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One of Victorian England's most famous philosophers harbored a secret: Herbert Spencer suffered from an illness so laden with stigma that he feared its revelation would ruin him. He therefore went to extraordinary lengths to hide his malady from the public. Exceptionally, he drew two of his closest friends-the novelist George Eliot and her partner, G. H. Lewes-into his secret. Years later, he also shared it with a remarkable neurologist, John Hughlings-Jackson, better placed than anyone else in England to understand his illness. Spencer insisted that all three support him without betraying his condition to others-and two of them did so. But George Eliot, still smarting from Spencer's rejection, years earlier, of her offer of love, did not. Ingeniously, she devised a means both of nominally respecting (for their contemporaries) and of violating (for our benefit) Spencer's injunction. What she hid from her peers she reveals to us in an act of deferred, but audacious literary revenge. It's here decoded for the first time. Indeed The Complicity of Friends comprises the first disclosure of Spencer's hidden frailty but also, more importantly, of the responses it generated in the lives and works of his three notable friends.
This book provides a complete rethinking of its principal figures. The novelist who emerges in these pages is a more sinuous and passionate George Eliot than the oracular Victorian we are used to hearing about. The significance of the friendship between Lewes, her irrepressible partner, and the inventive Hughlings-Jackson is outlined for the first time. And in an ironic twist, even his three farsighted confidants could not anticipate that, late in the twentieth century, certain of Spencer's own intuitions about the nature and provenance of his illness would be vindicated. Those with any interest in George Eliot, Lewes, Hughlings-Jackson, or Spencer will be compelled to re-envision their personalities after reading The Complicity of Friends.
List of contents
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
1 Introduction: Two Secrets-or One?
Phase One: What Eliot Saw, What Spencer Said
2 "The Lifted Veil," A: George Eliot Stolen!
3 "The Lifted Veil," B: Revenge by Diagnosis
4 A Fitful Reader
5 The Dagger Sheathed, Partly
Phase Two: What the Philosopher Wrote (with a Friend's Rejoinder)
6 Electricity and the Man
7 The Mystery of the Two Rooms
8 Enter Hughlings-Jackson
9 A Good Strong Terrible Vision
Phase Three: What the Doctor Heard
10 Lewes the Fixer
11 Who Was Hughlings-Jackson's "Educated Patient"?
12 Ghost Stories
Phase Four: The Exchange of Prisoners
13 The Man between the Fits
14 Eliot Does Mischief (Again)
15 Life after the Georges
16 Conclusion: The Brain is Not the Mind
Appendix 1: Many Snapshots, One Secretive Patient
Appendix 2: Did Spencer Have Autosomal Dominant Partial Epilepsy
with Auditory Features?
Notes
Acknowledgments
List of Works Cited
Index
About the author
Martin N. Raitiere is a practitioner of general adult psychiatry in Portland, Oregon.