Health of Samuel Johnson
The health of Samuel Johnson has been a focus of the biographical and critical analysis of his life. His medical history was well documented by Johnson and his friends, and those writings have allowed later critics and doctors to infer diagnoses of conditions that were unknown in Johnson's day.
His health and conditions had "damaging effects on Johnson's personal and professional lives"[1] likely causing him to lose opportunities to teach at prominent schools, while leading him "towards the invisible occupation of authorship".[1]
Medical history
Scrofula
Upon birth, Johnson did not cry and, with doubts surrounding the newborn's health, his aunt claimed "that she would not have picked such a poor creature up in the street".[2] As it was feared that the baby might die, the vicar of St Mary's was summoned to perform a baptism.[3] Two godfathers were chosen: Samuel Swynfen, a physician and graduate of Pembroke College, and Richard Wakefield, a lawyer, coroner, and Lichfield town clerk.[4]
Johnson's health improved and he was placed in the nursing care of Joan Marklew. During this period he contracted what is believed to have been scrofula,[5] known at that time as the "King's Evil". Sir John Floyer, a former physician to Charles II, recommended that the young Johnson should receive the "royal touch",[6] which he received from Queen Anne on 30 March 1712 at St James's Palace. Johnson was given a ribbon in memory of the event, which he claimed to have worn for the rest of his life. However, the ritual was ineffective and an operation was performed that left him with permanent scarring across his face and body.[7]
Eyesight problems
From early childhood, Johnson suffered from poor eyesight. Especially his left eye was weak. This interfered with his education, yet his handwriting was quite legible until the end of his life. There were somewhat contradictory reports about his eyesight from his contemporaries; he appeared to have been near-sighted. Yet he did not use eyeglasses, which were available at that time.[8]
His eyesight became worse with age. Boswell first met him in 1763, when Johnson was 54 years old, and noted that he had inflamed eyes. In letters written in 1773 Johnson wrote,
"My fever has departed but has left me a very severe inflammation in the seeing [right] eye. . . . My eye is yet so dark that I could not read..."[8]
Fear of madness
In 1734, Johnson feared that he was suffering from a disease that would lead to him being deemed mad. He wrote, in Latin, a letter asking Samuel Swynfen, his godfather, about his health.[9] Swynfen wrote back "from the symptoms therein described, he could think nothing better of his disorder, than it had a tendency to insanity; and without great care might possibly terminate in the deprivation of his rational faculties."[10] This Swynfen's response only caused Johnson to fear becoming insane even more.[9] However, Swynfen soon after showed Johnson's letter to others because of its "extraordinary acuteness, research, and eloquence", and this act was so upsetting to Johnson that he could never forgive Swynfen.[11]
Boswell claimed that Johnson "felt himself overwhelmed with an horrible melancholia, with perpetual irritation, fretfulness, and impatience; and with a dejection, gloom, and despair, which made existence misery".[9] However, Boswell blamed the common understanding of what was "sane" for Johnson's worries over being insane.[9]
Johnson was constantly afraid of losing his sanity, but he kept that anxiety to himself throughout his life. There were, however, occasional outbursts that worried his friends.[12] In June 1766, Johnson was on his knees before John Delap, a clergyman, "beseeching God to continue to him the use of his understanding" in a "wild" manner that provoked Johnson's friend, Henry Thrale to "involuntarily [lift] up one hand to shut his mouth".[13] The Thrales were afraid for his mental health, and took Johnson into their home in Streatham for a few months, in the hope that might aid his recovery.[13] Thrale's experience is similar to many other accounts; James Anderson reported Adam Smith as telling him:
I have seen that creature bolt up in the midst of a mixed company; and, without any previous notice, fall upon his knees behind a chair, repeat the Lord's Prayer and then resume his seat at table. He has played this freak over and over, perhaps five or six times in the course of an evening. It is not hypocrisy, but madness.[14]
Although this claim is similar to what the Thrales reported, Boswell wrote: "There is, I am convinced, great exaggeration in this, not probably on Smith's part, who was one of the most truthful of men, but on his reporter's."[15]
Early on, when Johnson was unable to pay off his debts, he began to work with professional writers and identified his own situation with theirs.[16] During this time, Johnson witnessed Christopher Smart's decline into "penury and the madhouse", and feared that he might share the same fate.[16] In joking about Christopher Smart's madness, his writing for the Universal Visiter, and his own contributions, Johnson claimed: "for poor Smart, while he was mad, not then knowing the terms on which he was engaged to write ... I hoped his wits would return to him. Mine returned to me, and I wrote in 'the Universal Visitor' no longer".[17] The truth was that Johnson wrote for the Universal Visiter as an "act of charity" to the ailing Smart.[18]
Hester Thrale Piozzi, in her British Synonymy Book 2, did not joke about Johnson's possible madness, and claimed, in a discussion on Smart's mental state, that Johnson was her "friend who feared an apple should intoxicate him".[19] She made it clear who she was referring to when she wrote in Thraliana that "I don't believe the King has ever been much worse than poor Dr Johnson was, when he fancied that eating an Apple would make him drunk."[19] To Hester Thrale, what separated Johnson from others who were placed in asylums for madness—like Christopher Smart—was his ability to keep his concerns and emotions to himself.[19] However, Johnson was receiving a treatment of sorts, and it is possible that it involved a set of fetters and padlock.[20] John Wiltshire later determined that these instruments were not symbolic, but actually used in private treatment.[21]
Stroke
On 17 June 1783, Johnson had a stroke resulting from poor circulation[22] and he wrote to his neighbour, Edmund Allen, that he had lost the ability to speak.[23] Two doctors were brought in to aid Johnson; he regained his ability to speak two days later.[24] Johnson believed that his stroke actually helped him, as if it had some sort of cancelling effect in relation to his other health issues: "My disorders are in other respects less than usual, my disease whatever it was seems collected into this one dreadful effect. My Breath is free, the constrictions of the chest are suspended, and my nights pass without oppression".[25]
Gout
Johnson suffered from what he and his doctors labelled as gout starting in 1775 when he was 65, and again in 1776, 1779, 1781, and 1783. He told William Boswell, in 1783, that "the Gout has treated me with more severity than any former time, it however never climbed higher than my ankles". Some of Johnson's friends and even his doctor believed that gout would actually help Johnson breathe.[26] However, surgery was performed in hope of relieving Johnson's gout.[27] This did not cure the gout, but Johnson tried another path which was to soak his feet in cold water; this only caused Johnson further health issues, but he claimed that it ended his gout problems.
The onset of his condition is beyond the probable onset for gout, and the way the gout was limited to Johnson's ankles, along with the confusion between arthritis and gout during Johnson's day, suggests to Pat Rogers that it was really a type of degenerative arthritis.[28]
Sarcocele
In 1782, Johnson was alarmed by a tumour that was diagnosed as a "sarcocele" (testicular tumour). This caused him great pain, and he underwent an apparently successful surgical operation, but the condition recurred.[29]
Posthumous diagnosis
The various biographies on Johnson have provided evidence for several posthumous diagnoses of Johnson. Before the writings of Lawrence C. McHenry in 1967, many of Johnson's actions and health related aspects were characterised as part of his ongoing depression. It was not until afterwards that the depression became a secondary component of Tourette syndrome, and this diagnosis has become the dominant explanation for many of Johnson's behaviours.
Depression
There are many accounts of Johnson suffering from possible bouts of depression or what he himself thought might be "madness". As Walter Jackson Bate puts it, "one of the ironies of literary history is that its most compelling and authoritative symbol of common sense—of the strong, imaginative grasp of concrete reality—should have begun his adult life, at the age of twenty, in a state of such intense anxiety and bewildered despair that, at least from his own point of view, it seemed the onset of actual insanity".[30] After leaving Pembroke College, Johnson began to experience "feelings of intense anxiety" along with "feelings of utter hopelessness" and lassitude.[31]
He told John Paradise, a friend, that he "could stare at the town clock without being able to tell the hour".[31] To overcome these feelings, Johnson tried to constantly involve himself with various activities, but this did not seem to help. Taylor, in reflecting on Johnson's states, said that Johnson "at one time strongly entertained thoughts of Suicide".[32][33]
Tourette syndrome
Johnson displayed signs consistent with several diagnoses described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, and it is widely accepted that Johnson had Tourette syndrome (TS),[34] a condition unknown during Johnson's lifetime. Johnson displayed signs of TS as described by the writings of Boswell:
... while talking or even musing as he sat in his chair, he commonly held his head to one side towards his right shoulder, and shook it in a tremulous manner, moving his body backwards and forwards, and rubbing his left knee in the same direction, with the palm of his hand. In the intervals of articulating he made various sounds with his mouth; sometimes giving a half whistle, sometimes making his tongue play backwards from the roof of his mouth, as if clucking like a hen, and sometimes protruding it against his upper gums in front, as if pronouncing quickly under his breath, 'Too, too, too.' All this accompanied sometimes with a thoughtful look, but more frequently with a smile. Generally when he had concluded a period, in the course of a dispute, by which time he was a good deal exhausted by violence and vociferation, he used to blow out his breath like a whale.[35]
There are many similar accounts; in particular, Johnson was said to act in such a manner at the thresholds of doors, and Frances Reynolds claims that, "with poor Mrs Williams, a blind lady who lived with him, he would quit her hand, or else whirl her about on the steps as he whirled and twisted about to perform his gesticulations".[36] When asked by Christopher Smart's niece, a young child at the time, why he made such noises and acted in that way, Johnson responded: "From bad habit."[35]
He had a number of tics and other involuntary movements; the signs described by Boswell and others suggest that Johnson had Tourette syndrome (TS).[38][39] In 1994, J. M. S. Pearce analysed—in a Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine report—the details provided by Boswell, Hester Thrale, and others, in an attempt to understand Johnson's physical and mental condition.[38] Based on their anecdotal evidence, Pearce compiled a list of movements and tics which Johnson was said to have demonstrated.[38] From that list, he determined it was possible that Johnson was affected by Tourette syndrome as described by Georges Gilles de la Tourette.[40] Pearce concluded that the "case of Dr Johnson accords well with current criteria for the Tourette syndrome; he also displayed many of the obsessional-compulsive traits and rituals which are associated with this syndrome".[40]
Pearce was not alone in diagnosing Johnson as having Tourette syndrome; in 1967 Lawrence C. McHenry Jr[41] was the first to diagnose Johnson with the syndrome but in passing.[42] It was not until Arthur K. Shapiro's Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome that the diagnosis was made clear through a comprehensive study, with Shapiro declaring, "Samuel Johnson ... is the most notable example of a successful adaptation to life despite the liability of Tourette syndrome".[43] T. J. Murray had come to the same conclusion in a 1979 British Medical Journal paper.[39] Murray based his diagnosis on various accounts of Johnson displaying physical tics, "involuntary vocalisations" and "compulsive behaviour".[44]
In a 2007 analysis, Thomas Kammer discusses the "documented evidence" of Johnson's tics, saying that Johnson was "known to have suffered from TS".[45] According to neurologist Oliver Sacks, "the case for Samuel Johnson having the syndrome, though [...] circumstantial, is extremely strong and, to my mind, entirely convincing".[46] He continues by generally describing the "enormous spontaneity, antics, and lightning quick wit" that featured prominently in Johnson's life.[46] However, Pearce goes further into Johnson's biography and traces particular moments in Johnson's life which reinforced his diagnosis, concluding:
It is not without interest that periodic boundless mental energy, imaginative outbursts of inventiveness and creativity, are, characteristic of certain Tourette patients. It may be thought that without this illness Dr Johnson's remarkable literary achievements, the great dictionary, his philosophical deliberations and his conversations may never have happened; and Boswell, the author of the greatest of biographies would have been unknown.[40]
Notes
- ^ a b Demaria 1994, pp. 5–6
- ^ Watkins 1960, p. 25
- ^ Lane 1975, p. 16
- ^ Bate 1977, pp. 5–6
- ^ Lane 1975, pp. 16–17
- ^ Lane 1975, p. 18
- ^ Lane 1975, pp. 19–20
- ^ a b Wilson GA, Ravin JG (September 2004). "Blinking Sam: the ocular afflictions of Dr. Samuel Johnson". Arch. Ophthalmol. 122 (9): 1370–4. doi:10.1001/archopht.122.9.1370. PMID 15364718.
- ^ a b c d Bate 1977, p. 117
- ^ Wain 1974, p. 63
- ^ Bate 1977, p. 118
- ^ Bate 1977, p. 407
- ^ a b Hill 1897, p. 423 (Vol. 1)
- ^ Hill 1897, p. 423 (Vol. 2)
- ^ Hill 1897, p. 424 (Vol. 2)
- ^ a b Pittock 2004, p. 159
- ^ Keymer 1999, p. 188
- ^ Pittock 2004, p. 163
- ^ a b c Keymer 1999, p. 186
- ^ Piozzi 1951, p. 415 note 4
- ^ Wiltshire 1991, pp. 43–49
- ^ Wiltshire 1991, p. 51
- ^ Watkins 1960, p. 71
- ^ Watkins 1960, pp. 71–72
- ^ Wiltshire 1991, p. 36
- ^ Wiltshire 1991, pp. 35–36
- ^ Watkins 1960, p. 73
- ^ Rogers 1986 pp. 133–144
- ^ Sir John Hawkins, The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D., 2nd edition, 1787, London.
- ^ Bate 1955, p. 7
- ^ a b Bate 1977, p. 115
- ^ Bate 1977, p. 116
- ^ Boswell 1969, p. 468
- ^ Stern 2005
- ^ a b Hibbert 1971, p. 203
- ^ Hibbert 1971, p. 202
- ^ Lane 1975, p. 103
- ^ a b c Pearce 1994, p. 396
- ^ a b Murray 1979, p. 1610
- ^ a b c Pearce 1994, p. 398
- ^ McHenry 1967, pp. 152–168
- ^ Wiltshire 1991, p. 29
- ^ Shapiro 1991, p. 361
- ^ Murray 1979, pp. 1611–1612
- ^ Kammer 2007, p. 9
- ^ a b Sacks 1992, p. 1515
References
- Bate, Walter Jackson (1977), Samuel Johnson, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, ISBN 0-15-179260-7.
- Bate, Walter Jackson (1955), The Achievement of Samuel Johnson, Oxford: Oxford University Press, OCLC 355413.
- Boswell, James (1986), Hibbert, Christopher (ed.), The Life of Samuel Johnson, New York: Penguin Classics, ISBN 0-14-043116-0.
- Demaria, Robert (1994), The Life of Samuel Johnson, Oxford: Blackwell, ISBN 1-55786-664-3.
- Hibbert, Christopher (1971), The Personal History of Samuel Johnson, New York: Harper & Row, ISBN 0-06-011879-2.
- Hill, G. Birkbeck, editor (1897), Johnsonian Miscellanies, London: Oxford Clarendon Press, OCLC 61906024
{{citation}}
:|first=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - Kammer, Thomas (2007). "Mozart in the Neurological Department: Who has the Tic?". In Bogousslavsky, Julien; Hennerici, M (eds.). Neurological Disorders in Famous Artists, Part 2. Vol. 22. Basel: Karger. pp. 184–92. doi:10.1159/000102880. ISBN 978-3-8055-8265-0. PMID 17495512.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help). - Keymer, Thomas (1999), "Johnson, Madness, and Smart", in Hawes, Clement (ed.), Christopher Smart and the Enlightenment, New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0-312-21369-7.
- Lane, Margaret (1975), Samuel Johnson & his World, New York: Harper & Row Publishers, ISBN 0-06-012496-2.
- McHenry, LC Jr (April 1967), "Samuel Johnson's tics and gesticulations", Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 22 (2): 152–68, doi:10.1093/jhmas/XXII.2.152, PMID 5341871
- Murray, T. J. (16 June 1979), "Dr Samuel Johnson's Movement Disorder.", British Medical Journal, vol. 1, no. 6178, pp. 1610–14, doi:10.1136/bmj.1.6178.1610, PMC 1599158, PMID 380753.
- Pearce, J.M.S. (July 1994), "Doctor Samuel Johnson: 'the Great Convulsionary' a Victim of Gilles de la Tourette's Syndrome.", Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 87 (7): 396–399, PMC 1294650, PMID 8046726.
- Piozzi, Hester (1951), Balderson, Katharine (ed.), Thraliana: The Diary of Mrs. Hester Lynch Thrale (Later Mrs. Piozzi) 1776–1809, Oxford: Clarendon, OCLC 359617.
- Pittock, Murray (2004), "Johnson, Boswell, and their circle", in Keymer, Thomas; Mee, Jon (eds.), The Cambridge companion to English literature from 1740 to 1830, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 157–172, ISBN 0-521-00757-7.
- Sacks, Oliver (19–26 December 1992), "Tourette's Syndrome and Creativity: Exploiting the Ticcy Witticisms and Witty Ticcicisms", British Medical Journal, 305 (6868): 1515–16, doi:10.1136/bmj.305.6868.1515, PMC 1884721, PMID 1286364.
- Stern, JS, Burza S, Robertson MM; Burza, S; Robertson, MM (January 2005), "Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome and its impact in the UK", Postgrad Med J, 81 (951): 12–9, doi:10.1136/pgmj.2004.023614, PMC 1743178, PMID 15640424
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - Wain, John (1974), Samuel Johnson, New York: Viking Press, OCLC 40318001.
- Wiltshire, John (1991), Samuel Johnson in the Medical World, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-38326-9.
- Rogers J. P. W. (1986). "Samuel Johnson's gout". Medical History. 30 (2): 133–144. doi:10.1017/s002572730004535x. PMC 1139614. PMID 3517522.