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Charles Lafontaine (1803 – 1892) was an early French Magnetizer. He eventually lived in Geneva and published a journal called ''Le magnétiseur''. Although he had failed as an actor, he became wealthy as a traveling mesmerist, or ''animal magnetiser'', as it was then known. He wrote an autobiography, which may have influenced George du Maurier in his writing of ''Trilby''. He stayed in London for a couple of years 1840–1841, where according to the locale newspapers and magazines of London, he created a great sensation in the city magnetizing a lion in the Zoological Gardens, London, in which he succeeded.〔Richard Harte - Hypnotism and the doctors- 1902〕 Followed by his successful magnetizing on animals, he repeated the performances in various other cities of England. He had a practice of calling one of his audiences to get magnetized and it worked great.〔Charles Lafontaine - Memoires.〕 "When he magnetised he looked like personified concentration. It was often remarked that when a person on being introduced to Lafontaine had talked with him for a little while, he felt as if he had known him for ever so long, which feeling of 'old acquaintance' shows that he had an eminently sympathetic nature" (Richard Harte - Hypnotism and the doctors) His stage demonstrations of animal magnetism in Manchester influenced surgeon James Braid to pursue the study of what came to be known as hypnotism (N.B. Braid's "hypnotism" was significantly different from Lafontaine's "magnetism"). Braid first saw Lafontaine in Manchester on November 13, 1841.〔See Yeates (2013), passim.〕 ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Charles Lafontaine」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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