The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 76, February, 1864 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 76, February, 1864.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 76, February, 1864 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 76, February, 1864.

Dom La Taste, the great opponent of Jansenism, alluding to the same circumstance, says, “I do not dispute the fact, that the andiron sunk so deeply that it appeared to penetrate to the very backbone."[20]

Montgeron, after quoting the above, adds his own testimony, as to this same occurrence, in these words:—­

“As I am not ashamed to confess that I am one of those who have followed up most closely the work of the convulsions, I freely admit that I am the person to whom the author alludes, when he speaks of a certain friar who tried against a wall the effect of blows similar to those he had given the convulsionist.  As this is an occurrence personal to myself, I trust the reader will perceive the propriety of my presenting to him the narrative in a more exact and detailed form than that in which it is given by the author of the ‘Vains Efforts.’

“I had begun, as I usually do, by giving the convulsionist very moderate blows.  But after a time, excited by her constant complaints, which left me no room to doubt that the oppression in the pit of the stomach of which she complained could be relieved only by violent blows, I gradually increased the force of mine, employing at last my whole strength; but in vain.  The convulsionist continued to complain that the blows I gave her were so feeble that they procured her no relief; and she caused me to put the andiron into the hands of a large and stout man who happened to be one of the spectators.  He kept within no bounds.  Instructed by the trial he had seen me make that nothing could be too severe, he discharged such terrible blows, always on the pit of the stomach, as to shake the wall against which the convulsionist was leaning.

“She caused him to give her one hundred such blows, not reckoning as anything the sixty I had just administered.  She warmly thanked the man who had procured her such relief, and reproached me for my weakness and my lack of faith.

“When the hundred blows were completed, I took the andiron, desirous of trying against the wall itself whether my blows, which she thought so feeble and complained of so bitterly, really did produce no effect.  At the twenty-fifth stroke the stone against which I struck, and which had been shaken by the previous blows, was shattered, and the pieces fell out on the opposite side, leaving an opening of more than six inches square.

“Now let us observe what were the portions of the body of the convulsionist on which these fearful blows were dealt.  It is true that they first came in contact with the skin, but they sank immediately to the back of the patient; their force was not arrested at the surface.

“I insist unnecessarily, perhaps, upon this fact, since all, even our greatest enemies, admit its truth.  But, however incontestable it is, I conceive that I cannot too strongly prove it to those who have not themselves witnessed what happened; inasmuch as the principal objection made by the author of the ‘Memoire Theologique’ consists in supposing that the violence of the most tremendous blows given to convulsionists is suspended by the Devil, who thus nullifies the effect they would naturally produce."[21]

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 76, February, 1864 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.