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  Richard Maurice Bucke (1837-1902)
   

 

 

 

 

 

The remarkable career of Richard Maurice Bucke ended suddenly on the cold morning of February 19, 1902. In his 65 years, Bucke had been many things to many people: an innovative doctor of psychiatry, a prospector, a confidant and literary executor to Walt Whitman, but to Emily Chesley, Bucke was a mystic with one foot. Actually, half a foot.

Bucke's semi-mono-pedal condition dated from the time when he went to prospect for silver in California (1857). His prospecting crew became lost in the mountains and was forced to survive as best they could. Frostbitten, and near death, Bucke was the lone survivor to make it to a mining camp, shy a foot and several toes. But it was not his lack of a full compliment of piggies, nor was it how he managed to survive with no food in such harsh conditions that interested Emily. (1) No, she was fascinated by Bucke's ideas about human consciousness.

bucke had a foot and several toes amputatedFollowing his adventures in the west and a formal education in Montreal and then Europe, Bucke returned to Ontario, where he entered the field of psychiatric medicine. In 1877, Bucke became the superintendent of the London Asylum for the Insane – coincidentally, the asylum was built very near to the homestead where he had been raised.

Bucke was a pioneer in medicine. At a time when the insane were kept in physical restraints and force-fed alcohol, Bucke advocated a more progressive approach to the treatment of the mentally ill. In 1879 he published his psychiatric speculations in Man’s Moral Nature. His thesis was that a person's moral sense was mediated via the sympathetic nervous system and that this innate moral sense was becoming prevalent in society. In 1883 he published the authorized biography of Walt Whitman – with whom he was friends and who, he believed, exemplified the high moral sense he described in his first book. (2)

Emily read the book in 1894, after meeting Bucke for the first time. Emily was accompanying one of her volunteers from the CU, Bidy "McBritches" Brennan, to the asylum. Bidy had been acting strangely, and Bucke diagnosed syphilis, which made sense given Bidy's occupation – a housemaid in the Reverand P.E. Derasty's vicarage. Though the outcome of Bidy's case was not a happy one (3), a great literary friendship developed between Bucke and Emily.

Bucke believed in three types of consciousness in humans: simple self-awareness, moral consciousness, and a third profoundly deep consciousness that he called “cosmic consciousness.” He believed the third level of consciousness had only been attained by a few dozen individuals: the likes of Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed, Dante, Walt Whitman, Francis Bacon, William Blake, as well as Bucke himself of course. He thought this third level of consciousness was attainable by everyone.

This concept fascinated Emily, and to it, she added the notion that human evolution was geared towards the species developing this third level of consciousness. This is the idea she explored in her 1918 book, The World Wide Waste. In the story the human species is diverted from their genetic destiny by the presence of a "pernicious electronic device" fancifully termed, IntraVision. The population of the world is hypnotized by the pseudo-entertainment form, which encouraged incipient dreams of banality called "real theatre", not the kind of self-awareness necessary to achieve the third level of consciousness.

Emily would often invite Bucke to tea (brandy) at the rambling mansion on Princess Ave. (4) Bucke enjoyed Emily's company and was as intrigued by Michael Flannigan. Both were unique individuals, though he confided to Emily once, as she reports in her journal: "I think your uncle may be a few wheels short of a gear." Despite this, Bucke tried one of Flannigan's devices at his asylum, and always took an interest in the dotty old Irishman's ingenious contraptions. (5)

Flannigan, from Emily's reports, took great delight in the celebrated doctor's interest. So it is not a surprise that the inventor bequeathed the patent and a working prototype of The Flannigan Foot Replacement Device to Bucke. Because of legal difficulties, the papers and prototype did not arrive at Bucke's house until the late afternoon of February 18, 1902, more than a year after Flannigan's death. The package remained unopened until the early hours of the next day, when Bucke put on the prosthetic feet with delight. They fit perfectly (Flannigan had adapted one for Bucke's partially toed condition.)

Unfortunately, Bucke neglected to read the instructions that Flannigan had written out on the back of an old bit of sausage wrapping. The prosthetic feet had two settings: normal walking and "extra sproingy". Yes, Flannigan had found yet another use for his patented "spring-wound rotary propulsion thingy."

Emily speculates about Bucke's last moments in her memoir:

One can only hope that dear Richard was in the third level of consciousness as he opened the door and took that first fateful step onto his porch. The paper claims that he died because he slipped on ice, but it must have been uncle's prosthetic feet that caused it – I know because I found them later that day, hanging in a maple tree in front of Richard's house like a signal of doom.

I can imagine the dreadful sequence of events, the sounds: the door creaks with the cold as he opens it, and his breath rises in a plume of steam as he takes his first step. Then the spring-wound rotary propulsion thingy engages, and his left foot rockets up with enough force to propel the Flannigan Flyer in a pinch! A woosh of surprise comes out of Richard as his leg launches high into the air, kicking the ceiling of the porch, and then the dreadful smack as his head slaps into the ground, causing what the medical examiner called "an extreme and explosive cranial haemorrhage."

Emily never shared her suspicions with the authorities, and mourned the death of a Canadian original alone. (6)

Notes:

1) Though Emily did write in her journal: "one wonders what desperate means Richard might have employed to survive so long in the wilderness. It makes you think, especially, that he means something when he utters the axiom: 'one foot does not a cannibal make.'" [back]

2) Whitman came to visit Bucke in London, Ontario in 1880 – the same year that Emily and Michael Flannigan arrived in town. [back]

3) See the excellent monograph: "Bidy Bites Back: The Genesis of Emily Chesley's 'Cannibalistic Chore'". [back]

4) Emily was never invited to the Bucke household, apparently because Bucke's wife, Jessie -- whom, it must be noted did not have a nautical background -- did not "like the cut of that slut's jib." [back]

5) The Flannigan "Bebebebebebeb" Inhibitor (circa. 1897) never really worked as well as Bucke had hoped, and several designs of the device were a little too invasive for his progressive therapies. [back]

6) In addition to his other achievements, Bucke was elected a charter member of the Royal Society of Canada, and was the president of national and international societies. In 1882 he helped found the "Cottage Medical School" in London, Ontario, which evolved into the Faculty of Medicine at Western University, now The University of Western Ontario. There he served as Professor of Nervous & Mental Diseases until his accidental death. [back]


Richard Maurice Bucke (1837-1902)

Later in life, Bucke was often mistaken for his literary and spiritual hero, Walt Whitman.

 

 

London, Ontario Asylum

Bucke was a pioneer in more humane treatments for the mentally challenged. (Illustration reproduced from the National Library of Canada's website (www.nlc-bnc.ca).)

 

 

 

 

walt whitman

Bucke believed that Walt Whitman was one of a few individuals who had attained the "third level of consciousness", which did not necessarily mean that he didn't have a silly beard.

 

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