This book is an exploration.
By means of words, signs, drawings.
Mescaline, the subject explored.
Mescaline, the subject explored.
Born in Belgium in 1899, Henri Michaux was educated at a Jesuit school in Brussels. He contemplated entering the priesthood then enrolled in medical school before abandoning his studies and becoming a merchant seaman. His voyages inspired two travelogues on Ecuador and Asia. He settled in Paris, where he began to write and paint. His work drew praise from several writers, including André Gide. In 1948, Michaux's wife died after accidentally setting fire to her nightgown: devastated, he began to take mescaline, painstakingly recording his experiences in text accompanied by distinctive calligraphic line drawings.
Henri Michaux published three books between 1956 and 1959 dealing with his experiences with mescaline - Miserable Miracle, L'infini turbulent and Paix dans les brisements. He also confronted us with a disturbing series of sketches - most of them in black and white, and a few in colour - executed shortly after each of his experiences. His prose, his poems and his sketches are intimately related, for each medium of expression reinforces and illuminates the others. The sketches are not simply illustrations of the texts.
Michaux's painting has never been a mere adjunct to his poetry: the two are at once autonomous and complementary worlds. In the case of the "mescaline experience", lines and words form a whole almost impossible to break down into its component elements. Forms, ideas and sensations intertwine as though they were a single, dizzyingly proliferating entity. In a certain sense, the sketches, far from being illustrations of the written word, are a sort of commentary. The rhythm and the movement of the lines bring to mind a kind of curious musical notation, except that we are confronted not with a method of recording sounds but with vortexes, gashes, interweavings of being. Incisions in the bark of time, halfway between the ideograph and the magical sign, characters and forms "more palpable than legible", these sketches are a criticism of poetic and pictorial writing, that is to say, a step beyond the sign and the image, something transcending words and lines.
Painting and poetry are languages that Michaux has used to try to express something that is truly inexpressible. A poet first, he began to paint when he realised that this new medium might enable him to say what he had found it impossible to say in his poetry. But is it a question of expression? Perhaps Michaux has never tried to express anything. All his efforts have been directed at reaching that zone, by definition indescribable and incommunicable, in which meanings disappear. A centre at once completely empty and completely full, a total vacuum and a total plenitude. Michaux's oeuvre - his poems, his real and imaginary travels, his painting - is an expedition winding its way toward some of our infinities - the most secret, the most fearful, and at times the most derisive ones.
Michaux travels via his languages: lines, words, colours, silences, rhythms. And he does not hesitate to break the back of a word, the way a horseman does not hesitate to wind his mount. Language as a vehicle, but also language as a knife and a miner's lamp. Their utility is paradoxical, however, since they are not employed to foster communication, but rather pressed into the service of the incommunicable. The extraordinary tension of Michaux's language stems from the fact that it is an undoubtedly effective tool, but its sole use is to bare something that is completely ineffective by its very nature: the state of non-knowledge that is beyond knowledge, the thought that no longer thinks because it has been united with itself, total transparency, a motionless whirlwind.
Miserable Miracle opens with this phrase: "This book is an exploration. By means of words, signs, drawings. Mescaline, the subject explored." When I had read the last page, I asked myself whether the result of the experiment had not been precisely the opposite: the poet Michaux explored by mescaline. An exploration or an encounter? An encounter with mescaline: an encounter with our own selves, with the known-unknown. A great gift of the gods, mescaline is a window through which we look out upon endless distances where nothing ever meets our eye but our own gaze. There is no I: there is space, vibration, perpetual animation. Battles, terrors, elation, panic, delight: is it Michaux or mescaline? It was all already there in Michaux, in his previous books. Mescaline was a confirmation. Michaux can say: I left my life behind to catch a glimpse of life.
It all begins with a vibration. An imperceptible movement that accelerates minute by minute. Wind, a long screeching whistle, a lashing hurricane, a torrent of faces, forms, lines. Everything falling, rushing forward, ascending, disappearing, reappearing. A dizzying evaporation and condensation. Bubbles, more bubbles, pebbles, little stones. Rocky cliffs of gas. Lines that cross, rivers meeting, endless bifurcations, meanders, deltas, deserts that walk, deserts that fly. Disintegrations, agglutinations, fragmentations, reconstitutions. Shattered words, the copulation of syllables, the fornication of meanings. Destruction of language. Mescaline reigns through silence - and it screams! A return to vibrations, a plunge into undulations.
Repetitions: mescaline is an "infinity-machine". Nothing is fixed. Avalanches, the kingdom of uncountable numbers, accursed proliferation. Gangrenous space, cancerous time.Battered by the gale of mescaline, sucked up by the abstract whirlwind, the modern westerner finds absolutely nothing to hold on to. He has forgotten the names, God is no longer called God. The Aztec or the Tarahumara had only to pronounce the name, and immediately the presence would descend, in all its infinite manifestations. Unity and plurality for the ancients. For us who lack gods: pullulation and time. All we have left is "causes and effects, antecedents and consequences". Space teeming with trivialities. Miserable miracle.
Michaux's first encounter with mescaline ends with the discovery of an "infinity-machine". The endless production of colours, rhythms and forms turns out in the end to be an awesome, absurd flood of cheap trinkets. We are millionaires with vast hoards of fairground junk. The second series of experiments (L'infini turbulent) provoked unexpected reactions and visions. Subject to continuous physiological discharges and a pitiless psychic tension. The exploration of mescaline, like a great fire or an earthquake, was devastating; all that remained intact was the essential, that which, being infinitely weak, is infinitely strong.What name can we give this faculty? Is it in fact a faculty, a power, or is it an absence of power, the total helplessness of man? I am inclined to believe it is the latter. This helplessness is our strength. At the last moment, when there is nothing left in us - when self is lost, when identity is lost - a fusion takes place, a fusion with something alien to us that nonetheless is the only thing that is truly ours.
The empty pit, the hole that we are fills to overflowing, and becomes a wellspring once again. When the drought is most severe, water gushes forth.Perhaps there is a point where the being of man and the being of the universe meet. Apart from this, nothing positive: a hole, an abyss, a turbulent infinite. Equidistant from sanity and insanity, the vision Michaux describes is total: contemplation of the demoniacal and the divine as the ultimate reality. The demoniacal stage of the experiment was above all the revelation of a transhuman eroticism - and therefore infinitely perverted. A psychic rape... Not at all sexual. An infinitely sensual universe, from which the human body and the human face had disappeared. An abstract lasciviousness: "Dissolution - an apt word that I understood instantly. Delight in deliquescence." Temptation, in the literal sense of the word, as all the mystics (Christian, Buddhist, Arab) have reported.
Perhaps the cause of Michaux's sense of repulsion was not so much the contact with Eros as the vision of the confusion of the cosmos, that is to say, the revelation of pure chaos. The visible entrails, chaos is the primordial stuff, the original disorder, and also the universal womb. I felt a similar sensation, though a much less intense one, in the great summer of India, during my first visit in 1952. Once I had fallen into that panting maw, the universe seemed to me to be an immense, multiple fornication. I suddenly had a glimpse of the meaning of the architecture of Konarak and erotic asceticism. The vision of chaos is a sort of ritual bath, a regeneration through immersion in the original fountain, a return to the "life before". Primitive tribes, the early Greeks, the Chinese, Taoists, and other peoples have had no fear of this awesome contact.The western attitude is unwholesome. It is moral. Morality, the great isolator, the great separator, divides man in half. To return to the unity of the vision is to reconcile body, soul, and the world. At the end of the experiment,
Michaux recalls a fragment of a Tantric poem:
Inaccessible to impregnations,
Enjoying all joys,
Touching everything like the wind,
Everything penetrating it like ether,
The ever-pure yogi
Bathes in the ever-flowing river.
Enjoying all joys,
Touching everything like the wind,
Everything penetrating it like ether,
The ever-pure yogi
Bathes in the ever-flowing river.
He enjoys all joys and nothing defiles him.
The divine vision - inseparable from the demoniacal vision, since both are revelations of unity - began with "the appearance of the gods". Thousands, hundreds of thousands, one after the other, in an endless file, an infinity of august countenances. And seas of light. "I cling to the divine perfection of the continuation of Being through time, a continuation that is so beautiful - so beautiful that I lose consciousness - so beautiful that, as the Mahabharata says, the gods themselves grow jealous and come to admire it."The vision of the gods is followed by nonvision: we are at the very heart of time. This journey is a return: a letting go, an unlearning, a travelling homeward to birth. On reading these pages of Michaux, I remembered a pre-Columbian object that the painter Paalen showed me some years ago: a block of quartz with the image of the old and wrinkled god Tlaloc engraved on it. He went over to a window and held it up to the light:
Touched by light
The quartz is suddenly a cascade.
The quartz is suddenly a cascade.
The infant god floats on the waters.
Nonvision: outside of actuality, history, purposes, calculations, hate, love, "beyond resolution and want of resolution, beyond preferences", the poet journeys back to a perpetual birth and listens to "the endless poem, without rhymes, without music, without words, that the Universe ceaselessly recites". Peace in the crater of the volcano, the reconciliation of man - what remains of man - with total presence.On embarking on his experiment, Michaux wrote: "I propose to explore the mediocre human condition." The second part of this sentence - a sentence which applies, I might add, to Michaux's entire oeuvre and to that of any great artist - turned out to be strikingly false. The exploration showed that man is not a mediocre creature. A part of oneself - a part walled in, obscured from the very beginning of the beginning - is open to the infinite. The so-called human condition is a point of intersection with other forces. Perhaps our condition is not merely human.
Michaux in words and pictures
Devotees of the simple perspective may be tempted to judge all my writings as those of a drug addict. I regret to say that I am more the water-drinking type. Never alcohol. No excitants, and for years no coffee, tobacco, or tea. From time to time wine, a little. All my life, in the matter of food or drink, moderate. I can take or abstain. Particularly, abstain. As a matter of fact, fatigue is my drug.I forgot. Twenty-five years ago, or more, I tried ether seven or eight times, once
laudanum, and twice the most unspeakable of all, alcohol . . .
Why did I stop taking mescaline?
Not as pliable as one wants.
Over the years, I made progress. I knew, nearing the important states, nearing the ones that count, how to direct them (and myself), but not with certainty, only intermittently.
Invisible but always there, behind the extraordinarily excellent states, apparently irreversible, there is a sudden unveiling of the very, very bad states which you don't want, or of the chaotic, the bizarre, the extravagant which you thought you had gotten past.
Taking some [mescaline] every four years, just to see how one is doing, probably would not be a bad idea.
I'm giving up even that.
Let's just say that I don't have much of a talent for addiction.
Links to the Book
Henri Michaux and Eric Duvivier
1964
Images du monde visionnaire
Images du monde visionnaire, an educational film by Henri Michaux and Eric Duvivier which was "produced in 1963 by the film department of Swiss pharmaceutical company Sandoz (best known for synthesizing LSD in 1938) in order to demonstrate the hallucinogenic effects of mescaline and hashish."
Ce film se propose de montrer les types d’images, et leurs façons spéciales d’apparaître et de disparaître, qu’un sujet quelconque, soumis à l’action de certaines substances psychotropes, voit défiler en son imagination avec une clarté extrême et sans l’intervention de sa volonté. Deux genres de visions, dont on a ici accusé les différences plutôt que les ressemblances, correspondent donc à deux hallucinogènes.
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