The Economy and Neurosyphilis
December 11th, 2008by Mary McMyne
LAFAYETTE, LA -
Neurosyphilis. Recently, in an attempt to keep my brain occupied (read: prevent utter mental paralysis) while my agent shops my novel, I decided to begin researching my next project. So now, instead of lying awake in bed at night, staring at the ceiling, pondering the terrible economy and my dumb luck to finish writing my book this of all Novembers, I am lying awake in bed at night, staring at the ceiling, pondering my awesome luck at being born in twenty-first-century America where no one ever gets neurosyphilis. [1]
That’s right. Neurosyphilis. I teach early British literature at the local college, and after another semester of teaching Shakespeare’s plays and sonnets, for some reason I’m finding myself inexplicably fascinated with the darker side of Tudor England. Picture it. Turn-of-the-seventeenth-century London. A place without antibiotics. Southwark, the red light district. Where a man strolling out of one of Shakespeare’s plays could walk into a brothel and purchase a woman’s attentions, along with the disease which was known at this time in London as the “French welcome” for the low low price of (that’s right, sir, step right up, sir, she can be yours for) only ten shillings.
It would start quietly enough: painless chancres. Condyloma lata. But then would come the swelling of your lower lymph nodes. A vague feeling of general malaise. The faintest sense of muscular atrophy. You would know what was happening. You would be quite aware of it. You would think back to that time you went to go see Twelfth Night with your grammar school chum Edwardus and curse yourself for having enough ale after (or was it during) the show to allow Eddie to convince you to step into The Swan (or was it The Gun) where you met that redhead. That redhead. You would begin to hate her. You would begin to wander the cobblestoned streets of Southwark at night, trying to remember which brothel you and Eddie wandered into. You would begin to ask Eddie, over ale, after another play. All’s Well That Ends Well. Or Jonson’s Every Man in His Humour. And then, when the sores disappeared, you would begin to dread what was coming - a year from now, or maybe some time later, or never, if you were lucky - the blindness, the sores, the slight cross-eyes, the irregularly sized pupils. The dementia.
Famous people who have died of syphilis: Napoleon Bonaparte, Charles Baudelaire, Guy de Maupassant. Suspected cases: Adolf Hitler, Vincent Van Gogh, Oscar Wilde, Henry VIII. And then there is the story about Frederic Nietzsche, wandering the streets after his undiagnosed syphilis triggered a mental breakdown. He was arrested for causing some sort of (unknown, much-speculated upon) public disturbance. Some say he saw a horse being whipped and rushed over, weeping, to embrace it. [2]
Look at him. He couldn’t even see to shave.
Aren’t we lucky our only problem is the economy?
[1] If you are the one remaining American with internet access - and thus easy access to lurid descriptions of this disease and its symptoms - who has let your syphilis go unchecked, dear god man, get thee to a doctor!
[2] I am told he was weeping because he felt the whipping of the horse had been justified by Descartes, who had stated that animals couldn’t have souls, but my only source for this is my husband’s philosophy professor. There I was, sipping my Riesling and talking about this story in a local bar with a friend, trying to remember what exactly my husband had said Nietzsche told the horse, and then, suddenly, there was Dr. Berkeley, turning around from the seat behind me to say (in his loud British accent), “He was apologizing for Descartes’ error.”
Tags: Humor, Literature, medicine, Philosophy, Sex, Writing






















Is that a real picture of Nietzsche?
That mustache is a mammal.
No, but this is.
Mustachius Erectus!
Forgot to add: Another hearty welcome!
And best of luck with the book.
I have faith that you will buck the trend.
And: If you want your photo avatar to show up next to your comments, go to gravatar.com, sign up for a free account, and upload your photo. That’ll fix her.
Thanks. My agent is hopeful!
Testing, one, two, three. Here, little gravatar…
Girl if your book’s timing is as good as your TNB debut I’d say you’re golden. Your post seems to combine RD and Reno’s for a perfect theme entry. Bravo my lady.
And may I add gratitude to that good luck of lack you contemplate. I used to ponder my good grace to lack consumption and the vapors.
I should warn you, I do have a touch of moxie…
Ha, ha. I didn’t even read those yet! I guess it is just the night for blisters and brothels. I’ve honestly just been obsessed, obsessed I tell you, with neurosyphilis. I’ve been reading Shakespeare’s Wife by Germaine Greer. It all started with curiosity about the infamous “second best bed.” Anyway, pleasure to make your acquaintance, moxie miss!
I don’t mean to be a debbie downer but neurosyphilis sounds like a real drag.
Also, I think I’ll be adding Song of Blackbirds to my Christmas wish list. Or I’ll stop being so cheap and just go buy it.
That ain’t debbie downer, that’s the truth!
And how cool of you! Unfortunately, SONG OF BLACKBIRDS is not yet available for purchase. My agent and I decided to put it on hold last summer so we could go out with WAIT as my first book. But SONG should be my second, and things are progressing well for WAIT (although no news yet), so hopefully it’ll be available for Christmas wish-listing &c. soon! Thank you muchly for the kind words and encouragement! You rock!
I try to rock as a rule. As a public service of sorts.
I will certainly keep my eyes and ears open for WAIT and SONG OF BLACKBIRDS. I’ll keep my Christmas wish-listing spots open for both of them.
Nietzsche forsaw the future, a newer strain of neurosyphillis that made the old look tame:
neurointernetitis.
An entire generation of peoples tethered to an instrument by what seems to be the tiniest of leashes, their brains engaged yet damaged, staring into flickering, poisoned screens, lethargic yet caffeinated, stirred yet indifferent, inactive yet infected and infecting, dead-eyed and desperate, wanting everything and nothing, gobbling information and hemorrhaging insight, legions of the living dead.
Oof. I need to take a walk.
>Nietzsche foresaw the future…
Is that why his eyes were crossed?
Neurointernetitis.
Sheesh.
I’m gonna go walk my dog myself!
Darn Motel computer! Neither the picture of Nietzsche’s face, nor his mustache, shows up.
I am personally happy that people don’t ordinarily get neurosyphilis anymore. Sounds pretty icky.
Come back and check it out from a faster connection. I’ve seen a lot of pictures of Nietzsche, but this one takes the cake. (Which would, naturally, promptly get stuck for days in that mustache!)
Good lord, this was awesome! Welcome to the fold, Mary!
I guess the only thing I have to contribute, of course, is to relay my own disturbing fascination with the disease - not for the disease itself, but its relationship to the invention of the merkin which was created to disguise the aforementioned Condyloma lata or as we call ‘em, the “scabbies”.
And after reading this, I hope never, ever to be called that redhead again. Ew.
OK, I cannot believe I did not know about the merkin before this morning. How could I possibly have lived this long and simply been unaware of such a strange phenomenon. THANK YOU FOR EDUCATING ME, KIMBERLY! This is important information!
As I’ve often said… If I can help enlighten just one person out there, then everything I’ve gone through will be worth it.
Who knew this would be my life’s calling?
Eeew is right. I learned about syphilis reading Frank Norris’s Vandover and The Brute.
The idea was Flossie (a hooker) gives Vandover syphilis, but of course he doesn’t know it. I don’t think it’s ever openly stated in the text, but it’s obvious what it is. By the end of the novel he’s a madman, foaming at the mouth, howling at the moon.
Which should be sad, except the guy was a bastard.
Sounds like a hell of a read. I’ll keep my eye out for it.
A hearty STD free welcome to the ranks! Great post. I, too, am immensely thankful for the absence of neurosyphilis. It will be what I say next year around the Thanksgiving table. I am thankful that I have escaped neurosyphilis. God bless us. Everyone.
Ha! I would like to be at that table, so I could be party to the ensuing conversation in which Grandma pipes up, clearing her throat, her voice faltering, “Pardon me Erika but what did you say you were thankful for? I don’t think I heard you correctly. Let me turn my hearing aid up.” Erika: (long pause) “I said God bless us, Grandma. Pass the cranberry sauce.”