Fig. 7.—Experiment of the cataleptic cock.

We place a cock on a table of dark colour, rest its beak on the surface, where it is firmly held, and with a piece of chalk slowly draw a white line in continuation from the beak, as shown in our engraving. If the crest is thick, it is necessary to draw it back, so that the animal may follow with his eyes the tracing of the line. When the line has reached a length of about two feet the cock has become cataleptic. He is absolutely motionless, his eyes are fixed, and he will remain from thirty to sixty seconds in the same posture in which he had at first only been held by force. His head remains resting on the table in the position shown in fig. 7. This experiment, which we have successfully performed on different animals, can also be accomplished by drawing a straight line with a piece of chalk on a slate. M. Azam declares that the same result is also produced by drawing a black line on a table of white wood. According to M. Balbiani, German students had formerly a great predilection for this experiment, which they always performed with marked success. Hens do not, when operated on, fall into a cataleptic condition so easily as cocks; but they may often be rendered motionless by holding their heads fixed in the same position for several minutes. The facts we have just cited come properly under the little studied phenomena, designated by M. Braid in 1843 by the title of Hypnotism. MM. Littré and Ch. Robin have given a description of the hypnotic condition in their Dictionnaire de Médecine.

Fig. 8.—Ordinary pin and needle, seen through a microscope (magnified 500 diameters).

Fig. 9.—Thorn of a rose, and wasp’s sting through a microscope (magnified 500 diameters).

If any shining object, such as a lancet, or a disc of silver-paper gummed to a plate, is placed at about the distance of a foot from the eyes of a person, slightly above the head, and the patient regards this object fixedly, and without interruption for twenty or thirty minutes, he will become gradually motionless, and in a great number of cases will fall into a condition of torpor and genuine sleep. Dr. Braid affirms that under such circumstances he has been able to perform surgical operations, without the patient having any consciousness of pain. Later also, M. Azam has proved the complete insensibility to pricking on the part of individuals whom he has rendered cataleptic by the fixing of a brilliant object. The experiment of the cataleptic cock was first described under the name of Experimentum Mirabile, by P. Kircher, in his Ars Magna, published at Rome in 1646. It evidently belongs to the class of experiments which were performed at the Salpêtrière asylum at Paris, by M. Charcot, on patients suffering from special disorders. It must now be evident to our readers that our scientific occupations were sufficiently varied, and that we easily found around us many objects of study. When the weather was wet and cloudy we remained indoors, and devoted ourselves to microscopical examinations. Everything that came under our hands, insects, vegetables, etc., were worthy of observation. One day, while engaged over a microscopical preparation, I was making use of one of those steel points generally employed in such purposes, when happening to pass it accidentally beneath the microscope, I was astonished to see how rough and uneven it appeared when highly magnified. The idea then occurred to me to have recourse to something still more pointed, and I was thus led to make comparisons between the different objects represented in figs. 8 and 9. It will here be seen how very coarse is the product of our industry when compared with the product of Nature. No. 1 of fig. 8 represents the point of a pin that has already been used, magnified 500 diameters. The point is evidently slightly blunted and flattened. The malleable metal has yielded a little under the pressure necessary to make it pass through a material. No. 2 is a little more pointed; it is a needle. This, too, will be seen to be defective when regarded by the aid of the microscope. On the other hand, what fineness and delicacy do the rose thorn and wasp’s sting present when examined under the same magnifier! (See the two points in fig. 9.)

An examination of this exact drawing has led me to make a calculation which leads to rather curious results: at a half millimetre from the point, the diameters of the four objects represented are in thousandths of a millimetre respectively, 3·4; 2·2; 1·1; 0·38. The corresponding sections in millionths of a square millimetre are: 907·92; 380·13; 95·03; 11·34; or, in round numbers, 908; 380; 95; 11.

If one bears in mind, which is much below the truth, that the pressure exercised on the point must be proportional to the section, and admitting that a pressure of 11 centigrams suffices to thrust in the sting of a wasp half a millimetre, it will require more than 9 grams of pressure to thrust in a needle to the same extent. In fact, this latter figure is much too small, for we have not taken into account the advantage resulting from the elongated shape of the rose thorn, which renders it more favourable for penetration than a needle through a drop of tallow.