Chapters in the History of the Insane in the British Isles Part 2
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The old story of the patient who thought Atlas weary of upholding the heavens and would let the sky fall upon him, is narrated by this author, as well as that of the man who believed his nose to be as big as a house.
It comes then, to this--to revert to the question, what was the medical knowledge or practice at the time of c.o.ke and Hale, to which they would turn for direction when insanity came before them in the Courts of Law?--that when the lawyers went to the doctors for light they got surprisingly little help. They had better have confined themselves to reading the old Greek and Roman books on medicine, of which the medical practice of that period was but a servile imitation, and not have added, from their belief in witchcraft, the horrible punishment of lunatics, which in our country extended over the period between 1541 and 1736, when the laws against witchcraft were abolished. The last judicial murder of a witch in the British Isles (Sutherlands.h.i.+re) was in 1722.
Leaving now the insane who were punished as witches, I pa.s.s on to remark that in Percy's "Reliques of Ancient English Poetry," it is stated that the English have more songs and ballads on the subject of madness than any of their neighbours. "Whether," the writer proceeds, "there be any truth in the insinuation that we are more liable to this calamity than other nations,[51] or that our native gloominess hath peculiarly recommended subjects of this cla.s.s to our writers, we certainly do not find the same in the printed collections of French and Italian songs."
Half a dozen so-called mad songs are selected. These refer to much the same period as that we have been considering; and, in fact, we come upon the "Old Tom of Bedlam," or Cranke or Abram man, who "would swear he had been in Bedlam, and would talk frantickly of purpose," so notorious in connection with the beggary which endeavoured to make capital out of the asylum most familiar to our ancestors of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In this light the Bedlam beggars appear in "King Lear"--
"The country gives me proof and precedent Of Bedlam beggars, who, with roaring voices, Stick in their numb'd and mortify'd bare arms Pins, wooden p.r.i.c.ks, nails, sprigs of rosemary;"
and these enforce their charity by lunatic "bans," that is, by licences to beg under the badge of the Star of Bethlehem.
Some doggerel from the most ancient of the Percy "Reliques" will serve for a sample of the rest:
"Forth from my sad and darksome cell, Or from the deepe abysse of h.e.l.l, Mad Tom is come into the world againe, To see if he can cure his distemper'd braine."
Tom appears to have brought away with him some of his fetters, then sufficiently abundant in Bedlam:
"Come, Vulcan, with tools and with tackles, To knocke off my troublesome shackles."
_This_ method of treatment--by fetters--has not, it may be well to state, survived, like immersion, in the practice of the present Master of Bedlam.
We learn from Shakespeare how "poor Tom that eats the swimming frog, the toad, the tadpole, the wall-newt and the water [newt]; ... swallows the old rat, and the ditch-dog;" and "drinks the green mantle of the standing pool," was "whipped from tything to tything, and stocked, punished, and imprisoned....
Mice, and rats, and such small deere Have been Tom's food for seven long yeare."[52]
Whipping-posts were very common in the reign of Henry VIII., and we suppose long before; certainly also much later. About the middle of the seventeenth century an old poet, John Taylor, once a waterman on the Thames, and hence called the "Water Poet," wrote:
"In London, and within one mile, I ween, There are of jails and prisons full eighteen, And _sixty whipping-posts_ and stocks and cages."
The whipping-post was sometimes called the "tree of truth." There is a curious pa.s.sage in Sir Thomas More's works, in which he orders a lunatic to be bound to a tree and soundly beaten with rods.
"There was a tree in Sir Thomas More's garden, at which he so often beat Lutherans, that it was called the 'tree of troth,'" says Burnet. This was not the tree at which he had the poor lunatic flogged, for he says that was in the street.
"It was a good plea in those days to an action for a.s.sault, battery, and false imprisonment, that the plaintiff was a lunatic, and that therefore the defendant had arrested him, confined him, and _whipped_ him."[53]
Whipping-posts may still be seen in some villages in England, in the vicinity of stocks. Of course they were largely employed for idle vagabonds, but many really insane people suffered. The following item from the constable's account at Great Staughton, Huntingdons.h.i.+re, ill.u.s.trates the custom of whipping wandering lunatics:--"1690/1. Paid in charges, taking up a distracted woman, watching her and whipping her next day, 8s. 6d."[54]
Let me here refer for a moment to the "brank."
The "brank" or "scold's bridle" was very probably used in former days for lunatics--an instrument of torture which has received much elucidation from my friend Dr. Brushfield, the late medical superintendent of Brookwood Asylum. Indeed, it is certain that it, or a similar gag, called the "witch's bridle," was employed for these unfortunate suspects, of whom so many, as we have good reason to conclude, were insane or hystero-epileptics. In the church steeple at Forfar one was preserved, within recent times, with the date 1661.[55]
Archdeacon Hale many years ago suggested that the "brank" was used to check noisy lunatics of the female s.e.x; and in reference to this, Dr.
Brushfield remarks: "Medical officers of asylums can always point out many female patients who, if they had been living a couple of centuries back, would undoubtedly have been branked as scolds. One of the female lunatics in the Ches.h.i.+re Asylum gave me, a few days since, a very graphic account of the manner in which she had been bridled some years ago whilst an inmate of a workhouse."[56]
No doubt, in addition to branks and whipping-posts, the pillory and stocks, and probably the ducking-stool, were made use of for unruly and crazy people, who nowadays would be comfortably located in an asylum.
What now, let us ask in conclusion, are the practical inferences to draw from the descriptions which I have given respecting the popular and medical treatment of lunatics in the good old times in the British Isles?
In the first place, we see that the nature of the malady under which the insane laboured was completely misunderstood; that they often pa.s.sed as witches and possessed by demons, and were tortured as such and burnt at the stake, when their distempered minds ought to have been gently and skilfully treated. Some, however, were recognized by the monks as simply lunatic, and were treated by the administration of herbs, along with, in many instances, some superst.i.tious accompaniment, ill.u.s.trating, when successful, the influence of the imagination.
Further, the medical treatment, so far as it made any pretension to methods of cure, was either purely empirical, or founded upon the one notion that descended from generation to generation from the earliest antiquity--that there was an excess of bile in the blood, and that it must be expelled by emetics or purgatives.
Again, there was the more violent remedy of flagellation, one always popular and easy of application; equally efficacious, too, whether regarded as a punishment for violent acts, or as a means of thras.h.i.+ng out the supposed demon lurking in the body and the real cause of the malady. And there was, of course, as the primary treatment, seclusion in a dark room and fetters.
To antic.i.p.ate what belongs to subsequent chapters, we may say here that when the insane were no longer treated in monasteries, or brought to sacred wells, or flogged at "trees of truth," they fared no better--nay, I think, often worse--when they were shut up in mad-houses and crowded into workhouses. They were too often under the charge of brutal keepers, were chained to the wall or in their beds, where they lay in dirty straw, and frequently, in the depth of winter, without a rag to cover them. It is difficult to understand why and how they continued to live; why their caretakers did not, except in the case of profitable patients, kill them outright; and why, failing this--which would have been a kindness compared with the prolonged tortures to which they were subjected--death did not come sooner to their relief.
FOOTNOTES:
[2] Collected and edited by the Rev. Oswald c.o.c.kayne, M.A., 1865.
Published under the direction of the Master of the Rolls.
[3] Corn or seed to cure bewitching (Saxon). Supposed to be the seeds of "wild saffron."
[4] _Op. cit._, vol. ii. p. 137; Leech Book, I. lxiii.
[5] That is, a small bell used in the church, probably the acolyte's.
St. Fillan's was twelve inches high. See _postea_.
[6] _Op. cit._, vol. i. p. 161.
[7] _Op. cit._, p. 171.
[8] _Op. cit._, pp. 313-315.
[9] _Op. cit._, p. 351 ("Medicina de quadrupedibus" of s.e.xtus Placitus).
[10] _Op. cit._, p. 361.
[11] _Op. cit._, vol. ii. pp. 343, 143, 343, 307, and 345.
[12] Wodnes (Saxon) signifies madness. "Ance wod and ay waur," _i.e._ increasing in insanity. (See Jamieson's Scotch Dictionary, 1825: "Wodman = a madman.")
[13] _Op. cit._, vol. ii. p. 335.
[14] Preface to vol. ii. p. xix.-xxiii.
[15] Vol. iv., preface, p. x.x.xiv.
[16] Vol. iv. p. 225.
[17] In Chambers's "Book of Days," in an article on "Holy Wells," it is added to the above statement that in the seventeenth century St.
Winifred could boast of thousands of votaries, including James II.
[18] In the "Miller's Tale," the carpenter is befooled into looking like a madman. "They tolden every man that he was wood," etc. (Percy Society's edition, vol. i. p. 152).
[19] Early English Text Society, vol. iii. p. 163. See also Clarendon Press Series, edited by Mr. Skeats. London, 1866.
[20] "Archaeologia Britannica," by Ed. Lhuyd, 1707. The Armoric word for mania is _diboelder_ or _satoni_; the Cornish, _meskatter_; the British, _mainigh_, among others.
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