame de Pontalba,
-perfectly recovered, in high health and spirits, radiant, and
-crowned with flowers, was to be seen at all the fêtes and concerts
-of the capital.</p>
-
-<p>A wealthy inhabitant of St. Denis arrived from a long
-journey, in which he had occasion to carry a brace of pistols;
-these he deposited, loaded, on a table in his bed-chamber, and
-sat down to dinner with his family and some friends, invited
-to celebrate his return. Hardly had dinner begun when a
-discussion arose between the father and his eldest daughter,
-about twenty years of age. This young woman had always
-shewn great jealousy of her younger sister, of whom she pretended
-her father was fonder than of her. On this occasion
-the same feeling broke out, and after some strong exhibition
-of ill-temper on her part, her father said, “Nay, if you are
-sulky, you had better go to bed.” The girl got up immediately,
-went to her father’s bed-room, took one of the pistols, shot
-herself, and expired in a few hours in great agony.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George Dunbar, Baronet, Major in the 14th Light
-Dragoons, quartered at Norwich, unhappily got involved in a
-dispute with his fellow officers. He was a man of quick
-sensibility, which may have betrayed him into error on the
-occasion; but whichever party was to blame, the quarrel was
-of a most violent nature, and he returned home much bruised
-from blows received in the scuffle. The next day, repairing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">295</a></span>
-to the mess-room, he declared to the other officers, “That, if he
-had offended any of them, he was ready to make an apology;
-or, if that was not thought sufficient, to give them honourable
-satisfaction.” This proposal was refused, and the officers
-insisted “That he must sell out, for that, as he had abused the
-whole regiment, nothing else would or could satisfy them.”
-To this, Sir George replied, “That he would live and die in
-the regiment, of which he had been an officer for twenty years,
-and that a pistol should end the dispute.” Here ended all
-communication, but the business made a most deep impression
-on his mind. For two successive days he neither took food
-nor slept; and his melancholy appearance filled his family
-with the most lively apprehensions. Lady Dunbar locked up
-his razors, pistols, &amp;c., and watched him with unceasing
-vigilance. Her distress at seeing him so wretched was very
-great, and in the night she moaned very much, and was quite
-restless. Sir George said, “Maria, you disturb me; I will
-get up;” which he immediately did, put on his watch-coat, and
-laid down on the floor. Lady Dunbar then endeavoured to
-conceal the anguish of her mind, in hopes to pacify him, and,
-being overcome with watching, fell asleep. Sir George, as
-soon as he perceived it, left the room, and at about five or six
-in the morning walked out. Her ladyship, when she awoke,
-being much alarmed at his absence, eagerly inquired for him,
-and was told he had taken a morning walk, having a violent
-headache, and thinking the air would do him good. This,
-however, proved only a pretence; for he had gone to purchase
-a case of pistols, and stood by while the bullets were casting,
-which, with the pistols, he brought home, concealed under his
-watch-coat. On his return, he went to Lady Dunbar, who
-took hold of his hand, observing at the same time, “How
-cold you are!” To which he answered, “Yes; I shall be
-better presently.” She then proposed to make breakfast, but
-he declined it, saying he had a letter to write first, and that
-he would ring to let her know when he had finished it. He
-then parted from her, after pressing her hand very hard; went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">296</a></span>
-to his study, wrote his will, and instantly after blew out his
-brains. Lady Dunbar, who heard the report of the pistol, ran
-down into the room, and fell insensible on his body, which
-lay extended on the floor, and from which she was taken up
-covered with his blood, and immediately removed to a friend’s
-house. They were a very happy couple, and she had accompanied
-him in all his campaigns.</p>
-
-<p>As George III. was passing in his carriage through the
-park to St. James’s, a gentleman dressed in black, standing
-in the green park, close to the rails, just as the carriage came
-opposite to where he stood, was observed to pull a paper
-hastily from his pocket, which he stuck on the rails, addressed
-to the king, threw off his hat, discharged a pistol in his own
-bosom, and instantly fell. Though surrounded with people
-collected to see the king pass, the rash act was so suddenly
-perpetrated, that no one suspected his fatal purpose till he had
-accomplished it. He expired immediately. In his left hand
-was a letter addressed “To the coroner who shall take an
-inquest on James Sutherland.” This unfortunate gentleman
-was judge-advocate at Minorca during the governorship of
-General Murray, with whom he had a law suit which terminated
-in his favour. The general, however, got him suspended
-and recalled. This, and the failure of some applications
-to government, had greatly deranged his mind. He was
-very genteelly dressed, but had only two-pence and some
-letters in his pocket; the letters were carried to the Secretary
-of State’s Office. He left a singular paper behind him, expressive
-of being in a sound mind, and that the act was
-deliberate.</p>
-
-<p>The following case is mentioned by Dr. A. T. Thomson, as
-illustrative of the extraordinary determination often exhibited
-by those resolved on self-destruction. A gentleman, who
-had long enjoyed an unblemished reputation, was appointed
-the treasurer of a society; but having unfortunately fallen into
-pecuniary difficulties, he not only applied the funds of the
-society to his own purposes, but forged some bills. As the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">297</a></span>
-punishment of the latter crime was penal at that period, on
-being arrested, he made an attempt upon his life, but did not
-succeed. His prior good character, and the respect in which
-he had been held, prevented him from being immediately sent
-to jail; and he was permitted to remain in the custody of the
-officer of justice who arrested him. The attempt which he
-had made upon his life rendered it requisite that every implement
-which could be employed by the suicide should be
-withheld from him; but in other respects, as much indulgence
-was extended to him as possible, under the circumstances of
-the case. His wife also was permitted to visit him, but she
-was searched before entering his apartment. He was locked
-up every night, and he was awoke in the morning by an
-officer, at a certain hour. On the third morning after his
-arrest, the officer, as usual, entered his room, and called to him,
-but received no answer; he then approached the bed, and
-found that his prisoner was dead. A medical man was immediately
-sent for. It appeared that this gentleman had studied
-anatomy, and knew how to use a lancet; and as he had a
-thorough conviction that he should be hanged, he had persuaded
-his wife to bring a lancet to him in her mouth. After
-being locked up for the night, he undressed himself, and
-opened the femoral artery, the blood from which he allowed
-to flow into the pan of the night chair, until, as was supposed,
-he became faint. He then bound a handkerchief round the
-upper part of the thigh, and placed himself in bed, in the
-position in which he was discovered. Notwithstanding his
-great loss of blood, he contrived so effectually to stem the
-further flow, that none was seen on the floor of the room, and
-only a few spots on the sheets of the bed.”</p>
-
-<p>A servant girl of Mursley, Bucks., committed suicide
-while her master and his men were weeding in the field, by
-taking a cord and tying it tight round the upper part of her
-left thigh, and with a fleam and stick used in bleeding cattle,
-making a deep incision through the artery. She bled to death
-before any assistance could be procured.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">298</a></span></p>
-
-<p>John Upson, of Woodbridge, in Suffolk, a glover, who was
-committed to the castle for felony a few days before, hanged
-himself in his own room with a garter. The following verses
-were written in a prayer-book lying by him:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Farewell, vain world, I’ve had enough of thee,</div>
-<div class="line">And now am careless what thou say’st of me;</div>
-<div class="line">Thy smiles I court not, nor thy frowns I fear,</div>
-<div class="line">My cares are past, my heart lies easy here.</div>
-<div class="line">What faults they find in me take care to shun,</div>
-<div class="line">And look at home: enough is to be done.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<table summary="poem" width="100%"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">“June 26, 1774.</td><td class="tdr padr2"><span class="smcap">Poor John the Glover.”</span></td>
-</tr></table>
-
-<p>Mr. Brower, a print-cutter, near Aldersgate-street, was
-attacked on the road to Enfield by a single highwayman,
-whom he recollected to be a tradesman in the city, and called
-him by his name. The robber immediately shot himself
-through the head.</p>
-
-<p>The case of a man is recorded in a French paper who
-burnt with one of the strongest passions of which we ever
-heard an account. His mistress having proved unfaithful to
-him, he called up his servant, informed him that it was his
-intention to kill himself, and requested that, after his death,
-he would make a candle of his fat, and carry it lighted to his
-mistress. He then wrote a letter, in which he told her that
-as he had long burnt for her, she might now see that his
-flames were real; for the candle by which she would read the
-note was composed of part of his miserable body. After this
-he committed suicide.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Colonel Mautren, of the Prussian Hussars,
-having been stripped, at the gaming table, of all his property,
-even to his watch and the rings he wore, returned home.
-Next day he disposed of his commission; and having offered
-marriage to a respectable female whom he had seduced, a
-clergyman was sent for, and the ceremony performed. He
-then retired to a private room, and while some friends were
-felicitating the bride on her good fortune, the report of a
-pistol announced the catastrophe that had taken place. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">299</a></span>
-company hastened to the room; but the Colonel was no more.
-On the table was a letter to his wife, mentioning the cause of
-his death and inclosing the amount of the sale of his commission.</p>
-
-<p>The particulars of the following case were read by M.
-Gerard de Gray, at the <i>Société de Médecine</i>. A young man,
-having spent in the capital all his finances, returned home
-to recruit his purse; but failing in his object, he resolved
-to put an end to himself. He made no secret of his determination.
-On the 16th of August he carried it into execution.
-His bed-room was about nine feet square, and a
-little more than six in height. On every aperture in it by
-which the air might possibly have admittance, he pasted paper,
-and about five in the afternoon lighted a brazier of coals,
-which he set on the floor close by his bed. He then left
-the apartment, carefully closing the door after him. At six,
-he said to an old lady, “My brazier is now ready—I go to
-die.” On the following morning, the family having become
-alarmed, the door of the chamber was forced open. An insupportable
-vapour issued from the place, and the body of the
-unfortunate youth was found stretched across the bed. On
-the floor, the brazier still occupied the place already mentioned;
-it was of considerable capacity, and seemed to have been
-lighted with paper. Near the body were placed two volumes
-of an old Encyclopædia; one of them at the foot of the bed,
-open at the article Ecstasy; the other near the right hand
-displayed the article Death. On the latter volume was a
-pencil and a bit of paper, with the words, <i>Je meurs avec
-calme et bonheur</i>, clearly written, with the date annexed; but
-beneath that there appeared, in characters very difficult to be
-read, the following words: <i>Au moment de l’agonie j’aurais
-voulu m’être procuré une sensation agréable</i>. It would appear
-that the deceased immediately on writing the scrawl, had
-fallen into the position in which he was found. The attitude
-did not betoken any struggle at the last moment; yet it seems
-probable, from the signs of sickness of the stomach, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">300</a></span>
-mention of agony in the last phrase, that life did not become
-extinct without some painful sensations.</p>
-
-<p>Madame Augine having been personally attached to the
-late Queen of France, expected to suffer under the execrable
-tyranny of Robespierre. She often declared to her sister,
-Madame Campan, that she never would wait the execution of
-the order of arrest, and that she was determined to die rather
-than fall into the hands of the executioner. Madame Campan
-endeavoured, by the principles of morality and philosophy, to
-persuade her sister to abandon this desperate resolution; and
-in her last visit, as if she had foreseen the fate of this unfortunate
-woman, she added, “Wait the future with resignation;
-some fortunate occurrence may turn aside the fate you fear,
-even at the moment you may believe the danger to be
-greatest.” Soon afterwards the guards appeared before the
-house where Madame Augine resided, to take her to prison.
-Firm in her resolution to avoid the ignominy of execution,
-she ran to the top of the house, threw herself from the balcony,
-and was taken up dead. As they were carrying her corpse to
-the grave, the attendants were obliged to turn aside to let pass
-the cart which conveyed Robespierre to the scaffold!</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1600, on the 10th of April, a person of the
-name of William Dorrington threw himself from the top
-of St. Sepulchre’s church, in London, having previously left
-on the leads or roof a paper of which the following is a
-copy:—</p>
-
-<p>“Let no other man be troubled for that which is my own
-fault; John Bunkley and his fellows, by perjury and other bad
-means, have brought me to this end. God forgive it them,
-and I do. And, O Lord, forgive me this cruel deed upon my
-own body, which I utterly detest, and most humbly pray him
-to cast it behind him; and that of his most exceeding and
-infinite mercy he will forgive it me, with all my other sins.
-But surely, after they had slandered me, every day that I lived
-was to me a hundred deaths, which caused me rather to die
-with infamy than to live in infamy and torment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">301</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, summa Deitas, quæ cœlis et superis presides, meis
-medere miseris, ut spretis inferis, letis superis, reis dona
-veniam.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">79</a></p>
-
-<p>“Trusting in his only passion and merits of Jesus Christ,
-and confessing my exceeding great sins, I say—‘Master, have
-mercy upon me!’”</p>
-
-<p>This paper was folded up in form of a letter, and indorsed,
-“Oh, let me live, and I will call upon thy name!”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Davers, who built at a vast expense a little fort on
-the River Thames, near Blackwall, known by the name of
-Davers’s Folly, after passing through a series of misfortunes,
-chiefly owing to an unhappy turn of mind, put an end to his
-miserable life. Some few hours before his death, he was seen
-to write the following card:—“Descended from an ancient and
-honourable family, I have, for fifteen years past, suffered more
-indigence than ever gentleman submitted to; neglected by
-my acquaintance, traduced by my enemies, and insulted by
-the vulgar, I am so reduced, worn down and tired, that I have
-nothing left but that lasting repose, the joint and dernier
-inheritance of all.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Of laudanum an ample dose</div>
-<div class="line">Must all my present ills compose;</div>
-<div class="line">But the best laudanum of all</div>
-<div class="line">I want (not resolution) but a ball.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<table summary="poem" width="100%"><tr>
-<td class="tdl">“N. B. Advertise this.</td><td class="tdr padr2">T. D.”</td>
-</tr></table>
-
-<p><br />A farmer near Allandale, in Northumberland, procured a
-gun-barrel, which he loaded with powder and shot, and having
-placed the stock end in the fire, he leaned with his belly
-against the other. In this position he awaited the dreadful
-moment. When the barrel became hot, an explosion took
-place, by which he was shot through the body. He had,
-some time before, been in the habit of excessive drinking,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">302</a></span>which had impaired his intellects, and probably produced a
-derangement which led to the commission of the deed.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Henry Grymes, of Virginia, U. S., whilst labouring
-under the influence of delirium, broke his skull with a stone.
-After having shattered it, he took out a piece about three
-inches long, and two broad. Concluding that this would not
-put a period to his existence, he thrust his fingers into his
-head, and tore out a considerable quantity of his brains. Instead
-of immediate death, <i>he instantly returned to the full
-exercise of reason!</i> walked home, and lived to the second
-evening following. He appeared very penitent and rational
-to the last moment of his life; and in the meantime gave to
-his friends the above statement of the horrid transaction.
-The cause of this derangement is believed to have been a
-disappointment in marriage. Through the whole of his life
-he supported an unsullied character.</p>
-
-<p>“A blacksmith charged an old gun-barrel with a brace of
-bullets, and, putting one end into the fire of his forge, tied a
-string to the handle of his bellows, by pulling which he
-could make them play whilst he was at a convenient distance,
-kneeling down; he then placed his head near the mouth of
-the barrel, and moving the bellows by means of the string,
-they blew up the fire, he keeping his head, with astonishing
-firmness and horrible deliberation, in that position till the
-further end of the barrel was so heated as to kindle the powder,
-whose explosion instantly drove the bullets through his
-brain. Though I know this happened literally as I relate
-it, yet there is something so extraordinary, and almost incredible,
-in the circumstance, that perhaps I should not have
-mentioned it, had it not been well attested, and known to the
-inhabitants of Geneva, and to all the English there.”<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">80</a></p>
-
-<p>A Hanoverian, eighty years of age, resided at a country
-house near Berne, with his five daughters, the eldest of whom
-was aged thirty, and the youngest sixteen. The family were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">303</a></span>of very retired habits, but were governed chiefly by the eldest
-sister, who was noted for her imperious disposition, and opposition
-to religion. A young Englishman, who had been for
-some time an occasional visitor to the house, became smitten
-with one of the daughters; and one fine evening, as the five
-sisters were taking the air in a carriage in the avenues of the
-Eugi, they met him in his cabriolet, accompanied by a friend.
-After parading up and down for some time, an exchange of
-vehicles was proposed to and accepted by the young ladies,
-one of whom accompanied the Englishman, and his friend
-entered the carriage with the ladies. A similar change was
-again effected, until the Englishman found himself with the
-object of his affections, with whom he immediately decamped.
-The others, thinking he had returned to the house by another
-road, gave themselves no uneasiness, but continued their
-road homewards. On arriving, however, they found he had
-not returned. The eldest sister, becoming alarmed, sent and
-informed the police that her sister had been run away with;
-and the next day, news having been received that the runaways
-were at Fribourg, she immediately set out for that
-place, accompanied by one of her sisters. Before her departure,
-she told the two who remained, that if she did not
-return by a certain hour, it would be a proof that their family
-was dishonoured; in which case, it became the duty of them
-all to renounce life. She required, and even extorted, from
-them a solemn oath, that they would drown themselves if they
-(the two elder sisters) did not return at the hour mentioned.
-On arriving at Fribourg, and finding their sister, whom they
-could not persuade to return home, they two resolved upon
-putting their resolution into effect; for which purpose they
-repaired to the banks of the Sarine; but the younger, on
-arriving, finding her courage fail, exclaimed, “Kill me, sister;
-I can never throw myself into the river.” The eldest drew
-out a dagger, and was about to perpetrate the deed, when a
-peasant coming up, interrupted the design. She immediately
-despatched the peasant to prevent her other two sisters from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">304</a></span>
-putting their oath into effect; but the precaution was too
-late. After having prepared every necessary for their aged
-father during the day, they dressed themselves in their best
-apparel, and, on arriving at the banks of the Aar, fastened
-themselves with a shawl, and, embracing each other, precipitated
-themselves into the river, in which position their bodies
-were found some time afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>The particulars of the following extraordinary case we find
-recorded in the Annual Register for 1823. It appears that a
-man of the name of Spring and his paramour, Mary Gooch,
-had agreed to commit mutual suicide. For that purpose a
-large dose of laudanum was purchased; but the dose which
-Spring took was not sufficient for his purpose, and he recovered.
-The poor woman was successful in killing herself.
-The following is the evidence given by Spring at the coroner’s
-inquest:—</p>
-
-<p>“John Spring said, that he was present with the deceased
-in bed when she died, about seven o’clock on Friday morning;
-that she did not die in agony; that on the Wednesday evening
-the deceased and witness came to an agreement to buy some
-laudanum to take together, that they might both be found
-dead together in the same bed; that on the Thursday morning,
-he (the witness) went to the chemist’s and bought some
-laudanum; he thinks four ounces; that when he came in,
-Mary Gooch said, ‘Your heart has failed you; you have not
-bought it for me;’ that she got up and felt witness’s pocket.
-The deceased said, ‘You have got something here.’ Witness
-replied, ‘Oh, that will soon do our business, if we take it.’
-She said, ‘Have you any money left of what I gave you
-to buy it with?’ Witness said, ‘Yes, there are some halfpence.’
-The deceased said she would purchase some oranges
-with them, to take after it, and would send for them; that
-she sent a boy of Webb’s, who returned with two oranges;
-that the deceased peeled them; that she took two wine
-glasses off the shelf, and placed hers on the box, and said,
-‘Now let us take it.’ She poured half into one glass, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">305</a></span>
-half into another. One glass she kept to herself, and the
-other she gave to witness. The deceased said, ‘Let us take
-hold of each other’s hands.’ Witness said, ‘No, my dear;
-if we do, we shall not take it; let us turn back to back, and take
-it.’ Deceased and witness turned their backs to one another,
-and drank the contents of the glasses. After they had drunk
-the laudanum, the deceased said, ‘What shall we do with
-the bottle?’ Witness said, he would go and throw it away.
-She said, she would in the mean time wipe the glasses.
-He threw away the bottle, and the deceased had wiped the
-glasses by the time he came back. The deceased said, ‘Let
-us go to bed.’ They both went to bed together. The deceased
-afterwards got out of bed, placed a chair against the
-door, to fasten it, and drew the window blinds. The deceased
-then said, ‘Now we shall die happily together.’ This
-was between two and three o’clock. He asked the deceased
-how she came by the money she had given him; the deceased
-said, ‘That is of no consequence, and does not signify;’
-the deceased and witness conversed together about various
-things, till eight o’clock. She said, she had sent her gown
-to her aunt’s, and that the money came from her. The
-laudanum did not take any effect till about two; she then
-began to sleep. The witness was sick about four, and the
-deceased was awake at that time. The deceased was not sick
-at all, and fell into a sound sleep at six. The witness awoke
-her between six and seven; the deceased then said, ‘How
-large your eyes look!’ Witness said to her, ‘Mary, I am
-afraid my laudanum will take no effect.’ The deceased said,
-‘Oh dear! if I should die without you, and you are taken
-before a court of justice, I shall not die easy.’ Witness told
-her she might be quite happy, for, if it did not take effect,
-he would get up and buy some that would, as he would die
-with her. The deceased said, ‘My dear, pray give me that
-blue muslin handkerchief, that I may have it in my hand
-when I die. Pray, don’t you take anything; but let me die,
-and you will get over.’ She then laid her head on the shoulder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">306</a></span>
-of the witness, and died almost immediately. The body began
-to grow cold by the time he came in from the town, about
-half-past eight. The deceased had been in a bad state of
-mind ever since he had known her. She always appeared to
-wish to die, and had attempted to destroy herself before,
-when the witness was at a fair. About a month previous, the
-deceased having come home in an unhappy state of mind,
-got up about twelve at night, took a linen line, pinned her
-cap over her head, and went out of the house, taking a small
-chair with her. She had one end of a rope about her neck,
-and was about to throw it over the arm of an apple-tree, when
-he overtook her, brought her in, and took the rope from her.
-The deceased, all Wednesday evening, was very anxious to die,
-and wished witness to die with her. On Thursday, she expressed
-a desire that they should both die together. The
-witness had known the deceased ever since Michaelmas Bury
-fair. She had been very anxious about the payment of the
-half-year’s rent; the witness said, he could go to his friends
-and get it; deceased said, ‘If you go away, I shall be afraid
-that you will not come back again.’ It was not from want
-that they committed the act; it had been in contemplation
-some time.”</p>
-
-<p>A young lady, at a boarding school near Birmingham, had
-been set a task, and felt indignant at being obliged to learn
-it out of an old book, while some of the other scholars were
-indulged with new ones. She went next day to an old woman
-in the neighbourhood, and told her “that she had had a
-singular dream,—that she was dead, and had been carried
-to her grave by such and such young ladies,” naming some
-of her companions and young friends; and asked the old
-woman what she thought of it; who replied, “that she put
-no faith in dreams.” A few days after, when going a walk
-with the other scholars, she loitered behind, and making her
-escape from the party, drowned herself in a pool near the
-school. She left her hat (or bonnet) on the edge of the pool,
-wherein was pinned a letter for her parents, entreating their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">307</a></span>
-forgiveness of such a rash act. She therein requested to have
-for her bearers those whom she had said she dreamed had
-carried her to her grave; and enclosed some locks of her hair
-as mementos of friendship. She was only about eleven years
-of age, and the daughter of very respectable parents in the
-neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>Sophia Edwards and Mary West, two female-servants, in
-the family of the Rev. John Gibbons, of Brasted, in Kent,
-were left in care of the house for some weeks, in consequence
-of the absence of their master and mistress. During this
-time they had the misfortune to break some articles of furniture,
-and to spoil four dozen of knives and forks, by incautiously
-lighting a fire in an oven where they had been placed
-to keep them from rust. The unfortunate girls, however,
-bought other knives and forks. Upon the return of Mr. and
-Mrs. Gibbons, the servants were severely reprimanded for
-what had happened, and one of them received notice to leave
-her place. They both appeared to be very uncomfortable for
-two days afterwards; and, on the second day, the footman
-heard them in conversation respecting Martha Viner, a late
-servant in the same family, who had drowned herself in a
-pond in the garden, and observing one to the other, that she
-had done so through trouble. The elder then said to the
-younger—“We will have a swim to-night, Mary!” The
-other replied—“So we will, girl.” The footman thought
-they were jesting, and said—“Ay, and I will swim with
-you!” Sophia Edwards replied—“No, you shan’t; but I will
-have a swim, and afterwards I will haunt you.” After this
-conversation, they continued about their work as usual, and at
-six o’clock asked the footman to get tea for them. While
-he was in the pantry for that purpose, he heard the kitchen
-door shut; and on his return into the kitchen, they were
-both gone. The footman afterwards thought he heard them
-upstairs, and therefore took no notice of their absence,
-until eight o’clock, when he told his master and mistress.
-Search was made for them about the house, garden, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">308</a></span>
-neighbourhood, during the whole night; and early next
-morning, the same pond was dragged which had so recently
-been the watery grave of Martha Viner, when both their
-bodies were found in it, lying close to each other.</p>
-
-<p>The following whimsical instance of indifference as to the
-mode of suicide is related in Sir John Hawkins’s History of
-the Science and Practice of Music, vol. v. 7:—“One Jeremiah
-Clarke, organist of St. Paul’s, an. dom. 1700, was at the
-house of a friend in the country, from whence he took an
-abrupt resolution of returning to London. His friend having
-observed marks of great dejection in his behaviour, and
-knowing him to be a man disappointed in love, furnished him
-not only with a horse, but a servant to take care of him. A
-fit of melancholy seizing him on the road, he alighted and
-went into a field, in the corner whereof was a pond, and also
-trees; where he began to debate with himself, whether he
-should then end his days by hanging or drowning. Not
-being able to resolve on either, he thought of making what he
-looked on as chance, the umpire. He tossed a piece of
-money into the air, which came down on its edge and stuck
-in the clay. Though the determination answered not his
-wishes, it was far from ambiguous, as it seemed to forbid both
-methods of destruction; and would have given unspeakable
-comfort to a mind less disordered than his. Being thus interrupted
-in his purpose, he returned, and mounting his
-horse, rode on to London, where, in a short time after, he
-shot himself.</p>
-
-<p>Falret relates the case of an apothecary who, on receiving a
-reproof from his sweetheart, went home and blew out his
-brains, having first written the following sentence on his
-door—“When a man knows not how to please his mistress,
-he ought to know how to die.”</p>
-
-<p>A German merchant, aged thirty-two, depressed by severe
-reverses of fortune, came to the resolution of starving himself
-to death. With this view he repaired, on the 15th of September,
-1818, to an unfrequented wood, where he constructed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">309</a></span>
-a hut of boughs, and remained, without food, till the 3rd of
-October following. At this period, he was found, by the
-landlord of a public-house, still alive, but very feeble, speechless,
-and insensible. Broth, with the yolk of an egg, was
-administered to him; he swallowed some with difficulty, and
-died immediately.</p>
-
-<p>In the pocket of the unfortunate man was found a journal,
-written in pencil, singular of its kind, and remarkable as a
-narrative of his feelings and sentiments. It commences in
-these words:—“The generous philanthropist, who shall one
-day find me here after my death, is requested to inter me;
-and in consideration of this service, to keep my clothes, purse,
-knife, and letter-case. Moreover observe, that <i>I am no suicide</i>,
-but have died of hunger, because through wicked men I have
-lost the whole of my very considerable property, and am
-unwilling to become a burden to my friends.” The ensuing
-remark is dated September 17th, the second day of abstinence:—“I
-yet live; but how I have been soaked during
-the night, and how cold it has been. O God! when will my
-sufferings terminate! No human being has for three days
-been seen here; only some birds.” The journal continues,
-“And again, three days, and I have been so soaked during
-the night, that my clothes to-day are not quite dry. How
-hard this is no one knows, and my last hour must soon
-arrive. Doubtlessly, during the heavy rain, a little water has
-got into my throat; but the thirst is not to be slaked with
-water; moreover, I have had none even of this for six days,
-since I am no longer able to move from the place. Yesterday,
-for the first time during the eternity which, alas! I have
-already passed here, a man approached me within eight or
-ten paces. He was certainly a shepherd. I saluted him in
-silence, and he returned it in the same manner; probably, he
-will find me after my death!”</p>
-
-<p>“Finally, I here protest before the all-wise God, that, notwithstanding
-all the misfortunes which I have suffered from
-my youth, I yet die very unwillingly, although necessity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">310</a></span>
-has imperiously driven me to it. Nevertheless, I pray for it.
-Father, forgive him; for he knows not what he does! More
-I cannot write for faintness and spasms; and this will be the
-last. Dated near the forest, by the side of the Goat public-house.</p>
-
-<table summary="poem" width="100%"><tr>
-<td class="tdl padl2">“Sept. 29, 1818.</td><td class="tdr padr2">J. F. N.”</td>
-</tr></table>
-
-<p>It is evident, from the above account, that consciousness
-and the power of writing remained till the <i>fourteenth</i> day of
-abstinence. The operation of famine was aggravated by
-mental distress, and still more by exposure to the weather.
-This, indeed, seems to have produced his most urgent sufferings.
-Subsequent to the common cravings and debility of
-hunger, his first physical distress appears to have been the
-sensation of cold; then cold and thirst; lastly, faintness and
-spasm. In this case we find no symptoms of inflammation.
-A want of nervous energy, arising from the reduction in the
-quantity or quality of the blood, appears to have been the
-principal disease. The effort of swallowing, and the oppression
-of food on the exhausted stomach, completed the catastrophe.<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">81</a></p>
-
-<p>There is an extraordinary instance of suicidal design recorded,
-and which is worth noticing, were it only to shew the
-extent to which the human powers can sustain life unaided
-by proper nourishment, even though the intelligent principle
-be subverted.</p>
-
-<p>An officer, having experienced many mortifications, fell
-into a state of deep melancholy. He resolved to die of
-famine; and he followed up his resolution so faithfully that
-he passed forty-five days without eating anything, except on
-the fifth day, when he asked for some distilled water, in which
-was mixed a quarter of a pint of spirits of aniseed. This lasted
-him three days. Upon being told that this quantity of spirit
-was too much, he then took in each glass of water no more
-than three drops of it, and the same quantity of fluid lasted
-him thirty-nine days. He then ceased drinking, and took
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">311</a></span>nothing at all daring the last six days. On the thirty-sixth
-day, he was obliged to recline on a couch. Every request to
-induce him to break his resolution was useless, and he was
-regarded as already lost, when chance recalled within him a
-desire to live. Having seen a child with a slice of bread and
-butter, the sight excited in him so violent an appetite that
-he instantly asked for some soup. They gave him every two
-hours some spoonsful of rice bouillie, and by degrees more
-nourishing diet, and his health, though slowly, was established.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">82</a></p>
-
-<p>Two young men, mere youths, entered a <i>restaurant</i>, bespoke
-a dinner of unusual luxury and expense, and afterwards
-arrived punctually at the appointed hour to eat it.
-They did so, apparently with all the zest of youthful appetite
-and glee. They called for champagne, and quaffed it
-hand-in-hand. No symptom of sadness, thought, or reflection
-of any kind, was observed to mix with their mirth,
-which was loud, long, and unremitting. At last came the
-<i>café noir</i>, the cognac, and the bill; one of them was seen to
-point out the amount to the other, and then burst out afresh
-into violent laughter. Having swallowed each a cup of
-coffee to the dregs, the <i>garçon</i> was ordered to request the
-company of the <i>restaurateur</i> for a few minutes. He came
-immediately, expecting, perhaps, to receive the payment
-of his bill, minus some extra charge which the jocund but
-economical youths might deem exorbitant.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of this, however, the elder of the two informed him
-that the dinner had been excellent, which was the more fortunate,
-as it was decidedly the last that either of them should
-ever eat; that for his bill, he must of necessity excuse the payment
-of it, as, in fact, that neither of them possessed a single
-sous; that upon no other occasion would they have thus violated
-the customary <i>etiquette</i> between guest and landlord; but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">312</a></span>that finding this world, with its toils and its troubles, unworthy
-of them, they had determined once more to enjoy a repast of
-which their poverty must for ever prevent the repetition, and
-then take leave of existence for ever! For the first part of
-this resolution, he declared that it had, thanks to the cook
-and his cellar, been achieved nobly; and for the last, it would
-soon follow, for the <i>café noir</i>, besides the little glass of his
-admirable cognac, had been medicated with that which would
-speedily settle all their accounts for them.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>restaurateur</i> was enraged. He believed no part of the
-rhodomontade but that which declared their inability to discharge
-their bill, and he talked loudly in his turn of putting
-them into the hands of the police. At length, however, upon
-their offering to give up their address, he was induced to
-allow them to depart.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day, either the hope of obtaining his
-money or some vague fear that they might have been in
-earnest in the wild tale that they had told him, induced this
-man to go to the address they had left with him; and he
-there heard that the two unhappy boys had been that morning
-found lying together, hand-in-hand, on a bed hired a
-few weeks before by one of them. When they were discovered,
-they were already dead and cold.</p>
-
-<p>On a small table in the room lay many written papers, all
-expressing aspirations after greatness that should cost neither
-labour nor care, a profound contempt for those who were
-satisfied to live by the sweat of their brow, sundry quotations
-from Victor Hugo, and a request that their names and the
-manner of their death might be transmitted to the newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>Many are the cases of young men, calling themselves
-friends, who have thus encouraged each other to make their
-final exit from life, if not with applause, at least with effect.
-And more numerous still are the tales recounted of young
-men and women found dead, and locked in each other’s arms,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">313</a></span>
-fulfilling literally, and with most sad seriousness, the destiny
-sketched so merrily in an old song—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Gai, gai, marions-nous—</div>
-<div class="line">Mettons-nous dans la misère;</div>
-<div class="line">Gai, gai, marions-nous—</div>
-<div class="line">Mettons-nous la corde au cou.”<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">83</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A woman drowned herself by breaking a hole in the ice of
-a pond sufficiently large to admit her head, which she put
-into the water, so that her body remained quite dry.</p>
-
-<p>A Greenwich pensioner, who had his allowance stopped
-from some misconduct, committed suicide by stabbing himself
-with his spectacles, which he sharpened to a point for that
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p>A man, with a determination to sacrifice his life, threw
-himself among the bears in the <i>Jardin du Roi</i>, in Paris. A bear
-sprung immediately upon him, and before he could be rescued
-from Bruin’s grasp, he was so mutilated that he died a few
-hours afterwards. Prior to his death he expressed much
-pleasure at having effected his purpose.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady, at the age of nineteen, was extremely
-beautiful, in possession of a large fortune, and by no means
-deficient in understanding or wit; but was immoderately
-fond of play. She soon gambled away her whole fortune.
-Reflections on the past became bitter; anticipation of the
-future alarming; melancholy increased, and weariness of life
-succeeded. Being at Bath, in the year 1731, she was seen to
-retire to her chamber with her usual composure, and was
-found in the morning hanging by a gold and silver girdle to
-a closet door. Her youth, beauty, and distress, rendered her
-an object of pity to every one but a near relation, who, on
-hearing of her death, was inhuman enough to exclaim, in a
-punning style—“Then she has tied herself up from play.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">314</a></span></p>
-<p>On the morning of her death she left these lines in the
-window:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“O death, thou pleasing end of human woe!</div>
-<div class="line">Thou cure for life! thou greatest good below!</div>
-<div class="line">Still mayst thou fly the coward and the slave,</div>
-<div class="line">And thy soft slumbers only bless the brave.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>On reading which a gentleman wrote thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“O dice, ye vain diverters of our woe!</div>
-<div class="line">Ye waste of life! ye greatest curse below!</div>
-<div class="line">May ne’er good sense again become your slave,</div>
-<div class="line">Nor your false charms allure and cheat the brave.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A man whose name and connexions were unknown, was
-found dead in his chamber at an inn, in Kent, with the
-following paper lying beside him:—</p>
-
-<p class="center f85">
-Lost to the world, and by the world forsaken,<br />
-A wretched creature,<br />
-Who groaned under a weary life<br />
-Upwards of thirty years, without knowing<br />
-One happy hour.<br />
-And all<br />
-In consequence of one single error,<br />
-Committed in early days,<br />
-Though highly venial<br />
-As being the mere effects of juvenile folly,<br />
-And soon repented of.<br />
-But, alas!<br />
-The poor prodigal<br />
-Had no kind father that would take him home,<br />
-And welcome back his sad repentant virtue<br />
-With fond forgiveness and the fatted calf.<br />
-Here<br />
-He sinks beneath his mighty load of ills,<br />
-And with<br />
-His miserable being lays them down,<br />
-Heart-broken,<br />
-At the age of fifty.<br />
-Tender reader, give him a little earth<br />
-For charity.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>A middle aged Frenchman, decently dressed, hanged himself
-in a public-house in Old Street Road. A letter written in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">315</a></span>
-French was found in his pocket, setting forth that some years
-ago, he dreamt he was to die that day, if not, he was to be
-damned; and therefore, for the salvation of his soul, he had
-thought it necessary to put an end to his life.</p>
-
-<p>A young gentleman, living in London, had paid his addresses
-to an agreeable young lady, won her heart, and
-obtained the consent of her father, to whom she was an only
-child. The old gentleman had a fancy to have them married
-at the same parish church where he himself had been, at a
-village in Westmoreland; and they accordingly set out alone,
-the father being at the time indisposed with the gout, in
-London.</p>
-
-<p>The bridegroom took only his man, and the bride her
-maid; and when they arrived at the place appointed, the bridegroom
-wrote the following letter to his wife’s father:—</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,—After a very pleasant journey hither, we are preparing
-for the happy hour in which I am to be your son. I
-assure you the bride carries it, in the eyes of the vicar who
-married you, much beyond her mother; though he says,
-your open sleeves, pantaloons, and shoulder-knot, made a
-much better shew than the finical dress I am in. However,
-I am contented to be the second fine man this village ever
-saw, and shall make it very merry before night, because I
-shall write from thence, Your most dutiful son,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“T. D.”</p>
-
-<p>“P. S. The bride gives her duty, and is as handsome as an
-angel. I am the happiest man breathing.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">The bridegroom’s servant knew his master would leave the
-place very soon after the wedding was over, and seeing him
-draw his pistols the night before, took an opportunity of going
-into his chamber and charged them.</p>
-
-<p>Upon their return from the garden they went into that
-room, and, after a little fond raillery on the subject of their
-courtship, the bridegroom took up one of the pistols, which
-he knew he had unloaded the night before, presented it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">316</a></span>
-to her, and said, with the most graceful air, whilst she looked
-pleased at his agreeable flattery, “Now, madam, repent of all
-those cruelties you have been guilty of towards me; consider,
-before you die, how often you have let a poor wretch freeze
-under your casement. You shall die, you tyrant! you shall
-die with all those instruments of death about you,—with that
-enchanting smile, those killing ringlets of your hair!”</p>
-
-<p>“Give fire,” said she, laughing. He did so, and shot her
-dead. Who can speak his condition? But he bore it so
-patiently as to call up his man. The poor wretch entered, and
-his master locked the door upon him. “Will,” said he, “did
-you charge these pistols?” He answered, “Yes;” upon which
-his master shot him dead with the undischarged instrument of
-death. After this, amidst a thousand broken sobs, piercing
-groans, and distracted motions, he wrote the following letter
-to the father of his dead mistress:—</p>
-
-<p class="tb">“<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,—Two hours ago, I told you truly I was the happiest
-man alive. Your daughter lies dead at my feet, killed
-by my own hand through a mistake of my man’s charging my
-pistols unknown to me! I have murdered him for it. Such
-is my wedding-day. I will follow my wife to her grave; but
-before I throw myself upon my sword, I command my distraction
-so far as to explain my story to you. I fear my
-heart will not keep together till I have stabbed it. Poor,
-good old man, remember that he who killed your daughter
-died for it! In death I give you thanks, and pray for you
-though I dare not pray for myself. If it be possible, do not
-curse me. Farewell for ever!</p>
-
-<p class="right padr2">“T. D.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">This being finished, he put an end to his life. The body of
-the servant was interred in the village where he was killed;
-and the young couple, attended by their maid, were brought
-to London, and privately interred in one grave, in the parish
-in which the unhappy father resided.</p>
-
-<p>The following case occurred in England not many years
-ago. A young couple, the wife aged sixteen and the husband<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">317</a></span>
-nineteen, discovered, a few months after marriage, that money
-was much more easily spent than procured; and being unable
-to live in the style they wished, they determined, after having
-held a long consultation on the subject, that their best and
-only remedy was at once to put an end to their imaginary
-miseries by committing suicide. After dinner, the husband
-attended his usual business, and brought home with him at tea-time
-a quarter of a pound of sugar of lead, for the purpose of
-executing their design. The whole of this poison was dissolved
-in a pot of coffee, and carefully strained and sweetened,
-to render it more palatable. The young man then deliberately
-wrote a letter, explaining the circumstances to his
-father, to whom he had previously sent a message, requesting
-him to call in the evening. At the time appointed the
-husband and wife drank off the poison, and then, embracing
-each other, laid down to die. When they were discovered,
-all that they could be induced to say was the word “poison.”
-Medical assistance was immediately procured, but no persuasions
-could induce them to take an antidote, both of them
-heroically resolving to die. The young woman, however,
-reconsidered the point, and began to think that death was not
-so agreeable a thing as she first supposed; but, retaining her
-feelings of obedience strong in death, imploringly said to her
-husband, when she was pressed to take the medicine offered,
-“Shall I take it, dear?” To this he gave a direct negative,
-enforcing it with an oath; but her love of life triumphed over
-her sense of obedience to the commands of her lord, and she
-consented to swallow the antidote. The husband, however,
-was not so willing to venture upon the cares and vexations of
-the world, and obstinately persisted in dying; but as this was
-not thought prudent, he was made by physical force to swallow
-the medicine, and was restored to life, and is still in the
-land of the living.</p>
-
-<p>Instances of mutual suicide are by no means uncommon on
-the Continent, and were not unknown in ancient times. The
-inhabitants of England have not become as yet romantic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">318</a></span>
-enough for these exhibitions. The case of M. Kleist, the
-celebrated Prussian poet, and Madame Vogle, may be fresh
-in the minds of our readers. Madame Vogle, it is said, had
-suffered long under an incurable disorder; her physicians had
-declared her death inevitable; she herself came to a resolution
-to put an end to her existence. M. Kleist, the poet, and
-a friend of her family, had also determined to kill himself.
-These two unhappy beings, having confidentially communicated
-to each other their horrible resolution, resolved to carry
-it into effect at the same time. They repaired to the inn at
-Wilhemstadt, between Berlin and Potsdam, on the borders
-of the Sacred Lake. For one night and one day they were
-preparing themselves for death, by putting up prayers, singing,
-drinking wine and rum, and concluded by drinking
-sixteen cups of coffee. They wrote a letter to M. Vogle, to
-announce to him the resolution they had taken, and to beg
-him to come as speedily as possible, for the purpose of seeing
-their remains devoutly interred. After having despatched
-the letter to Berlin, they repaired to the bank of the Sacred
-Lake, where they sat down opposite to each other. M. Kleist
-then took a loaded pistol and shot Madame Vogle through
-the heart,—she instantly fell back dead; he then reloaded
-the pistol, and applying the muzzle to his own head, blew out
-his brains.</p>
-
-<p>A horrid scene of mixed murder and suicide, accompanied
-with great calmness in its execution, was exhibited in the year
-1732, in the family of one Richard Smith, a bookbinder. This
-man being a prisoner for debt within the walls of the King’s
-Bench, was found hanging in his chamber, together with his
-wife; and their infant of two years old lay murdered in a
-cradle beside them. Smith left three letters behind him, one
-of which was addressed to his landlord, in which he says:—“He
-hopes effects enough will be found to discharge his
-lodgings, and recommends to his protection his ancient dog
-and cat.” A second was addressed to his cousin Brindley,
-and contained severe censure on the person through whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">319</a></span>
-means he had been brought into difficulties, with a desire also
-that Brindley would make the third letter public, which was
-as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“These actions, considered in all their circumstances, being
-somewhat uncommon, it may not be improper to give some
-account of the cause; and that it was an inveterate hatred we
-conceived against poverty and rags, evils that through a train
-of unlucky accidents were become inevitable. For we appeal
-to all that ever knew us, whether we were idle or extravagant,
-whether or no we have not taken as much pains to get our
-living as our neighbours, although not attended with the same
-success. We apprehend the taking our child’s life away to
-be a circumstance for which we shall be generally condemned;
-but for our own parts we are perfectly easy on that head. We
-are satisfied it is less cruelty to take the child with us, even
-supposing a state of annihilation as some dream of, than to
-leave her friendless in the world, exposed to ignorance and
-misery. Now in order to obviate some censures which may
-proceed either from ignorance or malice, we think it proper to
-inform the world, that we firmly believe the existence of
-an Almighty God; that this belief of ours is not an implicit
-faith, but deduced from the nature and reason of things. We
-believe the existence of an Almighty Being from the consideration
-of his wonderful works, from those innumerable celestial
-and glorious bodies, and from their wonderful order and harmony.
-We have also spent some time in viewing those wonders
-which are to be seen in the minute part of the world,
-and that with great pleasure and satisfaction. From all which
-particulars we are satisfied that such amazing things could not
-possibly be without a first mover,—without the existence of
-an Almighty Being. And as we know the wonderful God to
-be Almighty, so we cannot help believing that he is also good—not
-implacable, not like such wretches as men are, not taking
-delight in the misery of his creatures; for which reason we resign
-up our breath to him without any terrible apprehensions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">320</a></span>
-submitting ourselves to those ways which in his goodness he
-shall please to appoint after death. We also believe in the
-existence of unbodied natures, and think we have reason for
-that belief, although we do not pretend to know their way of
-subsisting. We are not ignorant of those laws made <i>in terrorem</i>,
-but leave the disposal of our bodies to the wisdom of the
-coroner and his jury, the thing being indifferent to us where
-our bodies are laid. From hence it will appear how little
-anxious we are about a ‘<i>hic jacet</i>.’ We for our part neither
-expect nor desire such honours; but shall content ourselves
-with a borrowed epitaph, which we shall insert in this paper:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">‘Without a name, for ever silent, dumb;</div>
-<div class="line">Dust, ashes, nought else is within this tomb;</div>
-<div class="line">Where we were born or bred it matters not;</div>
-<div class="line">Who were our parents, or have us begot.</div>
-<div class="line">We ‘were, but are not.’ Think no more of us,</div>
-<div class="line">For as we are, so you’ll be turn’d to dust.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="tb">“It is the opinion of naturalists, that our bodies are at certain
-stages of life composed of new matter; so that a great
-many poor men have new bodies oftener than new clothes.
-Now, as divines are not able to inform us which of those several
-bodies shall rise at the resurrection, it is very probable that
-the deceased body may be for ever silent as well as any other.</p>
-
-<p class="right padr2">
-(Signed,)<span class="h">xxxxxxxx</span>“<span class="smcap">Richard Smith</span>,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 5em;">“<span class="smcap">Briget Smith</span>.”</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="tb">A lady and gentleman visited an hotel in the neighbourhood
-of Paris, and ordered dinner to be prepared in a private room.
-The lady, who appeared only nineteen years of age, was most
-magnificently attired. The gentleman was observed to pay
-her marked attention, and addressed her with the most endearing
-epithets. The dinner consisted of every luxury of the
-season. After drinking a large quantity of wine, the gentleman
-requested that they should not be disturbed, and he was
-heard to lock the door. Half an hour afterwards, a report<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">321</a></span>
-of a pistol was heard in the room. The master of the hotel
-was alarmed. The assistance of the police was obtained, and
-the door of the room in which the lady and gentleman had
-dined forced open. The lady was found on the floor dead,
-and the gentleman a short distance from her, in the last
-struggle of death. Two pistols were found near the bodies.
-It appeared that they had agreed to commit mutual suicide,
-and each being provided with a loaded pistol, fired at and
-killed each other. On the table was found a piece of paper,
-on which were written with a pencil the following words:—“We,
-H***d and Maria **, were enamoured of each
-other. Circumstances beyond the control of man prevent our
-alliance. We have no alternative but separation or death;
-and believing death to be one eternal dream of bliss, we, after
-much meditation, have determined to kill each other. We
-affix our signatures to this document.</p>
-
-<p class="right padr2">“<span class="smcap">H***d</span>,<br />
-“<span class="smcap">Maria **</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>Two devoted lovers, disappointed in obtaining the consent
-of their parents to their union, resolved upon dying. They experienced
-some difficulty in deciding how to effect their purpose.
-The lady expressed an abhorrence of pistols, and the
-gentleman was equally repugnant to the rope. After much
-hesitation, they agreed to throw themselves into the river, and
-stated their intention to a friend, who, thinking they were
-merely joking, observed—“Well, I think you will find the
-water very cold; I should advise you to put on warm clothing
-before you jump in.” In the evening they were missing, and
-on searching the river, they were discovered, tied to each
-other, quite dead.</p>
-
-<p>The suicide of Sir R. Croft has often been alluded to. He
-attended the late Princess Charlotte in her confinement, and
-her much lamented death, although not owing to any want of
-skill on his part, preyed much on his mind, and drove him to
-the rash act. He fancied he saw the spirit of the princess
-glide through his room. The sight of an open razor on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">322</a></span>
-table first suggested the idea of self-destruction to him. He
-was a physician of great skill, and was much beloved by all
-who knew him.</p>
-
-<p>A bishop of Grenoble affords an instance of suicidal ingenuity.
-He took a rod on which his bed-curtains hung,
-and suspended it across by a stick, which communicated with
-the trigger of his fowling-piece. He then sat quietly down,
-with his feet hanging over the rod, and placing the muzzle of
-the gun in his mouth, held it fast. He had nothing more
-now to do than to drop his leg upon the rod, when the gun
-went off, and three bullets entered his brain.</p>
-
-<p>The fortitude which suicides display is amazing. A servant
-girl of the Dean of——, who had always borne a most excellent
-character, was accused by the family of theft. She
-immediately repaired to the wash-house, immersed her head
-in a pail of water, and was found dead in that position. What
-must have been the courage of this poor creature, who, when
-writhing under the lash of a false accusation, kept her head
-under water, despite the horrible sense of suffocation that must
-have come on!</p>
-
-<p>A French soldier of the name of Bordeaux, being determined
-to put an end to his life, persuaded a comrade, called
-Humain, to follow his example. They both repaired to an
-inn at St. Denis, and bespoke a good dinner. One of them
-went out to buy some powder and balls. They spent the day
-(Christmas) together with great cheerfulness, called for more
-wine; and, about four o’clock in the evening, blew out their
-brains, leaving some empty bottles, their will, a letter, and
-half-a-crown, in addition to the amount of their bill.</p>
-
-<p>The following letter was addressed by Bordeaux to the
-lieutenant of his troop, and was as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,—During my residence at Guise, you honoured me
-with your friendship. It is time to thank you. You have often
-told me that I appeared displeased with my situation. I was
-sincere, but not absolutely true. I have since examined myself
-more seriously, and acknowledge that I am disgusted with every
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">323</a></span>
-state of man, the whole world, and myself. From these discoveries
-a consequence should be drawn,—if disgusted with the
-whole, renounce the whole. The calculation is not long,—I
-have made it without the aid of geometry. In short, I am
-about putting an end to the existence that I have possessed for
-near twenty years, fifteen of which have been a burden to me;
-and from the moment that I have ended this letter, a few grains
-of powder will destroy this moving mass of flesh, which we vain
-mortals call the king of beings. I owe no one an excuse. I
-deserted. That was a crime; but I am going to punish it,
-and the law will be satisfied. I asked leave of absence from
-my superior officers, to have the pleasure of dying at my ease.
-They never condescended to give me an answer. This served
-to hasten my end. I wrote to Bord to send you some detached
-pieces I left at Guise, which I beg you will accept.
-You will find that they contain some well chosen literature.
-These pieces will solicit for me a place in your remembrance.
-Adieu, my dear lieutenant! Continue your esteem for St.
-Lambert and Dorat. As for the rest, skip from flower to
-flower, and acquire the sweets of all knowledge, and enjoy
-every pleasure.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">‘Pour moi, j’arrive au trou,</div>
-<div class="line">Qui n’echappe ni sage ni fou,</div>
-<div class="line">Pour aller je ne sais où.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“If we exist after this life, and it is forbidden to quit it
-without permission, I will endeavour to procure one moment
-to inform you of it; if not, I shall advise all those who are unhappy,
-which is by far the greater part of mankind, to follow
-my example. When you receive this letter, I shall have been
-dead at least twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p class="right">With esteem, &amp;c.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
-“<span class="smcap">Bordeaux</span>.”
-</p>
-
-<p>Lord Scarborough exhibited the same nonchalance in the
-act of killing himself as he did when he resigned his situation
-as master of the horse. He was reproached in the
-House of Peers with taking the king’s part because he had a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">324</a></span>
-good place at court. “My Lords,” said he, “to prove to
-you that my opinion is independent of my place, I resign it
-this moment.” He afterwards found himself in a perplexing
-dilemma between a mistress whom he loved, but to whom he
-had promised nothing, and a woman whom he esteemed, and
-to whom he had promised marriage. Not having sufficient
-resolution to decide which to choose, he killed himself to
-escape the embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the coolest attempt at self-destruction on record,
-the <i>chef d’œuvre</i> of a suicide, is one related by Foderé. An
-Englishman advertised extensively that he would on a certain
-day put himself to death in Covent Garden, for the benefit
-of his wife and family. Tickets of admission a guinea each.</p>
-
-<p>Voltaire states that Creech, the translator of Lucretius,
-wrote on the margin of the manuscript, “Remember to
-hang myself after my translation is finished,” and he accordingly
-did so.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">84</a> Zimmerman asserts that he committed suicide
-in order to escape from the contempt of his countrymen, in
-consequence of the ill-success that attended the translation of
-Horace, which followed Lucretius. Mr. Jacob, however, observes,
-in reply to the statement of Zimmerman, that Creech
-did not hang himself until seventeen years after the appearance
-of his Horace. His death was attributed at the time to
-some love affair, or to his morose and splenetic temper.</p>
-
-<p>The history of the unfortunate <i>Madame de Monnier</i> is full
-of interest. It has been asserted that her death was the
-result of an ardent passion for Mirabeau; but we think it has
-clearly been established that, at the time of her suicide, she had
-abandoned all claim to his affection, and had formed a strong
-attachment to a person who, although highly respectable in
-point of rank, was very inferior to herself. It is well known
-that Mirabeau had a <i>liaison</i> with Madame de Monnier, the
-wife of the Marquis de Monnier, whom she abandoned. After
-residing seven years with her seducer, mutual jealousies and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">325</a></span>suspicions arose, and all intercourse between them ceased.
-After the death of her husband, the Marquis de Monnier, she
-became enamoured of M. Edme. Benoit de Poterat, a retired
-captain of cavalry, a widower, thirty-five years of age.
-The lovers were mutually captivated, and they agreed to
-marry. Before this happy event, however, could be arranged,
-the ill health of M. de Poterat forced him to quit the country,
-and Madame de Monnier resolved to terminate her own
-existence. She often conversed with her intimate friend
-Dr. Ysabeau on the effects of suffocation from charcoal wood.
-She asked whether death necessarily ensued? The doctor
-replied, that when suffocation was gradual and incomplete, instances
-had been known of persons saved by the instinctive
-effort of introducing air into the room. On the death of
-M. de Poterat, which took place on the 8th of September,
-1789, Madame de Monnier was overcome with grief. Dr.
-Ysabeau and his wife did all they could to console her, but
-without effect. Being alone one day, she collected her
-papers, tied them in bundles, sealed them, wrote a letter containing
-her last directions, and entered a closet, the smallness
-and closeness of which she considered well suited to the design
-she had long resolved to carry into execution. She then
-closed and carefully calked the door and the window. Two
-chafing dishes full of charcoal, which she had just lighted,
-were then placed by her, one on each side of the arm chair
-upon which she seated herself. In order to prevent her purpose
-from being counteracted by any instinctive effort of
-nature, she bound her legs, first under and then above her
-clothes. She then tied one of her arms to the chair, and
-fixed the other, and in this position calmly awaited death.
-When it was discovered that she had attempted suicide,
-M. Bousseau, Procureur du Roi of the Bailliage, proceeded to the
-house, attended by a surgeon, who, without adopting the most
-simple means of resuscitation, commenced opening the body,
-on the supposition that she was <i>enceinte</i>. In the meanwhile,
-a messenger was dispatched for Dr. Ysabeau, who rode full<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">326</a></span>
-gallop towards Madame de Monnier’s house; but he arrived
-too late; the operation had been performed, and life was extinct.
-From the symptoms which were present before the
-ignorant and barbarous surgeon commenced the operation,
-Dr. Ysabeau expressed a firm belief that he could have
-restored her to animation.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">85</a></p>
-
-<p>M. ——, aged twenty-seven, a native of Burgundy, who
-was equally favoured by nature and by fortune, fell passionately
-in love with a young lady. For a long time he solicited
-in vain the consent of his parents to the match, but at length
-love triumphed. Scarcely a month had elapsed after his marriage,
-when he was seized with a lowness of spirits, a disgust
-of life, and a frightful desire to commit suicide. Everything
-which the tenderness of a young and loving wife, and the
-solicitude of the whole family, by whom he was loved, could
-suggest, was done to disperse these gloomy ideas, and reconcile
-him to life; but the unfortunate fellow was too deeply
-sunk in his melancholy. He at length quitted Burgundy,
-and went to Paris with his brother to consult a physician.
-The day after he had arrived, he went to M. Esquirol, made
-known his sad state to him, assuring him that his weariness of
-life was not the result of any physical disease, of any disappointment,
-or of any moral pain; affirming, on the contrary,
-that he was surrounded with nothing but subjects of contentment.
-His brother confirmed this declaration. He left
-M. Esquirol, and promised to return the next day and commit
-himself to his care in his establishment. The next day
-arrived, the young man went out at six o’clock in the morning,
-purchased a pair of pistols, and returned at seven. He
-then proposed to his brother to set out together for Rouen;
-but he reminded him of the promise he had given to
-M. Esquirol, adding, to prevent his changing his mind,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">327</a></span>
-that he had months suitable to go. At that instant M. ——
-took out his two pistols, and placing the mouth of one of them
-at his brother’s forehead, said, “If you do not consent to go
-with me immediately, I will instantly blow out your brains
-with this pistol, and afterwards kill myself with the other.”
-The brother, on hearing this, fell at his feet in a swoon, and
-when he recovered, he no longer saw his unfortunate relative
-who had threatened him, and he trembled lest he should have
-gone to some secret place to terminate his life. He at
-once gave notice to the police, and demanded that the most
-active of their body should be sent in search of him. On his
-part, he neglected nothing which could give him any clue to
-his discovery; he inquired of his friends and his acquaintances,
-but heard nothing of him until the next day, when he
-received intelligence from the police that the body of a man
-shot through the head, had been found in the forest of Seuart.
-It was that of his unfortunate brother.</p>
-
-<p>M. Escousse, author of a drama called Faruck le Maure,
-about twenty, and M. Lebras, about fifteen, both united by
-the closest ties of friendship, and each of a melancholy turn of
-mind, committed suicide at Paris. They had often complained
-of the miseries of this world, and talked of the necessity of
-quitting it. M. Escousse wrote the following note to his
-friends:—“I shall expect you at half-past eleven o’clock; the
-curtain will be raised; come, and we will at length arrive at
-the <i>dénouement</i>.” The young Lebras arrived at the appointed
-time, the charcoal was ignited, and the two friends expired
-together.</p>
-
-<p>A young woman of Marseilles, remarkable for her beauty,
-formed a connexion with a cabinetmaker, whose parents objected
-to their union. They were found quite dead, clasped
-in each other’s arms, having been suffocated by a quantity of
-burning charcoal. They were both dressed in the most elegant
-manner, and must have spent many hours at their toilet
-preparing for their last adieu.</p>
-
-<p>The following case related by Gall cannot easily be paral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">328</a></span>leled.
-The first lieutenant of a company in which a man named
-Prochaska served became enamoured of the wife of the latter;
-but she resisted all his entreaties. The officer, irritated by
-this obstinacy, was guilty of some injustice to the husband.
-Prochaska appeared dejected and morose, but the following
-day he appeared at the dinner table and seemed quite tranquil.
-A few days afterwards he and his wife attended the confessional
-and took the sacrament. He dined in good spirits, and
-took a few glasses of wine. In the evening, he and his wife
-went out to walk, and he expressed himself in terms of great
-affection for her. He asked her, however, if she had made
-a candid and full confession to the priest; and on being
-answered in the affirmative, he coolly plunged a poniard in
-her breast; seeing that she was not instantly dispatched, he cut
-her throat across, in order to release her from her sufferings.
-He now repaired to his house, and seizing his two children,
-who were in bed asleep, he actually hacked them in pieces
-with a hatchet. Having committed these three murders, he
-repaired to the main guard, and with the most perfect coolness
-and deliberation detailed the whole particulars of the
-bloody deed. He concluded in these words:—“<i>Let the lieutenant
-now make love to my wife if he pleases!</i>” Shortly after
-this, he stabbed himself to the heart.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady threatened, without ceasing, to kill herself,
-and made many attempts at it. An old uncle with whom she
-lived, tired by her repeated menaces, proposed a walk in the
-country; and taking her to the brink of a piece of water, he
-commenced undressing himself. “Now, niece,” said he,
-“throw yourself into the water, and I will follow after you.”
-He continued pressing her, and pushed her towards it; but
-after some struggling, she cried out that she was unwilling to
-die, and would never more talk of killing herself.</p>
-
-<p>A young woman, married to a churlish husband, and who,
-although the mother of many children, was unhappy in domestic
-life, determined to fall by her own hands. She threw
-herself into a part of the river sufficiently deep for the exe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">329</a></span>cution
-of her project, but a man, passing by, drew her out, and
-compelled her to go home. The necessary attentions were
-paid her, and she recovered; but it was observed that she
-stood in much dread of water, and felt a pain even in going
-into a bath. She, besides, had a fit of melancholy at the time
-in which she endeavoured to drown herself. This fit lasted
-two or three months; it was followed by a month of great
-excitement, and then she remained calm during the remainder
-of the year.</p>
-
-<p>The bell of the church at Fressonville, in Picardy, was heard
-to sound at an unusual hour, and in a very extraordinary
-manner. The people hastened to make inquiry, and found a
-man suspended from the clapper. He was immediately cut
-down, and after some time restored to life. No motives are
-assigned for the act.</p>
-
-<p>A person of melancholy temperament, and who detested
-his parents on account of their injustice towards him, had recourse
-to the chase as a diversion from his domestic sorrows.
-One day, being weary, he lay down in the shade by the side
-of his weapon and his dog, the faithful companion of his misfortunes,
-and fell into a profound sleep. He awoke in an agitated
-state of mind, and the idea occurred to him of making an
-eternal sleep follow the temporary one he had so much enjoyed.
-Pleased with this, he got up, increased the charge of his
-fowling-piece, and was about to blow out his brains, when he
-sensibly reflected in this manner—“What! am I about to
-shorten my days because my unjust and unnatural parents
-deprive me of their property? This is to give them their
-utmost desire, and to abandon to them that which they cannot
-take from me.”</p>
-
-<p>Matthew Lovat was born at Casale, a hamlet belonging to
-the parish of Soldo, in the territory of Belluno. His father’s
-name was Mark, and being in poor circumstances, the son
-was employed in the coarsest labours of husbandry. His education
-and habits must have been in accordance with his
-station; but it appears that, being attracted by the comfort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">330</a></span>able
-and easy circumstances of the rector and curate, the only
-persons in the parish who lived without manual labour, he
-placed himself under the latter with the desire of entering the
-priesthood. From him he learned to read and write a little,
-but he was too poor to gratify this inclination, and betook
-himself to the trade of a shoemaker. Whether this disappointment
-had any effect on Lovat we cannot tell, but he
-never became expert at his trade, and was distinguished for
-his gloominess and silence. When he grew older, he became
-subject to attacks of giddiness in the head in the spring, and
-to eruptions of a leprous character. Except this gloominess
-and his great attention to religious exercises, nothing remarkable
-was noticed about Lovat until July, 1802. At this period
-he performed an operation upon himself, which subjected him
-so much to the ridicule of his neighbours that he was compelled
-to remain within doors, and to refrain even from going
-to mass. He left the village in November, and went to
-Venice, where he had a younger brother, who recommended
-him to a widow, with whom he lodged until the 21st of September
-in the following year, working regularly as a shoemaker,
-and without exhibiting any signs of insanity. On that
-day he made his first attempt to crucify himself. Having
-constructed a cross out of the wood of his bed, he proceeded
-to nail himself to it in the middle of the street, called the
-Cross of Biri, and was only prevented by some persons who
-seized him as he was about to drive the nail through his left
-foot. He was interrogated as to his motives, but would give
-no answer, except on one occasion, when he said that the day
-was the festival of St. Matthew, and that he could not explain
-further. A few days after this had happened, he left Venice,
-and went to his native village, but returned soon after, and
-continued working at his trade for nearly three years without
-exhibiting further signs of his malady. Having taken a room
-in a third story in the street Delle Monache, his old delusion
-again seized him, and he commenced making at his leisure
-hours the machine on which he intended to accomplish his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">331</a></span>
-purpose, and providing the nails, ropes, bands, crown of thorns,
-&amp;c. He perceived that it would be difficult to nail himself
-firmly to the cross, and therefore made a net, which he fastened
-over it, securing it at the bottom of the upright beam a little
-below the bracket he had placed for his feet, and at the ends
-of the two arms. The whole apparatus was securely tied by
-two ropes, one from the net, and the other from the place
-where the beams intersected each other. These ropes were
-fastened to the bar above the window, and were just sufficiently
-long to allow the cross to lie horizontally upon the floor of his
-apartment. Having finished these preparations, he next put
-on his crown of thorns, some of which entered his forehead;
-and then, having stripped himself naked, he girded his loins
-with a white handkerchief. He then introduced himself
-into the net, and seating himself on the cross, drove a nail
-through the palm of his right hand by striking its head against
-the floor until the point appeared on the other side. He now
-placed his feet on the bracket he had prepared for them, and
-with a mallet drove a nail completely through them both, entering
-a hole he had previously made to receive it, and fastening
-them to the wood. He next tied himself to the cross by
-a piece of cord round his waist, and wounded himself in the
-side with a knife which he used in his trade. The wound was
-inflicted two inches below the left hypochondre, towards the
-internal angle of the abdominal cavity, but did not injure any
-of the parts which the cavity contains. Several scratches
-were observed on his breast, which appeared to have been
-done by the knife in probing for a place which should present
-no obstruction. The knife, according to Lovat, represented
-<i>the spear of passion</i>.</p>
-
-<p>All this he accomplished in the interior of his apartment,
-but it was now necessary to shew himself in public. To accomplish
-this, he had placed the foot of the cross upon the
-window sill, which was very low, and by pressing his fingers
-against the floor, he gradually drew himself forward, until the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">332</a></span>
-foot of the cross overbalancing the head, the whole machine
-tilted out of the window, and hung by the two ropes which
-were fastened to the beam. He then, by way of finishing,
-nailed his right hand to the arm of the cross, but could not
-succeed in fixing his left, although the nail by which it was
-to have been fixed was driven through it, and half of it came
-out of the other side.</p>
-
-<p>This took place at eight o’clock in the morning. Some
-persons by whom he was perceived ran up stairs, disengaged
-him from the cross, and put him to bed. A surgeon in the
-neighbourhood who was called in ordered his feet to be put in
-water, introduced some tow into the wound in the hypochondre,
-which he said did not reach the cavity, and prescribed
-some cordial.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily, Dr. Bergierri, to whom we are indebted for the particulars
-of this case, was passing near, and came immediately
-to the house. When he arrived, his feet, from which but a
-small quantity of blood had flowed, were still in water; his
-eyes were shut; he gave no answer to the questions of those
-around him; his pulse was convulsive; his respiration difficult;
-he was, in fact, in a state which required the most
-prompt means of assistance. Having obtained permission of
-the director of police, who had come to the spot to ascertain
-what had happened, he had him removed by water to the
-Imperial Clinical School at the Hospital of St. Luke and St.
-John, of which he then had the superintendence. The only observation
-Lovat made while being conveyed was to his brother
-Angelo, who was lamenting his extravagance; he replied,
-“<i>Alas! I am very unfortunate</i>.” His wounds were examined
-afresh on his arrival at the hospital, and it was quite evident
-that the nails had entered at the palm of the hand, and passing
-between the bones of the metacarpus without doing them
-much injury, had gone out of the back. The nail which
-fastened the feet first entered the right foot between the
-second and third bones of the metatarsus, and then passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">333</a></span>
-between the first and second of the left foot, laying them open
-and grazing them. The wound in the hypochondre was found
-to extend to the point of the cavity.</p>
-
-<p>The patient all this time was quite docile, and did everything
-that was required of him. The wounds in the extremities
-were treated with fresh oil of sweet almonds and
-bread and milk poultices, renewed several times a day. Some
-ounces of the mixture cardiaca opiata and a little very weak
-lemonade were taken at intervals during the first six days.
-On the fifth day the wounds of the extremities suppurated,
-and on the eighth, that in the hypochondre was perfectly
-healed.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bergierri frequently questioned him as to the motives he
-had in crucifying himself, and always received the same answer—“<i>The
-pride of man must be mortified; it must expire on
-the cross</i>.” Lovat seldom spoke; he sat with his eyes closed,
-and a gloomy expression of countenance. The impression on
-his mind that he must crucify himself was very deep. He
-seemed fully persuaded that this was an obligation imposed
-on him by the will of the Deity, and wished to inform the tribunal
-of justice that this was his destiny, in order that they
-might not suspect that he had received his death from any
-other hand than his own. He had expressed these ideas on a
-paper which he wrote before his attempt, and which afterwards
-fell into the hands of Dr. B.</p>
-
-<p>He did not complain much of pain during the first seven
-days, but on the morning of the eighth he suffered severely;
-this, however, was soon removed by the remedies had recourse to.
-In the course of a short time Lovat was completely restored
-to bodily health, but his mind retained until his death the
-same melancholy caste, although he never had another opportunity
-of putting his sanguinary project into execution.<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">86</a></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">334</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br /><br />
-
-<small>CAN SUICIDE BE PREVENTED BY LEGISLATIVE ENACTMENTS?—INFLUENCE
-OF MORAL INSTRUCTION.—CONCLUSION.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="indent f85">The legitimate object of punishment—The argument of Beccaria—A legal
-solecism—A suicide not amenable to human tribunals—Evidence at
-coroners’ courts, <i>ex-parte</i>—The old law of no advantage—No penal law
-will restrain a man from the commission of suicide—Verdict of <i>felo-de-se</i>
-punishes the innocent, and therefore unjust—Are suicides insane, and
-therefore not responsible agents?—The man who reasons himself into
-suicide not of sound mind—Rational mode of preventing suicide by promoting
-religious education.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> only legitimate object for which punishment can be
-inflicted is the prevention of crime. “Am I to be hanged
-for stealing a sheep?” said a criminal at the Old Bailey,
-addressing the bench. “No,” replied the judge; “you are
-not to be hanged for stealing a sheep, but <i>that sheep may not
-be stolen</i>.” Every punishment, argues Beccaria, which does
-not arise from absolute necessity is unjust. There should be
-a fixed proportion between crimes and punishments. Crimes
-are only to be estimated by the injury done to society; and
-the end of punishment is, to prevent the criminal from doing
-further injury, as well as to induce others from committing
-similar offences.</p>
-
-<p>The act of suicide ought not to be considered as a crime<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">335</a></span>
-in the legal definition of the term. It is not an offence that
-can be deemed cognizable by the civil magistrate. It is to be
-considered a sinful and vicious action. To punish suicide as a
-crime is to commit a solecism in legislation. The unfortunate
-individual, by the very act of suicide, places himself beyond
-the vengeance of the law; he has anticipated its operation;
-he has rendered himself amenable to the highest tribunal—viz.,
-that of his Creator; no penal enactments, however
-stringent, can affect him. What is the operation of the law
-under these circumstances? A verdict of <i>felo-de-se</i> is returned,
-and the innocent relations of the suicide are disgraced and
-branded with infamy, and that too on evidence of an <i>ex-parte</i>
-nature. It is unjust, inhuman, unnatural, and unchristian,
-that the law should punish the innocent family of the man
-who, in a moment of frenzy, terminates his own miserable
-existence. It was clearly established, that before the alteration
-in the law respecting suicide, the fear of being buried
-in a cross-road, and having a stake driven through the body,
-had no beneficial effect in decreasing the number of suicides;
-and the verdict of <i>felo-de-se</i>, now occasionally returned, is
-productive of no advantage whatever, and only injures the
-surviving relatives.</p>
-
-<p>When a man contemplates an outrage of the law, the fear
-of the punishment awarded for the offence may deter him
-from its commission; but the unhappy person whose desperate
-circumstances impel him to sacrifice his own life can be
-influenced by no such fear. His whole mind is absorbed in
-the consideration of his own miseries, and he even cuts
-asunder those ties that ought to bind him closely and tenderly
-to the world he is about to leave. If an affectionate wife and
-endearing family have no influence in deterring a man from
-suicide, is it reasonable to suppose that he will be influenced
-by penal laws?</p>
-
-<p>If the view which has been taken in this work of the cause
-of suicide be a correct one, no stronger argument can be urged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">336</a></span>
-for the impropriety of bringing the strong arm of the law to
-bear upon those who court a voluntary death. In the majority
-of cases, it will be found that some heavy calamity has fastened
-itself upon the mind, and the spirits have been extremely
-depressed. The individual loses all pleasure in society; hope
-vanishes, and despair renders life intolerable, and death an
-apparent relief. The evidence which is generally submitted
-to a coroner’s jury is of necessity imperfect; and although the
-suicide may, to all appearance, be in possession of his right
-reason, and have exhibited at the moment of killing himself
-the greatest calmness, coolness, and self-possession, this would
-not justify the coroner or jury in concluding that derangement
-of mind was not present.</p>
-
-<p>If the mind be overpowered by “grief, sickness, infirmity,
-or other accident,” as Sir Mathew Hale expresses it, the law
-presumes the existence of lunacy. Any passion that powerfully
-exercises the mind, and prevents the reasoning faculty from
-performing its duty, causes temporary derangement. It is not
-necessary in order to establish the presence of insanity to prove
-the person to be labouring under a delusion of intellect—a
-false creation of the mind. A man may allow his imagination
-to dwell upon an idea until it acquires an unhealthy ascendency
-over the intellect, and in this way a person may commit
-suicide from an habitual belief in the justifiableness of the
-act.<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">87</a> If a man, by a distorted process of reasoning, argues
-himself into a conviction of the propriety of adopting a particular
-course of conduct, without any reference to the
-necessary result of that train of thought, it is certainly no
-evidence of his being in possession of a sound mind. A person
-may reason himself into a belief that murder, under certain
-circumstances not authorized by the law, is perfectly just and
-proper. The circumstance of his allowing his mind to reason
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">337</a></span>on the subject is a <i>prima facie</i> case against his sanity; at least
-it demonstrates a great weakness of the moral constitution.
-A man’s <i>morale</i> must be in an imperfect state of development
-who reasons himself into the conviction that self-murder is
-under any circumstances justifiable.</p>
-
-<p>We dwell at some length on this subject, because we feel
-assured that juries do not pay sufficient attention to the influence
-of passion in overclouding the understanding. If the
-notion that in every case of suicide the intellectual or moral
-faculties are perverted, be generally received, it will at once
-do away with the verdict of <i>felo-de-se</i>. Should the jury entertain
-a doubt as to the presence of derangement, (and such
-cases may present themselves,) it is their duty, in accordance
-with the well-known principle of British jurisprudence, to
-give the person the benefit of that doubt; and thus a verdict
-of lunacy may be conscientiously returned in every case of
-this description.</p>
-
-<p>Having, we think, clearly established that no penal law
-can act beneficially in preventing self-destruction,—first, because
-it would punish the <i>innocent</i> for the crimes of the <i>guilty</i>;
-and, secondly, that, owing to insanity being present in every
-instance, the person determined on suicide is indifferent as
-to the consequences of his action,—it becomes our province
-to consider what are the legitimate means of staying the progress
-of an offence that undermines the foundation of society
-and social happiness.</p>
-
-<p>In the prevention of suicide, too much stress cannot be
-laid on the importance of adopting a well-regulated, enlarged,
-and philosophic system of education, by which all the <i>moral</i>
-as well as the intellectual faculties will be expanded and
-disciplined. The education of the intellect without any reference
-to the moral feelings is a species of instruction calculated
-to do an immense amount of injury. The tuition
-that addresses itself exclusively to the perceptive and reflective
-faculties is not the kind of education that will elevate
-the moral character of a people. Religion must be made the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">338</a></span>
-basis of all secular knowledge. We must be led to believe
-that the education which fits the possessor for another world
-is vastly superior to that which has relation only to the concerns
-of this life. We are no opponents to the diffusion of
-knowledge; but we are to that description of information
-which has only reference “to the life that is, and not to that
-which is to be.” Such a system of instruction is of necessity
-defective, because it is partial in its operation. Teach a man
-his duty to God, as well as his obligations to his fellow-men;
-lead him to believe that his life is not his own; that disappointment
-and misery is the penalty of Adam’s transgression,
-and one from which there is no hope of escaping; and, above
-all, inculcate a resignation to the decrees of Divine Providence.
-When life becomes a burden, when the mind is
-sinking under the weight of accumulated misfortunes, and no
-gleam of hope penetrates through the vista of futurity to
-gladden the heart, the intellect says, “Commit suicide, and
-escape from a world of wretchedness and woe;” the moral
-principle says, “Live; it is your duty to bear with resignation
-the afflictions that overwhelm you; let the moral influence
-of your example be reflected in the characters of those
-by whom you are surrounded.”</p>
-
-<p>If we are justified in maintaining that the majority of the cases
-of suicide result from a vitiated condition of the moral principle,
-then it is certainly a legitimate mode of preventing the commission
-of the offence to elevate the character of man as a moral
-being. It is no legitimate argument against this position to maintain
-that insanity in all its phases marches side by side with
-civilization and refinement; but it must not be forgotten that
-a people may be refined and civilized, using these terms in
-their ordinary signification, who have not a just conception
-of their duties as members of a Christian community. Let
-the education of the <i>heart</i> go side by side with the education
-of the <i>head</i>; inculcate the ennobling thought, that we live
-not for ourselves, but for others; that it is an evidence of true<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">339</a></span>
-Christian courage to face bravely the ills of life, to bear with
-impunity “the whips and scorns of time, the oppressor’s
-wrong, and the proud man’s contumely;” and we disseminate
-principles which will give expansion to those faculties
-that alone can fortify the mind against the commission of a
-crime alike repugnant to all human and Divine laws.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">1</span></a> Cæsar’s reply on being told of Cato’s death was reported to be—“Cato,
-I envy thee thy death, for thou hast envied me the preservation of thy life;”
-on which Plutarch remarks, “Had Cato suffered himself to be preserved by
-Cæsar, it is likely he would not so much have impaired his own honour, as
-augmented the other’s clemency and glory.” But Cato’s own idea was, that
-it was an insupportable instance of Cæsar’s tyranny and usurpation that he
-should “pretend” to shew clemency in saving lives over whom he had no
-legal authority.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">2</span></a> The affection and resolution of an obscure private soldier was very remarkable,
-who, standing before Otho with his drawn sword, spoke thus—“Behold
-in my action an instance of the unshaken fidelity of all your
-soldiery. There is not one of us but would strive thus to preserve thee,” and
-immediately he stabbed himself to the heart. Many private soldiers, after
-Otho’s death, gave the same proof of fidelity to their deceased lord.—<i>Plutarch’s
-Life of Otho.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">3</span></a> It is said that the night before the battle the same spectre appeared to
-Brutus, but vanished without saying anything.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">4</span></a> Tac. An. xvi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">5</span></a> At Anchiale, there was a monument erected to the memory of Sardanapalus.
-It consisted of an image carved in stone work, and having the
-thumb and the finger of the right hand joined, as if making some sound or
-noise with them. On the monument was inscribed these words in Assyrian
-characters: “Sardanapalus, the son of Anacyndarax, founded Anchiale and
-Tyre in one day. Eat, drink, and be merry. As for the rest, it is not worth
-the snap of the finger.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">6</span></a> Varro <i>de Ling. Lat.</i>, lib. iv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">7</span></a> 1 Samuel, xxxi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">8</span></a> This is the only case of suicide recorded in the New Testament. Judas’s
-conduct is condemned in the strongest language; he is called in the Gospel
-of St. John (vi. 70,) “a devil, and the son of perdition;” and in the first
-chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, at the 25th verse, after the account given
-of his violent death, he is said to have gone <i>to his own peculiar place</i>. (Εἰς τὸν τόπον τὸν ἴδιον)</p>
-
-<p>Virgil thus alludes to the “place of punishment” allotted to those who
-sacrifice wantonly their own lives:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Proxima deinde tenent mæsti loca, qui sibi letum</div>
-<div class="line">Insontes peperêre manu, lucemque perosi</div>
-<div class="line">Projecêre animas. Quàm vellent æthere in alto</div>
-<div class="line">Nunc et pauperiem et duros perferre labores!</div>
-<div class="line">Fas obstat. Tristique palus inamabilis undâ</div>
-<div class="line">Alligat, et novies Styx interfusa coërcet.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="right f85">(<span class="smcap">Æneis</span>, lib. vi. ver. 434 et seq.)<br /><br /></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“The next in place and punishment are they</div>
-<div class="line">Who prodigally throw their souls away:</div>
-<div class="line">Fools, who, repining at their wretched state,</div>
-<div class="line">And loathing anxious life, suborn their fate:</div>
-<div class="line">With late repentance now they would retrieve</div>
-<div class="line">The bodies they forsook, and wish to live;</div>
-<div class="line">Their pains and poverty desire to bear,</div>
-<div class="line">To view the light of heaven and breathe the vital air.</div>
-<div class="line">But fate forbids, the Stygian floods oppose,</div>
-<div class="line">And with nine circling streams the captive souls inclose.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="right f85">(<span class="smcap">Dryden.</span>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">9</span></a> Macc. i. 6.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">10</span></a> There is something sublime in the stern copiousness with which the
-stoics dwelt particularly on the facility with which suicide may be committed.
-“Ante omnia cavi, ne quis vos teneret invitos: <span class="smcap">PATET EXITUS</span>. Si
-pugnare non vultis, licet fugere. Ideoque ex omnibus rebus, quas esse vobis
-necessarias volui, nihil feci facilius, quam mori. Attendite modo et videbitis
-quam brevis ad libertatem et quam expedita ducat via. Non tam longas in
-exitu vobis quam intrantibus, moras posui,” &amp;c.—<i>Seneca de Providentia</i>, in
-fine. Vide epistle lxx.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">11</span></a> Epistles xii. and lxx.; and De Irâ, lib. iii.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">12</span></a> Corpus Juris Civilis, lib. xlviii. tit. xxi. parag. 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">13</span></a> Vide Potter’s Antiquities.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">14</span></a> Universal Geography, vol. iii. p. 155.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">15</span></a> It is generally believed that Rousseau killed himself by taking arsenic;
-but this has been denied. Judging from the character and disposition of the
-man, we should feel disposed to credit the statement respecting his voluntary
-death. Rousseau always maintained that the following stanza of Tasso had
-a direct application to him, and accurately described his feelings and position
-in the world—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Still, still ’tis mine with grief and shame to rove,</div>
-<div class="line">A dire example of disastrous love;</div>
-<div class="line">While keen remorse for ever breaks my rest,</div>
-<div class="line">And raging furies haunt my conscious breast,</div>
-<div class="line">The lonely shades with terror must I view,</div>
-<div class="line">The shades shall every dreadful thought renew:</div>
-<div class="line">The rising sun shall equal horrors yield,</div>
-<div class="line">The sun that first the dire event revealed;</div>
-<div class="line">Still must I view myself with hateful eye,</div>
-<div class="line">And seek, though vainly, from myself to fly.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">16</span></a> <i>Duverger de Haurane</i>, abbot of St. Cyran, regarded as the founder of
-Port Royal, wrote, in the year 1608, a treatise on suicide, which has, says
-Voltaire, become one of the scarcest books in Europe.
-</p>
-<p>
-He says the decalogue forbids us to kill. In this precept, self-murder
-seems no less to be comprised than murder of our neighbour. But if there
-are cases in which it is allowable to kill our neighbour, there likewise are
-cases in which it is allowable to kill ourselves. We must not make an
-attempt upon our lives until we have consulted reason. The public authority,
-which holds the place of God, may dispose of our lives. The reason of man
-may likewise hold the place of the reason of God,—it is a ray of the eternal
-light.
-</p>
-<p>
-Voltaire, disposed as he was to advocate the right of committing suicide
-whenever a man considered death preferable to a dishonourable life, had
-sufficient sagacity to see through the glaring sophistry of St. Cyran’s reasoning
-on this point. The same author says, “A man may kill himself for the good
-of his prince, for that of his country, or for that of his relations.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">17</span></a> It is evident that the great dramatist considered that suicide was
-opposed to the divine will.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Against self-slaughter</div>
-<div class="line">There is a prohibition so divine,</div>
-<div class="line">That cravens my weak hand.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Again, he says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line i04">“Or that the Everlasting had not fixed</div>
-<div class="line">His canon ’gainst self-slaughter!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">18</span></a> Warder’s “Letters from the Northumberland.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">19</span></a> London Medical and Surgical Journal, vol. v. p. 51.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">20</span></a> In a table given by Professor Caspar, of Berlin, one hundred and three
-cases of suicide are attributed to mental affections; thirty of these may be
-classed under this head, and thirty-two under that of fear and despondency
-combined.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">21</span></a> The massacre of St. Bartholomew lasted seven days, during which more than
-5000 persons were slain in Paris, and from 40 to 50,000 in the country. During
-the execution, the king betrayed neither pity nor remorse, but fired with his long
-gun at the poor fugitives across the river; and on viewing the body of Coligni
-on a gibbet, he exulted with a fiendish malignity. In early life, this monster
-had been noted for his cruelty: nothing gave him greater pleasure than cutting
-off the heads of asses or pigs with a single blow from his <i>couteau de chasse</i>.
-After the massacre, he is said to have contracted a singularly wild expression
-of feature, and to have slept little and waked in agonies. He attributed his
-thirst for human blood to the circumstance of his mother having at an early
-period of his life familiarized his mind with the brutal sport of hunting bullocks,
-and with all kinds of cruelty. It is recorded that, when dying, he
-actually sweated blood.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">22</span></a> Hist. Eccles. edit. Duaci, 1622, pp. 643-4.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">23</span></a> Meaning the Duke of Gloucester.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">24</span></a> King Henry, Act 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">25</span></a> Dr. Johnson’s Rasselas.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">26</span></a> Goëthe, in allusion to one of his own early attachments.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">27</span></a> Love, it is said, often turns the brains of the Italians, even the men.
-M. Esquirol says, “Frenchmen seldom go mad from love. A Frenchman
-often kills himself in a sally of passion and feeling, but is seldom in love
-long enough to go mad about it.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">28</span></a> “Love.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">29</span></a> O’Meara’s “Voice from St. Helena,” vol. i. p. 57.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">30</span></a> “Life of Napoleon.” vol. viii. p. 244.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">31</span></a> It is worthy of remark that the judge who condemned, as well as the
-disciple who betrayed, our Saviour, were both driven by despair to suicide.
-The fate of Judas is recorded in the Gospel; the concluding scenes in the
-life of Pontius Pilate are related by two learned historians (<i>Josephus</i> and
-<i>Eusebius</i>.) The former says that “Pontius Pilate, after having exercised
-great cruelties in his government of Judæa, was, before the Roman Emperor
-(Caligula), stripped of all his dignities and fortunes, and banished to
-Gaul, where it is said he suffered such extreme hardships of body and despair
-of mind, that, after lingering for two years, he became his own executioner.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">32</span></a> Lessing.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">33</span></a> On Lunatic Asylums.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">34</span></a> Vide Mathews’ Life, by his widow, vol. ii. p. 158.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">35</span></a> Dr. Haslam.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">36</span></a> “Revue Médicale,” Dec. 1821.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">37</span></a> Under the heathen mythology, it was believed that the struggles of death
-continued till Proserpine had cropped the hair on the crown of the head, as
-victims were treated at the altar. Virgil has preserved this opinion in the
-fourth book of the Æneid, where he gives so fine a picture of the dying
-agonies of Dido.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">38</span></a> It is only by reasoning physiologically that we can conclude that the act
-of dying is not a painful process. In proportion as death seizes its victim, so
-must consciousness be suspended. What can be more painful to the beholder
-than to witness the convulsive struggles, and the foaming at the mouth, of
-a person in an epileptic fit, who, when restored to consciousness, has no
-recollection of what has occurred? He remembers the premonitory indications,
-and that is all. Death is but an epileptic struggle. A phenomenon
-attends the dying moment which we do not recollect to have seen noticed.
-A man who fell into the water, and who rose several times to the surface, had
-a consciousness of the hopelessness and awfulness of his situation; he felt
-that death was inevitable. With this conviction on his mind, he saw presented
-to him a picture of his past life; the minutest action in which he
-had been engaged was brought in a kind of tableau before him. Circumstances
-that had long been forgotten were conjured from his brain, and he
-had a bird’s-eye view of his past career. Possibly, this may occur to every
-person at the moment of dying. The expressions of those placed under such
-circumstances would indicate as much.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">39</span></a> Foreign Quarterly Review, vol. xvi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">40</span></a> Vol. xxi. for 1837.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">41</span></a> It is related by Lord Bacon, in his “Historia Vitæ et Mortis,” that a
-friend of his, who was particularly anxious to ascertain whether criminals suffered
-much pain in undergoing the sentence of the law, on one occasion suspended
-himself by the neck, having for that purpose thrown himself off a
-stool, on which he supposed he could readily remount, when he had carried
-his experiment sufficiently far to satisfy his curiosity. The report goes on to
-state, that the loss of consciousness which followed would have led to a fatal
-termination of the experiment, had not a friend accidentally entered the
-apartment in time to save the life of the adventurous experimentalist. Foderé
-relates a similar incident of one of his fellow-students. This young man,
-after an argument respecting the cause of death in hanging, resolved personally
-to gratify his curiosity, by passing a ligature round his neck, and attaching
-it to a hook behind the door. To accomplish this, he had raised himself
-on tip-toe, and now gradually brought his heels to the ground. He soon lost
-all consciousness, but was cut down by a companion, who discovered him, in
-a state of insensibility, very soon after the commencement of the experiment,
-and by the prompt application of remedial measures he was finally recovered.
-From cases of this description we learn that the first effect experienced in
-hanging is the appearance of a dazzling light before the eyes, accompanied
-by tingling in the ears. These sensations are, however, momentary, for insensibility
-and death rapidly close the scene.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">42</span></a> Gazette Litteraire.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">43</span></a> Foreign Literary Gazette.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">44</span></a> In 1806, upwards of sixty voluntary deaths took place at Rouen, during
-June and July, the air being at that time remarkably humid and warm;
-and in July and August of the same year, more than three hundred were
-committed at Copenhagen, the constitution of the atmosphere presenting the
-same characteristics as it did at Rouen. The year 1793, presented in the
-town of Versailles alone the horrible spectacle of thirteen hundred suicides.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">45</span></a> This was Philip Mordaunt, cousin-german to the celebrated Earl of
-Peterborough, so well known to all European courts, and who boasted of
-having seen more postillions and kings than any other man. Mordaunt was
-young, handsome, of noble blood, highly educated, and beloved by those who
-knew him. He resolved to die. Preparatory to his doing so, he wrote to his
-friends, paid his debts, and even made some verses on the occasion. He said
-his soul was tired of his body, and when we are dissatisfied with our abode,
-it is our duty to quit it. He put a pistol to his head and blew out his brains.
-An uninterrupted course of good fortune was the only motive that could be
-assigned for this suicide.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">46</span></a> M. Falret.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">47</span></a> Dict. des Sciences Med., vol. liii.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">48</span></a> Previous to Cowper’s attempt at suicide, he had fallen into the company
-of two sophists, who both advanced claims to the right of self-destruction,
-and whose fallacious arguments won him to their pernicious views,
-which were, besides, aided by his recollection of a certain book containing
-similar reasoning, which, however weak in itself, now seemed to his disordered
-mind irrefragable.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">49</span></a> Dr. J. Johnson.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">50</span></a> Vide Dr. Conolly.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">51</span></a> Wordsworth.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">52</span></a> The <i>possunt quia posse videuntur</i> feeling is not sufficiently encouraged
-by medical philosophers in treating mental affections.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">53</span></a> History of Music.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">54</span></a> Edinburgh Medical Trans.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">55</span></a> Lib. xii. cap. 51.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">56</span></a> When Pope was on his death-bed, Bolingbroke observed to the weeping
-attendants, “I have known Pope these thirty years; he was the kindest-hearted
-man in the world.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">57</span></a> Prior to the more urgent symptoms developing themselves, he appeared
-to be endeavouring to recollect Dr. B., and addressed him as Dr. Death.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">58</span></a> A medical student, twenty years of age, was seized with mania, arising
-from the presence of worms in the intestines. He felt the most acute pains
-in the different regions of his body, appearing to him as if persons were
-driving arrows into him, more particularly in the palms of his hands and soles
-of his feet. This caused him to utter most distressing cries, to seek to be
-alone, and prevented him from walking. The intolerable pains and madness
-left him as soon as the worms were expelled.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">59</span></a> “When powerful feelings or passions are in active operation, in the insane
-or in the sane, they draw the muscles of the face into particular forms; and,
-if they continue for a length of time to be greatly predominant, they impress
-upon the countenance an appearance indicative of the character. This is
-felt and acted upon unconsciously in the common intercourse of life. A
-good countenance is a letter of recommendation; and we have, in spite of
-ourselves, an unfavourable feeling towards a stranger where this is absent.
-Now in the generality of suicidal cases, the desponding feelings are in constant
-and active operation; hence there is usually a melancholy and gloomy
-expression of countenance. This arises from no mysterious cause peculiar to
-insanity, but is perfectly intelligible on common physiognomical principles;
-but there are numerous instances where the most experienced physician would
-be unable to detect, by inspection only, the slightest mark of either a disposition
-to suicide or insanity. The absence of this expression must not, therefore,
-induce us to suppose that this disposition does not exist.”—<span class="smcap">Sir W.
-Ellis.</span></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">60</span></a> Ellis on Insanity.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">61</span></a> Indications of Insanity.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">62</span></a> Journ. Gen. de Médecine, Juillet, 1822.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">63</span></a> “Pain is an evil; death, the deprivation of every hope or comfort in this
-life. No man in his senses will burn, drown, or stab himself; for these all
-produce what are called evils; neither can any of these actions be executed
-without the probability of pain in the convulsive action or struggles of death.
-As no rational being will voluntarily give himself pain, or deprive himself of
-life, which certainly, while human beings preserve their senses, must be acknowledged
-evils, it follows that every one who commits suicide is indubitably
-<i>non compos mentis</i>, not able to reason justly, but is under the influence of false
-images of the mind; and therefore suicide <i>should ever be considered an act of
-insanity</i>.”—<span class="smcap">Dr. Rowley.</span></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">64</span></a> Lowness of spirits ought to be regarded and treated as insanity, says Ellis,
-and not dreaded as its forerunner. For it is at this stage that suicide is resorted
-to. Should this not be the case, specific hallucinations may speedily
-appear, and the agony of mind will be endured as a consequence of bankruptcy,
-the unfaithfulness of a friend, the persecutions of enemies, or the ravages of an
-incurable disease. No demonstration of the untenableness of such grounds,
-no picture of brighter and happier circumstances, will avail to refute or encourage.
-The sufferer clings to his hoarded misery. There is generally great
-loss of physical strength in cases of this kind, and the pale emaciated countenance,
-dull and sunken eye, and listless dejected form, tell as plainly as the
-querulous complaint, or the long intricate description of sorrows and anticipated
-evils, to what class the patient belongs.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">65</span></a> Vide Lord Dover’s Life of Frederick, and Ray on Med. Juris.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">66</span></a> Dr. J. Johnson.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">67</span></a> Hill on Insanity.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">68</span></a> This was no doubt an hallucination of the senses. On another occasion,
-when in the House of Commons, Lord Castlereagh fancied he saw the same
-“Radiant Boy.” Does not this fact establish that his lordship’s senses were
-not always in a healthy condition? It is possible that when impelled to suicide
-he laboured under some mental delusion.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">69</span></a> Notes to Metzger.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">70</span></a> Annales de Hyg. pub. et de Méd. Lég. tom. v. p. 156.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">71</span></a> We have availed ourselves of Dr. Taylor’s translation of the particulars
-of the prince’s death, which are recorded with much minuteness in the “Annales
-d’Hygiène Publique, et de Médecine Légale.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">72</span></a> Foderé, vol. iii. p. 167; from the Causes Célèbres. See also Grimm’s
-Historical and Literary Memoirs, (from 1753 to 1769,) vol. ii. pp. 41, 117,
-and 166.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">73</span></a> Travels in Asia, Africa, &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">74</span></a> To which may be added, anticipation of punishment, or disgrace from
-misconduct.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">75</span></a> Méd. Légale, iv. § 948; and Smith on Med. Jurisprudence.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">76</span></a> The committee made no report. Lord Delamere undertook to draw it up,
-but before he did so, parliament was prorogued. Bishop Burnet, who has
-given the particulars of the case with great minuteness, says, he had no doubt
-that the Earl of Essex committed suicide. He was subject to fits of deep
-melancholy, and maintained the lawfulness of suicide. This is also Hume’s
-opinion.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">77</span></a> This is confirmed by the fact that within the jurisdiction of the metropolitan
-police, the two districts in which the greatest number of suicides were
-committed or attempted, in 1836 or 1837, were those of the Regent’s Park
-and Stepney, through both of which the Regent’s Canal runs. This circumstance
-tends to shew that drowning is the mode of suicide most frequently
-resorted to in London, and that a canal offers greater facilities for that purpose
-than the river.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">78</span></a> The disposition to suicide may be manifested very early in life. M. Falret
-knew a boy, twelve years old, who hanged himself because he was only
-twelfth in his class. A similar case occurred at the Westminster school
-about seventeen years ago. Harriet Cooper, of Huden Hill, Rowly-Regis,
-aged ten years and two months, upon being reproved for a trifling fault, went
-upstairs, after exhibiting symptoms of grief by sighing and sobbing, and hung
-herself with a pair of cotton braces from the rail of a tent bed. A girl named
-Green, eleven years old, drowned herself in the New River, from the fear of
-correction for a trifling fault. Dr. Schlegel states, on the authority of Casper,
-that in Berlin, between the years 1812 and 1821, no less than thirty-one children,
-of twelve years of age and under, committed suicide, either because
-they were tired of existence or had suffered some trifling chastisement.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">79</span></a> “Oh, supreme God, who inhabitest the highest heavens, heal my afflictions;
-as with the wretched in hell, the joyful in heaven, shew mercy to the
-guilty.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">80</span></a> Dr. Moore’s Travels through France, vol. i. let. 32.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">81</span></a> Hufeland’s Journal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">82</span></a> Hist. de l’Acad. Roy., 1769.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">83</span></a> Paris and the Parisians, by Mrs. Trollope.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">84</span></a> Voltaire observes, that if Creech had been translating Ovid, he would
-not have committed suicide.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">85</span></a> We refer our readers, for a minute and deeply interesting account of this
-unfortunate woman’s career, to a work from which we have gleaned the above
-facts; the particulars of her life will be perused with great interest.—Videi>
-“Memoirs of Mirabeau, by himself,” vol. iii. chap. xi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">86</span></a> Vide Frontispiece.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">87</span></a> A singular case of this kind was brought under the notice of the Westminster
-Medical Society by Dr. Stone, as an argument in favour of the
-possibility of a person committing suicide when in possession of a sane
-mind.<br /><br /></p></div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<hr />
-<p class="center">T. C. Savill, Printer, 107, St. Martin’s Lane, Charing Cross.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ANATOMY OF SUICIDE***</p>
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