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To: Cats Pajamas

The Day of St. Anthony’s Fire
by John G. Fuller

4.18 · Rating details · 104 ratings · 19 reviews
This is the strange, true, almost incredible story of a small French village where in ‘51 hundreds of townspeople went mad on a single night. Many of the most highly regarded citizens leaped from windows or jumped into the Rhone, screaming that their heads were made of copper, their bodies wrapped in snakes, their limbs swollen to gigantic size or shrunken to tiny appendages. Others ran through the streets, claiming to be chased by “bandits with donkey ears”, by tigers, lions & other terrifying apparitions. Animals went berserk. Dogs ripped bark from trees until their teeth fell out. Cats dragged themselves along the floor in grotesque contortions. Ducks strutted like penguins. Villagers & animals died right & left.

Bit by bit, the story behind the tragedy in Pont-St-Esprit—a tiny Provencial village of twisted streets that looks much today as it did in the Middle Ages—unfolded to doctors & toxcologists. That story, one of the most bizarre in modern medical history, is movingly recounted in The Day of St. Anthony’s Fire.

Throughout the Middle Ages & during other times in history, similar hallucinatory outbreaks occurred. They were called St. Anthony’s Fire because it was believed that only prayers to the saint could hold the disease in check.

Even modern medicine could find no way to check the disease. Drugs failed to bring even temporary relief. Hundreds in the village suffered for weeks, with total agonizing insomnia, never knowing when they might once more suddenly go berserk.
The cause of St. Anthony’s Fire was known since early history to be ergot, a mold found on rye grain that at rare times inexplicably became posionous enough to create monstrous hallucinations & death.

In ‘51 little significance was attached to the fact that the base of ergot was lysergic acid, also the base for LSD, a drug just coming to the attention of scientists at the time—a drug so powerful that one eye-dropperful could cause as many as 5000 people to hallucinate for hours.

At this point, the story becomes a vividly absorbing medical detective story demonstrating the possibility that a strange, spontaneous form of LSD might have caused the human tragedy that came to the hapless villagers of Pont-St-Esprit.


469 posted on 09/22/2019 12:37:43 PM PDT by COUNTrecount (If only Harvey Weinstein's bathrobe could talk.)
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To: COUNTrecount

Watch the water


470 posted on 09/22/2019 12:44:05 PM PDT by Chuckster (Probably not...)
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To: COUNTrecount

Very interesting Count.


473 posted on 09/22/2019 12:56:45 PM PDT by Cats Pajamas (Freedom or Liberty? Which would you choose?)
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To: COUNTrecount

There is a documentary on Amazon Prime called, “CIA Covert Experiment’, that covers this incident from 1951. I watched it a few months ago. It is not for the faint of heart.


493 posted on 09/22/2019 2:06:34 PM PDT by Keflavik76 (Don't want to be a brick in Babylons wall)
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