In the arts, catalepsy is often used for
dramatic effect, sometimes as a
plot device.
Literature • In
William Shakespeare's tragedy
Romeo and Juliet, the kindly
Friar Laurence (in the course of a botched attempt to help the lovers) provides
Juliet with a catalepsy-inducing
potion so effective that
Romeo tragically imagines his beloved's deathlike trance to be actual death and poisons himself in despair just before she awakens from her
stupor—leading her to kill herself with his
dagger upon discovering his suicide. • In
Alexandre Dumas, père's novel
The Count of Monte Cristo, the Abbé Faria has fits of catalepsy from time to time, before eventually dying from one. • In
Eugène Sue's
The Mysteries of Paris, the villain Jacques Ferrand experiences a fit described as cataleptic in his final confrontation with Rodolphe, blinded by lamplight and hallucinating with visions of his fantasized Cecily. • In
George Eliot's
Silas Marner, the main character Silas Marner frequently has cataleptic fits and seizures, which adds to his uncanny reputation as a wizard or "
cunning man" among the superstitious natives of his adopted village of Raveloe. • In
Arthur Conan Doyle's "
The Adventure of the Resident Patient", a man feigns catalepsy to gain access to a
neurologist's rooms; the doctor attempts to treat him with
amyl nitrite. • In
Ford Madox Ford's
The Good Soldier, the protagonist Dowell experiences catalepsy following the death of his wife. • In
Robert A. Heinlein's
Stranger in a Strange Land, the main character Valentine Michael Smith is believed to have catalepsy when he is returned to Earth. • In
Edgar Allan Poe's "
The Premature Burial", the narrator develops catalepsy. He fears being mistakenly declared dead and
buried alive, and goes to great lengths to prevent this. In another of Poe's short stories, "
The Fall of the House of Usher", Madeline Usher has catalepsy and is buried alive by her unstable brother Roderick. Catalepsy is also depicted in "
Berenice", thus becoming one of the recurrent themes in Poe's fiction. • In
Poppy Z. Brite's
Exquisite Corpse, the main character—Compton, a serial killer facing a lifetime sentence—uses shamanistic techniques to induce catalepsy and, convincingly appearing deceased, is able to escape prison. • In
Émile Zola's short story "La Mort d'Olivier Becaille" ("The Death of Olivier Becaille"), the title character is buried alive and notes that "I must have fallen into one of those cataleptic states that I had read of." • In
Sax Rohmer's
Fu Manchu novels, Dr. Fu Manchu has a serum that induces a state of catalepsy so extreme as to be indistinguishable from death. • In
Charles Dickens's novel
Bleak House, Mrs. Snagsby has violent spasms before becoming cataleptic and being carried upstairs like a grand piano. • In
Hegel's
Lectures on the History of Philosophy: Greek Philosophy to Plato, Hegel describes
Socrates as having catalepsy caused by magnetic
somnambulism when in deep meditation. • In
Charles Williams's novel
Many Dimensions, Sir Giles Tumulty says to Lord Arglay, the Chief Justice of England: "You are a
louse-brained catalept, Arglay." • In
Philip K. Dick's novel
Now Wait for Last Year, Kathy Sweetscent becomes immobilized by withdrawal from JJ-180, an alien (and highly addictive) drug. "My God, Kathy thought as she stood gazing down at the record by her feet. I can't free myself; I'm going to remain here, and they'll find me like this and know something's terribly wrong. This is catalepsy!" • In the second chapter of
Álvares de Azevedo's
Noite na Taverna, character Solfieri rescues a woman who has catalepsy from inside a coffin. • In
Sheridan Le Fanu's novella
The Room in the Dragon Volant, a naïve young man falls foul of a criminal gang who employ a curious,
bulbocapnine-like drug which induces catalepsy, as a result of which he narrowly escapes
premature burial. • In the
Ted Hughes poem titled "Conjuring in Heaven" from
Crow, the eponymous character is left in a state of catalepsy.
Other media • In the radio show
Suspense, the episode titled "Dead Ernest" recounts how a man with catalepsy is wrongly believed dead when he is struck by a car. • In the movie
Son of Dracula (1943),
vampire hunter Professor Lazlo (
J. Edward Bromberg) describes a vampire as being in a "cataleptic state" between sunrise and sunset, but practically "invincible" during the nighttime, to Dr. Harry Brewster (
Frank Craven), as they look for answers to a number of strange situations involving
Count Alucard (
Lon Chaney Jr.). • In the movie
The Comedy of Terrors (1963), John Black (
Basil Rathbone) is stated to suffer from catalepsy, and is mistaken for dead several times throughout the movie. ==See also==