The Confessions of an English Opium Eater
The Confessions of an English Opium EaterTO THE READERPRELIMINARY CONFESSIONSPART IITHE PLEASURES OF OPIUMINTRODUCTION TO THE PAINS OF OPIUMTHE PAINS OF OPIUMMay 1818June 1819APPENDIXFOOTNOTESCopyright
The Confessions of an English Opium Eater
Thomas De Quincey
TO THE READER
I here present you, courteous reader, with the record of a
remarkable period in my life: according to my application of it, I
trust that it will prove not merely an interesting record, but in a
considerable degree useful and instructive. In that hope it is that
I have drawn it up; and that must be my apology for breaking
through that delicate and honourable reserve which, for the most
part, restrains us from the public exposure of our own errors and
infirmities. Nothing, indeed, is more revolting to English feelings
than the spectacle of a human being obtruding on our notice his
moral ulcers or scars, and tearing away that “decent drapery” which
time or indulgence to human frailty may have drawn over them;
accordingly, the greater part of our confessions (that is,
spontaneous and extra-judicial confessions) proceed from demireps,
adventurers, or swindlers: and for any such acts of gratuitous
self-humiliation from those who can be supposed in sympathy with
the decent and self-respecting part of society, we must look to
French literature, or to that part of the German which is tainted
with the spurious and defective sensibility of the French. All this
I feel so forcibly, and so nervously am I alive to reproach of this
tendency, that I have for many months hesitated about the propriety
of allowing this or any part of my narrative to come before the
public eye until after my death (when, for many reasons, the whole
will be published); and it is not without an anxious review of the
reasons for and against this step that I have at last concluded on
taking it.
Guilt and misery shrink, by a natural instinct, from public notice:
they court privacy and solitude: and even in their choice of a
grave will sometimes sequester themselves from the general
population of the churchyard, as if declining to claim fellowship
with the great family of man, and wishing (in the affecting
language of Mr. Wordsworth)
Humbly to express
A penitential loneliness.
It is well, upon the whole, and for the interest of us all, that it
should be so: nor would I willingly in my own person manifest a
disregard of such salutary feelings, nor in act or word do anything
to weaken them; but, on the one hand, as my self-accusation does
not amount to a confession of guilt, so, on the other, it is
possible that, if it did, the benefit resulting to others from the
record of an experience purchased at so heavy a price might
compensate, by a vast overbalance, for any violence done to the
feelings I have noticed, and justify a breach of the general rule.
Infirmity and misery do not of necessity imply guilt. They approach
or recede from shades of that dark alliance, in proportion to the
probable motives and prospects of the offender, and the
palliations, known or secret, of the offence; in proportion as the
temptations to it were potent from the first, and the resistance to
it, in act or in effort, was earnest to the last. For my own part,
without breach of truth or modesty, I may affirm that my life has
been, on the whole, the life of a philosopher: from my birth I was
made an intellectual creature, and intellectual in the highest
sense my pursuits and pleasures have been, even from my schoolboy
days. If opium-eating be a sensual pleasure, and if I am bound to
confess that I have indulged in it to an excess not yet recorded
{1} of any other man, it is no less true that I have struggled
against this fascinating enthralment with a religious zeal, and
have at length accomplished what I never yet heard attributed to
any other man—have untwisted, almost to its final links, the
accursed chain which fettered me. Such a self-conquest may
reasonably be set off in counterbalance to any kind or degree of
self-indulgence. Not to insist that in my case the self-conquest
was unquestionable, the self-indulgence open to doubts of
casuistry, according as that name shall be extended to acts aiming
at the bare relief of pain, or shall be restricted to such as aim
at the excitement of positive pleasure.
Guilt, therefore, I do not acknowledge; and if I did, it is
possible that I might still resolve on the present act of
confession in consideration of the service which I may thereby
render to the whole class of opium-eaters. But who are they?
Reader, I am sorry to say a very numerous class indeed. Of this I
became convinced some years ago by computing at that time the
number of those in one small class of English society (the class of
men distinguished for talents, or of eminent station) who were
known to me, directly or indirectly, as opium-eaters; such, for
instance, as the eloquent and benevolent ---, the late Dean of ---,
Lord ---, Mr. --- the philosopher, a late Under-Secretary of State
(who described to me the sensation which first drove him to the use
of opium in the very same words as the Dean of ---, viz., “that he
felt as though rats were gnawing and abrading the coats of his
stomach”), Mr. ---, and many others hardly less known, whom it
would be tedious to mention. Now, if one class, comparatively so
limited, could furnish so many scores of cases (and that within the
knowledge of one single inquirer), it was a natural inference that
the entire population of England would furnish a proportionable
number. The soundness of this inference, however, I doubted, until
some facts became known to me which satisfied me that it was not
incorrect. I will mention two. (1) Three respectable London
druggists, in widely remote quarters of London, from whom I
happened lately to be purchasing small quantities of opium, assured
me that the number of amateur opium-eaters (as I may term them) was
at this time immense; and that the difficulty of distinguishing
those persons to whom habit had rendered opium necessary from such
as were purchasing it with a view to suicide, occasioned them daily
trouble and disputes. This evidence respected London only. But
(2)—which will possibly surprise the reader more—some years ago, on
passing through Manchester, I was informed by several cotton
manufacturers that their workpeople were rapidly getting into the
practice of opium-eating; so much so, that on a Saturday afternoon
the counters of the druggists were strewed with pills of one, two,
or three grains, in preparation for the known demand of the
evening. The immediate occasion of this practice was the lowness of
wages, which at that time would not allow them to indulge in ale or
spirits, and wages rising, it may be thought that this practice
would cease; but as I do not readily believe that any man having
once tasted the divine luxuries of opium will afterwards descend to
the gross and mortal enjoyments of alcohol, I take it for
granted
That those eat now who never ate before;
And those who always ate, now eat the more.
Indeed, the fascinating powers of opium are admitted even by
medical writers, who are its greatest enemies. Thus, for instance,
Awsiter, apothecary to Greenwich Hospital, in his “Essay on the
Effects of Opium” (published in the year 1763), when attempting to
explain why Mead had not been sufficiently explicit on the
properties, counteragents, &c., of this drug, expresses himself
in the following mysterious terms (φωναντα συνετοισι): “Perhaps he
thought the subject of too delicate a nature to be made common; and
as many people might then indiscriminately use it, it would take
from that necessary fear and caution which should prevent their
experiencing the extensive power of this drug, for there are many
properties in it, if universally known, that would habituate the
use, and make it more in request with us than with Turks
themselves; the result of which knowledge,” he adds, “must prove a
general misfortune.” In the necessity of this conclusion I do not
altogether concur; but upon that point I shall have occasion to
speak at the close of my Confessions, where I shall present the
reader with the moral of my narrative.
PRELIMINARY CONFESSIONS
These preliminary confessions, or introductory narrative of the
youthful adventures which laid the foundation of the writer’s habit
of opium-eating in after-life, it has been judged proper to
premise, for three several reasons:
1. As forestalling that question, and giving it a satisfactory
answer, which else would painfully obtrude itself in the course of
the Opium Confessions—“How came any reasonable being to subject
himself to such a yoke of misery; voluntarily to incur a captivity
so servile, and knowingly to fetter himself with such a sevenfold
chain?”—a question which, if not somewhere plausibly resolved,
could hardly fail, by the indignation which it would be apt to
raise as against an act of wanton folly, to interfere with that
degree of sympathy which is necessary in any case to an author’s
purposes.
2. As furnishing a key to some parts of that tremendous scenery
which afterwards peopled the dreams of the Opium-eater.
3. As creating some previous interest of a personal sort in the
confessing subject, apart from the matter of the confessions, which
cannot fail to render the confessions themselves more interesting.
If a man “whose talk is of oxen” should become an opium-eater, the
probability is that (if he is not too dull to dream at all) he will
dream about oxen; whereas, in the case before him, the reader will
find that the Opium-eater boasteth himself to be a philosopher; and
accordingly, that the phantasmagoria of his dreams (waking or
sleeping, day-dreams or night-dreams) is suitable to one who in
that character
Humani nihil a se alienum putat.
For amongst the conditions which he deems indispensable to the
sustaining of any claim to the title of philosopher is not merely
the possession of a superb intellect in its analytic functions (in
which part of the pretensions, however, England can for some
generations show but few claimants; at least, he is not aware of
any known candidate for this honour who can be styled emphatically
a subtle thinker, with the exception of Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
and in a narrower department of thought with the recent illustrious
exception {2} of David Ricardo) but also on such a constitution of
the moral faculties as shall give him an inner eye and power of
intuition for the vision and the mysteries of our human nature:
that constitution of faculties, in short, which (amongst all the
generations of men that from the beginning of time have deployed
into life, as it were, upon this planet) our English poets have
possessed in the highest degree, and Scottish professors {3} in the
lowest.
I have often been asked how I first came to be a regular
opium-eater, and have suffered, very unjustly, in the opinion of my
acquaintance from being reputed to have brought upon myself all the
sufferings which I shall have to record, by a long course of
indulgence in this practice purely for the sake of creating an
artificial state of pleasurable excitement. This, however, is a
misrepresentation of my case. True it is that for nearly ten years
I did occasionally take opium for the sake of the exquisite
pleasure it gave me; but so long as I took it with this view I was
effectually protected from all material bad consequences by the
necessity of interposing long intervals between the several acts of
indulgence, in order to renew the pleasurable sensations. It was
not for the purpose of creating pleasure, but of mitigating pain in
the severest degree, that I first began to use opium as an article
of daily diet. In the twenty-eighth year of my age a most painful
affection of the stomach, which I had first experienced about ten
years before, attacked me in great strength. This affection had
originally been caused by extremities of hunger, suffered in my
boyish days. During the season of hope and redundant happiness
which succeeded (that is, from eighteen to twenty-four) it had
slumbered; for the three following years it had revived at
intervals; and now, under unfavourable circumstances, from
depression of spirits, it attacked me with a violence that yielded
to no remedies but opium. As the youthful sufferings which first
produced this derangement of the stomach were interesting in
themselves, and in the circumstances that attended them, I shall
here briefly retrace them.
My father died when I was about seven years old, and left me to the
care of four guardians. I was sent to various schools, great and
small; and was very early distinguished for my classical
attainments, especially for my knowledge of Greek. At thirteen I
wrote Greek with ease; and at fifteen my command of that language
was so great that I not only composed Greek verses in lyric metres,
but could converse in Greek fluently and without embarrassment—an
accomplishment which I have not since met with in any scholar of my
times, and which in my case was owing to the practice of daily
reading off the newspapers into the best Greek I could furnish
extempore; for the necessity of ransacking my memory and invention
for all sorts and combinations of periphrastic expressions as
equivalents for modern ideas, images, relations of things, &c.,
gave me a compass of diction which would never have been called out
by a dull translation of moral essays, &c. “That boy,” said one
of my masters, pointing the attention of a stranger to me, “that
boy could harangue an Athenian mob better than you and I could
address an English one.” He who honoured me with this eulogy was a
scholar, “and a ripe and a good one,” and of all my tutors was the
only one whom I loved or reverenced. Unfortunately for me (and, as
I afterwards learned, to this worthy man’s great indignation), I
was transferred to the care, first of a blockhead, who was in a
perpetual panic lest I should expose his ignorance; and finally to
that of a respectable scholar at the head of a great school on an
ancient foundation. This man had been appointed to his situation by
--- College, Oxford, and was a sound, well-built scholar, but (like
most men whom I have known from that college) coarse, clumsy, and
inelegant. A miserable contrast he presented, in my eyes, to the
Etonian brilliancy of my favourite master; and beside, he could not
disguise from my hourly notice the poverty and meagreness of his
understanding. It is a bad thing for a boy to be and to know
himself far beyond his tutors, whether in knowledge or in power of
mind. This was the case, so far as regarded knowledge at least, not
with myself only, for the two boys, who jointly with myself
composed the first form, were better Grecians than the head-master,
though not more elegant scholars, nor at all more accustomed to
sacrifice to the Graces. When I first entered I remember that we
read Sophocles; and it was a constant matter of triumph to us, the
learned triumvirate of the first form, to see our “Archididascalus”
(as he loved to be called) conning our lessons before we went up,
and laying a regular train, with lexicon and grammar, for blowing
up and blasting (as it were) any difficulties he found in the
choruses; whilst we never condescended to open our books until the
moment of going up, and were generally employed in writing epigrams
upon his wig or some such important matter. My two class-fellows
were poor, and dependent for their future prospects at the
university on the recommendation of the head-master; but I, who had
a small patrimonial property, the income of which was sufficient to
support me at college, wished to be sent thither immediately. I
made earnest representations on the subject to my guardians, but
all to no purpose. One, who was more reasonable and had more
knowledge of the world than the rest, lived at a distance; two of
the other three resigned all their authority into the hands of the
fourth; and this fourth, with whom I had to negotiate, was a worthy
man in his way, but haughty, obstinate, and intolerant of all
opposition to his will. After a certain number of letters and
personal interviews, I found that I had nothing to hope for, not
even a compromise of the matter, from my guardian. Unconditional
submission was what he demanded, and I prepared myself, therefore,
for other measures. Summer was now coming on with hasty steps, and
my seventeenth birthday was fast approaching, after which day I had
sworn within myself that I would no longer be numbered amongst
schoolboys. Money being what I chiefly wanted, I wrote to a woman
of high rank, who, though young herself, had known me from a child,
and had latterly treated me with great distinction, requesting that
she would “lend” me five guineas. For upwards of a week no answer
came, and I was beginning to despond, when at length a servant put
into my hands a double letter with a coronet on the seal. The
letter was kind and obliging. The fair writer was on the sea-coast,
and in that way the delay had arisen; she enclosed double of what I
had asked, and good-naturedly hinted that if I should never repay
her, it would not absolutely ruin her. Now, then, I was prepared
for my scheme. Ten guineas, added to about two which I had
remaining from my pocket-money, seemed to me sufficient for an
indefinite length of time; and at that happy age, if no definite
boundary can be assigned to one’s power, the spirit of hope and
pleasure makes it virtually infinite.
It is a just remark of Dr. Johnson’s (and, what cannot often be
said of his remarks, it is a very feeling one), that we never do
anything consciously for the last time (of things, that is, which
we have long been in the habit of doing) without sadness of heart.
This truth I felt deeply when I came to leave ---, a place which I
did not love, and where I had not been happy. On the evening before
I left --- for ever, I grieved when the ancient and lofty
schoolroom resounded with the evening service, performed for the
last time in my hearing; and at night, when the muster-roll of
names was called over, and mine (as usual) was called first, I
stepped forward, and passing the head-master, who was standing by,
I bowed to him, and looked earnestly in his face, thinking to
myself, “He is old and infirm, and in this world I shall not see
him again.” I was right; I never did see him again, nor ever shall.
He looked at me complacently, smiled good-naturedly, returned my
salutation (or rather my valediction), and we parted (though he
knew it not) for ever. I could not reverence him intellectually,
but he had been uniformly kind to me, and had allowed me many
indulgences; and I grieved at the thought of the mortification I
should inflict upon him.
The morning came which was to launch me into the world, and from
which my whole succeeding life has in many important points taken
its colouring. I lodged in the head-master’s house, and had been
allowed from my first entrance the indulgence of a private room,
which I used both as a sleeping-room and as a study. At half after
three I rose, and gazed with deep emotion at the ancient towers of
---, “drest in earliest light,” and beginning to crimson with the
radiant lustre of a cloudless July morning. I was firm and
immovable in my purpose; but yet agitated by anticipation of
uncertain danger and troubles; and if I could have foreseen the
hurricane and perfect hail-storm of affliction which soon fell upon
me, well might I have been agitated. To this agitation the deep
peace of the morning presented an affecting contrast, and in some
degree a medicine. The silence was more profound than that of
midnight; and to me the silence of a summer morning is more
touching than all other silence, because, the light being broad and
strong as that of noonday at other seasons of the year, it seems to
differ from perfect day chiefly because man is not yet abroad; and
thus the peace of nature and of the innocent creatures of God seems
to be secure and deep only so long as the presence of man and his
restless and unquiet spirit are not there to trouble its sanctity.
I dressed myself, took my hat and gloves, and lingered a little in
the room. For the last year and a half this room had been my
“pensive citadel”: here I had read and studied through all the
hours of night, and though true it was that for the latter part of
this time I, who was framed for love and gentle affections, had
lost my gaiety and happiness during the strife and fever of
contention with my guardian, yet, on the other hand, as a boy so
passionately fond of books, and dedicated to intellectual pursuits,
I could not fail to have enjoyed many happy hours in the midst of
general dejection. I wept as I looked round on the chair, hearth,
writing-table, and other familiar objects, knowing too certainly
that I looked upon them for the last time. Whilst I write this it
is eighteen years ago, and yet at this moment I see distinctly, as
if it were yesterday, the lineaments and expression of the object
on which I fixed my parting gaze. It was a picture of the lovely
---, which hung over the mantelpiece, the eyes and mouth of which
were so beautiful, and the whole countenance so radiant with
benignity and divine tranquillity, that I had a thousand times laid
down my pen or my book to gather consolation from it, as a devotee
from his patron saint. Whilst I was yet gazing upon it the deep
tones of --- clock proclaimed that it was four o’clock. I went up
to the picture, kissed it, and then gently walked out and closed
the door for ever!
* * * * *
So blended and intertwisted in this life are occasions of laughter
and of tears, that I cannot yet recall without smiling an incident
which occurred at that time, and which had nearly put a stop to the
immediate execution of my plan. I had a trunk of immense weight,
for, besides my clothes, it contained nearly all my library. The
difficulty was to get this removed to a carrier’s: my room was at
an aërial elevation in the house, and (what was worse) the
staircase which communicated with this angle of the building was
accessible only by a gallery, which passed the head-master’s
chamber door. I was a favourite with all the servants, and knowing
that any of them would screen me and act confidentially, I
communicated my embarrassment to a groom of the head-master’s. The
groom swore he would do anything I wished, and when the time
arrived went upstairs to bring the trunk down. This I feared was
beyond the strength of any one man; however, the groom was a
man
Of Atlantean shoulders, fit to bear
The weight of mightiest monarchies;