<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<p class="center"><small>POISONS IN FICTION</small></p>
<p><span class="smcap">From</span> a very early period poisoning
mysteries have been
woven into romance and story,
and in later times have been a
favourite theme for both novelist
and dramatist. But unfortunately,
the scientific knowledge
of writers of fiction, as a
rule, is of a very limited description,
and the effects attributed
by them to certain drugs
are usually as fabulous as the
romances of the olden times.
They tell us of mysterious poisons
of untold power, an infinitesimal
quantity of which
will cause instantaneous death
without leaving a trace behind.
They describe anæsthetics so
powerful, that a whiff from a
bottle is sufficient to produce
immediate insensibility for any
period desired. In fact, the
novelist has a pharmacopœia
of his own. After all, why
should we question or cavil,
and wish to analyse it in the
prosaic test tube of modern
science; for take away the marvels
and mysteries and you
kill the romance. The novel
performs its mission if it succeeds
in interesting and amusing
us, and the story-teller has
accomplished the object of his
art when he is successful in
weaving the possible with the
impossible, so that we can
scarce perceive it.</p>
<p>That master of fiction, Dumas,
gives us an instance of this,
in his wonderfully fascinating
adventures of the Count Monte
Christo. Nothing seems impossible
to this extraordinary
individual, and incident after
incident of the most romantic
and exciting nature crowd one
upon another throughout the
story; yet so beautifully blended
by the wonderful imagination
of the author, that it enthrals
us to the end. The
Count, who is supposed to have
studied the art of medicine in
the East, has always a remedy
at hand for every emergency,
from hashish, in which he is a
profound believer, to his mysterious
stimulating elixir, described
as "of the colour of
blood, preserved in a phial of
Bohemian glass." A single
drop of this marvellous fluid,
if allowed to fall on the lips,
will, almost before it reaches
them, restore the marble and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</SPAN></span>
inanimate form to life. His
pill boxes were composed of
emeralds and precious stones
of huge size, and their contents
consisted of drugs, whose effects
were beyond conception.
His knowledge of chemistry and
toxicology is equally astonishing,
as instanced in the conversation
he holds with Madame de
Villefort, who, for nefarious purposes,
desires to improve her
knowledge of poisons. Monte
Christo discourses on the poisonous
properties of brucine,
a drug rarely used in England,
but largely used in France.
"Suppose," says the Count,
"you were to take a millegramme
of this poison the first
day, two millegrammes the second
day, and so on. Well, at
the end of ten days you would
have taken a centigramme: at
the end of twenty days, increasing
another millegramme,
you would have taken three
hundred centigrammes; that is
to say, a dose you would support
without inconvenience, and
which would be very dangerous
for any other person who had
not taken the same precautions
as yourself. Well, then, at the
end of a month, when drinking
water from the same carafe,
you would kill the person who
had drunk this water, without
your perceiving otherwise than
from slight inconvenience that
there was any poisonous substance
mingled with the water."
The Count thus explains the
doctrine of immunity from a
poison, by accustoming the
system to its effect in small
doses for a length of time, a
process which is actually possible
with some drugs, but not
with all. His satirical description
of the bungling of
the common poisoner, as compared
to the fine subtlety and
cunning he advocates, is also
worth quoting: "Amongst us
a simpleton, possessed by the
demon of hate or cupidity,
who has an enemy to destroy,
or some near relation to dispose
of, goes straight to the
grocer's or druggist's, gives a
false name, which leads more
easily to his detection than
his real one, and purchases,
under a pretext that the rats
prevent him from sleeping, five
or six pennyworth of arsenic.
If he is really a cunning fellow
he goes to five or six different
druggists or grocers, and thereby
becomes only five or six times
more easily traced; then, when
he has acquired his specific, he
administers duly to his enemy
or near kinsman a dose of arsenic
which would make a mammoth
or mastodon burst, and
which, without rhyme or reason,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</SPAN></span>
makes his victim utter
groans which alarm the whole
neighbourhood. Then arrive a
crowd of policemen and constables.
They fetch a doctor,
who opens the dead body, and
collects from the entrails and
stomach a quantity of arsenic
in a spoon. Next day a hundred
newspapers relate the fact,
with the names of the victim
and the murderer. The same
evening the grocer or grocers,
druggist or druggists, come and
say, 'It was I who sold the
arsenic to the gentleman accused';
and rather than not
recognize the guilty purchaser,
they will recognize twenty.
Then the foolish criminal is
taken, imprisoned, interrogated,
confronted, confounded, condemned,
and cut off by hemp
or steel; or, if she be a woman
of any consideration, they lock
her up for life. This is the way
in which you northerners understand
chemistry." And so
he endeavours to incite a woman,
who is already anxiously contemplating
a series of terrible
crimes.</p>
<p>The recital of the ingenious
experiments of the Abbé Adelmonte
is a piece of clever construction,
as the quotation will
show. "The Abbé," said
Monte Christo, "had a remarkably
fine garden full of vegetables,
flowers, and fruit.
From amongst these vegetables
he selected the most simple—a
cabbage, for instance. For
three days he watered this
cabbage with a distillation of
arsenic; on the third, the
cabbage began to droop and
turn yellow. At that moment
he cut it. In the eyes of everybody
it seemed fit for table,
and preserved its wholesome
appearance. It was only poisoned
to the Abbé Adelmonte.
He then took the cabbage to
the room where he had rabbits,
for the Abbé Adelmonte had a
collection of rabbits, cats, and
guinea-pigs, equally fine as his
collection of vegetables, flowers,
and fruit. Well, the Abbé
Adelmonte took a rabbit and
made it eat a leaf of the cabbage.
The rabbit died. What
magistrate would find or even
venture to insinuate anything
against this? What <em>procureur
du roi</em> has ever ventured to
draw up an accusation against
M. Magendie or M. Flourens,
in consequence of the rabbits,
cats, and guinea-pigs they have
killed? Not one. So, then,
the rabbit dies, and justice takes
no notice. This rabbit dead,
the Abbé Adelmonte has its
entrails taken out by his cook
and thrown on the dunghill;
on this dunghill was a hen,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</SPAN></span>
who, pecking these intestines,
was, in her turn, taken ill, and
dies next day. At the moment
when she was struggling in the
convulsions of death, a vulture
was flying by (there are a good
many vultures in Adelmonte's
country); this bird darts on
the dead bird and carries it
away to a rock, where it dines
off its prey. Three days afterwards
this poor vulture, who
has been very much indisposed
since that dinner, feels very
giddy, suddenly, whilst flying
aloft in the clouds, and falls
heavily into a fish-pond. The
pike, eels, and carp eat greedily
always, as everybody knows—well,
they feast on the vulture.
Well, suppose the next day,
one of these eels, or pike, or
carp is served at your table,
poisoned, as they are to the
third generation. Well, then,
your guest will be poisoned in
the fifth generation, and die
at the end of eight or ten days,
of pains in the intestines, sickness,
or abscess of the pylorus.
The doctors open the body,
and say, with an air of profound
learning, 'The subject
has died of a tumour on the
liver, or typhoid fever.'"</p>
<p>After attempting to kill half
the household with brucine,
Madame de Villefort changes
her particular poison for a simple
narcotic, recognized by
Monte Christo (who in this instance
frustrates the murderer)
as being dissolved in alcohol.
The name of the latter poison
is not told us by the novelist,
but on the doctor's examination
of the suspected liquid
we read, "He took from its
silver case a small bottle of nitric
acid, dropped a little of it
into the liquor, which immediately
changed to a blood-red
colour."</p>
<p>Perhaps the most curious
method of poisoning ever used
in fiction is that introduced by
the late Mr. James Payn in his
novel, "Halves." The poisoner
uses finely chopped horse-hair
as a medium for getting
rid of <span class="err" title="original: h r">her</span> niece. In this way
she brings on a disease which
puzzles the doctor, until one
day he comes across the would-be
murderess pulling the horse-hair
out of the drawing-room
sofa, which causes him to suspect
her at once. This ingenious
lady introduced the
chopped horse-hair into the
pepper-pot used by her victim.
The inimitable Count Fosco,
whom Wilkie Collins introduces
into "The Woman in White,"
was supposed to possess a remarkable
knowledge of chemistry,
although he says, "Only
twice did I call science to my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</SPAN></span>
aid," in working out his plot to
abduct Lady Glyde. His media
were simple: "A medicated
glass of water and a medicated
bottle of smelling-salts relieved
her of all further embarrassment
and alarm." This genial villain
waxes eloquent on the
science of chemistry in his confession.
"Chemistry!" he exclaims,
"has always had irresistible
attractions for me from
the enormous, the illimitable
power which the knowledge of
it confers. Chemists—I assert
it emphatically—might sway, if
they pleased, the destinies of
humanity. Mind, they say,
rules the world. But what
rules the mind? The body
(follow me closely here) lies at
the mercy of the most omnipotent
of all potentates—the
chemist. Give me—Fosco—chemistry;
and when Shakespeare
has conceived Hamlet,
and sits down to execute the
conception—with a few grains
of powder dropped into his
daily food, I will reduce his
mind, by the action of his body,
till his pen pours out the most
abject drivel that has ever degraded
paper. Under similar
circumstances revive me the
illustrious Newton. I guarantee
that when he sees the apple
fall he shall <em>eat it</em>, instead of
discovering the principle of gravitation.
Nero's dinner shall
transform Nero into the mildest
of men before he has done digesting
it, and the morning
draught of Alexander the Great
shall make Alexander run for
his life at the first sight of the
enemy the same afternoon. On
my sacred word of honour it is
lucky for Society that modern
chemists are, by incomprehensible
good fortune, the most
harmless of mankind. The
mass are worthy fathers of
families, who keep shops. The
few are philosophers besotted
with admiration for the sound
of their own lecturing voices,
visionaries who waste their
lives on fantastic impossibilities,
or quacks whose ambition soars
no higher than our corns."</p>
<p>In "Armadale," the same
novelist introduces us to a poisoner
of the deepest dye in the
person of Miss Gwilt. This fair
damsel, whose auburn locks
seemed to have possessed an
irresistible attraction for the
opposite sex, was addicted to
taking laudanum to soothe her
troubled nerves, and first tried
to mix a dose with some lemonade
she had prepared for her
husband's namesake and friend,
whom she wished out of the
way. This attempt failing, and
a second one, to scuttle a yacht
in which he was sailing, proving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</SPAN></span>
futile also, he was finally lured
to a sanatorium in London,
where she had arranged for him
to be placed to sleep in a room
into which a poisonous gas
(presumably carbonic acid) was
to be passed. At the last moment
she discovers her husband
has taken the place of her victim,
and in a revulsion of feeling
she rescues him, and ends
her own life instead in the
poisoned chamber. According
to the story, the medical investigation
which followed this
tragedy ended in discovering
that she had died of apoplexy;
a fact which had it occurred in
real life would not have redounded
to the credit of the
medical men who conducted it.</p>
<p>The heroine of Mr. Benson's
novel, "The Rubicon," poisons
herself with prussic acid of <span class="err" title="original: unheard-of">unheard of</span>
strength, which she
discovers <em>among some photographic
chemicals</em>.</p>
<p>On the stage, "poisoning"
has gone somewhat out of fashion
with modern dramatists, although
it was a common thing
in years gone by for the villain
of the play to swallow a cup of
cold poison in the last act, and
after several dying speeches to
fall suddenly flat on his back
and die to slow music. The
death of Cleopatra, described by
Shakespeare as resulting from
the bite of a venomous snake,
is like no clinical description
of the final effects of death
from the bite of any known
snake. Beverley, in "The
Gamester," takes a dose of
strong poison in the fifth act,
and afterwards makes several
fairly long speeches before he
apparently feels the effects,
and finally succumbs. The
description of the death of Juliet,
which Shakespeare, in all
probability, conceived from
reading the effects that followed
the drinking of morion
or mandragora wine, is an accurate
description of death from
that drug. The use of this
anodyne preparation to deaden
pain dates from ancient times,
and it is stated it was a common
practice for women to administer
it to those about to suffer
the penalty of the law by
being crucified. We have another
instance of the fabulous
effects ascribed to poisons by
the early playwrights, in Massinger's
play, "The Duke of
Milan." Francisco dusts over
a plant some poisonous powder
and hands it to Eugenia. Ludovico
approaches, and kisses
the lady's hand but twice, and
then dies from the effects of the
poison.</p>
<p>Miss Helen Mathers, in one of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</SPAN></span>
her recent works, viz., "The Sin
of Hagar," a story warranted to
thrill the soul of "Sweet Seventeen,"
makes some extraordinary
discoveries which will be new
to chemists. For instance, she
tells us of strychnine that actually
<em>discolours</em> a glass of whisky
and water. One of the characters,
a frisky old dowager, professes
to be an <em>amateur</em> chemist,
and this lady, we are gravely informed
by the novelist, "detects
the presence of the strychnine
in the glass of whisky and
water <em>at a glance</em>."</p>
<p>But Miss Mathers has still
another poison, whose properties
will doubtless be a revelation to
scientists, and it is with this marvellous
body the "double-dyed
villainess" of the story puts an
end to her woes. For convenience
she carries it about with her
concealed in a ring, and when at
last she decides on committing
suicide, we are told "she simply
placed the ring to her lips, a
strange odour spread through the
room, and she instantly lay dead."</p>
<p>Sufficient eccentricities of this
kind in fiction might be enumerated
to fill a volume, but we
must forbear. It is perhaps
hardly necessary to state that
the lady novelist is the greatest
sinner in this respect, and
stranger poisons are evolved
from her fertile brain than were
ever known to man.</p>
<hr class="ruler" />
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</SPAN></span></p>
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