Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Dr. Scudder's Clinical Lecture by Edgar Lee Masters
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Dr. Scudder's Clinical Lecture

    By Edgar Lee Masters



    I lectured last upon the morbus sacer,
    Or falling sickness, epilepsy, of old
    In Palestine and Greece so much ascribed
    To deities or devils. To resume
    We find it caused by morphological
    Changes of the cortex cells. Sometimes,
    More times, indeed, the anatomical
    Basis, if one be, escapes detection.
    For many functions of the cortex are
    Unknown, as I have said.

        And now remember
    Mercier's analysis of heredity:
    Besides direct transmission of unstable
    Nervous systems, there remains the law
    Hereditary of sanguinity.
    Then here's another matter: Parents may
    Have normal nervous systems, yet produce
    Children of abnormal nerves and minds,
    Caused by unsuitable sexual germs.
    Let me repeat before I leave the matter
    The factors in a perfect organization:
    First quality in the germ producing matter;
    Then quality in the sperm producing force,
    And lastly relative fitness of the two.
    We are but plants, however high we rise,
    Whatever thoughts we have, or dreams we dream
    We are but plants, and all we are and do
    Depends upon the seed and on the soil.
    What Mendel found in raising peas may lead
    To perfect knowledge of the human mind.
    There is one law for men and peas, the law
    Makes peas of certain matter, and makes men
    And mind of certain matter, all depends
    Not on a varying law, but on a law
    Varied in its course by matter, as
    The arm, which is a lever and which works
    By lever principle cannot make use
    And form cement with trowel to the forms
    It makes of paint or marble.

        To resume:
    A child may take the qualities of one parent
    In some respects, and of the other parent
    In some respects. A child may have the traits
    Of father at one period of his life,
    The mother at one period of his life.
    And if the parents' traits are similar
    Their traits may be prepotent in a child,
    Thus giving rise to qualities convergent.
    So if you take a circle and draw off
    A line which would become another circle
    If drawn enough, completed, but is left
    Half drawn or less, that illustrates a mind
    Of cumulative heredity. Take John,
    My gardener, John, within his sphere is perfect,
    John has a mind which is a perfect circle.
    A perfect circle can be small, you know.
    And so John has good sense within his sphere.
    But if some force began to work like yeast
    In brain cells, and his mind shot forth a line
    To make a larger thinking circle, say
    About a great invention, heaven or God,
    Then John would be abnormal, till this line
    Shot round and joined, became a larger circle.
    This is the secret of eccentric genius,
    The man is half a sphere, sticks out in space
    Does not enclose co-ordinated thought.
    He's like a plant mutating, half himself
    Half something new and greater. If we looked
    To John's heredity we'd find this change
    Was manifest in mother or in father
    About the self-same period of life,
    Most likely in his father. Attributes
    Of fathers are inherited by sons,
    Of mothers by the daughters.

        Now this morning
    I take up paranoia. Paranoics
    Are often noted for great gifts of mind.
    Mahomet, Swedenborg were paranoics,
    Joan of Arc, and Ossawatomie Brown,
    Cellini, many others. All who think
    Themselves inspired of God, and all who see
    Themselves appointed to a work, the subjects
    Of prophecies are paranoics. All
    Who visions have of God or archangels,
    Hear voices or celestial music, these
    Are paranoics. And whether it be they rise
    Enough above the earth to look along
    A longer arc and see realities,
    Or see strange things through atmospheric strata
    Which build up or distort the things they see
    Remains the question. Let us wait the proof.

    Last week I told you I would have to-day
    The skull and brain of Jacob Groesbell here,
    And lecture on his case. Here is the brain:
    Weight sixteen hundred grammes. Students may look
    After the lecture at the brain and skull.
    There's nothing anatomical at fault
    With this fine brain, so far as I can find.
    You'll note how deep the convolutions are,
    Arrangement quite symmetrical. The skull
    Is well formed too. The jaws are long you'll note,
    The palate roof somewhat asymmetrical.
    But this is scarce significant. Let me tell
    How Jacob Groesbell looked:

            The man was tall,
    Had shapely hands and feet, but awkward limbs.
    His hair was brown and fine, his forehead high,
    And ran back at an angle, temples full.
    His nose was long and fleshy at the point,
    Was tilted to one side. His eyes were gray,
    The iris flecked. They looked as if a light
    As of a sun-set shone behind them. Ears
    Were very large, projected at right angles.
    His neck was slender, womanish. His skin
    Of finest texture, white and very smooth.
    His voice was quiet, musical. His manner
    Patient and gentle, modest, reasonable.
    His parents, as I learned through inquiry,
    Were Methodists, devout and greatly loved.
    The mother healthy both in mind and body.
    The father was eccentric, perhaps insane.
    They were first cousins.

            I knew Jacob Groesbell
    Ten years before he died. I knew him first
    When he was sent to mend my porch. A workman
    With saw and hammer never excelled him. Then
    As time went on I saw him when he came
    At my request to do my carpentry.
    I grew to know him, and by slow degrees
    He told me of his readings in the Bible,
    And gave me his interpretations. At last
    Aged forty-six, had ulcers of the stomach,
    Which took him off. He sent for me, and said
    He wished me to attend him, which I did.
    He told me I could have his body and brain
    To lecture on, dissect, since some had said
    He was insane, he told me, and if so
    I should find something wrong with brain or body.
    And if I found a wrong then all his visions
    Of God and archangels were just the fancies
    That come to madmen. So he made provision
    To give his brain and body for this cause,
    And here's his brain and skull, and I am lecturing
    On Jacob Groesbell as a paranoic.

    As I have said before, in making tests
    And observations of the patient, have
    His conversation taken stenographically,
    In order to preserve his speech exactly,
    And catch the flow if he becomes excited.
    So we determine if he makes new words,
    If he be incoherent, or repeats.
    I took my secretary once to make
    A stenographic record. Strange enough
    He would not talk while she was writing down.
    And when I asked him why, he would not tell.
    So I devised a scheme: I took a satchel,
    And put in it a dictaphone, and when
    A cylinder was full I'd stoop and put
    My hand among my bottles in the satchel,
    As if I was compounding medicine,
    Instead I'd put another cylinder on.
    And thus I got his story in his voice,
    Just as he talked, with nothing lost at all,
    Which you shall hear. For with this megaphone
    The students in the farthest gallery
    Can hear what Jacob Groesbell said to me,
    And weigh the thought that stirred within the brain
    Here in this jar beside me. Listen now
    To Jacob Groesbell's voice:

            "Will you repeat
    From the beginning connectedly the story
    Of your religious life, illumination,
    Vhat you have called your soul's escape?"

            "I will,
    Since I shall never tell it again."

        "I grew up
    Timid and sensitive, not very strong,
    Not understood of father or of mother.
    They did not love me, and I never felt
    A tenderness for them. I used to quote:
    'Who is my mother and who are my brothers?'
    At school I was not liked. I had a chum
    From time to time, that's all. And I remember
    My mother on a day put with my luncheon
    A bottle of milk, and when the noon hour came
    I missed it, found some boys had taken it,
    And when I asked for it, they made the cry:
    'Bottle of milk, bottle of milk/ and I
    Flushed through with shame, and cried, and to this hour
    It hurts me to remember it. Such days,
    All misery! For all my clothes were patched.
    They hooted at me. So I lived alone.
    At twelve years old I had great fears of death,
    And hell, heard devils in my room. One night
    During a thunderstorm heard clanking chains,
    And hid beneath the pillows. One spring day
    As I was walking on the village street
    Close to the church I heard a voice which said
    'Behold, my son' - and falling on my knees
    I prayed in ecstacy - but as I prayed
    Some passing school boys laughed, threw stones at me.
    A heat ran through me, I arose and fled.
    Well, then I joined the church and was baptized.
    But something left me in the ceremony,
    I lost my ecstacy, seemed slipping back
    Into the trap. I took to wandering
    In solitary places, could not bear
    To see a human face. I slept for nights
    In still ravines, or meadows. But one time
    Returning to my home, I found the room
    Filled up with visitors - my heart stopped short,
    And glancing at the faces of my parents
    I hurried, bolted through, and did not speak,
    Entered a bed-room door and closed it. So
    I tell this just to illustrate my shyness,
    Which cursed my youth and made me miserable,
    Something I fought but could not overcome.
    And pondering on the Scriptures I could see
    How I resembled the saints, our Saviour even,
    How even as my brothers called me mad
    They called our Saviour so.

        "At fourteen years
    My father taught me carpentry, his trade,
    And made me work with him. I seemed to be
    The butt for jokes and laughter with the men -
    I know not why. For now and then they'd drop
    A word that showed they knew my secrets, knew
    I had heard voices, knew I loathed the lusts
    Of women, drink. Oh these were sorry years,
    God was not with me though I sought Him ever
    And I was persecuted for His sake. My brain
    Seemed like to burst at times, saw sparkling lights,
    Heard music, voices, made strange shapes of leaves,
    Clouds, trunks of trees, - illusions of the devil.
    I was turned twenty years when on an evening
    Calm, beautiful in June, after a day
    Of healthful toil, while sitting on the porch,
    The sun just sinking, at my left I heard
    A voice of hollow clearness: "You are Christ."
    My eyes grew blind with tears for the evil
    Of such a thought, soul stained with such a thought,
    So devil stained, soul damned with blasphemy.
    I ran into my room and seized a pistol
    To end my life. God willed it otherwise.
    I fainted and awoke upon the floor
    After some hours. To heap my suffering full
    A few days after this while in the village
    I went into a store. The friendly clerk -
    I knew him always - said 'What will you have?
    I wait first always on the little boys.'
    I laughed and went my way. But in an hour
    His saying rankled, I began to brood
    On ways of vengeance, till it seemed at last
    His life must pay. O, soul so full of sin,
    So devil tangled, tortured - which not prayer
    Nor watching could deliver. So I thought
    To save my soul from murder I must fly -
    I felt an urging as one does in sleep
    Pursued by giant things to fly, to fly
    From terror, death, from blankness on the scene,
    From emptiness, from beauty gone. The world
    Seemed something seen in fever, where the steps
    Of men are muffled, and a futile scheme
    Impels all steps. So packing up my kit,
    My Bible in my pocket, secretly
    I disappeared. Next day took up my life
    In Barrington, a village thirty miles
    From all I knew, besides a lovely lake,
    Reached by a road that crossed a bridge
    Over a little bay, the bridge's ends
    Clustered with boats for fishermen. And here
    Night after night I fished, or stood and watched
    The star-light on the water.

        I grew calmer
    Almost found peace, got work to do, and lived
    Under a widow's roof, who was devout
    And knew my love for God. Now listen, doctor,
    To every word: I was now twenty-five,
    In perfect health, no longer persecuted,
    At peace with all the world, if not my soul
    Had wholly found its peace, for truth to tell
    It had an ache which sometimes I could feel,
    And yet I had this soul awakening.
    I know I have been counted mad, so watch
    Each detail here and judge.

            At four o'clock
    The thirtieth day of June, my work being done,
    My kit upon my back I walked this road
    Toward the village. 'Twas an afternoon
    Of clouds, no rain, a little breeze, the tinkle
    Of cow bells in the air, a heavenly silence
    Pervading nature. Reaching the hill's foot
    I sat down by a tree to rest, enjoy
    The greenness of the forests, meadows, flats
    Along the bay, the blueness of the lake,
    The ripple of the water at my feet,
    The rythmic babble of the little boats
    Tied to the bridge. And as I sat there musing,
    Myself lost in the self, in time the clouds
    Lifted, blew off, to let the sun go down
    Over the waters gloriously to rest.
    So as I stared upon the sun on the water,
    Some minutes, though I know not for how long,
    Out of the splendor of the shining sun
    Upon the water, Jesus of Nazareth
    Clothed all in white, the nimbus round his brow,
    His face all wisdom, love, rose to my view,
    And then he spake: 'Jacob, my son, arise
    And come with me.'

            "And in an instant there
    Something fell from me, I became a cloud,
    A soul with wings. A glory burned about me.
    And in that glory I perceived all things:
    I saw the eternal wheels, the deepest secrets
    Of creatures, herbs and grass, and stars and suns
    And I knew God, and knew all things as God:
    The All loving, the Perfect One, the Perfect Wisdom,
    Truth, love and purity. And in that instant
    Atoms and molecules I saw, and faces,
    And how they are arranged order to order,
    With no break in the order, one harmonious
    Whole of universal life all blended
    And interfused with universal love.
    And as it was with Shelley so I cried,
    And clasped my hands in ecstacy and rose
    And started back to climb the hill again,
    Scarce knowing, neither caring what I did,
    Nor where I went, and thinking if this be
    A fancy only of the Saviour then
    He will not follow me, and if it be
    Himself, indeed, he will not let me fall
    After the revelation. As I reached
    The brow of the hill, I felt his presence with me
    And turned, and saw Him. 'Thou hast faith, my son,
    Who knowest me, when they who walked with me
    Toward Emmaus knew me not, to whom I told
    All secrets of the scriptures beginning at Moses,
    Who knew me not till I brake bread and then,
    As after thought could say, Did not our heart
    Within us burn while he talked. O, Jacob Groesbell,
    Thou carpenter, as I was, greatly blessed
    With visions and my Father's love, this walk
    Is your walk toward Emmaus.' So he talked,
    Expounding all the scriptures, telling me
    About the race of men who live and move
    Along a life of meat and drink and sleep
    And comforts of the flesh, while here and there
    A hungering soul is chosen to lift up
    And re-create the race. 'The prophet, poet
    Must seek and must find God to keep the race
    Awake to the divine and to the orders
    Of universal and harmonious life,
    All interfused with Universal love,
    Which love is God, lest blindness, atheism,
    Which sees no order, reason, no intent
    Beat down the race to welter in the mire
    When storms, and floods come. And the sons of God,
    The leaders of the race from age to age
    Are chosen for their separate work, each work
    Fits in the given order. All who suffer
    The martyrdom of thought, whether they think
    Themselves as servants of my Father, or even
    Mock at the images and rituals
    Which prophets of dead creeds did symbolize
    The mystery they sensed, or whether they be
    Spirits of laughter, logic, divination
    Of human life, the human soul, all men
    Who give their essence, blindly or in vision
    In faith that life is worth their utmost love,
    They are my brothers and my Father's sons.'
    So Jesus told me as we took my walk
    Toward my Emmaus. After a time we turned
    And walked through heading rye and purple vetch
    Into an orchard where great rows of pears
    Sloped up a hill. It was now evening:
    Stretches of scarlet clouds were in the west,
    And a half moon was hanging just above
    The pears' white blossoms. O, that evening!
    We came back to the boats at last and loosed
    One of them and rowed out into the bay,
    And fished, while the stars appeared. He only said
    'Whatever they did with me you too shall do.'
    A haziness came on me now. I seem
    To find myself alone there in that boat.
    At mid-night I awoke, the moon was sunk,
    The whippoorwills were singing. I walked home
    Back to the village in a silence, peace,
    A happiness profound.

            "And the next morning
    I awoke with aching head, spent body, yet
    With spiritual vision so intense I looked
    Through things material as if they were
    But shadows - old things passed away or grew
    A lovelier order. And my heart was full.
    Infinitely I loved, and infinitely was loved.
    My landlady looked at me sharply, asked
    What hour I entered, where I was so late.
    I only answered fishing. For I told
    No person of my vision, went my way
    At carpentry in silence, in great joy.
    For archangels and powers were at my side,
    They led me, bore me up, instructed me
    In mysteries, and voices said to me
    'Write' as the voice in Patmos said to John.
    I wrote and printed and the village read,
    And called me mad. And so I grew to see
    The deepest truths of God, and God Himself,
    The geniture of all things, of the Word
    Becoming flesh in Christ. I knew all ages,
    Times, empires, races, creeds, the human weakness
    Which makes life wearisome, confused and pained,
    And how the search for something (it is God)
    Makes divers worships, fire, the sun, and beasts
    Takes form in Eleusinian mysteries
    Or festivals where sex, the vine, the Earth
    At harvest time have praise or reverence.
    I knew God, talked with God, and knew that God
    Is more than Thought or Love. Our twisted brains
    Are but the wires in the bulb which stays,
    Resists the current and makes human thought.
    As the electric current is not light
    But heat and power as well. Our little brains
    Resist God and make thought and love as well.
    But God is more than these. Oh I heard much
    Of music, heard the whirring as of wheels,
    Or buzzing as of ears when a room is still.
    That is the axis of profoundest life
    Which turns and rests not. And I heard the cry
    And hearing wept, of man's soul, heard the ages,
    The epochs of this earth as it were the feet
    Of multitudes in corridors. And I knew
    The agony of genius and the woe
    Of prophets and the great.

        "From that next morning
    I searched the scriptures with more fervid zeal
    Than I had ever done. I could not open
    Its pages anywhere but I could find
    Myself set forth or mirrored, pointed to.
    I could not doubt my destiny was bound
    With man's salvation. Jeremiah said
    'Take forth the precious from the vile.' Those words
    To me were spoken, and to no one else.
    And so I searched the scriptures. And I found
    I never had a thought, experience, pang,
    A state in human life our Saviour had not.
    He was a carpenter, and so was I.
    He had his soul's illumination, so had I.
    His brethren called him mad, they called me mad.
    He triumphed over death, so shall I triumph.
    For I could, I can feel my way along
    Death's stages as a man can reach and feel
    Ahead of him along a wall. I know
    This body is a shell, a butterfly's
    Excreta pushed away with rising wings.

    "I searched the scriptures. How should I believe
    Paul's story, not my own? Did he not see
    At mid-day in the way a light from heaven
    Above the brightness of the sun and hear
    The voice of Jesus saying to him 'Saul,'
    Why persecutest thou me?' And did not Festus,
    Before whom Paul stood speaking for himself,
    Call Paul a mad man? Even while he spake
    Such words as none but men inspired can speak,
    As well as words of truth and soberness,
    Such as myself speak now.

        "And from the scriptures
    I passed to studies of the men who came
    To great illuminations. You will see
    There are two kinds: One's of the intellect,
    The understanding, one is of the soul.
    The x-ray lets the eye behind the flesh
    To see the ribs, or heart beat, choose! So men
    In their illumination see the frame-work
    Of life or see its spirit, so align
    Themselves with Science, Satire, or align
    Themselves with Poetry or Prophecy.
    So being Aristotle, Rabelais,
    Paul, Swedenborg.

        "And as the years
    Went on, as I had time, was fortunate
    In finding books I read of many men
    Who had illumination, as I had it. Read
    Of Dante's vision, how he found himself
    Saw immortality, lost fear of death.
    Read Swedenborg, who left the intellect
    At fifty-four for God, and entered heaven
    Before he quitted life and saw behind
    The sun of fire, a sun of love and truth.
    Read Whitman who exclaimed to God: 'Thou knowest
    My manhood's visionary meditations
    Which come from Thee, the ardor and the urge.
    Thou lightest my life with rays ineffable
    Beyond all signs, descriptions, languages.'
    Read Blake, Spinoza, Emerson, read Wordsworth
    Who wrote of something 'deeply interfused,
    Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
    And the round ocean and the living air,
    And the blue skies, and in the mind of man -
    A motion and a spirit that impels
    All thinking things, all objects of all thought
    And rolls through all things.'

        "And at last they called me
    The mad, and learned carpenter. And then -
    I'm growing faint. Your hand, hold ..."

        At this point
    He fainted, sank into a stupor. There
    I watched him, to discover if 'twas death.
    But soon I saw him rally, then he spoke.
    There was some other talk, but not of moment.
    I had to change the cylinder - the talk
    Was broken, rambling, and of trifling things,
    Throws no light on the case, being sane enough.
    He died next morning.

            Students who desire
    To examine the skull and brain may do so now
    At their convenience in the laboratory.



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