The Quimby Manuscripts
Chapter
8 CONTEMPORARY
TESTIMONY
[Under
date of July 8th, 1856, a former patient wrote a brief article entitled
"An Important Discovery in the Healing Art," as if intending it for
publication. The Ms. has been preserved, and from it we quote the following:]
THIS
truly wonderful discovery is now practised by Dr. Quimby, of Belfast, a very
respectable gentleman, for intelligence, agreeableness and integrity. He is able
to cure without the use of medicine diseases which have baffled the skill of
most eminent physicians. Of this we have
evidence in his curing those who have been afflicted with sickness and pain for
several years, without once knowing the cause of their sufferings, and were
given up by their physicians as having a
I
now come to speak of myself and will give a short sketch of my own experience.
For almost four years previous to my consulting Dr. Quimby I had been an
invalid. In December, 1851, I contracted a violent cold, which brought on
influenza, attended with a severe cough. Every part of me seemed wracked with
pain, and it was with much difficulty I
I
had heard of his effecting wonderful cures in hopeless cases of long standing.
Although I could not readily conceive the manner in which it was done, I did not
doubt the truth of the assertion or think it absurd; but deemed it impossible
for anything in like manner to be wrought in my case. I therefore listened with
indifference to all I heard respecting his wonderful skill and superior
knowledge until a few weeks previous to putting myself under his treatment. I
had used every restorative recommended for my case, and all without benefit.
I was at last compelled to give up trying, as it was only something
simple I could take at all. I therefore
concluded there could be no risk in applying to one who was represented to cure
without the use of medicines, and hearing his mode of treatment spoken of in the
best terms by many of the learned class.
I
had the pleasure of seeing Dr. Quimby at my own home a few weeks before I was
carried to Belfast. He gave me encouragement, said he could help me and soon
enable me to walk again. This I thought was doing too much. I dared not believe.
And yet I was impotent to know the truth . . . that I could not even fancy to be
a reality . . . I set out on my journey with as much fortitude as could
reasonably be expected of one so weak. . .
I felt glad to lie down and rest myself after so fatiguing a journey. I was much
distressed, but wished to make as little ado as possible, for fear of alarming
those who accompanied me.
Dr.
Quimby made me a visit the same day, and expressed an opinion a second time that
he could help me. In one week's time I was able by slight assistance from Dr.
Quimby
During
my stay at Belfast Dr. Quimby had more practice than he could well attend to,
and several whose cases came under my own observation had long been considered
hopeless were in a short time restored to their natural strength. By the leave
of one young lady, Miss C., from Bucksport, I will narrate her sufferings and
the help she received. She had been a sufferer for more than ten years, and had
had fifteen medical attendants that were considered men of skill in their
profession, who were at last obliged to admit her case as something which
surpassed their knowledge of disease. She learning of my speedy recovery,
desired to learn more particularly concerning it, and consequently came to see
for herself. . : . Dr. Quimby examined her case and bid her be of good cheer,
and thought he could help
Ever
since my return home my health has been improving, although very many thought my
sudden cure was nothing to be relied on, and if I still persisted in taking
exercise I might ere long be in as perilous a situation as when I first applied
to Dr. Quimby. But they have become Convinced that it is reality, and think me
almost a miracle in the history of disease. I have been able to attend a singing
school during the past winter without experiencing the slightest injury. Permit
me to say to those like myself when looking for a remedy that you have only to
go to Dr. Quimby and "apply thy heart unto understanding, and thy ears to
the words of knowledge. So shall the knowledge of wisdom be unto thy soul. When
thou hast found it, then there shall be a reward, and thy expectation shall not
be cut off."
I
have deferred publishing this statement until the present time that all might
know that I am now well, and suffer from none of my former difficulties, that I
have recently gone to housekeeping and have "nothing to molest me, or make
me afraid" as regards to my former difficulties. I desire always to bless
the Lord, who has so wonderfully dealt with me, and also to express my deepest
gratitude to Dr. Quimby, as the means employed to change my conditions. .
[A
writer in the Bangor Times tells of the case of a Mrs. Hodsdon of
Kenduskeag, who had been sick with a complication of diseases for two years.
"Dyspepsia in its worst form, and a difficulty about the head, had
utterly prostrated her, so that, for the two years, she had been unable to
walk a step or to be moved in an upright position without fainting. Dr. Quimby
called upon the sufferer, and in two hours the patient rose from her bed
without assistance, seated herself in a chair and sat up two hours. She rested
well that night, she steadily improved and in due time gained twenty pounds of
flesh. All this came as the result of a single visit. The writer states that
he has heard of other cases of remarkable relief, and he wonders what power
there is behind Dr. Quimby's "gift." The testimony of others is
mentioned regarding the "marvellous power" following Quimby's
efforts. No theory is proposed, but the writer evidently agrees with one
signing himself "Exeter" in the Bangor Jeffersonian, Feb.,
1858, who declares that it is "too late an hour for the cry of `humbug'
in Mr. Quimby's treatment of disease. . . . People are beginning to inquire,
`Who and what is Dr.
"We
have been told that the `age of miracles' is passed, but we have recently heard
of several astonishing cures performed by a Dr. P. P. Quimby, which seem to
border on the miraculous. How these cures are effected, it is impossible to say,
as no visible means are employed. The most obstinate cases of disease have been
made to disappear at the mere will, it would seem, of the Doctor. . . . Having
heard of a remarkable recovery, we called on the patient, an intelligent young
lady, who stated to us her case, and the manner of her cure, the facts of which
she embodied, at our request, in the following letter."
PORTLAND,
ME., August 29th, 1860.
Dr.
Quimby,
Dear Sir:
I
have been sick since five years ago last July, having a great deal of pain in my
back and limbs, "caused by blue pills taken two years before,"
physicians said, giving me
Hearing
of you, I set out at once to see you. Arriving at the United States Hotel in
Portland, August 15th, A.M., I was carried up stairs to my room in my wheel
chair, and in fifteen minutes after I saw you, Dr. Quimby, I was walking. I went
down stairs to dinner without any assistance, and to my room again, and during
the P. M., I took long walks of about forty steps and back again, and when you
consider that in the morning of the same day, I could only stand for an instant,
and take two or three steps with assistance, you will not wonder that I was wild
with delight, or that I was to myself like one risen from the dead. The second
day I walked on the street sixteen rods, and during the sixth day I walked four
miles and a half, and in less than two weeks I walked into Portland from
Falmouth, four miles. My disease is entirely gone, my back is perfectly well,
and I have no fears of a relapse.
Yours
with much esteem,
F.
C. B.
Residence,
Williamstown, Vt.
[To
this testimony may be added that of Mr. Julius Dresser, restored to health by
Mr. Quimby three months before and devoting himself to conversing with
patients on "the Truth." Mr. Dresser saw Miss B. in her invalid
condition, then walked
Now,
if this were a solitary case, we might ascribe the cure to the imagination, as
it is well known that imagination has worked wonders in this way. But this is
but one of a number of equally remarkable cases which have occurred here in our
midst, and witnesses stand ready to bear testimony to the facts. One lady who
had been severely afflicted with rheumatism, and for years was bent nearly
double, a perfect cripple, unable to use her hands or feet, was in a short time
restored to health, and is now a living, working evidence of the Doctor's skill.
A gentleman, a friend of ours, had for years been afflicted with a hip
complaint. He had for a long time been confined to his bed, and was brought so
low his physicians had given him up, with the intimation he could live but a few
days. It was purposed to call in Dr.
Quimby. This the gentleman objected strenuously to, being bitterly opposed to
anything like humbuggery, and the Dr. he considered one of the biggest of
humbugs. His wife, however, insisted on calling in Dr. Q. He visited him and
yesterday we met the patient on the street, going home to dinner, looking
heartier than we have seen him for a long time. He considers himself entirely
cured of the complaint. We told him people considered all these cures as
humbugs. So did I, was his reply, but here I am, and if humbug can work such
wonders, glory be to humbug, say I: and so say we.
We might cite a dozen other cases, but we refrain. We have no other
motive in mentioning these rare cures than to make our readers acquainted with
the remarkable phenomena. We have but a slight acquaintance with Dr. Quimby, and
have no interest in publishing his astonishing cures to the world. We have
mentioned them as affording matters of curious speculation. We must confess
there is something about them more than our philosophy ever dreamed of. (1)
(1)The
editor 'of a Lowell, Mass., paper prints a communication from Miss B. in which
she gives the same facts cited above, and says, "The young lady who sends
us the following . . . has relatives in this city whom she has recently
visited. We have no question of the
entire truthfulness of her statements, which we have heard orally and with
more particularity." The communication is dated Oct. 22, 1860.
[The
next testimonial first appeared in the Lebanon, N. H., Free Press, and
was then copied by other papers in Maine and New Hampshire.]
LEBANON,
Dec. 3, 1860.
Just
at the present time there is a good deal said about Dr. Quimby, of Portland, and
it may not be considered amiss to mention the case of a young lady of this town
who has been greatly benefitted by him. For nearly three years she has been an
invalid-a great part of the time confined to her bed, and never left her room
unless carried out by her friends. A few weeks since she heard of Dr. Quimby,
and resolved to visit him. She did so, and after remaining under his care four
days she returned home free from all pain and disease, and is now rapidly
regaining health and strength.
The
reputation of Dr. Quimby as a man who cures diseases has extended without the
narrow limits of his own state, and the sick from various parts have learned to
avail themselves of his services. The increasing respect and confidence of the
public in his success suggests the day of miracles, and brings up a question as
absurd as that of two thousand years ago, "Can any good come out of
Nazareth?" Can actual disease be cured' by humbug? Dr. Quimby effects his
cures without the aid of medicine or outward applications, and his practice
embraces cases like the above, where all ordinary treatment has failed to
relieve. These facts at first place him in the rank of the mysteries of a
superstitious world, but there are few of his patients after a second interview
who do not think the mystery is in them and not in him. . . .
It is here that Dr. Quimby stands, his explanation and his cures go hand
in hand. While his senses [intuition] are
penetrating the dark mystery of the sick, he is in complete possession of his
consciousness as a man. Not fearing to investigate the operation of the mind, be
penetrated the region [where] nothing but magicians, sorcerers, witchcraft and
spiritualists have ventured, and going far beyond them in his experiments, he
arrived at the knowledge of the principle regulating happiness.
Therefore
his curing disease is perfectly intelligent and is in itself a new philosophy of
life. The foundation of his
It
is impossible in a brief communication to do anything like justice to Dr.
Quimby's system. Enough has been said to separate him from quacks and imposters.
The case cited above is not a solitary instance of his skill in practising his
science, and his increasing popularity with all classes shows that the
confidence of the public is not misplaced.
ONE
WHO HAS BEEN RELIEVED.
[Having
heard that Quimby had restored a woman who had been dumb, an interested reader
reported the results of investigations he had been prompted to make concerning
this cure, which occurred during the same year, 1856, the patient being a
daughter of Capt. Blodgett, of Brooksville. The patient had been suddenly
deprived of her speech two years before.]
No
cause was known, and the fact excited a melancholy surprise in herself. . . .
She had not been sick . . . nor had any trouble of mind or body been known to
have produced speechlessness. . . . One evening her speech was observed
Mr.
Q. says he employs no medicine of any kind for any complaint he is called upon
to treat. His theory is . . . that all diseases of the body are caused by a
derangement of the mind! And that the cure of all diseases may be effected,
theoretically, by a restoration or rectification of the mind of the invalid, to
its natural, proper condition. He has this
faith, and when he succeeds in imparting it to the patient,
She
began immediately to improve, and has grown better every week to a wonderful
degree. The disease has measureably departed from the hip, and the leg has
resumed almost its natural length and strength. She
threw aside her crutches a week or two ago . . . and now she walks with
considerable ease and no pain, with the aid of only a small cane in one hand.
She lifts her foot with ease, and bears her whole weight upon it momentarily
while walking-a thing which until within a few weeks she had not been able to do
for fifteen long years. The reader may imagine the enthusiastic congratulations
in which she indulges at the cheering prospect she now has of being completely
restored to health. She is apparently in the enjoyment of a new life....
Dr. Quimby has used no medicine or material appliances whatever, internally
or externally-he has not even seen nor touched the part afflicted.
All he has done has been by acts of volition, conversing with his patient
daily for about six weeks, "teaching her,"
[More
convincing to some will be the testimony of F. L. Town, assistant Surgeon, U.
S. A., Louisville, Ky., who, in a communication over his own signature, March,
1862, wrote to a Portland paper concerning his observations and knowledge of
the experience of a patient under Quimby's care. The editor, in introducing
the letter says, "The Doctor himself came to the International Hotel . .
. an invalid, so feeble that he had to be assisted in getting into the door,
and afterwards to his room on the second floor. He was so terribly dyspeptic
that he could eat no solid food, nor could he swallow cold water. . . . The
Doctor left completely cured, in about six weeks from his coming to visit Mr.
Quimby. . . . About the facts of the Doctor's remarkable cures there is no
doubt; but there may be question about how they are done." Dr. Town's
communication is as follows:]
Mr.
Editor: I believe you have some knowledge of Dr. Quimby of the International and
his peculiar mode of practice. By a chain of unforeseen circumstances. I have
been led to know something of Dr. Q. and the modus operandi in the treatment of
his patients. With a broad faith in the virtue of men I believe him to be an
honest man in his profession, who practises as. he believes, and would not
intentionally deceive anyone. His treatment is peculiar to himself and
independent of all systems or forms of practice whatever. For that pretentious
class, who in the guise of spiritualists, clairvoyants, and all other charlatans
who with no previous study, or knowledge of the power or effect of the medicines
they prescribe, seek to humbug communities . . . he has as little esteem, and
holds himself as sensitively separate from them as the most orthodox
practitioner. He has no sympathy or
connection with them. Neither is his
practice more nearly allied to that of the regular practitioner.
He gives no medicine. . . .
The
patient will find him unassuming in his manners, and no more ready to talk of
his successes than other men of theirs. . . . He will explain to you his way of
practice, give you the benefit of his treatment, entertain you with stereoscopic
views of his theory or belief, and end off perhaps by explaining a few passages
of Scripture. However, a man's belief is one thing, and his success in practice
is another; this alone wins a favorable opinion and wise confidence. There can
be no doubt that Dr. Q. has been the means of doing much good, as many patients
from their homes, now in the enjoyment of health, are willing to testify. In
some instances his treatment has been attended by the most unexpected and happy
results, affording great and immediate relief, when hope almost had failed.
These are not isolated cases, but none the less wonderful.
I
will briefly relate the history of the following case, in which the ties of near
consanguinity awakened the liveliest sympathy, and the happy termination of
which was the cause of equal surprise and pleasure. A member of our family had,
while in that transition period between happy childhood and budding womanhood,
gradually lost the power of walking or standing, and for a number of years (some
five or six) was wholly unable to make any use of her limbs whatever.
There was no deformity, nor any discoverable lesion, but weakness, and
all attempts to use them were attended by such excessive pain that they had to
be given up. During this time she was confined exclusively to the house, as the
jar of a carriage could not be borne; and often the tread of an incautious foot
across the floor was productive of pain. She was visited by some of our most
skilful practitioners, men of acknowledged ability and professors in popular
colleges. They expressed a belief that in
time a recovery might be hoped for.
Several
years passed, and time brought no healing on its wings, but new causes of
suffering. Her disease began to assume a much graver type-the eyes became
morbidly sensitive to light, which increased to such an extent that the least
degree of light seemed unbearable. The shutters were closed, curtains were
drawn, and heavy blankets followed, tacked closely over the windows.
The digestive powers became much impaired. The stomach, in failing to
perform its office, sympathized with the rest of the system. . . . For five
months the only nourishment that could be borne . . . was a
Through
the earnest representation of friends, Dr. Quimby was employed, certainly with
the least expectation of any benefit. We were little prepared to witness the
surprising and gratifying amendment that attended his visit.
The
relief afforded was immediate, entire. All pain and irritation ceased, and the
patient was convalescent. Light again began to shed its cheering rays through
the room, for six months darkened. The digestive powers increased, and she was
able to eat simple food. The use. of her limbs returned; and under a more
generous diet, and as new strength gave power to them, she was able to walk.
In a few months her weight more than doubled. . . .
At that time, stopping at a distant city, I soon came home to witness
these happy results. How great was the change! . . . Like a child, she was again
learning to walk. The hue of health was chasing from the cheek the pallor of
sickness, whilst her returning smile and speaking eye told of the happiness
within. Her whole aspect showed that she was indeed a new being.
Save
an occasional drawback, which a visit of a few weeks to Dr. Q. set all right,
she has steadily mended to the present, (nearly two years). The eyes are still
troublesome, but improving; otherwise her health is apparently confirmed.
Other
cases equally remarkable have come to my knowledge, whose history and symptoms
were every way different. It is apparent that his influence is not confined to
one class of diseases, and in no case could one safely predicate whether or not
relief might be expected. However, all may
not hope to be set at once in the broad highway to health. . . . Considering the
means employed, and the diversity of the cases, Dr. Q.'s success is
remarkable-whether it depends more upon the man, or he acts upon the first
principle of that which, when better understood, shall be recognized as a new
remedial agency . . . time will tell.
These
few remarks are made as an act of justice to Dr. Q. . . . Let us then in the
exercise of Christian charity, if plain facts are before us, and we find an
individual who can alleviate the pains of a single sufferer, strew flowers in
his
[Writing
under the head of "The Art of Healing," another interested observer,
signing himself "H.," communicates to the Portland Advertiser,
Feb. 1860, his conclusions in the case of Quimby's practice. He says in part:]
Every
theory admitting evil as an element cannot annihilate it. If disease is ever
driven out of existence, it must be by a theory and practice entirely at
variance with what we now put our trust
in.
. . . In every age there have been individuals possessing the power of healing
the sick and foretelling events. . . . Spiritualists, mesmerists, and
clairvoyants, making due allowance for imposition, have proved this power is
still in existence. Like this in the vague impression of its character, but
infinitely beyond any demonstration of the same intelligence and skill, is the
practice of a physician who has been among us a year and to whose treatment
some hopeless invalids owe their recovered health.
I refer to Dr. P. P. Quimby. With no reputation except for honesty, which he carries in his face and the faint rumor of his cures, he has established himself in our city and by his success merits public attention. . . He stands among his patients as a reformer, originating an entirely new theory in regard to disease and practising it with a skill and ease which only comes from knowledge and experience. His success in reaching all kinds of diseases, from chronic cases of years' standing to acute disease, shows that he must practise upon a principle different from what has ever been taught. His position as an irregular practitioner has confined him principally to the patronage of the ignorant, the credulous and the desperate, and the most of his cases have been those which have not yielded to ordinary treatment. (1)
[In
introducing the following letter to the Portland Advertiser, the editor
says; "We publish this morning a communication over the name of
`Vermont,' from a very intelligent young lady who, with her mother, was a
boarder at the International Hotel during the most of last winter. The mother
was a lady, we judge, of about fifty years, and the daughter about twenty. The
mother had been treated for
One
of the most noticeable characteristics of the present time is a growing distrust
in the virtue of medicine, as in itself able to cure disease; and this state of
the public mind this demand for some better mode of treating the sick has
either created or finds ready an army of new school practitioners of every
possible kind, some sincerely desirous of doing good and firmly believing what
they profess, while others are only too willing to impose upon credulity and
benefit themselves thereby. Under such circumstances it would be extremely
difficult for a true reformer, who not only sees the errors of the past and
present, but dares to take entirely different views even of the origin of
disease, to acquire for himself a reputation distinct from the many who also
profess to have advanced far in the new paths they have chosen, though in
reality having started from the same point that all others have in times past,
they will in the end arrive at nearly the same conclusions. Even great success
in the practice of his theory, might for a time be insufficient to establish
public confidence, and prevent his being ranked with all the innovators of the
day.
[This
states in an admirable way precisely the difficulty Quimby encountered,
classified as he was with humbugs, spiritualists, magnetic healers, and the
like, although radically different from them.
This writer goes on to say:]
Many
people who have lost faith in the ancient school, are at the same time startled
by such reasoning as Dr. Quimby uses with regard to disease. It is so contrary
to the commonly received opinions, they hardly dare believe there can be any
The
following outline of his theory was written after having passed through a
similiar change of feeling, and may give some general idea-though a very
imperfect one of the principles which are so effective in opposing disease.
According
to this new theory, disease is the invention of man. It is caused by a
disturbance of the mind-which is spiritual matter [or substance]-and therefore
originates there. We can call to mind instances where disease has been produced
instantly by excitement, anger, fear or joy. Is it not the more rational
conclusion that disease is always caused by influences upon the mind, rather
than that it has an identity, and comes to us and attacks us?
Living
in a world full of error in this respect and [educated] to believe that disease
is something we cannot escape, it is not strange that our fear comes upon us.
We take the opinions of men which have no knowledge in them for truth.
So we all agree to arbitrary rules with regard to our mode of life, and
suffer the penalties attached to any disobedience of the same. These diseases or penalties are real to us though they are the
results of our own belief.
It
is reasonable to infer from these statements that the only way to approach and
eradicate disease must be through the mind, to trace the cause of this misery
and hold up to it the light of reason, or disbelief in the existence of disease
independent of the mind. Then the cloud like shadows vanishes as error always
will when overpowered by the light of truth.
Dr.
Quimby proves the truth of this belief by his daily works. The marvelous cures
he is effecting are undeniable evidence of his superior knowledge and skill in
applying it for the benefit of suffering humanity. He does not use medicine or
any material agency, nor call to his aid mesmerism or any [spiritistic]
influences whatever; but works upon scientific principles, the philosophy of
which is perfectly understood by the patient, therefore [the patient]
Accepting
this new theory, man is placed superior to circumstances, easily adapting
himself to any necessity. Free from all fear, he lives a more simple, natural
and happy life. He is enabled to control the body and make it subservient to his
will, instead of his being a slave, completely at its mercy, which he will be if
he allows that it is subject to disease.
This
truth is capable of extensive practical application in all the exigencies of
life, and we learn to make constant use of it as we advance in knowledge. It
helps us to place a just estimate upon everything, the value of life is
enhanced, and as we have more of this true knowledge in ourselves we shall love
and worship God, who is the source of all wisdom, more sincerely and
intelligently.
[The
following was inserted as an advertisement in a Portland, Maine, paper, Feb.
3, 1861, in gratitude for the work Dr. Quimby was doing.]
THE
ANNIHILATION OF DISEASE
Disease
is the great enemy of life. Even those who
are free from it admit that they are liable to it and are in constant fear of
the danger.
It
is quite a new idea that disease cannot only be eradicated but annihilated, and
might be questioned were it not daily proved by the practice of Dr. P. P.
QUIMBY, of Portland, Maine, who has discovered an entirely new method of curing
disease upon scientific principles, without the use of medicine or any material
agency: also, without the use of mesmerism or any spiritual (1) influence
whatever. He is constantly curing the more desperate cases of disease-paralysis,
consumption, neuralgia yield to his control, and the deaf, blind and lame are
made whole by a philosophy which is perfectly intelligent to themselves, and is
able not only to rid them of present trouble, but also from the liability to
disease in the future.
(1) i. e. spiritistic.
These
statements are made without the knowledge of Dr. Quimby, for the benefit of any
who, suffering from disease, have failed to find relief, and are left. without
hope of finding
Dr.
Quimby has, after years of patient investigation, discovered this new principle
in metaphysics, which cannot fail to interest the well, and is of incalculable
importance to the sick. But his superior knowledge and skill in applying it to
the cure of disease is accompanied by such rare modesty of character that he has
never taken any means to make himself known to the world, and therefore he is
only known within the limits of the influence which his patients may hold in
society.
As
a token of gratitude to him, as well as for the benefit of any who may be
suffering from disease, he is thus unhesitatingly and publicly recommended.
[The
name of E. Chase, Portland, is appended in ink to the following testimonial,
clipped from the Portland Advertiser, 1860:]
Reader,
did you ever see Dr. Quimby? You have heard of him. As a Doctor he is
nondescript. He ignores all material medicines. He does not give the
infinitestimal atoms of Homeopathy or bread pills. He repudiates all spiritual
medicineship as he does the whole catalogue of pills and liquids recorded in the
M. D.'s Materia Medics. These he asserts are all humbugs, and the works of
darkness.
His
patients come from the four winds of heaven . . . no, not from the South.
The Doctor is a strong Union man; and would as soon cure a sick
rattlesnake as a sick rebel. He has patients from all parts of New England, the Middle States, and
the West. And his patients are all from the wealthier and educated classes. He
has a large practice in this city and neighborhood. Most of his patients get
well under his curative process, which differs from all other modes and theories
of medical practice. (1)
(1) The writer puts in his own opinion when he speaks as if Quimby had only wealthy and educated patients. This was not true. According to his own statement above, "medical" should be omitted in the last sentence.
We
have been boarding at the International Hotel, in this city, during the last six
weeks, and we have witnessed some remarkable cases; as have all the regular
boarders. We express no opinion about the modus operandi; except to say
positively that the Doctor's practice, if it do not cure, can do no possible
harm, as he gives no medicines.
[The
Portland Evening Courier also took to reporting instances of Dr.
Quimby's cures and giving space to articles by patients. Some of the latter
were by Mrs. Eddy, then Mrs. Patterson, and are reprinted in another chapter.
Mrs. Patterson's sonnet, also quoted elsewhere, was called out by the striking
cure of Capt. Deering. Commenting on this cure, a writer in the Courier says:]
Persons
who know but little of the theory or practice of Dr. P. P. Quimby are constantly
misrepresenting both. The Doctor has received hundreds of testimonials as to the
permanency and wonderful nature of his cures. The
following statement from Capt. John W. Deering, of Saco, written by himself,
will have great weight with those who know Mr. Deering, and it is published as
much to refute statements made by some interested persons to the effect that the
Doctor acts as a spirit medium and mesmeriser, as for the testimony it offers in
support of the healing power which the Doctor claims to exercise, even in cases
called chronic, and given over by old-school physicians.
[The
editor also takes pains to say that this wonderful cure, one of many equally
remarkable and astonishing cures which have come to his knowledge, is evidence
of Quimby's theory, as "original and entirely distinct from spirit
mediums and mesmerisers. . . . Below will be found Capt. Deering's
statement."]
"Early
in August, 1862, I was attacked with a slight pain in the small of my back, and
immediately my right leg commenced drawing up, so that in ten days, while
standing on my left foot, I could but just touch my right leg on the seat of a
common chair. All this time I suffered great pain in my knee pan. I was attended
by two of the best physicians in York County, who applied blisters, leaches, and
cappings to my right thigh, with no effect except to increase the pain.
"I
became entirely discouraged, when I heard of Dr. P. P. Quimby; and after many
solicitations on the part of my friends I yielded to their entreaties and
visited him. After an examination, he told me that the cause of my difficulty
was
Without
calling on the spirits of the departed for aid, without mesmerism and without
the use of medicines of any kind, he succeeded in completely restoring the
muscles of my side and leg to their proper functions, and I am now as well as
ever. I visited Dr. Quimby under the impression that he was some mysterious
personage who had acquired a great reputation for curing diseases, and who must
exercise some kind of mesmeric control over the will and imagination of his
patients. But I am convinced that he is a skilful physician, whose cures are not
the result of accident, but of a thorough knowledge and application of correct
curative principles." (1)
SACO, Jan 8, 1863. JOHN W. DEERING
(1) What most impressed people who, like Capt. Deering, supposed Quimby would undertake to exercise some mesmeric control over their wills, was the fact that after making his intuitive diagnosis and giving his silent treatment he would put his patients in command of the curative principle and aid them to help themselves the first moment possible. This convinced them that he was no charlatan but a genuine friend to the sick.
[It
is interesting, also, to note the zeal with which some took up the idea of
absent treatment as a perfectly intelligible process in contrast with the
difficult explanation offered by spiritists. The
following is from a communication addressed to the editor of the Courier by a
writer who signs himself, C. C. Whitney:]
"As
spiritualism seems to be to many the only way of accounting for all phenomena of
the present day, I thought it might be of some interest to your readers to state
a case that came under my own observation, and I will leave the public to judge
of the manner in which it was done.
"Two
years ago last March, I sent to Dr. Quimby to visit my wife, then living in
Wayne, in this state, who had been confined to her bed for over a year, and
unable to lie on her left side, or raise herself in bed.
"The
Doctor replied that he could not visit her in person, but would try an
experiment, and wished me to keep him informed of his success. His plan was that
on my receiving his letter be would commence to operate on her [absently,] and
continue his visits till the next Sunday, when he would, between the hours of 11
and 12, make her walk. I received this
letter Wednesday, and that night she was very uneasy and nervous, and the next
day, Thursday, she was more
(1)
This case shows the clearness with which Quimby discerned a patient's
condition at a distance, also his skill in telling how long his absent work
would take before the patient would be up and about.
[The
letter goes on to say that the patient suffered a partial relapse a year
later, and her husband, being in Portland, called on Quimby for help; the help
was given without informing the wife, and her husband reports that it was with
success according to Quimby's predictions. Evidently, there had been no
opportunity in this case for Quimby to converse with the patient and give her
advice regarding her health. The editor, commenting on the above instance,
thinks it invites explanation from those who would attribute it to spiritistic
influences. The editor was much impressed by the genuineness of the
explanation offered by Quimby in such cases, namely, that it was intelligent
use of therapeutic power, not the agency of spirits; for he learned from a
woman in Lancaster, N. H., that at the time appointed by Quimby for visiting
Mrs. Whitney absently, Quimby, then in Lancaster, remarked that he "must
go to Wayne to visit a patient." After retiring to the parlor for an
hour, Quimby returned and said he had "got the lady up from her bed, and
that she walked, and three persons were present in the room who witnessed it.
Upon writing Mr. Whitney, it was found that he and two friends, who had
accompanied him home from meeting were present at that time, and saw her
walk." This again shows the clarity
of Quimby's perception at a distance, also the fact that what he gave as facts
could be verified.
A writer in another Portland paper, name and date not given in the scrap-book, after pointing out the usual misconceptions gathering around Quimby's name and declaring that Quimby is "always conscious of what he says and does," adds that]
"He
takes as a starting-point that disease was
[It
will be noticed that the writers in the above excerpts from the press
uniformly speak of the fact that Dr. Quimby practised according to a "new
principle," not by giving medicine or by making any material
applications, and not by the use of mesmerism or spiritism. These excerpts
have not been selected and published here because they are favorable, but
because they are frank statements of Dr. Quimby's practice as it impressed
contemporary observers. The newspaper excerpt which shows the least
understanding of Quimby's practice is the following from the Bangor
Jeffersonian, 1856. This excerpt was republished in "The Philosophy of P.
P. Quimby," 1895. When the writer quoted below uses the term "animal
spirit," he is using his own term, not Quimby's, for this term was not
employed by Dr. Quimby. What Quimby taught was that the false ideas and mental
imagery causing the disease were directly impressed on the plastic substance
of the mind, which included what we now call the subconscious. Quimby did
indeed find the soul, (not the "animal spirit,") partly disconnected
from the body in certain extreme cases, when the patient lay at the point of
death, and he conversed with the soul, or, as he says in most of his writings,
"the scientific man." The statement quoted below shows that it was
difficult for some observers to understand what Quimby meant.]
A
gentleman of Belfast, P. P. Quimby, who was remarkably successful as an
experimenter in mesmerism some sixteen years ago, and has continued his
investigations in psychology, has discovered, and in his daily practice carries
out, a new principle in the treatment of disease. . . . His theory is
[The
following is one of the last newspaper references to Dr. Quimby and his work
in Portland, after he had announced his intention of retiring from his
practice there, that he might revise his writings for publication. It was
written by a former patient.]
It
is with feelings of surprise and regret that many of your readers receive the
announcement, given in your advertising columns, that Dr. P. P. Quimby has
determined to leave Portland. The Doctor has been in this city for nearly seven
years, and by his unobtrusive manners and sincerity of practice has won the
respect of all who know him. To those especially who have been fortunate enough
to receive benefit at his hands-and they are many-his departure will be viewed
as a public loss. That he has manifested wonderful power in healing the sick
among us, no wellinformed and unprejudiced person can deny. Indeed, for more
than twenty years the Doctor has devoted himself to this one object, viz., to
cure the sick, and to discover through his practice the origin and nature of
disease. By a method entirely novel, and at first sight. quite unintelligible,
he has been slowly developing what he calls the "Science of Health;"
that is, as he defines it, a science founded on
Hitherto
he has confined his efforts to individual cases only, seeking to discover in
them what disease is, how it arises, and whether it may not, with the progress
of truth, be entirely eradicated. The results of his practice have been such as
to convince him that disease, that great enemy to our happiness, may be
destroyed, and that, too, on grounds and by a method purely rational; and he
goes from us not to abandon the cause, we are rejoiced to learn, but to enter a
broader field of usefulness, wherein he hopes not only to cure, but as far as he
can, to prevent disease.
The
path he treads is a new one and full of difficulties; but with the evidence he
has already given, in numberless instances, of his extraordinary ability in
detecting the hidden sources of suffering, we are led to hope he may yet accomplish
something for the permanent good of mankind. An object so pure, and a method so
unselfish, must, when understood,
