A History of Solitude. David Vincent
literature, and philosophy. Zimmermann’s excursions into poetry, political commentary, and guides to living were bound up with his principal occupational identity as a doctor. His first publication was a treatise on ‘Irritability’, referring not to short temper but to the functioning of the nerves of the heart. He brought to solitude his experience as a leading medical authority, and his discussion of melancholy was later cited by Jean-Étienne Dominique Esquirol, the mid-nineteenth-authority on mental illness, as a key contribution to the topic.39 Melancholy had been a nosological term for two millennia, encompassing sadness, fear, and depression.40 During Zimmermann’s working life, the psychological causes were increasingly foregrounded over the physiological, which traditionally had been located in an excess of black bile.41 A related category was that of hypochondria, or hypochondriasis, from which Tissot claimed Zimmermann himself intermittently suffered. This lacked the modern association of imaginary illness but referred instead to a collection of symptoms for which there were no evident physical causes.42 The conditions were at the centre of a growing interest in the capacity of states of mind to generate bodily malfunctions. In his Anatomy of Melancholy, Burton observed that ‘the Minde most effectually workes upon the Body, producing by his passions and perturbations, miraculous alterations, as Melancholy, Despaire, cruell diseases, and sometimes death it selfe’.43 His speculation received increasing medical support. As Thomas Trotter excitedly wrote in 1812, ‘at the beginning of the nineteenth century, we do not hesitate to affirm, that nervous disorders have now taken the place of fevers, and may be justly reckoned two thirds of the whole, with which civilized society is afflicted’.44
So broad a collection of ailments had no single diagnosis or prognosis, but a pronounced rejection of society featured in every account and at every stage of the illness. According to Zimmermann,
An unseasonable and ungovernable propensity to Solitude is one of the most general and unequivocal symptoms of melancholy: all those whose feelings are a prey to images of chagrin, regret, and disappointment, shun the light of heaven, and the aspect of man; incapable of attaching themselves to any ideas but those which torment and destroy them, they fly the necessity of efforts at once painful and ineffectual.45
The withdrawal from company was often the first visible sign of a looming mental crisis. ‘When persons begin to be melancholy,’ observed William Buchan’s contemporary bestseller Domestic Medicine, ‘they are dull, dejected, timorous, watchful, fond of solitude, fretful, fickle, captious, and inquisitive, solicitous about trifles, sometimes niggardly, at other times prodigal.’46 Increasingly the sufferer could find no source of pleasure except in the denial of intercourse with those who might have been able to help them out of their deepening depression. Philippe Pinel’s influential Treatise on Insanity of 1801, set out for the coming century the principal characteristics of the illness: ‘The symptoms generally comprehended by the term melancholia are taciturnity, a thoughtful pensive air, gloomy suspicions, and a love of solitude.’47 How an individual arranged his or her social life was now the legitimate concern of European doctors. Too much time alone immediately raised warning flags. Medical textbooks routinely devoted a section on solitude in their advice on the causes and treatment of the most pervasive form of mental illness. Pathological melancholy was distinguished from the increasingly fashionable ‘white’ melancholy, a condition professed by those with a pronounced literary sensibility, denoting a low-key withdrawal for the purpose of observing the lessons of nature and the rural world.48 Thomas Gray, author of the most widely read poem on country life in the second half of the eighteenth century, mocked his own predilections:
Mine, you are to know, is a white Melancholy, or rather Leucocholy for the most part; which though it seldom laughs or dances, not ever amounts to what calls Joy or Pleasure, yet is a good easy sort of a state, and ca ne laisse que de s’amuser. The only fault of it is insipidity; which is apt now and then to give a sort of Ennui.49
‘Black’ melancholy was altogether more serious, a one-way journey towards a complete breakdown of mental and physical health.
As a doctor, Zimmermann could take a practical view of the pathologies of solitary living, seeking to reduce their incidence through medical intervention and published writings. It was otherwise with his final category of negative solitude, which he treated with unremitting hostility throughout his treatise. His tour of the landscape concluded with its spiritual dimension:
This long catalogue of the numerous causes which conduct to Solitude, is closed by Religion and Fanaticism. The former leads to the serenity and quiet of retirement, from the purest and noblest of considerations, the best propensities, and the finest energies. It is the passion of the strongest and best regulated minds. The latter is a rebellion against nature; a violation and perversion of reason; a renunciation of virtue; the folly and vice of narrow and oblique understandings; produced by a misapprehension of the Deity, and an ignorance of themselves.50
Zimmermann had no argument with religion itself. A Swiss Protestant, he was at ease with his denomination’s mixed economy of private prayer and collective worship. His problem was with the eremitical tendency in the Catholic Church, whose influence had been curtailed but by no means obliterated by the Reformation. The objection was not just to current monastic practice, limited as it was even in the Catholic regions of Europe. Rather, Zimmermann was exercised by the broader status and moral authority of the tradition of seclusion rooted in the desert hermits of the fourth century, who in turn were seeking to replicate Christ’s sojourn in the wilderness.51 He aimed his fire directly at the founding fathers of the Catholic Church: ‘So far were these madmen, who are deemed to be the stars of the infant Church, from understanding human nature, that they employed their knowledge to exact from themselves and their proselytes everything unnatural and impracticable.’52 What he repeatedly termed ‘fanaticism’ had no place in the rational, sociable culture of late eighteenth-century urban Europe.53
Zimmermann’s point of departure lay in his conception of how to live. Although an observant Christian, he had no sense that a silent, intensely personal communion with God was the ultimate purpose of man’s time on earth. Solitude Considered was a treatise on the pursuit of happiness, centred on the individual’s inherent sociability. The irreversible rejection of comfort and company represented a perversion of human nature. Zimmermann’s problem was with those who, ‘instigated by religious fervour, and perceiving nothing but corruption in the joys of social life, and sinful abomination in its virtues, retire from the spectacle to contemplate in the sacred gloom of the monastery, or the solitude of the cave and desert, a Being whose essence is unalterable purity, unlimited goodness and perfection’.54 He took issue with a spiritual tradition that argued, in the words of the seventeenth-century Cistercian Cardinal Bona, that ‘no one can find God except he is solitary, for God himself is alone and solitary’.55 At best, such a public renunciation of society was a form of self-indulgence. Zimmermann was of the same view as John Evelyn that the practice trivialized rather than grounded Christian worship. ‘Verily,’ wrote Evelyn, ‘there is more of Ambition and empty glory in some Solitudes, and affected Retreats, than in the most expos’d and conspicuous actions whatsoever: Ambition is not only in publick places, and pompous circumstances; but at home, and in the interior life; Heremits themselves are not recluse enough to seclude that subtile spirit, Vanity.’56 At worst, it overlapped with other forms of insanity. ‘Religious melancholy’ was seen as a particularly lethal category of mental illness. ‘All authors who have treated this subject,’ noted John Haslam in his Observations on Madness and Melancholy of 1809, ‘appear to agree respecting the difficulty of curing religious madness.’57 The human mind was incapable of coping alone with the consequences of seeking out the most profound spiritual revelations. Christian observance was entirely beneficial, continued Haslam, ‘but when an anxious curiosity leads us to unveil that which must ever be shrouded from our view, the despair, which always attends these impotent researches, will necessarily reduce us to the most calamitous state’.58 This category of melancholy remained part of the diagnostic tool-kit of nineteenth-century doctors, and still featured in Krafft-Ebbing’s compendious textbook on insanity in 1904.59