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Edgar Allan Poe: Mesmeric Revelation
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Poe
MESMERIC REVELATION
by Edgar Allan Poe
1844
WHATEVER doubt may still envelop the rationale of mesmerism, its
startling facts are now almost universally admitted. Of these latter, those
who doubt, are your mere doubters by profession–an unprofitable and
disreputable tribe. There can be no more absolute waste of time than the
attempt to prove, at the present day, that man, by mere exercise of will can
so impress his fellow as to cast him into an abnormal condition, of which
the phenomena resemble very closely those of death, or at least resemble
them more nearly than they do the phenomena of any other normal condition
within our cognizance; that, while in this state, the person so impressed
employs only with effort, and then feebly, the external organs of sense, yet
perceives, with keenly refined perception, and through channels supposed
unknown, matters beyond the scope of the physical organs; that, moreover,
his intellectual faculties are wonderfully exalted and invigorated; that his
sympathies with the person so impressing him are profound, and, finally,
that his susceptibility to the impression increases with its frequency,
while in the same proportion, the peculiar phenomena elicited are more
extended and more pronounced.
I say that these–which are the laws of mesmerism in its general
features–it would be supererogation to demonstrate; nor shall I inflict upon
my readers so needless a demonstration to-day. My purpose at present is a
very different one indeed. I am impelled, even in the teeth of a world of
prejudice, to detail without comment, the very remarkable substance of a
colloquy occurring between a sleep-waker and myself.
I had long been in the habit of mesmerizing the person in question (Mr.
Vankirk), and the usual acute susceptibility and exaltation of the mesmeric
perception had supervened. For many months he had been laboring under
confirmed phthisis, the more distressing effects of which had been relieved
by my manipulations; and on the night of Wednesday, the fifteenth instant, I
was summoned to his bedside.
The invalid was suffering with acute pain in the region of the heart, and
breathed with great difficulty, having all the ordinary symptoms of asthma.
In spasms such as these he had usually found relief from the application of
mustard to the nervous centres, but to-night this had been attempted in
vain.
As I entered his room he greeted me with a cheerful smile, and although
evidently in much bodily pain, appeared to be, mentally, quite at ease.
"I sent for you to-night," he said, "not so much to administer to my
bodily ailment, as to satisfy me concerning certain physical impressions
which, of late, have occasioned me much anxiety and surprise. I need not
tell you how skeptical I have hitherto been on the topic of the soul's
immortality. I cannot deny that there has always existed, as if in that very
soul which I have been denying, a vague half-sentiment of its own existence.
But this half-sentiment at no time amounted to conviction. With it my reason
had nothing to do. All attempts at logical inquiry resulted, indeed, in
leaving me more sceptical than before. I had been advised to study Cousin. I
studied him in his own works as well as in those of his European and
American echoes. The 'Charles Elwood' of Mr. Brownson for example, was
placed in my hands. I read it with profound attention. Throughout I found it
logical but the portions which were not merely logical were unhappily the
initial arguments of the disbelieving hero of the book. In his summing up it
seemed evident to me that the reasoner had not even succeeded in convincing
himself. His end had plainly forgotten his beginning, like the government of
Trinculo. In short, I was not long in perceiving that if man is to be
intellectually convinced of his own immortality, he will never be so
convinced by the mere abstractions which have been so long the fashion of
the moralists of England, of France, and of Germany. Abstractions may amuse
and exercise, but take no hold on the mind. Here upon earth, at least,
philosophy, I am persuaded, will always in vain call upon us to look upon
qualities as things. The will may assent–the soul–the intellect, never.
"I repeat, then, that I only half felt, and never intellectually
believed. But latterly there has been a certain deepening of the feeling,
until it has come so nearly to resemble the acquiesence of reason, that I
find it difficult to distinguish the two. I am enabled, too, plainly to
trace this effect to the mesmeric influence. I cannot better explain my
meaning than by the hypothesis that the mesmeric exaltation enables me to
perceive a train of ratiocination which, in my abnormal existence,
convinces, but which, in full accordance with the mesmeric phenomena, does
not extend, except through its effect, into my normal condition. In
sleep-waking, the reasoning and its conclusion–the cause and its effect–are
present together. In my natural state, the cause vanishes, the effect only,
and perhaps only partially, remains.
"These considerations have led me to think that some good results might
ensue from a series of well-directed questions propounded to me while
mesmerized. You have often observed the profound self-cognizance evinced by
the sleep-waker–the extensive knowledge he displays upon all points relating
to the mesmeric condition itself, and from this self-cognizance may be
deduced hints for the proper conduct of a catechism."
I consented of course to make this experiment. A few passes threw Mr.
Vankirk into the mesmeric sleep. His breathing became immediately more easy,
and he seemed to suffer no physical uneasiness. The following conversation
then ensued:-V. in the dialogue representing the patient, and P. myself.
P. Are you asleep?
V. Yes–no; I would rather sleep more soundly.
P. [After a few more passes.] Do you sleep now?
V. Yes.
P. How do you think your present illness will result?
V. [After a long hesitation and speaking as if with effort.] I must
die.
P. Does the idea of death afflict you?
V. [Very quickly.] No–no!
P. Are you pleased with the prospect?
V. If I were awake I should like to die, but now it is no matter. The
mesmeric condition is so near death as to content me.
P. I wish you would explain yourself, Mr. Vankirk.
V. I am willing to do so, but it requires more effort than I feel able to
make. You do not question me properly.
P. What then shall I ask?
V. You must begin at the beginning.
P. The beginning! But where is the beginning?
V. You know that the beginning is GOD. [This was said in a low,
fluctuating tone, and with every sign of the most profound veneration.]
P. What, then, is God?
V. [Hesitating for many minutes.] I cannot tell.
P. Is not God spirit?
V. While I was awake I knew what you meant by "spirit," but now it seems
only a word–such, for instance, as truth, beauty–a quality, I mean.
P. Is not God immaterial?
V. There is no immateriality–it is a mere word. That which is not matter,
is not at all–unless qualities are things.
P. Is God, then, material?
V. No. [This reply startled me very much.]
P. What, then, is he?
V. [After a long pause, and mutteringly.] I see–but it is a thing
difficult to tell. [Another long pause.] He is not spirit, for he exists.
Nor is he matter, as you understand it. But there are gradations of matter
of which man knows nothing; the grosser impelling the finer, the finer
pervading the grosser. The atmosphere, for example, impels the electric
principle, while the electric principle permeates the atmosphere. These
gradations of matter increase in rarity or fineness until we arrive at a
matter unparticled–without particles–indivisible-one, and here the law of
impulsion and permeation is modified. The ultimate or unparticled matter not
only permeates all things, but impels all things; and thus is all things
within itself. This matter is God. What men attempt to embody in the word
"thought," is this matter in motion.
P. The metaphysicians maintain that all action is reducible to motion and
thinking, and that the latter is the origin of the former.
V. Yes; and I now see the confusion of idea. Motion is the action of
mind, not of thinking. The unparticled matter, or God, in quiescence is (as
nearly as we can conceive it) what men call mind. And the power of
self-movement (equivalent in effect to human volition) is, in the
unparticled matter, the result of its unity and omniprevalence; how, I know
not, and now clearly see that I shall never know. But the unparticled
matter, set in motion by a law or quality existing within itself, is
thinking.
P. Can you give me no more precise idea of what you term the unparticled
matter?
V. The matters of which man is cognizant escape the senses in gradation.
We have, for example, a metal, a piece of wood, a drop of water, the
atmosphere, a gas, caloric, electricity, the luminiferous ether. Now, we
call all these things matter, and embrace all matter in one general
definition; but in spite of this, there can be no two ideas more essentially
distinct than that which we attach to a metal, and that which we attach to
the luminiferous ether. When we reach the latter, we feel an almost
irresistible inclination to class it with spirit, or with nihilty. The only
consideration which restrains us is our conception of its atomic
constitution; and here, even, we have to seek aid from our notion of an
atom, as something possessing in infinite minuteness, solidity, palpability,
weight. Destroy the idea of the atomic constitution and we should no longer
be able to regard the ether as an entity, or, at least, as matter. For want
of a better word we might term it spirit. Take, now, a step beyond the
luminiferous ether–conceive a matter as much more rare than the ether, as
this ether is more rare than the metal, and we arrive at once (in spite of
all the school dogmas) at a unique mass- an unparticled matter. For although
we may admit infinite littleness in the atoms themselves, the infinitude of
littleness in the spaces between them is an absurdity. There will be a
point–there will be a degree of rarity at which, if the atoms are
sufficiently numerous, the interspaces must vanish, and the mass absolutely
coalesce. But the consideration of the atomic constitution being now taken
away, the nature of the mass inevitably glides into what we conceive of
spirit. It is clear, however, that it is as fully matter as before. The
truth is, it is impossible to conceive spirit since it is impossible to
imagine what is not. When we flatter ourselves that we have formed its
conception, we have merely deceived our understanding by the consideration
of infinitely rarefied matter.
P. There seems to me an insurmountable objection to the idea of absolute
coalescence;–and that is the very slight resistance experienced by the
heavenly bodies in their revolutions through space- a resistance now
ascertained, it is true, to exist in some degree, but which is,
nevertheless, so slight as to have been quite overlooked by the sagacity
even of Newton. We know that the resistance of bodies is, chiefly, in
proportion to their density. Absolute coalescence is absolute density. Where
there are no interspaces, there can be no yielding. An ether, absolutely
dense, would put an infinitely more effectual stop to the progress of a star
than would an ether of adamant or of iron.
V. Your objection is answered with an ease which is nearly in the ratio
of its apparent unanswerability.–As regards the progress of the star, it can
make no difference whether the star passes through the ether or the ether
through it. There is no astronomical error more unaccountable than that
which reconciles the known retardation of the comets with the idea of their
passage through an ether, for, however rare this ether be supposed, it would
put a stop to all sidereal revolution in a very far briefer period than has
been admitted by those astronomers who have endeavored to slur over a point
which they found it impossible to comprehend. The retardation actually
experienced is, on the other hand, about that which might be expected from
the friction of the ether in the instantaneous passage through the orb. In
the one case, the retarding force is momentary and complete within itself–in
the other it is endlessly accumulative.
P. But in all this–in this identification of mere matter with God–is
there nothing of irreverence? [I was forced to repeat this question before
the sleep-waker fully comprehended my meaning.]
V. Can you say why matter should be less reverenced than mind? But you
forget that the matter of which "mind" or "spirit" of the schools, so far as
regards its high capacities, and is, moreover, the "matter" of these schools
at the same time. God, with all the powers attributed to spirit, is but the
perfection of matter.
P. You assert, then, that the unparticled matter, in motion, is
thought.
V. In general, this motion is the universal thought of the universal
mind. This thought creates. All created things are but the thoughts of
God.
P. You say, "in general."
V. Yes. The universal mind is God. For new individualities, matter is
necessary.
P. But you now speak of "mind" and "matter" as do the metaphysicians.
V. Yes–to avoid confusion. When I say "mind," I mean the unparticled or
ultimate matter, by "matter," I intend all else.
P. You were saying that "for new individualities matter is
necessary."
V. Yes; for mind, existing unincorporate, is merely God. To create
individual, thinking beings, it was necessary to incarnate portions of the
divine mind. Thus man is individualized. Divested of corporate investiture,
he were God. Now the particular motion of the incarnated portions of the
unparticled matter is the thought of man; as the motion of the whole is that
of God.
P. You say that divested of the body man will be God?
V. [After much hesitation.] I could not have said this; it is an
absurdity.
P. [Referring to my notes.] You did say that "divested of corporate
investiture man were God."
V. And this is true. Man thus divested would be God–would be
unindividualized. But he can never be thus divested–at least never will
be–else we must imagine an action of God returning upon itself–a purposeless
and futile action. Man is a creature. Creatures are thoughts of God. It is
the nature of thought to be irrevocable.
P. I do not comprehend. You say that man will never put off the body?
V. I say that he will never be bodiless.
P. Explain.
V. There are two bodies–the rudimental and the complete, corresponding
with the two conditions of the worm and the butterfly. What we call "death,"
is but the painful metamorphosis. Our present incarnation is progressive,
preparatory, temporary. Our future is perfected, ultimate, immortal. The
ultimate life is the full design.
P. But of the worm's metamorphosis we are palpably cognizant.
V. We, certainly–but not the worm. The matter of which our rudimental
body is composed, is within the ken of the organs of that body; or, more
distinctly, our rudimental organs are adapted to the matter of which is
formed the rudimental body, but not to that of which the ultimate is
composed. The ultimate body thus escapes our rudimental senses, and we
perceive only the shell which falls, in decaying, from the inner form, not
that inner form itself; but this inner form as well as the shell, is
appreciable by those who have already acquired the ultimate life.
P. You have often said that the mesmeric state very nearly resembles
death. How is this?
V. When I say that it resembles death, I mean that it resembles the
ultimate life; for when I am entranced the senses of my rudimental life are
in abeyance and I perceive external things directly, without organs, through
a medium which I shall employ in the ultimate, unorganized life.
P. Unorganized?
V. Yes; organs are contrivances by which the individual is brought into
sensible relation with particular classes and forms of matter, to the
exclusion of other classes and forms. The organs of man are adapted to his
rudimental condition, and to that only; his ultimate condition, being
unorganized, is of unlimited comprehension in all points but one–the nature
of the volition of God–that is to say, the motion of the unparticled matter.
You may have a distinct idea of the ultimate body by conceiving it to be
entire brain. This it is not, but a conception of this nature will bring you
near a comprehension of what it is. A luminous body imparts vibration to the
luminiferous ether. The vibrations generate similar ones within the retina;
these again communicate similar ones to the optic nerve. The nerve conveys
similar ones to the brain; the brain, also, similar ones to the unparticled
matter which permeates it. The motion of this latter is thought, of which
perception is the first undulation. This is the mode by which the mind of
the rudimental life communicates with the external world; and this external
world is, to the rudimental life, limited, through the idiosyncrasy of its
organs. But in the ultimate, unorganized life, the external world reaches
the whole body, (which is of a substance having affinity to brain, as I have
said,) with no other intervention than that of an infinitely rarer ether
than even the luminiferous; and to this ether–in unison with it–the whole
body vibrates, setting in motion the unparticled matter which permeates it.
It is to the absence of idiosyncratic organs, therefore, that we must
attribute the nearly unlimited perception of the ultimate life. To
rudimental beings, organs are the cages necessary to confine them until
fledged.
P. You speak of rudimental "beings." Are there other rudimental thinking
beings than man?
V. The multitudinous conglomeration of rare matter into nebulae, planets,
suns, and other bodies which are neither nebulae, suns, nor planets, is for
the sole purpose of supplying pabulum for the idiosyncrasy of the organs of
an infinity of rudimental beings. But for the necessity of the rudimental,
prior to the ultimate life, there would have been no bodies such as these.
Each of these is tenanted by a distinct variety of organic rudimental
thinking creatures. In all, the organs vary with the features of the place
tenanted. At death, or metamorphosis, these creatures, enjoying the ultimate
life–immortality–and cognizant of all secrets but the one, act all things
and pass every where by mere volition:–indwelling, not the stars, which to
us seem the sole palpabilities, and for the accommodation of which we
blindly deem space created–but that space itself–that infinity of which the
truly substantive vastness swallows up the star-shadows–blotting them out as
non-entities from the perception of the angels.
P. You say that "but for the necessity of the rudimental life, there
would have been no stars." But why this necessity?
V. In the inorganic life, as well as in the inorganic matter generally,
there is nothing to impede the action of one simple unique law–the Divine
Volition. With the view of producing impediment, the organic life and matter
(complex, substantial and law- encumbered) were contrived.
P. But again–why need this impediment have been produced?
V. The result of law inviolate is perfection–right–negative happiness.
The result of law violate is imperfection, wrong, positive pain. Through the
impediments afforded by the number, complexity, and substantiality of the
laws of organic life and matter, the violation of law is rendered, to a
certain extent, practicable. Thus pain, which is the inorganic life is
impossible, is possible in the organic.
P. But to what good end is pain thus rendered possible?
V. All things are either good or bad by comparison. A sufficient analysis
will show that pleasure in all cases, is but the contrast of pain. Positive
pleasure is a mere idea. To be happy at any one point we must have suffered
at the same. Never to suffer would have been never to have been blessed. But
it has been shown that, in the inorganic life, pain cannot be; thus the
necessity for the organic. The pain of the primitive life of Earth, is the
sole basis of the bliss of the ultimate life in Heaven.
P. Still there is one of your expressions which I find it impossible to
comprehend–"the truly substantive vastness of infinity."
V. This, probably, is because you have no sufficiently generic conception
of the term "substance" itself. We must not regard it as a quality, but as a
sentiment:–it is the perception, in thinking beings, of the adaptation of
matter to their organization. There are many things on the Earth, which
would be nihility to the inhabitants of Venus–many things visible and
tangible in Venus, which we could not be brought to appreciate as existing
at all. But to the inorganic beings–to the angels–the whole of the
unparticled matter is substance; that is to say, the whole of what we term
"space," is to them the truest substantiality;–the stars, meantime, through
what we consider their materiality, escaping the angelic sense, just in
proportion as the unparticled matter, through what we consider its
immateriality, eludes the organic.
As the sleep-waker pronounced these latter words, in a feeble tone, I
observed on his countenance a singular expression, which somewhat alarmed
me, and induced me to awake him at once. No sooner had I done this than,
with a bright smile irradiating all his features, he fell back upon his
pillow and expired. I noticed that in less than a minute afterward his
corpse had all the stern rigidity of stone. His brow was of the coldness of
ice. Thus, ordinarily, should it have appeared, only after long pressure
from Azrael's hand. Had the sleep-waker, indeed, during the latter portion
of his discourse, been addressing me from out the regions of the
shadows?
THE END
Edgar Allan Poe: Mesmeric Revelation
Up to the EServer | The Complete Works of Edgar Allan
Poe
MESMERIC REVELATION
by Edgar Allan Poe
1844
WHATEVER doubt may still envelop the rationale of mesmerism, its
startling facts are now almost universally admitted. Of these latter, those
who doubt, are your mere doubters by profession–an unprofitable and
disreputable tribe. There can be no more absolute waste of time than the
attempt to prove, at the present day, that man, by mere exercise of will can
so impress his fellow as to cast him into an abnormal condition, of which
the phenomena resemble very closely those of death, or at least resemble
them more nearly than they do the phenomena of any other normal condition
within our cognizance; that, while in this state, the person so impressed
employs only with effort, and then feebly, the external organs of sense, yet
perceives, with keenly refined perception, and through channels supposed
unknown, matters beyond the scope of the physical organs; that, moreover,
his intellectual faculties are wonderfully exalted and invigorated; that his
sympathies with the person so impressing him are profound, and, finally,
that his susceptibility to the impression increases with its frequency,
while in the same proportion, the peculiar phenomena elicited are more
extended and more pronounced.
I say that these–which are the laws of mesmerism in its general
features–it would be supererogation to demonstrate; nor shall I inflict upon
my readers so needless a demonstration to-day. My purpose at present is a
very different one indeed. I am impelled, even in the teeth of a world of
prejudice, to detail without comment, the very remarkable substance of a
colloquy occurring between a sleep-waker and myself.
I had long been in the habit of mesmerizing the person in question (Mr.
Vankirk), and the usual acute susceptibility and exaltation of the mesmeric
perception had supervened. For many months he had been laboring under
confirmed phthisis, the more distressing effects of which had been relieved
by my manipulations; and on the night of Wednesday, the fifteenth instant, I
was summoned to his bedside.
The invalid was suffering with acute pain in the region of the heart, and
breathed with great difficulty, having all the ordinary symptoms of asthma.
In spasms such as these he had usually found relief from the application of
mustard to the nervous centres, but to-night this had been attempted in
vain.
As I entered his room he greeted me with a cheerful smile, and although
evidently in much bodily pain, appeared to be, mentally, quite at ease.
"I sent for you to-night," he said, "not so much to administer to my
bodily ailment, as to satisfy me concerning certain physical impressions
which, of late, have occasioned me much anxiety and surprise. I need not
tell you how skeptical I have hitherto been on the topic of the soul's
immortality. I cannot deny that there has always existed, as if in that very
soul which I have been denying, a vague half-sentiment of its own existence.
But this half-sentiment at no time amounted to conviction. With it my reason
had nothing to do. All attempts at logical inquiry resulted, indeed, in
leaving me more sceptical than before. I had been advised to study Cousin. I
studied him in his own works as well as in those of his European and
American echoes. The 'Charles Elwood' of Mr. Brownson for example, was
placed in my hands. I read it with profound attention. Throughout I found it
logical but the portions which were not merely logical were unhappily the
initial arguments of the disbelieving hero of the book. In his summing up it
seemed evident to me that the reasoner had not even succeeded in convincing
himself. His end had plainly forgotten his beginning, like the government of
Trinculo. In short, I was not long in perceiving that if man is to be
intellectually convinced of his own immortality, he will never be so
convinced by the mere abstractions which have been so long the fashion of
the moralists of England, of France, and of Germany. Abstractions may amuse
and exercise, but take no hold on the mind. Here upon earth, at least,
philosophy, I am persuaded, will always in vain call upon us to look upon
qualities as things. The will may assent–the soul–the intellect, never.
"I repeat, then, that I only half felt, and never intellectually
believed. But latterly there has been a certain deepening of the feeling,
until it has come so nearly to resemble the acquiesence of reason, that I
find it difficult to distinguish the two. I am enabled, too, plainly to
trace this effect to the mesmeric influence. I cannot better explain my
meaning than by the hypothesis that the mesmeric exaltation enables me to
perceive a train of ratiocination which, in my abnormal existence,
convinces, but which, in full accordance with the mesmeric phenomena, does
not extend, except through its effect, into my normal condition. In
sleep-waking, the reasoning and its conclusion–the cause and its effect–are
present together. In my natural state, the cause vanishes, the effect only,
and perhaps only partially, remains.
"These considerations have led me to think that some good results might
ensue from a series of well-directed questions propounded to me while
mesmerized. You have often observed the profound self-cognizance evinced by
the sleep-waker–the extensive knowledge he displays upon all points relating
to the mesmeric condition itself, and from this self-cognizance may be
deduced hints for the proper conduct of a catechism."
I consented of course to make this experiment. A few passes threw Mr.
Vankirk into the mesmeric sleep. His breathing became immediately more easy,
and he seemed to suffer no physical uneasiness. The following conversation
then ensued:-V. in the dialogue representing the patient, and P. myself.
P. Are you asleep?
V. Yes–no; I would rather sleep more soundly.
P. [After a few more passes.] Do you sleep now?
V. Yes.
P. How do you think your present illness will result?
V. [After a long hesitation and speaking as if with effort.] I must
die.
P. Does the idea of death afflict you?
V. [Very quickly.] No–no!
P. Are you pleased with the prospect?
V. If I were awake I should like to die, but now it is no matter. The
mesmeric condition is so near death as to content me.
P. I wish you would explain yourself, Mr. Vankirk.
V. I am willing to do so, but it requires more effort than I feel able to
make. You do not question me properly.
P. What then shall I ask?
V. You must begin at the beginning.
P. The beginning! But where is the beginning?
V. You know that the beginning is GOD. [This was said in a low,
fluctuating tone, and with every sign of the most profound veneration.]
P. What, then, is God?
V. [Hesitating for many minutes.] I cannot tell.
P. Is not God spirit?
V. While I was awake I knew what you meant by "spirit," but now it seems
only a word–such, for instance, as truth, beauty–a quality, I mean.
P. Is not God immaterial?
V. There is no immateriality–it is a mere word. That which is not matter,
is not at all–unless qualities are things.
P. Is God, then, material?
V. No. [This reply startled me very much.]
P. What, then, is he?
V. [After a long pause, and mutteringly.] I see–but it is a thing
difficult to tell. [Another long pause.] He is not spirit, for he exists.
Nor is he matter, as you understand it. But there are gradations of matter
of which man knows nothing; the grosser impelling the finer, the finer
pervading the grosser. The atmosphere, for example, impels the electric
principle, while the electric principle permeates the atmosphere. These
gradations of matter increase in rarity or fineness until we arrive at a
matter unparticled–without particles–indivisible-one, and here the law of
impulsion and permeation is modified. The ultimate or unparticled matter not
only permeates all things, but impels all things; and thus is all things
within itself. This matter is God. What men attempt to embody in the word
"thought," is this matter in motion.
P. The metaphysicians maintain that all action is reducible to motion and
thinking, and that the latter is the origin of the former.
V. Yes; and I now see the confusion of idea. Motion is the action of
mind, not of thinking. The unparticled matter, or God, in quiescence is (as
nearly as we can conceive it) what men call mind. And the power of
self-movement (equivalent in effect to human volition) is, in the
unparticled matter, the result of its unity and omniprevalence; how, I know
not, and now clearly see that I shall never know. But the unparticled
matter, set in motion by a law or quality existing within itself, is
thinking.
P. Can you give me no more precise idea of what you term the unparticled
matter?
V. The matters of which man is cognizant escape the senses in gradation.
We have, for example, a metal, a piece of wood, a drop of water, the
atmosphere, a gas, caloric, electricity, the luminiferous ether. Now, we
call all these things matter, and embrace all matter in one general
definition; but in spite of this, there can be no two ideas more essentially
distinct than that which we attach to a metal, and that which we attach to
the luminiferous ether. When we reach the latter, we feel an almost
irresistible inclination to class it with spirit, or with nihilty. The only
consideration which restrains us is our conception of its atomic
constitution; and here, even, we have to seek aid from our notion of an
atom, as something possessing in infinite minuteness, solidity, palpability,
weight. Destroy the idea of the atomic constitution and we should no longer
be able to regard the ether as an entity, or, at least, as matter. For want
of a better word we might term it spirit. Take, now, a step beyond the
luminiferous ether–conceive a matter as much more rare than the ether, as
this ether is more rare than the metal, and we arrive at once (in spite of
all the school dogmas) at a unique mass- an unparticled matter. For although
we may admit infinite littleness in the atoms themselves, the infinitude of
littleness in the spaces between them is an absurdity. There will be a
point–there will be a degree of rarity at which, if the atoms are
sufficiently numerous, the interspaces must vanish, and the mass absolutely
coalesce. But the consideration of the atomic constitution being now taken
away, the nature of the mass inevitably glides into what we conceive of
spirit. It is clear, however, that it is as fully matter as before. The
truth is, it is impossible to conceive spirit since it is impossible to
imagine what is not. When we flatter ourselves that we have formed its
conception, we have merely deceived our understanding by the consideration
of infinitely rarefied matter.
P. There seems to me an insurmountable objection to the idea of absolute
coalescence;–and that is the very slight resistance experienced by the
heavenly bodies in their revolutions through space- a resistance now
ascertained, it is true, to exist in some degree, but which is,
nevertheless, so slight as to have been quite overlooked by the sagacity
even of Newton. We know that the resistance of bodies is, chiefly, in
proportion to their density. Absolute coalescence is absolute density. Where
there are no interspaces, there can be no yielding. An ether, absolutely
dense, would put an infinitely more effectual stop to the progress of a star
than would an ether of adamant or of iron.
V. Your objection is answered with an ease which is nearly in the ratio
of its apparent unanswerability.–As regards the progress of the star, it can
make no difference whether the star passes through the ether or the ether
through it. There is no astronomical error more unaccountable than that
which reconciles the known retardation of the comets with the idea of their
passage through an ether, for, however rare this ether be supposed, it would
put a stop to all sidereal revolution in a very far briefer period than has
been admitted by those astronomers who have endeavored to slur over a point
which they found it impossible to comprehend. The retardation actually
experienced is, on the other hand, about that which might be expected from
the friction of the ether in the instantaneous passage through the orb. In
the one case, the retarding force is momentary and complete within itself–in
the other it is endlessly accumulative.
P. But in all this–in this identification of mere matter with God–is
there nothing of irreverence? [I was forced to repeat this question before
the sleep-waker fully comprehended my meaning.]
V. Can you say why matter should be less reverenced than mind? But you
forget that the matter of which "mind" or "spirit" of the schools, so far as
regards its high capacities, and is, moreover, the "matter" of these schools
at the same time. God, with all the powers attributed to spirit, is but the
perfection of matter.
P. You assert, then, that the unparticled matter, in motion, is
thought.
V. In general, this motion is the universal thought of the universal
mind. This thought creates. All created things are but the thoughts of
God.
P. You say, "in general."
V. Yes. The universal mind is God. For new individualities, matter is
necessary.
P. But you now speak of "mind" and "matter" as do the metaphysicians.
V. Yes–to avoid confusion. When I say "mind," I mean the unparticled or
ultimate matter, by "matter," I intend all else.
P. You were saying that "for new individualities matter is
necessary."
V. Yes; for mind, existing unincorporate, is merely God. To create
individual, thinking beings, it was necessary to incarnate portions of the
divine mind. Thus man is individualized. Divested of corporate investiture,
he were God. Now the particular motion of the incarnated portions of the
unparticled matter is the thought of man; as the motion of the whole is that
of God.
P. You say that divested of the body man will be God?
V. [After much hesitation.] I could not have said this; it is an
absurdity.
P. [Referring to my notes.] You did say that "divested of corporate
investiture man were God."
V. And this is true. Man thus divested would be God–would be
unindividualized. But he can never be thus divested–at least never will
be–else we must imagine an action of God returning upon itself–a purposeless
and futile action. Man is a creature. Creatures are thoughts of God. It is
the nature of thought to be irrevocable.
P. I do not comprehend. You say that man will never put off the body?
V. I say that he will never be bodiless.
P. Explain.
V. There are two bodies–the rudimental and the complete, corresponding
with the two conditions of the worm and the butterfly. What we call "death,"
is but the painful metamorphosis. Our present incarnation is progressive,
preparatory, temporary. Our future is perfected, ultimate, immortal. The
ultimate life is the full design.
P. But of the worm's metamorphosis we are palpably cognizant.
V. We, certainly–but not the worm. The matter of which our rudimental
body is composed, is within the ken of the organs of that body; or, more
distinctly, our rudimental organs are adapted to the matter of which is
formed the rudimental body, but not to that of which the ultimate is
composed. The ultimate body thus escapes our rudimental senses, and we
perceive only the shell which falls, in decaying, from the inner form, not
that inner form itself; but this inner form as well as the shell, is
appreciable by those who have already acquired the ultimate life.
P. You have often said that the mesmeric state very nearly resembles
death. How is this?
V. When I say that it resembles death, I mean that it resembles the
ultimate life; for when I am entranced the senses of my rudimental life are
in abeyance and I perceive external things directly, without organs, through
a medium which I shall employ in the ultimate, unorganized life.
P. Unorganized?
V. Yes; organs are contrivances by which the individual is brought into
sensible relation with particular classes and forms of matter, to the
exclusion of other classes and forms. The organs of man are adapted to his
rudimental condition, and to that only; his ultimate condition, being
unorganized, is of unlimited comprehension in all points but one–the nature
of the volition of God–that is to say, the motion of the unparticled matter.
You may have a distinct idea of the ultimate body by conceiving it to be
entire brain. This it is not, but a conception of this nature will bring you
near a comprehension of what it is. A luminous body imparts vibration to the
luminiferous ether. The vibrations generate similar ones within the retina;
these again communicate similar ones to the optic nerve. The nerve conveys
similar ones to the brain; the brain, also, similar ones to the unparticled
matter which permeates it. The motion of this latter is thought, of which
perception is the first undulation. This is the mode by which the mind of
the rudimental life communicates with the external world; and this external
world is, to the rudimental life, limited, through the idiosyncrasy of its
organs. But in the ultimate, unorganized life, the external world reaches
the whole body, (which is of a substance having affinity to brain, as I have
said,) with no other intervention than that of an infinitely rarer ether
than even the luminiferous; and to this ether–in unison with it–the whole
body vibrates, setting in motion the unparticled matter which permeates it.
It is to the absence of idiosyncratic organs, therefore, that we must
attribute the nearly unlimited perception of the ultimate life. To
rudimental beings, organs are the cages necessary to confine them until
fledged.
P. You speak of rudimental "beings." Are there other rudimental thinking
beings than man?
V. The multitudinous conglomeration of rare matter into nebulae, planets,
suns, and other bodies which are neither nebulae, suns, nor planets, is for
the sole purpose of supplying pabulum for the idiosyncrasy of the organs of
an infinity of rudimental beings. But for the necessity of the rudimental,
prior to the ultimate life, there would have been no bodies such as these.
Each of these is tenanted by a distinct variety of organic rudimental
thinking creatures. In all, the organs vary with the features of the place
tenanted. At death, or metamorphosis, these creatures, enjoying the ultimate
life–immortality–and cognizant of all secrets but the one, act all things
and pass every where by mere volition:–indwelling, not the stars, which to
us seem the sole palpabilities, and for the accommodation of which we
blindly deem space created–but that space itself–that infinity of which the
truly substantive vastness swallows up the star-shadows–blotting them out as
non-entities from the perception of the angels.
P. You say that "but for the necessity of the rudimental life, there
would have been no stars." But why this necessity?
V. In the inorganic life, as well as in the inorganic matter generally,
there is nothing to impede the action of one simple unique law–the Divine
Volition. With the view of producing impediment, the organic life and matter
(complex, substantial and law- encumbered) were contrived.
P. But again–why need this impediment have been produced?
V. The result of law inviolate is perfection–right–negative happiness.
The result of law violate is imperfection, wrong, positive pain. Through the
impediments afforded by the number, complexity, and substantiality of the
laws of organic life and matter, the violation of law is rendered, to a
certain extent, practicable. Thus pain, which is the inorganic life is
impossible, is possible in the organic.
P. But to what good end is pain thus rendered possible?
V. All things are either good or bad by comparison. A sufficient analysis
will show that pleasure in all cases, is but the contrast of pain. Positive
pleasure is a mere idea. To be happy at any one point we must have suffered
at the same. Never to suffer would have been never to have been blessed. But
it has been shown that, in the inorganic life, pain cannot be; thus the
necessity for the organic. The pain of the primitive life of Earth, is the
sole basis of the bliss of the ultimate life in Heaven.
P. Still there is one of your expressions which I find it impossible to
comprehend–"the truly substantive vastness of infinity."
V. This, probably, is because you have no sufficiently generic conception
of the term "substance" itself. We must not regard it as a quality, but as a
sentiment:–it is the perception, in thinking beings, of the adaptation of
matter to their organization. There are many things on the Earth, which
would be nihility to the inhabitants of Venus–many things visible and
tangible in Venus, which we could not be brought to appreciate as existing
at all. But to the inorganic beings–to the angels–the whole of the
unparticled matter is substance; that is to say, the whole of what we term
"space," is to them the truest substantiality;–the stars, meantime, through
what we consider their materiality, escaping the angelic sense, just in
proportion as the unparticled matter, through what we consider its
immateriality, eludes the organic.
As the sleep-waker pronounced these latter words, in a feeble tone, I
observed on his countenance a singular expression, which somewhat alarmed
me, and induced me to awake him at once. No sooner had I done this than,
with a bright smile irradiating all his features, he fell back upon his
pillow and expired. I noticed that in less than a minute afterward his
corpse had all the stern rigidity of stone. His brow was of the coldness of
ice. Thus, ordinarily, should it have appeared, only after long pressure
from Azrael's hand. Had the sleep-waker, indeed, during the latter portion
of his discourse, been addressing me from out the regions of the
shadows?
THE END
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