We noticed, predominantly, changes similar to those seen in schizophrenic patients. The subjects exhibited preeminently difficulties in thinking, which became retarded, blocked, autistic, and disconnected.... Feelings of indifference and unreality with suspiciousness, hostility, and resentment also approximated schizophrenic phenomena. Hallucinations and delusional disturbances were much less prominent...
The first schizophrenic Humphrey Osmond ever treated was a girl
who told him that whenever she looked in the mirror, what she
saw was an elephant. As soon as she left, Osmond trotted off to
find his superior and tell him of this very odd delusion. "Well
you know she has schizophrenia," his boss had said. "What's
that?" Osmond had asked. He'd heard of it, of course. What
he wanted were the answers to the usual first questionssymptoms,
treatment, etiology. But what he discovered was that nobody could
tell him anything substantive. There were lots of theories, but
no hard data that did for schizophrenia what Freud and his followers
had done for the mechanism of repression, for the dynamics of
neuroses. Tired of his questions, Osmond's boss finally suggested
that he look up a Jungian analyst named Anthony Hampton, who in
turn suggested that he read a book by Thomas Hennell called The
Witnesses.
Alongside Clifford Beers's The Mind That Found Itself,
Hennell's book was one of the more evocative descriptions of what
it was like to suffer and recover from extreme psychosis. Hennell
captured perfectly the gradual inflation of his own disease. The
nocturnal noises. The odd subjectivity of objects. The contradictory
feeling of great personal destiny coupled with a growing certainty
that one's ego was shredding away. The symptoms were a bit like
an orchestra tuning up, first the strings, then the woodwinds,
last the brass. As anyone who has attended a concert knows, the
tuning up is nothing compared to the full orchestral blast. For
Hennell the crescendo came on a day when he decided to walk into
Oxford. He noticed that the other pedestrians were giving him
meaningful looks, as though they knew something he didn't. As
dusk arrived, Hennell saw that the fields beyond the hedgerow
were beginning to boil, a bit like a Van Gogh painting, while
up in the sky the stars were wheeling about, again a bit like
a Van Gogh painting. Hennell only had a second to savor these
weird perceptions before a squad car of secret police roared up,
clapped him into a van filled with meat, and drove him off to
a secret prison.
Although Osmond reread The Witnesses many times, its net
effect was to leave him more perplexed than ever about the nature
of schizophrenia.
After his apprenticeship ended, Osmond took a job at St. George's,
one of London's famous teaching hospitals. There he met a rather
exoticexotic in terms of Osmond's Scotch upbringing in the
Surrey downsjunior resident named John Smythies. Smythies had
grown up in India during the twilight of the Raj, where his father
had been chief forestor. It was Osmond's impression that young
Smythies had had numerous exotic adventures before being dispatched
to Rugby and Cambridge, for the intellectual tempering all proper
English gentlemen underwent. Smythies's passion was the nature
of mind, and he was not at all reticent about the fact that he
considered psychiatry merely a handy way to investigate what was
really a philosophical problem. This, plus his habit of speaking
in brisk declaratives prefaced by the phrase "it's obvious,"
did not endear Smythies to his superiors, most of whom were old-time
clinicians with a deep distrust of theory. But Osmond thought
Smythies "not much less bright than he thought he was,"
and they got on famously.
Smythies had a number of eccentric enthusiasmsparapsychology
was oneand one day he showed up at St. George's with a book
by Alexandre Rouhier, a contemporary of Beringer's, who had written
a book on peyote called Le Peyotl. On one of its pages
was a molecular formula for mescaline.
The formula reminded Smythies of something, but he couldn't put
his finger on what it was. Osmond also had a feeling of vague
recognition. Then they showed the picture to a former biochemist
who said it looked sort of like thyroid and sort of like adrenaline,
with the nod probably going to the latter. This similarity between
adrenaline and mescaline suggested an intriguing hypothesis: what
if, in stressful situations, adrenaline got transformed into something
chemically akin to mescaline. Wouldn't that account for Hennell's
boiling fields and whirling skies, for the elephant in the mirror?
It was known that certain plants were capable of such a metabolic
transformation, known as transmethylation, but there was no evidence
that animals were capable of transmethylation.
Obtaining some mescaline from Lights Chemical, Osmond and Smythies
began testing their hypothesis. Osmond took 400 milligrams of
mescaline one afternoon in Smythies's rooms, which were down a
back alley off Wimpole Street. A tape recorder had been borrowed
to record his thoughts. Osmond found it menacing. First it glowed
a deep purple, then a cherry red. Putting his hand close to it,
it felt as though someone had thrown open the door to a blast
furnace. For the first time Hennell made sense. Schizophrenics
weren't talking in similes and metaphorsthere was no as
if involved in the mad statethey were talking about reality,
and it was scientific arrogance to dismiss it as delusion.
Once his astonishment had cooled, Osmond turned to the philosophical
ramifications. If what we took to be objective reality was so
fragile that it could be swept away by 400 milligrams of mescaline,
then perhaps the vitalists who had argued that the brain was merely
a mechanism to stabilize an anarchic world were correct. Perhaps
the notion of objective reality was a paradox.
Smythies and Osmond published a small essay on these matters in
1952 called "A New Approach to Schizophrenia." In it
they theorized that the body, confronted with an anxious state,
might react by producing an endogamous hallucinogen, in this case
one derived from adrenaline. The hallucinogen would cause the
perceptual world to change, leading to more stress, more adrenaline,
more of the natural hallucinogen, and ever deeper levels of psychosis.
The only way to break this cycle would be for the sufferer to
literally turn off reality: to retreat into another world. This,
paradoxically, was the body's only way, short of death, of preserving
its own sanity.
What was particularly elegant about this theory, which they called
the M factor theory, was the way it combined both a neurological
and a psychological dynamic, thus marrying what were usually two
mutually exclusive bodies of research.
Having imagined this hypothetical chemical, the M factor, the
next step was either to isolate it in its natural state or to
make some up in the lab. It was a dilemma not unlike that faced
by the American astronomer W. H. Pickering, when he had deduced
in 1919 that the solar system had to contain another planet, as
yet undiscovered, which Pickering confidently named Pluto. Eleven
years later Pluto was found exactly where Pickering had predicted
it would be. But the tools of astronomy, as Osmond and Smythies
quickly learned, were far more sophisticated than the tools of
neuropharmacology. The mysteries of outer space were child's play
compared to the complexities of inner space. They approached some
chemists at Imperial Chemical"the chaps who had done the
original work on synthesizing penicillin"and asked them
to work on a series of compounds intermediate between adrenaline
and mescaline. The chemists tried, but soon gave up: however slight
the differences were on paper, they were insurmountable in the
lab.
So they decided to concentrate on the amenochromes, which were
formed when adrenaline decomposes naturally. One of these amenochromes,
adrenochrome, seemed a likely candidate, as it had a molecular
structure surprisingly similar to mescaline.
Osmond swallowed his first adrenochrome in 1952. After ten minutes
the ceiling changed color, and whenever he closed his eyes he
was overwhelmed by a swarm of dots, which merged and fled with
the kind of shifting pointillism one finds in schools of fish.
Someone pulled out a pack of Rorschach cards, and Osmond astounded
himself with the inventive shapes he was able to discover. Walking
back down the corridors of the hospital, Osmond was amazed at
how sinister they seemed: what did all the cracks on the floor
mean? And why were there so many of them? His colleagues were
delighted with his behaviorthis certainly was a model psychosisand
Osmond watched them celebrating as though from behind a thick
glass wall.
Osmond was no longer in England when he had his adventure with
adrenochrome. In mid-1952 he had accepted a job in the Canadian
province of Saskatchewan, as Clinical Director of Saskatchewan
Hospital. The place was touted as the finest mental hospital on
the prairies, although this was something of a joke since it was
the only mental hospital on the prairies. Actually the
place was so rank, so depressingly nineteenth-century-madhouse,
that when Osmond and his colleagues received the APA's Silver
Plaque award for most improved mental hospital, American customs
declared the "before" pictures to be obscene and special
dispensation had to be obtained before they were allowed into
the country.
It was Osmond's job to clean up this mess without unduly rattling
the Old Director, who was supposed to remain on as a patriarchal
figurehead until retirement. But the Old Director resented this
new crop of bright boys, with their talk of insulin treatments
and electroshock and the search for the mysterious M factor. Whenever
possible he countermanded Osmond's innovations.
Work on the M factor was proceeding slowly. In the absence of
Smythies, who was scheduled to arrive in Saskatchewan in a few
months, Osmond had begun working with a psychiatrist affiliated
with Saskatchewan University named Abram Hoffer. Hoffer had a
passing acquaintance with Heinrich Kluver, who had suggested that
sometime he might want to look into mescaline as "quite the
most interesting thing around." When Smythies finally arrived
he brought along some notes for an essay, which, after some input
from Osmond, was published under both their names in the Hibbert
Journal. Smythies had been reading up on eighteenth-century
medicine, a period of fanciful theories and bitter polemics, with
little regard for the facts. It was, Smythies thought, a period
with remarkable similarity to twentieth-century psychology. What
was needed was a new model of scientific progress, one along the
lines that Karl Popper had suggested, which saw science proceeding
from Orthodoxy (the accepted theory of the known facts) to Heresy
(a new ordering of the facts, often of greater inclusiveness)
and thence to a New Orthodoxy, and so on through further heresies
and better orthodoxies.
Mescaline was mentioned exactly twice. The first instance came
in the context of an analysis of the psychobiological explanation
of schizophrenia. "No one is really competent to treat schizophrenia
unless he has experienced the schizophrenic world himself,"
they wrote. "This is possible to do quite simply by taking
mescaline." The second mention was in the context of a new
theory of mind, which henceforth would have to account for three
new sets of facts:
A) The recent development in the study of the design and behaviour of electronic computing machines, and the study of analogous brain mechanisms.
B) The recent advances in parapsychology. We refer to the establishment of Extra-sensory perception as scientific fact.
C) The nature of the phenomena witnessed under the influence of mescaline. One would have thought that anyone, concerned in devising systems of psychology based on the concept of the unconscious mind, would have utilized such a prolific source of material as mescaline offers, but no one has yet done so, although Rouhier made this suggestion as long ago as 1922.
Aldous Huxley was fifty-eight when he dashed off that characteristically
enthusiastic note to Osmond and Smythies. He had been a featured
player on the literary stage for thirty-two years, his reputation
secured by a quartet of satirical novels begun when both he and
the century were in their twentiesexercises of such brilliance
that André Maurois, the French belle lettrist, lauded Huxley
as "the most intelligent writer of our generation,"
by which he meant Huxley's mind held more information in perfect
equilibrium than anyone else around.
He was supposed to have read, while still in short pants, the
entire Encyclopedia Britannica, which was certainly conceivable
from the volumes of essays that flowed from his pen, and paid
his rent for most of his life. He seemed to know something about
everything, which might lead one to think he was either a bore
or a dilettante, but he was neither. His opinions, whether the
subject was molecular biology or the Renaissance painter Piero
della Francesca, were so precociously sharp that art critic Kenneth
Clark once groused that after a lifetime studying Piero, in the
end he seemed to know "far less than Aldous had learnt in
a few weeks, by some miraculous combination of intellect and intuition."
Once, vacationing in Italy, Huxley happened to stumble across
the filming of Helen of Troy, one of those excessive Hollywood
costume dramas of the 1950s. Now this production, on this particular
day, had a particularly pressing problem: the script called for
a bacchanale. But neither the director, a midwesterner,
nor the assistant director, a New Yorker, were exactly sure what
a bacchanale was. Enter Aldous Huxley. Who, as the assistant
director later told the story, "went on for hours relating
what he knew about bacchanales. As a result our bacchanale was
so successful that the crowd people could not stop when the director
cried 'cut.'"
That was the quintessential Huxley: amusing, full of exotic lore
made even more exotic by his own exotic physique: six four and
so thin it was as though a flagpole had animated itself. When
Aldous was young most of his friends thought he looked like a
grasshopper, but as he matured he was usually compared to a waterbird,
a heron or egret. He had a long, wide face that was always a decade
younger than his calendar age, topped first by brown, then silver
hair. But his most compelling features were his blue eyes, one
sightless, the other nearly so, and his conversation, which flowed
with such grace it was easily the most athletic aspect of a decidedly
unathletic man. Huxley would lean back in his chair, fix his myopic
blue eyes above and beyond one's head and then let his thoughts
unwind "without interruption until he had turned over every
stone to discover the strange facts hidden beneath them, or had
followed the labyrinth... and had unraveled the truth at the
end of it." Unlike a lot of champion talkers, he was also
an avid listener, with an insatiable appetite for information,
for gossip, stories, books, politics, science, scandal, and facts,
the more exotic the better, murmuring "most extraordinary"
whenever a choice tidbit presented itself.
Had Aldous Huxley died at thirty-five, shortly after the publication
of his fifth novel, Brave New World, his place in English
literature would have been secure. Somerset Maugham might have
placed him alongside himself, in the first seats of the second
row; Scott Fitzgerald could have lamented the premature closing,
after a rousing first act, of another promising career. But Huxley
didn't diehe changed, which is sometimes worse. From the mid-Thirties
on he immersed himself in mysticism and oriental philosophy. His
novels, when he stirred himself to produce one (which he did at
regular intervals for the simple reason that novels earned more
than essays), were really philosophical essays dolled up in fictional
garb, like something Voltaire or one of the other philosophes
might have written. "Nobody since Chesterton has so squandered
his gifts," wrote the critic Cyril Connolly in Enemies
of Promise, which was ironically, an inquiry into why he,
Connolly, had squandered his own gifts.
But the feeling that something alarming had happened to Aldous
was widespread. To André Maurois, the new incarnation was
"an astonishing reversal of his thought, and disturbing to
anyone as close to the earlier Aldous Huxley as I had been."
Few of his early admirers dared or cared to follow him down the
paths that led first to The Perennial Philosophy, his compilation
of the mystical components underlying all religion, and thence
to his suggestion to Osmond and Smythies that he was not adverse,
indeed he was most eager, to try mescaline, a drug that presumably
made one crazy.
The consternation over this transformation dogged Huxley until
the day he died, which was the same day John Kennedy died, November
22,1963. When the obituary writers came to summarize his life
in the twenty or thirty column inches reserved for the passing
of Great Men, their inability to rationalize the whole was obvious.
What they didn't realize was that Huxley's life was less a career
than a quest for... what? The perfect synthesis of science,
religion, and art? The uniting of the inner man and the outer
man? "My primary occupation," Huxley once wrote in one
of his approximately ten thousand letters, "is the achievement
of some kind of over-all understanding of the world... that
accounts for the facts."
He was born Aldous Leonard Huxley on July 26, 1894, in the county
of Surrey, England, the third son of Dr. Leonard Huxley, educator,
editor, and minor literary figure, and the grandson of T. H. Huxley,
eminent biologist and one of the most famous men in Victorian
England. Known as "Darwin's Bulldog," T. H. was the
man who had demolished Bishop Wilberforce in the famous Oxford
debates over Darwin's theory of evolution. He personified the
scientific rationalist, and he eloquently argued its case in newspapers
and magazines, and from lecterns throughout the English-speaking
world. His collected essays, filling nine volumes, began appearing
in the year of his third grandson's birth, and just a few months
before his own death at age seventy.
"Clear, cold logic engines," were what T. H. demanded
from his son and grandsons. As Aldous's older brother, Julian,
once defined it, the Huxley tradition was one of "hard but
high thinking, plain but fiery living, wide intellectual interest
and constant intellectual achievement."
Huxley's mother, Julia, came from equally impressive stock. She
was the niece of poet Matthew Arnold and granddaughter of the
moralist and educator Dr. Thomas Arnold, one of the eminent Victorians
later eviscerated by Lytton Strachey in the book of that name.
Julia Huxley was an educator who founded Prior's Field, a girls'
school just a few meadows away from Hillside School, where young
Aldous received his first education.
He was, by all accounts, a brilliant, unathletic, aloof student,
whose capacity for detachment unnerved his peers. "Aldous
possessed the key to an inviolable inner fortress," said
his cousin Gervas, who also attended Hillside. "Never can
I remember him losing his control or giving way to violent emotion
as most of us did." He "possessed some innate superiority
and moved on a different level from us other children," according
to his older brother, Julian. He was always thinking, measuring,
comparing, assessing. Once his godmother, after observing him
staring fixedly out a window, asked what on earth he was thinking
about and received the single word skin in reply.
So he was an odd child, even a little scary. Some years later
the English science fiction writer Olaf Stapledon published a
book called Odd John, which was an attempt to imagine what
an intellectual superman, a true Übermensch to use
Nietzsche's much debated term, would really be like. The resulting
portrait bears a striking resemblance to the adolescent Aldous
Huxley, with the profound qualification that Odd John was never
tested by personal tragedy the way Huxley was. Beginning with
his entrance to Eton, Huxley's detachment was shattered by three
tragedies. When he was fourteen his mother died. When he was sixteen
he contracted a streptococcus infection that destroyed the cornea
in his right eye and left the other clouded to the point of blindness
The condition was so serious that Huxley was forced to learn Braille
which he shrugged off with the wry joke that now he could read
with impunity after lights out. He was also forced to give up
his dream of studying biology, in preparation for a medical career.
Adapting a typewriter with Braille keys, he began tapping out
poems and stories.
Finally, two years after his blindness lifted and a year after
matriculating at Balliol College, Oxford, in the same August that
saw the beginning of World War One, Huxley's middle brother, Trev,
committed suicide.
"There is, apart from the sheer grief of the loss, an added
pain in the cynicism of the situation," Aldous wrote to cousin
Gervas. "It is just the highest and best in Trev, his ideals,
which have driven him to his death, while there are thousands
who shelter their weakness from the same fate by a cynical, unidealistic
outlook on life. Trev was not strong but he had the courage to
face life with idealsand his ideals were too much for him."
This was not a mistake Aldous intended to make. At Oxford he buried
his idealism under a cloak of aesthetic dandyism, affecting yellow
ties and white socks, and instead of the usual classical reproduction
above the fireplace, installing a poster of bare-breasted bathing
beautiesFrench of course. He moved a piano into his room and
began banging out American jazz. And he started spending weekends
at Garsington, a manor house some six miles from Oxford that Phillip
and Ottoline Morrell maintained as a country retreat for the Bloomsbury
crowd. A typical Garsington houseparty mingled the likes of Maynard
Keynes, Lytton Strachey, Bertrand Russell, the WoolfsLeonard
and Virginiawith assorted other aristocrats of the artistic
and intellectual beau monde. Young Huxley held his own amid this
galaxy of wits, and was considered by them an intellectual comer
and promising poet. When he published a chapbook of poems entitled
The Defeat of Youth in 1918, tout Garsington joined in
his praise.
Garsington was also where Huxley met his future wife, Maria Nys,
a waifish Belgian war refugee who was one of Lady Ottoline's charges.
Besides being more than a foot shorter than her future husband,
Maria's temperamentintuitive, magical, sensuouswas the exact
opposite of Aldous's clear cold logic engine. Igor Stravinsky
once said of Maria: "knowing nothing, she understands everything."
And one of the things she understood was people. Maria had great
psychological acuity, something her husband was almost totally
without. Aldous called her his "personal relationship interpreter,"
and he used to quiz her thoroughly about the people they met at
Garsington.
Their partnershipthey began living together in 1919 and were
married a few months laterproduced one child, a boy, Matthew,
and at least eight novels. The first of these, Chrome Yellow,
was published in 1921, and was followed at two-year intervals
by Antic Hay, Those Barren Leaves, and Point,
Counterpoint. Opening the boards of that first book, none
of Huxley's friends could have been prepared for what they found
inside. The gentle, abstracted poet of lines like
No dip and dart of swallows wakes the blank Slumber of the canal:a mirror dead for lack of loveliness remembered |
The style is formed, the specific frame of reference and interpretation of life is clear, and a public has gathered to buy the wares this craftsman knows how to produce in steady supply. And then suddenly the formula seems false, the angle hopelessly inaccurate, the analyses contemptibly shallow. Huxley's family mores and his ancestral genii were challenging his own personal genius. Satire could entertain; it could not assure. The sardonic, to keep its edge, must sharpen on the whetstone of the full truth of manman, the one unfinished animal; man the incomparably teachable; untaught, less than a beast; ill-taught, worse than a beast; well-taught, the one creature of infinite promise, of superhuman potential.
For an instant I thought of fire, an immense conflagration somewhere close in that great city; the next, I knew the fire was within myself. Directly afterward there came upon me a sense of exultation, of immense joyousness accompanied or immediately followed by an intellectual illumination impossible to describe. Among other things, I did not merely come to belie re, but I saw that the universe is not composed of dead matter, but is, on the contrary, a living Presence; I became conscious in myself of eternal life.
If we could sniff or swallow something that would, for five or six hours each day, abolish our solitude as individuals, attune us with our fellows in a glowing exaltation of affection and make life in all its aspects seem not only worth living, but divinely beautiful and significant... then, it seems to me, all our problems would be wholly solved and earth would become a paradise.
"But Aldous, what if we don't like him? What if he wears
a beard?" was Maria's comment when Huxley announced that
he had invited an unknown chap named Osmond, a psychiatrist no
less, for a visit. The offer of room and board chez Huxley was
a rare ticket; even Julian, when he was in town, stayed at a local
hotel.
The possibility that Osmond might be a tedious bore hadn't occurred
to Huxley, and after a few moments' thought he arrived at a simple
solution. "We can always be out," he said.
Osmond, some three thousand miles away, was having similar fears.
What if he couldn't play in Huxley's intellectual league? What
if he came off as a tedious bore? "You can always arrange
to stay late at the APA," his wife said.
He need not have worried. The one thing Huxley prized most in
a fellow conversationalist was intellectual breadth, and Osmond
had plenty of that. Like Heard, he could turn on a conversational
dime and launch into a disquisition on, say, scurvy, that was
so vivid one would almost swear he had shipped with Da Gama when
half of that gentleman's crew perished. Maria, watching Aldous
warm to the younger man, confided to Osmond: "I knew you'd
get along. You're both Englishmen."
Huxley accompanied Osmond to several APA sessions, which he found
deadly dull, and amused himself by genuflecting whenever Freud's
name was mentioned. The subject of mescaline didn't arise until
two days before Osmond was to leave, and then it was Maria who
broached the subject, having decided that the famous British reticence
was going to prevent the two men from discussing what was certainly
uppermost in Aldous's mind. Osmond admitted that he had brought
some mescaline with him; while Huxley conceded that he had borrowed
a tape recorder to preserve a record of the experiment.
The next day, May 4, 1953, Osmond dissolved some mescaline crystals
in a glass of water and nervously handed it to Huxley. Outside
it was one of those perfect LA mornings, blue and warm, with just
a trace of smog hanging over the San Bernardino valley. What if
the drug worked too well, Osmond thought to himself. Although
Smythies and he had begun to appreciate that there was more to
the mescaline experience than simple psychosis, that didn't diminish
the possibility that the next six hours might be absolutely hellish.
And Osmond didn't relish the possibility that he might become
infamous as the man who drove Aldous Huxley crazy.
On the other hand, what if nothing happened? It was beginning
to dawn on Humphrey that Huxley had some rather idiosyncratic
notions about what he hoped to achieve in the mescaline state.
Nowhere was this more explicit than in the letter Osmond had received
confirming his invitation to stay with the Huxleys while at the
APA. After the usual pleasantries, Aldous had launched into a
critique of what he called the Sears & Roebuck culture:
Under the current dispensation the vast majority of individuals lose, in the course of education, all the openness to inspiration, all the capacity to be aware of other things than those enumerated in the Sears-Roebuck catalogue; is it too much to hope that a system of education may someday be devised which shall give results, in terms of human development, commensurate with the time, money, energy and action expended? In such a system of education it may be that mescaline or some other chemical substance may play a part by making it possible for young people to "taste and see" what they have learned at second hand, or directly but at a lower level of intensity, in the writings of the religious, or the works of poets, painters and musicians.