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A Tale of a Tub
The Tale of a Tub   The Tale of a Tub - Section IX - A Digression Concerning The Original...
Jonathan Swift
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       Section IX - A DIGRESSION CONCERNING THE ORIGINAL, THE USE, AND IMPROVEMENT OF MADNESS IN A COMMONWEALTH
       Nor shall it any ways detract from the just reputation of this
       famous sect that its rise and institution are owing to such an
       author as I have described Jack to be, a person whose intellectuals
       were overturned and his brain shaken out of its natural position,
       which we commonly suppose to be a distemper, and call by the name of
       madness or frenzy. For if we take a survey of the greatest actions
       that have been performed in the world under the influence of single
       men, which are the establishment of new empires by conquest, the
       advance and progress of new schemes in philosophy, and the
       contriving as well as the propagating of new religions, we shall
       find the authors of them all to have been persons whose natural
       reason hath admitted great revolutions from their diet, their
       education, the prevalency of some certain temper, together with the
       particular influence of air and climate. Besides, there is
       something individual in human minds that easily kindles at the
       accidental approach and collision of certain circumstances, which,
       though of paltry and mean appearance, do often flame out into the
       greatest emergencies of life. For great turns are not always given
       by strong hands, but by lucky adaptation and at proper seasons, and
       it is of no import where the fire was kindled if the vapour has once
       got up into the brain. For the upper region of man is furnished
       like the middle region of the air, the materials are formed from
       causes of the widest difference, yet produce at last the same
       substance and effect. Mists arise from the earth, steams from
       dunghills, exhalations from the sea, and smoke from fire; yet all
       clouds are the same in composition as well as consequences, and the
       fumes issuing from a jakes will furnish as comely and useful a
       vapour as incense from an altar. Thus far, I suppose, will easily
       be granted me; and then it will follow that as the face of Nature
       never produces rain but when it is overcast and disturbed, so human
       understanding seated in the brain must be troubled and overspread by
       vapours ascending from the lower faculties to water the invention
       and render it fruitful. Now although these vapours (as it hath been
       already said) are of as various original as those of the skies, yet
       the crop they produce differs both in kind and degree, merely
       according to the soil. I will produce two instances to prove and
       explain what I am now advancing.
       A certain great prince {126a} raised a mighty army, filled his
       coffers with infinite treasures, provided an invincible fleet, and
       all this without giving the least part of his design to his greatest
       ministers or his nearest favourites. Immediately the whole world
       was alarmed, the neighbouring crowns in trembling expectation
       towards what point the storm would burst, the small politicians
       everywhere forming profound conjectures. Some believed he had laid
       a scheme for universal monarchy; others, after much insight,
       determined the matter to be a project for pulling down the Pope and
       setting up the Reformed religion, which had once been his own. Some
       again, of a deeper sagacity, sent him into Asia to subdue the Turk
       and recover Palestine. In the midst of all these projects and
       preparations, a certain state-surgeon {126b}, gathering the nature
       of the disease by these symptoms, attempted the cure, at one blow
       performed the operation, broke the bag and out flew the vapour; nor
       did anything want to render it a complete remedy, only that the
       prince unfortunately happened to die in the performance. Now is the
       reader exceeding curious to learn from whence this vapour took its
       rise, which had so long set the nations at a gaze? What secret
       wheel, what hidden spring, could put into motion so wonderful an
       engine? It was afterwards discovered that the movement of this
       whole machine had been directed by an absent female, who was removed
       into an enemy's country. What should an unhappy prince do in such
       ticklish circumstances as these? He tried in vain the poet's never-
       failing receipt of corpora quaeque, for
       "Idque petit corpus mens unde est saucia amore;
       Unde feritur, eo tendit, gestitque coire."--Lucr.
       Having to no purpose used all peaceable endeavours, the collected
       part of the semen, raised and inflamed, became adust, converted to
       choler, turned head upon the spinal duct, and ascended to the brain.
       The very same principle that influences a bully to break the windows
       of a woman who has jilted him naturally stirs up a great prince to
       raise mighty armies and dream of nothing but sieges, battles, and
       victories.
       The other instance is what I have read somewhere in a very ancient
       author of a mighty king {127a}, who, for the space of above thirty
       years, amused himself to take and lose towns, beat armies and be
       beaten, drive princes out of their dominions, fright children from
       their bread and butter, burn, lay waste, plunder, dragoon, massacre
       subject and stranger, friend and foe, male and female. It is
       recorded that the philosophers of each country were in grave dispute
       upon causes natural, moral, and political, to find out where they
       should assign an original solution of this phenomenon. At last the
       vapour or spirit which animated the hero's brain, being in perpetual
       circulation, seized upon that region of the human body so renowned
       for furnishing the zibeta occidentalis {127b}, and gathering there
       into a tumour, left the rest of the world for that time in peace.
       Of such mighty consequence is it where those exhalations fix, and of
       so little from whence they proceed. The same spirits which in their
       superior progress would conquer a kingdom descending upon the anus,
       conclude in a fistula.
       Let us next examine the great introducers of new schemes in
       philosophy, and search till we can find from what faculty of the
       soul the disposition arises in mortal man of taking it into his head
       to advance new systems with such an eager zeal in things agreed on
       all hands impossible to be known; from what seeds this disposition
       springs, and to what quality of human nature these grand innovators
       have been indebted for their number of disciples, because it is
       plain that several of the chief among them, both ancient and modern,
       were usually mistaken by their adversaries, and, indeed, by all,
       except their own followers, to have been persons crazed or out of
       their wits, having generally proceeded in the common course of their
       words and actions by a method very different from the vulgar
       dictates of unrefined reason, agreeing for the most part in their
       several models with their present undoubted successors in the
       academy of modern Bedlam, whose merits and principles I shall
       further examine in due place. Of this kind were Epicurus, Diogenes,
       Apollonius, Lucretius, Paracelsus, Des Cartes, and others, who, if
       they were now in the world, tied fast and separate from their
       followers, would in this our undistinguishing age incur manifest
       danger of phlebotomy, and whips, and chains, and dark chambers, and
       straw. For what man in the natural state or course of thinking did
       ever conceive it in his power to reduce the notions of all mankind
       exactly to the same length, and breadth, and height of his own? Yet
       this is the first humble and civil design of all innovators in the
       empire of reason. Epicurus modestly hoped that one time or other a
       certain fortuitous concourse of all men's opinions, after perpetual
       jostlings, the sharp with the smooth, the light and the heavy, the
       round and the square, would, by certain clinamina, unite in the
       notions of atoms and void, as these did in the originals of all
       things. Cartesius reckoned to see before he died the sentiments of
       all philosophers, like so many lesser stars in his romantic system,
       rapt and drawn within his own vortex. Now I would gladly be
       informed how it is possible to account for such imaginations as
       these in particular men, without recourse to my phenomenon of
       vapours ascending from the lower faculties to overshadow the brain,
       and there distilling into conceptions, for which the narrowness of
       our mother-tongue has not yet assigned any other name beside that of
       madness or frenzy. Let us therefore now conjecture how it comes to
       pass that none of these great prescribers do ever fail providing
       themselves and their notions with a number of implicit disciples,
       and I think the reason is easy to be assigned, for there is a
       peculiar string in the harmony of human understanding, which in
       several individuals is exactly of the same tuning. This, if you can
       dexterously screw up to its right key, and then strike gently upon
       it whenever you have the good fortune to light among those of the
       same pitch, they will by a secret necessary sympathy strike exactly
       at the same time. And in this one circumstance lies all the skill
       or luck of the matter; for, if you chance to jar the string among
       those who are either above or below your own height, instead of
       subscribing to your doctrine, they will tie you fast, call you mad,
       and feed you with bread and water. It is therefore a point of the
       nicest conduct to distinguish and adapt this noble talent with
       respect to the differences of persons and of times. Cicero
       understood this very well, when, writing to a friend in England,
       with a caution, among other matters, to beware of being cheated by
       our hackney-coachmen (who, it seems, in those days were as arrant
       rascals as they are now), has these remarkable words, Est quod
       gaudeas te in ista loca venisse, ubi aliquid sapere viderere {129}.
       For, to speak a bold truth, it is a fatal miscarriage so ill to
       order affairs as to pass for a fool in one company, when in another
       you might be treated as a philosopher; which I desire some certain
       gentlemen of my acquaintance to lay up in their hearts as a very
       seasonable innuendo.
       This, indeed, was the fatal mistake of that worthy gentleman, my
       most ingenious friend Mr. Wotton, a person in appearance ordained
       for great designs as well as performances, whether you will consider
       his notions or his looks. Surely no man ever advanced into the
       public with fitter qualifications of body and mind for the
       propagation of a new religion. Oh, had those happy talents,
       misapplied to vain philosophy, been turned into their proper
       channels of dreams and visions, where distortion of mind and
       countenance are of such sovereign use, the base, detracting world
       would not then have dared to report that something is amiss, that
       his brain hath undergone an unlucky shake, which even his brother
       modernists themselves, like ungrates, do whisper so loud that it
       reaches up to the very garret I am now writing in.
       Lastly, whoever pleases to look into the fountains of enthusiasm,
       from whence in all ages have eternally proceeded such fattening
       streams, will find the spring-head to have been as troubled and
       muddy as the current. Of such great emolument is a tincture of this
       vapour, which the world calls madness, that without its help the
       world would not only be deprived of those two great blessings,
       conquests and systems, but even all mankind would unhappily be
       reduced to the same belief in things invisible. Now the former
       postulatum being held, that it is of no import from what originals
       this vapour proceeds, but either in what angles it strikes and
       spreads over the understanding, or upon what species of brain it
       ascends, it will be a very delicate point to cut the feather and
       divide the several reasons to a nice and curious reader, how this
       numerical difference in the brain can produce effects of so vast a
       difference from the same vapour as to be the sole point of
       individuation between Alexander the Great, Jack of Leyden, and
       Monsieur Des Cartes. The present argument is the most abstracted
       that ever I engaged in; it strains my faculties to their highest
       stretch, and I desire the reader to attend with utmost perpensity,
       for I now proceed to unravel this knotty point.
       There is in mankind a certain . . . Hic multa . . . desiderantur. .
       . and this I take to be a clear solution of the matter.
       Having, therefore, so narrowly passed through this intricate
       difficulty, the reader will, I am sure, agree with me in the
       conclusion that, if the moderns mean by madness only a disturbance
       or transposition of the brain, by force of certain vapours issuing
       up from the lower faculties, then has this madness been the parent
       of all those mighty revolutions that have happened in empire, in
       philosophy, and in religion. For the brain in its natural position
       and state of serenity disposeth its owner to pass his life in the
       common forms, without any thought of subduing multitudes to his own
       power, his reasons, or his visions, and the more he shapes his
       understanding by the pattern of human learning, the less he is
       inclined to form parties after his particular notions, because that
       instructs him in his private infirmities, as well as in the stubborn
       ignorance of the people. But when a man's fancy gets astride on his
       reason, when imagination is at cuffs with the senses, and common
       understanding as well as common sense is kicked out of doors, the
       first proselyte he makes is himself; and when that is once
       compassed, the difficulty is not so great in bringing over others, a
       strong delusion always operating from without as vigorously as from
       within. For cant and vision are to the ear and the eye the same
       that tickling is to the touch. Those entertainments and pleasures
       we most value in life are such as dupe and play the wag with the
       senses. For if we take an examination of what is generally
       understood by happiness, as it has respect either to the
       understanding or the senses we shall find all its properties and
       adjuncts will herd under this short definition, that it is a
       perpetual possession of being well deceived. And first, with
       relation to the mind or understanding, it is manifest what mighty
       advantages fiction has over truth, and the reason is just at our
       elbow: because imagination can build nobler scenes and produce more
       wonderful revolutions than fortune or Nature will be at the expense
       to furnish. Nor is mankind so much to blame in his choice thus
       determining him, if we consider that the debate merely lies between
       things past and things conceived, and so the question is only this:
       whether things that have place in the imagination may not as
       properly be said to exist as those that are seated in the memory?
       which may be justly held in the affirmative, and very much to the
       advantage of the former, since this is acknowledged to be the womb
       of things, and the other allowed to be no more than the grave.
       Again, if we take this definition of happiness and examine it with
       reference to the senses, it will be acknowledged wonderfully adapt.
       How sad and insipid do all objects accost us that are not conveyed
       in the vehicle of delusion! How shrunk is everything as it appears
       in the glass of Nature, so that if it were not for the assistance of
       artificial mediums, false lights, refracted angles, varnish, and
       tinsel, there would be a mighty level in the felicity and enjoyments
       of mortal men. If this were seriously considered by the world, as I
       have a certain reason to suspect it hardly will, men would no longer
       reckon among their high points of wisdom the art of exposing weak
       sides and publishing infirmities--an employment, in my opinion,
       neither better nor worse than that of unmasking, which, I think, has
       never been allowed fair usage, either in the world or the playhouse.
       In the proportion that credulity is a more peaceful possession of
       the mind than curiosity, so far preferable is that wisdom which
       converses about the surface to that pretended philosophy which
       enters into the depths of things and then comes gravely back with
       informations and discoveries, that in the inside they are good for
       nothing. The two senses to which all objects first address
       themselves are the sight and the touch; these never examine farther
       than the colour, the shape, the size, and whatever other qualities
       dwell or are drawn by art upon the outward of bodies; and then comes
       reason officiously, with tools for cutting, and opening, and
       mangling, and piercing, offering to demonstrate that they are not of
       the same consistence quite through. Now I take all this to be the
       last degree of perverting Nature, one of whose eternal laws it is to
       put her best furniture forward. And therefore, in order to save the
       charges of all such expensive anatomy for the time to come, I do
       here think fit to inform the reader that in such conclusions as
       these reason is certainly in the right; and that in most corporeal
       beings which have fallen under my cognisance, the outside hath been
       infinitely preferable to the in, whereof I have been further
       convinced from some late experiments. Last week I saw a woman
       flayed, and you will hardly believe how much it altered her person
       for the worse. Yesterday I ordered the carcass of a beau to be
       stripped in my presence, when we were all amazed to find so many
       unsuspected faults under one suit of clothes. Then I laid open his
       brain, his heart, and his spleen, but I plainly perceived at every
       operation that the farther we proceeded, we found the defects
       increase upon us, in number and bulk; from all which I justly formed
       this conclusion to myself, that whatever philosopher or projector
       can find out an art to sodder and patch up the flaws and
       imperfections of Nature, will deserve much better of mankind and
       teach us a more useful science than that so much in present esteem,
       of widening and exposing them (like him who held anatomy to be the
       ultimate end of physic). And he whose fortunes and dispositions
       have placed him in a convenient station to enjoy the fruits of this
       noble art, he that can with Epicurus content his ideas with the
       films and images that fly off upon his senses from the superfices of
       things, such a man, truly wise, creams off Nature, leaving the sour
       and the dregs for philosophy and reason to lap up. This is the
       sublime and refined point of felicity called the possession of being
       well-deceived, the serene peaceful state of being a fool among
       knaves.
       But to return to madness. It is certain that, according to the
       system I have above deduced, every species thereof proceeds from a
       redundancy of vapour; therefore, as some kinds of frenzy give double
       strength to the sinews, so there are of other species which add
       vigour, and life, and spirit to the brain. Now it usually happens
       that these active spirits, getting possession of the brain, resemble
       those that haunt other waste and empty dwellings, which for want of
       business either vanish and carry away a piece of the house, or else
       stay at home and fling it all out of the windows. By which are
       mystically displayed the two principal branches of madness, and
       which some philosophers, not considering so well as I, have mistook
       to be different in their causes, over-hastily assigning the first to
       deficiency and the other to redundance.
       I think it therefore manifest, from what I have here advanced, that
       the main point of skill and address is to furnish employment for
       this redundancy of vapour, and prudently to adjust the seasons of
       it, by which means it may certainly become of cardinal and catholic
       emolument in a commonwealth. Thus one man, choosing a proper
       juncture, leaps into a gulf, from thence proceeds a hero, and is
       called the saviour of his country. Another achieves the same
       enterprise, but unluckily timing it, has left the brand of madness
       fixed as a reproach upon his memory. Upon so nice a distinction are
       we taught to repeat the name of Curtius with reverence and love,
       that of Empedocles with hatred and contempt. Thus also it is
       usually conceived that the elder Brutus only personated the fool and
       madman for the good of the public; but this was nothing else than a
       redundancy of the same vapour long misapplied, called by the Latins
       ingenium par negotiis, or (to translate it as nearly as I can), a
       sort of frenzy never in its right element till you take it up in
       business of the state.
       Upon all which, and many other reasons of equal weight, though not
       equally curious, I do here gladly embrace an opportunity I have long
       sought for, of recommending it as a very noble undertaking to Sir
       Edward Seymour, Sir Christopher Musgrave, Sir John Bowles, John
       Howe, Esq., and other patriots concerned, that they would move for
       leave to bring in a Bill for appointing commissioners to inspect
       into Bedlam and the parts adjacent, who shall be empowered to send
       for persons, papers, and records, to examine into the merits and
       qualifications of every student and professor, to observe with
       utmost exactness their several dispositions and behaviour, by which
       means, duly distinguishing and adapting their talents, they might
       produce admirable instruments for the several offices in a state, .
       . . civil and military, proceeding in such methods as I shall here
       humbly propose. And I hope the gentle reader will give some
       allowance to my great solicitudes in this important affair, upon
       account of that high esteem I have ever borne that honourable
       society, whereof I had some time the happiness to be an unworthy
       member.
       Is any student tearing his straw in piecemeal, swearing and
       blaspheming, biting his grate, foaming at the mouth, and emptying
       his vessel in the spectators' faces? Let the right worshipful the
       Commissioners of Inspection give him a regiment of dragoons, and
       send him into Flanders among the rest. Is another eternally
       talking, sputtering, gaping, bawling, in a sound without period or
       article? What wonderful talents are here mislaid! Let him be
       furnished immediately with a green bag and papers, and threepence in
       his pocket {135}, and away with him to Westminster Hall. You will
       find a third gravely taking the dimensions of his kennel, a person
       of foresight and insight, though kept quite in the dark; for why,
       like Moses, Ecce cornuta erat ejus facies. He walks duly in one
       pace, entreats your penny with due gravity and ceremony, talks much
       of hard times, and taxes, and the whore of Babylon, bars up the
       wooden of his cell constantly at eight o'clock, dreams of fire, and
       shoplifters, and court-customers, and privileged places. Now what a
       figure would all these acquirements amount to if the owner were sent
       into the City among his brethren! Behold a fourth in much and deep
       conversation with himself, biting his thumbs at proper junctures,
       his countenance chequered with business and design; sometimes
       walking very fast, with his eyes nailed to a paper that he holds in
       his hands; a great saver of time, somewhat thick of hearing, very
       short of sight, but more of memory; a man ever in haste, a great
       hatcher and breeder of business, and excellent at the famous art of
       whispering nothing; a huge idolator of monosyllables and
       procrastination, so ready to give his word to everybody that he
       never keeps it; one that has forgot the common meaning of words, but
       an admirable retainer of the sound; extremely subject to the
       looseness, for his occasions are perpetually calling him away. If
       you approach his grate in his familiar intervals, "Sir," says he,
       "give me a penny and I'll sing you a song; but give me the penny
       first" (hence comes the common saying and commoner practice of
       parting with money for a song). What a complete system of court-
       skill is here described in every branch of it, and all utterly lost
       with wrong application! Accost the hole of another kennel, first
       stopping your nose, you will behold a surly, gloomy, nasty, slovenly
       mortal, raking in his own dung and dabbling in his urine. The best
       part of his diet is the reversion of his own ordure, which expiring
       into steams, whirls perpetually about, and at last reinfunds. His
       complexion is of a dirty yellow, with a thin scattered beard,
       exactly agreeable to that of his diet upon its first declination,
       like other insects, who, having their birth and education in an
       excrement, from thence borrow their colour and their smell. The
       student of this apartment is very sparing of his words, but somewhat
       over-liberal of his breath. He holds his hand out ready to receive
       your penny, and immediately upon receipt withdraws to his former
       occupations. Now is it not amazing to think the society of Warwick
       Lane {136} should have no more concern for the recovery of so useful
       a member, who, if one may judge from these appearances, would become
       the greatest ornament to that illustrious body? Another student
       struts up fiercely to your teeth, puffing with his lips, half
       squeezing out his eyes, and very graciously holds out his hand to
       kiss. The keeper desires you not to be afraid of this professor,
       for he will do you no hurt; to him alone is allowed the liberty of
       the ante-chamber, and the orator of the place gives you to
       understand that this solemn person is a tailor run mad with pride.
       This considerable student is adorned with many other qualities, upon
       which at present I shall not further enlarge. . . . Hark in your
       ear. . . . I am strangely mistaken if all his address, his motions,
       and his airs would not then be very natural and in their proper
       element.
       I shall not descend so minutely as to insist upon the vast number of
       beaux, fiddlers, poets, and politicians that the world might recover
       by such a reformation, but what is more material, beside the clear
       gain redounding to the commonwealth by so large an acquisition of
       persons to employ, whose talents and acquirements, if I may be so
       bold to affirm it, are now buried or at least misapplied. It would
       be a mighty advantage accruing to the public from this inquiry that
       all these would very much excel and arrive at great perfection in
       their several kinds, which I think is manifest from what I have
       already shown, and shall enforce by this one plain instance, that
       even I myself, the author of these momentous truths, am a person
       whose imaginations are hard-mouthed and exceedingly disposed to run
       away with his reason, which I have observed from long experience to
       be a very light rider, and easily shook off; upon which account my
       friends will never trust me alone without a solemn promise to vent
       my speculations in this or the like manner, for the universal
       benefit of human kind, which perhaps the gentle, courteous, and
       candid reader, brimful of that modern charity and tenderness usually
       annexed to his office, will be very hardly persuaded to believe.
       Content of Section IX - A DIGRESSION CONCERNING THE ORIGINAL, THE USE, AND IMPROVEMENT OF MADNESS IN A COMMONWEALTH [Jonathan Swift's ebook: A Tale of a Tub]
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