The Mattoid, or Crank
The more frequency of attacks on
public men by irresponsible persons in recent years calls for wider
research into the matter of incipient or half-concealed insanity.
Dr. Arthur MacDonald of Washington, whose works on criminology are
regarded as authoritative, has given exhaustive study to the “mattoid”
because of his belief that this country is in peculiar danger from
this type of mental defectives who frequently menace the lives of
public men. The political criminal is nearly always a mattoid who
attempts murder because of some benefit he believes will result
to the nation from the removal [of] his victim.
The mattoid, or crank, is usually
quiet [of] demeanor and therefore may conceal his aberration, thus
increasing his danger. He may even be a genius of certain type and
free from criminal instincts. It is said that Edgar Allen Poe and
Walt Whitman both exhibited many mattoid tendencies. [All?] extraordinary
talent or genius might be termed a sort of ego-mania, and when this
is not held within judicious bounds the possessors begin to assume
the notion that they are vested with a divine mission. These vagaries
may be prompted by selfish motives and the individual may attempt
a heinous crime simply [to] further his own financial or political
ends. Again, his motives may be altruistic as evidenced by the acts
of over-zealous reformers and religious enthusiasts.
A brief consideration of the criminal
mattoids who have startled our country during the past two or three
decades is somewhat illuminating and emphasizes the need of better
efforts directed toward the weeding out of this type of mental defective.
The man who attempted to assassinate Colonel Roosevelt had an obsession
on the third-term business from which he could not pry himself loose,
and he was also influenced by a dream in which President McKinley
appeared to him and said, “This is my murderer. Avenge my death.”
Guiteau, the murderer of Garfield, was an educated mattoid laboring
under the delusion that the country would be benefitted [sic]
by his atrocious act. Booth, Lincoln’s slayer, was of the same type.
Conditions growing out of the war had excited him to the point of
fixing the blame upon one person. The assassin of Mayor Carter,
of Chicago, and also [194][195] the
man who attempted to take the life of Mayor Gaynor, of New York,
were both of the criminal crank type and claimed their acts were
justified. Another mattoid attempted to take the life of Jay Gould
and adroitly became a servant in the household, which position he
held with efficiency for three months. When, however, the time came
for his murderous attack upon Mr. Gould, his plans were frustrated
by his falling on the floor and dropping the sharpened fruit knife
with which he intended cutting his victim’s throat. The man was
overpowered and afterward placed in a private sanitarium in order
that no publicity be given to the affair. Csolgosz, McKinley’s assassinator,
was a young man possessing a low degree of intelligence and his
vacillating brain was thrown entirely out of commission by the eading
[sic] of anarchist literature. Holt, who came into the limelight
more recently, seemed to have the delusion that he was acting in
the interest of patriotism and humanity. His moral sense and natural
affections seemed normal in other directions.
It is a great problem that confronts
alienists, psychologists and anthropologists today—the detection
and management of this dangerous class of individuals. The crank
or paranoic [sic], who, by convert [sic] actions or
by veiled or threatened speech shows signs that he may be a possible
menace to society should be placed in strict isolation until his
case has had painstaking investigation. The wholly insane are not
nearly so dangerous as the half insane.
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