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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's A Treatise on the Art of Midwifery, by Elizabeth Nihell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: A Treatise on the Art of Midwifery
- Setting Forth Various Abuses Therein, Especially As to the
- Practice With Instruments: the Whole Serving to Put All
- Rational Inquirers in a Fair Way of Very Safely Forming
- Their Own Judgement Upon the Question; Which It Is Best
- to Employ, in Cases of Pregnancy and Lying-in, a
- Man-midwife; Or, a Midwife
-
-Author: Elizabeth Nihell
-
-Release Date: September 20, 2019 [EBook #60334]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TREATISE ON THE ART OF MIDWIFERY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='c002'>A</span><br /> <span class='xlarge'><em class='gesperrt'>TREATISE</em></span><br /> <span class='large'>ON THE</span><br /> <span class='c002'><em class='gesperrt'>ART</em> of <em class='gesperrt'>MIDWIFERY</em>.<br /> <em class='gesperrt'>SETTING FORTH</em></span><br />&#8196; <span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>Various Abuses</span> therein,</span><br /> <span class='large'>Especially as to the</span><br /> <span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>Practice</span> with <span class='sc'>Instruments</span>:</span><br /> <span class='c002'>THE WHOLE<br /> Serving to put all Rational Inquirers in a fair Way of very safely forming their own Judgement upon the <span class='sc'>Question</span>;</span><br /> <span class='small'>Which it is best to employ,</span><br /> <span class='xlarge'>In Cases of <span class='sc'>Pregnancy</span> and <span class='sc'>Lying-in</span>,</span><br /> <span class='small'>A</span><br /> <span class='xlarge'><em class='gesperrt'>MAN-MIDWIFE;</em></span><br /> <span class='small'><em class='gesperrt'>OR, A</em></span><br /> <span class='xlarge'><em class='gesperrt'>MIDWIFE.</em></span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='large'>By Mrs. <em class='gesperrt'>ELIZABETH NIHELL</em>,</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>Professed Midwife</span>.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'><em class='gesperrt'>LONDON:</em></span></div>
- <div class='c004'>Printed for <span class='sc'>A. Morley</span>, at Gay’s-Head, near Beaufort Buildings, in the Strand.</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Mdcclx.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_i'>i</span>
-<img src='images/i__001.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><span class='small'>TO</span><br /> All <span class='sc'>Fathers</span>, <span class='sc'>Mothers</span><br /> <span class='large'>and likely soon to be <span class='sc'>Either</span>.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c006'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di__001.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-<span class='sc'>Though</span> the subject of
-the following sheets is of
-such universal importance,
-that it would be difficult to
-name that human individual, to whom
-it does not in some measure relate,
-you, it doubtless, more immediately
-concerns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Under</span> no protection then so properly
-as yours can a work be put, not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_ii'>ii</span>presumingly calculated to determine
-your judgment, but only to recommend
-to you the examination of a
-point, in which Nature would have
-such just reproaches to make to you,
-for cruelty to yourselves, if you was
-indolently to determine yourselves either
-without an examination, or on a
-blind implicit confidence in others;
-in others, perhaps, interested to mislead
-you. This last advertence of
-mine will, more than all that I could
-offer besides, prove to you my sincere
-unaffected with for your favorable acceptance
-of this essay of mine, on the
-footing of absolutely no interest but
-purely yours. And that interest how
-dear! how sacred! How indispensably
-ought it to challenge your preference
-almost to any other interest of your
-own, and much more surely to any of
-others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span><span class='sc'>Happily</span> then for you, in a matter
-of such common concernment to human-kind,
-Nature has not been so
-unjust, nor so unprovident as to place
-a competent notion of it out of the
-reach of common sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Deign</span> then, for your own sakes,
-to examine it by that light of Reason,
-the spring of which is for ever in yourselves.
-It cannot fail of affording
-you a sufficient certainty on which to
-rest your opinion, in a point upon
-which it is of such deep, such tender
-importance to you, not to form your
-resolutions on a wrong one. In virtue
-of such your own fair examination,
-the decision will no longer be
-dangerously and precariously that of
-others for you, no longer be nothing
-better than a lightly adopted prejudice,
-but become truly and meritoriously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>the genuine result of your own
-judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> whatever your decision may
-be, at least to me you can hardly
-impute it as an offence, my seeking to
-supply you with matter, whereon to
-exercise that judgment of yours in so
-interesting a point. At the worst,
-I have the consolation of being in
-my duty, while thus aiming, however
-deficiently, at proving that with the
-most tender regard and unfeigned
-zeal.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I am, respectfully,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Your most devoted, and</div>
- <div class='line in6'>most faithful humble servant,</div>
- <div class='line in16'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Nihell</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Haymarket,</div>
- <div class='line'>Feb. 21, 1760.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_ci'>ci</span>
-<img src='images/i__002.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c006'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di__002.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-<span class='sc'>The</span> preservation of so valuable
-a part of the human Species
-as pregnant women, as well
-as that of their dear and tender
-charge, their children, so
-powerfully recommended by the voice of
-Nature and Reason, to all possible human
-providence for their safe birth, forms an
-object so sensibly intitled to the private and
-national care, and even to that of universal
-society, that all enforcement of its importance
-would be an injury to the human
-understanding, or at least to the human
-heart. It would look too like imagining
-that it could be wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>What</span> I have then to say preliminarily,
-must chiefly arise from my own due sense
-of my inequality to the subject of which I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cii'>cii</span>presume to treat. Though, if example
-could be any countenance, I might plead
-that of so many authors who have, with
-the utmost confidence and the utmost absurdity,
-written upon the art of midwifery,
-without understanding any thing at all of
-it. The truth is, that my very natural and
-strong attachment to the profession, which
-I have long exercised and actually do exercise,
-created in me an unsuppressible indignation
-at the errors and pernicious innovations
-introduced into it, and every
-day gaining ground, under the protection
-of Fashion, sillily fostering a preference of
-men to women in the practice of midwifery:
-a preference first admitted by credulous
-Fear, and admitted without examination,
-upon the so suspicious recommendation
-of those interested to make that Fear
-subservient to their selfish ends.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Of</span> these disorders, pernicious as they are
-to society, I have however been long with-held
-from taking public notice by far from
-groundless scruples. Being myself a practitioner,
-I had just reason to fear, that my
-representation would have the less influence,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_ciii'>ciii</span>from a supposition of personal interest
-in them. They might naturally
-enough be construed as the result of a
-jealousy of profession. I had yet a reason
-more particular to myself against interfering
-in this matter. My husband is unhappily
-for me a surgeon-apothecary: I
-say unhappily, because though of a business
-I maintain to be so foreign and distinct
-from the function which I profess, there
-might not be wanting, among such as
-would imagine their private interest attempted
-at least to be hurt by me, a suspicion
-that I was indirectly aiming at recommending
-his advantage in prejudice
-to theirs. Yet so far, so very far is this
-from being the case, that the main scope
-of my essay is to prove, that his business has
-no relation at all to mine, and that especially
-as to the particular point I would
-wish to establish, he is absolutely as indifferent
-to me as any other person, either of
-his own profession, or of any other whatsoever.
-This prejudice then of self-interest
-being fairly annulled by the appeal to the
-manifest drift of the work itself, which gives
-him as formally the exclusion as to any other
-of his sex, I had still a repugnance to
-the entering into a discussion of abuses, that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_civ'>civ</span>could not be laid open without exposing
-truths, that might have an air of invidiousness
-or detraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Some</span> friends of mine, to whom I communicated
-my doubts, agreed with me, that
-there are faults which cannot innocently
-be revealed, where their manifestation may
-be attended with some greater evil, but
-that it could not be right to rank among
-the faults to be spared any error in an art,
-where one single false idea, suffered to subsist,
-may prove the occasion of wounds or
-torturous death to thousands. On the contrary,
-the due knowledge of faults of this
-nature is, in fact, a public benefit. They
-serve, as one may say, for beacons to the
-art, they hold a light to it, and show it
-the rocks it should avoid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is certain then, that I have not the
-least intention to attack any particular persons,
-any farther than in what I conceive
-to be false theory, or mispractice in the
-art I profess; I hope then it will not be
-imputed to me as unfair or over-presumptuous,
-if I especially do not over-respect
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cv'>cv</span>writers or practitioners, who themselves
-have not respected either common-sense or
-common-humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Have</span> not some of our modern authors,
-especially the male-practitioners, who in
-these later times have treated of midwifery,
-added new and worse errors of their own
-to those bequeathed to us by the antients,
-whom they have insulted, as they themselves
-will probably one day be, but with
-more reason, by their successors, if the
-world should continue blind enough for
-them to have any in this profession? One
-would even imagine, that in the criticisms
-in which they indulge themselves of one
-another’s systems and instruments, they are
-inflicting part of the punishment due for
-their common offences against Nature, in
-the abuse of an Art, originally intended to
-assist her. At the same time, even from
-their own showing, nothing can be plainer,
-than that their boasted inventions have,
-under the specious pretence of improvement,
-fallen from bad to worse, as is ever
-the case of superstructures on the crazy
-foundation of false principles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_cvi'>cvi</span><span class='sc'>Read</span> the men-writers on this art, and
-you will find interspersed in most of them,
-amidst the most flagrant proofs of their
-own ignorance of it, reproaches to that
-of the midwives, too just, perhaps as to
-some, but shamelessly absurd in them, who
-to that ignorance substitute their own subtilities
-of theory, which, when reduced to
-practice, are infinitely worse than any deficiency
-in some particular female-practitioners;
-being mostly, in truth, fit for nothing
-so much, as to prepare dreadful work
-for their instruments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> if they so falsely exalt their own
-learning above the ignorance of women;
-they have their reason for it. They seek
-to drive out of the practice those who stand
-in the way of their private interest: that
-private interest, to which the public one
-is for ever sacrificed under the specious and
-stale pretext of its advancement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Can</span> it then be wrong in any of our sex
-and profession to endeavour, at least, to
-justify ourselves, and to undeceive the public,
-of the ill and false impressions which
-have been given it of our talents and ability?
-Pernicious prejudices have sometimes their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cvii'>cvii</span>run, like epidemical distempers: and surely
-it is more for the service of mankind,
-that their duration should be shortened,
-than suffered to proceed without at least an
-endeavour to oppose them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I should</span>, however, be much more
-pleased with an exemption from the disagreeable
-task of composing the apology of
-our sex in this matter, it being contrary to
-that modesty which becomes us so well;
-but as the men-midwives, in their system
-of exalting their powers of Art over ours
-of Nature, keep no measures with truth,
-I see myself forced to do justice to our function,
-and to manifest the unreasonableness
-of that contempt, with which they treat
-and depreciate our services; and with which
-they have, in favor of their own interest,
-perhaps too successfully imbued the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> this attempt of mine there is no blamable
-ostentation. If I set in their just
-light of utility the qualifications of the women
-of our profession, as to industry, dexterity,
-ease of execution, patience, constitutional
-tenderness, and especially natural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cviii'>cviii</span>aptitude, it is no more than practical
-truth warrants, and the throwing a due
-light into the matter of comparison requires.
-Yet I do not wish, that we should
-pass for any thing beyond what we really
-are. All the partiality, all the tender feelings
-it is so natural for me to have for the
-sufferings of my own sex, would be sufficient
-to with-hold me from desiring to
-establish any opinion or practice tending
-to endanger the personal safety of women
-in child-birth, or of any thing so dear to
-them as their children. I am myself a
-mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I own</span> however there are but too few
-midwives who are sufficiently mistresses in
-their profession. In this they are some
-of them but too near upon a level with the
-men-midwives, with this difference however
-in favor of the female practitioners,
-that they are incapable of doing so much
-actual mischief as the male-ones, oftenest
-more ignorant than themselves, but who
-with less tenderness and more rashness go
-to work with their instruments, where the
-skill and management of a good midwife
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cix'>cix</span>would have probably prevented the difficulty,
-or even after its coming into existence,
-prove more efficacious towards saving
-both mother and child; always with
-due preference however to the mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I will</span> also, with the same candor, own
-that there are some not intirely incapable
-men-midwives: but they are so very rare,
-and must forever necessarily be so, and even,
-at the best, so inferior to good midwives,
-that a worse office could scarce be done to
-mankind, that on so false a supposition as
-that of a sufficient ability in them, to explode
-the practice of the art by women, because
-some of them might be exceptionable.
-And how should it be otherwise, than
-that some should be more deficient than
-others? is there that art in the world, to
-which the same objection does not lie of
-different degrees of merit in the professors
-of it, as well as that of the imperfection of
-all human arts in general?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean time, the consequences of
-this unfair conclusion against the women
-professors of midwifery, in affording the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cx'>cx</span>men a plea for supplanting them, do not
-hitherto appear very advantageous ones to
-the public. It remains, I fancy, to be
-proved, that population is any gainer by the
-diminution of that evil, to which the instruments
-or other methods of practice,
-employed by the men, are pretended to be
-such a remedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>To</span> examine this point is the object of
-the following sheets; the work being divided
-into two parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> first treats of our title to the practice
-of this art, of the pleas used by the
-men for arrogating to themselves the preference,
-of the knowledge of Anatomy, of
-the necessity of the instruments, of the incapacity
-of women, of the Fashion: and
-whether the superior safety is on the side
-of employing men-practitioners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> answers inserted to each objection,
-all together, constitute an essay to remove
-the prejudices, which have been so industriously,
-and too successfully disseminated
-against the female practice of this art; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cxi'>cxi</span>to show that the substitution of the men,
-more especially of their iron and steel-implements,
-is attended with greater danger,
-greater mischiefs, than those which that
-substitution is pretended to prevent or redress.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> second has more particularly for
-object to demonstrate the insufficiency, danger,
-and actual destructiveness of instruments
-in the art of midwifery. To this
-purpose I therefore pass all that is needful
-of them in review, in the several cases, in
-which the antients and moderns would
-persuade us they are necessary. I set myself
-to establish my exceptions to them by
-incontestable examples; but above all, by
-the authority of reason and experience. I
-take notice of some of the manifest contradictions
-to be met with in almost all the
-authors, to one another. I have ventured
-to subjoin some observations, taken from
-my own observations and practice, in lieu
-of what I condemn, and to point out a method
-of operation, much more plain, more
-tender, more secure, than the one by instruments.
-I support this by those general
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cxii'>cxii</span>principles, which have happily guided
-me on all occasions, and from which it is
-even easy to refute the pretentions and
-system of the instrumentarians, in which
-I shall note here only three essential defects.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> <em>first</em>, in that the origin of the men,
-insinuating themselves into the practice of
-midwifery, has absolutely no foundation
-in the plea of superior safety, and, consequently,
-can have no right to exact so
-great a sacrifice as that of decency and
-modesty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> <em>second</em>, for that they were reduced
-first to forge the phantom of incapacity in
-the women, and next the necessity of murderous
-instruments, as some color for
-their mercenary intrusion. And, in truth,
-the faculty of using those instruments is
-the sole tenure of their usurped office.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> <em>third</em>, their disagreement among
-themselves about, which are the instruments
-to be preferred; a doubt which, the
-practices tried upon the lives and limbs of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cxiii'>cxiii</span>so many women and children trusted to
-them, have not yet, it seems, resolved,
-even to this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> reserving to treat upon these and
-other points more at large, in their place,
-I am to bespeak the reader’s candid construction,
-of my having, especially in the
-beginning of the first part, transiently availed
-myself of the authorities of authors,
-sacred and prophane. It is less that I think
-truth stands in need of such corroboratives,
-than to show that it is not destitute of them.
-It is not by authority, but by reason, that
-truth, in matters of temporal concernment,
-claims acceptance from reasonable beings.
-At the worst, those to whom they may
-present a tiresome prospect, have but to
-skip them over; or if they peruse them,
-they are desired not to forget that no
-stress is laid on them, beyond their being
-answers to arguments of the like nature,
-urged on the opposite side of the
-question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_cxiv'>cxiv</span><span class='sc'>Though</span> instruments are not within my
-sphere of practice; though consequently I
-have the honor of not being personally very
-well acquainted with them, nor have I at
-hand all the original authors who have published
-their own inventions of them, I have
-been sufficiently enabled to do justice to
-their pretentions, by a recourse to those who
-professedly and fully treat of them. My
-guide is commonly Monsieur Levret, who
-is one of the exactest describers of them.
-Not most certainly that I otherwise prefer
-him, for of the utility of his forceps I think
-just as ill as I do of all the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I should</span> have been glad to avoid at
-once the barren driness of abridgments furnishing
-no distinct ideas, and the tedious
-exactness of particularized descriptions and
-histories; as for example, of the forceps,
-as well as of errors committed by practitioners;
-but this medium I could rather
-wish than hope to keep. I have then been
-so afraid of obscuring matters by brevity,
-that of the two I have perhaps run too far
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cxv'>cxv</span>into the contrary and less agreeable excess:
-which, however, in consideration of its
-favoring explicitness, is not perhaps the most
-inexcusable one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I wish</span> I could make an apology as receivable
-by a reader, who will doubtless be
-justly disgusted at the repetitions I have
-too little scrupled the making of the same
-thoughts, and even sometimes of the same
-expressions. Yet I dare bespeak, from his
-candor, some indulgence to the confession
-of a fault, it will easily be perceived I could
-not well escape, without the worse inconvenience
-to himself, of his being perplexed
-with references back to past pages, besides,
-that sometimes a chain of argument would
-be broke, consequently weakened, by the
-suppression of some link of it, on account
-of the matter having been elsewhere already
-employed in other connexions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> the whole, I throw myself, with
-the more confidence, on the favorable acceptance
-of the public, from my consciousness
-of its not being but with the best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_cxvi'>cxvi</span>intentions for the good of society that I hazard
-this production: and have therefore
-reason to hope, that it will occasionally be
-remembered, that my object is purely that
-of representing a truth, and not of recommending
-a composition.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class='c007'>Page 20. For blood into water <em>read</em> water into blood.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i__003.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_cci'>cci</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS<br /> <span class='small'>OF</span><br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Part</span> the <span class='sc'>First</span>.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c003'>
- <li class='c008'><em><span class='xlarge'>I</span>n gratitude of the men-midwives at Paris to their women-teachers of the art</em>, page 6.</li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Regulations of the profession of midwifery not unworthy the national care</em>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Objection I.</span> <em>Prior possession of the art in the men</em>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Answer</span>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. II.</span> <em>Preference of the men founded on the nobility of the art</em>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 15.</li>
- <li><em>Egyptians not so simple as Dr. Smellie pretends</em>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. III.</span> <em>Writings of the men-authors prove the antiquity of men-midwives</em>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 24.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. IV.</span> <em>Manual operation a science fittest for the men</em>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 29.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. V.</span> <em>Anatomy necessary</em>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 32.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. VI.</span> <em>Instruments, their use peculiar to the men</em>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 36.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_ccii'>ccii</span><span class='sc'>Obj. VII.</span> <em>Ignorance only exclaims against instruments</em>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 40.</li>
- <li><em>Dr. Smellie’s false account of the</em> Hôtel-Dieu <em>at</em> Paris, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>.</li>
- <li><em>No men-practitioners suffered in it</em>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Dr. Smellie’s Doll-machine</em>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Compendious forming of pupils</em>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. VIII.</span> <em>It is a presumption in women to enter into competition with men in this art</em>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 53.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. IX.</span> <em>Opinion prevalent of superior safety under the hands of the men</em>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 59.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. X.</span> <em>Ignorance of the women</em>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 73.</li>
- <li><em>How the young men students get their</em> learning, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Women cruelly used to procure it them</em>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Story of a woman’s child killed with a crotchet</em>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Examination of a passage of Plato quoted by Dr. Smellie</em>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Pecquet, a great anatomist, the victim of his own erroneous speculation</em>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. XI.</span> <em>Partial artists the best</em>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 107.</li>
- <li><em>Story of a Dentist</em>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>.</li>
- <li><em>A man-midwife’s toilette</em>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Story of a woman perishing suddenly after delivery</em>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Cruel method of training up pupils</em>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Story of a child horribly murdered</em>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Lessons of midwifery given by Madam Clavier</em>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</li>
- <li><span class='sc'>Pudendist</span>, <em>a name in the stile of oculist or dentist, more proper for a male-practitioner of midwifery than</em> <span class='sc'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Accoucheur</span></span>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_cciii'>cciii</span><span class='sc'>Obj. XII.</span> <em>Men-midwives have terminated happily many labors</em>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 151.</li>
- <li><em>Triumph of a man-midwife</em>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Why young practitioners should conceal their instruments</em>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Appeal to numbers for the greater safety with women, verified by the practice of the midwives at the</em> Hôtel-Dieu <em>at</em> Paris, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. XIII.</span> <em>Prevalence of the Fashion</em>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 184.</li>
- <li><em>Parallel of error in the preference of men-midwives to that of bringing up of charity-children by hand</em>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Story of a woman ashamed of having been lain by a midwife</em>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Inoculation justified</em>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>.</li>
- <li><em>The greatest lady in Britain no example in favor of</em> Accoucheurs, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Midwives formed by the men-practitioners liable to caution against them, and why</em>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Alarming danger of a scarcity of good midwives, to what owing</em>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Obj. XIV.</span> <span class='sc'>False-modesty</span>, <em>that of the women, who prefer the practitioners of their own sex</em>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='sc'>Ans.</span> 219.</li>
- <li><em>Story of Agnodice and the Athenian women canvassed</em>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Dr. Smellie’s</em> <span class='sc'>Commandment</span> <em>to his pupils against immodesty</em>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- <li><em>No stress laid on the Rabbit-woman of Godalmin</em>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_cciv'>cciv</span><em>Attitude indecent, and to no end nor purpose</em>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</li>
- <li><em>A stone of more virtue than a man-midwife</em>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Conclusion</span> <em>of the</em> <span class='fss'>FIRST PART</span>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='sc'>Part</span> the <span class='sc'>Second</span>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Containing various observations on the labors and delivery of lying-in women, including a description of the pretended necessity for the employing instruments</em>, <span class='sc'>Introduction</span>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Of</em> <span class='sc'>Deliveries</span>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>Story of the sudden death of a woman after delivery</em>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Accounted for</em>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Method of prevention</em>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Histeric medicines invented by the</em> learned <em>men-practitioners, and examples of their insignificance</em>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Of</em> <span class='fss'>DIFFICULT</span> <em>and</em> <span class='fss'>SEVERE</span> <em>cases</em>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>Divisions of them</em>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Profound ignorance of certain men-midwives</em>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Their avarice and cruelty set forth by a man-midwife</em>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Midwives incapable of such horrors</em>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>.</li>
- <li><em>The Crotchet used, and its horrid effects, exemplified in several stories</em>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_ccv'>ccv</span><em>A</em> <span class='fss'>VOLUME</span> <em>might be made of them, says a man-midwife</em>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Some instances of male-practice</em>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Of</em> <span class='sc'>Touching</span>, 309.</li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Of the</em> <span class='fss'>OBLIQUITY</span> <em>of the</em> <span class='fss'>UTERUS</span>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Of the</em> <span class='fss'>EXTRACTION</span> <em>of the</em> <span class='fss'>HEAD</span> <em>of the</em> <span class='fss'>FŒTUS</span> <em>severed from the</em> <span class='fss'>BODY</span>, <em>and which shall have remained in the</em> <span class='fss'>UTERUS</span>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>Speculum matricis <em>given up by Dr. Smellie: so would other instruments be, if justice was done them</em>, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>.</li>
- <li><em>A curious method of</em> <span class='fss'>CELSUS</span>, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Inventions of</em> <span class='fss'>CAWLS</span> <em>and</em> <span class='fss'>FILLETS</span>, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Of that labor in which the</em> <span class='fss'>HEAD</span> <em>of the</em> <span class='fss'>FŒTUS</span> <em>remains hitched in the passage, the</em> <span class='fss'>BODY</span> <em>being intirely come out of the</em> <span class='fss'>UTERUS</span>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>Quackery of Daventer</em>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Two examples of children, the one killed, the other supposed dead, and losing its head by errors in the manual function</em>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>When</span> <em>the</em> <span class='fss'>HEAD</span> <em>of the fœtus presents itself foremost but sticks in the passage</em>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>Objections to instruments more at large included under the title to this section</em>, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Mauriceau’s</em> tire-tête, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Palfin’s</em> <span class='fss'>FORCEPS</span>,</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_ccvi'>ccvi</span><em>with the improvements of various practitioners</em>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>A waggon load of instruments insufficient, and why</em>, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a>.</li>
- <li><em>A curious nostrum of an instrument</em>, <a href='#Page_406'>406</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Mr. Freke’s ingenious invention of a</em> <span class='fss'>FORCEPS</span> <em>and</em> <span class='fss'>CROTCHET</span> <em>all in one</em>, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a>.</li>
- <li><em>Dr. Smellie’s improvement of the forceps</em>, <a href='#Page_417'>417</a>.</li>
- <li><em>The curve forceps of Levret</em>, <a href='#Page_419'>419</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Case of a</em> <span class='fss'>PENDULOUS BELLY</span>, <a href='#Page_445'>445</a>.</li>
- <li class='c008'><em>Triumph of the moderns over Hippocrates and the antients in the invention of the forceps</em>, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><em>Inhumanity and folly of the general conspiracy against children</em>, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c008'><span class='sc'>Conclusion</span> <em>of the</em> <span class='sc'>Second Part</span>, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
-<img src='images/i_001.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><span class='small'>A</span><br /> <span class='large'>TREATISE</span><br /> <span class='small'>ON</span><br /> MIDWIFERY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c006'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_001.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-<span class='sc'>Whoever</span> considers the
-absolute necessity of the art
-of midwifery, will readily
-allow it a place among the
-capital ones in the primeval
-times of the world. All the other arts
-are no further necessary to man, than to
-procure him the conveniencies or luxuries
-of life; that of midwifery is of indispensable
-necessity to his living at all, imploring as
-he does its aid for his introduction into
-life. Without this art the earth itself
-must soon become dispeopled and a desert,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>whereas by means of it men have been
-multiplied, with inconceivable rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> conformity to its claim of importance,
-this art appeared in all its lustre
-among the Jews, the Egyptians, the Athenians
-and Romans, and indeed in all nations
-during thousands of ages. Nor was
-the confinement of the exercise of it to
-women deemed any derogation to it. It
-even gave honor to its professors of that
-sex. Socrates, so ennobled by his character
-of being the greatest philosopher in all
-antiquity, did not disdain to boast himself
-the son of a very able midwife Phanarete,
-as may be seen in Plato’s book on science,
-in Diogenes Laertius and others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Among</span> the Egyptians and the Greeks
-it cannot be hard to conceive what emulation,
-what ardor it must have excited
-among the women of that profession, the
-custom of distributing prizes to those of
-the greatest merit in it, in the face of the
-people. No one is ignorant of the power
-of honors and distinction to bring arts to
-perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span><span class='sc'>But</span> from the instant the midwives
-sunk into dis-esteem, and wherever that
-has happened, it will be found by woeful
-experience, that not only the art itself has
-suffered in the very midst of the most
-falsely boasted improvements, but that
-human-kind itself has much and very
-justly to complain of the change.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> native inconstancy and levity of
-the French nation opened the first inlet,
-in these modern-times, to men-practitioners.
-In antient history we meet with but
-one feeble attempt of that sort, which
-however soon gave way to the united powers
-of modesty and common sense. In
-France, and may it not be the same case
-soon here! the women of a competent
-class of life and education, begin to decline
-forming themselves for this profession,
-as beneath them, considering the
-slight put upon those women who exercise
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Nor</span> has this injustice remained unpunished.
-Many women have found, by severe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>experience, their having been enemies
-to themselves, in abandoning or
-slighting those of their own sex, from
-whom, at their greatest need, they used
-to receive the most effectual service, and
-who alone are capable of discharging their
-duty by them, with that sympathy for
-their pains, that tender affectionate concern,
-which may so naturally be expected
-from those who have been, are, or may be
-subject to the same infirmities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Many</span> out of a distrust inspired them
-of midwives, have thrown themselves into
-the hands of men, who have promised
-them infinitely more than they were able
-to perform; and who behind all the tender
-alluring words, of superior skill and
-safety in the employing of them, conceal
-the ideas with which they are full, of cutting,
-hacking, plucking out piece-meal, or
-tearing limb from limb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> murder of so many children, the
-fruits of their bowels, might, one would
-imagine, have induced mothers to consider
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>this point a little more carefully. Yet,
-through the prevalence of groundless fears,
-and of imaginary dangers they have run
-into real ones, and have sometimes found
-their death precisely where they sought
-their life; and not seldom where nature
-has even favored them enough in their labor,
-for them not to need any extraordinary
-ministry of art, the men have put
-them to cruel and dangerous tortures.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Notwithstanding</span> some examples,
-and many violent presumptions of such
-mal-treatment, too many women have been
-so miserably misled by fashion, as to prefer
-the betraying the cause of their own sex,
-and the subjecting themselves to those who
-deceive them with false hopes, to the entrusting
-their preservation to those of
-their own sex, in the hands of which the
-care of it has been for so many ages, with
-so much reason, and such little cause of
-complaint.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Yet</span> we do not see that any of these
-men-midwifes have been capable of forming
-a good midwife. On the contrary, we see,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>that in order to remedy the abuses, or rather
-to prevent the fatal accidents which
-every day occur in the practice of a profession
-so necessary to the preservation of
-the human species, they were in France
-obliged to have recourse to one of the ablest
-midwives in that kingdom, who was
-placed at the head of the practice in the
-Hôtel Dieu at Paris, to preside over the
-lyings-in there, and to found and cultivate
-that inexhaustible seminary of excellent
-female practitioners, who have actually
-restored the art to its antient degree
-of esteem, with all fair judges. These
-worthy proficients have been so public-spirited,
-as to communicate their talents
-and knowledge to a number of surgeons,
-who never had any reason to be ashamed
-of the lessons they assiduously took from
-the midwives, unless indeed for themselves
-not being able to come up to them in the
-practice, so true it is, that the business is
-not at all natural to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Yet</span> have even many of those very
-men-practitioners, influenced by that self-interest
-which has such a power in all human
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>affairs, revolted against their mistresses
-in the art, and their benefactresses. They
-have, at various times, commenced lawsuits,
-about the Hôtel Dieu at Paris, in
-order to get the lyings-in there committed
-to them: but the administrators, the persons
-of a just sense of things, together
-with the parliament of that town, ever
-attentive to decency, without excluding
-the due regard to the preservation of the
-subjects, have constantly opposed and frustrated
-the pretentions of these innovators.
-These again thus disappointed, were forced
-to content themselves with practising upon
-some women of quality, under the favor
-and protection of some of the old ladies
-of the court of Lewis XIV. who had
-their reasons for propagating this fashion.
-And now these innovators, not without a
-due proportion of ingratitude to the injustice,
-began to run down the midwives,
-and exalt themselves. The novelty prevailed,
-and the contagion of example soon
-communicated itself to the provinces, and
-thence into neighbouring nations. A few
-men perhaps of real abilities, but governed
-by the most sordid interest, associated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>to their party a number of the most ignorant
-and unexpert practitioners, but who
-served to fill up the cry, and made a common
-cause against the midwives, whose pretended
-insufficiency was now to be pleaded
-in favor of themselves being admitted
-to supplant them. Nor was the concurrent
-attestation in their favor, of so many
-ages, during which the practice was entirely
-in female hands, to weigh any thing
-against the boasts of their own superior
-ability. They picked up and sounded loud
-a few real instances perhaps, and undoubtedly
-many false ones of faults of practice
-in women: though were the numbers of
-human creatures, who have barbarously
-perished by the unskilfulness of the practitioners,
-to be fairly liquidated, it would
-appear that fewer have been the victims of
-female ignorance, than of the presumption
-and indexterity of the men. The
-women are undoubtedly liable to error:
-there have even been monsters of iniquity
-among them, but certainly in no number
-to form a general prejudice against them:
-but as to the men they are all of them,
-as will be more fully demonstrated hereafter,
-naturally incapable of the exercise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>of this profession. A history of their murders
-might even be collected out of the
-books written by them to establish their
-superiority over the women. From Deventer,
-Mauriceau, and the most celebrated
-of their writers, amongst many
-excellent observations in the way of the
-chirurgical art, many of the grossest absurdities
-have escaped, where they transgress
-its bounds and go into that of midwifery.
-Some of those absurdities too
-are so glaring, that they have not even
-been overlooked by themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Many</span> persons in Holland, having set
-up for men-midwives, without being duly
-qualified, the government thought proper
-to interfere, and consequently there
-was an ordinance issued on the 31st of
-January, 1747, by which it was enjoined,
-that no one should practise in the quality
-of man-midwife, or exercise this art, unless
-he were especially authorized for this
-function, by a certificate of his having
-undergone a sufficient examination before
-capable and intelligent judges for that purpose
-appointed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span><span class='sc'>It</span> will appear, in the sequel of this
-work, that it were to be wished, for the
-sake of the good that would redound from
-it, to the preservation of the human species,
-both in parent and child, that those who
-are entrusted with the public welfare,
-would establish the same regulation in the
-British dominions, to expel and exclude
-from the art all the ignorant pretenders of
-either sex, who are, in fact worse than the
-Herods of society. The cruelty of Herod
-extended to no more than to the infants;
-not to the mothers; that of such pretenders
-to both.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> their conduct was to be examined
-with attention, how many fatal mistakes
-would be discovered in the practitioners of
-both sexes? But I dare aver it more in the
-men than in the women-practitioners.
-With what horror would not there in
-these be remarked, tearings, rendings,
-and tortures of no use to which they put
-both the mother and the child? One, upon
-some most learnedly erroneous hypothesis,
-pulls and hauls the arm of an innocent infant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>yet living, so that he plucks it off; or
-repels it with such violence, that he breaks
-it: another unmercifully opens the infant’s
-head, and takes the brain out: some bring
-the whole away piece-meal: operations
-often to be defended only by hard words
-and harder hearts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Nor</span> need this procedure astonish.
-Every thing is at the disposal, I had almost
-said, at the mercy of these executioners:<a id='t11'></a>
-but have they any? all their handy-work
-is transacted in private, and remains
-buried in the tomb of oblivion. The parents
-suspecting nothing, think every thing
-has been done, according to art, that is
-to say, very right. The operator thinks
-he has done nothing but his duty, and is
-highly satisfied with himself, after he has
-ordered some draughts for his patient.
-The magistrate knows no injury done to
-the subject, or is insensible to the consequences
-from the same spirit of confidence.
-In the mean time, a husband
-loses a fine child, or a beloved wife, perhaps
-both; children, a tender mother,
-and if they are of the same sex, have the
-same fate to dread for themselves. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>man-midwife is clear, for only saying,
-that he has done all for the best. But
-this is probably true too, as to the intention;
-but as to the fact, it shall be shewn
-that there is often great reason to doubt it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Be</span> this observed, without offence to
-the few able men-midwives who are masters
-enough of the business, not to deserve
-the reproaches due to by much the greater
-number of rash and ignorant pretenders
-to it: whose practice, well examined,
-would bring to light such terrible truths,
-as would alarm even the legislature to
-provide a remedy against the danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> contradiction to this, it may be
-urged, that the practice by women is susceptible
-upon that account, of superior
-objections. That remains now to be examined.
-The chief object of this work
-being a fair discussion, which of the two
-sexes is the most appropriated by nature
-and art, to the exercise of this function.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>To</span> this end, I shall present, in a candid
-view, the two opinions which, on this
-point, divide the English yet more than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>they do the French. Most of the surgeons,
-all the men-midwives, no doubt, many
-apothecaries, a number of women and
-nurses maintain, that midwifery is the business
-of the men: whilst on the other
-hand, the best part of the able physicians,
-with many other persons of both sexes,
-defend the contrary side of the question,
-and insist on this art being, for many invincible
-reasons, solely the province of female
-practitioners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Not</span> to lose sight of the fundamental
-arguments and proofs brought to support
-respectively these two opinions, I shall
-place them in parallel with one another,
-in form of objections and answers. The
-objections made to women-practitioners
-precede the answers. If the men-midwives,
-or their partizans, shall think I
-have omitted any thing that makes for
-them, or against us, or have any stronger
-or more essential arguments to oppose, I
-shall endeavour to satisfy them.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
- <h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the First.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Regard</span> ought to be paid to prior possession.
-The art of midwifery being a
-branch of the art of physic, must have been
-originally in the hands of man, the inventor
-of all arts.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>The</span> just deference so universally paid
-to holy writ will, I presume, allow no
-prejudice to be found against my availing
-myself of those inferences and decisions to
-be drawn from it, which are so agreeable
-to the eternal laws of common sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> the arts and sciences, acquired by
-experience, and by acts often repeated,
-had, as they certainly were not invented by
-men only, that could not at least be said of
-those acts of the human life, which are
-indispensably necessary to its preservation.
-Such faculties may with more propriety
-be termed instinctive, than invented ones.
-The faculties of eating, of drinking, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>lying down to rest, common to both sexes,
-are not perhaps more natural, more
-matter of instinct, than the faculty of one
-woman assisting another in her labor-pains
-being appropriated to the female sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>There</span> is no occasion to give one’s
-imagination the torture to account for
-Eve’s delivering herself of her first children.
-There is no reason to establish it as
-an absolute necessity that Adam should
-have assisted Eve in her first lyings-in;
-whose labor-pains might not only be less
-severe, than they afterwards became in accomplishment
-for the curse pronounced on
-the human race for the sin of those first
-parents, but also more consonant to piety,
-to believe that God, being the best of fathers,
-infused into Eve knowledge sufficient
-of the manner of delivering herself;
-a manner more natural and more conformable
-to the ideas of that decency imprinted
-with his own hand in the human heart,
-in no point more strongly, nor more universally,
-than in this matter of the women
-lying-in, when both men and women
-have an equal repugnance to the interposition
-of any assistance, but that of the female
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>sex, to which the faculty of ministering
-in that case seems innate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> admitting even that Adam, for the
-want of females for that function, before
-the daughters of Eve were grown up to a
-capacity of it, actually did assist Eve, in
-the seasons of her delivery; that would
-establish no inference of right for the future:
-since we know that their children
-and descendents in time following did not
-make use of men to lay the women.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> Genesis, chap. xxxv. ver. 17. there
-is mention made of Rachel’s midwife. In
-the same book, chap. xxxviii. ver. 27, and
-28. we see they were intelligent midwives.
-Thamar being with child. “It came to
-pass in the time of her travail, that behold,
-twins were in her womb.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ver.</span> 28. “And it came to pass that
-when she travailed, that the one put
-out his hand, and the <em>Midwife</em> took
-and bound upon his hand a scarlet
-thread, saying, this came out first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span><span class='sc'>And</span> here I intreat the reader not to
-impute to me any idea so absurd as
-that of meaning to defend an erroneous
-practice solely from the antiquity of it; I
-intend nothing further by this citation,
-than to prove the antiquity itself, which
-if not decisive in favor of the practice by
-women, can at least be no prejudice against
-it.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Second.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>The</span> art of midwifery being equally
-noble for its subject as for its end, since it
-is the only one which enjoys the prerogative
-of saving, at one operation of the hand,
-more than one individual at once; ought
-the less noble sex to dispute pre-eminence
-in it with the men? On tracing things
-back to the remotest distance of times, it
-must be allowed, that if the women,
-through a mistaken modesty, in those times
-of ignorance and simplicity, commonly
-made use of midwives, it may be presumed
-there were also men-practitioners employed
-in difficult cases.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>
- <h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Readily</span> granting that the art is a noble
-one; noble in its subject and ends:
-all that I am surprised at is, that the men
-did not find it out sooner. Probably the
-nobility of this art is only begun to be
-sounded so high by the men, till they discovered
-the possibility of making it a lucrative
-one to themselves. Then indeed
-the ignorance and incapacity of the poor
-women for it, came all of a sudden to be
-doubted and despised. The art with all its
-nobility was for so many ages thought beneath
-the exercise of the noble sex: it was
-held unmanly, indecent, and they might
-safely have added impracticable for them.
-But had even any of the medical profession
-not thought so, there is great reason
-to think the rest of mankind would have
-viewed their interested endeavors to usurp
-this province from the female sex, in the
-light they deserve. It was only for the
-eternal fondness which prevails among the
-French for novelties, that paved the way
-for the admission of so dangerous and indecent
-an one, as that of men making a
-common practice of midwifery, and taking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>it out of the women’s<a id='t19'></a> hands, to which
-it was so much more natural.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> here far from wishing to enter
-into a contest with the men, on the superiority
-and excellence they assume over the
-women; though not quite so indisputable
-perhaps as is commonly imagined. All
-that I contend for, to the purpose of the
-present question, is, that there are certain
-employments and vocations, which are generally
-and naturally more proper for one
-sex than for another. A woman would
-seem to aim at something above her sex, that
-would set up an academy for teaching to
-fence, or ride the great horse: but a man
-sinks beneath his sex, who interferes in
-the female province. It is not with quite
-so good a grace as a woman that he would
-spin, make beds, pickle and preserve, or
-officiate as a midwife. Be this observed
-without impeachment of the superiority
-of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Open</span> books, sacred and profane, you
-will find that the Egyptians were not so
-simple as Dr. Smellie would give us to understand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>they were; when in the beginning
-of his introduction, pages 1st and
-2d, he grants us, out of his special grace
-and favor, “that in the first ages the
-practice of the art of midwifery was
-<em>altogether</em> in the hands of women, and
-that men were never employed but
-in the utmost extremity: indeed (says
-he) it is natural to suppose, that while
-the <em>simplicity</em> of the early ages remained,
-women would have recourse to none
-but persons of their own sex, in diseases
-<em>peculiar</em> to it: accordingly we find
-that in Egypt midwifery was practised
-by women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>According</span> to scripture, however, the
-sorcerers of Egypt were not so very simple
-neither, since they had art enough to
-imitate some of the miracles of Moses,
-in transforming their rods into serpents,
-blood into water, and covering the land
-with frogs<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a>. All this did not favor of
-simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span><span class='sc'>The</span> Egyptians<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a> have ever passed for
-the most intelligent and enlightened of all
-the other nations of the earth, who respected
-them as oracles of wisdom and
-sound philosophy. They are the first people
-who established systematically rules of
-good government. This profound and serious
-nation saw early the true end of human policy;
-and virtue being the principal
-foundation and cement of all society,
-they industriously cultivated it. At the
-head of all virtues they placed that of
-gratitude. The honor attributed to them
-of being the most grateful of men, shews
-that they were also the most social.
-They had an inventive genius: their Mercuries,
-who filled Egypt with surprizing
-discoveries, scarce left any thing wanting
-to the perfection of their understanding,
-or to the convenience and happiness of
-life. The first people among whom libraries
-were known to exist, is that of
-Egypt. In short, so far from being simple
-or ignorant, they excelled in all the
-sciences. There were indeed among them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>no <em>men-midwives</em>; but to make up for
-this deficiency, they had, it seems, excellent
-midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Besides</span> it is even ridiculous to confine
-the practice of midwifery by females
-only to early ages. Who does not know,
-that it was so in all ages, and in all countries,
-till just the present one, in which
-the innovation has crept into something of
-a fashion into two or three countries. The
-exceptions before, or any where else, to
-the general rule, are so few, that they are
-scarce worth mentioning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> to return to the so <em>simple</em> Egyptians.
-We read in Exodus, chap. i. v. 15.
-and following, that Pharaoh said to the
-midwives, “When ye do the office of
-midwife to the Hebrew women, and
-set them upon the stools, if it be a son
-then ye shall kill him, but if it be a
-daughter she shall live.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“17. But the midwives feared God,
-and did not as the king of Egypt commanded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>them, but saved the men-children
-alive.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> king reproached them, as may be
-seen in the same place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Why</span> did not Pharaoh give the same order
-to the men-midwives, if there had
-been any such employed in difficult or extraordinary
-pains? (as Mr. Smellie supposes.)
-Or rather, if the king had not
-thought it too unnatural for women to be
-delivered by men, he certainly would not
-have failed to have commanded it, especially
-on perceiving that the midwives had
-deceived him. This would have been a
-fine occasion to have forbidden them their
-function, and for the men-practitioners to
-have come into vogue. The men would
-certainly have been of the two not the
-improperest to have executed the intentions
-of the tyrant: as tender-heartedness
-is surely not more the character of their
-sex, than of the women. Besides, their
-instruments would have served admirably
-to have thinned the species, without distinction
-of the sexes. They might also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>have concealed the barbarity of the murders
-by such instruments, under the pretext
-of their necessity from hard-labors, as
-the midwives excused their disobedience
-under that of easy ones, which had rendered
-their aid superfluous.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Third.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>So</span> many authors as have wrote on the
-art of midwifery, from the age in which
-Hippocrates florished, whom we look on
-as the first and father of the men-midwives,
-with the disciples whom he formed, and
-their successors, do not they satisfactorily
-prove the antiquity of man-midwives?</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>As</span> for satisfactorily, no. It can only
-be concluded from this objection, that the
-ignorance of the pretended men-midwives
-is very antient: and yet posterior by much
-to the function of the midwives, since that
-is coeval with the world itself, embraces
-all times, extends through all parts of the
-earth, whereas we hear nothing of the
-other till the times of Hippocrates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span><span class='sc'>Nevertheless</span> I greatly respect Hippocrates,
-and all the authors who have
-treated of this art. Some thanks are due
-to them, though but from those whom
-they have set to work in our days. Consider
-but the most celebrated authors among
-them down to our times, there may
-be found in them great progresses by
-degrees, especially in our modern writers
-on this subject. Yet the most intelligent
-of them feel and confess that the matter is
-yet far from exhausted. For after having
-studied all the treatises we have upon it,
-there may, there must be perceived an
-aberration and emptiness with which the
-understanding remains unsatisfied, and feels
-that much is yet wanting to the requisite
-perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Notwithstanding</span> likewise the veneration
-confessedly due to Hippocrates, I cannot
-dispense myself from saying the truth;
-he might be and doubtless was an excellent
-physician: he has wrote upon all the female
-disorders, and on the means of delivering
-them; he may have been consulted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>in his time, but he can never pass for an
-able man-midwife. His writings contain
-some violent remedies and strange prescriptions
-for women in labor, which must be
-the produce of the most dangerous ignorance
-of what is proper for them in that
-condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> author was also evidently ignorant
-of what concerns preternatural deliveries,
-as indeed were his successors till
-the beginning of the last century.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>To</span> prove what I advance, there needs
-no recourse back to very remote times: it
-will be sufficient to peruse the treatises of
-Ambrose Paræus, Jacques Guillemeau,
-Peter-Paul Bienassis, printed 1602, and
-even that of De la Motte, who is of this
-century, to own, that the practice of the
-men-midwives was far from having attained
-any degree of perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> manner in which the antients proceeded,
-when the child presented in an
-untoward situation, is a fully convincing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>proof thereof; since they obstinately, in
-such cases, continued their efforts to reduce
-it to its natural situation, in spite of
-a thousand difficulties and dangers, instead
-of bringing it away footling, as is now
-done by all who understand the right
-practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Hippocrates</span> is the first who discovered
-that wonderful secret of killing the
-child, and bringing it away piece-meal
-from the mother’s womb. He advises it,
-in the manner taken notice of by Dr. Smellie,
-in his introduction, (page 10. &amp; seq.)
-I do not know whether it is from that
-branch of practice that he adopts him
-for “the father of midwifery” (p. 4.)
-but, what is certain is, that Galen, and
-all the successors of Hippocrates, till towards
-the end of the last century, exactly
-followed his method of not delivering
-women in hard labors, but by the means
-of murderous instruments. I shall not
-here detain myself with rehearsing the long
-legend Mr. Smellie gives us of all the authors
-who have written on this subject to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>the time of Ambrose Paræus; time when
-to the progresses made by the midwives
-of the Hôtel Dieu at Paris in the art of
-midwifery, it was owing, that the surgeons,
-guided by their superior lights,
-made some greater progress towards perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>That</span> the reader however may not suspect
-me of exaggeration, or over-straining
-points, I request of him to suspend his
-judgment, to have the patience to hear me
-out to the end, and he will find, that I
-have here advanced nothing but what in
-the sequel stands clearly and manifestly
-proved.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Fourth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>In</span> a word, the manual operation of
-midwifery is an art, a science, and as such
-consequently more competently to be
-professed by men, than by women. It is
-making the art cheap, say the moderns,
-to allow the practice of it to women.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>
- <h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>I agree</span> with you in the first part of
-your objection: but I absolutely deny the
-consequences.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>There</span> are women, who, besides the
-gifts received from nature, are improved
-by study, by reading, and experience,
-who succeed much more easily than men
-in the practice. To say the truth, nature
-has, in this point, been even lavish to the
-women, for this art is a gift innate to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I will</span> however own, that not all women
-indistinctly are proper for this business;
-that there must be natural dispositions
-cultivated by art; that a purely speculative
-knowledge is not sufficient; that
-there are required good intellects, memory,
-strength of body and mind, sentiments,
-some taste, and practice joined to theory;
-so that when I say that the women are
-born with dispositions for this art; this
-can only be understood in general, and
-relatively to the men, among whom those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>dispositions are more rare, because they
-are less natural to them in this branch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Would</span> it not be a sort of blasphemy
-against the divine providence to maintain,
-that what God has placed and left in possession
-of the women, was fitter for the men?
-the attentive, beneficent, and tender manner
-with which he governed his people
-elect, obliges us to believe that he omitted
-nothing of what was necessary or advantageous
-to it; since he regarded that people
-as his own particular dominion and appendage;
-honoring it with his presence,
-like a master in his dwelling-house, or a
-father in his family. He had taken pleasure
-in the forming and instructing it from
-its<a id='t30'></a> infancy. He put the women in possession
-of the art of midwifery, he blessed,
-approved, and recompenced the midwives.
-It is but just, that men should hear and
-keep silence where God speaks. They may
-think themselves happy, to learn from him
-the true secrets of nature, and not from
-those pretended doctors who abandon the
-rules of truth to cleave to themselves;
-who, instead of her, present us with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>phantom of their own creation, who, in
-short, would make us the worshippers of
-their dreams and imaginations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> women have for them the authority
-of God, who has declared himself in
-their favor; they have for them the authority
-of men from one pole to the other,
-who have in all ages made use of the female
-ministry in this art. Such a plurality
-of votes has surely some claim to prevalence,
-especially, since it is founded upon
-the natural order of things, upon truth
-and reason supported by experience. This
-experience we have on our side: none can
-deny it, without denying self-evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>One</span> would think there is a kind of
-curse attends the operations of men-practitioners,
-as I dare aver it for a truth, that
-difficult and fatal labors have never been
-so rife, or so frequent, as since the intermeddling
-of the men. Whereas, God has
-ever so blessed the work of the midwives,
-that never were lyings-in so happily conducted,
-nor so successful, as when the
-practice was entirely in their hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span><span class='sc'>Open</span> the book of Numbers, you will
-observe, that God having ordered Moses
-to number his people: out of seventy individuals
-of the family of Jacob, who had
-come to dwell in Egypt, two hundred and
-forty years before, there had issued above
-six hundred thousand men fit to carry
-arms, without taking into the account an
-almost infinite multitude of children, of
-youths under twenty years of age, of women,
-of old men, besides a whole tribe,
-that of Levi, which was entirely set apart
-for the divine worship.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Fifth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>There</span> is no such thing as being a
-good practitioner of midwifery without
-understanding anatomy: now this science
-is the province of a man, of a physician,
-or surgeon, not of a woman.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>It</span> is sufficient that a woman understands
-and knows the structure and mechanical
-disposition of the internal parts which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>more particularly distinguish her sex; that
-she can discern the container from the contents,
-what belongs to the mother from
-what belongs to the child, as well as what is
-foreign to both. In short, she ought to be
-skilled enough to give full satisfaction to
-all questions that the most able anatomist
-could put to her, in respect to that part
-purely necessary to the art of midwifery,
-and to its operations with mastery and
-safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> the midwife, especially one instructed
-in hospitals, ought to be well acquainted
-with all that is essential and necessary to
-that effect; and she cannot but be so, unless
-she is of herself incapable, or that those
-who are charged with the instruction of
-pupils, wrong the confidence of the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I myself</span> know more than one midwife,
-so well educated as to be able to
-give demonstrations on this subject, to analyze
-things by their names, either upon
-drawings of them, upon skeletons, or
-upon the originals themselves. It is true,
-that these poor midwives do not understand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>anatomy enough to make dissections;
-but I fancy that the ladies who want assistence
-in their lyings-in, are not very curious
-of having one that can dissect instead
-of delivering them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Prophane</span> history has preserved to us
-the names and talents of a number of illustrious
-women who have distinguished
-themselves in all kinds of arts. Cleopatra
-queen of Egypt, is one of the first ladies
-that have written on the art of midwifery.
-Mr. Smellie, in his introduction,
-endeavours to render doubtful this quality
-of queen and princess, with a design, probably
-to weaken the credit of it, or rather
-out of contempt to the women; but as
-all those who have made collections of antient
-history, assure us, that notwithstanding
-the wars in which this princess was
-engaged, she did not neglect an assiduous
-application to physic, I had rather adhere
-to their authority, than to that of Mr.
-Smellie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> Greece, Aspasia, and a number of
-other celebrated women, quoted by various
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>authors, have applied themselves to
-our profession, and have left behind them
-valuable works on the method of delivering
-women, and of managing them both
-before and after their lying-in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Madam</span> Justin, midwife to the Electress
-of Brandenbourg, has also given us
-a very good treatise. Several professed
-midwives appointed to form the apprentices
-of the Hôtel Dieu at Paris, have
-written very clearly on the same subject,
-without however being mistresses of any
-more anatomy, than what was sufficient
-for their business.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Sixth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>The</span> different instruments which the
-men have invented in aid of, and supplement
-to the deficiency of nature, and of
-which they are frequently obliged to make
-use in different labors, ought not to be
-put into the hands of midwives: and were
-it but for this reason alone, they ought to
-be excluded from the practice of this art.
-As, why multiply attendants unnecessarily?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>A man-midwife, with his instruments
-which he ought always to have about him,
-is enough for every thing: whereas a midwife,
-if the case requires instruments, will
-be obliged to have recourse to a man: consequently
-double embarrassment, double
-expence.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>The</span> keen instrumentarians bring an
-argument they imagine capable of banishing
-or exterminating all the midwives.
-The men, they say, enjoy alone the glorious
-privilege of using instruments, in order,
-as they pretend, to assist nature. But
-let them, I intreat of them, answer, whether
-if the question could be decided by
-votes, where is the kingdom, where is
-the nation, where is the town, where, in
-short, is the person that would prefer iron
-and steel to a hand of flesh, tender, soft,
-duly supple, dextrous, and trusting to its
-own feelings for what it is about: a hand
-that has no need of recourse to such an
-extremity as the use of instruments, always
-blind, dangerous, and especially for
-ever useless?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span><span class='sc'>What</span> has engaged men to invent and
-bequeath to their successors so many wonderful
-productions, for such they imagine
-them? Is it not the thirst of fame and
-money? These gentry have judged, that
-they ought to spare no lucubrations, no
-labor of the head, no efforts of the tongue
-and pen to procure themselves a strange
-reputation, supported by these horrible
-instruments. But these lucubrations, this
-labor of the head, would have been much
-better employed in seeking for the means
-of absolutely doing without them, as our
-good female practitioners have ever done,
-and as those of them still do, who are
-instructed in the right practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>We</span> are no longer in the times of the
-Pharaohs and the Herods, who mercilessly
-massacred the innocents; we are no longer
-in the times of those pure Arabs, who
-were the inventors of a number of cruel
-operations, and of several instruments,
-which often cause more apprehension and
-terror to a woman in labor, though concealed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>from her light, but never from her
-imagination, than the actual presence of
-all the apparatus of the rack, where that
-torture is in use.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> were to be wished, that all the men-midwives,
-who had wrote on this matter,
-had suppressed the mention of their instruments;
-for as their books often fall
-into the hands of women, so deeply interested
-as the sex is in that subject, it is
-not to be imagined what bad effects they
-have. Their variations among themselves
-would be sufficient to frighten the women:
-you meet with authors condemning
-in the morning the over-night’s sentiment.
-I can observe them losing their
-way in systematical errors, which explain
-nothing to me, and in which nothing can
-be discovered but disagreement with one
-another, and with themselves. The wisest
-and most able of them, after having well
-examined all the kinds of instruments
-hitherto invented, have doubtless seen and
-been convinced of their ridiculousness and
-usefulness, but all of them have not hitherto
-dared to speak out and say as much.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span><span class='sc'>The</span> most interested of them would fain
-persuade us, that, in their display of a
-whole armory of instruments, they have
-discovered the philosopher’s stone of midwifery,
-in virtue of which they have a
-right to wrest out of the women’s hands,
-the practice of an art, which nature has
-appropriated to them. But certainly the
-point, and the whole point is, to find an
-expert dexterous hand, the sex is out of
-the question, provided it is but a human
-hand, and provided the work is done to
-the satisfaction of society, it seems to me
-that nothing more need be required.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Seventh.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>It</span> is only for the ignorant to be so rash
-as to raise an out-cry against the use of all
-instruments; people who do not know the
-absolute necessity there is for employing
-them on certain occasions. This clamor
-must proceed “from the interested views of
-some low, obscure and illiterate practitioners,
-both male and female, who
-think that they find their account in decrying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>the practice of their neighbours.”
-Such is the objection in the words of Dr.
-Smellie, in his Treatise on Midwifery
-(page 241.) and for this panegyric, he
-prepares us in his Introduction (page 55.)
-where, speaking of the midwives of the
-Hôtel Dieu of Paris, he first indeed tells
-us, that the surgeons had, in that hospital,
-perfected themselves in the art of midwifery;
-but then for fear that from thence
-occasion might be taken of saying, that to
-women it was they were beholden for that
-perfection; he takes care immediately
-after to add, that what “got the better
-of those ridiculous prejudices which the
-fair sex had used to entertain,” was,
-that the women or midwives of this hospital
-“had recourse to the assistance of men
-in all difficult cases of midwifery.”</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>These</span> gentlemen will permit me to
-tell them that they make great pretentions,
-and prove little or rather nothing. Calling
-hard names with a disdainful tone,
-and with airs of triumph, are not overwhelming
-reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span><span class='sc'>But</span> to the point. Those who reject
-instruments, say you, do not know what
-they are: they reject them from ignorance.
-This is soon said. Nevertheless a number
-of authors, much more experienced and
-versed in the matter than Dr. Smellie, are
-of this opinion. Deventer exclaims against
-instruments; Viardel does the same; Levret
-admits none but those of his own invention,
-and rejects universally all others;
-and well might he except his own, since
-he wrote only to recommend them. Delamotte
-was not very fond of instruments:
-he tells us in his preface, that in a course
-of thirty years practice, he had not twice
-made use of the crotchet, though he had
-an extent of country forty leagues round,
-in which he regularly exercised his profession,
-insomuch as to have four lyings-in
-in a day under his management.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> very exactly read almost all the
-modern authors who have written on this
-art; and have been surprized to observe
-that whilst, on one hand, they agree, they
-own, that in England, France, and Holland,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>people are much come off, or undeceived,
-as to all those dangerous or mortal
-instruments of which the antients made
-use, such as the short broad-bladed knife,
-(call it, if you please, a pen-knife) the
-bistory, the crotchets, &amp;c. especially since
-the invention of the new forceps, or tire-tête:
-on the other hand, these same doctors
-tell you, that recourse must be had to
-crotchets, or to the Cæsarean operation,
-when the new forceps will not do. A comfortable
-resource this, in an instrument so
-boasted as the best discovery that has been
-made since the creation of the world, and
-for which we are indebted to the moderns!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> also scrupulously examined all
-that authors have been pleased to say of
-great, wonderful and magnificent, with
-regard to the new forceps of Palfin, as it
-now stands after infinite corrections, as
-well in foreign countries, as in this one,
-which have dignified it with the name of
-the English forceps; and I find all these
-great elogiums reduced, at the most, to
-no more than the proving, as clear as the
-sun, that it is allowable for an operator,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>extremely able and extremely prudent, to
-make use of it, when the business might
-be perfectly well done without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>From</span> thence I deduce my demonstration
-directly opposite to the pretentions of
-Dr. Smellie and of his followers. According
-to the instrumentarians, and according
-to certain doctors, there are certain occasions,
-certain cases, in which there is an
-absolute necessity for employing the forceps.
-If we will hearken to and follow
-other doctors of more celebrity and credit,
-it is not right to make use of it, but when
-one may very well do without it: for example,
-after the having obviated all the
-obstacles which retard the delivery, after
-having, with the hands only, dis-engaged
-the head or the shoulders of the child,
-without which (say these same writers)
-the instrument would be found insufficient
-or useless; this palpably implies the being
-able to do without it. Now since it is not
-allowable, in good practice, to make use
-of it, but when it is perfectly needless
-to use it at all, there is then no absolute
-necessity for it; as surely, what can be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>done without, is not absolutely necessary.
-Be this only transiently remarked. For I
-reserve most convincingly to prove this
-proposition in the second part of this work.
-There I shall treat of all the instruments
-of our antients and our moderns, and besides
-an enumeration of them shall demonstrate
-their danger and uselessness. In the
-mean time, it must be owned, that either
-Mr. Smellie has been much misinformed
-of what passes at the Hôtel Dieu of Paris,
-in the ward of the lying-in women, or
-else, which I the least believe, is not sincere
-in the account he gives us, that the
-women of that hospital “had recourse to
-the assistence of men, in all the difficult
-cases of midwifery;” which, he observes,
-“got the better of those ridiculous prejudices
-the fair sex had been used to entertain.”
-That is to say, in preference of
-midwives to men-practitioners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I frequented</span> this Hôtel Dieu two
-whole years, before being received an apprentice-midwife,
-which I accomplished
-with great difficulty, on account of being
-born a subject of England, and consequently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>a foreigner there: my admission,
-however, I gained at length, through the
-favor, protection, and special recommendation
-of his royal highness the duke of
-Orleans. Now, I dare aver, that in all
-the time before, and after I was admitted
-there, I never but once saw Mr. Boudou,
-surgeon-major called, who did nothing
-more than to make us, one after another,
-<em>touch</em> the patient, about whom we had
-been embarrassed; and as he interrogated,
-he made us discover an <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">uterus</span></i> full of schirrous
-callosities, which joined to its obliquities,
-impeded the palpation of it
-properly with the hand, the orifice being
-very difficult to come at. Every thing,
-however, was done without his help, and
-very successfully. And most certainly we
-should have spared him the trouble of
-coming at all into our ward, if the head-midwife,
-who was a little capricious in
-her temper, had not taken it into her head
-to keep us in our perplexity, which engaged
-us to send for Mr. Boudou without
-her knowledge, and for which she was afterwards
-heartily angry with us.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span><span class='sc'>I never</span> once saw an occasion in which
-there was any necessity for using instruments,
-though in my time we had, at
-least, five or six hundred women a month
-to deliver.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Very</span> far then are the midwives from
-having often occasion of recourse to the assistence
-of the men, in difficult cases; and
-indeed to those prejudiced in favor of
-men-practitioners, it may, though true,
-appear strange, that in a place where there
-are every year so many thousand women
-delivered, and consequently many difficult
-labors amongst them, and even cases of
-monsters, there is no recourse to the surgeon-major
-but in the last occurence,
-which falls out very rarely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>About</span> eighteen or twenty years ago,
-Madam Poor, head-midwife of this hospital,
-delivered a woman of a monster
-with two heads, with no help but only
-her fingers and a young prentice. Not an
-instrument was employed: no man assisted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>her. The child was christened, and died
-presently after. The mother remained
-some months upon recovery, and did perfectly
-well. This fact requires no proofs,
-being of such public notoriety. The monster
-was carried to St. Cosmo’s, where any
-surgeon may see it. I served my time with
-this same mistress some years after this
-kind of prodigy had happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to what I have advanced concerning
-the procedure in the wards of the
-lying-in women, should my testimony appear
-in the least suspicious, I appeal to the
-justice and veracity of all the doctors in
-England, who have been at the Hôtel
-Dieu at Paris, who cannot but confirm
-what I have said. In the mean time Mr.
-De la Motte, who passes for an author of
-credit may certify, the same. Here follows
-what he says in his preface to his
-observations, page 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>One</span> would think (says this author)
-from reading the books of Messieurs
-Mauriceau and Peu, that it was impossible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>to succeed in the practice of midwifery,
-without having operated at Paris
-in the lying-in ward of the Hôtel
-Dieu. It is true, that this hospital is the
-best school in Europe, and that I would
-have ardently wished to have been admitted
-to the operations of midwifery
-during the five years I staid in that hospital:
-but as there is no more than <em>one</em>
-surgeon <em>only</em>, who is in charge to attend
-when he is called to consultation with
-the midwives, and that it is a place
-which goes only by favor, I was forced
-to content myself with following in quality
-of topical surgeon, to the physicians
-who performed their visits there. So
-that I followed only, for six months,
-three physicians in their rounds there,
-during which time I applied myself to
-examine the conduct observed by those
-gentlemen, to preserve the women after
-their lying-in from the accidents which
-follow thereon. By this means I made
-myself amends for my want of recommendation;
-but I can safely say, that during
-the six months I was admitted in
-the above-mentioned quality, there was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>no more than one extraordinary labor,
-which was that of a child engaged in the
-passage, where the presence of a surgeon
-was required, and which however was
-terminated without any other help than
-that of patience. And yet there were
-(so far back as then) from three hundred
-and fifty, to four hundred pregnant
-women, who were all delivered by
-the apprentices and rarely by the Dame
-De la Marche, at that time, head midwife
-of the hospital: so that I am persuaded,
-that those who boast of having
-lain a great many women there, exaggerate
-furiously.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>For</span> me, I dare yet go farther, and
-will maintain it, that those persons impose
-upon the public in such boasts: since the
-naturalized surgeons, those of the nation,
-those of Paris itself, have no right to come
-into our ward. There is no one admitted
-but the surgeon-major, whose place is a
-place of favor, and rather matter of form
-than any thing else. Much more then are
-strangers excluded, and the truth is, that
-they never did, nor ever do operate there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span><span class='sc'>As</span> to the reproach which Mr. Smellie
-makes to us of being interested, I can,
-for myself, prove that I have delivered
-gratuitously, and in pure charity, above
-nine hundred women. I doubt much,
-whether our critic can say as much, unless
-he reckons it for a charity, that which he
-exercised on his automaton or machine,
-which served him for a model of instruction
-to his pupils. This was a wooden
-statue, representing a woman with child,
-whose belly was of leather, in which a
-bladder full, perhaps, of small beer, represented
-the uterus. This bladder was
-stopped with a cork, to which was fastened
-a string of packthread to tap it, occasionally,
-and demonstrate in a palpable
-manner the flowing of the red-colored
-waters. In short, in the middle of the
-bladder was a wax-doll, to which were
-given various positions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>By</span> this admirably ingenious piece of
-machinery, were formed and started up an
-innumerable and formidable swarm of
-men-midwives, spread over the town and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>country. By his own confession, he has
-made in less than ten years nine hundred
-pupils, without taking into the account
-the number of midwives whom he has
-trained up, and formed in so miraculous a
-manner. See the preface of this author.
-He speaks of his <em>machine</em> in the first page,
-and p. 5, of the number of his pupils.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> as to these worthy pupils, must
-not they be finely enabled to judge of the
-situation of women with child, and of that
-of their fœtus? Must not they be deeply
-skilled in that branch of anatomy? Must
-not they acquire a habit of the touch exquisitely
-nice, exquisitely just, for discerning
-the proportion and analogy between
-a mere wooden machine, and a body, sensible,
-delicate, animated, and well organized?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I hope</span> too that it is an injustice done
-to that doctor, by those who say that his
-pupils have too often a way of hurrying
-out the waters, which can only serve to
-render the labor more dry, consequently
-more laborious, and by that means furnish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>a handle for setting their instruments to work.
-If this should be so, as once more I hope
-it is not, may not the bad habit they will
-have contracted during their pupilship, of
-drawing the small-beer out of their wooden-woman,
-have contributed to this method
-of practice?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean time, does it become a
-doctor to call us interested, who himself,
-for three guineas in nine lessons, made you
-a man-midwife, or a female one, by means
-of this most curious machine, this mock-woman?</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Eighth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>But</span> you who come so late (it will be
-said) What new discoveries do you bring
-us? Can you imagine you will, with one
-dash of the pen, cancel the impression of
-so many excellent works as have appeared
-before you? Do you believe a woman can
-have more ability than so many men of
-letters, who have labored all their life-time
-in perfecting the art, and who so
-strongly recommend the use of instruments,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>as the most expeditious method of extricating
-one self, in all the cases they
-specify, and where there is a necessity for
-recourse to extremities? Can you think,
-that these personages have all spent their
-time in vain?</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Almost</span> all the sciences and arts attain
-to perfection, in process of time, through
-the experience and assiduous attention of
-those who cultivate them. We owe the
-most of our rare and precious inventions to
-the ages of barbarism, in which as yet
-reigned that brutality and ignorance which
-the irruption of the northern swarms had
-diffused over all Europe. This invention
-and perfection of arts cannot be attributed
-to merely human industry; but, with more
-probability, to a particular over-ruling providence,
-which commonly concealing itself
-under what seems to us the weakest,
-and under occurrences which appear to us
-the effect of chance, have guided men to
-wonderful discoveries. Do not we owe to
-a fair Circassian the art of inoculating children?
-And surely the art of midwifery,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>perhaps more than any other, stands
-the fairest chance of being improved by
-women.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>For</span> my part, I dare maintain it, that
-the surgeons, in form of men-midwives,
-have been the death of more children,
-with their <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">speculum matricis</span></i>, their <em>crotchets</em>,
-their <em>extractors</em> or <em>forceps</em>, their <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-têtes</span></i>,
-&amp;c. than they have preserved. If in killing
-the children, they have saved the lives
-of some mothers, they have hurt and damaged,
-not to say murdered, a number
-of others. Their faults ought to set us
-upon searching out for a better way of going
-to work; a more easy, a more safe
-one. This fatal operation by instruments
-might even be pronounced absolutely useless
-in the profession. There is no inveighing
-severely enough against so dangerous a
-doctrine as that which recommends them.
-Even common humanity requires an endeavour
-to open the eyes of those, who imagine
-they cannot do better than blindly to
-assent, in every point, to authors recommendable,
-it is true, by a number of good
-things, but whose authenticity in those
-points procures them but the more dangerously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>credit in erroneous ones. Good
-sense does not dictate undistinguishingly
-receiving all that is advanced even by the
-best authors. As they may have been
-themselves deceived, they may also deceive
-us. The sacrifice of our reason is what
-we owe to nothing but to revelation.
-Books written by men have no title to it.
-As their understanding is not above the
-impositions of others, or errors of their
-own, they may adopt falsities, through ignorance,
-through prejudice, for want of
-examination, or of right reasoning. Their
-heart may also have been byassed or corrupted
-by views of interest or of ambition.
-I may therefore, without over-presumption
-aver, that with regard to instruments,
-it is wrong to lay any stress on the
-authority of others. For, with all the
-respect due to some illustrious writers in
-these modern times, who defend the party
-opposed to ours, it may be assuredly said,
-that either they have not known the art of
-midwifery, or that they have formed their
-judgment of it by nothing but the abuses
-of the antients, who practiced it without
-knowing it. Is it not a crying shame, that
-operators, who in their life-time massacred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>such numbers of human creatures, should
-still retain, after death, credit enough to
-assassinate common sense? Faith is given
-to unskilful authors, who have deceived
-their cotemporaries, posterity, and perhaps
-themselves: ignorance admires, enthusiasm
-protects them. But what a cruel
-and mean policy must be that of supposing,
-that the knowledge of truth ought not to
-have a clearer title to dominion than the
-illusions of imposture? I hope however,
-that, when the eyes of the public shall, in
-this point, come to be opened, and opened
-they will be, if true physicians will give
-themselves the trouble to enlighten it, that
-public will at length see, that an approbation,
-unpreceded by a due examination,
-does it as little honor as service.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Lying-in</span> women principally require
-an early assistence. For unless they are
-pregnant of a monster with two heads (a
-case so rare, that in the practice of a thousand
-surgeons, in their whole life, it may
-not twice, nor perhaps once fall in their
-way) there need never be an occasion of
-recourse to a surgeon: for in this case, of
-a monster, it must be the affair of a most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>profoundly skilled operator and not of
-merely a common man-midwife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Run</span> over all the authors who have
-written on this matter, and you will find
-that the men-midwives, for want of right,
-and of true knowledge of the profession,
-have introduced themselves by force and
-violence, as one may say, sword in hand,
-with those murderous instruments: read
-the ancients, it will appear, that they cut
-their way in, with iron and steel, forerunners
-of murders. Our moderns to palliate
-these violences and injustices, agree
-on one hand, that the common and gentlest
-methods are to be preferred: but, on
-the other hand, when you tell them, that
-the common and gentlest methods are the
-hands of women, who ought therefore to
-be preferred to the men, and to be restored
-to their antient and rightful possession;
-then you will see the whole pack open in
-full cry: to arms! to arms! is the word:
-and what are those arms by which they
-maintain themselves, but those instruments,
-those weapons of death! would
-not one imagine, that the art of midwifery
-was an art-military?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span><span class='sc'>As</span> for we women, we can but in our
-weakness groan under this tyranny. Our
-protest, joined to that of reason and experience,
-avails little. Our wise innovators
-have a great deal more wit than we
-have; but it is not a wit of which we
-would be ambitious: for it serves them
-no better, than under the pretence of saving
-to be paid for destroying: at least it
-is not unfrequently so.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Ninth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Opinion</span> often makes a stronger impression
-on us than truth. Whatever you
-may say to the contrary, the imagination
-will prevail of life, being safer in the hands
-of a man than of a woman. For, in short,
-of what importance can a woman be, who,
-after all, is but a woman? This is so true,
-that most of our women now a-days will
-have a man-midwife, some through prejudice,
-others through good œconomy, because
-if there are any prescriptions necessary
-for the patient, the man-midwife, who
-is also stiled the doctor, will write for them;
-whereas, if there is a midwife, a physician
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>may moreover be requisite: this is an
-additional charge.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>A happiness</span> founded on opinion only,
-is rather too slightly founded, especially
-in a point where not less than life is at
-stake. I know there are women so obstinately
-wedded to their opinion of certain
-pretended doctors, that they would
-not look upon it to be a good office done
-them, though certainly it would be one,
-to undeceive them. I also know that the
-title of doctor is so common in this country,
-that it ought to be very cheap.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Most</span> of the women in labor, (you say)
-will have men to assist them, as thinking
-their life more in safety with them, than
-in the hands of women. May be so. But
-what does that prove but the deplorable
-blindness, the weakness of the human understanding,
-and the silly prejudices in favor
-of novelty? Is it then the instruments
-of these men-midwives that give this confidence
-or this security? As if a king, a
-queen, or princess dangerously ill, could be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>defended from death, by doubling their
-guards.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> women have on this occasion the
-delicacy not to suffer even their husband
-to assist at their labor, and this out
-of decency. This is very well for those
-who are contented with midwives; but as
-for those who will be attended by men to
-lay them, it is very wrong in them not
-even to insist on their husband to stay by
-them. For this preference of men to deliver
-them, comes either from a greater inclination
-to the men, or from a greater
-confidence in them than in the women,
-or, in short, from the pure necessity they
-imagine themselves under to employ a
-man. If it is from inclination, or from
-necessity, it will be always proper for the
-husband to stay, to contain the man-midwife,
-as much as possible, within the
-bounds of modesty. If the man-practitioner
-is preferred by them, out of the
-great confidence they have in men: in
-what man can they place more confidence
-than in a tender husband: who more than
-he can interest himself in the man-midwife’s
-acquitting himself duly of his office?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span><span class='sc'>I wonder</span> that this great confidence
-which is reposed in the male sex should be
-limited to the man-midwife only. I promise
-the women, that they may with equal
-justice imagine a greater handiness about
-them in men-attendants than in women;
-they may just as well have men-nurses as
-men-midwives: the convenience will be
-as much greater in the one, as the safety
-will be in the other. Away then with all
-the women, who croud round to comfort
-and relieve a woman in labor: away with
-your mothers, sisters, aunts or female acquaintance:
-in consequence to the preference
-due to the male-sex, let the patient’s
-labor be attended by fathers, brothers,
-uncles, or men-acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> let common opinion lower women
-as much as it will, so much is certainly
-and experimentally true, that, notwithstanding
-the prejudice and superiority of
-the men, the judgments and decisions of
-the women are often more shrewd, more
-exact than theirs. Women have a certain
-delicacy of mind, which, not being spoilt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>by undigested studies, renders their taste
-much more quick, and more to be depended
-on, than that of the half-learned.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> distribution of merit and talents
-is entirely in the hands of divine providence,
-that gives what and to whom it
-pleases, without respect to the quality of
-persons; forming out of the assemblage of
-sciences of all sorts, a sort of empire,
-which, generally speaking, embraces all
-ages, and all countries, without distinction
-of age, sex, condition or climate. The
-rightful claim to solid praise in this empire,
-is for every one to be contented with
-his place, without bearing envy to the
-glory of others. These he ought to look
-on as his colleagues, destined as well as
-himself to enrich society, and become its
-benefactors. As this providence places
-kings on the throne for nothing but the
-good of the people, neither does it distribute
-different talents to men but for the
-public utility. But, as in states it has been
-seen, that tirants and usurpers have sometimes
-got the upper-hand, so, amongst men
-of talents there may, if I dare so express
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>myself, creep in a sort of tyranny, which,
-in the present case for example, consists
-in looking on the women with a jealous
-eye, especially those who from an eminence
-of talents might dispute precedence
-with them. Thence it is that they are, as
-it were, hurt by their successes, and by
-their reputation, and that they endeavour
-to depreciate their merit, in order to establish
-the sole dominion in themselves. A
-hateful defect this, and entirely contrary
-to the good of society.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> is nevertheless the defect of most
-of our young men-midwives. But when
-I consider the mercenary interest by which
-they are guided, I am far from wondering
-at their inveteracy against those midwives,
-especially who are distinguished for their
-merit and science. The objects of this
-malignity of theirs are principally those,
-who have a reputation they fear may enable
-them to be their competitors in practice.
-From this mean jealousy of profession,
-they warmly inveigh against its being
-trusted in our sex. This is a doctrine
-they spread every where, and the stale burthen
-of their abuse is ever, “What is a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>woman? What effectual service can be expected
-from a woman?” And thus, by
-dint of this repetition and of clamor, they
-come at length to accomplish the persuading
-an over-credulous public. The
-common people have in all ages been easily
-seducible, open to imposition, and when
-once an error has got full possession of
-them, it is a miracle if it does not maintain
-itself in it. They love novelty, are
-readily taken with striking objects, and
-stop at the surface of things, which they
-eagerly seize. Singularity especially moves
-them. Reason alone, and divested of
-chimeras, appears too naked to them.
-They must have something that borders
-upon the marvellous. Is it not from
-thence that the dreams of the poets found
-faith among the Heathens, or that the
-fables of the Coran pass for so many truths
-among the Mahometans? To the same
-weakness in favor of every thing that will
-make one stare, is owing that silly credulity,
-which so often leads men to the
-swallowing the grossest absurdities. One
-would think fictions had peculiar charms
-for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span><span class='sc'>Nothing</span> however can be more pitiful,
-than the injustice of running down a
-sex, which has, in this very matter of
-midwifery, served the whole earth through
-all ages, till just the present one, that a
-small part of the world, becomes in imagination,
-all of a sudden a land of Goshen,
-or the only enlightened spot, and takes
-the ignis fatuus of a mercenary presumption
-for the sun-shine of sound reason.
-But after this injustice, where will the
-men stop? What profession will they leave
-to the women? It will at last be discovered,
-that the men can spin, raise paste, cut
-out caps, pickle and preserve better than
-we do. After all, is it not even ridiculous
-to see a custom, established for above
-five thousand years, universally approved
-by great and little, fall into disgrace, I
-will not say by the opinion, but by the
-whim of a handful of people, most of
-whom too are, most probably, perfectly
-sensible of the nonsense and absurdity of
-that whim, but defend it from a spirit that
-can hardly not be suspected of interestedness,
-which indeed will make men defend
-any thing?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span><span class='sc'>And</span> after all, even common decency
-and common gratitude might engage the
-men-midwives to speak less slightingly of
-the women of that profession; since of
-whom is it, that the most famous of our
-present master-men-midwives of London
-have learned their science but of the women?
-Do not even the principal ones of
-them make it their boast to have served a
-kind of apprenticeship under those midwives,
-who had served theirs in the Hôtel
-Dieu at Paris?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> surely the reader will not think it
-here impertinent to observe, that the wise
-administrators of that famous hospital,
-would hardly have failed establishing men-midwives
-in it, if the safety of the subject
-had had any thing to fear in the hands of
-women. But women alone it is that preside
-at all the lyings-in there, be they never
-so extraordinary or laborious. The
-men-midwives have never yet been able to
-extend their footing within that place.
-Their emissaries can gain no admission, nor
-are any proficients trained up there but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>women only. Notwithstanding which,
-all the women who are there delivered are
-satisfactorily and skilfully assisted. Vexatious
-accidents are less frequent there, in
-proportion to the numbers, than elsewhere,
-under the eyes and operation of the men-midwives.
-Mother and child are both
-more in safety under the hands of those
-dextrous matrons, than in those of the
-most renowned men-practitioners<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>To</span> those then, who with a contemptuous
-tone ask what is a woman but a
-woman? I shall with equal modesty and
-truth answer, that generally speaking women
-are inferior to men in most public services.
-They are scarcely so fit to head armies,
-to navigate ships, break horses, or
-the like manly employs: but there are
-certainly domestic branches, in which they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>rather make a better figure than the men.
-Midwifery seems their appropriate lot: and
-rather a gift than an acquisition. They
-hold from nature herself, in this matter,
-a certain expertness and dexterity, to which
-not all the more abstruse refinement of art
-can ever conduct the men. Nor will the
-operation of iron and steel instruments
-ever equal the suppleness, safety and effectual
-ministry of the fingers of an expert
-midwife, who understands her business.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Let</span> me then be permitted to ask retortingly
-in my turn, What is, at the best,
-a man-midwife? Is not he one of a new
-set of operators unknown to our ancestors?
-A creature in short hard to be defined? In
-no original or primitive language is there
-so much as a word to express one of this
-profession. The common word for him
-in the English language is a contradiction
-in terms, a monstrous incongruity; a <span class='fss'>MAN</span>-<em>mid</em>-<span class='fss'>WIFE</span>.
-Sensible of the ridiculous sound
-of this expression, scarcely less so than that
-of a <em>woman</em>-coach-<em>man</em>, they have, by way
-of remedy, borrowed the term of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">accoucheur</span></i>
-from that nation whence the fashion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>was unhappily borrowed, among many
-other fashions, so many of which are however
-rather ridiculous, than like this one
-<em>big</em> with danger, added to the ridicule of
-it. But even that affected French word
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">accoucheur</span></i> is of a very recent date in France.
-No French authors employ it, who are not
-themselves of a more modern date than the
-word itself, which has not above the antiquity
-of a century to boast. The name
-and vocation of a midwife are found in
-the most primitive languages, being, in
-fact, coeval with mankind itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to those who, from a principle of
-œconomy, prefer a man-midwife to a
-midwife for conducting a lying-in, with
-respect to the remedies and prescriptions
-which may be necessary on those occasions,
-Œconomy is doubtless a laudable consideration,
-but I am much afraid, that those
-who on this occasion make it a reason of
-preference, much mis-calculate things.
-This man-midwife you prefer is either an
-eminent or an ordinary one. If he is an
-eminent one, you are not always sure of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>having him in the greatest need; for besides
-their being so rare, they cannot be
-every where at one time. But admitting
-that you are fortunate enough to fall into
-the hands of a man-midwife of the greatest
-name in the profession, can you imagine
-that you will have a very cheap bargain
-of him? These gentlemen expect
-no small fees, and will not attend without
-them. You would besides be ashamed of
-not doing honor to the footing on which
-they give themselves out. Whereas the
-same gratitude is not always shewn to a
-midwife, however skilful in her profession,
-and whatever trouble she may give herself
-both before and after the lying-in of her
-patients; notwithstanding too the assiduous
-attendance and visits she bestows upon
-them till they are out of danger; notwithstanding
-these tender attentions she
-has for the children, which are so seldom
-regarded by the men-midwives; there
-are who imagine they cannot give a midwife
-of this sort too little, and that for no
-other reason on earth, but because she is
-not a man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span><span class='sc'>If</span> on the contrary, and what the most
-frequently happens, you fall into the hands
-of one of the common men-midwives, either
-of that multitude of disciples of Dr.
-Smellie, trained up at the feet of his artificial
-doll, or in short of those self-constituted
-men-midwives made out of broken
-barbers, tailors, or even pork-butchers (I
-know myself one of this last trade, who,
-after passing half his life in stuffing sausages,
-is turned an intrepid physician and man-midwife)
-must not, I say, practitioners of
-this stamp be admirably fitted, as well for
-the manual operation, as for the prescriptions?
-If then it is from thrift they
-are employed, by way of sparing fees to
-a real physician, I own, I think this is
-pushing savingness too far; as I should be
-almost as much afraid of the prescriptions
-of these mock-doctors as of their operation.
-I should have more confidence in
-the advice of a discreet matron, or of a
-skilful midwife, who, by habit and a long
-experience of seeing ladies in their lyings-in
-attended by the best physicians, is in
-the most common cases of the labor-pains,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>more able to advise the sick person to innocent
-remedies, where there is no complication
-in the disorder, than those half-bred
-or ignorant pretenders: but if there
-is a complication, then there must absolutely
-be a good physician called in, the
-expence of which should not be regretted,
-since life is at stake.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> in such cases, a midwife, though
-never so skilful, will neither be ashamed
-nor backward to require such aid: whereas
-a man-midwife, the more ignorant he
-is, will be but the more careful of concealing
-that ignorance, and from the most
-false prejudice that both the faculties of
-physic and surgery are implicit ingraftments
-on the profession of midwifery in
-a man, will rather let mother and child
-perish, than call in that assistance, of which
-he will be ashamed to confess his standing
-in any need. He will then rashly do the
-best he can for his patient: but what will
-that best most probably be? Torture and
-death; and that with perfect impunity. I
-say most probably, for not even the most
-credulous, or the most zealous for the appropriation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>of this profession to the male-sex,
-can hardly carry the blindness of credulity
-and obstinacy the length of assenting
-in earnest, that in the common run of
-men-practitioners you are to find at once
-the man-midwife, the physician, and the
-surgeon. Whereas women, fully sufficient
-for all cases but the very extraordinary
-ones indeed, are ever ready to call for proper
-help, on the first alarm of danger, of
-which too their apprehension is much more
-quick and just than that of the men.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Tenth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>The</span> ignorance of the women is the
-cause of the little confidence there is reposed
-in them.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>If</span> this objection was fairly stated, it
-should be said, that the ignorance of the
-women in the art of destroying mother and
-child, occasions their not being trusted
-so much as they deserve with the office of
-saving both. In that art indeed of perpetrating
-double murder with perfect impunity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>under the sanction of the public
-credulity, imposed upon by a vain parade
-of learning, I readily confess the men
-superior to the women. I do more than
-confess it, I will prove it; and how? even
-from their own writings and confession,
-not extorted from them by the spirit of
-candor, but from an interested desire of
-decrying or supplanting one another, in
-order to self-recommendation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> fact, whoever will, with a competent
-degree of knowledge of the subject,
-and of due impartiality, peruse the practical
-treatises of midwifery, written by the
-most celebrated practitioners, some of whom
-have so vainly pretended to the triple union
-of the characters of man-midwife, surgeon
-and physician in one person, and it
-will be found, that all their boasted superiority
-of erudition, has only led them
-into the greater errors of practice, and the
-most barbarous violences to nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> perhaps I exaggerate. Let the
-reader judge for himself, and pronounce
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>as his own reason shall dictate to him.
-Let him if he can read without shuddering,
-the following quotation from one of
-the most celebrated <em>men</em>-midwives of the
-age, Levret, p. 199. “Mauriceau had
-invented a new <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-tête</span></i>, which was to
-be introduced into that part (the uterus).
-Peu or Pugh, like <em>many</em> others, made
-use of different hooks (<em>crochets</em>) and La
-Motte opening the head with scissors,
-scooped out the brain, &amp;c. We read,
-with horror, in <em>all</em> these authors, that
-they have extracted children, who, tho’
-much <em>maimed</em> or <em>mutilated</em>, have yet <em>lived</em>
-several hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> this many reflections will naturally
-occur. These children thus destroyed,
-owed most probably their death neither
-to nature, nor to the difficulties of
-the passage through which the launch is
-made into our world, but to the labor being
-prematurely forced, and the delivery
-effectuated by those torturous instruments,
-which at once kill the child, and not seldom
-irreparably wound the mother in the
-tender contexture of these parts. A midwife,
-with less learning and more patience
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>than those gentlemen, and well acquainted
-with the power and custom of Nature
-to operate in some subjects, sometimes more
-slowly, and in all ever more safely and
-gently than art, would have left to nature,
-not without her tenderest assistance of that
-nature, the expulsion of the child. A
-proper predisposal of the passage, and direction
-of the posture, with an unremitting
-attention to employ the fingers, so as
-not to lapse the critical moment of operation,
-often never to be recovered with
-safety to mother and child, would have, I
-repeat it, and appeal to common sense for
-the probability thereof, saved the lives of
-those innocents, which thus fell the victims
-of those <em>learned</em> experiments, with
-instruments, which, by the way, be it
-remarked, none are so forward to use, as
-those who are the loudest in exclaiming
-against the employ of them. And reason
-good, if they exclaim against them, it is
-evidently in order to cover their practice
-with them, against which the minds of
-their patients must so naturally be revolted.
-But that exclaiming does not evidently hinder
-their being used, when, the truth is,
-that if due care was previously taken with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>the patients, those execrable substitutes to
-the fingers need never be used at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> if these instrumentarians were
-called to account for their so justly presumable
-massacres, what would be their
-defence? Most certainly not the truth.
-One would not own, that in order to attend
-a richer patient, or perhaps to return
-to his bottle, he had recourse to his fatal
-instruments, to make the quicker riddance
-or <em>effectual</em> dispatch; another would not
-confess, that he employed them purely
-because his fund of <em>patience</em> was exhausted;
-some would not care to allow, that they
-used them purely on the scheme of trying
-experiments; and none of them would,
-you may be sure, plead guilty of ignorance
-of better and more salutary methods. No!
-their wilful error, or that want of skill,
-they would be sure to conceal under the
-cloud of hard words and scientific jargon,
-in which they would dress up their respective
-cases, and insult the ignorance of
-those silly good women, who <em>know</em> no <em>better</em>
-than to deliver those of their own sex
-with the help of their fingers and hands,
-and who are so undextrous, as to have no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>notion of putting them to such unnecessary
-tortures and risks, as are inseparable
-from the use of those iron and steel instruments.
-Instruments which rarely fail of
-destroying the child, or at least cruelly
-wounding it, and never but injure the mother,
-not only in those exquisitely tender-textured
-parts, where they are so blindly
-and ungovernably introduced; but in the
-often irrecoverable dilatations of the external
-orifice, the vagina, and especially the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fourchette</span></i> or <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">frænum labiorum</span></i>, all which,
-in general, they considerably damage: and
-always originally without necessity. For
-if through carelessness, if through an impatience,
-so much more natural to men
-than to women, in a case and position of
-this nature; if through ignorance of the
-critical minute of extraction, the occasion
-of operating with the fingers has <em>not</em> been
-<em>lapsed</em>, any recourse to instruments is perfectly
-unnecessary, and they will hardly
-ever succeed where the subject is inaccessible
-to the fingers, without having the worst
-of consequences to dread from them both to
-mother and child. Nothing then can be
-worse for a man-midwife, than to be
-tempted to any negligence, to any precipitation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>to any ostentation, in short, of expedition
-or of superiority of skill to that of
-the women, by his having those instruments
-at hands, the doing without which
-is at once so much better and safer, even
-by the confession of those who use them
-nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>How</span> greatly then is the ignorance of
-the midwives preferable to <em>such</em> an use, as
-the male-practitioners commonly make of
-that deep learning of theirs, which only
-misleads them, at the expence of humanity!
-How over-compensated is that want
-of theoretical knowledge, so unjustly reproached
-to women, since they profess a
-sufficiency even of that knowledge; how
-over-compensated, I say, is that supposed
-want, by that instinctive keenness of apprehension,
-and ready dexterity of theirs in
-the manual operation, which in them is a
-pure gift of nature, and to which not the
-utmost efforts of art or experience can
-ever make the men arrive, for reasons
-which will be made clearly appear in the
-two following considerations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span><span class='sc'>First</span>, It will hardly be denied, that
-the art of midwifery requires a regular
-training or education for it. The season
-of that education can only be that of youth.
-And surely in that season precisely, the
-very nature of the study excludes those of
-the male-sex, at the same time, that there
-is nothing in it indecent or improper for
-the females destined to that profession.
-This proposition will be more clearly illustrated,
-by an appeal to the reader’s own
-sense and reason upon what passes, and
-must necessarily pass in those hospitals for
-the reception of lying-in women, where
-those of the male-sex are allowed to attend
-for the sake of learning the profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> Charity is indeed founded upon
-specious motives, but the conduct of it
-would make humanity shudder, even
-where no violence is expressly intended
-to humanity; and without the least
-forced or uncharitable conclusion, may serve
-to demonstrate the impropriety of attempting
-to throw the practical part of midwifery
-into the hands of male-practitioners,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>the implicit consequence of which must be
-the exclusion of the midwives, without
-any direct and formal exclusion of them,
-but purely from the discouragement that
-will hinder any good and able ones being
-formed in future. And that no thoroughgood
-men-midwives, except perhaps two
-or three extraordinary men in a whole nation,
-can ever be formed, the procedure at
-the lying-in hospitals, open to men-pupils,
-such as it must of all necessity be from
-the nature of the thing itself, without any
-the least reproach herein meant to the
-worthy managers, will convince all who
-will make an unprejudiced use of their
-judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>We</span> will then suppose a lying-in hospital,
-in which, for the sake of training up
-<em>men</em> to the profession of mid<em>wives</em>, there
-are young pupils of the male-sex admitted
-to attend and learn the practical and
-manual part of the business. To obtain
-this end, we will not say that women of
-virtue and character are subjected to the
-inspection and palpation of a set of youths,
-who perhaps pay largely for their privilege
-of attendance; but we will grant,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>that the objects of this charity are entirely
-women, who, though they may have unfortunately
-forfeited their right to virtue,
-cannot however have lost their claim to
-the protection of that humanity, which,
-besides the great and most political attention
-due to population, pays especially a
-tender regard to the innocent burthen,
-though of a guilty mother. Yet among
-these wretched victims, there may be not
-a few who, if they were not even to deserve
-more compassion than blame, for
-particular circumstances of their ruin, in
-which the villainy of men has often a
-much greater share than female frailty
-itself, cannot surely deserve that all traces
-of modesty, or natural remains of regard
-for it, should be utterly eradicated by that
-hard necessity of theirs to accept of a charity,
-by which they must be abandoned
-up to the researches of a set of young men,
-to whose approaches their age and sex must
-alone give an air of petulance and wantonness
-not to be explained away, to the
-satisfaction of the poor passive sufferer,
-by the goodness of the intention. Every
-one must be sensible of the dreadful effects
-such a treatment must have on the mind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>of a poor creature in that condition, when
-the imagination is known to be the most
-weak, and susceptible of the most dangerous
-impressions. At that critical time,
-amidst all the terrors and apprehensions
-inseparable from her situation, she is moreover
-exposed to the greatest indignity that
-can be well imagined, that of serving for
-a pillar of manage to break young men
-into the exercise of that most unmanly profession.
-Nay, that very circumstance of
-the use she is put to, which she is in fact
-to consider as a kind of valuable consideration
-by her paid for the relief afforded
-her, and which in that light can scarce be
-called a charity; that very circumstance,
-I say, of her submission, at all calls, and
-upon all pretences of the pupils, being
-accounted for to her by the good intention
-of it, will yet hardly pass on a wretched,
-frightened, harrassed woman, who, whatever
-may be said to procure her tame acquiescence,
-can scarcely, if she has a spark
-of female modesty left in her, be reconciled
-to the grossness of such usage, whether
-she considers herself as the butt of
-wantonness, or the victim of experiments,
-or perhaps of both the one and the other.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>It is well if she is defended by her ignorance
-from any idea of those dreadful instruments,
-of the having practices tried
-upon her with which, her circumstances
-might but too reasonably render her apprehensive,
-since a needless resort to them
-may be too often presumed in the course
-of practice, where the men are even paid
-for their assistence. These the men-midwives
-may possibly indeed conceal from the
-sight of their patients, but I defy him to
-conceal them from their wounded imagination,
-if they are not wholly ignorant or
-can think at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Yet</span> in pure justice to all parties it
-should be observed, that, besides many
-other points to be learned only by ocular
-inspection and manual palpation, of which
-no theory by book or precepts can convey
-satisfactory or adequate notions, that great
-and essential point in our profession, a skill
-in what we call the <em>Touching</em>, is not to be
-acquired without a frequent habit of recourse
-to the sexual parts whence the indications
-are taken. And in this nothing
-but personal experience can perfect the
-practitioner. But this admitted, only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>proves the more clearly the utter impropriety
-of men addicting themselves to this
-occupation. For, once more, most certainly
-the season of acquiring the nicety
-of that faculty of <em>Touching</em>, besides other
-requisites in the art, is for obvious reasons
-that of youth. Now let any one figure to
-himself boys or young men, running at
-every hour, and exercising a kind of cruel
-assault on those bodies of the unfortunate
-females, upon which they are to learn
-their practice. But will they learn it by
-this means? It is much to be doubted.
-It may perhaps be granted, that men of a
-certain age, men past the slippery season
-of youth, may claim the benefit of exemption
-from impressions of sensuality, by
-objects to which custom has familiarized
-them. But, in good faith, can this be
-hoped or expected in the ungovernable
-fervor of youth? Can such a stoic insensibility
-be imagined in a boy or young man,
-as that he can direct such his researches by
-pawing and grabbling to the end of instruction
-only? Must not those researches,
-humanly speaking, be made in such a disorder
-of the senses, as to exclude the cool
-spirit of learning and improvement? May
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>he not lose himself, and yet not find what
-was the occasion of losing himself? In
-short, granted, though it is surely hard to
-grant, that the wretched women, admitted
-to this so falsely called Charity, may
-not deserve much tender consideration;
-but in what can the poor young pupils
-have deserved so ill of their parents or
-guardians, as to be thus exposed to temptations
-so shockingly indecent? What father,
-what mother, what considerate relation
-can paint to himself a child, or
-charge of his, at an age so incapable of
-resisting the power of sensual objects, as
-is that of youth, employed in exploring
-such arcanums, and exploring them too
-in vain? It is surely easier to guess the
-natural consequences, than to defend either
-the subjecting youths to them, or the
-hoping any good from the subjecting them.
-In short, even Dr. Smellie’s doll is a more
-laudable method of instruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> besides this reason taken from the
-moral impossibility of laying a timely foundation
-of practical knowledge in the male-sex,
-for preferring women under the false
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>charge of ignorance, to the so unconsequentially
-boasted learning of the men, there remains
-a yet stronger argument against the
-male-practitioners: an argument furnished
-by nature herself, and of the which, every
-impartial reader’s own feelings will in
-course render himself the judge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Nature</span> has to all animals, from the
-man down to the lowest insect, to all vegetables,
-from the cedar to the hyssop, to all
-created beings, in short gives what is respectfully
-necessary for them. Nor can it
-without the grossest absurdity be imagined,
-that this tender universal parent, or call
-her by a yet more sacred name, the divine
-providence, would have failed women in
-a point of so great importance to them, as
-that of the ability to assist one another, in
-lying-in, at the same time, that she has
-given them so strong and so reasonable a
-sympathy for those of their sex in that
-condition? Can it be thought that nature,
-so vigilant, so attentive, to the production
-of fresh generations, through all beings,
-should have been deficient or indifferent
-as to women, her favourite work, the friend,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>the ornament of human kind? And so she
-must have been, if she had left her in the
-necessity of recourse to others than those
-of her own sex, in whom there exists so
-sensibly a superior aptitude for tending,
-nursing, comforting and relieving the
-sick, that even the men themselves, in their
-exigences of infirmities, can hardly do
-without them. But to say the truth, and
-as I have before remarked, nature has
-been even liberal in her accomplishments
-of those of the female sex for this office.
-Not content with giving them a heart
-strong imprinted with a particular sympathy
-for their own sex, on this occasion,
-a sympathy, which for its tenderness, has
-some resemblance or affinity to the instinctive
-love or <em>storge</em> that parents have for their
-children; she has also bestowed on them a
-particular talent, both for the manual function
-in the delivery of women, and for
-all the concomitant requisites of their aid
-during the time of their lying-in: a talent
-in short, which may even be felt, without
-the necessity of definition or proof, to
-be superior to any possible attainment of
-the men in that art, though they should
-have sacrificed hecatombs of pregnant rabbits,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>or have brooded over thousands of
-coveys of eggs in their search of excellence
-in it. To say nothing of a certain softness,
-flexibility, and dexterity of hand, palpably
-denied to the men, there is, both in the
-management of the manual operation, and
-in the attendance due on those occasions,
-a quality in which the women, generally
-speaking, excel the men, and that is, patience,
-a quality more essential, more indispensable
-than can well be imagined.
-For on patience it is, that the salvation of
-both mother and child often depend; whether
-that patience is considered in the so
-needful point of predisposing the passages,
-or of waiting, without however over-waiting,
-the critical efforts of nature in the
-expulsion of her burden. Now nothing is
-more certain, than that nature, who to
-woman has in general given all that vivacity
-and quickness of spirit, which seems
-incompatible with the phlegmatic quality
-of patience, has, as if she had purposely
-meant an exception favourable to her darling
-end, the propagation of beings, especially
-the human one, bestowed on the female
-sex, such a remarkable assiduity and
-diligence in aid of women’s labors, as are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>rarely to be seen in men, and when seen,
-appear rather forced than naturally constitutional
-to them. Women, in those cases,
-have more bowels for women: they feel
-for those of their own sex so much, that
-that feeling operates in them like an irresistible
-instinct, both in favor of the pregnant
-mother and of the child. Thence it
-is, that a woman-practitioner will employ,
-without stint, or remission, all that is necessary
-to predispose the passages, for the
-least pain, and the greater safety; she will
-patiently, even to sixteen, to eighteen hours,
-where an extraordinary case requires so
-extraordinary a length of time, keep her
-hands fixedly employed in reducing and
-preserving the uterus in a due position, so
-as that she may not lapse the critical favorable
-moment of extraction, or of assisting
-the expulsive effort of nature: and
-what man is there, can it be imagined,
-would have endurance enough to remain
-so long in a posture, the very image of
-which, in one of his sex, is so nauseating
-and so revolting, to say nothing of the
-want of that pliability and dexterity of
-management of the fingers, on those occasions,
-so necessary, and so uncommon in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>the men, especially in that very age,
-when their practice should be supposed the
-greatest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is then in those cases where nature
-is slow, as she sometimes is, in her operation,
-and often so, for the greater good
-of the patient, so conformed perhaps, that
-a quicker expulsion would only destroy
-her, that the midwife, not only uses all
-patience consistent with safety of life to
-the mother especially, but inculcates patience
-to her suffering charge. Whereas
-<em>the men</em>, from their natural impatience, or
-from whatever other motives their precipitation
-may arise, having those infernal
-iron and steel instruments at hand, are but
-too often tempted to make use of them,
-not only without necessity, but against all
-the indications of nature, pleading for a just
-indulgence to her of her own time in her own
-work. In vain then do too many of them
-declaim as loudly as can be wished, or as
-the thing deserves, against all recourse to instruments,
-but in extremities which, they
-pretend, justify them. In the first place, those
-extremities are often the fault of deficient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>and unskilful practice. The precious moments
-of the assistence due to nature have
-been lapsed, or there has been some failure
-of preliminary treatment; or what is
-worse yet, extremities are rashly taken for
-granted when they are not existing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span>, in the history of one single woman,
-I give the history probably of thousands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>A healthy</span> woman, about twenty five
-years of age, and remarkably robust, was
-in labor of her second child. Her first
-had come in that natural smooth way, as
-had given the same man-midwife, who
-was now to lay her again, not the least
-trouble, as often happens. In this second
-labor, however, the head of the child stuck
-in the passage; and was so far advanced,
-that the Doctor told her, whether in jest
-or earnest I cannot say, that he could discern
-the color of its hair. Her pain,
-though extremely great, had not however
-hindered her observing the Doctor rummaging
-for his instruments; her frightful
-apprehension, of which, she had all the reason
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>to imagine, did not a little contribute
-to retard her throws. She taxed him with
-his intention to use them, and he did not
-deny it. Upon this she used the most
-moving fervorous entreaties for a respite of
-execution; but all in vain; he told her,
-with a resolute tone, that he knew surely
-better what was for her good than she did,
-that he had even already waited longer
-than he could justify; and that her life
-was absolutely desperate if the child was
-not instantly extracted, of the which being
-dead, he was sure from many incontestable
-symptoms. Her thorough confidence in
-a man, whom she had often heard declaim
-vehemently against the use of instruments
-unless in extremities, and which she understood
-in the most literal sense, without
-considering, or perhaps knowing that, on
-too many occasions, nothing is so different
-as words and actions; her thorough confidence
-in him, I say, joined to a natural
-love of life, and to her present feelings of
-exquisite pain, determined her to an acquiescence.
-The fatal instrument was
-struck into the brain-pan of the child, who
-at the instant gave the lie to the first part
-of the Doctor’s asseveration as to its death,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>by such a strong kick inwards as had almost
-killed her, and convinced her not only of
-its being alive but lively. This did not,
-you may be sure, add to her belief of the
-second part of his averment, that waiting
-any longer for the operation of nature,
-would infallibly have been her death. It
-might be so: yet surely there are strong
-reasons for concluding, that a little more
-patience might have saved a fine boy, and
-yet not have destroyed, or even hazarded
-the destroying the mother, whose life is
-certainly the preferable object. But how
-cruel to state the dreadful alternative where
-it does not exist! And how easy, in the
-presumption of that alternative, to extort
-the dreadful consent from a weak woman,
-yet more weakened by her condition, and
-naturally determined by her present feelings,
-to embrace the appearance of an immediate
-relief, presented to her in the
-form of salvation of life! However, scenes
-similar or a-kin to this, may, without
-breach of charity, be presumed too frequent,
-especially under those superficial
-men-midwives, whom the facility of forming,
-in the manner they are generally formed,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>renders so suspicious as to their ability,
-and who for so many reasons, both of nature
-and interest, are but too liable to the
-murderous want of that patience, for which
-the women are but the more remarkable
-in this case, for their not being perhaps
-so capable of it in any other. But here
-their duty is even their nature; as if in so
-capital a point, she would trust it to nothing
-but herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> it should be here to this objected
-that the women may, through that very
-spirit of patience, wait too long, or overstay
-the time of saving the patients life,
-for want of calling in proper assistence; I
-have already implicitly obviated this objection,
-by remarking before, that a true
-thorough midwife, from her quickness of
-apprehension, and knowledge of the danger,
-will ever be readier to call in the assistence
-and advice of a physician, than
-the common men-midwives, who are ever
-in proportion to their ignorance the more
-rash, the more fearless, and consequently
-averse to calling in that help, of which they
-will be ashamed to confess their want, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>thus cruelly, though with impunity, lose
-the opportunity of others endeavouring at
-least to repair those damages, of which
-themselves are oftenest the authors. Now a
-midwife has no such shame; she pretends
-to no extraordinary skill in physic or surgery;
-she knows her art, and will not presume
-to transgress its bounds; she would think
-herself accountable if she did: and even
-that very tenderness and sensibility, upon
-which nature has founded her patience,
-will make her cautious how she pushes
-that patience too far. She may easily see,
-feel and discern those cases in which nature
-calls the physician in aid to the midwife;
-nature, who seems to have placed
-such boundaries between those professions,
-as nothing but interest, presumption, or
-ignorance of nature, could ever render
-their union in one person supposable: tho’
-the quality of physician may not indeed
-exclude that of the surgeon, but rather
-implies, at least, the theory of surgery.
-For I presume anatomy is the great basis
-of true rational physic, though it can
-very little assist practical midwifery, which
-depends so much upon purely manual operation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>and needs only a sufficient general
-idea of the structure of the sexual parts in
-woman, the conceptacle, and passages of
-the delivery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> is so true, that any impartial observer
-of the male and female practitioners
-in midwifery, will easily distinguish the
-characteristic difference of the sexes, in
-their respective manner of operation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the men, with all their boasted erudition,
-you cannot but discern a certain,
-clumsy untowardly stiffness, an unaffectionate
-perfunctory air, an ungainly management,
-that plainly prove it to be an
-acquisition of art, or rather the rickety production
-of interest begot upon art.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> women, with all their supposed
-ignorance, you may observe a certain shrewd
-vivacity, a grace of ease, a handiness of
-performance, and especially a kind of unction
-of the heart, that all evidently demonstrate
-this talent in them to be a genuine
-gift of nature, which more than
-compensates what she is supposed to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>refused them, in depth of study, though
-even of that they are not so unsusceptible,
-as some men detractingly think; and in
-midwifery, most certainly they attain all
-that they need of learning to perfect them,
-with a facility the greater for nature, having
-collaterally endowed them with an
-organization of head, heart and hand, obviously
-adapting them to this her most
-capital mystery. This will be denied by
-none who have any regard for truth, and
-who do them justice, as to the keenness
-of their apprehension, as to that simpathizing
-sensibility which supplies them with
-the needful fund of patience, and tender
-attention; and as to that peculiar suppleness
-of the fingers, as well as slight of hand,
-in a function which rather exacts a kind of
-knack or dexterity, than mere strength,
-of which they have also a competency.
-Nor can it be quite without weight, that
-the midwives, besides their personal experience,
-being sometimes themselves the
-mothers of children, have a kind of intuitive
-guide within themselves, the original
-organ of conception, itself pregnant,
-in more cases than that, with a strong instinctive
-influence on the mind and actions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>of the sex; an influence not the less certainly
-existing, for its being undefinable
-and unaccountable, even to the greatest
-anatomists<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c012'><sup>[4]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span><span class='sc'>The</span> men, it will be said, have many
-or all of these qualifications, except indeed
-the last. Granted that they have:
-but how very few are there of the men
-that possess the most essential ones to a
-degree comparable to that of the women:
-or rather not so imperfectly, as that all
-their boasted skill in literary theory and
-anatomy, cannot supplement or atone for
-the deficiency? Nor theory, nor all the
-books that ever were written on that subject
-from the divine Hippocrates, who understood
-so much of physic, and so little
-of midwifery, down to Dr. Smellie, who
-is so great a man in both, will ever amount
-to so much as the practical experience of
-a regular bred midwife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to that superior skill of the men in
-anatomy which is sounded so high, against
-the women, I shall not imitate the men in
-their want of candor towards the female-sex
-in their availing themselves of false arguments.
-I will not then take the benefit
-of the slight opinion which Celsus and
-Galen had of the depths of anatomy; they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>who contented themselves with a gross superficial
-notion of the principal viscera. I
-will not even desire to countenance that
-contempt by the example of that great
-philosopher Mr. Lock, the intimate friend,
-and even the counsellor of the British Esculapius
-Sydenham, who paid a great deference
-to his physical knowledge; and
-yet this very Mr. Lock wrote an ingenious
-treatise (though not published by him) upon
-the insignificance of the refinements of anatomy
-in the practice of physic. Neither
-will I here insist on the absurdities into
-which even the greatest anatomists have
-fallen; as for example, <em>Pecquet</em>, the famous
-discoverer of the thoracic duct in the human
-body, who nevertheless adopted so
-extravagant a notion, as that digestion of
-food ought not to be promoted by
-exercise, but by drinking spirituous liquors,
-a practice to which himself fell a
-victim, dying suddenly at the anatomical
-theatre. It is only for those who have a
-false cause to defend to shut their eyes
-against those truths which seem against
-them. Those on the contrary who defend
-purely the truth, know that one truth
-cannot hurt or exclude another truth, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>that all truths may very well coexist. It
-may be true that anatomy, though it does
-not give the nature of the elementary composition
-of parts intrinsic and too minute
-for the human sense, since a new incision
-only presents a new surface, much conduces
-however to ground the student in
-mechanical principles of great assistence
-to him in practice, of which they are
-doubtless the most solid foundation: yet
-that truth is not incompatible with another
-quite as much a truth, that midwifery
-can have no occasion but for a general
-notion of the configuration of those
-parts upon which it is exercised. A midwife,
-for example, may be a very safe and
-a very good one, without knowing whether
-the uterus is a hollow muscle, or purely
-a tissue of membranes, arteries and veins: but
-if that ascertainment is necessary, she must
-wait for it till the anatomists have settled
-among them that point, which, like many
-other capital points of anatomy, is not
-however yet done. In short, once more,
-a woman in labor requires a midwife to
-lay her, not an anatomist to dissect her, or
-read lectures over the corpse, he will be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>most likely to make of her, if he depends
-more on the refinements of anatomy, than
-on the dexterity of hand, and the suggestions
-of practical experience and common sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> then, there are who can examine
-things fairly and with a sincere desire of
-determining according to the preponderance
-of reason, they cannot but on their
-own sense of nature, on their own feelings,
-in short, discern that no ignorance, of which
-the women are undistinguishingly taxed,
-can be an argument for the men’s supplanting
-them in the practice of midwifery,
-on the strength of that superiority
-of their learning, so rarely not perfectly
-superfluous, and often dangerous, if not
-even destructive both to mother and child.
-Consult nature, and her but too much
-despised oracle common sense; consult even
-the writings of the men-midwives
-themselves, and the resulting decision will
-be, that great reason there is to believe,
-that the operation of the men-practitioners
-and instrumentarians puts more women
-and infants to cruel and torturous deaths,
-in the few countries where they are received,
-than the ignorance of the midwives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>in all those countries put together where
-the men-practitioners are not yet admitted,
-and where, for the good of mankind, it
-is to be hoped they never will.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> here said few countries have hitherto
-countenanced men-midwives. That
-I presume is too notorious to require proof:
-for even those Saracen or Arabian physicians,
-Avicen, Rhazes, &amp;c. who, by the
-by, are little more than servile translators
-or copists of the Grecian ones, wrote
-only theoretically in quality of physicians;
-for it does not appear that they ever practised
-midwifery themselves, nor ever got
-the practice of it by men introduced into
-their countries. Among the Orientals
-there is no such being known as a man-midwife;
-that refinement of real barbarism,
-under the specious pretext of humanity,
-is happily unknown to them. But
-if it should be said, that the jealousy so
-constitutional to the inhabitants of the
-warmer climes, has a share in the exclusion
-of men-practitioners; the women
-have, at least in that point, a weakness to
-thank for its production to them of so
-great a good, as the greater safety of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>persons and children, in that capital emergency
-of their lying-in. For, after all, the
-art of midwifery is, in the hands of men,
-like certain plants, which, by dint of a
-forcing culture, exhibit more of florish, or
-a broader expansion; but besides ever retaining
-a certain exotic appearance, they
-never come up to the virtue of those spontaneously
-growing in the full vigor of a
-soil of nature’s own choice for them. Art
-may often indeed improve nature, but can
-never be a supplement to her, where she is
-essentially wanting. Deep learning may,
-in very extraordinary cases perhaps, repair
-the errors, or assist the deficiencies of the
-manual function, but the deepest learning
-will never bestow the manual function, nor
-indeed can in the same person exist, but
-at the expence of the manual function,
-which must have been in some measure
-neglected for it. And yet the greatest
-practical skill that any man can with the
-utmost labor and experience acquire, will
-hardly ever equal the excellence in it of
-the women, Great Nature’s chosen instruments
-for this work: an excellence by
-them attained with scarce any learning at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>all, or at least of that abstruse theoretical
-sort, on which the men make their superiority
-principally depend.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> that I may not herein be taxed of
-maintaining any thing that has only the
-air of a paradox, or of begging the question,
-I shall implicitly, in the course of
-my answer to the following objection, endeavor
-to remove any remaining doubt
-on this head.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Eleventh.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>In</span> like manner, as there are particular
-parts of the human body which have their
-appropriate undertakers or protectors under
-their proper distinctive names, as oculists,
-dentists, and corn-cutters, who by
-making respectively one part their particular
-care and study, arrive at a greater perfection,
-at least in the practical operations
-on it, than regular physicians or surgeons,
-whose object is the whole fabric;
-Why, by parity of reasoning, should not
-the men-practitioners in midwifery be preferable
-to the midwives, since a man has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>to his manual function superadded a
-theory superior to that of the women,
-who, it is confessed, stand sometime in
-need of calling in the physician to their
-assistence? As a man then will have laid
-in a stock of medical knowledge, peculiarly
-adapted to the exigencies and disorders
-incident to women during their pregnancy
-and lying-in, he must consequently
-excel the midwife, or the physician singly
-considered; he who with so much
-greater convenience will have united in
-one person both their faculties, besides that
-of the surgeon.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>That</span> certain parts of the human body
-enjoy the protection of practitioners, who
-respectively devote themselves to their service,
-I confess. Such appropriations may
-also be beneficial, at least, to the practitioners.
-I can even conceive, that a professed
-dentist may clean, scale, and draw
-teeth, or an oculist couch a cataract, better
-than either a physician or surgeon.
-These may in their respective practice be
-excelled by those partial artists. But I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>much doubt, even as to these, whether
-their trusting too much to that partial excellence,
-does not sometimes do more mischief
-than good, for want of duly consulting
-the relation of such parts to the universal
-fabric, of which physicians and surgeons
-must be so much better judges.
-Galen does not appear in contradiction to
-common sense, where he observes, that to
-rectify a disorder of the eye, the head
-must be rectified, which cannot well be
-done without rectifying the whole body.
-In confirmation of which, I once myself
-knew a gentleman, whom a professed oculist,
-at Paris, assured of the loss of his eyes
-being infallible; and who upon his despondingly
-consulting a regular physician, was
-by him as positively assured, that those very
-condemned eyes might be saved by a proper
-regimen. The gentleman happily believed
-him, and his eye-sight was not only
-saved, but perfectly restored.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Another</span> instance of the like nature
-occurs to me, which seems applicable to
-the dentist, and which I quote here from
-a translation of the learned and ingenious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>Dr. Huxham’s observations on the constitution
-of the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Many</span> years ago I knew a gentleman
-of a hale, robust habit of body,
-who, from being too much addicted to
-the drinking of brandy, fell into a violent
-jaundice, from which however he
-would have recovered well enough,
-would he have conformed himself to
-the advice of his <em>physicians</em>: but he on
-the contrary, because his <em>gums</em> were
-very apt to bleed, and his <em>teeth</em> stunk
-from the <em>scorbutic taint</em>, put himself into
-the hands of an ignorant <em>pretender to
-physic for the cure of these inconveniencies</em>.
-This fellow immediately set about <em>scaling
-his teeth</em>, and <em>rubbing his gums</em> with
-<em>his famous teeth-powder</em>, till at last, by
-perpetually fretting and irritating the
-loose texture, he brought on such a
-hemorrhage, that baffled all the stiptics
-that could be invented by the most expert
-surgeons, and continuing to spout
-forth in small streams from the little arteries
-of the gums, which were now
-every where divided: in the space of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span><em>sixteen hours</em> the poor man <em>died</em> through
-mere loss of blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> instances are however only adduced
-to justify that doubt which I expressed
-of these partial artists being <em>always</em>
-to be beneficially consulted in those local
-affections, to which their talent is supposed
-exclusively appropriated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Corn-cutter</span> is indeed a homely
-plain English term, but if the teeth give
-from the Latin the appellation of dentist,
-as the eye that of oculist, what name, taking
-it from the <em>part</em> in question, will remain
-for that language, to give the men-practitioners
-of midwifery, in substitution
-to that hermaphrodite appellation, that absurd
-contradictory one in terms, of <em>man</em>-mid<em>wife</em>,
-or to that new-fangled word <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">accoucheur</span></i>,
-which is so rank and barefaced a
-gallicism? But let what name soever be
-given them, it can hardly be too burlesque
-an one, considering the gross revolting impropriety
-of men, addicting themselves to a
-profession naturally so little made for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Paint</span> to yourself one of these sage
-deep-learned <em>Cotts</em>, dressed for proceeding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>to officiate<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c012'><sup>[5]</sup></a>, and presenting himself with
-his pocket-nightgown, or loose washing
-wrapper, a waistcoat without sleeves, and
-those of his shirt pinned up to the breasts
-of his waistcoat; add to this,<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c012'><sup>[6]</sup></a>fingers,
-if which not the nicest paring the nails
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>will ever cure the stiffness and clumsiness;
-and you will hardly deny its being somewhat
-puzzling, the giving a name to such
-an heteroclite figure? Or rather can a too
-ludicrous one be assigned <em>it</em>?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Those</span> however who will consider this
-grave Doctor in his margery field-uniform,
-this ridiculous piece of mummery, in a
-light of seriousness, such as the matter perhaps
-more justly deserves, especially combining
-with all the rest, the idea of his
-crotchets, forceps, and the rest of his bag
-of instruments, may think he less resembles
-a priestess of Lucina, than the sacrificer,
-in a surplice, with his slaughtering-knife,
-to one of those heathen deities whose
-horrid worship required human victims,
-which the poor lying-in women but too
-nearly resemble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> whether or not, in imitation of
-the dentist, or oculist, he receives his title
-from the particular part he has taken under
-his protection, so much is certain, that
-the same arguments, which militate for
-those partial artists claiming their respective
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>departments of the human body, will not
-avail the man-midwife. An oculist, a
-dentist, a corn-cutter, have no operations
-to perform but those of which disorders
-equally incident to both sexes are the object.
-There is nothing in their practice
-repugnant to the nature of the male-sex,
-nor to that reasonable decency, which only
-requires that no sacrifices of it should
-be made in vain, or at least not made to
-no better a purpose than to increase at once
-the danger and the pain of both mother
-and child, in whose favor it is sacrificed,
-as it may be clearly proved to be oftenest
-the case. But of the chirurgical part of
-the man-midwife’s pretention, I reserve
-to treat after considering him in the capacity
-of a physician; in which a man may
-indeed be wanted, but in that of surgeon
-never, or at least so very rarely, as not to
-atone for the dangers which attend the
-men forming themselves into a set under
-the name of men-midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Where</span> there is no complication of
-any collateral disorder with the gestation
-and parturition of women, it is even a jest
-for men to pretend the necessity of any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>study or practice to which women may not
-arrive, and even much excel them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> where there exists the case of a
-singular constitution, or of symptoms declarative
-of other help being necessary than
-just the common one, that quickness of
-discernment, that peculiar shrewdness of
-the women, in distinguishing what is relative
-to their art from what is foreign
-from it, gives them the alarm in time,
-and if they have a just sense of their duty,
-or but common sense, they must know that
-such disorders cannot be <em>partial</em>, cannot
-therefore be considered as they are by the
-man-midwife, as subordinate to his particular
-province, relative as they are to the
-whole fabric or system. All <em>partial</em> practice
-then is here absolutely out of the question,
-and now what help can, consistently
-with good sense, be expected from a man-midwife,
-who, under a natural impossibility
-of ever acquiring the female dexterity
-in the manual operation, cannot however,
-be supposed to attain even that imperfect
-degree of skill, without sacrificing to the
-endeavours at it the time and pains in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>study and practice, which are requisite to
-form the able physician?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>But</span>, in fact, the men, that is to say,
-those of that sex who have the best understood
-all the refinements of anatomy,
-all the variety of female distempers, never
-that I can learn, attempted to invade the
-practical province of midwifery. The
-immortal <em>Harvey</em>, <em>Sydenham</em>, the great <em>Boerhave</em>,
-<em>Haller</em>, and numbers of others who
-have written so usefully upon all the objects
-of midwifery, have never pretended
-or dropped a hint of the expedience of
-substituting men-midwives to the female
-ones. They contented themselves with
-lamenting the ignorance of some midwives,
-from which has been drawn a very just inference
-of the necessity of their being better
-instructed; but even those great men
-never chose the character of practitioners
-themselves, nor probably would have
-thought it any detraction from their merit
-to have it said, they might make a bad
-figure in the function of delivering a woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span><span class='sc'>Whoever</span> then will consider but how
-the common run of men-midwives actually
-are and must be formed, and assuredly
-the number of exceptions to the general
-insufficiency cannot oppose the inference,
-must allow that, where a woman has
-distempers collateral to her pregnancy,
-with which they must also become dangerously
-complicated, she must expose herself
-to the utmost hazard, in any confidence
-she may place in a man-midwife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> truth is, that most of the dangerous
-lyings-in are so far from being likely
-to be relieved by a man-midwife, that it
-is often to the having relied upon his medical
-judgment, and especially to his manual
-skill they are owing. But of the first
-only it is we are now here speaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> women captivated by that assiduity
-of the men-midwives, of which they only
-fail when they are not paid or likely to
-be paid, in some form or other, up to the
-value they set upon themselves, lightly
-take for granted, that, as men, they are also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>capable physicians. It is enough, in short,
-for these practitioners not to be women;
-for the women to think they can prescribe
-for them in all disorders. A mistake this,
-often big with the utmost danger to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> men-midwives, in general, have
-never, at the most, carried their studies
-beyond the disorders commonly incident
-to pregnant women: the knowledge of all
-the other possibly collateral ones, is what
-even the least modest of them will hardly
-claim, unless to the profoundly ignorant,
-and is in fact scarce less than impossible
-to one who has applied himself
-essentially to the manual function. In such
-cases the ignorance of a midwife can hardly
-be greater than that of the men-practitioners,
-and must be less dangerous from
-her less of pretention. Her consciousness
-of her own want of sufficient light, will
-engage her readily to state the exigency to
-some able and experienced physician, whom
-she must allow, in such cases, to be her
-superior judge: whereas the other, the
-man-midwife, acknowledges no greater
-authority than that with which he is pleased
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>to invest himself. He stands, in virtue
-of a distinct business, and a business for
-which he never was made, of a sudden the
-self-constituted sovereign dictator and inspector-general
-of all female disorders whatsoever,
-where the woman is with child,
-that is to say, where the case is only thereby
-rendered much the more nice and difficult,
-and, not rarely, does he continue
-under the same pretext, to extend his practice
-to where there is no pregnancy at all
-in the case. And yet ask him for his titles,
-they are all implicitly dependent on or
-subordinate to that same midwifery, for
-which he is so naturally unqualified, even if
-a due study and exercise of it would permit
-those avocations, that would contribute to
-accomplish him in the so necessary general
-knowledge of physic. But indeed why
-need he acquire it, since it is so commonly
-taken for granted, or that he is believed
-upon his own word, especially if he is
-backed with a diploma, for form’s sake,
-that may have cost him little or nothing
-of medical study, or indeed of any thing
-but the amount of the fees for it?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span><span class='sc'>Yet</span> how serious, how important is it
-for women, if they tender their own lives,
-and that of the precious burthen of which
-they are the depositaries, to make that
-distinction between the physician and the
-midwife, which they seem so little to make!
-How little do they consider, what nevertheless
-is strictly true, that a man can never
-at the best be but an indifferent practitioner
-of midwifery, though he may be
-an excellent one in physic; but that as
-bad a midwife as he can be, he must be
-yet, if possible, a worse physician, if he
-attempts to throw both professions into
-one, and exercise them jointly! They are
-incompatible, from the justly presumable
-impossibility of one man doing justice to
-the practice of the one, unless at the expence
-of the study of the other: by which
-other, to obviate cavils, I repeat it, I
-mean the general practice of physic, which
-comprehends the speculative part of midwifery,
-as well as all other branches understood
-to be the province of the physician.
-This distinction then I make, because,
-as to the diseases purely incident to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>pregnant women, experimental practice
-will rather assist the medical study of them:
-and it is in that part only the men-midwives
-can make any figure at all, and that
-not a superior one to midwives who are
-regularly bred, and who have, in their
-favor, their excellence in the manual function
-besides.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Once</span> more, in complicated cases, the
-most dreadful mistakes are to be dreaded
-from those common-men-midwives, who
-so groundlessly erect themselves into physicians
-on those occasions. A purge, a venesection,
-or any other prescription injudiciously
-ordered, may be the occasion
-proximate or remote of death to both mother
-and child; yet a woman, at least,
-<em>ought</em> not to expect better from one of these
-practitioners who, for the most part, has
-neither study nor experience in general
-physic; nor more than a smattering of
-anatomy, joined to the index-learning of
-dispensatories. Such a man-midwife can
-never have thoroughly made himself master
-of the course of the fluids, nor of the order
-of their circulation. Their relation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>to the solids, and the efficacy of medicines
-upon both, can hardly be sufficiently
-known to a man, who must have been
-too much employed in trying to form a
-hand never to be formed, and in attendances
-on the practice of his midwifery, to
-acquire those collateral requisites for the
-effectual multiplication of his professions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Yet</span> this man void of knowledge, experience,
-observation, and, in consequence,
-of physical ability, shall boldly decide on
-the expedience of an internal remedy, of
-which he does not know the power or
-operation; of a venesection, of which he
-can but guess at the consequence; and of
-a narcotic, of which he is unaware of the
-danger. In all which, observe, he may
-possibly sometimes be tolerably right, in
-cases where there is <em>no</em> complication; that
-is to say, in cases when a midwife, duly
-bred, is as sufficient as the best man-practitioner.
-But then she is moreover not
-only quicker of apprehension, as to danger,
-where the case appears complicated, but
-readier to call in proper help where she
-discerns it to be above her reach, and consequently
-above that of the man-midwife,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>who must be equally or rather more at a
-loss, because his boasted theory will serve
-only to puzzle him, or what is worse yet,
-since a shew must be made of doing something,
-<em>will</em> most probably determine him
-improperly, if not fatally, to random prescriptions,
-in points out of his sphere of
-knowledge, or rote of practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Many</span> a man who to-day undertakes
-prescribing for a fever, for a fit, a convulsion
-in a lying-in woman, only because he
-appears in the character of a man-midwife,
-would have been ashamed the day before
-he had taken up that business to give himself
-out for a physician. He would have
-been afraid of ordering any thing for her
-if she was not his patient, as to lying-in,
-and would not, even after assuming the
-profession of midwifery, perhaps order any
-thing for the same woman, out of the
-time in which his office is supposed necessary.
-This plainly proves, that many of
-those gentlemen are weak enough to imagine,
-that the man-midwife implies the
-physician, though the greatest physicians
-that ever were never dreamt of such an absurdity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>as that the physician implied the
-midwife, whose master and instructor he
-rather is, in points highly useful indeed at
-times to her profession, but in which that
-profession does not consist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I do</span> not however charge <em>all</em> the men-midwives
-with so much modesty, as to
-confine their striking out of midwifery into
-physic, to the women lying-in, or to
-the time of their lying-in, since there have
-not been wanting some who, with equal
-ignorance, but superior effrontery, have intrepidly
-hoisted, the standard of a general
-knowledge of physic, and having originally
-insinuated themselves into families
-in the character of men-midwives, have
-easily maintained their ground in them
-afterwards on the foot of physicians.
-A circumstance not much to be wondered
-at, considering the endearment of
-such an office as that of a man-midwife,
-and the ascendant it must serve to give
-them over the heads of families, even in
-points where a midwife can have no shadow
-of pretention, for interfering. In
-the mean time, let any one of sense or
-common humanity consider but the consequences
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>of this dangerous admission of
-the sufficiency of a man-midwife in those
-complicated cases, which require the consultation
-of a regular physician; to say nothing,
-for the present, of the other objections
-already mentioned, or which I shall
-hereafter more at large discuss, and the result
-must be, to allow that the medical
-pretentions, or indeed any pretentions, of
-these men-practitioners, cannot be too
-much discouraged, nor confidence more
-misplaced than in them. For once that
-they may hit the mark by chance, they
-will often take the part of the distemper
-instead of that of the patient; they will
-do what they have only a gross guess of
-being the right, not what they know to
-be so: and physic, at best, but a conjectural
-science, must in them want even the
-common grounds of conjecture.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Instead</span> then of the dangerous self-sufficiency
-of these complex smatterers, you
-have in a plain midwife, supposing her regularly
-bred, and duly qualified for her
-profession (for I am no more an advocate
-for ignorance in the women than in the
-men) one, who, being called in time, will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>duly consider, and observe the constitution
-of the person that wants her assistence. If
-nothing appears extraordinary, or out of the
-common-rules in her patient’s constitution
-and conformation, she needs only lay down
-for her the previous course of management,
-and as the hour of delivery approaches predispose
-her properly: a point in which the
-men must be grossly deficient, for want of
-that skill of prognostic inherent to the
-women, from their particular delicacy and
-shrewdness in the <em>faculty of touching</em>; upon
-which more depends than can be well
-imagined. Wherever a case occurs to a
-midwife, so complicated as to be above
-her reach, her interest, her reputation, her
-duty, all conspire to prescribe to her a
-timely application to a regular physician.
-She communicates her doubts or difficulties
-to him, who, at the same time that he
-receives a just information from her of the
-state of things, combines it with his own
-knowledge of the human constitution. He
-does not confound, as the man-midwife
-does, ideas so different as those of the manual
-operation, and the medicinal prescription.
-The object of the physician, being
-the same as that of the midwife, the prevention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>or alleviation of pain to the mother,
-and the greatest safety to the mother
-and child, but preferentially that of the mother;
-there is this advantage to both mother
-and child, that all harshness of practice, all
-the violenter remedies will be as much
-corrected as can be done, consistent with
-the safety of mother and child, by the midwife’s
-tenderness, by which the physician
-will at the same time be above the being
-misled into omissions of any thing absolutely
-requisite. In short, on such occasions, they
-serve to temper one another. A truly great
-physician will not disdain the lights furnished
-him by her practical experience, and
-she knows the bounds of her mechanical
-duty and profession too well, to interfere
-with his superior intellectual province, in
-those points submitted to it. A pragmatical
-man-midwife, on the strength of his
-miserable half-learning, would think it a
-derogation from his character, to call in a
-physician in supplement to his deficiency,
-of which he is always ashamed, though
-indeed he has sometimes the excuse of
-himself not knowing it. Then when a fatal
-accident has happened, under his hands,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>against which, with more knowledge he
-might have guarded, or which with less of
-presumption or dependence on himself he
-might have prevented, by procuring previous
-or collateral advice; he thinks himself
-abundantly acquitted by laying the blame
-on <em>occult causes</em>. Even the great man-midwife,
-<em>Mauriceau</em> himself, has made use of
-that trite exploded apology<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c012'><sup>[7]</sup></a>: where he
-expressly says, “that a sudden unexpected
-death of his patient was one of those
-<span class='fss'>FATALITIES</span>, that not all the human
-prudence can prevent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> that I may not here incur the least
-charge of unfairness, as if I meant by this
-quotation any thing so absurd or unjust, as
-that in the labors of pregnant women, as
-well as in other diseases unconnected with
-them, there may not sometimes happen
-accidents impossible to be foreseen, as well
-under the care of the best physician, called
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>in by the very best midwife, as under the
-most ignorant assuming man-midwife, I
-shall here introduce another quotation from
-the same <em>Levret</em>, that will especially shew
-the ladies, and all parties concerned, to
-what an imaginary safety, so much, and
-even the very point sought for, is sacrificed
-as is sacrificed, in preferring the men-practitioners
-to the midwives.
-<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c012'><sup>[8]</sup></a>
-“M. de la Motte says, that for the
-fifth time he laid the wife of a glover
-of Valogne, the 16th of March, 1704;
-that the woman was but an hour in
-her labor-pains, and that he delivered
-her with all the facility imaginable;
-that he left her upon the couch till he
-had given her some broth, after which
-he recommended her to the care of the
-nurse, and went <em>where his business called
-him</em>. He adds, that he had time but
-just to bleed two persons in the neighbourhood,
-before he was fetched away
-in haste to see the patient he had just
-laid, whom he found <em>dead</em> upon the bed.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>The cause of this <em>death</em> was instantly
-manifest to him from the stream of
-<em>blood</em>, which ran about the floor, and
-even penetrated to the apartment beneath,
-after soaking through the bed
-itself, in which there remained clots of
-blood of an extraordinary size.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>This</span> author adds, in the reflexions
-at the end of this observation, that this
-delivery had been both more easy and
-more expeditious than any this woman
-had precedently had: and he notes,
-that these <em>melancholic accidents</em> are not
-<em>without example</em>, since such ladies as the
-princess of ... and madam la Presidente
-de —— with <em>numbers</em> of <em>others</em>,
-have, on the like occasion, undergone
-the same <em>fate</em>, as her he here treats of.
-These are, according to him, <em>proofs</em> that
-all human science and dexterity <em>often</em>
-cannot prevent the <em>like misfortunes</em>, since
-these <em>great ladies</em> had been lain by the
-most <em>celebrated men-midwives</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> I might here, without much probability
-of being contradicted, aver, that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>where such accidents, said to happen so
-<em>frequently</em> and inevitably, should happen
-under the hands of midwives, there would
-be but one voice among the men-practitioners
-and their credulous adherents, to
-impute them to the ignorance and malpractice
-of the women. The plea of <em>occult
-causes</em> would be hooted at in them,
-tho’ receivable, it seems, from the men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Not</span> however to imitate what I condemn
-in them, a gross want of candor to
-the women, of whom, by the by, the very
-best of the men-practitioners have learnt all
-the laudable part of practice, I shall allow
-that among those frequent examples, of
-sudden deaths upon delivery, some few
-might perhaps be of those unaccountable
-surprizes with which nature mocks human
-ignorance; but then it must be allowed
-too, that not all of them admit of
-that favorable solution. The truth is that
-nature, to those who have studied her
-course, and watched her motions with a
-due spirit of practical observation, hardly
-ever but gives warning enough to prepare
-proper obviative methods. It is not here
-the place to enter into the discussion of those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>deaths by sudden hemorrhage upon delivery,
-of which I shall hereafter attempt to
-give a more satisfactory account, as well
-as of the measures of prevention, than
-Levret. My end in the preceding quotation
-is to show;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>First</span>, that by the confession of the
-men-midwives themselves, the most fatal
-accidents <em>frequently</em>, and <em>inevitably</em> happen
-under them in spite of all their <em>science</em> and
-<em>dexterity</em>!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, to offer to the reader a reflexion
-for himself to judge of the validity
-of it, to wit, that, not only in the cases of
-the hemorrhage, but in many others,
-where there is a complication of disorders
-with the state of pregnancy and parturition,
-much of the safety of mother and
-child must depend on that general medical
-knowledge, to which the men-midwives
-have so little grounds of pretention.
-Nor indeed, for the symptoms of necessity
-for resorting to medical help, have they
-the same shrewd prognostic or acute sense
-as the experienced women, who much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>sooner perceive the danger before it is too
-late, and are neither with-held by a false
-shame, nor by a criminal or senseless presumption,
-from calling in proper assistence.
-Such at least has been and still is their practice
-in all ages, and in all countries, where
-the matters of pregnancy and lyings-in are
-committed to them. The great object of
-the man-midwife is to impose so false a
-notion on his patient, as that his partial
-knowledge is sufficient to every thing. The
-consequence of which is, that if he is not
-too officious, too pragmatical, by way of
-ostentation of his art, in common cases,
-that is to say, where there is no complication
-of disorders, every thing may pass
-off tolerable well, till the crisis of labor-pains.
-And in that crisis I defy him, with
-all his learning, to equal the female skill
-and cleverness, not only for lessening the
-sufferings of the patient, but for facilitating
-the happy issue of her burden.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> where there is a complicated case,
-dependent on the physician’s art, then the
-trusting to those men-dabblers in midwifery
-is a folly that may be fatal to both
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>mother and child, or, at the best, the delivery
-will have been rendered more painful,
-more laborious, more big with danger,
-for those precautions having been
-neglected, which can be so little supposed
-to occur to the common run of men-midwives
-in cases foreign from their rote of
-practice. Yet it is precisely in those disorders
-collaterally contingent to pregnancy,
-and no disorder does that state exclude, that
-the greatest skill and knowledge of physic
-are required. Then it is, that not only
-the preservation of the mother claims regard,
-and certainly the preferable one, but
-even that of the child is no indifferent
-point. And to save both, the state of the
-mothers constitution must be carefully considered.
-Thus the combination of the
-disease with the pregnancy, the due regard
-to the mother as well as that to the child,
-form a triple object that takes in a compass
-of comprehension to which no midwife
-will pretend, nor can be imagined to
-exist in the mere man-practitioner of midwifery.
-Such a nicety of observation does
-not seem to be the province of a manual
-operator, and indeed useless to him in that
-character. And as he will be more likely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>to trust to conjectures, which no sufficient
-grounds of study will have justified his presuming
-to trust, he must oftener take the
-part of the disease than of the patient. It
-is well if sometimes, disconcerted at the
-excess of a danger of which he does not
-understand the origin or nature, he does
-not, in default of the head, employ the
-hand, and engage the mother in a premature
-or forced delivery of the child, to the
-imminent hazard of the lives of both.
-Now comes the chirurgical operation in
-play; and we shall now see, that the ingraftment
-of the surgeon upon the midwife,
-deserves equally at least reprobation with
-that of the physician.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> before I enter on this disquisition,
-I am to observe, that this objection to the
-surgeon’s commencing midwife, does not
-in the least attack the merit of that respectable
-body of men, the surgeons. No one
-can honor their profession more than I do:
-I even readily grant, that their skill in anatomy
-is of service to midwifery itself, into
-which it throws a great light. It would
-be easy for me to name, if requisite, several
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>surgeons, who are not only an honor
-to their country, from their excellence in an
-art so beneficial to mankind, but an ornament
-to society, from their extensive humanity
-and charity. These, I am so far from
-thinking, will hold themselves honored by
-the men-midwives attempting to make
-a common-cause with them, that I rather
-depend on their bearing witness on the
-part of the women in this cause, which
-is indeed the cause of Nature, of that Nature
-which they study so practically, consequently
-so usefully, and with which they
-are so conversant. I am persuaded they
-can even furnish me with arguments, from
-their superior store of knowledge, in supplement
-to my deficiencies. The surgeons
-must look on these professors of midwifery
-as a kind of amphibious beings, hard to
-define, whose claim exhibits rather the deformity
-of a preternatural excrescence, or
-wen growing out of the chirurgical art,
-than the becomingness of a natural member
-of it. Most of the first founders of
-this new sect of instrumentarians in this
-country were, or I am greatly misinformed,
-neglected physicians, or surgeons without
-practice, who in supplement to their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>respective deficiencies, greedily snatched
-at the occasion at that time of a prevailing
-whim in France, of employing men-midwives,
-with just such a rage of fashion,
-as some of the ladies there prefer valet-de-chambres
-to waiting maids. This novelty
-then appeared to practitioners despairing
-of business enough in their own way, an
-excellent scheme for eking out their scanty
-cloth with this bit of a border, of which
-by degrees they have made to themselves
-a whole cloak. In short novelty joined,
-to the much exagerated objections to perhaps
-a few insufficient midwives, brought
-in and established a remedy yet worse than
-the disease. Their success encouraged others;
-and now behold swarms of pupils
-pullulating, and forming on the models
-before-mentioned. Thus two or three
-maggots have produced thousands. Iron
-and steel are not tender: and yet it was
-by the pretended necessity of resorting to
-instruments made of these metals, that
-these out-casts of either profession effectuated
-their introduction into a business so
-little made for them. Then it was, that
-not with the least squinting view to filthy
-lucre, but purely out of stark love and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>kindness to the women, that these redressers
-of wrongs, armed with their
-crotchets, and other weapons of death,
-took the field on the hardy adventure of
-rescuing the fair sex out of the dreadful
-hands of the ignorant midwives. But as
-to the validity of that plea of theirs, of
-the necessity of employing instruments, I
-reserve to treat of it at large in its place in
-my second part.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> I shall only request the reader to
-remember, what has been said of the indecent,
-superficial, and even cruel method
-of training up pupils in this upstart profession.
-But if I was to add here my having
-been credibly informed, that there are
-novices who watch the distresses of poor
-pregnant women, even in private lodgings,
-where, under a notion of learning the business,
-they make those poor wretches,
-hired for their purpose, undergo the most
-inhuman vexation, in a condition so fit to
-inspire compassion, and where those scenes
-must be rather a school of brutality than
-of art: if I was to urge, what from the
-great probability of the thing I firmly believe,
-that more than one unhappy creature
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>has fallen a victim to the rudiments
-of these novices; that especially not long
-ago, one of them in a hurry and confusion
-of presumption and ignorance, instead
-of the after-birth from a woman, tore away,
-by mistake, her womb itself, which
-occasioned, of all necessity, the poor creature’s
-dying in unutterable agonies of torture:
-if I was yet to go farther and assert,
-that even not one of the least eminent
-men-midwives pulled off the arms of a
-child in his attempt to extract it, and very
-gravely laid them upon the table; what
-would be replied to me? It would be said
-I had invented these horrors, or forged
-such raw-head and bloody-bones stories,
-purely in favour of my own cause. And
-to this objection, while I produce no proof,
-and for my producing no proof other reasons
-may be obviously assigned, besides
-that of those cases being non-existent, some
-of which I am very certain are true, and
-firmly believe all the rest; to this objection
-then I say, I make no reply. The reader,
-who will have considered this matter, may
-easily decide within himself the degree of
-probability in such allegations. But what
-objection will stand good against authorities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>of reasonings and facts, produced from
-the writings of the <em>men-midwives</em> themselves?
-Will they be suspected of partiality
-or aggravation of things against themselves?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I shall</span> here select one of perhaps the
-most excusable examples from the circumstances
-accompanying it, or it would probably
-not have been produced by the author
-a man-midwife, to shew, by the confession
-of the men-midwives themselves,
-the insufficiency of their discernment, whether
-a child is dead or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Edge-tools</span> and crotchets naturally
-inspire horror, and though they <em>ought</em>
-not to be employed unless on a dead
-child, it is well known the mother is
-not always <em>safe</em> from the effect of them.
-Besides there are <em>no signs</em> of the death of
-a child, though he should have stuck in
-the passage for several days ... <em>certain
-enough</em> to authorize a recourse to a method
-which infallibly <em>kills</em> it, if it is not
-dead before. This is so true, that whoever
-will turn over the authors antient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>and modern, on this subject, there is not
-<em>one</em> of them that gives us <em>satisfaction</em> on
-this point. On the contrary, they <em>all</em>
-seem <em>agreed</em> on the <em>insufficiency</em> of these
-signs, and there are even <em>few</em> of them
-who do not bring examples to support
-this uncertainty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Here</span> follows one taken from the
-observations of Saviard, p. 367. This
-author says, that a chirurgical operator,
-whose name he <em>prudently</em> suppresses, being
-sent for in aid of a midwife<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c012'><sup>[9]</sup></a>, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>extract a child that had stuck six days
-in the passage, and which he <em>thought</em>
-dead, from several of the signs most essential
-to conviction, it happened however,
-that having opened with his <em>bistory</em>
-the teguments and membranes which
-occupy the as yet unossified space, at
-the commissure of the parietal bones
-with the fontanelle, it happened (said
-he) that on opening this place with his
-bistory, introducing his crotchet at this
-opening, and having fixed it in one of
-the parietals, he drew out the child,
-who began to cry <em>piercingly</em>, all hurt as
-he was by so <em>large</em> a <em>wound</em>, that there
-came out of it more than an egg full of
-its <em>brains</em>, which made a <em>cruel</em> sight in
-the eyes of the by-standers, and a very
-mortifying one for the operator.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>It</span> were to be wished that this was
-the <em>only</em> example: but I will not relate
-any <em>more</em>; it is easy to think one
-cannot be too <em>circumspect</em> in the matter
-of such relations. Levret, p. 77.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span><span class='sc'>Now</span> I, who have not the same reason
-for <em>circumspection</em> in this case, as Monsieur
-Levret, with strict regard both to matter
-of fact and to candor, <em>agree</em> with <em>him</em>, in
-averring, that this is not the <em>only</em> example
-perhaps, by thousands, of the rash resort
-to the expedient of <em>opening</em> the head, and
-extracting the child with the crotchet; an
-expedient which, as Dr. Smellie observes,
-(p. 248.) “<em>produced a</em> <span class='fss'>GENERAL CLAMOR</span>
-<em>among the women, who observed, that when
-recourse was had to the assistance of a man-midwife,
-either the mother or child, or both
-were lost</em>.” Now of not filling up the cry
-of those women, I must own I should be
-most ashamed. Especially when the good
-Dr. by way of curing our fears and <em>weak</em> apprehensions,
-and of shewing the nonsensicalness
-of them, first very gravely tells you
-the insufficiency of <em>all</em> hitherto invented
-instruments, and only modestly concludes,
-that the forceps of his own ingenious contrivance,
-is indeed the best, but still imperfect.
-His homage to truth would however
-not have been so imperfect as it is if
-he had said that instruments may be totally
-left out of good practice, and that no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>“<em>artificial hands</em>”, as he calls them, can, in
-any case, constitute a worthy supplement to
-the <em>natural</em> ones; no not even to his own,
-supposing iron and steel to be ever so little
-less tender than his fingers.
-<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c012'><sup>[10]</sup></a>
-<span class='sc'>But</span> why do these gentry then so
-much insist on the absolute necessity there
-is of <em>sometimes</em> having recourse to instruments?——Why?
-The motive for that
-insistence is so transparent, that not to see
-through it would indeed be blindness. It
-is the capital, and perhaps the only plea
-that has the least shadow of plausibility for
-the men to intrude themselves into the
-women’s business of midwifery. The women
-do not pretend to the art of handling
-those instruments, and would be very sorry
-to pretend to it. Nor do those midwives,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>who are sufficiently skilled in their
-art, ever need the supplemental aid of
-them: whatever is done with them is as
-well, and infinitely more safely done without
-them: so that the only grounds of introducing
-men into that female practice is
-essentially false. The making then the
-surgeons art a pandar to a sordid interest,
-by the incorporation of midwifery with it,
-is, in fact, engrafting on a noble stock, a
-scion of another one, both which would
-bear very well separate, but, thus joined,
-can produce nothing but a vile poisonous
-fruit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> there could be such a thing as laughing
-in a matter of such general importance
-to human kind as the fixing of this point,
-there could hardly be any refraining from
-it, with regard to the conduct of the men-midwives,
-especially in Paris. There the
-novices of them, sensible of the natural
-defect there must be in men-practitioners,
-apply for improvement to the regular midwives.
-There is particularly, among others,
-one Madam Clavier, who, when I
-knew her, lived in the Rue de St. André,
-that gave lessons, at so much a-head, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>the men-students of midwifery. Yet these
-same men have no sooner got a smattering
-of all that is valuable in the profession,
-for beyond a practical smattering at most
-nature refuses them further progress; they,
-I say, have no sooner acquired a little useful
-insight from these laudably communicative
-midwives, but they are the first to
-swell the cry against them of, “oh these
-<em>ignorant midwives!</em>”——or “<em>what can be
-expected from a woman?</em>” And what is
-more yet, among women it is, that they
-can make this equally ungrateful and false
-clamor prevail. And women, in a point
-of the utmost importance to themselves,
-prove that the men have, in fact, not quite
-a wrong idea of their weakness, since they
-are weak enough to countenance a notion,
-that so unjustly dishonors them in every
-sense. But that is not enough. What one
-should imagine, women especially would
-consider, is that this notion received with
-its consequential exclusion of those of their
-own sex, tends to have their own pains aggravated,
-and the safety not only of themselves
-but of their so naturally dear children,
-yet more endangered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span><span class='sc'>For</span> the truth of this increase of pain
-and danger from the practice of the instrumentarians,
-it is not to any representations
-from me only, who may be supposed
-too interested a party, but to reason,
-and even to reason’s best mistress, Nature
-herself, that I appeal. I appeal even to
-the very writings of the most celebrated
-men-midwives themselves, to which I
-would refer all who are sincere enough with
-themselves to be resolved to embrace truth
-when discovered to them. It is then even
-in the writings of those men-practitioners,
-that a lover of truth might find enough to
-satisfy himself, that all the mighty pretences
-of the men-midwives to superiority
-of skill and practice to the women are
-false and absurd. Look into <em>Deventer</em>, <em>Peu</em>,
-<em>La Motte</em>, <em>Mauriceau</em>, <em>Levret</em>, <em>Smellie</em>, &amp;c.
-and you will find that, except their accounts
-of the <em>innocent</em> manual function, in
-which midwives must so much excel them;
-except <em>their</em> pernicious practical part, on
-which they so tediously insist, by way of
-recommending each some particular instrument
-that is to <em>usher</em> him into employment,
-and increase his profit, in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>noble view he takes care to decry the instruments
-of all others, or at least prefer
-his own; except the scientific jargon of
-hard Latin and Greek words, so fit to throw
-dust in the eyes of the ignorant, and give
-their work an air of deep learning; except
-what they have pillaged from regular physicians
-and surgeons, who have treated
-upon these matters: except in short all
-the quacking verboseness of the various
-histories of their exploits and deliverances
-of distressed women, and you will find the
-merit of their whole works shrink to little
-or nothing, under the appraisement of
-common sense and true practical knowledge.
-The most that you will find in them, is,
-hard or lingering labors, oftenest precipitated
-fatally to the mother, or at least to
-the child; they hardly, you may be sure,
-carrying their candor so far, as always to
-mention when it has proved so to <em>both</em>; of
-which however the tenor of their practice
-with instruments gives you but too much
-room to presume the probability. In short
-those cases, of which their works are chiefly
-patched up, are little better than so many
-quack-advertisements; and their best exploits
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>therein recounted not a whit preferable; nor
-indeed so practically just, as what would
-appear in the common daily practice of a
-regular well-bred midwife, that should
-keep a register of her deliveries. There
-might not indeed appear so much anatomy
-in her descriptions, but, I am very sure,
-there would be couched in them much
-more solid instruction. Not that I
-therefore have not the highest deference
-to the true physicians, the true surgeons.
-But as far as I can presume to judge, it is
-not in the works of the men-midwives,
-that the best lights in midwifery are to be
-looked for. They are themselves for every
-thing that is worth reading in their writings
-indebted, both to the physicians and surgeons,
-whose arts they have despised enough
-to think, they may be well enough learnt
-collaterally and subordinately to the mechanical
-operation of midwifery, as well as
-obliged to the midwives, to whom they <em>ought</em>
-at least to go to school, tho’ sure to rail at
-their <em>ignorance</em> the minute after being
-taught by them. In short, the most valuable
-lights thrown into this subject are
-undoubtedly furnished by those great men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>Boerhave, Haller, Heister, the great Harvey,
-and other the like excellent physicians
-and surgeons, not one of whom however,
-I presume, in the way of making a
-trade of it, ever delivered a woman in his
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Nay!</span> was any accident requiring a
-chirurgical operation to befall a pregnant
-woman, I should think the application
-would be more safely made to a thorough
-regular-bred surgeon, than to one of the
-common run of these men-midwives; and
-the exceptions are so few, they are hardly
-worth making. The reason too for such
-a preference is obvious and natural. A
-regular surgeon probably would not only
-be more consummately skilful and expert
-in his general notions, both theoretical and
-practical, so far as surgery was in the
-question, but would not, from any thing
-only <em>partial</em> in his profession, have the same
-temptation of bringing into play a horrid apparatus
-of murderous instruments, to show
-the importance and utility of that anatomical
-midwifery of theirs, all the art of
-which consists in the violences it offers to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>Nature. What would be to be done, the
-true surgeon could hardly do worse than the
-pragmatical man-midwife, and most probably
-would perform it much more artistlike,
-except perhaps in the sole point of
-striking a crotchet into the brain-pan of a
-live-child, or needlessly tearing open, with
-iron and steel, parts so tender and so delicate,
-as hardly to bear the touch of even
-the softest hand, guarded with all precaution.
-He would not, in short, be so forward
-to use means destructively dangerous
-to both mother and child, and at the best
-often to ruin a woman for being a mother
-for ever after.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> the whole then, if any one will
-dare give his own understanding fair play,
-against the powers of prejudice and interested
-imposition, it cannot but, on a fair
-examination satisfy him, that that strange
-anomalous complex creature of the three
-arts, physic, surgery and midwifery, is
-most likely to excel in neither. <span class='sc'>It</span> may
-by great chance be an indifferent physician;
-<span class='fss'>IT</span> must be in this respect a dangerous
-surgeon, but <span class='fss'>IT</span> can never be any thing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>but a despicable midwife; or if that favorite
-name of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">accoucheur</span></i>, <span class='fss'>IT</span> is so fond of
-assuming, should not be popular enough
-from its gallicism, let <span class='fss'>IT</span> change it for the
-Latin one of <em>Pudendist</em>: a word of not one
-jot a more pedantic coinage than <em>Dentist</em>,
-or <em>Oculist</em>, but of which moreover the propriety
-of the sound may somewhat atone
-for the pitiful play of words it contains,
-and which can yet scarcely be more pitiful
-than the object of its application.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Twelfth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>It</span> is not probable, that the men-practitioners
-would have come into the vogue
-in which we see them, if numbers of instances
-were not to be produced in their
-favor, of their having terminated happily
-many labors, in which they have been preferably
-employed, and to the exclusion of
-the midwives.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>This</span> only proves, what none in their
-senses will deny, that the greater part of
-the cases of labor are so mild, that not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>even that faultiness of the men-practitioners,
-which is palpably owing to an incurable
-imperfection of Nature, not, in
-short, all that is bungling or deficient in
-their preliminary disposition and manual
-operation, can absolutely frustrate the kindness
-of that Nature, of which these intruders
-are not ashamed of assuming the
-honor. But that inference of the men in
-favor of themselves is as ridiculous as it is
-false. In those cases of labor, which are
-much the less frequent, and require no extraordinary
-assistence, the utmost of the
-real merit of these bunglers is only of the
-negative kind: that is to say, they have
-not destroyed the mother nor the child;
-and indeed, every thing considered, great
-is the praise to them thereof. It is not always,
-even in naturally easy labors, that
-the women who employ men to lay them
-have not a harder bargain of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> even in these propitious labors,
-the mischief done to a lying-in woman, by
-employing of a man to the exclusion of a
-midwife, is not a small one, if pain is an
-evil, and the lessening that evil a desirable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>good. For certainly there can hardly be
-a case of lying-in supposed, in which some
-<em>labor-pains</em> are not felt. The bringing forth
-children in pain, stands hitherto the irreversible
-decree of nature, from which few
-women can promise themselves a total exemption.
-But these pains, if they cannot
-be entirely spared, to the lying-in woman,
-will always admit of actual or preventive
-alleviation. That alleviation can be no
-inconsiderable object to women, who are
-by their nature so tender and so impatient
-of pain. Even then in the prospect and
-presence of the very gentlest labors, there
-are two natural points to be respectively attended
-to. The one is the predisposition
-of every thing, according to art, so as to
-render the expected labor-pains as moderate
-as possible. The second is in the
-manual function, at the actual crisis of
-the delivery. Now, in both these points,
-for reasons above-deduced of the superior
-aptitude in women derived to them from
-Nature herself, a woman may reasonably
-depend not only on a more simpathizing
-cherishment, but a more efficacious assistence
-from those of her own sex. There
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>are a thousand little tender attentions
-suggested by nature, and improved by experience,
-that a midwife can employ both
-preventively and actually to the mitigation
-of her charge’s pain; attentions which, if
-even they ever entered into a man-midwife’s
-head, could not be accepted but
-with repugnance, I will not say only by
-a modest woman, but by any woman at
-all. And the truth is, that there can be
-few men in the world, but what, the more
-tender lovers they are of the women, but
-must be only the more disgusted, the more
-impatient of the midwife’s preparatory
-part of her office, which is however the
-most important one, both as to the prevention
-of pain, and to the safety of the
-delivery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> even where those preparatory offices
-have been omitted, or at best perfunctorily
-performed by a man-midwife, and
-where the actual function in the crisis of
-labor has been deficient, or at best indifferent,
-the labor may still have proceeded,
-and the patient delivered with only more
-pain, than she would probably have suffered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>under a good midwife’s hands. What follows
-then? Why this; that the patient
-in the transport of joy at her delivery from
-pains which are hardly ever but great,
-even though much less than her fear had
-magnified them to her; instead of gratitude
-to that Nature, which can constitute to her
-only a vague object of the mind, her weak
-imagination gives to the assistent man-midwife,
-a more palpable being, as he is of
-flesh and blood, the merit of a deliverance,
-in which he had most probably no other
-share, than its being his fault that it was
-not yet less painful than she has found it.
-But this is not at all. What sounds towards
-a paradox, and yet is strictly true,
-is, that the more pain the patient has endured,
-through the man-midwife’s fault,
-the greater will her gratitude be to him.
-The reason is as obvious as it is natural.
-Herself not knowing, nor having perhaps
-any idea of what ought to have been done
-for her more perfect relief, she will have
-no conception that the man has omitted
-any thing: she will give him credit for
-what he has <em>appeared</em> to do for her; and
-measure her sense of acknowledgement by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>the pain from which she will suppose he
-has helped to rid her; and in her joy at
-her delivery would think it even an ingratitude
-to listen to suggestions from others,
-or even from herself, that should tend to
-diminish, explain away, or may be reduced<a id='t156'></a>
-to less than nothing, the benefit she so
-vainly imagines was his work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Yet</span> nothing is more true, nor indeed
-more likely to be true, than that besides the
-natural pains of labor not having been obviated
-by a due preventive method of assuagement;
-besides their having been unskilfully
-attended to in the article of the delivery,
-through the natural unhandiness of
-the men-midwives, it does not unrarely
-happen, that their defective practice, not
-only occasions to the women much greater
-pains, but even much greater danger than
-would probably have been the case, I will
-not say if a midwife, but even if Nature
-had barely been left to herself, that is
-to say, if nature had been neither injured
-by a clumsy aukward attempt to help her,
-nor injudiciously interrupted, nor prematurely
-forced or cruelly hurried. The patient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>is however delivered, and delivered
-so that, if she was better informed, or less
-blinded with joy, instead if thanking the
-operator, to whom she attributes her deliverance,
-she would have to impute to him
-all the increase of pain she had unnecessarily
-suffered, all the increase of danger of
-which this man so thanked was himself the
-author. Then it is, that even in a subject
-so serious, a judicious by-stander might
-give himself the comedy of observing the
-airs of consequence, which an operator assumes
-for a woman under his case <em>not</em> losing
-the life, of which but for him she
-would most probably <em>not</em> have been in the
-least danger. Thus a man, whose all of
-merit well weighed, is no more than not
-having been able to consummate the destruction
-of mother and child, in spite of
-the kindness of nature, shall for that negative
-merit be allowed the positive one of
-having performed wonders of art. Then
-it is that the mother naturally in a rapture
-of joy at her deliverance, in which she never
-remembers but with a gratitude, of
-which she only mistakes the object, by
-paying to the operator, what in fact was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>due to nature; then it is, I say, that the
-mother, father or parties concerned, for
-want of making due allowances in a point
-they are so excusable for not understanding,
-cordially join the self-applause of the
-man-midwife. Nor does it unfrequently
-happen, that one of these instrumentarians,
-after an operation, for which he deserves
-the severest censure, and of which, whatever
-necessity he had to plead was originally
-owing to his own unskilfulness or omission,
-shall strut about the room, and florishing
-his butcher’s <em>steel</em>, sing an <em>Io Peean</em>
-to himself, “<em>for that his victorious art had
-saved nature as it were by enchantment</em>”<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c012'><sup>[11]</sup></a>.
-Then it is, that in full chorus the deluded
-parties, in the innocence of their heads
-and hearts, hold up their hands to heaven,
-and piously exclaim, “<em>what a narrow escape
-the patient had, thanks to the learned Dr.
-and what a mercy it was she had not been
-trusted to such an ignorant creature as a
-midwife must be</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span><span class='sc'>This</span> folly has even sometimes gone so
-far, that when a woman has, through a
-man-midwife’s mispractice, suffered perhaps
-a wrong, so deep as to be disqualified
-for ever after for being a mother, or
-had a fine child, literally speaking, murdered
-(<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">secundum artem</span></i> indeed) he has, what
-with scientific jargon, through the cloud
-of which it was impossible for persons unversed
-in the matter to discern the truth,
-what with an air of importance, and what
-with especially her own weak prepossession
-in favor of the superiority of men to women-practitioners,
-known how to impose
-on her the most atrocious injury for so great
-a service as that of saving life is for ever
-held. The deceived patient then thinks
-she cannot thank him too much, nor reward
-him sufficiently for what he could be
-scarce punished enough, if proportionably
-to the mischief he had done; and to which
-his mis-representations have perhaps even
-made herself innocently an accomplice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> indeed is easily to be accounted
-for. A pregnant woman must especially,
-in the moment of her labor-pains, think
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>herself too much in the power of the
-operator, to whom she has trusted herself,
-to dispute his judgment. She may
-even, and that is probably oftenest the
-case, have too good an opinion of it, to
-dispute it. Her labor is severe, and, as
-before observed, severe, or at least the
-more so, very likely from some fault of his.
-Her deliverance lingers; Nature, from some
-vice of conformation, or defect of art in
-her assistent, appears faint, remiss, insufficient,
-in short, in her expulsive efforts;
-in the mean time, the pains of the patient
-grow more and more intense and intolerable:
-the man-midwife, either perplexed
-or impatient, or not knowing what better
-to do, has recourse to those fatal instruments,
-with which the odds are so great,
-that he will gall, bruise, or irreparably
-wound the child, or the mother<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c012'><sup>[12]</sup></a>. In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>some cases indeed, he may take the
-dreadful advantage of the mother’s agonies
-of pain, to use those instruments, and
-do her a mischief she may not just then
-feel, from the pain of the operation being
-absorbed in the greater one; to use them,
-I say, unobserved by her<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c012'><sup>[13]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> where the exigency appears yet
-greater, where, in short, the operator imagines,
-as he too often imagines such an
-extremity where it does not exist, as that
-either the mother or the child must perish,
-it is his maxim, and certainly a very just
-one, to consider the mother’s safety, as the
-preferable object. Of this preference then
-he makes a merit, so much the more acceptable
-to the mother for her own self-preservation
-being so palpably concerned,
-and so much the less disputable for her
-not knowing but he may be in the right,
-as to the reality of the fatal dilemma. In
-such a doubt, if nature takes the part of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>the child’s life, which is at stake in the
-decision, she also much more strongly and
-reasonably takes the part of the mother’s
-own existence in the mother’s own breast.
-She cannot then deny the premisses, of
-which she is no judge, when the inference
-is not only in favor of her life, but even a
-very just one upon the admission of those
-premisses. The temptation also of a quick
-riddance from a violent state of pain, is
-too great a temptation for a weak woman,
-overpowered with her actual feelings in
-that rack of nature, to resist: she acquiesces
-then, or perhaps her husband, her
-friends, equally ignorant with herself of
-the truth of things, and duly simpathizing
-with her in her impatience of her longer
-suffering, even virtuously, even piously
-acquiesce in the recourse to these instruments,
-which are so sure of destroying
-the child, and hardly ever fail of doing
-the mother great and sometimes irreparable
-mischief.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>When</span> then the child has been destroyed,
-the mother damaged; in satisfaction
-for all this tragic-work, what have you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>but perhaps the learned Doctor’s assertion,
-“<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c012'><sup>[14]</sup></a><em>that if this force had not been used, the
-mother must have been lost as well as the
-child</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> granting what is the utmost that
-candor can be expected to grant, that in
-but the doubt of the mother’s life, it is
-right to sacrifice the life of the child to
-that doubt, and much more to the certainty
-of the mother’s life not to be otherwise
-saved, than by these fatal instruments,
-I beg and entreat all fathers and mothers,
-or who are likely to be so, to consider
-with themselves whether:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the first place, an experienced midwife
-is not more likely to prevent such an
-extremity by previous management, proper
-anticipations, and actual handiness
-during the labor-pains, than the aukward
-man-practitioner (as most of them evidently
-are) who must, naturally speaking,
-be so much her inferior in those points of
-her art, which conduce essentially to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>smoothing the way for, and effectuating a
-delivery; and from the defect of which
-points that necessity which, is pleaded of a
-recourse to instruments, originally takes
-its rise. So that in fact they who are the
-authors of the danger, pretend to remove
-it, and how? by an evil only inferior to
-death itself, from which however those are
-not always safe, to whose safety so much
-is sacrificed in vain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the next place, it may well be
-recommended to consideration, whether,
-as the <em>common methods</em><a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c012'><sup>[15]</sup></a> confessedly allowed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>by the men-midwives to be the
-<em>preferable</em> ones, since the recourse to instruments
-is not even by them <em>allowed</em>,
-until the <em>common methods</em> are exhausted,
-there is not great reason, without breach of
-charity, to imagine that the natural unfitness
-of the men for the <em>common methods</em> does
-not determine especially the common men-midwives
-to an over-hasty recourse to the
-<em>extraordinary</em> ones, and make them see
-very <em>dangerous symptoms</em>, where they are no
-better than phantoms of their own creation;
-so that by their eagerness to embrace
-them for an excuse, they lose to the
-patient that benefit of patience in general,
-which Dr. Smellie himself allows in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>particular case<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c012'><sup>[16]</sup></a>. To which patience the
-midwives are so much more inclined than
-the men, as indeed they may well be,
-since, should that even be exhausted, they
-have no instruments to fly to for the abridgment
-of a labor: and where they
-understand their business, not only every
-thing is best done without them, but the
-want of them is prevented.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> besides the common motive of impatience
-in the men-practitioners for resorting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>to that dangerous expedient of making
-short work, of which the women are
-unhappily incapable<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c012'><sup>[17]</sup></a>, or at least which
-the good artists among them hold in the
-contempt and detestation it deserves; are
-there no other motives from which recourse
-may be had to the instruments? I
-have hinted at some: but as the matter is
-of infinite importance, from the use made
-of these instruments, in introducing men
-into the practice of an art so appropriated
-to the women, it cannot but be of service
-even to the public, to discuss the justice at
-least of some of those hints, and examine
-whether there is any farther foundation
-for my fears, that the precipitancy of the
-men in their resorting to instruments, or
-to the prematurely forcing a delivery, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>the utmost danger if both mother and
-child, whether, in short, the pretence of
-extremities may not, in some cases, have
-even other causes, than a natural incapacity
-for the <em>common method</em>, an ignorance
-of better practice, or their impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> before remarked what I here
-repeat, and repeat it without the least apprehension
-of being justly taxed with
-breach of charity, that a mere sordid view
-of lucre, of supplementing, in short, deficiencies
-of success in other professions,
-was originally the foundation in this country
-of that novel sect of men-midwives,
-which we have in our days seen so much
-multiplied. If any can imagine that the
-instrumentarians, with their crotchets,
-their forceps, and the rest of their iron or
-steel apparatus, had more in view the relief
-of the distressed females, from the
-dangers to them in the ignorance of the
-midwives, than they had their own interest,
-in the stepping into the place of
-those they so injuriously decried; if any,
-I say, can believe that sheer humanity, and
-not sordid gain, was their view, I can only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>pity a credulity, that must proceed more
-from a goodness of the heart, than of
-the head. But to whoever will deign
-to consult his own reason, exercised upon
-facts and the nature of things, may easily
-satisfy himself, that interest, and interest
-only, inspired and actuated these intruders
-into a province so little made for them, of
-which there can hardly be a stronger presumption
-than the very recommendation of
-instruments, of which not one of them
-but must know the perniciousness, though
-they make it the capital handle of the
-introduction of themselves. Not one of
-them but rails at them, and uses them.
-Now, as I may safely take it for granted,
-that interest is at the bottom of this innovation,
-where that same interest is the
-principle, it will hardly be denied me,
-that it is generally speaking the leading or
-the governing one. It is rarely contented
-with acting a second part. It often exacts
-sacrifices, but is rarely itself one. All the
-actions and procedure of its votaries take
-the tincture of it. Humanity and all
-the virtuous or tender passions are either
-totally excluded, or exist with little or no
-efficacy in a heart enslaved by interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>In virtue of this reasoning, and I should
-be much more glad of finding myself mistaken
-(knowingly I am sure I am not so)
-than that it should be but too much verified
-by matter of fact, I shall here submit
-a case to the reader for his own decision
-on the probability, and I dare swear, that
-among the female readers especially, I
-may chance to have, there will be more
-than one, who, on her own personal experience,
-could attest the existence of such
-a case, or at least has the strongest grounds
-of presumption of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>A Woman</span> then, lingering in a severe
-labor, and urged by her pains naturally to
-wish the speediest end of them, is yet by
-another superior promptership of nature
-desirous of meriting the sweet name of mother,
-and is inclined of herself not to think
-it over-purchased by a little more patience.
-In this crisis, much must depend on the
-judgment, and consequently on the advice
-of the assistent practitioner, male or female.
-If a midwife, besides the tenderness
-constitutional to her sex, her natural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>fears for the mother especially, not without
-a due share of concern for the child,
-where there is a possibility of saving it without
-too great a risk to the parent, besides
-the superior execution of her art in points
-of the manual function, she is moreover
-bound in all duty to see one labor come to
-its issue before she undertakes another; for
-the sake of which, she cannot well, if she
-would, without instruments, prematurely
-force a delivery by such violent, dangerous
-and so often destructive means. She will
-then in course encourage and inspirit her
-charge with patience, and use all the blandishments,
-soothing methods imaginable
-to comfort, relieve, and strengthen the
-resolution and spirit of the lying-in-woman.
-Now, a man-midwife, <em>well paid</em>,
-will perhaps in that cold unaffectionate
-manner, with which a duty that has no
-foundation but in interest is ever performed,
-exhort to endurance that patient whom
-his dexterity is insufficient to relieve, that
-patient whose pains are perhaps for the
-greatest part his own fault. But should
-he, during some lingering<a id='t171'></a> labor, be called
-elsewhere, to a more rich employer,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>or should one from whom he has greater expectations,
-require an attendance from him
-incompatible with his duty to his prior
-employer, is not here a temptation to make
-a quick dispatch with his instruments? A
-temptation to which it is at least doubtful
-whether a man, actuated by interest, may
-not be over-inclined to yield. It may even
-byass him, without his perceiving it himself.
-A man’s determining motive, when
-it is not of a very justifiable nature, is often
-skreened even from himself by a more
-specious one. Such, in the present case,
-is the saving the mother, oftenest by destroying,
-and sometimes by only galling,
-bruising, or maiming the child, when the
-mother rarely escapes her share of the suffering.
-How many mothers have pathetically
-interceded, and interceded in vain,
-for a respite of execution, when the operator
-has in a peremptory tone cut short
-their instances, by telling them in a magisterial
-way, that he knew best what to
-do, and could not answer for the patient’s
-life, if the operation was longer delayed!
-What reply has a poor woman, weak by
-nature, oppressed by pain, and subdued
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>by her prepossession to oppose to such an
-argument of necessity, of which her own
-life appears to be the favored object?
-What husband, what friends, but must
-unhesitatingly subscribe to so just a preference
-as that of the mother and the child?
-Not that I would insinuate here, that such
-a dilemma does not sometimes though certainly
-very rarely exist: but is it not to be
-feared, that it is too often rather lightly
-taken for granted that it does exist? May
-it not be presumed, that the instruments
-are brought oftener into use than is necessary,
-for the sake of a dispatch, of which
-the child is almost ever the victim, and
-not unseldom the mother herself, who is
-always hurt, and sometimes irreparably<a id='t173'></a>
-damaged? May it not be justly suspected,
-that the abuses of Art have occasioned to
-many women an appearance of barrenness,
-from the reality of which kinder Nature
-had in fact exempted them?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> as if ignorance, inability, impatience,
-interestedness, were not all of them
-sufficient motives for the forcing use of
-these instruments, Dr. Smellie has unmeaningly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>added another, which alone must,
-to the greatest number of the men-practitioners,
-prove a greater excitement than
-all the others put together, if it be true,
-that Vanity has so great a predominancy
-over the human heart as it is generally
-imagined to have. But let us first quote
-him: the inference will follow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“(P. 265.) <em>at any rate, as</em> women <em>are
-commonly</em> frightened <em>at the very</em> name <em>of
-an</em> instrument, <em>it is adviseable to</em> conceal
-<em>them as much as possible</em>, untill (mind pray
-that <span class='fss'>UNTILL</span>) <em>the</em> character <em>of the</em> operator
-<em>is</em> established.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(P. 273.) “<em>Though the</em> forceps <em>are covered
-with leather, and</em> appear <em>so</em> simple
-<em>and</em> innocent, <em>I have given directions for</em>
-concealing <em>them, that</em> young practitioners
-<span class='fss'>BEFORE</span> <em>their</em> characters <em>are</em> fully established,
-<em>may avoid the calumnies</em> and <em>mis-representations
-of those people who are apt
-to prejudice the ignorant and weak-minded
-against the use of any instrument, though
-never so necessary, in this profession; and
-who taking the advantage of unforeseen accidents
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>which may afterwards happen to the
-patient, charge the whole misfortune to the</em>
-<span class='fss'>INNOCENT OPERATOR</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> I appeal to every reader of common-sense,
-to every reader who knows
-any thing of the human heart, whether it
-can be imagined that any man-midwife,
-who is called in to the aid of a lying-in
-woman, will choose to appear in the character
-of a <em>young practitioner</em>, or of such an
-one, as that his <em>character</em> is not enough
-<em>established</em> to <em>dare</em> to use instruments, for
-fear of after-reflexions. Is not there, if
-but in this lesson of the Doctor’s, couched
-a strong temptation for a man-practitioner
-not indeed to produce openly and barefacedly
-his apparatus of instruments, but
-to be very uncautious<a id='t175'></a> of concealing them?
-Since the reason for concealing them, that
-of the women being apt to be frightened at
-them, stands coupled with another reason,
-the fittest in the world to work a contrary
-effect to both; by piquing the vanity of
-the operator to suffer them to be seen, and
-what is worse yet, to the using them only
-that they might be <em>seen</em>, especially if to
-this motive of ostentation you add, that if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>these instruments being the very <em>grand</em> and
-<em>capital</em> point of their imaginary <em>superiority</em>
-to the women-practitioners; over whom
-every occasion of using them seems to the
-men a kind of triumph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> while it is to the novices in the
-art, that Dr. Smellie recommends more
-especially the concealment of these same
-terrifying instruments, the good Dr. does
-not seem aware, that an advice much more
-honest and humane might be given to the
-women, for whose <em>benefit</em> the instruments
-are supposed to be invented, which is, not to
-employ <em>young practitioners</em> or novices, not in
-short to employ those whose character was
-not <em>fully</em> established, since they might, in order
-to pass for adepts, or at least for no novices,
-be too apt to embrace occasions of
-florishing those same instruments with less
-necessity, if possible, than the <em>great men</em>
-themselves of the profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean time, this curious injunction
-to the <em>young</em> practitioners, while the <em>old</em> ones
-are by that distinction implicitly allowed
-more openness in using the instruments,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>reminds me of the caution of the Regent-duke
-of Orleans, who taking monsieur
-de St. Albin<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c012'><sup>[18]</sup></a>, a natural son of his, that
-was in priest’s orders, to task, for some
-irregularities, of which certain bishops had
-complained, said to him in their presence,
-“<em>Sirrah, could not you stay till you were a
-bishop?</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> whatever may be the motives of
-recourse to instruments, and there are other
-possible ones which I have omitted,
-certain it is, that in this nation they are
-more frequently employed than even in
-France, where that pernicious fashion first
-took birth. And yet in this very nation
-it is, that the men-practitioners themselves
-own, that the less they are used the better.
-Now will they, to solve this contradiction
-of their practice to their doctrine,
-plead that the labors of the women here
-are, in general, more difficult than they
-are in France? Common sense and truth
-will however furnish a juster solution: men-midwives
-are more employed <em>here</em> than in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span><em>France</em>, where the women-practitioners are
-still respected, and less driven out of practice,
-consequently instruments are less frequently
-used. For I will not pay the
-men-operators of this country so ill a compliment,
-as to excuse them, by saying they
-are less dexterous at the manual function
-than those of France, and therefore the
-more obliged to have recourse to those instruments,
-of which they themselves have
-so ill an opinion, though indeed not a so
-thoroughly bad one as they deserve.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean while they may well proceed
-triumphing in their career, notwithstanding
-all the fatal trips they make in
-it, while, if they did not even run it in
-the dark, they have so much learned dust
-ready to throw into the peoples eyes whom
-it is so much their interest to blind. No
-wonder then, that since, in the more severe
-cases, in the preternatural labors, they
-so often receive from well-meaning employers
-both pay and thanks for the greatest
-mischiefs, owing to their errors both of
-omission and commission, they should, in
-the less difficult, and which are by much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>the most frequent ones, where no tragic
-accidents have happened, have credit given
-them for a merit, to which their pretentions
-are so little examined. For this they
-are indebted to the overflow of a gratitude
-at a loss for a living object and from an impatience
-of doubt mistaking that object so
-grosly, as well as to that same prepossession’s
-continuing, from which they were preferably
-employed. Hence it is, that one
-might often hear women, who had not
-even suffered a little by their practice,
-from the want of knowing, that by their
-practice it was they did not suffer less, very
-sincerely say, “<em>Dr. such an one attended
-me in my lying-in —— He delivered me very
-well.</em>” —— Or, “<em>I have been lain for
-four or more children by a man-midwife,
-and never had room to complain.</em>” All
-which proves no more than what may very
-well have happened, that Nature has been
-too favorable to them, for even the untoward
-assistence of a man, in the office
-of a midwife, entirely to frustrate her beneficence.
-I do not here add the weight
-that <em>fashion</em> throws into the scale of prejudice,
-reserving to treat of that separately.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span><span class='sc'>But</span> to that conclusion in favor of the
-men-midwives, from the supposed superiority
-of their success to that of the women-practitioners,
-contained in the objection
-I am now answering, I have further
-to oppose an argument drawn from <em>matter
-of fact</em>, to which I should imagine it difficult
-to find a satisfactory reply. This
-argument then consists in a fair appeal to
-Experience herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> before observed, that in the
-Hôtel-Dieu at Paris, there are no men-practitioners
-suffered, for I do not include
-the surgeon-major, who is absolutely no
-more than an officer for the form-sake.
-Consequently there are no instruments ever
-employed in the delivery of the women
-admitted to that hospital. It is true they
-are extremely well taken care of; all necessaries
-are found them by that noble charity;
-but yet it cannot be thought, that
-the same abundance of ease and conveniences
-can be afforded, as by those persons,
-generally speaking, who employ men-midwives.
-This distinction I mention for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>sake of the allowance justly to be made
-in the calculate I am about to propose.
-Notwithstanding however the superiority
-in this point on the side of men-midwives
-practice, notwithstanding the grief of mind
-from various causes, as well as the bad
-constitution of the bodies of many of those
-indigent wretches, prior to the reception
-into that hospital, notwithstanding other
-easily conceivable disadvantages; notwithstanding
-all these, I say, take any given
-number of patients, delivered purely by
-the midwives of that hospital, without
-the intervention of one man-practitioner,
-and especially without instruments, and
-to that given number, oppose an equal
-one of women attended from the first of
-their labor to their delivery by the men-midwives,
-and see on the side of which
-sex, in the operators, there will be found
-the greater number of those who shall
-have done well, or suffered least.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> the more emboldened to propose
-such an experiment from my own certain
-knowledge. I have seen more than two
-thousand women delivered under my eyes,
-at the Hôtel-Dieu at Paris, some of whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>cases must be readily imagined to have been
-severe or preternatural ones. Yet all of
-them were delivered by our midwives and
-apprentices without the aid of a man-practitioner;
-nor an instrument so much as
-thought of. And in all this number I can
-safely aver, there were but four who died
-upon their lying-in; and that not from
-any fault of the midwife’s art; but one
-from the complication of a dropsy, the
-other three, who were daughters to honest
-tradesmen, sunk under the shock of grief
-and shame at the being deserted by the
-men who had brought them into that condition.
-They died, in short, of their desire
-to die. Yet the children all did well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> is a fact that does not require the
-being believed upon my word. The
-known practice at that hospital, and the
-registers regularly kept, will attest the
-truth of this computation. And here, I
-appeal to every intelligent reader’s own
-sense, to his own knowledge of things,
-whether it is unfairly presumed, that in
-the same number of two thousand women,
-delivered by the men-practitioners, they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>could show a roll so innocent, so free from
-fatal mischief or damage to their patients,
-to mother and to child. Let any parents,
-or who may hope to be parents, or are
-concerned but for the interest of mankind
-in population, weigh but the force of this
-argument, purely drawn from a matter of
-fact, of which there can be so few who are
-not, in some measures, judges enough to
-decide upon their own knowledge, or at
-least on strong grounds of belief or conjecture.
-In such a number as two thousand
-women delivered by the men-operators,
-how many, by what I know, and by
-what many others must know as well as
-I, must have perished, or been torn, ruptured,
-grievously hurt, or irreparably damaged!
-How many innocent infants must
-have lost their little lives, in proof of that
-superiority of practice in the men to the
-women! Or rather, in proof of that infatuate
-credulity, which has prevailed in
-favour of an innovation so unauthorized by
-nature, by common sense, or by experience!</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>
- <h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Thirteenth.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Say</span> what you will, the fashion will
-predominate. It is now the fashion to
-prefer men-practitioners of midwifery to
-midwives. You will oppose the torrent
-in vain.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>The</span> conclusion against me that I shall
-oppose the torrent in vain, is a very just
-one. As to myself, I ought to expect that
-I should oppose it in vain, if the decision
-of the public was to turn upon any thing
-of so little authority as my private opinion,
-especially in a point where it is so justly
-liable to the suspicion of its being byassed,
-both by private interest, and partiality to
-my own sex. I readily then grant that
-my own opinion should go for nothing.
-But what ought to go for a great deal is
-my reader’s own judgment, formed upon
-his own reason and knowledge. But that
-is not all. I have some dependence on
-Nature and common sense recovering their
-rights, from this preference of the men-midwives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>which shocks both, being, in
-truth, nothing more than a fashion, not
-even of the growth of this country, but
-transplanted from a neighbouring one,
-whose follies are unhappily so contagious,
-though for the most part so despicable.
-How a few interested men, for want of
-business in their own professions, transplanted
-this baneful exotic here, where it
-has met with such undue cherishment has
-already been touched upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> then as this unnatural preference
-has all the folly and whim of fashion in
-it, it may be hoped, that it will also have
-all the instability and transitoriness of one.
-Time that confirms the dictates of Nature
-destroys the fictions of opinion. But in
-points where Nature is herself attacked or
-injured, inconveniencies and damages never
-fail of following thereon, enough to oppose
-the duration of them. The numbers
-of lying-in women (thanks to beneficent Nature)
-rather not destroyed than duly assisted
-by the men-operators, can neither atone for
-those who perish, sometimes the mother,
-sometimes the child, sometimes both,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>while none of them are but sufferers in
-some degree; nor long blind a public, that
-has so much interest not to be imposed
-upon in a matter so essential to it, by false
-pretences, or by an injurious and interested
-degradation of the midwives, who at the
-worst can hardly be so bad as the very best
-of the men, in the capital point of their
-business, the manual function. The oftenest
-greater <em>danger</em>, and always the greater
-<em>pain</em>, under men-operators than under
-the midwives hands will, sooner or later,
-determine the parties concerned to open
-their eyes on their greatest interest, in a
-point of such infinite importance to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Granting</span> then to Fashion all the
-power it really has, and a greater one it
-is, than for the honor of human kind, can
-well be imagined, still, it not only has its
-limits of extension, but duration. It
-is only for the truth of Nature to be universal
-and eternal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Fashion</span>, it is true, may not only govern
-people in indifferent matters, such as
-dress, furniture, equipage, or so forth, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>even in essential, even in capital ones,
-such, for example, as is this point of option
-between the men-operators and the
-midwives: it may, in short, exert its tyranny
-in many things, one would rather
-think left better to the determination of
-<span class='sc'>Reason</span>. But then this tyranny cannot
-well be long-lived. The evils which such
-a fashion begets destroy at length their
-own parent. No opinion then, as I have
-before observed, can be permanent that
-is not founded on the truth of Nature:
-but where the consequences of such an
-opinion are detrimental to the good of
-society, which is the darling object of
-Nature; that spirit of self-preservation
-which she has so manifestly diffused thro’
-human kind, will hardly suffer errors
-pernicious to it long to subsist. There is
-no fashion can, under such objections, long
-hold out against victorious Nature, who is
-sure to revenge the violences offered her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span> here I even officiously seize on an
-occasion that rises to me out of the very
-bowels, I may say, of my subject, of selecting
-for one proof of the danger of adopting
-innovations offensive to Nature, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>point of such near analogy to midwifery,
-as that of nursing children, the care of
-whom, next to that of the mothers, is the
-true midwife’s tender province.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I wish then that those, who too readily
-admit that this so recent a fashion of employing
-men-midwives preferable to female
-ones, is an improvement receivable
-on the foot of its supposed advantage to
-human kind, would consider a little the
-actual consequences of having flown in the
-face of Nature with respect to the bringing
-up young children, in a way scarce
-more foreign from her dictates, than that
-of <em>men</em> delivering <em>women</em>. That women
-are by Nature herself formed for the office
-of aiding women in their lying-in; that
-they are also formed to bring up children
-by the breast, are two parts of their destination
-by Nature, which in all ages, and
-in all countries seem to have born little or
-no controversy. Interest has lately invaded
-both these provinces. With this difference,
-that as to the first, that of women
-supplanted in their business of delivering
-women, an active interest has prevailed;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>as in that of denying the female breast to
-children, it is a purely passive one<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c012'><sup>[19]</sup></a>; and
-we shall soon see what a dreadful effect
-this sacrifice of Nature to interest has produced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the mischief produced by the other,
-of the implicitly excluding the women
-from midwifery, by the power of prejudice
-and fashion, it is not, as yet, of a
-Nature for obvious reasons quite so susceptible
-of proof, though most certainly
-not the less therefore existent. And that
-mischief is palpably owing to the gain
-which the men-midwives find or presume
-in the exercise of that profession. This is
-the active interest: that end to which the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>means give so justly the construction of
-base and sordid. The rich are the object
-of this wretched imposition, which will
-probably last so much the longer, for the
-interest to be found in imposing upon
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> for the denying the female breast
-to children; it has not indeed passed
-hitherto into a tenet, that children may as
-well be reared by the spoon as by the breast,
-because there is not that prospect of the
-place of a <em>dry-nurse</em> being as lucrative as
-that of a <em>man-midwife</em>. If it was so, I
-should not dispair of seeing a great he-fellow
-florishing a pap-spoon as well as a forceps,
-or of the public being enlightened
-by learned tracts and disputations, stuffed
-full of Greek and Latin technical terms, to
-prove, that water-gruel or scotch-porridge
-was a much more healthy aliment for new-born
-infants than the milk of the female
-breast, and that is was safer for a man to dandle
-a baby than for an insignificant woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> this unnatural treatment then of
-children is almost entirely as yet confined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>to the very poor, that is to say, to new-born
-babes thrown upon the public <span class='fss'>CHARITY</span>
-for their <span class='fss'>SUSTENANCE</span>, the rearing
-by the spoon is not yet regularly established
-as a general <em>doctrine</em>, it is only admitted
-in <span class='sc'>Practice!</span> As <em>proper</em> wet-nurses,
-from the difficulty in procuring
-them, might be <em>dearer</em> than dry ones; the
-<em>cheapest</em> method is preferred, and forms a
-kind of passive interest or saving œconomy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> what are the consequences of this
-violation of Nature, in the grudging her
-peculiarly appointed aliment to these poor
-little candidates for life? What follows
-the substituting, for cheapness-sake, such
-food as is meant to be afforded them, and
-is perhaps sometimes even not given them?
-Death. Death with all that cruelty of
-torture that attends atrophy or inanition.
-Thus perish these miserable victims to the
-false opinion, that the course of Nature
-can be changed with impunity. I have
-said here false opinion only, because, with
-all the obduracy of heart that the spirit
-of interest so notoriously creates, with all
-the crimes it so often produces, I cannot
-think, that such an horror, as the murder
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>of so many innocents, can be entirely imputed
-to interest without ignorance coming
-in for its share, though interest has doubtless
-contributed to the so long continuance
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> that maxim is not a false one, that
-he who knowingly suffers an innocent
-person to perish, and can help it, is actually
-guilty of murder: and I prefer here
-the term of guilty to that of accessary;
-because I am told, that where there is
-guilt of murder, all are in the eye of equity
-and law, principals. Ignorance then, of
-the sure murder of these innocents by
-their method of treatment, can be the
-only plea for those to whom the national
-charity had committed the care of them.
-I should think too, that even I myself sinned
-against charity, if I did not believe,
-that there is none of those trustees of the
-poor children, that would not shudder at
-the thought, of himself taking an infant
-up by the leg and dashing its brains out
-against the wall. And yet that would be
-balmy mercy, the dispatch considered,
-compared to the lingering tortures, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>which those poor little creatures must expire,
-in the common way of parish-nursing.
-What is certain however is, that
-Death would scarce more assuredly be the
-consequence of the child’s brains being at
-once beat out, than of that impropriety of
-aliment, which in the mildest construction
-is owing to an error in opinion or belief,
-that any aliment could be salutarily substituted
-to the one dictated by Nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> here mentioned barely impropriety,
-or sometimes negation of aliment,
-without allowance for other causes of destruction
-to those infants, such as cold,
-bad air, uncleanliness, neglect of due attendence,
-or deficiency, in short, of requisites,
-which are not to be expected from the
-very poorer sort of the people, to whom the
-rearing of those infants is generally committed.
-But that omission of mine is neither
-undesigned nor unfair. I presume I
-shall have the greatest physicians on my side,
-in averring, that even new-born babes
-are endowed with a surprizing hardiness.
-Their little seemingly so delicate bodies
-bear cold to a degree scarcely credible, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>from the commonness of both observation
-and practice, that they only thrive the better
-for immersions in cold water. Cleanliness,
-a good air, and attendence, have
-doubtless indeed some share in the well-doing
-of children of that age: but all together
-are in no degree of comparison to
-the importance of bestowing on children
-their appropriate aliment. The physical
-disquisitions into the reason of this do not
-belong to me here: nor are a few instances
-of infants reared by the spoon any valid
-justification for breaking the general rule
-of Nature, assigning to the female breast
-the nutrition of children: of which too
-there is this salutary consequence, that in
-the very act of lactation there is, by Nature,
-generated such an indearment of the suckled
-child to the nurse<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c012'><sup>[20]</sup></a>, as that she who
-began it perhaps only for hire, finds herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>engaged by a growing affection to
-supply in some measure the place of the
-mother to the orphan or deserted babe.
-The rearing by the spoon is so far from
-inspiring any such dearness, that the innocent
-infant is considered only as an embarrassment,
-of which the quicker the riddance,
-in the death of the <em>brat</em>, so much
-the better.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> opinion, however, that this one
-of the greatest institutes of Nature for the
-preservation of the species, for which she
-has so admirably organized the female
-breast, could be dispensed with in favor
-of a most sordid savingness, has alone caused
-more human sacrifices, to that black Demon
-of <span class='sc'>Interest</span>, than probably were
-ever made to the “grim idol of” Moloch
-in the valley of Hinnom, while the cries
-of the poor children could not be heard
-by ears closely stopped up in honor of that
-infernal spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> if any reader should imagine that
-I here invent any thing, or that, in favor
-of my inference of danger from the case
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>of revolting against the unalterable institutes
-of Nature, I have exagerated matters,
-nothing will be more easy, nor probably at
-the same more shocking, than the procuring
-himself a proof of the scarce not actual
-murders I have mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> parish-registers of this great metropolis
-are, I presume, open for inspection.
-There needs but to examine them,
-to discover the red-letter catalogue of the
-armies of innocents that have been put to
-death under the management of the charity
-destined to preserve their life. There
-will be found not one but many, even of
-the most populous parishes, where for
-fourteen, twenty, or more years, not one
-poor babe of the thousands taken in have
-escaped the general destruction, and sacrifice
-to that inhuman fiend of Hell, <em>Interest</em>.
-Here with what propriety might Nature
-borrow from one of her most dutiful children
-and darling, the following exclamation,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>—— —— <span class='fss'>ALL</span> <em>my pretty ones?</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Did you say</em> <span class='fss'>ALL!</span> <em>what</em> <span class='fss'>ALL?</span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><hr class='poem' /></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span><em>I cannot but remember such things were,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>That were most</em> <span class='fss'>PRECIOUS</span> <em>to me</em>: did Heav’n look on,</div>
- <div class='line'><em>And would not take their part?</em> <span class='sc'>Accursed Interest</span>,</div>
- <div class='line'>They were all <span class='fss'>STRUCK</span> for thee!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>This is so rigidly true of some parishes,
-that if I am not misinformed, the verification
-was not long ago made, as to one of
-them before a court of justice, of not a
-single infant having been brought up in the
-term of fourteen years. And I could name
-another, in which, during the course of
-above twenty years, <span class='fss'>ALL</span>, <span class='fss'>ALL</span> the new-born
-children that fell under the administration
-of the Parish-<span class='sc'>Charity</span>, perished, except
-one boy, of whom it is recorded as a prodigy,
-that he lived till he was five years of
-age, when he filled up the number, and
-died like the rest. Will any one here say,
-that this <span class='fss'>TOTAL</span> mortality was purely
-accidental?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> this can be no wonder to those
-who know there is such an expression,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>even proverbially in use, as that of children
-being a <span class='fss'>BURTHEN</span> to the parish. An
-expression of which it is hard to pronounce
-whether it is more execrable or more silly.
-But what is so inconsequential as the spirit,
-or rather the no-spirit of interest? Children
-may indeed be a burthen to private
-families; and yet for the sweetness of it,
-how chearfully is it oftenest born, or with
-very few extraordinary exceptions to the
-general rule? But to a nation, or what is
-the same thing, to the lawful representative
-of the nation, a parish, what can be
-on earth a falser light to view children in,
-than that of a burthen? What could be
-so intolerable in the sum to be added to
-that actually paid for their being worse
-than murdered out of hand, to save their
-little lives, and bring them up to that age,
-in which the national wisdom should have
-established for them, at once, the means of
-earning their likelihood, and of earning
-it with such beneficial retribution to their
-truly mother-country, as should amply
-reward her for her not having neglected
-the duties of humanity towards them? All
-the good, all the sensible part of mankind
-allow, that the true riches of a state, are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>in the numerousness of it subjects. Trade,
-arts, the navy, the militia, our colonies
-all open inexhaustible channels of employment
-and maintenance. And yet there
-are who can call children, those children
-too of the public, not in a ludicrous, but in
-the dearest tenderest sense, since in the public
-they ought to find that office of a parent,
-of which the guilt, the inability,
-the want of nature in their natural relations,
-or their death may have defrauded
-them; there are, I say, who can call such
-children a <em>burthen</em>! We complain of the
-defect of population, and yet have seen
-interest creative of obduracy, and perpetuating
-ignorance and error, manifestly
-thinning the species, by nipping those
-tender blossoms of human kind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span>, if this notice of the treatment
-of children should even appear a digression,
-I should, in favor of the intention, hope
-forgiveness from a humane reader. He
-would scarce impute it to me as matter for
-criticism, the having sacrificed propriety
-to the introduction of a point so important
-to humanity. But the truth is, that
-neither as a digression, nor as a false or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>over-strained argument, nor as a misapplication,
-can the same well be considered,
-by any who will withal consider its strict
-affinity in so many points to the subject
-of which I am treating.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> will readily appear, that both these
-violences offered to Nature in the substituting
-the men-midwives to the females,
-and dry-nurses to wet-ones, acknowledge
-exactly the same common parent, interest,
-and have exactly the same common effect,
-the destruction of infants. Is it then possible
-to be too much on one’s guard against
-those so flagrant impositions, which are
-the offspring of that proof-hardened passion?
-Is any thing sacred from it, since
-the lives of innocents palpably have not
-been so, in one branch of practice, nor
-very presumably are one jot more respected
-in the other? It is true indeed, that
-the practice of employing dry-nurses has
-not yet ascended much among the great
-and rich; first, because fashions rarely do
-ascend from the lower classes of life, and
-next, because there is no such temptation
-of actual lucre to defend or spread it: but
-as to that of preferring men-midwives,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>nothing is so likely as its descending, as it
-is so much the nature of fashion to descend,
-and none are more readily adopted by the
-lower ranks of people from the higher
-ones, than those fashions which are the
-most foolish and the most pernicious. And
-certainly this is not the one that the least
-deserves those epithets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Was</span> it not for this influence of the
-fashion, in making the most unreasonable
-as well as the most dangerous things pass
-into practice from the highest down to the
-lowest life, many an honest man might
-escape the bad consequences of his following
-the example of those, than whom
-none are so liable to be imposed on in
-such matters, the great and the opulent.
-These make it worth the while of interested
-persons to deceive them, and thus
-often for being cheated, pay with their
-money, their health, and even with their
-lives. In the mean time, many who are
-seduced by the vogue in which they see the
-men-midwives, employ them on a principle
-which cannot be enough commended,
-their natural affection to their wives and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>children. The reasoning which occurs to
-a husband in middling or low life on this
-occasion is probably as follows. “My
-wife and child are full as dear to me as
-those of the greatest man in the kingdom
-are to him, and shall I grudge a
-little more expence in the provision for
-their greater <em>safety</em>?” So far he reasons
-right: all his mistake lies in taking
-too readily for granted, that same <em>greater
-safety</em>, to be on the side of the men-practitioners
-in preference to the midwives,
-because the former are employed by the
-great, who, by the by, consult Nature
-the least of any class of life, even in points
-of their own health. And certainly in
-many respects to that <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">sine-quo-non</span></i> of human
-happiness, the great had better follow the
-example even of the poor, than the poor
-theirs. Make the most then of your reasoning
-from the prevalence of fashion, the
-gout and the men-midwives, well considered,
-are no very enviable appendixes
-of high-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> in some that laudable tenderness for
-mother and child, is the determining consideration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>for employing a man-midwife by
-whom Nature, if consulted, would assure all
-concerned, that the safety of both was more
-likely to be endangered than not, there are
-others again, in whom calling in the aid
-of a man-midwife is rather matter of luxury,
-of parade or ostentation, than of opinion
-of superior safety. These are of
-that imitative kind of beings, with whom
-the preference of a man-practitioner for
-the conducting of his wife’s lying-in, turns
-upon no other motive, than what would
-equally make them bestow a silk gown of
-a new fashion, or a laced-head upon her;
-from a spirit of emulation of some neighbour
-or superior.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> what is more surprizing yet, is that
-notwithstanding the kind of loathing and
-repugnance with which Nature inspires
-the women to receive such an office from
-a man, as that of delivering them, a repugnance
-to which they had so much better
-listen, since it has all the characters of
-a salutary instinct; there are women so
-weak, as not only not to represent to their
-husbands the expedience of examining, at
-least, the propriety of such a fashion, before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>they blindly adopt it on the faith either
-of others liable to be deceived, or of
-those interested in the deceiving them; but
-who even, in a ridiculous complaisance to
-that fashion, of which themselves and
-children are not unlikely to be the victims,
-will make a point of being attended by a
-man-midwife, by way of a piece of state.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> myself known women so infected
-by this silly vanity, that on receiving
-visits from their friends after lying-in,
-and being delivered by a woman, with the
-utmost safety and satisfaction to them, have
-been ashamed of having had the better
-sense and regard for themselves, to employ
-a midwife in defiance of the fashion, and
-have told their friends, that it is true
-Mrs. —— had lain them, but that there
-was a Doctor at hand in the next room.
-This by the by was false, for such a <em>Led-Doctor</em>
-is neither needed nor employed,
-where a midwife that knows her business
-is called. If any occasion for medical or
-even chirurgical skill arises from the complication
-of a case, there is always time
-to have the advice of a regular physician,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>or a regular surgeon, because that complication
-can never escape timely notice. It
-can only then be, for the sake of his iron
-and steel instruments, that a man-midwife
-has so much as the pretext of being necessary,
-and I hope to prove, that all the
-needful can be much better done without
-them. Yes, I repeat it, better done without
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>For</span> here and throughout the reader
-will please to observe, that it is on the superiority
-of safety in employing midwives
-that I impugn the growing fashion of a
-recourse to men-practitioners. It is the
-side of Nature I take against a set of mean
-mercenaries, who commit the cruellest
-outrages upon her, under the falsest of all
-pretences in them, that of assisting her.
-I would not be so criminal as to wish the
-benefit of a false argument, in a point of
-life and death to those mothers and children,
-my tender care, even could I be silly
-enough to imagine, that I could pass such
-an one upon my reader. I wave therefore
-all plea of the novelty of this upstart
-profession of men-midwives. Such a plea
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>I readily confess is not receivable. Were
-It so, how many valuable discoveries or
-improvements must have been stifled in
-their birth, if the objection to their being
-novelties was a valid one? All that I would
-contend for is, that an innovation should
-not be admitted only because it is an innovation;
-and that the decision of a matter
-of such capital importance, is better
-left to Reason, always herself submissive to
-Nature, than abandoned to Fashion, which
-so often acknowledges no other jurisdiction
-than that of whim or humor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>There</span> is no prescription for error, no
-sanction in custom against improvements.
-But certainly in such a capital point as the
-life of so many human creatures, in short,
-in one of the most sacred objects of government,
-that of population, such a novelty
-as that of bringing men-midwives
-into general practice, requires rather a
-greater authority than that of Fashion,
-while there is such a standard of essay as
-Reason.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span><span class='sc'>Inoculation</span> was not long since a
-novelty in this nation. The lady who introduced
-it, for any thing I know to the
-contrary, still lives to enjoy the honor of
-having procured so great a benefit to mankind.
-But then this benefit would bear
-the fairest of all trials, that of calculation:
-for what is reason itself but another word
-for calculation? The procuring then the
-small-pox by inoculation, in a body duly
-prepared, and especially at an eligible age,
-affords, according to the doctrine of chances,
-so much a fairer prospect of safety, than
-in the case of a spontaneous or accidental
-infection, that nothing scarcely could be
-imagined more friendly to Nature than
-such a rational prevention of her danger,
-from a distemper too rarely escaped, for
-the possibility of that escape to be employed
-as an argument against such a
-method of prevention. Here then the
-seeming violence offered to Nature, appeals
-for its justification to Nature, Reason
-and Experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Consult</span> Nature as to this innovation
-in the employing men-practitioners preferably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>to the midwives, who have been for
-ages, and so universally considered as the
-properest for that function. Nature will
-tell you, that it is injuring her to suspect
-her of being so cruel a mother-in-law, as
-to deny her tenderest production the female
-sex sufficient succors within herself,
-or leave women under a necessity of recurring
-to men for aid in their greatest need
-of it, during those sufferings, to which it
-has pleased the great master of Nature to
-subject peculiarly the women. If Nature
-then is but another name for his Fiat
-through all his works, never was his will
-more plainly signified than by her voice in
-this point: a repugnance in both sexes to
-that office being administered by a man.
-A repugnance which is not even one of
-Nature’s least remarkable signs of abhorrence<a id='t208'></a>
-from this innovation, and is only to
-be surmounted in the men by interest, and
-in the women by their false fear, or what
-is weaker yet, by their rage in following
-that bell-weather Fashion, though it should
-lead them like sheep to the slaughter. The
-uncouthness and inaptitude of the men, so
-ill compensated by their miserable inventions
-of iron and steel instruments, form
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>another loud protest of Nature against this
-important function being committed to
-men-operators.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Consult</span> reason, and reason founded
-upon those dictates of Nature, to which
-time only gives the more strength, will tell
-you, in contempt of fashion, that the
-men-midwives will never do any thing in
-a matter rather too universal for any excellence
-in it to depend upon Greek, Latin,
-or Arabic; that they are, in short, only
-hatching of wind-eggs, in the study of an
-art, which no incubation on it will ever
-sufficiently naturalize to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> to experience you appeal, I have already
-furnished unrefutable arguments of
-that’s being against the men-midwives.
-But let them remember my confession,
-that the number which I have quoted of
-women happily delivered is taken from the
-course of practice of good midwives. I
-am not here an advocate for bad ones, nor
-would I wish to authorize them if I could.
-All that I shall say, and dare aver is, that
-the very worst of them, unless their hands
-are cut off, or at least deserve to be cut
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>off, can hardly be worse than the best of
-the men-operators.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> while it is to the tribunal of Nature,
-of Reason, and of Experience, that I presume
-to wish that this same Fashion might
-be brought; I readily acknowledge its force
-though not its justice. I feel the power
-of it, with pain, for the sake of humanity<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c012'><sup>[21]</sup></a>!
-My opposition then to this fashion
-is rather founded in duty than in hope.
-The weakness of it will probably furnish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>fashion only a new matter of triumph, not
-indeed over me who am too low for it,
-but over the welfare of mankind, which
-it has often, in more points than this, the
-pleasure to see sacrificed to it, though in
-not one perhaps more palpably than in this
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean time it might be worth
-the while of even those who not being
-themselves men-midwives, nor having any
-personal interest in patronizing them, owe
-their favorable notion of them to their own
-fair judgment; it would, I say, even be
-worth their while to consider that there may
-possibly be a time, when they may themselves
-see reason to change that judgment of
-theirs. They may possibly discover the
-illusions of interest, under the old stale
-mask of service to the public. They may
-find out the folly of fashion. But will
-not it be too late, when that fury of fashion
-shall, like a pestilence, have either swept
-away the good midwives, or at least have
-so thinned their numbers, as not to leave
-enough for the demand of the service?
-They must in time become, to all intents
-and purposes, like an old obsolete law, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>effectually abolished by disuse, as if abrogated
-by a formal repeal. “The matter
-would not be much if they were,” an
-instrumentarian will probably say, but
-I doubt much, whatever he might gain
-by it, whether mankind or population
-would profit much by that extermination,
-even though the men-midwives with their
-tire-têtes, crotchets, and forceps, were to
-succeed to their business.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span> that such an extermination is far
-from improbable, will appear no strained
-inference to those who consider the power
-of Fashion, which establishes its tyranny,
-much as the first Roman emperors did
-theirs over that commonwealth, by leaving
-a semblance of liberty without the
-substance; whence the baneful effects do
-not the less follow, or rather the more
-surely follow. Thus there is indeed as yet
-no act of parliament for the preference of
-men-practitioners or the extinction of the
-midwives, but the statutes of fashion are
-not only more forcible than any act of a
-human legislature, but, in this matter even
-than the laws of Nature herself tho’ inculcating
-their observance, under pain of death,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>or at the least of severe corporal punishment;
-such as being torn with cold pinchers,
-or cut or punctured with instruments,
-or put to more pain than necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Already</span> has fashion driven numbers
-of women out of their livelihood to make
-way for the encroachments of the men on
-the female provinces of industry, though
-there never was a time, in which it was
-not a just complaint that there were rather
-much too few means of employment for
-women. Fashion has determined it otherwise,
-and many callings formerly appropriated
-to females are now exercised by
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> as to this profession of midwifery,
-even the total extinction of the real midwives,
-would not be perhaps so bad as giving
-that name to those poor creatures in
-training under the men-practitioners, who
-independently of their own incapacity of
-practice, consequently of forming good
-practitioners, have a palpable interest not
-to suffer their women-pupils to gain any
-eminence in the profession that might give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>umbrage to themselves<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c012'><sup>[22]</sup></a>. The midwives
-whom these men-practitioners would
-perhaps gratiously allow to subsist, might
-to their own insufficiency add the dangerous
-circumstance of creating, or at least of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>not preventing, by duly exerting themselves
-in the predisposing part, the necessity of
-calling in their protectors, especially where
-recommended by them. Not that I imagine
-even these mock-midwives would wilfully
-be guilty of such prevarication in
-their duty. For them not to deserve such a
-suspicion, it is enough that they are women,
-consequently tender-hearted. But
-that does not exclude the idea of weakness.
-But where so fair a virtue as gratitude may
-disguise even from themselves the fouler
-motive of interest lurking at bottom, if that
-tenderness is not even destroyed, it may not
-impossibly be made a tool of, and join in persuading
-them, that things had really better
-be left to the men-practitioners, whose
-creatures and devotees they are. Thence
-a negligence superadded to their defect of
-skill. Such subalterns then would, at least,
-not be dis-inclined to the “<span class='fss'>FINDING</span>”
-<em>themselves</em> “<span class='fss'>AT A LOSS</span>”, or yet worse for
-the patient, have by their omissions, if
-not commissions, bred the occasion of
-“<em>finding</em>” themselves “<em>at that loss</em>”, even
-mechanically, and without the direct design
-of paying their court to their recommending
-“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">accoucheur</span></i>, <em>their man of honor</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>and <em>real friend</em>,” in a <em>candid</em> recourse to
-him. Pity it were indeed that so charming
-a harmony should not subsist between
-<em>the accoucheurs</em> and such <em>midwives</em>, for the
-“<span class='fss'>MUTUAL ADVANTAGE</span>” of both! A
-harmony, which however could hardly
-be established but at the expence of the
-sacrificed patients.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span> here I appeal to the reader’s own
-fair judgment, whether I over-strain the
-consequence against such wretched creatures
-as they cannot but be who must, for
-bread, be so subservient to the men-midwives,
-and be what the French call, their
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">âmes<a id='t216'></a> damnées</span></i> (souls sold). Can any thing
-be more probable than that these <em>good women</em>
-dignified by the men-practitioners,
-out of their special grace and favor with the
-title of midwives, will on all occasion consult
-the “<em>advantage</em>” of their kind <em>patrons</em>
-and “<em>real friends</em>”. And how can that
-advantage be better consulted than by
-bungling their work so as to make it <em>appear</em>
-necessary to have a <em>candid recourse</em> to
-the good Doctor, who recommended and
-warranted them? can it, in short, be imagined,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>that they will be less mere machines
-than Dr. Smellie’s Dolls, or indeed furnish
-less occasion, than the education under
-those Dolls, for the <em>iron</em> and <em>steel instruments</em>,
-which are the most part understood
-to be indispensably necessary where the
-midwife shall have failed. And as to such
-midwives as have been formed or recommended
-by the men-practitioners, their <em>not</em>
-failing would indeed be the wonder!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thus</span> the name of a midwife may subsist
-after the reality shall have perished,
-and the world so often deceived by mere
-names, may not perhaps discover this annihilation
-till long after it is effectuated,
-or till it is too late to repair the damages,
-which will hardly fail of discovering it to
-them. Of good midwives there never were
-too many; but they are now much too few;
-though still not more rare in proportion
-than those of the men-midwives, who
-may be called good, comparatively to so many
-of them as are dangerously superficial.
-Discouragement has already greatly hindered
-the places of the good female-practitioners
-who are gone off the stage, from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>being duly supplied. Proper subjects decline
-taking up a profession, in which they
-must have to dread the prevalence of so
-false a prejudice against them, as that which
-determines the preference of the male-operators.
-It is easier to destroy, than to create
-a-new; and perhaps when the need of good
-midwives shall be at the greatest, the difficulty
-of finding such, will make the employing
-of men-practitioners, with all the
-so just objections to them, even a necessity.
-Things are not at present perhaps far from
-that point, and an alarming consideration
-that would be to all women, if they were
-but to reflect on the increase of pain and
-danger to themselves in the hours already
-too big with both, of their increase, I say,
-by the most aukward and violent aid of
-the men, compared to the so much more
-effectual and gentle methods so natural to
-the women-assistents.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> the parties then principally concerned
-in the decision of this question, and especially
-the women who are the patients,
-and their tender relations of husband, father,
-or brother, &amp;c. were but to consult
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>their own feelings, their reason, and even
-that instinct which, in this point, is itself
-so strong a reason from its being the voice
-of Nature never unhearkened to with impunity,
-they would soon, to your objection
-drawn from a fashion scarce less ridiculous
-than pernicious, allow no more weight
-than, in fact, it deserves.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Objection</span> the Fourteenth.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>You</span> must allow, however, that it must
-be a false modesty that, in the women,
-which can oppose the preference of the
-men-practitioners to the female ones.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>ANSWER.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>I know</span> indeed that Dr. Smellie (page 2.
-of his introduction) attributes the opposition
-made by the Athenian women<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c012'><sup>[23]</sup></a> to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>the prohibition of midwives, and to the
-acceptance of men-practitioners in their
-room to “<em>mistaken modesty</em>.” It may however
-with more reason and truth be averred,
-that the admittence of men to that function
-by women, would be in the women
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>a most egregiously <span class='fss'>MISTAKEN IMMODESTY</span>.
-Since, surely the virtue or grace
-of female modesty is not an object to be
-held so cheap, as to be sacrificed for worse
-than nothing, for nothing better, in short,
-than the purchase with it of danger or
-perdition to both the mother and child.
-After so valuable a sacrifice as that of modesty
-itself, it may perhaps sound mean to
-add any thing comparatively, so trifling as
-that of the hire not given to the person
-who prostitutes herself in some sort on a
-so much mistaken hope, but to the very
-person to whom she is prostituted in that
-hope of superior safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> not then here to assume a character,
-that would become me so ill, of a
-Casuist or Divine, by pretending to fix the
-degree of moral turpitude in the submission
-of modest women to a practice, which, I
-will even allow might be justified by the
-superior consideration of safety to two lives,
-if that consideration was not a question
-most impudently begged, with so little
-foundation, that the very contrary thereof
-is the truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span><span class='sc'>Neither</span> would I here incur the just
-charge of impertinence, in giving my private
-and insignificant opinion on an undecency
-so unwarranted by any necessity. That
-would look too like dictating to others,
-what they are to think of a practice, of
-which every one will doubtless judge for
-himself. The boundaries of female modesty
-are so well known, and so ascertained
-by common consent, that surely it little
-belongs to me to offer new lights upon that
-subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>What</span> I have then to say, on this head,
-is purely in justification of that modesty,
-which the men-midwives are for obvious
-reasons pleased to call a false one, though
-so far as it pleads for excluding them, it
-is an ingratitude to that Nature, of which
-it is the peculiar gift to the female sex, not
-to term it even a wise virtue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Society</span> especially stands indebted to
-Nature for her suggestion of modesty in
-this point. If in all ages, in all civilized
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>countries, the wife is considered as the peculiar
-property of a husband, insomuch, that
-all laws human and divine consecrate, if I may
-use the expression, to him alone, exclusive
-of all other men, the access to the reserved
-parts of the wife’s body, certainly such a
-privilege can hardly be thought lightly
-communicable. And what can be more
-so than suffering a man, mercenarily or
-wantonly, or perhaps both, to invade that
-so sacred property, under the mask of a
-service, for which he is by Nature so evidently
-disqualified? While Nature too has
-made so ample a provision for this very
-service, in fitting the women for it, with
-so much more propriety and safety, both
-to the concern of the public in the welfare
-of population, as well as to the domestic
-honor of families, which is not without
-some danger, at least, from the practice of
-midwifery being in the hands of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to this last averment of mine, the
-truth of it is so glaring, that it does not
-even need Dr. Smellie’s own implicit confession
-of it, in his instructions to the men-practitioners
-in general, or, if you please,
-to his more than nine hundred pupils.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>“<em>He</em> (<em>the</em> <span class='sc'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Accoucheur</span></span>) <em>ought to</em> <span class='fss'>ACT</span>
-<em>and</em> <span class='fss'>SPEAK</span> <em>with the utmost</em> <span class='fss'>DELICACY</span>
-<em>of</em> <span class='fss'>DECORUM</span>, <em>and</em> <span class='fss'>NEVER VIOLATE</span>
-<em>the</em> <span class='fss'>TRUST</span> <em>reposed in him, so as to harbour
-the least</em> <span class='fss'>IMMORAL</span> <em>or</em> <span class='fss'>INDECENT</span>
-<em>design; but demean himself in all respects
-suitable to the</em> <span class='fss'>DIGNITY</span> <em>of his</em> <span class='fss'>PROFESSION</span>,”
-p. 447.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> I confess myself so smitten with
-the propriety and sanctity of the precept
-of the good Doctor’s, and particularly
-with the needfulness of it, that I would
-advise every man-practitioner of midwifery,
-of a certain age that might require
-it, to have the said commandment wrote
-out in <em>gold letters</em>, and wear it about his
-arm, especially on his proceeding to <em>officiate</em>,
-by way of amulet, phylactery or preservative
-against any incident temptation
-to <em>violate</em> his <em>trust</em>, or to fall off from the
-high <em>dignity</em> of his profession. All that I fear
-is, that its virtue may not always be to be
-depended upon, against the energy planted
-by nature in the difference of the sexes.
-No one would be farther than I from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>cruel injustice of drawing consequences
-unfavorable to any set of men, from the
-misconduct of any particular individual in
-it.<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c012'><sup>[24]</sup></a>Errors are purely personal. If I
-then so much as mention the case of a
-man-midwife convicted of having debauched
-a gentleman’s wife, in consequence of
-his admission to the practice of his profession
-of midwifery upon her, it is by no
-means neither with a design to insult the
-unhappy criminals, nor to draw from
-thence an inference to the disfavor of the
-men-practitioners in this point, beyond
-what I am authorized by the constancy of
-the temptation from Nature, to all, yes, to
-all, who, by their age, in one sex, are
-not past it: I say in one sex, because in
-the other, the female, the very circumstances
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>of a woman’s needing a midwife,
-shews that she is not past the age of, at
-least, causing a temptation. Further, it
-would even be a matter of argument on
-the side of the men-midwives, that so <em>few</em>
-instances come to the knowledge of the
-public, of the ill-consequence of a practice
-which breaks down the capital barriers of
-modesty; if those ill-consequences were not,
-in the nature of them, not only a secret,
-but easy to be kept secret. Who would
-complain but the husband or relations of
-transactions between a man-midwife and
-his patient? But then how seldom need
-a third to be let into such a secret?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I would</span> not then have the men-midwives
-to be too forward to treat the modesty
-of the women on this head as a false
-one, or their scruples as a weakness. Modesty
-in this case is not only the safeguard
-of the lives of themselves and children, but
-of their own honor, which if it does not
-receive an actual fall in such a subjection
-to a man-midwife, had perhaps better not
-be so unnecessarily risked so near the brink
-of the precipice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span><span class='sc'>I am</span> not writing here for Italians or
-Spaniards, or any of the inhabitants of
-those countries who are so prone to jealousy,
-perhaps because they know their women.
-I am now addressing myself to Englishmen,
-not jealous, because, if they know
-theirs, they must know that, in proportion
-to the number, no women on the earth
-have more of the reality of virtue and modesty.
-I will not suppose then any thing
-so offensive, as that the chastity of the generality
-of them is not infinitely superior to
-the advantages or overtures for design afforded
-the men admitted to such a privacy, as
-that of attending them in their lying-in and
-delivering them. But would the honestest
-woman, or one however sure of herself
-or of her virtue, think it eligible, without
-a full satisfactory proof of that superior
-safety, which is her object in preferring
-men-midwives, to be herself the occasion of
-temptation to those people? How can she
-answer that she will not be it? In that so
-formidable army of mercenaries, actually
-continuing to form itself under the banners
-of Fashion, and headed by Interest, can she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>answer that the insensible stoics of it, will
-fall to her share? Would a woman, I will
-not say, of strict principles of honor, but
-barely of not the most abandoned ones,
-submit herself in the manner she must to a
-man-midwife, on her employing him, if she
-would but satisfy herself, as she easily may,
-that his aid cannot be more effectual than
-that of a woman? But what! if it is most
-undoubtedly a less safe one?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> this is far from all to be objected
-on the head of modesty to this practice.
-The opportunities, if not of temptation, if
-not of seduction by it, at least of offensiveness
-to female reserve are such, as would
-make even a husband, the least susceptible of
-jealousy, so uneasy for the outrages to which
-the employing of a man-midwife in the
-course of his wife’s pregnancy and delivery
-might expose her, as would make him
-think it no indifferent point for his judgment
-to settle whether such outrages might
-not better be spared her. It will not I presume
-be denied, that all female modesty is
-a flower, the delicacy of which cannot be
-too much guarded against any tendency to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>blast it, and that nothing can threaten more
-that effect, than such infringements of the
-unity of a husband’s privilege in the sole
-incommunicable possession of his wife’s
-body, as are implied in the course of a
-man-midwife’s attendance. An unity of
-privilege, which, when broke in one point,
-does not always stop at that, but may proceed
-to farther breach, where there is art
-on one side, and weakness on the other.
-Many women are doubtless proof against
-the slipperiness of such an overture: but
-all have not alike strength of mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> lest I should be here taxed with
-forging of phantoms merely for the honor
-of combating them, I shall only entreat
-all parties concerned to consider the following
-so probable circumstance, and then
-let them decide as their own judgment
-will direct them: a circumstance taken (can
-any thing be fairer?) even from a man-midwife’s
-own stating, as well as from the
-nature of things, of which none need be
-ignorant that will think at all about them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is then to be observed, that during
-a woman’s pregnancy, and before the labor-pains
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>come on, one of the principal points
-of midwifery is, what is called the art of
-<em>Touching</em>. Thence are derived the surest
-prognostics for preparation, and especially
-from the signs it affords of rectitude or obliquity
-of the Uterus. I have already offered
-reasons needless to repeat, why the men can
-never arrive at the excellence of skill in the
-women in this particular. But as to the
-importance of this faculty of <em>Touching</em>,
-hear what Dr. Smellie himself says.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>P. 180. “The design of <em>touching</em> is to
-be informed, whether the woman is or
-is not with child; to know how far
-she is advanced in her pregnancy; if she
-is in danger of a miscarriage; if the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">os
-uteri</span></i> be dilated; and in time of labor
-to form a right judgment of the case,
-from the opening of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">os internum</span></i>,
-and the pressing down of the membranes
-with their waters, and lastly, to distinguish
-what part of the child is presented.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Again, P. 448. speaking of a <em>midwife</em>,
-he says, “she ought to be well skilled in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>the art of <em>touching</em> pregnant women,
-and know in what manner the womb
-stretches, together with the situation of
-all the abdominal <span class='fss'>VISCERA</span>: she ought
-to be perfectly mistress of the <span class='fss'>ART</span> of
-<span class='fss'>EXAMINATION</span> in the time of labour”.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> you have from an unsuspected
-authority a certainly not over-rated importance
-of the expedience of preliminary
-<span class='fss'>TOUCHING</span>. Now granting, only for argument’s
-sake, what is assuredly false, that
-a man-practitioner can be equal (superior
-he would not in this point, at least, have
-the impudence to pretend himself) to a
-midwife; let a husband, let a wife, but
-reflect on the difference, every thing else
-being equal, there must be as to <em>modesty</em>,
-between the function of <em>touching</em> being performed
-by a man or by a woman. Let a
-husband, I say, for an instant figure to
-himself what a figure he must make, what
-a figure his wife must make, under such a
-ceremony performed by a lusty <span class='fss'>HE-MIDWIFE</span>,
-exploring those arcana of the female
-fabric, and especially to so little purpose,
-with his natural disqualifications for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>so much as knowing what he is about.
-Will the husband be present? What must
-be the wife’s confusion during so nauseous
-and so gross a scene? Will he <em>modestly</em> withdraw
-while his wife is so <em>served</em>? What
-must be his wife’s danger from one of
-those rummagers, if she should be handsome
-enough to deserve his attention, or
-a compliment from him on such a visitation
-of her secret charms, the more flattering
-from <em>him</em>, not only as he must be
-supposed so good a judge from the frequency
-of his occasions of comparison, but
-as it must imply a superior corporal merit
-in the woman so visited, as could overcome
-that satiety which a fastidious plenty of
-patients might so naturally be imagined
-to create in a man-midwife? Will any one
-say, that these suppositions are over-strained,
-or out of Nature? I fancy, that if
-the secret histories of many families were
-ransacked, of the practice on which the
-men-midwives were in possession, it would
-not be always found, that those preliminary
-visitations were not turned to some account
-of interest or seduction. And yet
-an omission of that <em>touching</em> might be dangerous.
-How kind is it then in Nature,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>to have of herself so far consulted the good
-and tranquility of society, in palpably bestowing
-upon women a faculty, which she
-has as palpably refused to the men, in
-whom the exercise of it would for obvious
-reasons be big with so many inconveniences?
-Is there any breach of charity in the
-taking for granted the existence of such
-inconveniences, unless indeed, all of a
-sudden, in favor of this lucre-begotten
-sect, the men were ceased to be men, and
-the women women?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> allowing that nothing was to pass
-between a man-midwife and his patient, in
-this <em>act</em> of <em>touching</em>, beyond the necessity of
-the practice, or in a merely technical sense,
-that in short no such libertine impression
-should make itself be felt in the course of
-such <em>touches</em>, as should discompose the good
-<em>Doctor</em>’s <span class='fss'>DIGNITY</span>, and endanger the patient’s
-honor, by present or future attempts
-derived from such a strange privity; is it
-not to be feared, that a designing or interested
-person may take other advantages besides
-that of gratifying sensuality? May
-not a woman, the more attached she is to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>her modesty, the greater sacrifice she has
-made of it, in her innocence of intention,
-only imagine herself but the more subjected
-to a man, to whom she has submitted
-in the manner she must do to a man-midwife,
-and let him take an ascendant over
-her and her family, of which a midwife
-would not so much as dream, from her
-office being so much in course, and too little
-extraordinary for her to have any extraordinary
-pretentions or designs? On the contrary,
-a man-midwife need scarce set any
-bounds to his. In any differences in a family,
-especially between man and wife,
-must not a man-practitioner, from such a
-familiarity with the wife’s person, have such
-a footing in the confidence of the wife, as
-may enable him to dispose of her will almost
-in any thing? He may be her apothecary,
-physician, surgeon, privy-councellor,
-what not? What can a woman refuse a
-man, to whom she is so deluded as to think
-she owes her own life, or that of a darling
-child, all his merit, in which I have before
-explained? What can a woman in short
-refuse a man, to whom nothing of that has
-been refused, in which consist all the preliminaries
-of granting every thing? She
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>may indeed refuse him the sacrifice of her
-virtue, if he should think it worth designing
-upon, but how few things else could she
-refuse him? Once more the greater value
-she put on the sacrifice of so much of her
-modesty, the less would she be able to deny
-him any thing else, as any thing else
-must comparatively appear so inconsiderable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> hitherto I have spoke only of those
-outrages and dangers to modesty from the
-preparatory attendance of the man-midwife
-as occasion may require, during the pregnancy.
-But as to his officiating in the crisis
-of the labor-pains and delivery, there
-are two very essential points of consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The first.</span> The modesty of the women,
-unaccustomed to the approaches of other
-men than a husband, must be in great sufferance
-in the moments of their labor-pains.
-All Nature agonizes in them. They are
-at once weakened in the flesh and in the
-spirit. The bare presence of a man to officiate
-at such a time, may excite in them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>a revolution capable of stopping the labor-pains
-caused by the expulsive efforts of delivery,
-which thus becomes dangerously
-retarded, and may so overpower them, as
-to put them in the greatest peril of their
-lives. This is what has often happened.
-You may see frequent examples of this revolt
-of Nature against the ministry of men-midwives
-in Dr. La Motte himself, a man-midwife.
-If Nature then suffers so much
-in women at that juncture, when a person,
-nay even of the same sex, offers her aid, in
-certain indispensable occasions, to which
-humanity is subjected; how greatly must
-the presence of a man increase their constraint
-and embarrassment, and rob them
-still more of that so necessary freedom in
-the animal functions! But how greatly
-ought the women to thank that their instinctive
-repugnance of Nature to such a
-prostitution of their persons, if they consider
-those tortures, which, by the listening
-to that same repugnance, may at once be
-saved to their modesty, and to their personal
-feeling. Let them paint themselves
-the following posture prescribed by a man-midwife.
-“<em>The patient must be commodiously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>placed, that is to say, on the bed-side,
-her thighs raised and expanded, her feet
-drawn up to her posteriors, and kept steady
-in that posture by some trusty helpers.</em>”<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c012'><sup>[25]</sup></a>
-Levret, p. 161. <em>On the use of the new
-crooked forceps.</em> Here it may be said; “why
-there is nothing in this attitude, however
-shockingly indecent, but what may be
-sanctified by the extremities of necessity”.
-Very well. But what must a husband,
-what must a wife think at her being <em>spread
-out</em> in this manner, under the hands and
-eyes of a man-practitioner, with his helpers,
-perhaps his trusty apprentices, only
-for the experiment of a <em>forceps</em> of a new
-invention, the merit of which too is a
-so contested an one, that Levret himself is
-forced to own that, “that same <span class='fss'>FORCEPS</span>
-<em>would be<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c012'><sup>[26]</sup></a> an instrument of pure</em> <span class='fss'>SPECULATION</span>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span><em>and not of</em> <span class='fss'>PRACTICE, IF</span>
-(N. B. that <span class='fss'>IF</span>) <em>a certain general precept
-should be true</em>,” which, by the by,
-is most certainly so! So that, in this case,
-for example, you see how a woman may
-be treated, only to ascertain the merit of
-some new-fangled gimcrack of an instrument.
-But to how many occasions of as
-little, or even less necessity than this, for
-putting a woman into postures of this
-sort, might not wantonness, interest, or
-other motives give birth? Or can pretexts
-for such insults to modesty be wanting to
-designingness?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The second</span> consideration is this.
-Those moments of weakness of spirit, and
-infirmity to which the labor-pains subject
-the women may, in some of naturally the
-weakest of them be, liable to leave impressions
-in favor of a man-midwife, the less
-suspected of harm, and consequently the
-more dangerous for their being suggested
-by that gratitude for his imaginary<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c012'><sup>[27]</sup></a> contribution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>to their deliverance, which is itself
-a virtue, though the object of it is so
-miserably mistaken by them. Let any one
-image to himself what must often happen
-in Nature, a woman sinking under her pains,
-her mind all softened and overpowered with
-her present feelings, and looking up for <em>relief</em>
-to the <em>man</em>, employed, as she imagines,
-to procure it her, though the real fact oftenest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>is, that he will not have enough prevented
-her pain, or perhaps greatly occasioned
-its increase. Of this however she
-knowing nothing, sees him in the amiable
-light of her deliverer from her actual and
-intolerable state of pain. In the mean time,
-those aukward uncouth endeavours of his
-to relieve and deliver her, even though they
-should aggravate her torture, pass upon her
-for master-pieces of art or skill. “Who
-would be without a man-midwife?” At
-length, Nature sometimes, even in spite of
-all his omissions, or bungled operation,
-proceeds in her favorite task of delivery,
-that is to say, if he has not hurried or made
-tragic work of it, with his mispractice
-or his instruments. The patient then is rid
-of her burthen, and what are then her feelings?
-Those of exquisite delight, from the
-comparison with what she was induring but
-the instant before. It is a transport of
-joy, not unmingled with gratitude, to the
-person to whom she fancies herself in any
-measure obliged for it. The ugliest wretch
-on earth, so he could but be imagined the
-cause of such a delivery, would, in those
-instants, assume in her eyes the form of
-Loveliness itself. Even with the greatest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>innocence of heart she could hug, she could
-kiss him in the ebullitions of her joy and
-gratitude. Let no one imagine these expressions
-are over-strained. Such a rapture
-of felicity, in the sudden case of being
-taken as it were down from a rack, is not
-of a Nature to know any bounds of moderation,
-nor can be conceived but by those
-who have felt it. Her gratitude would
-even extend to inanimate<a id='t241'></a> things, much more
-to the dear Doctor, to whom she conceives
-she owes so much. She eyes him with all
-the intense eagerness of a gratitude so fond,
-that its transiency into a passion of another
-nature would not appear such a prodigy, to
-those who consider how apt passions of tenderness
-are to confound motives and run
-into one another. The melting-softness
-of those moments of infirmity and weakness
-of spirit, affords a susceptibility of impressions,
-which may not afterwards be so
-soon worn out, and of which the usual affection
-from the difference of sexes, in the
-parties, may sooner or later come in for its
-share. Dr. Smellie has, as I have before
-observed, implicitly allowed the possibility
-of a temptation to men, and shall I not follow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>his laudable example of candor, and
-confess that there may also be weak women?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is indeed true that in cases of extremities,
-such as most certainly are not the
-frequentest ones, any thought of immodesty
-may be intirely out of the question. The
-sad and suffering state of a woman agonizing
-with pain, at the gates one may say
-of death, leaves little room for licentious
-temptations. But, once more, those cases
-are much the rarest: and even in those, the
-greater the danger will have been, the greater
-must the gratitude afterwards be for the
-imaginary service, that will be supposed to
-have accomplished the deliverance. Let a
-midwife have really rendered that service,
-the gratitude will scarce be so quick, so lively
-or so lasting, only because she is not a
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> it shall be here objected, that the men-midwives
-ought to be above all suspicion or
-scandal of this sort; I shall only say, that at
-least it is their interest to appear so. But
-they themselves will not pretend to an exemption
-from temptation, nor can answer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>for themselves that such a temptation may
-not come into existence, as that all their
-virtue, fortified by the divine precept before
-quoted from Dr. Smellie, may not defend
-them from yielding to it. They are not, or
-at least ought not to be men in years for
-obvious reasons as to that manual practice
-of theirs which at the best is so indifferent.
-Let any one then consider the consequence
-of this worse than unnecessarily putting
-young women, in such manner, into the
-hands of men in the vigor of their age. Let
-any impartial person but reflect what barriers
-are thrown down, what a door is opened
-to licentiousness, by the admission of
-this so perfectly needless innovation. Think
-of an army, if but of barely Dr. Smellie’s
-nine-hundred pupils, constantly recruiting
-with the pupils of those pupils, let loose
-against the female sex, and of what an havock
-they may make of both its safety and
-modesty, to say nothing of the detriment
-to population, in the destruction of infants,
-and I presume, it will not appear intirely
-in me a suggestion of private interest to
-wish things, in this point, restored to the
-old course of practice of this art of midwifery
-by women. A course which Nature
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>has so self-evidently established, in her
-tender regard to the female sex, and to its
-darling offspring, and in which she has not
-less consulted one of her primary ends,
-the Good of Society, in the greater security
-of the conjugal union and property, which
-ought to be so sacred, and especially so, for
-the honor of the human understanding, from
-the invasion of an upstart profession, sordidly
-mean in its motives, infamously false
-in its pretences, shamefully ridiculous in
-its practice, and yet dreadfully serious in
-all its consequences.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Conclusion</span> of the <span class='sc'>First Part</span>.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'>In the foregoing part of this work I
-have contented myself with asserting, in
-general, the perfect inutility of those instruments,
-of which the male-practitioners
-themselves confess the danger, and use
-them not a bit the less for that confession.
-It is then for the following and second
-part, that I have reserved the entering into
-a more particular discussion of them.
-Therein will appear, upon how false and
-slender a foundation the gentlemen-midwives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>have insinuated themselves into a
-business so little made for them. The
-truth is, that the pernicious quackery of
-those same instruments has been artfully
-made the pretext, and become the sanction
-of an innovation set on foot by Interest,
-adopted by Credulity, and at length fostered
-by Fashion. The employing of midwives
-was undoubtedly not long since, in
-this country, the General Rule. The calling
-in of men-practitioners, upon very
-extraordinary occasions, was an Exception,
-and a very rare one, to that General Rule.
-But by a fatal inversion of the natural order
-of things, the Exception is recently
-crept into the place of the General Rule.
-The point is to consider, whether this
-palpable violence to Nature is of that benefit
-to society which it is pretended to
-be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> already examined some of the
-arguments in favor of the men-practitioners.
-But the principal one, deduced from
-the incapacity, or rather aversion of the
-midwives, upon just grounds, from using
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>instruments, merits an ampler scrutiny. In
-proof of my candor in it, I shall take most
-of my remarks on those instruments from
-what the men-practitioners themselves say,
-and confess of them. This, I presume,
-cannot be deemed unfair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> the whole, those parties whom
-the decision may concern, will please to decide
-on which side the force of Reason and
-Truth shall appear the greatest; and so deciding,
-it is, in fact, in their own favor,
-and in one of their most capital concerns,
-that they will decide.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>They</span> will decide, in short, whether,
-upon the whole, the plea of the men-practitioners,
-founded upon the ignorance of a
-few midwives which, bad as it is, is more
-than balanced by their incompetency<a id='t246'></a>
-in the manual function, and to which a
-remedy might easily be found, is a valid
-one for driving out of the practice of midwifery
-a sex, to which the faculty of it is
-self-evidently the genuine gift of Nature
-herself, only to make way for a set of interested
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>male-practitioners, whose so boasted
-art is oftenest signalized by the most barbarous
-and horrid outrages upon Nature,
-with this aggravation, that they are needlessly
-committed under the specious and
-plausible pretext of flying to her assistence.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>The End of the <span class='sc'>First Part</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_247.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>
-<img src='images/i_249.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><span class='c002'>A</span><br /> <span class='large'>TREATISE</span><br /> <span class='c002'>OF</span><br /> MIDWIFERY.<br /> <span class='c002'><span class='sc'>Part</span> the <span class='sc'>Second</span>.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Containing various observations on the labor
-and delivery of lying-in women, including
-a discussion of the pretended
-necessity for the employing instruments.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c001'><span class='sc'>Introduction.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='c006'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_249.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-<span class='sc'>Notwithstanding</span> the
-numerous productions of
-writers on the art of succoring
-women in labor, all
-that has hitherto appeared
-on that subject, still leaves the mind unsatisfied;
-not that it is so unjust as to expect
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>perfection in any human art, but
-from its feeling that, in this particular one,
-too much is given to theory, and too little
-to the practical part, or manual function.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>While</span> the causes of difficult labors
-are far from solidly or sufficiently explained,
-and rather obscured by a cloud of scientific
-jargon, than practically illustrated,
-they give us no tolerably sure method for
-preventing or remedying those difficulties.
-On the contrary, the whole boasted improvement
-of the art is reduced, to a pernicious
-recourse to instruments, which
-cut at once the knot they cannot unty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is then no wonder that there should
-still, in all the books and observations hitherto
-given on this matter, exist a void lamentably
-unfilled; and as this void evidently
-consists<a id='t250'></a> less in the theory than the
-practice, the superior qualifications, and natural
-endowments of the women for the
-manual operation, point out the fitness of the
-greater dependence on them for the filling
-up what, humanly speaking, can be filled
-up of that void.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span><span class='sc'>Let</span> the physicians, the surgeons instruct
-the midwives in so much of anatomy as is
-necessary to their function; let them afford
-them, either in writing or verbally, their
-guidance and direction in the consequences
-or occasionally in the preliminaries of management
-of the lying-in; all this is right,
-salutary, and in due course: but that men
-should pretend to the manual operation
-in these cases, it certainly neither is nor can
-be their business. Nor is this negation of
-propriety a reproach to them. Will any man
-think it an indignity to be told, he cannot
-clear-starch, hem a ruffle, or make a bed as
-handily as a woman? The exceptions are
-the shame; and in this department of art it
-would be truer to say, that there are no exceptions
-than that there are only a few.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> can we wonder at the insufficiency
-of the lights thrown into the art of midwifery
-by that cloud of writers who have
-treated of it, when so few of them having
-had any other view than advertising themselves,
-and being incapable of saying any
-thing to the purpose, of the art of delivering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>the women, have filled up their books
-with insignificant digressions, or things intirely
-foreign from the point?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> some you see all distempers of women
-collateral to their pregnancy, which is certainly
-a very necessary and an infinitely extensive
-subject, while on the practical article
-of the deliverance they give you nothing
-but what is barren, jejune, or even false.
-Others, by way of filling up, run digressively
-into a discussion of the methods of treating
-infants. Others again have written
-only to recommend some pretended secrets,
-as powders, preparations, &amp;c. Some have
-swelled their volumes with the more or less
-commodious structure of a couch, or the
-mechanism of a close-stool, or the make
-of different sorts of syringes for anodine injections.
-In others you meet with remedies
-for the deformities of the human body, for
-the contractions or stiffnesses of the muscles
-of the shoulders, arms, hands, legs, feet,
-thighs, haunches, &amp;c. to straiten the crooked,
-and even, in a treatise on midwifery, to
-extirpate a polypus from the nose. Others,
-with all the parade of justly exclaiming against
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>nostrum-mongers, the plausible writing
-against which serves at once to fill up,
-and give them an air of superiority to such
-trumpery, substitute however nothing better
-of their own than the recommendation
-of some instrument, which they give you
-for a master-piece of invention; and to establish
-which, they cry down every instrument<a id='t253'></a>
-of other practitioners, though not one
-jot inferior to it in any thing, but the not
-being the newest. Thus, after having perused
-such a multiplicity of authors, it is
-incredible to say how little true, or practically
-useful knowledge is to be picked out
-of the whole mass of them. You find almost
-every thing in them but what you are
-looking for.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean time, the superficial examiner
-of things, who sees such a number
-of volumes, furnished by these pretenders
-to the art of midwifery, cannot conceive
-they contain matter so little essential as they
-do. The scientific air diffused over them,
-not a little embellished with pretty prints
-of machines, as of a windowed forceps,
-a stool, or of a gravid uterus, all these contribute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>to throw the dust of erudition into
-the eyes of those, who do not penetrate beyond
-the surface of things. And thus the
-aids and appendages of the art, or what is
-yet worse, even the abuses of it, pass for
-the art itself, the main of which, as it undoubtedly
-consists in the expertness or dexterity
-of the manual practice, can be so little
-and so imperfectly conveyed by description.
-I am however far from denying the
-benefit which may result to midwives, from
-consulting all that has been written on this
-subject. I am far from encouraging ignorance
-in the women of this profession.
-Their skill in the manual function cannot
-but be improved by the addition of a sound
-and competent theory. But it should always
-be remembered, that the very basis or capital
-point of the art is the manual dexterity;
-and in that point, the most learned of
-the men must yield to the most ignorant
-of the women. A point which the men
-surpassing the women in every thing else
-can never compensate: no not with all those
-dreadful “artificial hands”, of which they
-boast so much their invention, in the room
-of the infinitely preferably <em>natural</em> ones, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>which the use, in this office, becomes the
-men as little, as their hands seem formed
-for it; and I might add, their heads, if
-they themselves can possibly think otherwise.
-In such an opinion the ignorance is
-theirs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the treatise herein offered on the
-art of midwifery, as the object of it is principally
-to attack particular abuses and dangerous
-innovations in it, it will not be expected
-that the same should furnish a compleat
-general course of practice. But this
-I dare aver that if I should be induced to
-attempt such a work, it will not be the
-worse for my consulting more the experience
-I have of Nature in her operations in
-this one of her so capital concerns, than the
-authorities of men, who seem or pretend to
-know so little of her, as to think of assisting
-her with instruments, formed only for
-her destruction, or at least for doing her
-more damage by their violence, than any
-reason to hope good from them can justify.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> I shall not offer any digressions
-on physic, anatomy, chemistry, or pharmacy;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>I shall confine myself entirely to
-the points of my business of the manual
-operation. Let the physician prescribe,
-the surgeon bleed, the chymist contribute
-medicines, the apothecary make them up;
-with none of these professions do I presume
-to interfere. But as to the man-midwife,
-who not only so often presumes in some measure
-to represent them all, but to join to
-them the exercise of an art so unnatural
-to his sex, I should think myself wanting
-to my duty in my profession, if I did not
-point out the mischief I apprehend to result
-from especially that method of practice,
-on which he grounds the pretence of
-necessity for his practising it at all; and
-this chiefly forms the object of this second
-part, in supplement to my first.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>Of <span class='sc'>Deliveries</span>.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>We</span> understand, by deliveries, in general,
-the issue of the fœtus out of the mother’s
-womb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> are distinguished into two kinds,
-the one natural, the other preternatural.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span><span class='sc'>The</span> natural one, is that in which the
-fœtus comes out in the most ordinary way,
-when it presents the head foremost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is deemed preternatural, when the
-fœtus presents in the passage any other
-part than the head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> two kinds are again subdivided
-into two distinctions of labor, of easy or
-difficult, because both the natural and preternatural
-mode of delivery may be easy or
-difficult.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> delivery is termed easy when the
-fœtus comes out readily, and without the
-aid of art.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is termed difficult, when the labor
-of it is hard, and the fœtus does not make
-its way out but with pain, and with the
-help and assistent industry of the midwife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the cases of a natural and easy delivery,
-there is little or no actual occasion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>for the presence of the midwife, beyond
-that of receiving the fœtus, tying the
-navel-string, giving the child to be kept
-warm, and then delivering the mother of
-the after-birth. The spirits of the patient
-are then to be recomposed, her agitation
-calmed, a warm and soft linnen cloth applied
-to the stomach; a warm shift and
-bed-gown put on her; a linnen cloth to
-be laid on four-fold over the belly; a double-napkin
-round her, and she to be placed
-in a bed well warmed. Such is the summary
-of the process to be observed in those
-common cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the deliveries, on a preternatural labor,
-when they are easy, the same method takes
-place: there being no difference, but that
-in one the child will have been received by
-the head, in the other by the feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> kinds of labors are so easy, that
-there is no need of demonstrating their being
-to be terminated without the aid of instruments.
-When the fœtus presents itself
-promisingly, Nature is best left to her
-own action, and nothing should be precipitated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>in the manual function, unless some
-unexpected accident should intervene, and
-require interposition, such as a great flooding,
-or other exigency.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the preternatural delivery, the better
-practice is not to delay the extraction of
-the fœtus, after the discharge of the waters;
-nor stay till her strength shall have
-been exhausted. On the presenting of a
-fair hold, and a sufficient overture, no difficulty
-should be made of extracting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>All</span> that is to be observed then, is not
-to prematurate this extraction: not to
-proceed, in short, like those unskilful, or
-inconsiderate practitioners, who are no sooner
-entered the patient’s room, but they
-want to have their operation dispatched out
-of hand. Nothing can be more important
-to the well-doing of the patient, than for
-no violence to be used to Nature, who loves
-to go her own full time, without disturbance
-or molestation. In this point then
-great caution and circumspection are requisite.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span><span class='sc'>It</span> should also be observed, that it is
-wrong for the midwife to leave a woman
-newly lain-in, however happily delivered.
-It is necessary to stay by her for some hours
-afterwards, till she is in such a state of tranquility
-and ease, as may leave nothing to
-fear of those after-disasters which too often
-happen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Some</span> celebrated practitioners and authors
-upon midwifery have been surprized
-to see women, after their going their time
-without mis-adventure, and after having
-been readily and happily brought to bed
-die suddenly. There are too many of
-both the female and the men-midwives
-who have no notion of this misfortune till
-it is too late to prevent it. The cause of
-this melancholic accident is unknown to
-many practitioners of the art. Some have
-confessed their ignorance of it: others have
-erroneously, others deficiently accounted
-for it. But all are surprized when the patient
-is the victim of it: especially as it
-follows, in some cases that afford the best
-grounded hopes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span><span class='sc'>Messieurs Mauriceau</span> and De la
-Motte give us examples of these unexpected
-deaths. The first, in his 230th observation,
-says,</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>I delivered</span> a woman of a very corpulent
-habit, aged about thirty-five
-years, of her first child, which was a
-lusty girl, alive, and that came naturally.
-This woman had been near two days
-in labor, with small slow pains or throws,
-after which the waters having burst forth
-with a strong throw, she had subsequently
-favorable ones, which made her bring
-forth as happily as one could wish. I
-immediately delivered her: but to my
-great surprize, scarce had she been a
-quarter of an hour after delivery, that
-she of a sudden fell into violent faintings,
-with an oppression at the breast,
-and a great agitation of the whole body,
-which was instantly followed by a convulsion,
-caused by a loss of blood, of
-which she died a quarter of an hour afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>“<span class='sc'>This</span> (adds Mr. Mauriceau) was one
-of those kind of fatalities which no human
-prudence can elude or parry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>La Motte</span> had the same case happened
-under his hands, which I need not repeat
-here, being inserted in the first part
-of this work, where, p. 131, I ventured
-to promise an essay of mine, to give a less
-unsatisfactory reason of such deaths, than
-what is to be found even in those two celebrated
-authors whom our cotemporaries consider
-as their masters in the art of midwifery.
-These impute those unforeseen deaths
-to occult and inevitable <em>causes</em>. I own, I
-do not intirely think them either occult
-or inevitable. I doubtless may be mistaken,
-but of this I am sure, I shall advance
-nothing but what is authenticated to me
-by my own observation and experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>An</span> over-repletion of blood, and a defect
-in the contraction of the uterus, of
-which all the vessel being open are too slow
-in recovering their occlusion, are generally
-speaking, the causes of these diseases. I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>could support this opinion by some chirurgical
-axioms, but I presume it will be
-thought more satisfactorily proved by the
-success of the method of practice, which I
-would recommend to prevent or cure those
-dangerous or rather fatal causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to know that a woman may thus perish
-unexpectedly a quarter of an hour after
-delivery, is enough to require the being on
-one’s guard for using a salutary prevention;
-I would advise attention, especially to
-her constitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Whenever</span> therefore a pregnant woman
-is observed to be remarkably corpulent,
-and full of blood, with a good constitution,
-she should be advised to lose some
-blood, once or twice during her pregnancy,
-by way of precaution. This is of great
-service to rarefy the blood, and obviate
-those excessive hemorrhages, which are to
-be dreaded on their lying-in. Then nothing
-is to be precipitated during their labors,
-that Nature may have full time to
-predispose the uterus to enter into contraction
-by due degrees, that is to say, neither
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>too quick, not too slow. But if, notwithstanding
-these precautions, there should,
-after delivery, supervene any considerable
-loss of blood, followed with faintings or
-oppressions, the patient must be stirred, excited
-to cough and sneeze contributively to
-the evacuation of the blood, which otherwise
-is apt to clot in the uterus, and would
-suffocate her if not expelled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> by this mean the evacuation does not
-naturally take place, which may be perceived
-by the faintings of the patient, the
-midwife must, without losing time, put
-her hand into the bowel, and extract all
-the clots of blood she will not fail of finding
-there, and of which the presence, as
-being extraneous matter, necessarily oppose
-the contraction of this organ, and quickly
-suffocates the woman, if she is not timely
-relieved.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> hemorrhages are but too frequent,
-especially with those women who neglect
-the precautionary bleeding; and such sudden
-death too commonly the consequence of
-neglecting, or of not knowing that the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>salutary practice, in these cases, is to well
-evacuate the uterus by the operation of the
-hand, where Nature appears in the least
-tardy or deficient.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> long experience I have of this manual
-help, which has never failed of success
-with me, warrants my averring, that there
-is little or no danger, in these cases, to women,
-provided the midwife employs herself
-dextrously to clear them while time
-serves. Their relief is instantaneous. They
-come to themselves presently: they are
-restored to a freedom of respiration: nor
-will they have so much as been sensible of
-this operation of the hand, which will nevertheless
-have saved their lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>There</span> have been men-midwives, that
-pass even for learned, but who from their
-ignorance of this so simple and easy method
-of relief, have been in the disagreeable circumstance
-of seeing many women perish
-under their hands, though they had to all
-appearance been very happily delivered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span><span class='sc'>With</span> respect to pregnant women, there
-is again another point of great consequence
-to ascertain. Great care must be taken not
-to mistake the signs of delivery. This is a
-very essential matter. Nothing scarce can
-be more dangerous, than to excite a woman
-to the last labor-pains, which will not fail
-of exhausting that strength of her’s, in vain,
-which had so much better be reserved for
-the support of her in the time she will really
-need it. So that a midwife ought to
-make it her business clearly to distinguish
-the spurious pains from the true ones.
-Where a woman near her time feels pains
-in the belly, the loins, or even the sexual
-parts; they are not always to be taken for
-the true labor-pains. In this point, the
-<em>touching</em> will be a great guidance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> the fœtus is still high in the uterus,
-and the situation of it does not indicate a
-readiness for extrusion; if the waters are not
-sufficiently prepared, or their pressure down
-not in due forwardness, the pains must be
-assuaged by some calming anodine remedies:
-the patient must be left to her rest,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>till things declare themselves more openly;
-and then, as she will not have been fruitlessly
-fatigued and tormented, the labor
-may proceed happily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>There</span> have been men-practitioners so
-very unskilful, or at a loss for delivering
-women by the operation of their <em>hands</em>,
-that they tortured their <em>heads</em> to discover
-<em>medicines</em> to save themselves the tediousness
-of Nature’s taking her own time, as if she
-was to do her work the better for their hurrying
-her. Towards the atchievement of
-this end, they brought into play certain
-drugs, to which they gave the appellation
-of hysteric, and placed or pretended to
-place great confidence in them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Even</span> some of our modern practitioners
-prove, at least, by their practice, that
-they have faith in the virtue of such drugs,
-since they continue to use them. They
-are still suffered to make a figure in many
-of the Pharmacopœas, though no sure
-experience hitherto has verified their efficacy.
-On the contrary, a thousand and
-a thousand examples might be quoted in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>demonstration of their insufficiency and
-danger. I shall content myself with producing
-here the testimony of Mr. De la
-Motte, in the second book of his observations,
-and he is not the only man-midwife
-that does such medicines the justice
-of disapproving them.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'><em>Observation</em> 174.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'>“<span class='sc'>A celebrated</span> man-midwife of this
-town (says Mr. de la Motte) pretended
-to have a marvellous powder to provoke
-labor-pains, and accelerate parturition.
-This powder was composed of galbanum,
-myrrh, savin, rue, and other
-drugs, of which he made the patient
-take a dose, to hasten a delivery, when
-the labor was lingering, from half a
-drachm to a drachm, and after the effect
-of this medicine, which ended
-commonly in leaving the patient in a
-worse condition than before the taking
-it, he substituted the use of the crotchet,
-which was indeed an infallible method
-of putting a speedy end to the labor;
-and of which he as well as his fellow-practitioners
-made such a murderous use,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>the aid of the hand well conducted being
-unknown to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>The</span> same operator (says Mr. de la
-Motte) was sent for to assist a lady who
-had continued in labour for three days,
-to whom he proposed a dose of his powders,
-to which she readily consented in
-the hopes of a speedy delivery. Unluckily,
-not most certainly for the lady,
-but for the honor of the powders, the
-operator, not having had the providence
-of having them about him, was forced
-to go home for them. The lady, in
-the mean while, was brought very happily
-to bed, just as he was re-entering
-the room with his dose for her. What a
-pity this was! What would not have
-been the boast of the virtue of those
-pretious powders, if the delivery had
-waited for them but half a quarter of
-an hour, though they would not have
-had the least share in it, since it would
-have been purely the work of Nature
-and Time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>This</span> celebrated man-midwife was
-called to two other women of my acquaintance,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>of whom the labor somewhat
-resembled that of this lady, but
-of which the consequences were very
-different: he had made them take
-his powders to no manner of purpose,
-when seeing that a day had passed without
-their producing the expected effect,
-he had recourse to his <em>crotchet</em>, with
-which he quickly <em>dispatched</em> both the
-deliveries.”</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'><em>Observation</em> 174, of the same Mr. De la Motte.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'>“<span class='sc'>A gentleman</span> who lived upon his fortune,
-without professing surgery, though
-he had served his time to it, and had
-even formerly exercised it, not only in
-France, but in Italy, and in other foreign
-countries, told me, in conversation, that
-he had an infallible remedy to make a
-woman bring forth instantaneously, however
-lingering and difficult her labor
-might naturally be. Of this, he said,
-he had made undoubted experiments,
-and that he had obtained this secret from
-an Italian, under oath of not disclosing it
-to any one. He was more than a little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>surprized at finding me without curiosity
-to learn from him this pretended secret,
-which he imagined must concern me so
-much, as one who made open prefession
-of the obstetrical art; and still greater
-was his surprize at seeing me change
-the subject, without any sign of attention
-to what he had been saying on this
-head.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>In</span> process of time, he married, and
-his wife being pregnant was got into the
-time of her labor-pains towards delivery.
-It became now expedient for him to declare
-this famous secret to me, which
-was no other than half a drachm of borax
-in a glass of any innocent liquid agreeable
-to the palate of the patient. But
-as this dose happened to be administered
-by one who had no sort of faith in it, it
-had no effect: his wife lay four days and
-four nights in labor; the child died the
-moment after it was born, and the mother
-narrowly escaped following it.”</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>
- <h4 class='c011'><em>Observation</em> 176, (of M. De la Motte)</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>“<span class='sc'>As</span> I was at Caën, a town of Normandy,
-attending the lying-in of a lady there,
-an old stander of a practitioner of that
-place, and a man of good abilities, told
-me, that he had been lately sent for to a
-woman who had continued several days
-in labor, with slow and moderate pains.
-As he found the fœtus well situated, he
-made the patient take an infusion of three
-drachms of sena in the juice of a Seville
-orange, in order to quicken the throws
-and advance the delivery, which indeed
-came on ten or twelve hours afterwards,
-but the woman died, one may say, immediately
-after it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>To</span> this account (continues M. De la
-Motte) I opposed, for answer, that being
-at Bayeux, on the like occasion, an
-old practitioner in surgery of that place,
-in conjunction with whom I had been
-called to visit a patient, told me, in conversation,
-that he understood midwifery
-very well, that he had even, not long
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>before terminated a delivery given over by
-another surgeon; that the child, one arm
-of which hung out, was dead, before
-he put his hand to it, and that the mother,
-though well delivered, died soon
-after.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> examples may suffice to prove,
-that the notion of giving histeric medicines,
-for which the inventors did not forget
-to make themselves be well paid, existed
-in M. De la Motte’s time, who is
-not but a modern author: nor are they
-even to this hour absolutely exploded, tho’
-some of the men-midwives themselves have
-joined Mr. de la Motte’s cry against them.
-It gives however those men-practitioners,
-who exclaim against a quackery in others,
-by which themselves get nothing, a good
-sort of an air: it serves even to render
-that more pernicious quackery of their
-instruments the less obnoxious to suspicion.
-Nothing is easier to give up than that by
-which nothing is got. If the instruments
-were not a plea for the very essence of such
-a thing as a man-midwife, they too would
-be given up. However, it will hardly be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>denied, that those same pompous histeric
-medicines were the invention of <em>learned</em>
-men-practitioners, and not of those poor
-ignorant midwives, who, with respect to
-women in labor, are of opinion, that
-there can nothing be more effectual for
-their well-doing, than in the first place
-giving Nature fair-play, and, when requisite,
-to assist her with the management of
-<em>natural</em> hands skilfully conducted: always
-observing neither to lapse nor precipitate
-the critical time of such assistence. In
-the mean time, let a humane reader but
-reflect how many mothers and children
-must have been, and perhaps still continue
-to be the victims of a reliance in such medicines,
-and he will allow, that such errors
-of practice, tho’ not capital in the intention,
-are too often deplorably so in the
-effect. Is it not true to say, considering
-the havock of the human species, so presumably
-made by quackery and empiricism
-in general, that the lives of the subject
-are less sacred than their property? Surely
-they are less guarded, either by the laws,
-or by common sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span><span class='sc'>As</span> to a fœtus that presents an arm, or
-any other part than the head or feet, there
-is rarely any thing to do but to slide the
-hand all along that arm, or other part it may
-present, to find out the feet, and terminate
-the delivery; without its being necessary
-to attempt the reduction of any part or
-member.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Most</span> of the writers on midwifery often
-start difficulties where there are really
-none. They often give us emphatical accounts
-of a head too large, and a passage
-too narrow, in which they state them as
-difficulties that are invincible, when the
-case is far from being so. When the
-fœtus presents fair, and is in a good posture,
-our method of practice is, to advise
-the patient to remain as quiet a-bed as
-possible, avoiding every thing that may
-tend to fatigue her body, or hurry her
-spirits, to reserve in short her strength as
-much as possible. With time and patience
-the head of the fœtus scarcely ever
-fails of moulding itself to the passage,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>through a particular providence of Nature,
-which has so ordered it, that the parietal
-bones of the head of the fœtus, so flexile
-as to ride over one another, form a kind
-of oval figure, which facilitates the issue,
-and dispose it for making way for itself,
-through the extrusive pressure of the labor-throws.
-Mean while nothing should be
-done to irritate the pains; the membranes
-should not be unnecessarily or untimely
-burst, which loses the benefit of the waters.
-You can hardly, in this case, rely
-too much on the benevolent efforts of Nature:
-she is constantly at work for the patient’s
-delivery. Interruptions sometimes
-only serve to mar or retard a favorable
-crisis: but all abrupt force or violence is
-carefully to be avoided. As to bad postures
-of children, I shall treat of them in the
-sequel, and of the means to remedy them.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>
- <h3 class='c001'>Of <span class='fss'>DIFFICULT</span> and <span class='fss'>SEVERE</span> Cases.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c015'><span class='sc'>If</span> an easy delivery requires nothing of
-extraordinary assistence; it is not so
-with a difficult one. All the knowledge,
-experience, dexterity, strength, prudence,
-tenderness, charity, and presence of mind,
-of which a woman is capable, are requisite
-to accomplish certain laborious deliveries.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> has been, in all times, very well known,
-that the most natural situation for the fœtus
-coming into the world, is that, in which
-the head presents first, it being that which
-commonly makes way for the rest of the
-body. Yet this delivery may become difficult,
-in proportion to the obstacles incident
-to it: obstacles not always surmountable,
-without great skill and industry employed
-in aid of Nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On</span> the other hand, when it is felt that
-the fœtus presents any other part than the
-head, this position, called preternatural,
-oftenest occasions the delivery to be more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>laborious and hard to accomplish, in proportion
-to the more or less trouble there
-may be to search and come rightly at the
-feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Many</span> English and French authors have
-given us a long enumeration of the causes
-which may make deliveries difficult and
-laborious. The curious may have recourse
-to them; as for me, who have not proposed
-to myself here a treatise compleat on all
-points, I shall content myself with setting
-forth only what tends to fullfil my proposed
-aim, that is to say, to take notice of
-those principal points, which first moved
-insufficient midwives to call in surgery to
-their assistence, to remedy their blunders,
-to retrieve their mischief, or to repair their
-omissions. I shall consider the kinds of
-exigencies, which the men-operators seized
-for a pretext of employing their iron and
-steel-instruments, the use of the natural
-hand, being yet more unknown to them
-than to the meanest midwife, and by this
-means, for the cure of confessedly a great
-evil, obtruded an infinitely greater one,
-and more extensive, in every sense, and in
-every point of light, that of men taking the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>practical part of midwifery into their own
-hands, or rather into their artificial ones of
-iron and steel, from which they derive all
-the authority of their introduction in the
-character of men-midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> labors then which are generally
-speaking looked on the most nice, and arduous,
-may be comprized under the following
-heads.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1st. <span class='sc'>The</span> obliquity of the uterus or
-womb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2dly. <span class='sc'>The</span> extraction of the head of the
-fœtus severed from the body, and which
-shall have remained in the uterus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3dly. <span class='sc'>That</span> labor in which the head
-of the fœtus remains hitched in the passage,
-the body being intirely come out of the
-uterus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4thly. <span class='sc'>When</span> the head of the fœtus
-presents itself foremost, but sticks in the
-passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span><span class='sc'>To</span> these I shall add the case of the pendulous
-belly, which is not without its difficulty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Of</span> all these classes of labors I shall treat
-separately. But before I proceed on them,
-I presume, that it may not be improper preliminarily
-to corroborate what I have said
-of the intrusion of the men into the practice
-of a profession, of the essential part of which
-they were so ignorant and disqualified for
-it, by the testimony which one of the best
-men-midwives in Europe has not refused
-to the truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> is M. de la Motte, one of the ablest
-and most intelligent modern writers on the
-subject of midwifery, of which his works
-form an incontestable proof. The ingenuity
-and candor with which he has written,
-must render him less suspected than any
-other. This is no midwife. He is a man,
-and esteemed an able practitioner, who
-learned the principles of the art from Madam
-la Marche, head-midwife of the
-Hôtel Dieu at Paris. He made his advantage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>of the works of his predecessors
-Mauriceau, Peu, and of all the best authors
-on this subject. All that was worth
-it in them he has transfused into his own
-writings; and that in a very clear manner.
-He collected whatever the best physicians
-had usefully said on the diseases of mother
-and child: in short, he has added many good
-observations and reflexions of his own, in
-the journals of his manual practice: the
-reading of his works, with some precaution
-however, cannot but be useful to the students
-of the art.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I do</span> this writer this justice, with the
-more readiness and pleasure, for, that
-though he himself exercised the profession
-of man-midwife, and consequently in favor
-of his own practice, and of the pupils
-he was bringing up, was not without the
-injustice of adopting the prejudices of his
-cotemporaries too indiscriminately against
-the midwives; he does not suppress any
-truth relative to the art itself. But even,
-as to the midwives, the truth escapes him
-without any design on his side of its coming
-out. But such is the force of truth. And
-thus it appears. M. De la Motte wrote
-in a little sorry country-town at a great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>distance from the capital, being at the very
-extremity of the kingdom of France, on a
-sea-coast, where there were no other midwives
-than poor country-women, without
-knowledge, without skill, or any other
-qualification, than a little of the habit of
-attending women in labor. Yet with all
-these deficiencies it will appear, that the
-men-practitioners were far more to be
-dreaded than those poor ignorant creatures,
-who had scarce any thing but Nature for
-their guide.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I shall</span> here give the substance of what
-he says in his preface, followed by some examples
-of the unskilfulness, or rather of the
-most profound ignorance of the most able
-men-midwives of his time, for forty leagues
-round his place of residence in the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>It</span> is (says M. De la Motte) astonishing,
-that the obstetrical art should, until
-the beginning of the preceding age, have
-been left either to ignorant women, or
-to surgeons, who had not (any more
-than too many to this day) any other
-resource in difficult labors, than some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>instrument guided by undextrous hands,
-always sure of killing the child, and endangering
-the mother. Do not these
-poor innocents deserve compassion for
-being exposed to operations of surgery,
-which one would rationally think they
-could not need, till providence should
-have at least given them leave to come
-into the world?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> be it observed, that by the word
-“ignorant,” M. De la Motte should not
-intend the application of it to the midwives
-of the Hôtel Dieu at Paris, since, by his
-own confession, it is the best school of midwifery
-in Europe. Nor certainly is he in
-the wrong. Be it in honor of truth allowed
-me to say, that I know of those women
-who have served their apprenticeship in this
-hospital, who would think they made a
-wretched bargain, if they exchanged the
-manner of operating they learned there, for
-all the Latin, Greek, Arabic, or the iron and
-steel instruments of the best man-practitioner
-in Europe; even though his excellence
-in the manual function should be thrown
-into the scale for make-weight. The most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>constant success justifies their practice. In
-whatever situation the fœtus has presented,
-I have seen them, without having recourse
-to a man-midwife, and consequently to instruments,
-procure a happy delivery in very
-difficult labors. I have myself seen one deliver
-a child that had been dead in the
-mothers womb for near six weeks, without
-dismembering it; and though it was
-half-putrified, and the head so rotten-tender
-as to have no solid consistence, I dare
-advance this, without fear of being falsified,
-since I can name the mother, now alive in
-London, the witnesses, the place and year.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Such</span> real midwives as I am here discribing,
-for I do not mean the spurious nominal
-ones, only fit to <em>create</em> work for the instrumentarians,
-or whose cue of interest is
-to do so, have no reason to apprehend, that
-in the numbers they have lain, there can
-be any found, that can complain of having
-suffered, or of suffering any the least damage
-or inconvenience, after their lying-in,
-that might be imputed to ignorance or mispractice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span><span class='sc'>On</span> the contrary, I dare aver, that such,
-genuine midwives have cured many women
-who had received notable injury, before
-they came under their hands, in their
-having passed through those of the men-practitioners.
-Nothing being more agreeable
-to Nature, to Reason, to Experience,
-than that the method of practice of a skilful
-midwife is not only the most easy and
-gentle, the least painful, but assuredly the
-most safe both for mother and child. This
-is what the most severe examination will
-to those, who give themselves the trouble
-of making it, establish, in contempt of that
-fashion, by which so pernicious an error,
-as that of preferring men-practitioners, has
-acquired more credit and influence than so
-salutary and demonstrable a truth, as that
-for which I am contending. In the mean
-time, let us hear what M. De la Motte
-himself, a man-midwife, says of those brethren
-of his, of whom heaven grant there
-may not exist to this day too many resemblers!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>“<span class='sc'>To</span> the shame (says M. de la Motte)
-of the profession they exercise, they
-have no guide but their avarice, while
-the grossest ignorance of the art of midwifery
-itself is their lot. Such are
-much to be dreaded by women in difficult labor;
-for (adds he) they having
-no help to offer them but that of their
-instruments, they employ them indifferently
-in all the situations in which the
-fœtus presents. Nay, even the hands
-of some who will use their hands, are
-not less dangerous when misconducted.
-The ignorant therefore should never
-meddle with lyings-in. It would save
-them from the reproach they may incur
-of murder, in undertaking what they
-cannot execute, and what surpasses their
-skill. They would not furnish <em>scenes</em>
-that make one <em>shudder</em> with <em>horror</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>I speak</span> here of so many poor women,
-whose strength shall have been exhaust—by
-a great loss of blood, caused by the
-violences which an ignorant man-midwife
-shall have made them suffer, I speak
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>of women, whose parts shall have been
-all bruised, and so vilely treated and
-torn, as in some to lay the anus and
-vagina into one, besides their children
-being dismembered, some their arms or
-legs plucked off, others the whole body,
-the head being left behind in the
-uterus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> is the language of a man-midwife
-himself, who candidly declaims against
-the errors of his fellow-practitioners, undoubtedly
-without designing that such their
-errors should be wrested into an objection
-to the practice of that art being committed
-to the men. Such a conclusion would
-in me be unfair, and a vain attempt to impose
-on the reader the laudable condemnation
-of an abuse, for an indiscriminate reproach
-to the whole set of men-midwives.
-This would however be but a kind of retaliative
-treatment of those, who, from the
-defective practice of the ignorant and unskilful
-midwives, of which if there was
-no more than one in the world, that one
-would be much too many, take the unjust
-handle of inveighing against midwives
-in general.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span><span class='sc'>Even</span> la Motte himself, who, as I have
-before with pleasure observed, was really
-as capable a man in the profession of midwifery
-as a man can be, at least to judge
-of him by his writings, has embraced every
-occasion of boasting the superiority of the
-men to the women in the exercise of midwifery.
-But while he taxes men of <em>scenes</em>
-that make one <em>shudder</em> with <em>horror</em>, the
-mistakes he imputes to the women, which
-are bad enough in all conscience, are not
-however of that atrocious nature, as those
-he relates of the men. Nay, with all his
-desire of under-rating the women, he falls
-into even pitiful contradictions. Let the
-reader himself decide on the following one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> an article of practice, for which
-M. De la Motte blames the midwives, and
-what an article? not such as he reproaches
-to the men-practitioners, murdering,
-maiming the women, or tearing their children
-limb from limb, but purely for their
-applying certain bandages to the belly of
-women after their lying-in, in order to
-keep that part smooth from wrinkles;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>this very author, I say, who allowed the
-Hôtel Dieu at Paris, where the manual
-function is wholly confined to women,
-to be the best school of midwifery in Europe,
-where he himself wished, and wished
-in vain, to be admitted to practise, and,
-in short, from the head-midwife, of which
-Madam de la Marche he himself probably
-learned all that was worth any thing in his
-practice, thus speaks of the midwives bred
-up in that hospital.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>This</span> prerogative of having served apprentice
-in the Hôtel Dieu at Paris, is
-not for these women, an <em>indifferent</em> matter,
-for though they were to have no
-more than a <em>shadow</em> of <em>sense</em>, they are persuaded,
-that in setting themselves off with
-a <em>title</em> that does not render them more
-<em>capable</em>, they ought to be honored and
-respected above all others, which they
-would not fail of being, if they were to
-give some marks of sufficiency beyond
-what others can give.<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c012'><sup>[28]</sup></a>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span><span class='sc'>The</span> nonsense of this objection of Mr.
-De la Motte is too glaring to need a comment.
-If an education in the best school
-of midwifery in Europe, does not give a
-woman a right to plead it for a title to reliance
-on her superior sufficiency, without
-any reason therefore to accuse her of vanity,
-what can give her a title?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> to return to M. De la Motte’s sentiments
-on the practice of the men-midwives;
-it will easily be seen, that the horrors
-he objects to their practice, and of
-which he himself undoubtedly endeavoured
-to steer as clear as he could, were of a nature,
-without the least breach of candor,
-to suppose liable to repetitions wherever so
-false a doctrine and practice prevail as the
-substituting steel and iron-instruments, or
-“artificial hands” to natural ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Let</span> us now see what Mr. De la Motte
-thinks of the use of the <span class='fss'>CROTCHET</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>“<span class='sc'>When</span> I settled in my province (says
-this author<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c012'><sup>[29]</sup></a>) I found several ancient
-master-surgeons, who pretended to help
-the women in their difficult, or preternatural
-labors, solely with the use of
-the crotchet; without ever, in their life
-having made any <em>delivery</em>, but in that manner,
-and as soon as they had extracted
-the fœtus with their crotchet, they left
-the rest or the after-birth to be brought
-away by a woman, as they themselves
-knew nothing of the matter. When
-they were fetched to help a woman in labor,
-they took their crotchet, went to
-the woman, whom they put into posture,
-and whether the child presented the head,
-breech, arm or leg, whether it was dead
-or alive, a woman’s having passed a day
-and a half in labor was cue more than
-enough for them to go to work with
-their crotchet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> following extracts from the same
-Mr. De la Motte, may serve to confirm
-the foregoing observation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>“<span class='sc'>Observation</span> 187. I was sent
-for to lay Madam de ... about fifteen
-leagues from Valognes, the place of
-my residence, and there was at the same
-time a surgeon of the town where I then
-was, who had been fetched to lay a woman
-that had been in labor from the day
-before, whose child presented the vertex:
-he, without further examination, put
-her into a convenient posture, and with
-his crotchet brought away the child at
-several pulls, with much pain and labor,
-and threw it under the bed, with the
-after-birth, in the most severe season of
-the year: after which, the operator hugged
-himself prodigiously, for having so
-happily accomplished so difficult a labor.
-Having rested a little, and just as he was
-going, a woman curious, bethought herself
-of seeing whether it was a boy or
-girl: she found the poor child yet alive,
-though so mangled with the crotchet,
-and that after having remained, in this
-condition, an hour and a half, without
-its having been in the power of so violent
-an operation, or of the rigor of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>weather to terminate a life which seemed
-to have held out against so many barbarities,
-only to reproach the detestable
-operator with the enormity of his crime.
-The child was christened and died soon
-after.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Reflexion.</span> This is what may be
-called a cruel ignorance, &amp;c.”——To
-the which I add, that if this wretched operator
-had had the patience to wait some
-time, the child would in all probability
-have come naturally with any the least help
-of the hand at every throw of the mother:
-for she had not been over-time in labor,
-and the head was not, it seems, stuck in
-the passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Observation</span> 196, p. 274. I was
-desired to go to Cherbourg to lay a poor
-woman there, whom a surgeon and a
-man-midwife by profession, belonging
-to that place, had given over.... I
-found the woman in a condition hard
-to describe, with an arm and a leg of
-her child pulled off, and the remainder
-of the body left behind in the mother’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>womb. I put her into posture, and instantly
-delivered her of one child (it
-seems she went with twins) who had
-only an arm plucked off: I then sought
-out the other, whose leg had been torn
-away. Strange and fatal sight, which
-was seen by more than twenty women
-present, all ready to swear to the truth of
-this! I left the woman to their care, after
-having delivered her of the after-birth.
-She had been as much hurt as the children,
-of whom nothing remained in the
-uterus, by the care I took to evacuate it.
-I left the mother tolerably well considering
-her condition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Reflexion.</span> This was the more surprizing,
-for that the first operator was an
-old practitioner, who had been an out-surgeon
-to the Hôtel Dieu above eight years,
-before M. De la Motte was apprentice there.
-Yet this man neither was sensible of the
-being twins in the case, nor had dexterity
-enough in the manual function. Here I ask,
-could the most ignorant midwife have acquitted
-herself worse than this <em>man</em>?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>“<span class='sc'>Observation</span> 185. A tradesman’s
-wife of Valognes being taken in labor
-sent for a midwife. A little while after
-her coming, the membranes burst, the
-waters were discharged, and the child
-presented an arm. The midwife required
-help. (Probably she might be one
-of the ignorant and unskilful ones) and
-two surgeons were sent for, who passed
-for being the most expert ones in the
-town. They begun with plucking off
-the arm that presented, though the child
-was <em>alive</em>. The other arm, as soon as
-they got hold of it, underwent the same
-fate. After which they struck the crotchet
-into a rib, which they brought
-away, then two, then three, and, at length,
-struck the crotchet into the back-bone,
-and pulled so cleverly together, that they
-brought the child away doubled up.
-The midwife delivered her of the after-birth,
-and notwithstanding all this ill
-usage, the woman recovered; but it was
-a long while first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span><span class='sc'>Reflexion.</span> (Mr. De la Motte’s own)
-“Was there ever a crueller operation seen
-both for the mother and child; the first
-terribly torn, the other barbarously dismembered?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Observation</span> 186. The wife of
-a tallow-chandler of this town was taken
-in labor: the waters were discharged,
-after which an arm of the child presented.
-Help was sent for; one of the two
-operators (mentioned in the foregoing
-observation) came with his servant and
-crotchet. He began his operation, by
-plucking off the arm of this certainly
-live child, then, without further examination,
-he strikes the crotchet into
-its body, and pulled, without being
-able to bring away any thing. The master,
-whose strength was exhausted, made
-his pupil help him, and they both pulled
-as hard as they could: still nothing
-came, and I verily believe that the master
-would have called in some body else
-to his assistence, if the handle of the
-crotchet had been long enough, or that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>the poor woman had not given up the ghost
-under the cruel torments they made her
-suffer, to such a degree that they forced
-her to part with her life, sooner than
-with her child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Reflexion.</span> Here was a <em>delivery</em>
-in intention, but the execution had
-something horrid, and perfectly odious
-in it. I never could have imagined, that
-two men could have pulled in this manner,
-without dislocating the bones of the
-woman into whom the crotchet had been
-struck: for so it was shown to be, upon
-the body being opened, in which the
-child was found with an arm plucked off,
-entangled in the umbilical chord round
-its neck, without the least mark of the
-crotchet upon its body: too plain a
-proof this of the crotchet having been
-struck into the mother and not the child,
-and consequently of the little circumspection,
-not to say rage, with which the
-surgeon had acted upon the body of this
-unhappy creature: for surely it must be
-granted, that it could be no part of the
-child that could have resisted the terrible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>efforts made both by master and man,
-jointly to bring it away; and yet this
-was one of the <span class='fss'>BEST</span><a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c012'><sup>[30]</sup></a> operators in the
-country for <span class='fss'>HELPING</span> women in labor.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“<span class='sc'>I could</span> make a <span class='fss'>VOLUME</span> of these
-histories, if they were good for any thing
-but to excite horror.” Such is the witness
-born by M. De la Motte, as to the <em>ablest</em> men-midwives
-of his time, in all his province.
-Now in order to invalidate the conclusion,
-so natural to be drawn from so unexceptionable
-an attestation, against the superiority
-of the practice of the men to that of the
-women, will it be said, that the men-practitioners,
-in this country, are in general
-better educated than such operators as have
-been above shown? If so great a falsity
-should be advanced, let the reader himself
-reflect on what he may easily find to be the
-common method of training up of men-pupils
-in this art. I have in the first part
-of this work, stated some reasons for their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>insufficiency, both in study and practice;
-and the more this point is examined, the
-more clear will that undoubted truth appear,
-that if the ignorant midwives are,
-as they undoubted are, a great evil, they
-are even blessings in comparison to the generality
-of the men-practitioners, bred up
-with the help of artificial Dolls, pretty
-prints, or even of their personal visitation
-of those miserable wretches hired, or under
-the mask of charity, forced to undergo,
-from apprentices or pupils, so many inhuman
-tortures and outrages in vain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> will also perhaps be said, as to the
-examples I have just produced from M. De
-la Motte, that since his time, that is to say,
-about the beginning of this century, that
-the art of midwifery has received so much
-improvement, as to cancel all impressions
-of fear from such examples. Yes! It has
-received improvement with a vengeance.
-If a vain endeavour to perfect instruments,
-impossible to be perfected, or against common
-sense to suppose, even when perfected
-superior to skilful hands, are an improvement,
-then the art may be called improved.
-In the mean time, infinite is the mischief
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>done by so many pretending operators,
-with each his bag of hard-ware at hand,
-his only proof of superiority to a woman,
-in practice, confiding in those instruments.
-Their negative damage is almost as great
-as their actual one. For by occasioning
-the men, and even ignorant midwives to
-trust to the calling in their help, the methods
-of predisposing of the women to parturition,
-the proper precautions, and actual
-manual function in the labor-pains, which
-is a point of the utmost importance, are
-at best but slightly and prefunctorily, consequently
-not sufficiently, performed, or
-perhaps wholly neglected. And why? because
-the instruments, the <em>crotchet</em>, the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-tête</span></i>, the <em>forceps</em>, are considered as sure
-reserves to remedy such deficiencies. This,
-besides many other reasons, encourages the
-indolence, carelessness, and inattention of
-the men-practitioners, and even of the midwives,
-especially of those poor suborned
-creatures recommended by the men-practitioners,
-paid, as one may say in some sense,
-not to do their work so well, as that none
-should be left for their honorable patrons.
-Thence it has happened, that where an
-ignorant midwife has, through her unskilfulness,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>or for whatever other reason, been
-wanting in predisposing the passage, or
-lapsed the critical moments of the manual
-aid, so that she really is or pretends to be
-out of her depth, by the exigence being
-beyond her ability; the man-midwife is
-called in, who, with his instruments, forces
-that delivery, which might, if justice
-had been done to the patient, have proceeded
-in a natural way, with much less pain
-and danger. Be this remarked, without
-my speaking here of the extraordinary tortures
-and outrages, such as M. De la Motte
-himself has related. The woman then is,
-by the help of instruments, delivered by the
-man-midwife so called in. “If he had
-but staid a few minutes longer, both
-mother and child must have been lost”.
-So believes the father of the child, so believes
-the mother, so believe most of the
-parties concerned, and what is more, sometimes
-so believes the man-midwife himself.
-Though the strict truth has been, that the
-greatest part of the pain the mother endured,
-and every appearance of danger, either
-to her or to her child, were positively owing
-to nothing but the negligence and mispractice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>used, either by man or woman-practitioner,
-in reliance, if matters should
-come to the worst, on the supplemental
-aid or reparation of errors, by those miserable
-instruments, which constitute all the
-boasted improvements of an art, the true
-nicety and requisite accuracy of which they
-are so much more calculated to banish or
-destroy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> however quoted the foregoing
-examples from M. De la Motte.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>First</span>, Because that he himself being a
-man-midwife, and greatly partial to the practice
-being best in the hands of men, his attestation
-must be the less suspicious: but
-especially, because he was a professed enemy
-to instruments, and adhered as closely as
-Nature would allow him, to the imitation
-of those midwives from whom he had received
-all his <em>knowledge</em>, and abused them
-afterwards for their <em>ignorance</em>, as if their
-communication to him of their knowledge
-could not have been, without leaving themselves
-wholly destitute of it to enrich him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span><span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, Because, the stories which
-he relates upon his own knowledge, leaving
-me the fairest room to infer the necessary
-repetition of the like tragical wents
-wherever instruments are admitted, it became
-less invidious to specify them, than
-incidents of the like nature here: especially,
-I say here, in London, or in England,
-where the use of those instruments grows
-every day more and more rife, and must consequently
-furnish the more examples of
-pain, destruction and danger caused by them
-to the women, weak or prejudice-ridden
-enough to prefer the men to the women-practitioners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Both</span> Charity then and Prudence prescribe
-to me the not pointing out particular
-persons to whom I could impute mispractice.
-If any one will affect to treat this
-suppression as not owing thereto, but
-purely to an impossibility of specifying
-cases of that sort, and of proving them;
-I appeal to the candid reader, whether
-the nature of the charge considered,
-such a specification can be expected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>from me, since, from the examples I
-have produced, I pretend to infer no more
-than a probability, the grounds of which
-I submit to himself, of the repetition of
-the like acts from the same, or even from
-increasing the same practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> would not perhaps be otherwise impossible
-to give some instances. For example,
-I could expand a hint before given,
-of a man-midwife of this town, who passes
-for eminent in his profession, and who not
-above five years ago, was called to deliver
-a woman in labor, whose child presented
-an arm. This practitioner, instead of
-searching out for the feet, to extract this
-fœtus, that was quite alive, first plucks off
-one arm, then another, then, at length,
-gives over the job, and left the poor mother
-in this condition, who was forced to have
-recourse to a midwife to finish the delivery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>More</span> than one operator, as I have before
-observed, in very natural deliveries,
-instead of bringing away the after-birth,
-tore out the body of the uterus; for all
-their boasted anatomy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span><span class='sc'>Another</span> gentleman-midwife delivered
-a woman of a fine child, or rather received
-it, for it came naturally and easily.
-Upon which, he took it into his head that
-he would not deliver her of the after-birth,
-proposing to defer this work till next day.
-And so he would have done, if he had not
-casually met with a less senseless practitioner,
-who represented to him the danger to
-which, by so doing, he exposed the poor
-patient he had left, and advised him to go
-back as fast as he could to deliver her.<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c012'><sup>[31]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> myself been not a little surprized
-at hearing lately some ladies mention, with
-much approbation, the inimitable complaisance
-of certain gentlemen-midwives,
-who have the patience, as they call it, to
-wait five, six, seven hours by the clock, before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>they deliver of the after-birth after the
-issue of the child, and that out of tenderness
-to the patients, who, as they say, would
-be sadly off, if they fell into hands more
-quick and expeditious.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> while I am thus taking notice of the
-errors of practice in the men-practitioners,
-it may be objected to me, that I deal unfairly
-with my reader.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>First</span>, In not furnishing instances of
-male-practice of the midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, That whereas I have confessed
-the incapacity of some of the midwives,
-without allowing inferences from them against
-all the professors of the art who are
-of the female sex, I ought to make the same
-equitable allowance as to the men-practitioners,
-and not condemn all for the sake of
-those insufficient ones, which the capable
-ones themselves candidly condemn, witness
-among others, M. De la Motte.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span>, as to my omitting such a specification
-of instances of mispractice in my own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>sex, it is neither from partiality, nor affectation,
-that this omission of mine proceeds.
-For could any one be so weak as
-retaliatively to state cases, in the manner
-I have done, of mispractice of some midwives;
-nothing could be more superfluous,
-nor less to the purpose. My confession,
-my lamentation, that there are but too many
-ignorant midwives, palpably obviate the
-necessity of proving what is granted. The
-public would be very little the better for a
-truth, with which it cannot but be too well
-acquainted, that there are ignorant midwives,
-and insufficient men-practitioners.
-The truth then, for which I contend, is,
-that the faults of the midwives, however
-it may be wished that they could be prevented,
-are, comparatively speaking, neither
-so likely to exist in Nature, nor of that
-horrid, atrocious kind, that are to be
-found in the practice of the men-practitioners
-or instrumentarians. There is nothing
-among the midwives of the puncturing,
-tearing with cold pinchers, maiming,
-mangling, pulling limb from limb, disabling,
-as must be inseparable in a greater
-or less degree from the use of those iron and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>steel-instruments, which are so often and
-so unnecessarily employed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the second objection, of my not
-making any distinction of the capable from
-the incapable men-practitioners. The reason
-of that is obvious. It results from the
-fairest comparison of the two sexes, in respect
-to midwifery, independent of any such
-examples as have been produced against any
-particular individuals of that profession in
-the men. Nature has so favored the midwives,
-that among them the bad ones are
-evidently an exception to the general rule,
-of the fitness of that sex for the art: whereas
-among men, the bad practitioners are,
-and must for ever be, the general rule, and
-the good ones the exception, if so it is, that,
-in Nature, there can be such an exception:
-he that makes a practice of using instruments
-can hardly be one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Nothing</span> however will more conduce
-to establish the natural disqualification of
-the men for this art, than a fair consideration
-of that capitally essential branch of it,
-the <span class='fss'>ART</span> of <span class='fss'>TOUCHING</span>, in order to ascertain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>the state of pregnant women, and the
-difficulties so necessary to be foreknown in
-order to be lessened or avoided. On due
-prevention often depends the saving the life
-of both mother and child; it cannot then
-be thought a digression, that I transiently
-give a summary account of this great light
-or guidance to that prevention, even though
-this work is nothing of a regular treatise of
-the art.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>Of <span class='sc'>Touching</span>.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Conducively</span> to a just idea of touching,
-there should be a just foundation laid
-of a competent knowledge of the fabric
-of the sexual parts, of the conformation
-of the <em>pelvis</em>, and of the bones which constitute
-it. There requires no depth of
-anatomy to know, in general, that the
-<em>pelvis</em> is composed of that part of the back-bone
-called the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">os sacrum</span></i>, terminated at
-the bottom by the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coccyx</span></i>, of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ilia</span></i>, and
-the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">os pubis</span></i>. In the cavity formed by the
-assemblage of these bones is the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">uterus</span></i>, suspended
-between the bladder and the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">intestinum
-rectum</span></i>, by four ligaments called broad
-and round. The two broad ones are a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>production of the <em>peritonæum</em>, on the side
-of the <em>vertebræ</em>, and terminate on each side
-of the uterus near the fallopian tubes. The
-round issue on the side of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">fundus uteri</span></i>,
-immediately under the tubes, and from
-thence passing through the <em>peritonæum</em>, and
-crossing the muscles of the hypogastrium, are
-inserted at the pubis and common membrane
-or integument of the fore-part of the thighs.
-I pretend here nothing further, than to
-give a summary sketch of these parts, a
-more particularized one being here needless.
-Suffize it to observe, that no good
-midwife can be without a proper and distinct
-conception of their position and conformation,
-not only for touching, but for
-operating with success.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Touching</span>, in the terms of art, consists
-in the introduction of one or two fingers
-into the vagina, and thereby into the
-orifice of the uterus of the person, whose
-state or situation requires to be known.
-There scarcely needs admonishing on this
-occasion, a midwife, of the due care of
-her hands, being properly prepared and
-guarded from the least danger of hurting.
-Such a precaution recommends itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span><span class='sc'>The</span> touch then is the most nice and
-essential point of the art of midwifery.
-Nor to acquire a sufficient degree of accuracy
-in it, can there be too much pains
-taken, considering how much depends on
-it. Midwives only of great practice, or
-lying-in hospitals, where there is full liberty
-for the young female practitioners to
-make observations, can render it familiar
-to the learner. I presume I may take for
-granted, that such a practical study is not
-extremely decent, nor proper for young
-lads. And yet, at their season of life it
-is, that this study should be begun, if but
-to give expertness the necessary time to attain,
-through habit, its full growth, against
-the age of exercising the manual
-function. It must surely be rather too late,
-for a man to commence his course of touching
-at the age of practising; as it must be
-too soon, at a season of life, where his capital
-end of <em>touching</em> will probably not be
-the acquisition of the science. At whose
-expence then must the rudiments of a man’s
-study of this branch of the art be? surely
-at that of the unfortunate women, subjected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>to the annoyance of such nauseous and
-profitless visitation. In short, this is <span class='fss'>ONE</span>
-of the points of the art, from the nature
-of which it may fairly, and without implication
-of contradiction, be pronounced,
-that the greatest anatomist in Europe may
-nevertheless be a very indifferent, not to
-say a miserable man-midwife: or even that
-a very indifferent anatomist may for all that
-be an excellent manual practitioner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>A midwife</span>, duly qualified by Nature
-and art, with a shreudness and delicacy of
-the touch, is, when requisite, capable of
-giving, in virtue thereof, a just account of
-a woman’s condition. She is enabled to
-make faithful reports to the physician, and
-inform him of the needful concerning the
-state of his patient, where any co-incidence
-of pregnancy sollicits his attention. By the
-same means she can distinguish the true
-labor-pains from the false ones; and when
-the term of delivery is at hand, it may,
-by the touch, be discerned, whether the
-labor will be easy or hard, whether the fœtus
-is well or ill situated. With other precognitions,
-highly necessary for our taking
-proper measures both obviative and actual.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span><span class='sc'>I say</span> necessary, because it is from this
-practice of touching that we draw our prognostics,
-both for the predisposition of the
-passage, in order to save pain by proper
-anticipation, and to smooth or facilitate a
-happy delivery. It is then the touch that
-serves us for a guide, and certifies to us the
-situation of the uterus, its rectitude or its
-obliquity, as well as what part the fœtus
-presents.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is in short by the information we receive
-from the touch, that we are enabled
-in good time to remedy, or at least to lessen
-all the obstacles: so that by the very same
-means, by which we obviate any necessity
-of recourse to instruments, we at the same
-time alleviate the pains and sufferings of the
-party: which one would think no inconsiderable
-advantage of the female over
-the male practice, which last is so constitutionally
-more rough and more violent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Such</span> is the capital importance of the
-<span class='fss'>TOUCH</span>, undeniable, I presume even by the
-men-practitioners. But will any of the hemidwives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>then, with those special delicate
-soft hands of theirs, and their long taper
-pretty fingers, pretend to vye with the women
-in the exquisite sense or faculty of the
-touch, with which Nature herself has so palpably
-endowed and qualified them for the
-necessary shreudness of discernment, that
-in them it can scarcely be deemed an acquisition of
-art? If the encroachments however
-of the male-practitioners proceed, under
-color of their vast superiority, I should
-not be surprized at seeing, ere long, a grave
-set of grey-bearded gentlemen-midwives
-impannelled in lieu of a jury of matrons,
-on a female convict pleading her belly.
-What can hinder the redress of such a grievance,
-as the law has authorized for so many
-ages, but the object not being one of
-a pecuniary enough interest to tempt the
-men to interfere in it? they would be in
-the wrong however not to apply for the
-office, since it would not be one of the least
-innocent occasions for them to improve
-their hand in the mistery of <em>touching</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> let them pretend what they will,
-so great is the advantage, so liberal of her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>gift has Nature been to women, in that
-aptitude of theirs, which may be termed a
-knack of touching, that the hand of a true
-midwife will, at the deriving of indications
-from the report of its touch, beat the
-most scientific head of a man-practitioner,
-though stuffed never so full with Greek
-and Latin. Yes, an ignorant midwife,
-without perhaps anatomy enough to know
-where the <em>pineal gland</em> is, or without so much
-as having heard the name of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ossa innominata</span></i>,
-and with purely her expertness,
-and with that sort of knowledge she has at
-her fingers ends, will give you a more useful
-and practical account of matters, as they
-go, where it is sometimes so infinitely important
-to know how they go, than the most
-learned anatomist that ever dissected a corpse,
-brandished a forceps, stuck a crotchet
-into a child’s brain-pan, or tore open a
-living woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Upon</span> this point of touching there occurs
-a consideration, on which I have before just
-transiently touched, and beg leave, for the
-sake of its importance, to give it some
-expansion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span><span class='sc'>In</span> my objection to a man’s practising this
-branch of art, <span class='fss'>TOUCHING</span>, I wave here the
-natural repugnance all the parties must have
-to it, even the man-midwife himself, on
-any footing but of that of interest, allowing
-an exclusion of any libertine design, I
-wave especially the argument against it,
-from its being a kind of invasion of a husband’s
-incommunicable prerogative; I even
-wave the breach of modesty, I suppose all
-this to be answered by the plea of superior
-safety, however false and imaginary
-that plea may be. But surely it will be
-allowed me to pity the unfortunate condition
-of a woman, subjected to so disagreeable
-a visitation; a visitation which,
-instead of being performed in the gentle,
-congenial, and especially, as to the end,
-satisfactory manner, of which the women
-alone are capable, must furnish a scene,
-not only unprofitable, disgustfully coarse,
-and even ridiculous, but also most probably
-a very painful one. Figure to yourself
-that respectable personage a He-midwife,
-quite as grave and solemn as you
-please, with a look composed to all that
-“<span class='fss'>DELICACY</span> <em>of</em> <span class='fss'>DECORUM</span>,” recommended
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>by Dr. Smellie, and so suitable to
-the high <span class='fss'>DIGNITY</span> of the <em>office</em> he is undertaking
-of <em>touching</em> the unhappy woman,
-subjected to his pretentions of useful discovery
-by it. What must not parts, which
-dispute exquisiteness of sensibility with the
-eye itself, suffer from hands, naturally
-none of the softest, and perhaps callous
-with handling iron and steel instruments,
-from some hands, in short, scarce less hard
-than the instruments themselves, boisterously
-grabbling and rummaging for such nice
-indications, as their want of fineness in the
-touch must for ever refuse them? what
-if they may possibly, by such coarse <em>touching</em>,
-find some common, obvious signs
-presenting themselves, so that the grossest
-touch cannot escape distinguishing them;
-does it therefore follow, that the nicer
-points on which so much may depend
-for preparatory disposal, will not escape
-hands, scarce not less disqualified for the
-necessary discernment, than a midwife’s if
-she had gloves on? in the mean while,
-what torture must not the poor woman
-endure, in every sense, from the wounds
-of modesty, and even of her person? and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>for what? that the doctor may, with a
-significant nod, or silent shrug, give himself
-the false air of being satisfied about
-what he was pretending to look for; or,
-if he speaks, come off with some jargon,
-only the more respectfully received by the
-patient, for its neither being common
-sense, nor intelligible to her; or perhaps,
-if he has any by-ends in view, or is a
-man of gallantry, here is a fine occasion
-for his placing a compliment. But for
-any essential advantage to her, from such a
-quackery of painful perquisition, she need
-not expect it. The infinitely important
-service of predisposing the passages, and
-of obviating difficulties, to be only ascertained
-by that faculty of touching, is
-palpably and peculiarly appropriated by
-Nature to the women only; and it is from
-them alone that a woman must, naturally
-and truly speaking, be the least shocked
-at receiving such service. Whereas in
-being <em>touched</em> by a man, besides, I once
-more say, besides the revoltingness of Nature,
-and the protest of female modesty
-against it, besides the pain inseparable
-from it, besides even its insufficiency; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>safety of the woman is destroyed to the
-very foundations, by the negation of due
-foreknowledge and proper disposal, against
-the actual crisis of danger or the real labor-pains,
-the mitigation of which, and
-facilitating the delivery, depend so much
-on the <em>accuracy</em> of the <em>touch</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Whoever</span> then will but consider that
-greater aptitude of organization in the women
-for fineness of that sense of touching,
-will allow, that I beg no question, when I
-aver, proverbially, but truly speaking,
-that if one hundred points of qualification
-were requisite to constitute this capital faculty
-of <span class='fss'>TOUCHING</span>, a midwife already possesses,
-in the but being a woman, ninety-nine
-of them, the sure and certain gift
-of Nature: and the remaining one from
-Art, may with great ease, with a little instruction
-and experience, be acquired.
-Whereas, the He-midwife, not only, as
-not being a woman, wants the whole ninety-nine,
-but can never receive the hundredth
-at the hands of Art, but in so imperfect
-a degree, that his trusting it will make
-it worse to the unfortunate woman that
-shall trust him, than if he was wholly without
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>it. I might perhaps, not without reason,
-extend this allegation of the superiority
-of the female sex over the male in this
-point, and in the same proportion, to the
-whole of the manual function, but that I
-am more afraid of exagerating, than even of
-falling short of the truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Surely</span> then, one might imagine, that
-the parties principally concerned in liquidating
-this difference for the government of
-their decision, on a point of such capital
-importance, would not do amiss to consider
-it, before they suffer themselves to be
-imposed upon in the manner they are by
-the men-pretenders to a purely female office.
-An imposition so very gross, that instead
-of answering the end of those on whom
-it passes, that of greater safety, only encreases
-the dreaded danger. And most
-assuredly, the women who subject themselves
-to it, do so, if with no scandal to their
-modesty at least to their understanding; for
-being sunk to so low a degree of cheapness,
-as even to purchase, with a sort of prostitution,
-innocent let it be, it is still a prostitution,
-after which money is a consideration
-beneath mention, and to purchase what?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>danger to their own life, danger to that of
-the pretious burthen within them, and, at
-the very least, an increase of bodily pain to
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> De la Motte, in his 188th <span class='fss'>OBSERVATION</span>,
-p. 265, <em>Leyden ed.</em> makes an animadversion
-upon a midwife’s <em>touching</em> a patient,
-which, unless he was induced to it
-by that spirit of injustice to midwives in
-general, against which injustice all his usual
-candor is sometimes not proof, would persuade
-me, that he was more ignorant of the
-nature and ends of <em>touching</em>, than what his
-works show him to have been in other parts
-of the profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> that <span class='fss'>OBSERVATION</span> he gives you the
-case of a woman in labor, to whom he was
-called, whose membranes a midwife had
-prematurely broke, whom she had actually
-over-fatigued with making her too often
-shift her posture, and also with incessant and
-reiterated <span class='fss'>TOUCHINGS</span> (<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attouchemens qu’elle
-reïteroit sans relâche</span></i>) and all this, from a
-principle of avarice, in order to make the
-quicker riddance, for the sake of attending
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>a richer patient, where she expected greater
-gain; “as if (says Mr. De la Motte, in
-words that ought to be engraved in every
-practitioners heart) a poor woman was
-more to be neglected than a wealthy one,
-in the presence of a God who judges all
-our actions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>For</span> my quoting this case, especially as
-it regards the point of <span class='fss'>TOUCHING</span> now
-under discussion, my reason, from the considerations
-to which it will give rise in the
-reader’s own mind, will probably appear so
-satisfactory to him, that he will easily absolve
-me of any charge of digression.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the midwife’s bringing on the premature
-discharge of the waters, if the fact
-was true: it was very blameable practice.
-It is a practice that all capable midwives
-reprove and forbid, as it is robbing the
-part of the most natural and necessary lubrication
-for facilitating the launch in due
-time of the fœtus. I have been assured,
-with what truth I cannot well warrant, that
-the men-practitioners are commonly much
-too precipitate in the breaking of the membranes.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>Be the practitioners then of what
-sex they may, such practice is bad.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span>, as to the motive M. De la Motte
-attributes to the midwife, of avarice for
-such a procedure, I should heartily join with
-him in condemning her, if the mention he
-makes of the <span class='fss'>REITERATED TOUCHINGS</span>
-did not make me suspect not his sincerity
-but his knowledge. If the poor midwife had
-been to write the case, I have the charity
-to think she could, with truth, have given
-a better reason for her practice than a suggestion
-of avarice. At the worst, however,
-so criminal a spring of action in such a conjuncture,
-could only be personal to herself,
-not affect the midwives in general. Mr.
-De la Motte himself would own this, who,
-as the reader may see p. 286, does not
-spare the men-practitioners on this head,
-without meaning, that he or his fraternity
-should be involved in any sinister inference
-from thence. And, indeed, I should have
-a right to laugh at men-practitioners reproaching
-the midwives with interestedness.
-I fancy I can have few readers so ignorant,
-as not to know by which of the two sexes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>the greater fees are expected; which sex, in
-short, looks the most out of humor, when
-those same fees do not amount to the practitioner’s
-idea of the <span class='fss'>DECORUM</span> of his
-“<span class='fss'>DIGNITY</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> let that pass. I come now to the
-great point of the <span class='fss'>TOUCHINGS</span> complained
-of by M. De la Motte, and I sincerely believe
-unjustly complained of. My cause of
-such belief is this: I am well grounded in
-my averring, that in many labors much depends
-on the rectification of things, (this
-will be hereafter more at large explained) by
-the act of touching, not only reiterated, but
-sometimes even not to be discontinued for
-hours together. And these <em>touchings</em> are so
-far from fatiguing, or vexing the patient,
-that they often prove her greatest relief
-from pain, and even preservation from danger,
-by the facilitation they procure to the
-issue of the fœtus, that is to say, if they
-are skilfully managed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> myself known women in pain,
-and even before their labor-pains came on,
-find, or imagine they found, a mitigation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>of their complaints, by the simple application
-of the midwife’s hand; gently chasing or
-stroaking them: a mitigation which, I presume,
-they would have been ashamed to
-ask, if they had been weak enough to expect
-it, from the delicate fist of a great-horse-godmother
-of a he-midwife, however
-softened his figure might be by his
-pocket-night-gown being of flowered
-callico, or his cap of office tied with pink
-and silver ribbons; for I presume he would
-scarce, against Dr. Smellie’s express authority,
-go about a function of this nature in
-a full-suit, and a tie-wig.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> also the more ready to believe, that
-these same <em>touchings</em>, with which M. De la
-Motte, finds fault had in this case been really
-of service, since he confesses, he found
-the child “<em>well situated, and</em> <span class='fss'>FAR ADVANCED</span>
-<em>in the passage</em>”; and withal offers no
-reason to think, but that it was so <em>far advanced</em>
-from the <em>touchings</em>, not in spite of
-the <em>touchings</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>We</span> shall now see what followed. Mr.
-De la Motte, that despiser of midwives;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>Mr. De la Motte, who so consistently regretted
-his not being admitted to the Hôtel
-Dieu at Paris, and accuses the women,
-educated at that Hospital, of vanity, for
-valuing themselves on that education, behaved
-himself on this occasion, as indeed
-his merit was that on most occasions he did
-so, like a true good midwife: he found
-things <em>far advanced</em> enough, for him to
-leave the rest very wisely to Nature, and so
-he did. The consequence of which was,
-that the patient was soon delivered of a fine
-boy, and both mother and child did well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Such</span> was the result of Mr. De la Motte’s
-true midwifely proceeding. But what
-would an instrumentarian have probably
-done? One of those, I say, who, as to all the
-boasted improvement of the obstetrical art,
-produce the stupendous inventions of those
-surely rather weapons of death, than of life,
-which Dr. Smellie calls his <span class='fss'>REINFORCEMENTS</span>,
-and is so good as “<em>principally</em>”
-to recommend, “<em>namely the small forceps,
-blunt hook, scissors, and curve crotchets</em>”,
-the unenviable privilege of using which
-blessed substitutes to the soft fingers of women,
-being supposed inherent to the men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>by right of superiority of skill, has so greatly
-<span class='fss'>IMPROVED</span> the art of midwifery, and
-thinned the number of good midwives, by
-exploding their so much less painful, and
-certainly more safe method of practice,
-both for mother and child? For after all,
-what can such instruments be expected to
-do, but, instead of improving the art, to
-multiply murders? if this should appear
-too severe, hear what Mr. De la Motte
-himself says to the very case in point: to
-this very case, in which himself, I repeat
-it, did no more than play the part of the
-good midwife, and was only the more commendable
-for doing so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>If</span> the operator of the place had been
-called, he would <span class='fss'>DOUBTLESS</span> have
-proceeded in this delivery, as he had
-done in the other (see p. 292.) that is
-to say, he would have <em>quickly</em> dispatched
-it with his <em>crotchet</em>: but on the contrary,
-if he had had any experience, he would
-have conducted the other delivery as I
-did this, and thereby have exempted
-himself from the reproach he must have
-made to himself, for having killed a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>poor woman in the most <em>cruel</em> manner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Happy!</span> thrice happy it is for the midwives,
-that, at least, if avarice should
-tempt any of them to the injustice of hurrying
-a poor patient’s delivery, in order to
-attend a rich one; a circumstance which,
-I fancy however, does not more often occur
-to the female than to the male-practitioners;
-the woman cannot, at least, use
-towards precipitating such deliveries means
-so violent as the men. They appear only
-in guise of peaceable simple seconds to Nature:
-the men take the field, armed as
-combatants against her. The women can
-but prematurate things by excitation of
-the hand; they may be guilty of reprehensible
-negligence, they may be over curious
-in their bandages, by way of smoothing
-wrinkles after delivery; in short, they
-may commit many faults, which I am far
-from justifying, or even extenuating; but
-at the very worst, I defy them to equal
-the instrumentarians in mischief; nor can
-their practice abound with those horrors,
-of which a man-midwife tells us he could
-furnish <span class='fss'>VOLUMES</span> (p. 298.) horrors which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>must be so greatly multiplied since his time,
-as the recourse to instruments is more
-than ever pursued, in practice, though so
-fallaciously disowned in the theory; under
-which disavowal the gentlemen midwives
-figuratively conceal their bag of hard-ware,
-just as Dr. Smellie directs them literally
-to do in their visits to patients.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> to resume the subject of <span class='fss'>TOUCHING</span>,
-I am to observe, that among its essential
-services on many occasions, both
-during the pregnancy, and in the actual
-labor-pains, there is one case, which, for
-its frequency and importance, deserves a
-separate consideration: it is that of the
-obliquity of the uterus, of which touching
-not only serves to inform, but to rectify
-it. I shall therefore dedicate a section
-to the treating of it.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>Of the <span class='fss'>OBLIQUITY</span> of the <span class='sc'>Uterus</span>.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>By</span> the obliquity of the uterus I mean
-its untoward situation. For either the uterus
-preserves its natural direction, or does
-not preserve it. Where the uterus preserves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>it, I call it well placed: the point of
-it is turned directly to the cavity of the
-pelvis, and the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">fundus uteri</span></i> is suspended in
-the space between the umbilical region and
-the vertebræ: if the uterus does not preserve
-its natural direction, if it inclines too
-much forwards, backwards, or towards
-either the right or the left side, I call it
-oblique, or untowardly placed. All the
-other situations of the uterus are reducible
-to these four, from which they differ no
-otherwise than as its line that should naturally
-be perpendicular to that of the vagina
-deviates more or less from it towards
-any of them. It is from this obliquity,
-greater or less, that proceeds, by much the
-most often, the greater or the less difficulty
-of the lyings-in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> would be superfluous here to analise
-all the causes of such obliquity, because, being
-mostly natural ones, there is no preventing
-them. But there are some causes
-of it, or at least, that appear to me to be
-sometimes the causes of it, that it cannot be
-improper for me to premise here, for precaution-sake.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span><span class='sc'>I have</span> then some reason to think, that
-both here and in Holland the stays contribute
-much to the obliquity of the uterus.
-For though women, during their pregnancy,
-may perhaps wear them looser than at
-other times; yet their natural hardness
-pressing on the belly, with the stiff whalebones,
-always too many if there are any at
-all, cramp the fœtus and the womb, to
-which the stays too often give a bad situation,
-according to their motion or swagging
-more to one side than to the other, in
-their state of looseness; and if they were
-laced tighter, that would be yet more
-dangerous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I could</span> wish then, that women with
-child would either content themselves with
-wearing a bodice only, or stays without any
-whalebone, but at the back just to serve the
-loins, and even those not to come so low
-down as I have seen some. The obliquity
-of the uterus is much rarer in France than
-it is here, for which I cannot account otherwise,
-than from the women there avoiding
-any prejudice from their stays, during their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>pregnancy. There is another cause, as I
-apprehend it, of the lateral byass, which
-is the lying too constantly on either side,
-whence the uterus contracts a habit of inclination
-to that side. The probability of
-such an effect I submit to the anatomists, as
-I speak here only conjecturally, and not
-with the presumption of certainty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> obliquity of the uterus may be discerned
-from the difficulty there will be,
-in touching, to come at its orifice. And
-it is by touching alone that you can hope
-to discover which way its deviation points,
-whether it is placed too high towards the
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">os pubis</span></i>, too much turned towards the curve
-of the vertebræ, or in a lateral direction,
-towards either the right or left <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">ilion</span></i>. But
-which ever way that mis-direction points,
-the difficulty of the delivery is proportionable
-to the degree of it: and the skill and
-knowledge of the midwife in not only the
-reduction, but the keeping of the uterus to
-its due position, till the delivery is accomplished,
-form one of those principal branches
-of the art, for which the gentlemen-midwives
-must be naturally so unfit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span><span class='sc'>There</span> are very few authors who have
-treated of this obliquity of the uterus.
-Some do not mention it at all, others speak
-of it, but so slightly as to escape attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Dr.</span> Smellie in his enumeration of the
-cases, by which laborious labors are occasioned,
-which he ranges under seven heads,
-has intirely omitted this case of obliquity.
-He has bestowed indeed a whole chapter
-on the distortion of the pelvis, a case I take
-to be comparatively infinitely rarer than an
-obliquity of the uterus. He might as well
-suppose a frequent vitious conformation of
-the cheek-bones, as of those that form the
-pelvis: which, were it so, must necessarily
-imply a constant recurrence of hard labors
-in the same woman, which is not often
-the case. Whereas the liableness of the
-uterus to an obliquity from various accidents,
-principally accounts for the easiness
-of one labor in a woman, being no argument
-for her not having a hard one in future,
-or convertibly. I dare aver then,
-that in the course of my practice, which
-is not the least extensive one, this very case
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>of obliquity has occurred to me oftener
-than all the others put together, and indeed
-caused me the most pain to remedy
-or conquer. Why then such an omission
-by these writers? I cannot conceive, unless
-that they were aware of the consequence,
-obvious to be drawn from thence, that
-women, by the superior fitness of their
-hands, must be the properest to apply the
-topical remedy; and that their iron and
-steel instruments could not so well be set
-to work in such a case, at least in due time.
-This is absolutely so true, that in the case
-of this very obliquity, which occasions
-most of the very lingering labors, for which
-the midwives, who have not preventively
-exerted themselves to reduce it, and thereby
-to clear the passage for the fœtus, have no
-remedy but patience; those very lingering
-labors, I say, which shall have thus arisen
-from the want of skill or prevention, furnish
-the men-practitioners with a pretence
-to dispatch them with their instruments.
-Thus they, often murderously for the child,
-and injuriously to the mother, terminate many
-a delivery, which a gentle and constant
-reduction of the uterus would have so much
-more safely and less painfully accomplished.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>And how accomplished? evidently not by
-any violence to Nature, but purely by redressing
-the wrong she is in, oftenest not
-by her own fault, but by some adventitious
-cause, in which she has been rather a passive
-sufferer than originally herself deficient. A
-justice this of distinction too often refused
-her, and from which too many errors of
-practice arise, perhaps in more cases than this.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>However</span>, this is certain, that this
-case of the obliquity of the uterus deserves
-much more notice and attention than have
-been paid to it. It is one of the most important
-difficulties of the art.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>He</span> who treats the most at large of this
-matter is Daventer, who, I have strong
-reasons for believing, first took the hint
-from some midwife: but a hint, which the
-usual imperfection of the manual function
-in men hindered him from duly improving.
-For in the way he sets forth the
-different inclinations of the uterus, and
-the methods of rectifying them, instead of
-throwing a practical light upon the subject,
-he has obscured it with errors, absurdities,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>and repetitions without number
-or excuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> that I may not appear to treat this
-author dogmatically, and especially as he
-furnishes me with an occasion of further
-elucidating a point of such great importance
-to the art of which I am treating,
-I must here intreat the attention of those
-readers, especially who deign to peruse me
-rather in the search of useful truth, than
-of amusement, of which indeed so serious
-a matter is so little susceptible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Let</span> us then examine some of Daventer’s
-methods of practice, so inconsequential
-to so just a theory as that of the mis-direction
-incident to the uterus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Daventer</span>, chap. xlvi. p. 288, French
-edition, treating of the rectification of an
-obliquity of the uterus fallen forwards, goes
-on thus. “When the membrane is broke,
-and the vertex of the head partly come
-forth, there is no longer occasion to support,
-as before, the orifice of the uterus.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>It should be let fall with the head beyond
-the curvature of the os sacrum.
-The head will make its way much more
-easily than if it was still wrapped up in
-the uterus (<em>indeed!</em>) Now to make the
-fœtus come forth, the midwife must, as
-she did at the beginning, employ both
-her hands; the one internally applied,
-the other externally; but take care so to
-do judiciously. Neither must she wait
-till the labor-pains are over, before she
-sets her hands to work, as I have just
-before observed. On the contrary, it is
-in the time of the throws that she must
-operate, and when they are on the decline,
-terminate the delivery. The midwife
-therefore should not barely content
-herself with watching the time of the
-pains, but should also admonish, at every
-one of them, her patient to second them
-with all her strength, in order that the
-child may advance the more under their
-stronger protrusion. During which, the
-midwife having her hand in the vagina,
-the back turned towards the rectum
-is to advance the tip of her fingers,
-the most she can, under the head of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>child, taking care however not to overpress
-them; and in this posture, she is
-to keep her hands unmoveable, till she
-feels the labor-pains come on. The other
-hand she is to put on the hypogastrium,
-nearly over the place answering
-to the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">fundus uteri</span></i>; and when the pains
-shall begin, she is to give her hands such
-action, that that which is in the vagina
-shall push back the coccyx, and the other
-applied externally shall push up
-gently the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">fundus uteri</span></i>, and at the same
-time determine its orifice towards the
-pelvis. I say gently. But this is to be
-understood of the beginning of the
-throws, for in proportion as they increase,
-the midwife must press the
-harder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Care</span> must, in the mean time, be
-taken, that the pression made on the belly
-must not be too violent but <em>very</em> moderate:
-whereas that made on the coccyx
-must be with the midwife’s whole
-strength, with this attention however,
-<em>first</em>, that this great effort must not be
-made but when the force of the throws
-obliges the woman strongly to contract
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>the muscles of the hypogastrium, and
-must cease with those throws. <em>Secondly</em>,
-that the hand must be laid flat on the
-coccyx, not with the fingers half-bent,
-least the joints should hurt the woman.
-<em>Thirdly</em>, that the hand may be as much
-expanded as possible, that the pression
-may be equal on all parts. Observing
-these three conditions, the midwife may
-employ her <em>whole</em> strength, without <em>fear</em>
-of doing any harm to the woman. On
-the contrary, she will greatly relieve her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>To</span> the which I have to say, that I should
-greatly pity a woman that should fall under
-the hands of a woman that should receive
-such directions from Monsieur l’Accoucheur,
-and much more yet, if she was to be
-under his. A midwife to operate thus!
-with one hand in and the other out, over the
-lower part of the belly, “gently” says Daventer,
-and yet stronger in proportion as the
-throws increase: and a little after he says,
-this pression on the belly must not be too
-violent, but <em>very</em> moderate. I confess, I
-do not understand, but that may be my
-fault, how a pression can be stronger and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>stronger as the pains increase, without
-ceasing to be gentle or very moderate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Besides</span>; as to the pression of the midwife’s
-hand on the coccyx of the patient,
-so violent as he advises it, with the whole
-strength of the midwife, can this be executed
-without causing to the vagina or rectum
-a contusion, very capable of bringing
-on a gangrene, of causing a mortification,
-or, in short, the laceration of the frænum
-labiorum, whatever he may say to the
-contrary?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I observe</span>, by the way, that in this
-very chapter Daventer supposes the heads
-of children breaking themselves, sometimes
-against the os pubis, or the vertebræ, as
-if these were bare bones, at least he is
-to me, in these points, unintelligible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>He</span> goes on to object, that if, through
-ignorance, Nature has been so far left to
-herself, that the point of the uterus should
-be fallen into the pelvis, that its orifice, and
-the head of the child, should be fallen into
-the lower curve of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">os sacrum</span></i>, that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>membrane should be broke, and the child’s
-head a little discovered, and withal, the
-woman’s strength much exhausted,</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>To</span> change, (says Daventer) this situation,
-thus you must proceed. The
-woman must rest upon her knees and
-elbows, with her head low. And what
-(adds he) determines the placing a woman
-in this posture, is, that the weight
-of the uterus may impel it to the side
-of the diaphragma, and consequently
-withdraw it from the sinuosity of the
-coccyx.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>To</span> me it appears impossible, that a
-woman, whose strength shall have been
-exhausted, or but much diminished, can
-put herself into such a posture, which
-could only serve to make her lose any little
-strength she might have left.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>At</span> the end of the said chap. xlvi. Daventer
-concludes in the following terms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>However</span>, to say the truth, of whatever
-kind the obliquity of the uterus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>may be, I hold, that the safest, the
-easiest, and the least painful expedient,
-is the footling-extraction of the child,
-from the very beginning of the labor,
-before or immediately after the discharge
-of the waters, as soon as one can be assured
-that the pains the woman feels are
-the labor-pains. If this method should
-be followed, which I hope (adds he) it
-will one day be, it would preserve an
-incredible number of women and children,
-the unhappy victims of a contrary
-practice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> I must confess the shallowness of
-my understanding. Such a reasoning as
-Daventer’s in this case passes my conception.
-He allows, that in all the obliquities
-of the uterus, it is extremely difficult
-to find the orifice, to come at it, and to
-introduce the fingers into it: nay, he owns,
-that it is not without a great deal of trouble,
-that you can get to touch but the
-surface of that orifice; and after that
-confession, he tells you very gravely that,
-in such cases, you must deliver the child
-by the feet, in the very beginning of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>labor, before even the discharge of the
-waters, or at least soon after.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ought</span> then the translator of Daventer,
-who is at the same time his apologist,
-in good conscience, boast so much the discoveries
-of this author upon the obliquity
-of the uterus? is it possible for common
-sense to give the approbation that he does
-to those easiest, safest, and least painful
-methods, that he recommends for relieving
-the mother and child in those cases of
-obliquity?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> then too much prepared to be
-surprized, in the chapter following that
-from which I have quoted, to find him,
-where treating of an uterus too much inclined
-towards the vertebræ, not scruple
-to reason as follows.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>But</span> if the child is too much compressed,
-or has a head over large, so that
-it is not without much difficulty to the
-midwife, and pain to the woman, that
-it can be hoped to bring the child into
-the pelvis, a state of things which does
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>not unseldom happen, I judge that, to
-prevent the danger, the best method is
-the footling-extraction. But (adds our
-author by way of reflexion) this work
-is more <em>befitting</em> a <em>man</em> than a <em>woman</em>,
-unless she has a <em>quick</em> judgment, and
-an <em>alert</em> hand: a man-midwife should
-therefore be called (<em>Doubtless!</em>) and he
-must lay his account with having work
-enough, for it is not without a great
-deal of trouble and difficulty, that he
-will accomplish the turning the child,
-and that for <em>three</em> reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>The First.</span> Commonly, the orifice
-of the uterus in this situation is but
-little open: it must be <em>violently</em> dilated,
-that is to say, in <em>forcing</em> Nature, or <em>doing
-violence</em> to her. Yet this must be done
-slowly, for too much precipitation would
-cause to the woman <em>very acute pains</em>.
-(<em>To be sure, a slow violence would not hurt
-her.</em>)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Reason</span> the <span class='sc'>Second</span>. It is not
-more easy to penetrate to the bottom
-of the uterus, of which the orifice already,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>narrow as it must be, is moreover
-occupied by the head of the child,
-than to open the orifice. No wonder
-then, that so much trouble and patience
-should be required to get at the child’s
-feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Thirdly</span>, It will be found, that the
-distance there is between the orifice of
-the vagina to the bottom of the uterus,
-must render the <em>man-midwife’s</em>
-work so much the more difficult for
-the sinuosity of it, and his being
-forced to operate in a part so narrow
-and close, and in which the hand is
-much cramped for room. It is obvious
-to sense, that a place so oblique and
-streight must deny the liberty of passage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> advice which Daventer gives here
-of extracting the child by the feet in the
-case he supposes, and, for that purpose,
-violently to dilate the orifice of the uterus,
-appears to my weak mind such mad, such
-frantic doctrine, as to be beneath refutation.
-The bare recital of his own reasons,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>and of the difficulties there are to
-surmount, which he himself confesses,
-abundantly demonstrate the impossibility
-and absurdity of the method he proposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> after taking the liberty of dissenting
-from that celebrated man-midwife in
-cases of obliquity, as to the practical part,
-which I take indeed to be his <em>own</em> discovery,
-it is but just I should offer what I
-conceive to be the true midwife’s practice,
-for terminating happily the labor of a
-woman in the case of obliquity of the
-uterus: submitting the same to better
-judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>All</span> the deflexions or byasses of the
-uterus, whatever they are, are to be known
-by the touch. An expert and knowing
-hand will never fail of ascertaining the discovery
-of them. I say, an expert and knowing
-hand, for without an exact knowledge of
-the figure of the whole pelvis, the situation
-of the bladder, of the rectum, the vagina,
-and the uterus, before and after pregnancy,
-the situation of the orifice with respect
-to the pelvis, there is no distinguishing
-for example, an over-elevated orifice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>from one too low, nor a direct from an oblique
-one. In vain would one conceive
-clearly what those terms signify, or have
-some knowledge of the distinctive parts of
-the female sex, without one has at the same
-time sufficient experience, and fineness of
-sense in the touching part. Without these
-qualifications there is no proceeding but
-darkling, and in danger of deception.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> orifice of the uterus is always diametrically<a id='t347'></a>
-opposite to the fundus of it.
-When then you know what the situation
-of the orifice of the uterus is, when in its
-due place, you may, if well versed in <em>touching</em>,
-calculate any aberration from the right
-line, and by the situation of the orifice
-giving that of the fundus, know how the
-rest is disposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>When</span>, by <em>touching</em>, I perceive, there
-is an obliquity of the uterus in the case,
-in the proper time, I desire the patient to
-lay on her back, and introducing my finger,
-endeavour to come at the orifice of the
-uterus. Upon getting hold of it, I support
-it so long as the labor-throw continues,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>and I take care the child should not engage
-itself too much.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> obliged, with my hand, continually
-to repeat this service; and after resting
-a little from the fatigue, whenever I can
-snatch a moment safely for such relaxation,
-I re-introduce my finger, as before, in order
-to prevent the pains, and hinder the
-orifice from falling, that is to say, from
-sinking, so as to turn too much backwards,
-or from rising too high, or, in short, from
-deviating towards the right or the left, according
-to the circumstances or kinds of
-inclination that may present themselves.
-I also take great care, that the child may
-not engage itself too far under the os pubis.
-I do not discontinue these cares, these attentions,
-until, whatever assiduity, length
-of time, or trouble it may cost me, I shall
-have arrived at rectifying the wrong direction,
-by thus constantly supporting the internal
-orifice, till, in short, I have brought it,
-little by little, to turn and come directly
-on a line with the external orifice. By this
-management of the hand, I procure the
-child a fair opening, and its falling forward,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>without being wrapped up or embarrassed
-in the uterus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span> yet, in certain cases of obliquity I
-sometimes find so great an inversion of order,
-such an intanglement, that the child
-presents itself in the vagina with the body
-of the uterus covering it wholly, and by
-its volume totally impeding the coming at
-the orifice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> before observed, that I required
-my patients, in these cases, to lye upon
-their backs, and this, because, if they set
-up straight, the uterus would overset, and
-render the obstacle, if not invincible, at
-least, much more hard to remove.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>However</span>, both to ease my patients,
-and to prevent the child’s ingaging itself
-too far in the pelvis, I get them, according
-to the circumstances, to keep still lain
-down, but to turn sometimes to one side,
-sometimes to the other, without ceasing
-my attentions, without discontinuing to
-rectify the turn of the internal orifice from
-over the summit of the child’s head, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>to uphold the said orifice, if it should tend
-to turn backwards, to depress it downward,
-by a gentle pressure, if it is inclined
-to rise towards the os pubis. This operation,
-this support, this depression, ought
-always to be managed with as much tenderness
-as skill, and there cannot be too
-much of both.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Certain</span> it is, that the bad situation
-of the uterus often occasions a severe and
-difficult labor. A midwife therefore, from
-the very first of the labor-pains, cannot bestow
-too much attention to the giving such
-preventive or actual aid as I have proposed.
-Nothing, on these occasions, is more
-dangerous than delay. The pretious moments
-of operation must not be lost, least
-the child, coming to engage itself, should
-throw us into an embarrassment yet greater
-than the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the beginning of the labor, it is no
-very great matter, to know exactly, what
-part the child presents to the orifice of an
-oblique uterus. It is enough to know, that
-it is not the head, in order to determine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>you, in due time, to the footling-extraction.
-What I mean is, that as soon as a
-good position shall have been procured to
-the orifice of the uterus; if it is any other
-part but the head that presents itself at that
-orifice, and that it is sufficiently dilated for
-the hand to get by gentle degrees introduced,
-dilated, in short, to about the diameter
-of a crown-piece, then, if the membranes
-do not break of themselves, the
-midwife should pierce them, and search
-for the feet of the child, to bring it away.
-But if the head it is that presents at the
-orifice, there is no need of any hurry: it
-is even better to wait till the membranes
-burst of themselves, unless they should be
-come out of the vagina, in which case they
-are to be opened, in order to terminate the
-delivery, not with scissors, but with the
-fingers alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> reader will here please to observe,
-that in these cases of obliquity, almost
-every thing depends, as to the prognostication,
-and prevention of difficulties, as
-well as to the relief in actual labor, on the
-exploration of the touch, and consequently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>the manual function. The last is especially
-and palpably indispensable. What
-can supply the place of it? not surely those
-forcing medicines, which some ignorant
-men-practitioners obtrude on the unhappy
-patient, and which only serve to exasperate
-the pains in vain, and certainly not to accelerate
-that parturition, which is retarded
-by the purely local indisposition of the
-womb. An obstacle which a skillful, tender,
-experienced hand cannot but be the
-fittest to remove.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> this case however it is, that Monsieur
-l’Accoucheur oftenest looks extremely
-silly and disconcerted. Though the throws
-redouble, the child is never the nearer
-coming out. On the contrary, till its passage
-is franked by the reduction of the uterus,
-it bears in vain upon any part, but
-that aperture, through which alone lies its
-issue: and, in fact, the harder it bears, the
-more it obstructs its own deliverance, and
-damages its mother. Monsieur l’Accoucheur
-stands by, does nothing, and can do
-nothing, or worse than nothing, if he
-should pretend to it: if he had the head,
-he has not the hand to give the patient any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>efficacious aid. Then it is, that where
-thus incapable by Nature, for the manual
-function, the men-practitioners abuse that
-excellent, that divine, but here mistimed
-and misplaced maxim, of leaving things to
-Nature, of trusting to Nature. The power
-of Nature is just then, all of a sudden, acknowledged
-to be self-sufficient, when she
-really wants human help to redress her
-wrong. She is then at her greatest need,
-left to shift for herself. The fruitless pangs
-increase. Monsieur l’Accoucheur stands
-by an idle spectator, or perhaps goes about
-his business. In the mean time both mother
-and child, exhausted by fruitless efforts,
-for perhaps four, five, or six days,
-perish for want of the proper and only relief.
-Thus the ignorant operators abstain
-from interfering, when interfering, if they
-were fit for it, might be of service, only
-because they cannot so well in this case employ
-their iron or steel instruments: and as
-to their hands, they would most probably
-indeed make sad bungling work of it.
-Their action, in short, is, if that can be
-imagined, yet worse than their inaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span><span class='sc'>Some</span> of them, in this case, content
-themselves with saying, that the orifice is as
-yet too distant, and that nothing is urgent.
-They go away then, and leave the patient
-in the hope of some favorable change which
-is never to happen. They return, and find
-a strange disorder in the state of things, the
-child is too far engaged: it is too late to
-retrieve the damage, as they imagine, and
-I readily believe, when they have lapsed
-the due time of operation, of which it is
-not only probable they knew nothing, but,
-if they had known what to do, would have
-done it very ill. Then the vast knowledge
-and learning of these disconcerted instrumentarians
-can furnish them no better expedient,
-than that of murdering the child
-(as they pretend) to save the mother,
-though it is not always that the mother
-does not follow the fate of her poor infant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I know</span>, by my own experience, that
-often to make a happy end of such deliveries,
-requires an extreme attention and indefatigable
-pains. But practitioners should
-resolve, either to go through with the undertaking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>as it should be, or not begin it,
-in such cases, especially where the lives of
-mother and child depend upon their doing
-their duty, as they will answer the contrary
-to God, to man, and to themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> cases are but too frequent in
-England. I have myself met with several
-of them, and sometimes even in persons
-extremely well made, in which I have been
-obliged to perform this manual aid, for
-many hours together, ay, even for half-a-day
-and more by the clock; all my motions
-keeping time with those of Nature narrowly
-watched, so as to rectify and adjust
-the orifice and the uterus; constantly reducing
-any detortion, and keeping things
-in their due direction, without tiring, or
-without losing patience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> I ask of my reader, is such work
-as this, naturally speaking, the work of a
-man, as Daventer would persuade us?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> the Monsieur l’Accoucheur is an ignorant,
-or rather not a very intelligent one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>indeed, the mother, or the child, or perhaps
-both, will probably be his victims.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> you say, if he is an intelligent one
-all will be safe. No; he may perhaps
-know what to do, but will he have the
-woman’s faculty of acquitting himself of
-his duty? all the theory in the universe
-will not do here without the practical part;
-and will the hands of a man in that respect
-ever equal the suppleness, the dexterity,
-the tenderness of a woman’s? once more,
-is a man made for such work?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I say</span> nothing here of the patience so remarkable
-in the true midwife on such trying
-occasions. I will grant, that Monsieur
-l’Accoucheur may, in the view of forty,
-fifty, or a hundred guineas perhaps, have
-enough of it not to slacken an attendance
-on his part, so dangerous, so insignificant,
-and often so pernicious; that it would be
-much better to pay him for his absence: I
-grant then, that he may employ his divine
-hippocratic fingers in such handy-work,
-for so many hours together, without stepping
-into the next room for refreshment;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>or, in short, without hazarding the lives of
-the mother and child, by a remission of actual
-attention and manual assistence. But
-granting all this, can any one, who has a
-respect for truth, a respect for his own
-knowledge and sense of things, a respect,
-in short, for two such precious lives, as
-those of mother and child, not, I may say,
-intuitively, perceive and feel, the impropriety
-and danger of the practice, in such
-cases, being committed to a man preferably
-to a woman?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> would a woman especially, who
-loves herself, who loves the child in her
-womb, and who is capable of thinking at
-all, sacrifice herself and child to so palpable
-an imposition, as that of the pretended
-superiority of the men to the women in
-this point? She cannot even, well, without
-repugnance, submit, nor but for the
-indispensable necessity probably would submit
-to receive such service even from one
-of her own sex, whose tender, soothing,
-congenial softness, must make it more easy
-and supportable. But what can she expect
-from a man’s clumsy, aukward, unnatural,
-disgustful operation, but increase of danger,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>or of pain, perhaps of both; while
-she and her child may not improbably be
-the victims of the rudiments in the art
-of a man by Nature condemned for ever to
-be a novice only, and who, for possibly a
-great hire to assist her, earns it only, as I
-have before observed, by excluding that
-due relief he is himself not capable of giving
-her; earns it by the not preventing
-enough her pains, and even by increasing
-her torments; till at length, not unfrequently,
-some infernal instrument is produced,
-like the dagger, in the fifth act of
-a tragedy, and forms the catastrophe of
-mother, or of child, or of both?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>Of the <span class='fss'>EXTRACTION</span> of the head of the
-<span class='sc'>Fœtus</span>, severed from the <span class='sc'>Body</span>, and
-which shall have remained in the
-<span class='sc'>Uterus</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I agree</span> with our modern writers, that
-there can hardly exist a more vexatious accident,
-than that of the head’s remaining in
-the uterus, after the extraction of the body.
-There are many causes of this effect.
-The death of the child for some time past,
-so that the waters may have had time
-to relax, to macerate the fibres, and thereby
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>to render them incapable of resisting
-any efforts; there will result from thence
-a great difficulty of procuring the total issue
-of the dead fœtus, without dismembering
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Some</span> mis-conformation of parts in the
-mother may also contribute to it, or the
-obliquity of the uterus, where the child is
-brought away by the feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Independently</span> of all these causes,
-this accident is almost always the effect
-of unskilfulness; it is, in truth, so rare,
-that it will scarce ever happen, where the
-delivery is conducted by an accurate and
-able practitioner of the art. If we have
-some examples, that even under skilful
-hands this case has come into existence, a
-thorough examination of it would shew,
-that it was only owing to the cruel necessity
-the practitioner may have been under,
-of being aided by persons not duly qualified
-to afford the least effectual help, or to
-conceive what they were directed to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span><span class='sc'>But</span>, however that may be, the damage
-is not absolutely without remedy.
-The great point is, without loss of time,
-to introduce the hand into the uterus,
-which does not proceed in its contraction,
-but gradually and leisurely enough, to give
-leave for the needful evacuation. It is
-true, that this operation requires a very
-nice skilful hand; with which, where it is
-found, surely no instrument, nor other invention,
-can come into competition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> accident has appeared to occasion
-such severe labors, that many practitioners,
-and Peu, among others, (page 308) have
-advised abandoning the expulsion to Nature,
-rather than to fatigue the patient by
-fruitless and torturous attempts, to the success
-of which such obstacles presented
-themselves, as they looked upon to be unsurmountable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span> (Aphor. 240) is of the
-same opinion, which he thus expresses.
-“When the head of the fœtus shall have
-remained in the uterus, which is no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>longer open enough to give it passage
-forth, it is better to commit the expulsion
-to Nature, than to attempt the extraction
-with too much violence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>These</span> practitioners ground their opinion
-on that Nature, always wise and intent
-on self-preservation, taking more care
-to expel a superfluity, than even to attract
-the needful, often discharges herself,
-and that without violence, if she is but ever
-so little assisted, of all extraneous bodies,
-or other things retained in us against her
-intention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Messieurs</span> de la Motte, Peu, and
-Viardel adduce examples of Nature’s doing
-spontaneously, what some of our later moderns
-are for absolutely doing themselves
-by means of those curious instruments, in
-which they make such a parade of the rare
-inventiveness of their genius, particularly in
-the extraction of a head remaining detached
-in the uterus, on its contracting some
-hours after the unskilful operation of some
-deficient practitioners. In such cases, I say,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>those gentlemen furnish instances of Nature’s
-expelling the superfluous and extraneous
-incumbrance, with only the help of
-some glysters, and other remedies administered
-to the patient.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> though no one can be more intimately
-convinced than I am, that Nature,
-acting for ever upon surer principles than
-Art, possesses resources which she often
-displays in the most desperate exigencies; I
-own, that in this case I am not for totally
-relying upon her beneficence<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c012'><sup>[32]</sup></a>. Here is a
-wrong to redress, not owing to her, but
-to deficient practice; and this wrong can
-hardly be repaired by her alone, unless
-something of a better practice contributes
-to relieve her. That practice is not, however,
-the less recommendable for being plain
-and obvious. The most gentle, the most
-guarded, but withal the most efficacious
-means must be tried, little by little, to insinuate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>the fingers and hand into the uterus,
-how closely contracted soever it may be; for
-yield it will; and then seize the head by the
-mouth, the occipital cavity, or whatever other
-part affords the least slippery hold, without
-waiting whole hours, as do certain ignorant
-or negligent practitioners with respect
-to the after-birth, who give time to the
-uterus to enter into too strong contraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Some</span> authors, and other persons of
-much that depth of practical merit, having
-learned solely by the experience of delaying
-to bring away the after-birth, that,
-to abandon thus the head of a child remaining
-in the uterus, was, at the same
-time, to expose the mother to the highest
-danger, judged it expedient to have recourse
-to auxiliary methods. They have therefore
-employed and directed for this purpose
-such edge-tools, as instruments and
-crotchets of different figures, some to incide
-and separate the bones of the skull;
-others to bring them away piece-meal, or
-all together, according as they should find
-the operation the easiest.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span><a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c012'><sup>[33]</sup></a>
-<span class='sc'>Dyonis</span> and Mauriceau are of opinion,
-that the crotchet should be thrust into
-the most convenient place of the head,
-such as the mouth, one of the orbits of
-the eye, or the occipital cavity; after
-which, you are to endeavour to bring away
-the head by redoubled efforts. But if the
-crotchet slips, as the head is of a round figure,
-and may turn like a ball, they direct
-you to thrust the crotchet into the hole of
-the ear, then giving some one the handle
-to hold, you are to strike another crotchet
-of the same figure in the other ear, and so
-pulling with both crotchets at once, extract
-the head, that is to say, if possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ay</span>, that “<em>if possible</em>,” is well added;
-for with infinite submission to those very
-<em>learned</em> gentlemen, nothing appears to me
-more impracticable; and, I fancy, if they
-had ever made the experiment, they would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>have found it so. What a blind operation,
-with such instruments, and in such a place!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Guillemeau</span> (Treat. of Mid. Book II.
-chap. 17.) remarks, that, in such case, you
-should take the time that the woman has a
-labor-pain to accomplish the extraction by
-this method, that is to say, to snatch that
-moment to extract the head, when you
-<span class='fss'>BELIEVE</span> you have got fast hold of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> if the woman is too badly conformed,
-Dyonis (Book II. page 287) advises
-the use of the edged crotchets to cut
-the head to pieces, and bring away, by
-parts, what you could not do whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span> (Book II. page 287)
-would have it so, that this sort of crooked
-knife should have a long handle; and says,
-that Ambrose Paræus and Guillemeau are
-for a short one to it. Doctors will disagree.
-They all however give their respective
-reasons, and it is indeed hard to say
-which does not give the worst.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> De la Motte, in the like circumstances,
-made use of a bistory, or incision-knife
-inserted in a sheath, open at both
-ends; of which he gives the following account.
-(Observ. 259.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>I introduced</span>, said he, into the uterus,
-my left hand, over which I fixed the
-head; and with my right, I slipped in a
-sheath open at both ends, in which was
-an incision-knife, that I applied to this
-head, and made an opening in it capable
-of admitting my fingers. I widened it
-afterwards, as much as I thought proper,
-and scooped out a part of the brain;
-after which, I got hold sufficient to bring
-away the head, of which the volume
-was considerably diminished.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Ambrose Paræus</span> (Book of Gener.
-chap. 33.) tells us he had, to his great
-regret, a case of this sort fall to his
-share, the head of a fœtus remaining in
-the uterus. To extricate himself from
-which, he proposes much the same methods
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>I have described after Dyonis and
-Mauriceau; and advises, in the same case,
-that if they do not succeed, recourse should
-be had to an instrument, called <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pied de griffon</span></i>,
-(Griffin’s claw) which he says he took
-from the French surgery of d’Alechamp.
-He gives two forms of one, one of two
-branches, another of four. These instruments,
-both the one and the other, are
-made on the principle of the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Speculum Matricis</span></i><a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c012'><sup>[34]</sup></a>,
-of which the use is at once, so detestably
-cruel, and so perfectly unavailing.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>The Griffin’s claw however differs from
-the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">speculum matricis</span></i>, in that the latter
-has its branches elbowing in an angle,
-and that the former has its branches streight
-a-top and at bottom, and arched in the middle,
-and furnished with roughnesses to seize
-and keep hold of the head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Those</span> who will take the trouble to see
-the delineation of these instruments, in
-these authors, will, at the very first glance
-of the eye, be convinced of their unserviceableness.
-So would they be of that of another
-instrument of the like nature, invented
-some years ago, and attributed to a
-surgeon of Rouen, which is composed of two
-crotchets, of which the blades are arched,
-and their extremities claw-footed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> horror which these means of extraction
-naturally inspire, the damage and
-inconveniences inseparable from them,
-notwithstanding all the improvements pretended
-to have been made, have engaged
-several authors to imagine other less dangerous
-expedients. But before I mention
-them, I cannot well avoid taking notice of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>a suggestion of <em>Celsus</em>, if but to warn those
-whom it may concern, not to be too much
-carried away by the authority of a great
-<em>name</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> such a case the method Celsus recommends,
-is, for one of the robustest men that
-may be got, to press strongly upon the
-belly of the patient, with his heavy hands,
-inclining them downwards, so that such a
-pressure may force out the head that shall
-have remained in the uterus. Is not this
-a right <em>learned</em>, and especially a very tender
-expedient?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span> and Amand giving a loose
-to their genius have proposed less perilous
-methods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em><span class='sc'>The</span></em> first tells us, that it came into his
-head, in this case, that a fillet of soft linnen
-might be made, in from of a sling, to
-be slipped over the head, and so bring it
-away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Amand</span> has imagined a silk caul, of net
-work, to wrap the head in. This caul
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>is to be pursed up by means of a string, that
-gathers four ribbons fastened to four opposite
-points of the circumference, or opening
-of this kind of purse, by which the
-head so wrapped up is to be extracted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> Walgrave professor at Copenhagen
-has improved on the first scheme of a fillet,
-by stitching together the two extremities
-of a fillet of linnen of about two yards long
-and four or five inches wide, in which he
-makes three slits lengthways, to seize the
-head more firmly, and hinder the fillet
-from slipping off the rounder parts of it.
-The figure of it may be seen in a Latin
-work intitled, <em>Dissertation upon the separated
-head of a child, and the different ways of
-extracting it from the mother’s womb</em>. By
-Mr. John Voigt, at Giessen, 1749.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Monsieur</span> Gregoire, man-midwife at
-Paris, has disputed with Monsieur Amand
-the glory of this invention of the caul.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> if a reader will deign to consult
-his own reflexion, upon even these last,
-less however injurious means than those of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>iron and steel instruments, he will probably
-conclude, that if it is possible to come
-at the head, so as to fix, for example, a
-caul over it, the same liberty of access will
-serve to do all that can be necessary to secure
-a sufficient hold and purchase for the
-naked hand to bring it away, without such
-aids, as must necessarily suppose a free play
-of the hand in the uterus. I own this
-requires great shreudness of discernment by
-the touch, great expertness, great slight of
-hand and neat conveyance, but these are all
-points of excellence which midwives should
-be exhorted, encouraged, and even obliged
-to acquire: for acquire them they may;
-which is more than the men, generally
-speaking, ever can, and are therefore supplementally
-obliged to have recourse to
-such substitutes to hands, as those horrid
-instruments or silly inventions of theirs,
-with which, even at the best, they can never
-do so well as the women, who understand
-their business, can do without them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Let</span> it also be here remembered, what
-I observed at the beginning of this section,
-that this case of a separated head, I might
-almost say, never, no never comes into existence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>but through some previous neglect,
-error or failure of practice: so that surely
-the preventing it must be rather, preferable
-to the necessity of remedying it, either
-with crotchets, fillets, or even with but
-the hand alone; the trusting to any of
-which may make practitioners so often remiss,
-where remissness can hardly ever be
-but of bad consequence, where no fault,
-in short, can be other than a great one,
-and for which, the innocent patient it is
-that must most commonly be the sufferer,
-both in her own person, and in that of her
-child.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>Of that labor in which the head of the fœtus remains hitched in the passage, the body being entirely come out of the uterus.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>It</span> is here to be observed that though
-the body may be intirely free of the uterus,
-some of the causes deduced in the
-precedent section, may produce impediments
-or obstacles to the issue of the head.
-The head never detaches itself from the body
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>but in that labor where the feet of the
-child come out first, and are too forcibly
-hauled by rash or unskilful hands, by such
-in short as do not know how to disingage
-or remove the let or obstacle to the issue of
-the head, with one hand, while with the
-other they properly support the body of
-the child. As it is then greatly to be wished
-that this accident might never happen,
-I shall, to the means I have already indicated
-for preventing or remedying it, add
-others coincidently with the design of this
-section, to prove the inutility of instruments
-in the case of the title prefixed to it. I
-shall then quote the practical tenets of the
-best authors upon this point, together
-with reflexions, which my own experience
-and practice have suggested to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span> explains this case tolerably
-justly, where he treats of the footling-extraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Care</span> (says he) should be taken that
-the child should have its face and belly
-directly downwards; to prevent, on
-their being turned upwards, the head of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>it being, towards the chin, stopped by
-the os pubis. If therefore it should not
-be so turned, it must be put into that
-posture. This will easily be done if, as
-soon as you begin drawing the child out
-by the feet, you incline and turn it little
-by little, in proportion as your extraction
-of it proceeds, till its heels bear
-in a direct line with the belly of the
-mother,”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>[<em>Here I must beg leave to interrupt Mr.
-Mauriceau, to observe, that it is not enough to
-have hold of the child’s feet to begin turning
-it: but the breech must have come out: then,
-if it is not well turned, by placing one hand on
-the belly, and the other on the breech of the child,
-there will be time enough easily to turn it immediately
-and naturally, neither with too much
-precipitation, nor yet too leisurely, not little by
-little, or by slow degrees. This last precaution being
-of no use but to flag an operation, in which
-a delay may be fatal to the child, without any
-service to the mother, it only keeping her the
-longer in pain.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>There</span> are (he goes on) however
-children with so large a head, that it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>remains stopped in the passage after the
-body is intirely got out, notwithstanding
-all the precautions that can be used to
-avoid it. In this case, you must not
-stand amusing yourself with so much as
-attempting to bring the child away by
-the shoulders, for sometimes you will
-sooner part the body from the neck, than
-get the child out by this means. But
-while some other person shall pull it by
-the two feet or beneath the knees,”
-[<em>here Monsieur Mauriceau is much out: great
-care should be taken not to have it pulled by
-any one, but purely to give the body of the child
-to be supported by some discret person, while the
-delivery proceeds as the author goes on to describe</em>]
-“the operator will disingage little
-by little the head from between the
-bones of the passage, which he may do
-by sliding softly one or two fingers of
-his left hand into the mouth of the
-child, to disingage the chin in the first
-place, and with his right hand, he will
-embrace the back of the child’s neck,
-above the shoulders, to draw it afterwards,
-with the help of one of the fingers
-of his left hand, employed, as I
-have just observed, in disingaging the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>chin. For it is this part which the most
-contributes to detain the head in the
-passage, whence it cannot be drawn out
-before the chin shall have been intirely
-disingaged. Observe also, that this is
-to be done with all possible dispatch for
-fear the child should be suffocated, as
-would indubitably happen, were he to
-remain any time thus held and stopped:
-because the umbilical chord, which will
-have come out, being turned cold, and
-strongly compressed by the body or by
-the head of the child, remaining too
-long in the passage, the child cannot
-then be kept alive by means of the mother’s
-blood, whose motion is stopped
-in that chord, as well by its cooling
-which coagulates it, as by the compression
-which hinders it from circulating,
-for want of which it is a necessity for
-the child to breathe, which he cannot
-do till his head shall be intirely out of
-the uterus: therefore when once you
-have begun the extraction of the child,
-you must try to procure the total issue of
-it as quick as possible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Monsieur</span> Levret, who has wrote for
-no end on earth but to recommend his <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-tête</span></i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>seizes the occasion of the foregoing
-passage extracted from Mauriceau to tell
-us, page 51, of the first part of his work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span> acknowledges here,
-that there are children who have the
-head so large, as for it to remain stopped
-in the passage, after the body shall
-have been wholly got out, notwithstanding
-all the precautions that can be taken
-to avoid it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>From</span> whence this zealous instrumentarian
-draws the following conclusion.
-“Here (says he) is one of those cases, in
-which my <em>instrument</em> may be of great
-service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> conclusion however does not to
-me at all appear a just one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>First</span>, because Mauriceau, after those
-lines of his, just above quoted by Levret,
-adds immediately the method of practice
-pursuable in this case, to give a good account
-of it without the help of instruments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span><span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, because we are not at all
-to be concluded by what any author says,
-any farther than the truth of things bears
-him out. Mauriceau<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c012'><sup>[35]</sup></a> might have explained
-himself better: he might have said,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>that, in this case, the child should be pushed
-back a little into the uterus, to have the
-freer play for its being more easily disingaged:
-he might have advised, as I have
-before observed, rather a safer method of
-proceeding than what he has done. Mr.
-Levret himself allows this p. 56. Then,
-still with a view to recommend his forceps,
-his <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-tête</span></i>, as being absolutely necessary,
-he continues thus (p. 58.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Though</span> every thing should apparently
-have been done that is above set
-forth, still we are not always so happy
-as to accomplish the delivery. It sometimes
-happens, that we cannot get the
-head of the child out of the uterus.
-There are of this two examples in the
-treatise of M. De la Motte, of which I
-do not think it here out of place to furnish
-an extract.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Mr.</span> De la Motte, in his 253d. Observation,
-(goes on M. Levret) relates,
-that in a case in which he was obliged
-to turn the child, in order the better to
-finish the delivery, he turned it very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>easily; that having brought it out as far
-as to the thighs ... it being alive, he
-gave its body a half turn, so as to put its
-face downwards which it had upwards,
-and that then he continued drawing out
-the child as far as to the shoulders and
-neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>After</span> that (says M. De la Motte)
-I gave it some gentle shakes, and even
-pulled it pretty hard, and had several
-tugs at it, to make an end of a delivery
-I had so happily begun; but all was in
-vain. This obliged me, according to
-my usual method, to put my finger into
-its mouth. I was mistaken, for what
-I took to be the mouth, I found to be
-the nape of the neck, and that the neck,
-not having followed the motion of
-the body, was twisted round, and consequently
-the face still remained turned
-upwards, so that the chin it was that,
-being hitched at the os pubis, was the obstacle
-to have been conquered to terminate
-the delivery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr. Levret</span> here observes, there being a
-great probability that, when la Motte
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>turned the body of the child, he was pulling
-it towards him, and that the mother
-was in a labor-throw: for it is well known,
-that then the uterus contracts itself in all
-directions round the body it contains: she
-was then compressing exactly the head of
-the child, which must render it immoveable,
-while he was turning the body.
-These two co-incidences must have contributed
-to twist the neck of the child, consequently
-to make it lose its life. And to
-clench the misfortune, he gave its little
-body to be held by the husband of the
-mother, while he was pushing back the
-head with one hand, and with the other
-disingaging the chin. He told the husband
-at the same time to pull softly; “but
-he hauled with such violence, in the
-hope of easing his wife, that he fell
-with a jerk six foot off the bed, with
-the body of the child, of which the
-head had remained in the uterus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Let</span> us proceed to the second example.
-This is the fact. M. De la Motte
-tells us, that he was called to assist a poor
-woman in labor, in which she had been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>lingering for two days, that this patient
-was a very little woman, and of about
-forty five years of age; the arm of a very
-small child had come out the day before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>I slipped</span> (said he) my hand along
-this little arm, to go in quest of the feet,
-which I presently found, and after having
-closed them together, I brought
-them away out of the uterus. The body
-followed till it came to the neck.
-The patient being on the edge of the
-bed, which was very high from the
-ground, and where there was not room
-enough left to support the child in proportion
-as I drew it out, I was obliged
-to give it a woman to hold, while I proceeded
-gently to disengage the head
-which was stopped in the passage. This
-was no wonder, considering the streightness
-of it, being correspondent to the
-littleness of her size; considering withal
-the advanced age of the patient, the
-length of time since the discharge of the
-waters, during which the uterus being
-irritated by the lingeringness of the labor,
-the presence of the arm in the passage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>had caused an inflammation, consequently
-some induration, all these joined
-to the time that the fœtus had been
-dead, which as before observed was a
-very small creature, were reasons more
-than sufficient to manage very tenderly
-with the child, so as to bring it away
-whole. This (says M. De la Motte)
-induced me to introduce my hand flat
-towards the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">frænum labiorum</span></i>, and to put
-my middle finger into the child’s mouth,
-while my other hand was over its neck.
-My measures being thus taken, I desired
-the midwife, while I should disingage the
-parts, to pull softly, for fear of an accident.
-But she nevertheless, senselessly
-and foolishly, gave it much such a pull,
-as the woman’s husband I have before
-mentioned. This indeed forced out the
-body of the child, but severed from the
-head, which remained in the uterus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> it may be observed that Monsieur
-Levret, by this preamble, on the one hand
-prepares us for the necessity of his instrument,
-by a constant supposition of cases,
-in which, notwithstanding all the precautions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>that may be taken, it happens sometimes
-(as he says) “that it is not possible
-to terminate happily the delivery, nor
-get the child’s head out of the uterus;”
-to support which opinion he produces the
-two examples from De la Motte, which I
-have just before quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>On</span> the other hand, he owns, as it were,
-<em>en passant</em>, that there are means, which he
-even explains of accomplishing successfully
-the deliveries, in such labors, by solely
-the operation of the hands, avoiding the
-faults committed by M. De la Motte, after
-which, as if those faults were any proof
-in favor of his instrument, he concludes,
-that, “if through any cause whatever,
-this case was not to be got over, the
-child should be given to some one
-to be held, with the precautions before
-set forth, and that then the operator
-was to proceed with his instruments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the first example we see that De la
-Motte was guilty of three grievous errors.
-The first, in taking the nape of the neck
-for the mouth: the second, in having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>taken the time of the mother’s throw,
-in which the uterus must have contracted
-round the neck in all directions, to turn
-the body of the child, which contributed
-to twist its neck: thirdly, in having given
-the body of the child to the husband to
-hold, with direction to pull it, even tho’
-he cautioned him to do it gently. He
-ought rather not to have trusted him with
-the body at all, or have absolutely forbid
-him to make the least motion, his part
-being only to support it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the second example, De la Motte
-committed no more than the last fault, in
-trusting a midwife, of whom he might
-not know all the stupidity: but this was
-sufficient to produce that accident; an
-accident which it will not even be hard to
-avoid, with due management, or hands
-skilfully conducted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>With</span> Mons. Levret’s leave (whom I
-ought to honor, since it is from him I
-have chiefly taken what he has said against
-all instruments but his own) I shall then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>say, that it is against the laws of candor,
-or of common sense, to seek, from the
-faults which may be committed in the
-manual practice, either through ignorance,
-inadvertence, or want of circumspection,
-to infer the necessity of instruments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> point here under discussion turns
-intirely upon a child extracted by the feet.
-Now it is extremely rare, that in this case,
-the head does not follow the body. But
-if, in exception to this general rule, the
-head should be stopped in the passage, upon
-proceeding to disengage it, with all the
-proper measures and precautions which I
-have added to those above specified from
-Mauriceau, the sole aid of the hands will
-be full sufficient to accomplish the total
-delivery. But if they were to be ill managed,
-the risk would be evidently great
-of detaching the body from the head; and
-this would change the case from that of
-the head stuck in the passage, to the one
-of the head separated from the body, of
-which I have treated in the preceding section.
-Without then multiplying cases
-without necessity, as the reader will easily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>see, that the first is but the consequence
-of a mis-treatment of the last, so that, by
-the same rule, the right management of
-the last case is a sure prevention of the
-first, I shall only observe, that it might be
-shewn, that capable, well-conducted hands
-are sufficient to guard against both dangers,
-and shewn, even by Mons. Levret’s own
-confession, which he so inconsistently contradicts,
-in favor of his own instrument,
-without offering any thing like a reason
-for such a contradiction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> if the damage in these cases resulting
-from an unskilful use of the hands
-should be urged against me: I answer, in
-the first place, that I am not arguing for
-any thing but what is to be effectuated by
-good practice: my point, is only to establish
-the superiority of skilful hands to the
-use of instruments: and in these cases, I
-aver, that even the damages done by the
-mispractice of defective hands, may be better
-repaired by sufficient ones, than by a
-recourse to instruments. How often too
-are instruments used by such men-operators,
-as are to the full as unfit to manage
-such instruments, bad as they are, as some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>women may be to use their hands! But if
-I could give no better reason for the rejection
-of instruments, than the abuse of
-them, even by the numbers of ignorant superficial
-men-practitioners that employ
-them, I should not expect to be heard;
-and yet the great argument against midwives
-is the ignorance of a few of them:
-though that ignorance of theirs could never
-produce such a multiplicity of horrors, of
-murders, injuries, tortures of mothers,
-such mutilations and massacres of children,
-as the deep learning of the instrumentarians!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>My</span> plea then is much more fair. The
-reader will be pleased to consider, and decide
-upon his own reflexions, whether, it
-is not at least probable, from what has
-been shewn in the cases of the obliquity
-of the uterus, of a head separate from the
-body of the fœtus, or even of that reputed
-most dangerous extremity, the head being
-hitched in the passage, when the whole body
-shall have come out, that every thing
-may be at least as hopefully attempted with
-the hands alone, as with those instruments,
-the use of which forms the sole reason for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>a recourse to men-practitioners; tho’, well
-considered, nothing could be a stronger reason
-against such a recourse than their using
-them. But let us proceed to the next case;</p>
-
-<h4 class='c011'>When the head of the fœtus presents itself foremost, but sticks in the passage.</h4>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>For</span> this section it is, that I have reserved
-to treat incidentally and more at large of
-the objections to be made in general to all
-instruments, and in particular to the principal
-ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Among</span> the severe labors, which give
-much trouble, and exact much patience
-from all parties, from the patient, the
-midwife, and all the assistence, this case
-may challenge a place. It is that, in which
-the head of the child having presented itself
-foremost, and having ingaged itself
-half way, or thereabouts, in the streight
-of the bones of the pelvis, and of the orifice
-of the uterus, the labor-pains remit,
-languish, and the progress of the labor becomes
-suspended. Whether there be any
-mis-conformation of the bones of the pelvis,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>or whether (as our practitioners are
-pleased to express it,) the head of the fœtus
-be too large for the passage, or whether,
-in short, both these causes concur to
-the formation of this obstacle, or exist in
-complication with other circumstances; it
-is, in this case, we may say the head is
-hitched, stuck or ingaged in the passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> De la Motte, book the 3d. chapter
-the 20th, describes this state of the
-fœtus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>When</span> (says he) the head has struck
-into the streight of the passage which,
-at first, affords a great deal less room
-than were to be wished, for its letting
-it pass, the head ingages itself as much
-forward as possible, from the continual
-and violent pains the woman suffers,
-which act upon the child, whose head
-lengthens and flattens, in such a manner,
-to adjust and mould itself to the passage,
-that the hairy scalp becomes quite tumefied,
-so as to make the head look almost
-like a double head, which however
-remains stuck fast between the bones,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>without being able to get out, and only
-ingages itself the more the more it advances ...
-but growing larger as it
-advances, and the aperture which it obliged
-to force diminishing more and
-more, makes it so that the head remains
-at length so jammed in, that it cannot be
-drawn out without diminishing its volume,
-which (as this author says) cannot
-be executed without instruments:
-as I was obliged to do, to accomplish the
-following delivery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> De la Motte then proceeds to tell
-us, that he was called to lay the wife of a
-laborer, the head of whose child was
-hitched in the passage. After having well
-examined the state of the mother and child,
-and ascertained as much as it is possible to
-ascertain the death of the latter——“I
-determined, (says he) to finish the delivery,
-which I did by opening the head
-of the child with my incision-knife, and
-scooped out therewith part of the brain.
-After which, I made use of my hand,
-with which I got hold of the inside of
-the skull, and in an instant drew the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>child out, who appeared to have been
-dead a long time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is not here that, in answer to M. De
-la Motte, I shall stop to propose a more
-gentle and more natural method of giving
-a good account of this case of a hitched
-head, than the cruel and dangerous expedients
-suggested by the instrumentarians:
-I reserve the submission to better judgment
-of my own ideas of practice, in this point,
-till after I shall have quoted the notions of
-more authors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Daventer</span>, p. 343, of his observations,
-supposes to us the case of a head stuck
-in the passage, when the difficulty of the
-labor shall have been increased, as well by
-the ignorance, as by the negligence of the
-practitioner, male or female, that may not
-have given the proper aid in due time, or
-not have foreseen the danger; he moreover
-supposes a complication of obliquity, caused
-by the mis-conformation of the bones in
-the patient. If this embarrassment then
-should not have been foreseen or guarded
-against, he advises the opening of the head
-of the child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>“<span class='sc'>There</span> is, for this no occasion (says
-he) for any instruments of a particular
-make; a common knife guarded as far
-as the point, a pair of scissors, a pointed
-spatula do the business. The opening
-they make may be dilated with the
-fingers, and the brain taken out; after
-which, you seize the head with your
-hand, or with a linnen cloth, and try,
-in this manner, to bring away the body.
-When I say you may draw the head out
-with a linnen cloth, I mean a broad strip
-or fillet cut lengthways of the cloth,
-and hemmed in the borders, or any
-piece of linnen that is fine and strong,
-to be passed round the back of the head,
-and bringing in under the chin, you
-twist the fillet, and draw out the child.”——He
-then adds, that he much esteems
-this method; that those, whose hands are
-<em>small</em> enough to pass this linnen round the
-back of the head, without opening it, are
-not obliged to open it, and have therein a
-great advantage over others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span><span class='sc'>This</span> last method proposed by Daventer
-ought doubtless to be preferably pursued,
-as being the less cruel. But, in the first
-place, it is utterly impracticable. A head
-represented to be hitched or jammed, does
-not leave the least hands that can be imagined
-room or liberty to pass a fillet round
-the back of the head, in order to bring it
-under the chin. But were it even practicable,
-it would be useless, and dangerous: useless,
-in that the hands alone, so introduced,
-might of themselves, little by little, disingage
-this head; dangerous, for that this
-fillet might most likely produce the effect
-that fillets commonly do, strangle the child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span>, to conquer this obstacle
-of the head so stuck, proposes several kinds
-of crotchets, to apply various ways, to the
-head of the child, after having scooped
-out the brain, by means of an opening
-made in the skull. He gives us several
-examples in his observations, but as they
-are absolutely fit for nothing but to inspire
-horror, I shall refrain from specifying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>them. Dyonis is of the same opinion with
-Mauriceau.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Those</span> who will give themselves the
-trouble to peruse the authors who have
-preceded thus, will find, that their method
-differs very little from that of la Motte
-and Mauriceau, which most assuredly kills
-the child if it is not dead: and the ascertainment
-of the death of a child stuck in
-the passage is so difficult, that the ablest
-practitioners cannot answer for not being
-mistaken in it. The reader will please to
-apply here what I set forth, p. 139, and
-following, to which I beg leave to refer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mauriceau</span>, at length, imagined,
-that he had out-done all others, in his invention
-of an instrument he calls a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-tête</span></i>.
-He specifies it in his 26th observation. But
-it is as dangerous as the crotchets, since,
-in order to use it, you must begin by opening
-the skull with an incision-knife, or
-with a sort of steel spike, double-edged,
-which he invented on purpose for the use
-of piercing the child’s scull at the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fontanelle</span></i>,
-to admit a little round plate of steel of another
-instrument.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span><span class='sc'>Monsieur</span> Soumain, and other celebrated
-practitioners, have acknowledged
-the insufficiency of this instrument of
-Mauriceau; but were it good for any thing,
-as to drawing out the head so stuck, it
-would for ever be fatal to those poor unfortunates,
-since it could not fail of killing
-them if they were still alive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>After</span> this we have the tire-tête of
-Mr. Fried, but it is as murderous as that
-of Mauriceau, nor answers the intentions
-which its author had proposed to himself.
-He has therefore himself had the candor
-to condemn it, as may be seen p. 154. in
-a treatise of midwifery, published in 1746,
-by the care of Mr. Boëhmer, who has
-added two dissertations to the treatise on
-this art by Dr. Manningham.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> Menard, in his preface, p. 24, gives
-the figure of an instrument, of which the
-idea seems to have been taken from a twibill,
-with a ducks beak. Mr. Menard
-has endeavoured at perfecting it, by having
-it made angular, shortened, and grooved.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>He has given it a figure of dented
-pinchers, with curve claws. He gives us
-also the figure of an instrument pointed and
-edged, made like the head of a spear,
-which he uses for opening the scull, and introducing
-the pinchers, by means of which
-he draws the child out by the head, as he
-keeps pinching the bones of the scull and
-teguments. By this it is easy to conceive,
-that this instrument has no advantage over
-that of Mauriceau, and has all its inconveniences.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Many</span> other modern practitioners advise
-the use of one or two crotchets, be the
-child dead or alive, or of a tire-tête, made
-in form of strait blades, with spoon-bills,
-to introduce them one after another into
-the uterus; and after having placed them
-on each side of the child’s head, and made
-them meet together, to try the extraction
-with them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> last contrivance, as ingenious as it
-may appear, does not save the child’s life,
-as all these authors would insinuate. For
-these instruments, wherever they are applied,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>must pierce to get a solid hold; without
-which they could serve for nothing
-but to crush or lacerate the teguments; so
-that they should not be used where the
-child is a live one: and even when it’s dead,
-the mother is not absolutely safe from the
-damage they may do, whatever precaution
-the operator may take, or whatever may
-be his dexterity of hand. If one of the
-blades should slip, which frequently happens,
-it will be difficult for him not to do
-the mother a mischief. For as to the child,
-it is very rare that the crotchet does not
-instantly destroy it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Menard</span> has again given us another figure
-of an instrument, to appearance less
-dangerous; but the make of it sufficiently
-denotes its want of power in the operation,
-which is also confirmed by the testimony of
-the most celebrated practitioners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is now (1760) about forty years ago,
-that Palfin, a surgeon of Ghent in Flanders,
-and demonstrator of anatomy in the
-same town, went to Paris, and there presented
-to the academy of sciences an instrument
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>for extracting, by the head, children
-stuck in the passage. Gilles le Doux,
-surgeon of the town of Ypres, put in his
-claim to the invention of this curious instrument,
-which has however been ever
-looked upon as insufficient, and to have
-too much bulge, to allow its introduction
-into a place already so difficult by
-its being blocked up with the body that
-requires the extraction. After at least a
-dozen of corrections of this pretended tire-tête
-or forceps of Palfin, Gilles le Doux
-himself corrected it, so did afterwards Messieurs
-Petit, Gregoire, Soumain, Duffé,
-and I do not know how many more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> short, one may say, that never did
-any instrument undergo more alterations
-than this forceps has done. One of the
-greatest improvements, according to the
-opinion at the time here in England, which
-it received, was that given it by Dr. Chamberlain.
-Chapman, whose treatise on
-midwifery is esteemed, to give this tire-tête
-the greater lustre, tells us, that Dr.
-Chamberlain kept this instrument a long
-while a secret; and that the Dr.’s father,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>his two brothers, and himself, used it with
-good success. Mr. Boëhmer, public professor
-of physic and anatomy at Hall, in
-the Lower Saxony, in the College Royal
-of Frederic, and of the society of curious
-Naturalists, from whom I quote this, calls
-this instrument, I am here speaking of, the
-English tire-tête, or forceps.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>All</span> due honor be to the original author
-of this sublime invention of the forceps,
-whoever was the happy mortal!
-happy, I say, according to Dr. Smellie,
-who calls it a “<em>fortunate contrivance</em>”<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c012'><sup>[36]</sup></a>;
-though perhaps by fortunate, he rather
-means its having been so to himself. For
-hitherto, in all truth, I must own, that I
-do not find, even by the most exagerated
-accounts of the learned men-midwives,
-that those poor instruments of God’s making,
-the women’s fingers, would not much
-better, and much safer, do every thing
-that is pretended to be done by that same
-boasted instrument, or that can be done
-by any other human means.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span><span class='sc'>But</span> let us suppose for an instant, what
-both my love and knowledge of the truth
-would hinder me from granting, that instruments
-are at some times, and in some
-sort necessary: in what case is it that they
-are necessary? this is what hitherto I do
-not know. And which instrument is it
-that a man-midwife must use? that is
-what I yet know less: nor do I believe
-there is any practitioner so presumptuously
-silly, as to admit any particular one, as
-the only one universally received and approved.
-It will perhaps be said, that according
-to the circumstances, each practitioner
-will, out of his bag of hard-ware,
-pick out that which will be fit for the
-occasion. But then, a waggon would not
-carry their whole armory, to calculate
-not only according to the various alterations
-made, if but in the forceps, by whim,
-desire of getting a name, or of increasing
-practice, but according to the various exigencies
-and circumstances to which the
-form of the instrument ought to be peculiarly
-adjusted. And upon every occasion,
-there is not the time for inventing, directing,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>or making a new instrument. But
-if it is said, that for want of such exactness,
-the general make of an instrument must
-do, in <em>all</em> cases: that general make is not
-at least to be looked for in any of the kinds
-I have already quoted, by which such
-numbers of women and children must have
-been tortured or sacrificed, before they
-were exploded and given up, as good for
-nothing or insufficient, even by the men-practitioners
-themselves, who however substituted
-no others to them but what were
-rarely less exceptionable. They were only
-newer. Let us then now proceed to pass
-in a summary review the later and pretended
-improvements of this prodigious invention
-of the forceps, and candidly examine
-the validity of their claim over the women’s
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> Rathlaw, a famous surgeon of Holland,
-in his dissertation on the means, or
-secret of Roger Roonhuysen, which was
-transmitted to his heirs, for extracting (as
-was said) in a very little time, a child,
-whose head should be embarrassed in the
-neck of the uterus, says thus,</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>“<span class='sc'>To</span> me it appeared impossible, to establish
-an instrument, whose use should
-be so certain, so general, so necessary,
-that one could not be a man-midwife
-without having a knowledge of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> same Mr. Rathlaw, in the same
-piece, exclaiming against the use of the
-crotchets has this remark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>No</span> one (says he) can be ignorant of
-it’s being no longer the practice in
-France, or in England, to employ
-crotchets, or murderous tire-têtes (<em>would
-this were truth!</em>) in the deliveries, unless
-for a monstrous or hydrocephalous head,
-when the bulk of it is so enormous,
-that there is no possibility of getting it
-out whole, and especially if the child
-should be dead.... In my time,
-(adds this author) every eminent man-midwife
-had invented different means
-of extricating himself out of the plunge
-of such a case, and their reputation grew
-in proportion to their respective success.
-Yet, hitherto, I do not know, that either
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>at Paris or at London, they have got
-such a length, as to take any particular
-instrument under their protection. Nine
-years ago, (Mr. Rathlaw continues) I
-had made a forceps almost wholly of my
-own invention to extract the fœtus by
-the head, and it often succeeded well
-with me. It was, as to its make, a
-good deal resembling that which Butter
-describes in the Edinburgh-acts, volume
-III. art. 20. But mine (proceeds he)
-seem to possess better proportions, and
-is certainly of a more handy use, than
-those which have hitherto appeared.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Please</span> to observe, that this forceps of
-Mr. Rathlaw is the same as Palfin’s, or rather
-as that of Gilles le Doux, excepting
-only the semilunar hollow cuts in the claws,
-which Monsieur Duffé, a surgeon of Paris,
-had contrived in them. The author says,
-it had <em>often</em> succeeded well with him: he
-does not say <em>always</em>, and why? most probably
-because, when he did so <em>often</em> find it
-of service, that was, only whenever there
-was no sort of occasion for using it at all.
-Do not let it here be imagined, that I force
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>an inference. I give my reason. Supposing
-that such an instrument was necessary
-to every practitioner, the case for his using
-it cannot but rarely occur. Now those
-rare cases where Rathlaw judged his forceps
-necessary, and in which it failed him,
-were in all likelihood the true tests of its
-merit: whereas those other cases, in which
-he <em>often</em> succeeded, may very well be taken
-for such as, with hands and patience,
-might have afforded a better account of
-them, than the silly superfluous quackery
-of employing a forceps, unless indeed his
-hands were too clumsy to attempt it. Otherwise
-the using instruments, where they
-sometimes do the work with so much more
-pain and danger, when the bare hands well
-conducted would do so much better, remind
-me naturally enough of what I have seen a
-pretty master do with a steel-instrument called
-a zig-zag or fruit-tongs, when, to display
-it, or out of wantonness, he has catched
-up fruit with it, that lay fully within
-the reach of his hand. In this piece of
-childishness there is however no mischief;
-whereas the man-midwife, for considerations
-of lucre, dallies with two lives to
-pluck at a fruit that is never, I repeat it,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>never, out of reach of the hand, where
-that steel-instrument of his, a forceps, can
-bring it away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> Rathlaw also tells us of another instrument,
-of which he gives us an account.
-He had got the secret from one Velsen, a
-physician at the Hague. This Velsen had it
-of Vanderswam, who had been a pupil of
-Roonhuysen, the inventor of this pretended
-nostrum, with which he always helped
-the women in labor, snug under the bed-cloaths,
-the better to conceal his miraculous
-secret. He had long promised his
-pupil to discover it to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>In</span> short (says Mr. Rathlaw) one day
-that Roonhuysen was returning from laying
-a woman, a burgomaster of Amsterdam
-came to speak with him: in
-the hurry Roonhuysen was to receive
-him, he hid his nostrum-instrument in
-some apartment. His curious pupil
-(Vanderswam) who had for several years
-been watching such an occasion with great
-eagerness, found it, and took a draught
-of it. This instrument was in a case
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>with two long steel crotchets, and a
-piece of whalebone, in the shape of a
-pipe for smoaking, only shorter, and at
-one of the ends of which was a piece
-of steel, of the shape of an acorn, and
-there was no other instrument in this
-case.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> Mr. Velsen is to be believed, it seems,
-on the one hand, that Roonhuysen made the
-whole science of midwifery consist in the
-knowledge and use of this his instrument,
-since it is there said, that Roonhuysen had
-promised this pupil of his to teach him
-the art of midwifery, but taught him nothing
-of it; and indeed it does not appear,
-that he had hidden any thing from
-Vanderswam but this wonderful instrument,
-with which he used, under the
-bed-cloaths, to smuggle the child through
-the difficult passage<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c012'><sup>[37]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span><span class='sc'>On</span> the other hand again, it may be
-judged, that this pretended marvellous instrument
-was not of effectual enough service
-to its inventor, unless in those cases
-where he might as well have done without
-them, since this very same Roonhuysen
-made use of crotchets, doubtless, when
-he found his instrument fail him. O women!
-women! thus it is that your pretious
-lives, and that of your children (to
-say nothing of the additional tortures you
-are put to, as if those of Nature’s own
-ordering were not already enough) are
-trifled with, in practices being tried upon
-you with such instruments, for which you
-are besides to pay exorbitantly; and all for
-what? To increase the practice of some
-quack, who raises into notice his worthless
-name, or perhaps swells some work of
-his, published by way of advertising himself,
-with the rare boast of having delivered
-you with an instrument, that has only,
-not murdered some of you, though it may
-sometimes perhaps have done you irreparable
-damage, and will have always occasioned
-you an unnecessary increase of pain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>and danger. Is it possible to inculcate this
-truth too often or too strongly to you?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>There</span> are many people, (adds Mr.
-Rathlaw) who make a doubt whether
-this instrument is not the same as that
-with which the three Chamberlains,
-brothers, acquired in Ireland and other
-countries the reputation of being the
-most eminent men-midwives in the
-world. In those circumstances in which
-others employed crotchets, they could,
-by their manual operation, and with less
-labor, hasten the delivery of the women
-in less time, and without the least danger
-to mother and child.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> not unwilling to believe that the
-three brothers, the Chamberlains, might
-pass for the most eminent men-midwives
-in the world, especially in Ireland, where
-before there never had, as I understand,
-been seen any practitioners of midwifery
-but women. As to other countries, these
-brothers might very easily surpass in skill
-those, who knew no gentler way of terminating
-a delivery than by the means of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>crotchets. Therefore it is that our author
-adds, that the Chamberlains only made use
-of the manual operation; he does not add
-of other instruments. It is a great pity
-however, that the surgeons of all countries
-have not yet got hold of, and adopted this
-marvellous secret of Roonhuysen’s, which
-would extricate them so gloriously, in their
-attendance on such difficult labors. They
-would thereby greatly reduce their armory,
-from its complex state at present of variety
-of crotchets, tire-tête, forceps, spoons,
-blunt hooks, pinchers, fillets, lacs, scissors,
-incision-knives, and the rest of their tremendous
-apparatus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>According</span> then to Mr. Rathlaw, the
-forceps of Roonhuysen was the same as that
-of the Chamberlains. How he got the
-secret from them matters not. He only
-changed the figure of the blade-parts. In
-short, our author adds, that to him it seems
-probable, that this instrument has been
-brought to perfection by the continual experience
-of men-midwives, who have successively
-employed it. He pretends himself
-to have made some alterations in it for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>the better, but what they are he is not
-pleased to tells us.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> illustrious Janckius, a great practitioner,
-mentions another corrected forceps
-in his dissertation upon the forceps and
-pinchers, instruments invented by Bingius,
-a surgeon of Copenhagen, and of their
-use in difficult labors, printed at Leipsic,
-1750, page 211. This forceps resembles
-mostly that which the celebrated Monsieur
-Gregoire, senior, first imagined upon the
-model of Palfin’s tire-tête.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Janckius, in the same dissertation,
-tell us, that it would be of service to
-have spoons or blades of the forceps of
-various curvatures, and of different
-lengths, for the shorter the arching, and
-more crooked the blades or spoons are,
-the more difficult and dangerous will the
-application be, according to Chapman
-and Boëhmer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thence</span> this consequence seems derivable,
-that to obviate these difficulties and
-dangers, it would be requisite to have as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>many crooked spoons as there are particular
-cases, as well as to take measure of
-the heads that are stuck, which still would
-imply the introduction of the hand, and, of
-course, the uselessness of instruments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> Levret, in his notes, p. 377, makes
-us observe, that the branches of the forceps
-of Bingius, which are solid, being
-considerably more crooked than the windowed
-forceps, the expansion of their middle
-part must be too wide not to risque, in
-the extraction, the <em>tearing</em> the perinæum,
-which it is no such <em>indifferent</em> matter as not
-to be remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> Janckius had, it seems, that bad
-habit of employing too <em>soon</em> the instrument
-of Bingius, which is extremely dangerous.
-This however, is not seldom the case, when
-Monsieur l’Accoucheur is in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Boëhmer</span>, in a dissertation on this subject,
-thus expresses himself, as to the instrument
-of Levret, and the forceps of
-Bingius.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>“I shall only observe (says that learned
-physician) what Mr. Levret has himself
-very justly remarked, that the application
-of the forceps is dangerous, unless
-the head should have already descended
-low enough into the pelvis for the orifice
-of the uterus to be effaced, and to
-make but one and the same cavity with
-the vagina. This counsel is essential for
-two reasons;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>First</span>, for fear of hurting the orifice
-of the uterus which might easily happen
-without this precaution.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, on account of the instrument
-itself, the blades of which could
-not embrace more than a part, and not
-the whole of the head, which remaining
-too high, they could not consequently
-compress it equally, nor extract it.
-It is for the same reasons (continues he)
-that I rather differ in opinion from the
-celebrated Janckius, who, as soon as the
-waters are discharged, and he perceives
-that the head does not pass, has instantly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>recourse to the instrument.... Some
-time (says he) should be indulged to the
-action of Nature.... There is often
-more success obtained by temporising,
-than by too early a recourse to instruments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Little</span> by little the truth will come
-out. Little by little, even the men-practitioners
-themselves, will be forced to allow,
-that the very least imperfect of the
-instruments are prejudicial and dangerous:
-though perhaps they will not speak out
-the whole truth, and confess that total
-uselessness, which would, in so great a
-measure, imply their own. But common-sense
-will inform whoever consults the
-light of it within himself, that these instruments
-are of a nature so heterogeneous,
-from the service expected from them, so
-impossible to be adapted to the infinitely
-tender texture of the organ of gestation,
-that the very best of them must occasion
-lacerations, especially by the opening of
-the branches, the strain of which bears
-upon the mother’s body, and can never
-but hurt the child, in crushing it’s head;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>as they make that to be done precipitately,
-about which Nature has, for taking her
-own longer time, no doubt a very good
-reason, if there was no more than that one
-of gradually dilating the passage; but there
-are probably many others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Art</span> should aim at imitating Nature:
-now Nature proceeds leisurely, instead of
-which the forceps goes too quick to work.
-The action of it depends on an artificial
-compression, which begins by moulding,
-or rather crushing the child’s head, adaptingly
-to the figure of the pelvis, to facilitate
-its extraction; and though the divine
-providence has in its wisdom provided for
-the preservation of the human species, by
-means of what is called the duramater, and
-by the void of the sutures in the cranium
-of children, the manual compression of the
-instrument is either too strong or too weak.
-If too strong, the child is lost; the head
-being so compressed by the instrument, that
-the brain escapes through the occipital cavity:
-if it is too weak, so that the head
-has not been sufficiently compressed, nor
-it’s bulk competently diminished, in attempting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>the extraction, not only the uterus
-can scarce escape the being wounded,
-but the perinæum and the bladder the being
-torn: and indeed in either case they
-hardly escape, the instruments occasioning
-various inflammations and contusions,
-of the worst consequence, both in the internal
-and external parts, besides the great
-danger of the blades slipping and violently
-hurting the mother, not to mention the
-painful divarications and shocking attitudes
-in order to the introduction.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> instrument used by Mr. Giffard,
-man-midwife, is supposed by Levret and
-others to be nothing more than the windowed
-forceps, of which the use had been
-long before known. But that appears as
-unsatisfactory as others. Mr. Freke too,
-it seems, furnished a new kind of corrected
-forceps, the chief merit pretended of
-which was, that the extremity of one of
-the blades was curved in form of a crotchet,
-and that this extremity might be <em>concealed</em>
-when not employed as a crotchet, and consequently
-helped to avoid the having a multiplicity
-of instruments, as this new-fangled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>one might, upon an occasion, serve
-either for crotchet or forceps.—What a
-prodigious strain of sublime invention is
-this of death and wounds in various shapes!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I find</span> too that Chapman is blamed,
-for that, in his essay on the art of midwifery,
-he very frankly condemns all the
-tire-têtes he had seen employed till his
-time by all other practitioners, but he
-has not, it seems, given a description of
-the one he himself used, nor doubtless the
-method of using it, the one necessarily depending
-on the other. Nor where that
-author speaks of passing a ribbon over
-the head of a child, is he so good as to
-tell you how he managed to get it over.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I must</span> not here omit some mention of
-the forceps, pretended to be improved by
-Dr. Smellie. Upon which, however, I
-shall spare the reader a tedious minute discussion
-of its form, and of its advantages
-and disadvantages, comparatively to other
-forceps calculated for the same use. Levret
-may to the curious furnish sufficient
-satisfaction on that head. He has examined
-it with great exactness and seeming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>candor, even though he prefers his own
-to it. Nothing can be plainer, than its
-being just as insignificant and foolish a
-gimcrack as any of the rest. But there
-is one particularity, of which Levret takes
-notice, that I cannot well omit mentioning.
-The Dr. has, it seems, whether to
-spare the women the shock of the gleam
-from a polished steel instrument, or, whether
-to defend them from the injury of
-that metalline chill, which is not well to
-be cured by any warming at the fire, covered
-his instrument with leather spirally
-wound round it. Levret upon this concludes
-his remarks with the following
-one. “The ledges or roughness which
-the leather must, <em>besides increasing its bulk</em>,
-create by those its spiral circumvolutions,
-cannot but be such an obstacle to
-the introduction of the instrument,
-as to let it be serviceable only in
-those cases where (N. B.)—one may
-do <em>very well without it</em>. For it is well
-known, than in those cases where recourse
-to it is requisite, the most polished,
-the most smooth instrument often
-finds such great difficulties in its
-intromission, that nothing but a hand,
-<em>consummately</em> expert in the use of this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>instrument<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c012'><sup>[38]</sup></a> can, without damage, remove
-the impediments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Dr.</span> Smellie has, however, himself
-salved one of Levret’s objections to his
-instrument, as to any offensive smell or infection
-that might be contracted by the
-use of it. (Treatise of Mid. p. 291.) “The
-blades of the forceps ought to be <em>new
-covered</em> with stripes of <em>washed</em> leather,
-after they shall have been used, especially
-in delivering a woman suspected
-of having an <em>infectious</em> distemper.” Certainly,
-certainly, not only the Doctor’s
-nine hundred pupils, but all other practitioners,
-that use this famous instrument,
-will do well to observe this injunction. It
-is the very best thing they can do, next to
-never using it at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I come</span> now to the boasted instrument
-of Levret; who is the last, at least that
-I know of, who has invented a new make
-of a tire-tête, or forceps corrected, over
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>all that have appeared since Palfin. He
-gives us, in a book written on purpose to
-recommend it, a minute analysis of it,
-and an ingenious delineation in some pretty
-prints of it. The work is intitled, <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Observations
-sur les causes et les accidens de plusieurs
-accouchemens laborieux</span></cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> to make use of the instrument or
-instruments which Levret recommends,
-requires not only a hand consummately
-dextrous and skilful in the art, but an infinite
-number of perplexing precautions,
-as may be seen, p. 106, and seq. of his
-observations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I will</span> not here undertake a circumstantial
-account, I shall content myself
-with mentioning some of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is here (says our author) a very
-important remark to be made, when
-you are for using this forceps. It is
-absolutely necessary that the orifice of
-the uterus should be, as it were, totally
-effaced or erased, that is to say, that
-the vagina and the uterus should, in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>manner, no longer form other than one
-and the same cavity, from a sort of uninterrupted
-continuity, because, without
-that, there would be a danger of
-getting hold of the orifice of the uterus
-between the head of the child and the
-instrument, which would be extremely
-hurtful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>I ought</span> (continues he) to add, that
-great attention should be given to the
-attenuation of that orifice, for before it’s
-intirely disappearing, it becomes sometimes
-so thin, and so exactly close fitted
-to the child’s head, that, without a
-most scrupulous examination, one might
-commit a mistake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Besides</span> the measures, observations and
-remarks this practitioner urges in that
-place, which require infinite attentions, he
-adds to them the following ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>First</span>, when you introduce the instrument
-you are never sure of being in
-the uterus, but, when, besides the precaution
-I have above recommended, you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>feel that the axis of the instrument, or
-the extremity of the branches, is in a
-kind of vacuum. This sign would I
-own be a very equivocal one, for a person
-that should use this forceps without
-having practised surgery<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c012'><sup>[39]</sup></a>; but so it will
-not be for him, whose sense of the touch
-is habituated to the feeling of instruments
-of different sorts, as they enter
-into empty cavities of vessels or of hollow
-organs, or in short of any cavity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, when by drawing towards
-yourself the instrument, you are
-assured of the preceding sign, you will
-feel a small resistence to a certain degree.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Thirdly</span>, the blades of the instrument
-should suffer themselves to be opened
-out with some sort of ease, and
-what is opened out should not make resistence
-enough for the blades to return
-with any violence to the place whence
-the opening out began.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>“<span class='sc'>Fourthly</span>, the blades in the instrument
-should, as they open wider and wider,
-rather tend to augment the diameter
-of the void of the instrument than
-diminish it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Fifthly</span>, these same blades should,
-in their expansion, go a little depth in
-the vagina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>If</span> the man-midwife, (says Levret)
-perceive, that <em>any</em> of these favorable signs
-should be <em>wanting</em>, he ought to <em>mistrust</em>
-the <em>success</em>, and to have recourse to his
-<em>sagacity</em> for the remedying it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thus</span> far as to the handling this forceps
-of Levret’s, to whom the defectiveness of
-the English and French forceps had inspired
-an idea of providing such a supplement to
-it, from the richness of his own invention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I do</span> not wonder however at no instrument
-pleasing Mr. Levret so well as his
-own. Nothing is more common among the
-instrumentarians, than their disagreement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>about the make of their instruments. Some
-will have their forceps long, others short,
-some strait and flat, others curve: in short,
-there is no adapting the mechanism of it
-to their various fancies, so apt too as they
-are to change. Levret complains bitterly
-of the inability or injustice of the instrument-makers;
-but by what I believe of
-them, very unjustly. The gift of the fault
-is not in the instrument; it is in the use
-to which they are so often put of attempting
-impossibilities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> now let us examine, what surely
-very competent judges have thought of
-this famous new forceps of Mr. Levret,
-which he calls <em>his</em> instrument.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>When</span> the book and instrument were
-presented the Royal Society at London, it
-appears by a quotation inserted by Mr.
-Levret himself, that his instrument was
-allowed to be ingenious enough, but that
-“there was <em>nothing extraordinary in it</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Page</span> the 10th of his preface, he has
-the candor to own, that he does not absolutely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>pretend that success will always attend
-its application, even in the cases he
-points out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Page</span> the 36th, and seq. of his observations,
-after having exploded the forceps,
-and other instruments of the authors who
-have preceded him; and after having described
-the alterations and corrections made
-in the English and French tire-têtes, he
-gives us indeed the better opinion of his,
-by a fair confession of the insufficiency of
-them all without exception, and even of his
-own: by which, however, it is plain, he
-can mean no more than that, imperfect as
-they are, they all are still preferable to the
-hands alone; but the question of this superiority
-is as constantly as it is shamelessly
-begged by him, and all his fraternity of
-instrumentarians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thus</span> however he expresses himself as
-to his own instruments. “This instrument
-is actually, to all appearance, now
-at the very utmost degree of perfection,
-to which it is possible for it to arrive,
-without however having all the perfection
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>that might be wished, for the most
-expert practitioners in the use of it, agree
-in the opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>First</span>, of the difficulty of its introduction
-in certain cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, of its stubbornness as to
-the crossing of the blades.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Thirdly</span>, of its contributing to <em>tear</em>
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fourchette</span></i>, or <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">frænum labiorum</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>[<span class='sc'>Our</span> author is very angry, that Boëhmer,
-who, in his critical objections, opposes
-those his own words to him, has not
-added the subsequent lines.]</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>The</span> correction I have made in this
-instrument (continues Levret) by means
-of the shifting axis, has rendered the
-difficulty of crossing the blades <em>less</em> considerable,
-and the two following reflexions
-may serve <em>greatly</em> to overcome the
-other two inconveniences.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span><span class='sc'>But</span> should it be granted to Levret,
-that the shifting axis somewhat lessens the
-difficulty of crossing the blades of this instrument,
-it would still remain too great
-an one, for all that correction. The reflexions
-he adds, for the overcoming the
-other two inconveniences, carry no conviction
-with them; and indeed he himself
-seems to think so, by his adding afterwards
-(p. 99.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>To</span> obviate this inconvenience of tearing
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fourchette</span></i>, or the perinæum, I
-caused to be made a <em>curve</em> forceps, as to
-any thing else not differing, in its dimensions,
-from the first. I took the idea of
-it from the curve pinchers used in the
-operations of lithotomy. It will be easier
-to conceive, than for me to describe
-the advantage it must gain by it. That
-was not however the only end I proposed
-by it, as all the good practitioners
-at present agree on the <em>small</em> efficacy of
-the common forceps, in the case of a
-head stuck in the passage when the face
-is turned upwards.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span><span class='sc'>It</span> is in consequence of this opinion that
-Levret, in the sequel to his observations,
-p. 301, tells us.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>I could</span> (says he) answer Mr. Boëhmer,
-that all the most eminent men-midwives
-are convinced, that when the
-child presents with the face upwards, or
-turned forwards, that is to say, towards
-the os pubis, and that in this position,
-the head sticks, the forceps commonly
-used can be of <em>no</em> service: I do not (adds
-he) even except the one I have had made
-with a shifting axis. The defectiveness
-of these instruments, in these particular
-cases, sufficiently proves, I should think
-on one hand, that the English forceps
-is not so good as Mr. Boëhmer seems to
-believe; and on the other, I presume,
-he will be convinced, that I am not
-more servilely attached to my own productions,
-than those of others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> insufficiency then of the common
-forceps has given rise to the curve forceps
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>of our author. Here follows what he
-further adds to what I have above (p. 427)
-quoted from page 99 of his work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>The</span> form I have given to my forceps,
-renders it then very useful, since, by
-means of the curve, it lays holds of the
-head with all the efficaciousness that
-can be found in the use of the common
-forceps, employed on the most advantageous
-position that the head can be
-imagined.... Notwithstanding
-all the corrections made in the
-English and French forceps (continues
-the other practitioners) if my instrument
-is compared to all the other forceps it
-will appear;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>First</span>, that it has none of their faults.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Secondly</span>, that it is very feasible
-with it to extract the head of a child
-separated from the body and remaining
-in the uterus. This is so possible, that
-all those who have seen my instrument,
-are unanimously of opinion, that no
-other forceps can do as much.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>“<span class='sc'>Thirdly</span>, with my instrument it
-appears to me possible to assist powerfully
-the getting out the head of a child
-that shall have remained in the uterus,
-the body being entirely come out, but
-of which a part is still in the vagina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Fourthly</span>, my instrument has this
-in common with the ordinary forceps,
-that it can extract a child by the head,
-when this part shall be stuck in the
-passage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> may well be said here, that Mr.
-Levret attributes such excellent qualities,
-and marvellous properties, to that same
-new forceps of his, as ought to immortalize
-his memory, and render his forceps
-universal over the whole earth,—if they
-were but proved. Ay! there lies the difficulty.
-Messieurs Rathlaw, Boëhmer,
-Janckius, and the most notable practitioners
-in England, do not believe a syllable
-of the matter. Even Dr. Smellie, though
-I think he approves the crooked part of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>the forceps, speaks slightly enough of it,
-and has even dared to falsify the inventor’s
-assertion of the ne-plus-ultra of it, by altering
-the form, as he tells us, p. 370.
-“in a manner that renders it more simple,
-more convenient, and less expensive.”
-Mr. Levret cannot then expect
-we shall take these advantages for granted
-upon his own bare assertion, in the blind
-enthusiasm he manifests for this rare production
-of his genius. I do not so much
-as believe, that he was even himself, at
-times, clearly persuaded of its excellence.
-At least he, in several places, appears to
-contradict himself. As it is then greatly
-of use to show into what a maze of errors
-these are capable of falling, who neglecting
-the guidance of judgment in the
-road of truth, wander into the wilds of
-imagination, I shall just point out here
-some of Levret’s, at least, to me, seeming
-inconsistencies with himself, but especially
-with plain reason and common-sense. The
-reader will find the notice I take of them
-far from digressive, serving as they do even
-for connexion, as well as enforcement of
-my arguments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span><span class='sc'>Mr.</span> Levret, p. 161, concludes the first
-part of his observation thus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Nota</span>, some very intelligent persons
-have been pleased to charge me with an
-opinion, which I have never had as to
-<span class='fss'>CURVE FORCEPS</span>: they think, that I
-believe it capable of going into the uterus
-in search of the child’s head when it
-is not ingaged in the orifice: and yet
-I do not advise the use of it, unless in
-those cases where the other (the common
-forceps) is employed, over which
-it has essential advantages.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> the reader will please to observe,
-that all the wonders, just before quoted
-from himself, are reduced only to the cases
-in which it may be advantageously substituted
-to the common forceps. This, by
-the by, is reducing it to less than nothing.
-But how is this consistent with those same
-marvellous excellencies he displayed to us
-a little before, to wit? “<em>It is very feasible
-with it to extract the head of a child separate
-from the body, and remaining in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>uterus.</em>”——And again, “<em>with my instrument
-it appears to me possible, to assist
-powerfully the getting out the head of a
-child that shall have remained in the uterus,
-the body being entirely come out, but of
-which a part is still in the vagina</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> these two cases clearly imply, that
-Mr. Levret’s curve forceps is capable of
-going into the uterus in search of the
-child’s head, even when it is not engaged
-in the orifice: for here the case meant, is
-either that of a head remaining detachedly
-in the uterus, after having been severed
-or torn away from its body: or of a head
-not separated, but remaining in the uterus
-after the body shall have come out, and
-part of it is still in the vagina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>If</span> therefore Mr. Levret’s forceps had the
-advantage over the common forceps, confessedly
-insignificant in these cases, of being
-able to lay hold of these heads, he might be
-somewhat in the right to exalt it as he has
-done. But at present he must be wrong,
-which ever side he takes. The dilemma
-is self-evident. He is in the wrong to deny
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>what he had certainly said. He is in
-the wrong to complain of being taxed
-with an opinion, which his own allegations
-prove he had entertained. I therefore
-refer Mr. Levret from himself to
-himself. If he did not believe, that his
-curve forceps had over all the rest the properties
-he sets forth, why has he so confidently
-affirmed them? and after affirming
-them, why would he hinder us from
-thinking that he believed what he affirmed?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I am</span> here to observe, that if I have
-made use of the terms of “a head not
-<em>separated but remaining in the uterus after
-the body shall have come out, and part of
-it is still in the vagina</em>,” it is purely because
-I would not change any thing in the
-expression of this celebrated instrumentarian.
-It is this exactness of quotation,
-that has made me conform myself to his
-manner of speaking, in my answer upon
-this difficulty. Otherwise, I own, I do
-not apprehend the propriety of his description
-of the case. It surprized me too the
-more, in so intelligent a writer as Mr. Levret,
-that he should represent to us a body
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>come out of the uterus, and yet remaining
-in the vagina; as if, on such an occasion,
-the vagina could be distinguished from
-the orifice of the uterus. It is even stranger
-to me yet in Mr. Levret, for that he himself,
-in a note, p. 106, of his observations
-(by me before quoted) expressly says, that
-“when you are for using this forceps, it
-is absolutely necessary that the orifice
-of the uterus should be, as it were, totally
-erased or defaced;” so that the vagina
-and orifice should be laid into one.
-(See p. 420.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> follows a much more material
-contradiction, rather however to common
-sense than to Levret himself, to which I
-intreat the reader’s particular attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Observations</span>, part the 2d, p. 160.
-Levret gives us the following preliminary
-general precept.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>There</span> is, says he, a general precept
-by which it is established, that a surgeon
-ought never to thrust instruments
-into deep places, without guiding or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>conducting them with the hand, or with
-the extremity of the fingers of that hand
-that does not hold the instrument.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> is then to this general axiom strongly
-dictated by reason, and surely in no case
-more obviously so, than where the exquisitely
-tender texture of the uterus protests
-against committing its safety from the cruellest
-injuries, to the necessarily blind random
-agency of an iron or steel instrument,
-so palpably ungovernable in so remote, intricate,
-and slippery a place by even the
-most skilful hand<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c012'><sup>[40]</sup></a>; it is, I say, in exception
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>to this so salutary general precept, that
-Mr. Levret will have it that there are exceptions,
-and in favor of what, do you
-think, not surely of the poor woman who,
-is to be the subject, or rather the victim of
-the experiment, but of——his most egregiously
-silly <span class='fss'>CURVE FORCEPS</span>! Yes; it is
-by way of trying practices with that same
-instrument, that the patient is liable to be
-<em>spread out</em>, in that delicate attitude which
-I have above, (p. 237) described from
-Levret, to the perusal of whom, for a thorough
-conviction of the perfect insignificance
-of that instrument, or indeed of any
-of that sort, I would recommend even the
-most sanguine in favor of instruments, if
-they would but grant, to their own reason,
-its just prerogative of a previous suspence of
-prejudice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> these cases, however, for the which
-being exceptions to that excellent general
-rule, Levret contends; and, to do him
-justice, contends so auckwardly, that he rather
-provokes pity than indignation, at his
-endeavouring to establish even so pernicious
-an error; let the reader consider within
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>himself the part into which this forceps is
-to be thus blindly thrust, at the risque of
-so many almost inevitable dangers. And
-for what?——In those cases it is either
-possible or not possible to introduce the
-fingers. Where they absolutely cannot be
-insinuated, the introduction of those instruments
-is in all human probability big with
-the worst of mischiefs, where neither hand
-nor fingers can controul the effects of the
-iron or steel: which, consequently, endanger
-more than they can help, and are
-therefore not to be used. But if the hand
-or the fingers can be insinuated, the hand
-or the fingers well conducted will do the
-work without the help of instruments,
-which in this second supposition become
-also useless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> brings me to this case particularly,
-the title of which is prefixed to this
-section, that of a head stuck in the passage,
-which the gentlemen-midwives may perhaps
-second Levret, in maintaining to be
-an exception to that admirable axiom above
-quoted, and maintain it purely, in
-evasion of the conclusion against their miserable
-instruments, which I aver need never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>be resorted to, nor never are, but for
-want of sufficient skill in the manual function
-to terminate such labors without them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I answer</span> then to these instrumentarians,
-that an instrument, even, no more
-dangerous than a probe, would in so tender
-a place as I am treating of, not perhaps be
-quite enough exempt from a possibility of
-doing mischief, to deserve an exception:
-but as to those instruments, which are so
-palpably likely to hurt both mother and
-child, to injure, in short, or even to destroy
-both the mould and the cast, they are
-all of them within the case of exception,
-or rather exclusion. It is then, in knowing
-what to do, and in the faculty of operating
-with the hand according to that
-knowledge, that the art of midwifery principally
-consists. If instruments are deemed
-ingenious, the doing without them is surely
-not less so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> as to the case proposed in this section,
-that of a child’s head stuck in the
-passage, I aver, that it is not absolutely impossible
-to terminate this delivery by the
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span><span class='sc'>I am</span> even ready to demonstrate this
-before any competent judges. I speak by
-experience. I have hitherto executed with
-all desirable success this operation without
-any aid but that of the hand, with a little
-patience and proper assiduity. I have many
-and many a time seen it practised at the
-Hôtel Dieu, and elsewhere. I never in
-my whole course of practice saw sufficient
-reason for attempting so hazardous an extraction,
-as that which is executed by
-means of a tire-tête. Why then those
-needless terrors, those superfluous tortures
-with instruments, to women already in too
-much pain and anguish? care enough could
-not be taken to spare those of the weaker-nerved
-sex in that condition such horrors,
-the very idea of which, to say no more,
-is enough to put them into imminent peril
-of their lives. All the forceps, and the rest
-of the chirurgical apparatus, especially the
-more complex instruments, very justly
-frighten the women, and their friends and
-assistents for them. Their introduction requires
-at once a painful, a shocking, and a
-needless devarication. The patients are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span>put into attitudes capable of making them
-die with apprehension, if not with shame,
-from that native modesty of theirs, which,
-in these cases, may however be pronounced
-rather a wise instinct than a virtue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>How</span> much preferable is the true midwife’s
-practice, who will have oftenest prevented,
-by her knowledge and skill, this
-very situation! That is to say, if she has
-been called in time. She knows how to
-predispose the passages, and by gentle reductions
-to restore Nature to her right road,
-where she has been through mispractice
-driven out of it, or through negligence suffered
-to deviate from it, or not preventively
-watched.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I have</span> never but seen, with respect to the
-uterus in this case, that it was possible to
-insinuate first one finger, then another, and
-little by little the whole hand, not indeed
-a hard hand, as big as a shoulder of mutton,
-the hand of some lusty he-midwife,
-but of a midwife, such as it is commonly
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_442'>442</span><span class='sc'>When</span> Nature does not proceed as could
-be wished in her labor-pains, the point is
-then to husband well the strength of the patient,
-to restore it where it fails, by giving
-her good broths and corroboratives, that
-do not heat, or cooling things, where heating
-ones have been injudiciously administered.
-She is then to lie as composed and
-tranquil as possible; to be cherished, comforted,
-inheartened. There is, humanly
-speaking, no fear but her strength will
-return; her pains must not be irritated,
-nor herself harrassed with ineffectual interference.
-Nature will come to herself
-again: the situation will, by her benign
-energy, change for the better, and become
-favorable enough, for the midwife to be
-able to assist her in the due time with a
-manual operation, that will terminate happily
-her delivery. It is at least, with this
-success, that I have delivered many, who,
-by the unskilfulness of those who had attended
-them, at the beginning of their
-pains, had been reduced to a deplorable
-condition, by their labor lingering some
-for upwards of six days.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_443'>443</span><span class='sc'>In</span> short, it is extremely rare that this case
-of a head stuck in the passage ever happens,
-unless under the hands of unskilful practitioners,
-or of over-dilatory or neglectful midwives,
-who will not have duly attended to the
-prognostics of this event; who will not have
-watched and taken the benefit of the favorable
-critical moment; who give the
-head time to engage itself, or get fast jammed,
-for want of their removing the impediments
-to Nature’s doing the rest, or
-when help has been called or come too
-late. It may also be owing to those who
-hasten too much, who precipitate the women’s
-labor by forcing draughts, that heat,
-burn them up, exhaust their strength, and
-prematurate the coming on of the labor-pains.
-Some practitioners fatigue them,
-with making them walk, or keep them
-up too much.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> when the membranes are not too
-soon pierced and the waters let out, when
-the pains are not provoked, when time is
-given to Nature to form to herself a passage,
-not omitting the precautions I have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_444'>444</span>summarily intimated; when due care is
-taken to procure all possible ease of body
-and mind to the patient; who may
-vary her posture, sometimes lying along,
-sometimes sitting up, or well supported
-when she walks: little by little the head
-will frank itself a passage with the weight
-of the body acting by an innate energy, and
-with a little due assistence of the midwife’s
-art: and with this practical advertence,
-that, in these arduous cases, much may be
-safely left to Nature, but not every thing.
-There are times in which she cannot bear
-neglect, but there are none in which she
-can bear extreme violence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> the reader will not expect I should
-in a treatise, purely calculated to expose
-the abuses of midwifery, attempt to particularize
-either all the contingent cases,
-or all the modes of operation in them.
-That would require a work a-part. I shall
-only then, to the four principal cases, in
-which instruments are so falsely supposed
-necessary, add a summary account of that of
-a <em>pendulous belly</em>, which is not without its
-difficulty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_445'>445</span><span class='sc'>As</span> to a <span class='fss'>PENDULOUS BELLY</span>, madam
-Justine, midwife to the Electress of Brandenbourg,
-remarks, in her Treatise of the
-Art, that she knows, by experience, that
-some children turn upon their heads with
-their feet upwards, in women who have a
-large and prominent abdomen; because,
-says she, they are pitched too much into the
-fore-part of the belly, that is become
-pendulous. But she does not explain the
-consequence of this situation, which however
-does not fail of causing a severe and
-troublesome labor; in that the uterus being
-fallen into the capacity of the hypogastrium,
-and the child being got above
-the os pubis, there it sticks, and the labor-pains
-are ineffectual, if proper assistence is
-not given to Nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> practice which my success on experience
-encourages me to propose is, to
-have the patient lye on her back, the belly
-to be braced upwards with a large linnen-fold
-or roller, to reduce the uterus and
-fœtus to its better position in the capacity
-of the pelvis; but if, notwithstanding that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_446'>446</span>help, the head of the child continues to
-rest on the os pubis, the finger must be insinuated
-between those bones and the head,
-in order to make, it, little by little, retrograde
-into the pelvis towards the coccyx.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> every case then that can be imagined,
-so far as my own experience and observation
-have reached, I am authorized to aver,
-that the gentleness of the manual assistence
-to women is at once more agreeable to Nature,
-and more salutary than the violence
-of the instrumental practice; which not
-only conveys the idea, but the very reality
-of a butchery. While its being sheltered
-under the plausible pretext of tenderness
-and pious regard to the safety of the
-poor women and children, cannot but provoke
-the greater indignation, at seeing vile
-interest trifling thus wantonly with their
-lives, and add to the cruel outrages on the
-human person, the greatest of insults on
-the human understanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>It</span> cannot however have escaped observation,
-that while I am, with the utmost
-regard to truth, endeavouring to recommend
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_447'>447</span>the preference of the hands to instruments,
-there is nothing I mean so little,
-as that some deliveries may not be accomplished
-by instruments, and especially by
-that divine invention of the forceps. What
-I presume to exclaim against, is the needless
-torture to the mother, the needless increase
-of danger to which she and her child both
-are exposed, for the sake of that practice
-being tried upon them, with those instruments,
-when the bare hands would be so
-much more safe and effectual. I could myself,
-no doubt, in many cases, if I could be
-inhuman and wicked enough to dally with
-any thing so sacred as the health or life of
-a woman and child, in some measure, entrusted
-to me, give myself the learned air of
-delivering with a <span class='fss'>CURVE FORCEPS</span>. But
-in the very same cases, though at the hazard
-of being called ignorant for my pains,
-I would always be sure to do it more cleverly,
-less dangerously, less hurtfully, with
-only my hands. So that, without straining
-any comparison, the forceps may deliver
-indeed, but how? Why just as a man
-may, if he chuses it, hobble round St.
-James’s Park, on a pair of those <em>artificial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_448'>448</span>legs</em><a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c012'><sup>[41]</sup></a> called stilts, when one would imagine,
-that the mock-elevation from them could
-scarce atone for their uncouth totteringness,
-and that he might full as well deign
-to use his own <em>natural</em> legs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the slighter cases then, that is to say,
-in those cases, where it is a jest to doubt
-of the hands not being the preferable instrument,
-since they may be truly averred
-to be so even in the most difficult ones, instrumentarians
-commonly go to work, <em>only</em>
-(please to mind that <em>only</em>) with the forceps.
-So that it is <em>only</em> in those slighter
-cases, where, once more nothing is more
-certain than that no instrument is wanted
-at all, that they find matter of triumph over
-their predecessors in theory and practice,
-over common sense, and especially over
-humanity. And this is that amazing, that
-<span class='fss'>FORTUNATE IMPROVEMENT</span>, the superhuman
-invention of the forceps, the philosopher’s
-stone of the modern art of midwifery,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_449'>449</span>found out by the male-practitioners.
-Yet, after all it plainly appears, that
-even themselves do not rely on it in the
-more difficult cases. They are then obliged
-to return to the <em>old</em> crotchet, or the like
-methods, which bad, very bad, and very inferior
-to the hands as they are, never however
-are supposed to be resorted to, without
-an appearance of extremities to afford
-some color, some plea of humanity to employ
-them, in a kind of dernier resort, to
-prevent a greater evil by a less one.
-Whereas, when the forceps is used, the
-cruelty of that torture it cannot but create,
-must be greatly aggravated by the consideration
-of its being perfectly needless. But
-in the case of using either crotchet or forceps,
-or indeed any instruments at all, the
-truth is, that besides the increase of danger
-and pain they bring, to the already too
-much afflicted patients, they defraud them
-of the more efficacious, less painful, and
-especially more safe help of the hands
-alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> instrumentarians all then agree on
-that insufficiency of this precious forceps,
-which occasionally compels their recourse
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_450'>450</span>to the crotchet so detested even by themselves.
-Levret, for example, confesses this,
-p. 24, of the appendix to his observations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>The</span> crotchets (says he) are, generally
-speaking, instruments, the very
-sight of which shocks and terrifies: but
-notwithstanding the repugnance which
-all <em>good</em> men-midwives ought to have
-to the using of them, there are cases in
-which there is no doing without them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Now</span> in these cases, that of the monster
-with two heads<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c012'><sup>[42]</sup></a>, is not meant to be included,
-as Levret himself afterwards explains
-himself. If then there are such cases
-as necessitate a recourse to crotchets, it
-will, I presume, be allowed me, that they
-can be no other than those which render
-the delivery the most laborious. What
-those cases are, I have, from after the instrumentarians
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_451'>451</span>themselves reduced to the
-four capital ones, I have above set forth,
-without reckoning the pendulous belly.
-At least I know of no other situations than
-those, that can produce the very severe labors,
-nor do I believe that the instrumentarians
-know any other, or they would tell
-us so. Now if, in the more difficult of
-those cases, there is no doing without the
-crotchet, what becomes of the prodigious
-merit of the forceps, so insignificant in cases
-of the greatest need, and so superfluous in
-those others, where there being no occasion
-at all for it, it must be the most inhuman
-wantonness to employ it?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Here</span> can you be with too much insistence
-desired to observe the solemn banter,
-in such a matter of life and death too, of
-these kind, tender-hearted modern instrumentarians!
-they are so transported with
-stark love and compassion to the poor women
-and children, that they do not know
-what they are about; they fall into the
-most palpable contradictions, and would
-have even Hippocrates, and the antients,
-appear as so many bloody-minded Cannibals
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_452'>452</span>compared to them. Hippocrates, it
-seems, and the antients, according to the
-best of their apprehension, in points of
-midwifery, prescribed the crotchet, in no
-case however but where the child was
-certainly dead, which, by the by, is next
-to the not prescribing it at all, since the ascertainment
-of that death is scarce not impossible.
-So because they recommended
-this practice in the last necessity, the ingeniousness
-of the modern instrumentarians
-was “<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c012'><sup>[43]</sup></a>stimulated to contrive some <em>gentler</em>
-method of bringing along the head” —— without
-any necessity at all; that is
-to say, in the minor difficulties, for the
-crotchet of the old practice is, to this instant,
-even with them, left in possession of
-the greater ones. Thus was produced the
-forceps, that prodigiously bright refinement
-upon the dull antients, and goes on improving
-without end under the wise heads
-of our gentlemen-midwives. But if the
-modern Genius of arts and sciences has no
-better improvement than this to boast over
-Hippocrates and the antients, may the instinct
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_453'>453</span>of self-preservation defend mothers,
-and, in them, their children, from being
-the trophy-posts of their victorious atchievements!
-may the midwives continue
-in their happy ignorance of their curious
-devices! may they ever preserve a due aversion
-from indeed all instruments whatever!
-for they are all needless and pernicious substitutes
-to the hands. May none of them,
-especially in any labors committed to their
-conduct, prove so criminally false to their
-sacred trust, as through negligence, or
-through an interested designing reliance
-upon instruments, to repair their failures
-or mispractice, slacken their attention to
-their duty, or afford, by their defective
-performance, an excuse, though a fallacious
-one, for resorting to instruments, when
-skilful hands are incomparably more fit for
-a remedy or retrieval!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>I cannot</span> then too ardently wish, for
-the women not to be so cruel to themselves,
-and to their so naturally dear children
-within them, as inconsistently to suffer
-their aim at superior safety, to be the very
-snare that betrays them into the greater
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_454'>454</span>danger, and often worst of consequences,
-from those male-practitioners, to whom
-that aim drives them for recourse; while
-that examination they owe to so interesting
-a point would issue, or deserve to issue,
-in rescuing them from such a shameful
-subjection of body and spirit to a band of
-mercenaries, who palm themselves upon
-them, under cover of their crotchets, knives,
-scissors, spoons, pinchers, fillets, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">terebra
-occulta</span></i>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">speculum matricis</span></i>, all which, and
-especially their <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tire-têtes</span></i>, or <em>forceps</em>, whether
-Flemish, Dutch, Irish, French or
-English, bare or covered, long or short,
-strait or crooked, flat or rounding, windowed
-or not windowed, are totally useless,
-or rather worse than good for nothing,
-being never but dangerous, and often destructive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Nature</span>, if her expulsive efforts are
-but, in due time, and when requisite, gently
-and skilfully seconded by the hands alone,
-will do more, and with less pain than all
-the art of the instrumentarians, with their
-whole armory of deadly weapons. The
-original and best instrument, as well as
-the antientest, is the natural hand. As
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_455'>455</span>yet no human invention comes near it,
-much less excells it: and in that part it is
-that the women have incomparably and
-evidently the advantage over the men for
-the operations of midwifery, in which
-dexterity is ever so much more efficacious
-than downright strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span>, indeed, let every requisite faculty
-for the assistence of lying-in women be
-well considered, and the resulting determination
-cannot but be, that in the common
-labors, where the men themselves
-are either simple by-standers or receivers of
-the child, or operate with the hand only,
-they are the very best of them, not comparable
-to a common midwife, and in those
-cases, in which they pretend the use of instruments
-necessary, hardly better than the
-worst one. So that, not less than justly
-speaking, they are not receivable, either
-as substitutes, or even as supplements to
-midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The</span> art of midwifery then, in its management
-by women, carries with it, in the recommendation
-of order, modesty, propriety,
-ease, diminution of pain and danger, all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_456'>456</span>the marks of the providential care of Nature.
-It is imaged by the incubation of a
-brood-hen, assiduously watching over her
-charge, and tenderly hatching it with her
-genial heat. Whereas the function of
-this art, officiated by men, has ever something
-barbarously uncouth, indecent, mean,
-nauseous, shockingly unmanly and out of
-character: and, above all, of lame or imperfect
-in it. It strongly suggests the idea
-of the chicken-ovens in Egypt, kept by a
-particular set of people, who make a livelihood
-of the secret, which they, it seems,
-ingross of that curious art of hatching of
-eggs by a forced artificial heat: a practice,
-which, like the other refinements of dungbeds
-for the same purpose, or that of committing
-the rearing or education of the
-chickens to<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c012'><sup>[44]</sup></a>“<em>cocks</em>, to <em>capons</em>, or to <em>artificial
-wooden mothers</em>,” may sound indeed
-vastly ingenious; but besides the numbers
-that perish the victims of those experiments,
-many of the productions of such
-methods of hatching are observed to be
-maimed, wanting a leg or a wing, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_457'>457</span>some way damaged or defective. The
-comparison breaks indeed in that, at least,
-the grown hens themselves escape damage,
-which is not often the case of mothers under
-those heteroclite beings the men-midwives;
-or, if they do escape, it is no thanks
-to those operators, but to the prevalence of
-Nature over their pragmatical intervention,
-so fit only to disturb, thwart, or oppose her
-effects, and in every sense to deprive the
-unhappy women that trust them of her
-common benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>But</span> while superior considerations of
-humanity so justly intercede for the mothers,
-while I strenuously contend for the
-preference to be, without hesitation, due
-to the mother over the child, especially in
-that dreadful dilemma, where one must
-be sacrificed to the safety of the other;
-supposing such a dreadful alternative ever
-to exist, which I much doubt, or at least,
-not to exist so often as it is rashly taken
-for granted, and even then, where the effects
-do not always follow the resolution
-taken thereon, since, though the child is
-always certainly lost, the mother is far from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_458'>458</span>always saved, when, by a judicious preventiveness
-in practice, neither of them
-might perhaps have been so much as in
-jeopardy; while, I say, I plead for the
-preferable attention to the mothers, I hope
-no mothers will think me the worse intentioned
-towards them, for giving the lives
-of their children the second place in my
-tender concern for the safety of both.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span> surely never was a time, when
-children more required the intercession of
-humanity in their favor. Mothers can
-speak for themselves. But the poor infants,
-so often precluded, by violence,
-from the pity-moving faculty of their own
-cry, have nothing but the cry of Nature
-to plead for them. A cry, the listening
-to which is prevented by those vain imaginary
-terrors, inspired by designing Art in the
-service of Interest, through which Nature
-is seduced to act against herself, and deliver
-herself up to her greatest enemies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> short, one would imagine, that
-all the rage of cruelty was unchained,
-and let loose against especially those tender
-innocents, born or unborn.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_459'>459</span><span class='sc'>Among</span> the poor, particularly as to
-those infants cast upon the public charity,
-a barbarously premature ablactation, under
-a pretext so easily foreknown to be as false
-as it is fatal, of bringing them up by hand
-for cheapness-sake, has destroyed incredible
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Among</span> the rich, or those able enough
-to pay for the learned murder of their offspring,
-how many of their children, even
-before they have well got hold of life, in
-this, literally speaking as to them, iron
-age, encounter their death or wounds,
-stuck in the brain by a crotchet, or crushed
-by a forceps, to say nothing of their
-being now and then ingeniously strangled
-in the noose of a fillet!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>And</span> those horrors proceed unchecked
-and unexploded, and in what a nation?
-a nation, that values herself upon the distinction
-of profound thinking: a nation
-that, besides that interest she has in common
-with all other well-governed nations,
-to protect and promote population, stands,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_460'>460</span>be it said, in that true spirit of justice,
-which as much disdains to pay a fulsome
-compliment, as good sense ever will
-to receive it, moreover eminently distinguished
-above them all, for producing a
-race of natives, one would think could
-hardly be too numerous, since they are the
-most remarkable in the known world for
-courage, for personal beauty, and for many
-other liberal gifts of Nature, among
-which surely not the least is, that inborn
-spirit of liberty, to which they owe
-the honorable acquisition of so many additional
-advantages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Can</span> it then be too strongly recommended
-to the women especially, at least,
-to examine whether their notion of superior
-safety under the hands of a man, in
-their lying-in, bears upon the solid foundation
-of Nature, or merely on the treacherously
-weak one of a delusive opinion?
-an opinion that owes its existence to
-fears cruelly played upon, and turned
-to account by designing Interest. If
-those then of them who are under the
-force of prejudice, or governed by habit,
-or by both at once, would, on a point
-that concerns themselves and children so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_461'>461</span>nearly, assume liberty enough of mind to
-shake off the dangerous yoke, they would
-undoubtedly find it better and safer to
-listen to that salutary instinct of Nature so
-authorized by reason, which inspires them
-with that repugnance to submit themselves
-in the manner they must do that submit
-themselves to men-midwives, who have
-the impudence to call that repugnance a
-“<em>false modesty</em>:” as if that Modesty could
-not be a true one, a foolish one I am sure
-it could not be, that should murmur at
-being so cruelly sacrificed to such a bubble’s
-bargain as it is, by those innocents, who,
-over-persuaded by a deceitful promise of
-more effectual aid, too often embrace a
-torturous and a shameful death, for which,
-to add ridicule to horror, they are expected
-to pay their executioners larger fees than
-to one of their own sex for a more decent,
-a more safe, and always a less painful delivery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>May</span> the women then, for their own
-sakes, for the sake of their children, cease
-to be the dupes, sure as they are to be in
-some measure the victims of that scientific
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_462'>462</span>jargon, employed to throw its learned dust
-in their eyes, and to blind them to their
-danger or perdition! may they, in short,
-see through that cloud of hard words used
-by pedants, whose interest it is to impose
-themselves upon them: a cloud, which is
-oftener the cover-shame of ignorance, than
-the vehicle of true knowledge, and perhaps
-oftener yet the mask of mercenary
-quackery, than a proof of medical ability!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the writings of the men-midwives
-especially, I dare aver, that, though
-there may be here and there some very
-just theoretic notions, borrowed from able
-physicians and surgeons, nothing is more
-contemptible than most of their practical
-rules; what is tolerable in them being
-most probably got from midwives, but so
-disfigured with their own absurd sophistications,
-that I should heartily pity any
-woman, subjected to have her labor governed
-by such, as should have no better
-guidance than their ridiculous instructions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Then</span> it is that a sensible woman would,
-in defence of her own life, or of any life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_463'>463</span>that she holds dear to her, in the case of
-needing the aid of midwifery, view with
-equal disdain, with equal horror, either
-the rough manly<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c012'><sup>[45]</sup></a> he-midwife, that in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_464'>464</span>the midst of his boisterous operation, in a
-mistimed barbarous attempt at waggery
-or wit, will ask a woman, in a hoarse voice,
-“if she has a mind to be rid of her burthen,”
-or the pretty lady-like gentleman-midwife,
-that with a quaint formal
-air, and a gratious smirk, primming up
-his mouth, in a soft fluted tone, assures
-her, and lies all the while like a tooth-drawer,
-that his instruments will neither
-hurt nor mark herself nor child but a little,
-or perhaps not at all. (See p. 448.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>This</span> last character, if less brutal than
-the other, is not perhaps the least dangerous,
-since the practice being at bottom
-the same, pregnant consequently with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_465'>465</span>same mischief, the gentleness of the insinuation
-gives the less warning, and paves
-the way for the admission of a handling
-not the less rough for the smoothness of
-the address. But is there any such thing
-as polite murder? is mischief the less mischief
-for being perpetrated with an air of
-kindness? well considered it is but the
-more provoking. The male-practitioners
-then are not quite in the wrong, to presume
-as they do upon the weakness of the
-women’s understanding, since they can so
-grossly pass upon them their needless cruelties,
-under so inconsistent and false a color
-as that of a tender compassion. Thus
-to all the rest of the shame to which they
-put them, they add that of so palpable an
-imposition in that flimsy cover of the mean
-interest, which is so probably the real motive
-at bottom of their taking up a function,
-to which they were never called by Nature,
-nor by any necessity, unless, perhaps, of
-their own.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>In</span> the mean time, the truth is, that,
-in vain, would the men, by way of sparing
-the women the terror of their masculine
-figure, upon those delicate occasions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_466'>466</span>of officiating, and to appear the more natural
-in the business, aim at an occasional
-effemination of their dress, manner and air.
-They can never in essentials atone for their
-interested intrusion into an office, so clearly
-a female one, that, if but only as to the
-manual discharge of it, not even the qualifying
-them for the opera, would, perhaps,
-sufficiently emasculate them.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Conclusion</span> of the <span class='sc'>Second</span> and <span class='sc'>Last Part</span>.</h3>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Here</span>, confessing my just apprehensions
-of not having fulfilled the promise of my
-title-page; there will not, I hope, to that
-reproach of my deficient powers in the
-performance, be added the undeserved ones
-of vanity or injustice in the design or conduct
-of my feeble essay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>For</span> as to vanity, or any presumption,
-on my part, of any thing so weak, so unauthoritative
-as my representation, having
-any chance to remove the abuses, not however
-the less existent for that incapacity
-of mine to remove them, my knowledge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_467'>467</span>of the world would alone defend me from
-so ridiculously wild a thought. I am but
-too well aware of the tenaciousness of especially
-false prejudice in most minds, where
-it has once gained entrance, and with
-whom prepossession is ever eleven points
-of the right. I have then purely had in
-view the discharge of that duty, incumbent
-on every member of human society, to oppose
-such errors as appear to be pernicious
-to the good of it. In that light I have beheld
-the growing practice of the instrumentarians,
-and in that sincere belief I have hazarded
-the publication of my sentiments,
-without surely pretending to any authority
-over the opinion of others. That I chearfully
-leave to every one’s reason, who is capable
-of reason. And to write for others
-than the rational, would be only labor deservedly
-lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to injustice, I am, at least, clear of
-that of partiality to my own sex. I grant
-and lament as much as any one the incompetency
-of but too many of the midwives.
-The number of such cannot be too little.
-But then would the banishing them out of
-the practice be preferable to the having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_468'>468</span>them better taught, especially since there
-is nothing but what is so much worse to
-put in their room, men and instruments?
-What occasion too for such a dangerous
-extremity? For as the deficiency is
-evident, so are the causes: which are not only
-the want of sufficient care in the training
-and education of women to this profession,
-but the actual discouragement, which must
-grow every day greater and greater, by the
-encroachments of the instrumentarians,
-whose plea for supplanting them will be
-consequently strengthened by that alarming
-scarcity of capable midwives, which themselves
-will have so much contributed to
-create. These being then the principal
-causes, and well known to be so, the remedies
-are not obscure, nor hard to attain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>A good</span> education especially is of great
-importance, to accomplish what Nature
-has already gone so great a way in, by her
-giving in many respects to the women such
-a superior aptitude for the business. Capable
-midwives would much help to form
-good female pupils; and the lying-in hospitals
-especially might be made highly useful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_469'>469</span>to so desirable an end. But surely as to
-the practical part of midwifery in these
-hospitals, it ought not to be under the direction
-of men, whose interest it should be,
-only to form the women so deficiently, as
-that themselves might be the less unnecessary;
-to form them, in short, more for
-their own service, than for that of the public.
-That temptation being removed, the
-female-practitioners could not receive too
-respectfully from the surgeons lectures or
-instructions, any lights in anatomy relative
-to their theoretic proficiency. But to nothing
-should they be more constantly and
-effectually excited, than to perfect themselves
-in the manual operation; and indeed,
-in general, so to capacitate themselves for
-their function, as to prove and establish the
-perfect inutility of all instruments whatever.
-Nor will it be a difficult task for a
-woman to acquire a superiority in her hands
-to the most boasted of those unnatural substitutes.
-This is the true way of laudably
-disarming the instrumentarians, and of
-thereby depriving them of the only shadow
-of a pretence they have for supplanting the
-women, and invading the female province,
-of which invasion it is so probable, that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_470'>470</span>not the cause they plead, but the pay they
-squint at, is the real motive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>As</span> to the discouragement of proper women
-from applying themselves to the profession,
-it can only cease by the concurring of
-those, on whom the choice out of either
-sex occasionally depends, to restore things
-to their antient channel: and that will
-in course, for their own sakes, follow on
-their ceasing to be imposed upon by the
-false pretences of the men-practitioners.
-But this is a point upon which I am too
-much a party to be heard, though even as
-no more than an advocate, and much less
-as a judge. All I shall then presume to say
-is, that I very readily leave the decision of the
-question to Reason, that inward oracle in
-every one’s breast; an oracle, which, in
-a cause so interesting to human Nature, can
-never return a false answer, where consulted
-by those who deserve to find the
-truth by sincerely seeking it, with a firm
-design to sacrifice to it the poor vanity of
-defending a prejudice, or any other interest
-of the passions. And surely there can hardly
-exist a point of more capital importance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_471'>471</span>to Society, than the determining, what
-however one would imagine not very difficult
-to determine, on which side in this
-profession of midwifery particularly, the
-superiority of auxiliary power may be expected,
-on that, where there is evidently
-a great deal of Nature, assisted with a little
-but a competency of Art, or on that,
-where what there is of Art is most barbarously
-abused, and without any Nature at
-all.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>The END.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_471.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Exod. Chap. vii. and viii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Diod. Sic. Herodotus.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. The Commentator on Boerhave’s Lectures, vol. V.
-p. 252. or §. 694. says, “<em>At Paris women are taken
-into the Hôtel Dieu, fifteen days before their lying-in, at
-the public expence, so that the business of midwifery can
-be no where better learn’d.</em>”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. <em>It is evidently this universal influence of the</em> Uterus
-<em>over the whole animal system, in the female sex, that Plato
-has in view in that his description of it, which Mr. Smellie
-(introd.</em> p. 15<em>) calls</em> odd <em>and</em> romantic, <em>from his not making
-due allowance for the figurative stile of that florid author.
-Thus the diffusion of the energy of the</em> uterus, <em>Plato calls
-its</em> “wandering up and down thro’ the body.” <em>A power
-of activity which, towards conquering the otherwise natural
-coldness of the female constitution, nature would hardly give
-to the</em> uterus <em>merely to excite in women a desire, sanctified
-under due restrictions, by her favorite end, that of propagation,
-if she had not, at the same time, endowed that uterus
-with an instinct, beneficial by its influence in the preservation
-of the issue of that</em> desire. <em>And the real truth is, that there
-is something that would be prodigious, if any thing natural
-could be properly termed prodigious, in that supremely tender
-sensibility with which women in general are so strongly impressed
-towards one another in the case of lying-in. What are
-not their bowels on that occasion? It may not be here quite foreign
-to remark, in support of the characteristic importance
-of the</em> uterus <em>or the</em> womb, <em>that in the antient Saxon language
-the word</em> Man <em>or</em> Mon <em>equally signified one of the
-male or female sex, as</em> Homo <em>in Latin. But for distinction-sake
-the male was called</em> Weapon-man, <em>(not however for
-any offensive weapon or</em> instrument <em>in midwifery;) and the
-female</em> Womb-man, <em>or man with an</em> uterus: <em>from
-whence by contraction the word</em> woman.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Smellie. Treatise of midwifery, p. 339. <em>where it
-appears, that the above dress is reserved for a man-midwife’s
-masquerade-habit in private practice, before ladies, not to
-frighten them; whereas to the poor women in hospitals his
-looking like a butcher, is it seems necessary, with bases and an
-apron; the</em> steel <em>of course.</em> But if it is not too presumptuous
-for me to offer so <em>learned</em> a gentleman as the Dr.
-a hint of improvement for his man-practitioner’s toilette,
-upon these occasions, I would advise, for the younger
-ones, a round-ear cap, with pink and silver bridles,
-which would greatly soften any thing too masculine in
-their appearance on a function which is so thoroughly
-a female one. As to the older ones, a double-clout
-pinned under their chin could not but give them the air
-of very venerable old women.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. <em>If a man happens by great chance to have long taper
-fingers, it is a circumstance so uncommon, that it is proverbially
-said of him, “He has rare</em> midwife’s <em>fingers.”</em> Nor
-was it quite unhumorously observed of one of the founders
-of the sect of instrumentarians in England, remarkable
-for a raw-boned coarse, clumsy hand, that no forceps
-he could <em>invent</em> of iron or steel, being more likely
-to hurt than his fingers, he had, at least, that excuse
-for recommending instruments.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>A la veritê</em> Mauriceau <em>raporte cette mort inopineê à
-une</em> <span class='sc'>Cause occulte</span>, <em>puisqu’il dit expressement que</em> “ce
-fut un de ces fortes de malheurs de la destinée que
-toute la prudence humaine ne peut pas eviter.” <em>C’est
-aussi l’opinion de</em> la Motte. <span class='sc'>Levret</span>, p. 272.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. Levret, p. 269.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. This will doubtless be laid hold of as one proof, that
-midwives have, in cases where they are puzzled, been
-forced to have recourse to men-practitioners: but I have
-no where said, there were not some midwives unequal
-to their business. The sequel will shew, that this most
-probably was one of them, and the case was not much
-mended by the assistent she called in. A little more
-patience, though I confess there is some room to think
-it in this so long lingering case excusably exhausted,
-would have prevented the murder of the child: but as
-the concomitant circumstances are not specified, I cannot
-pretend to determine that point. All I shall say is,
-that there is not hardly one case in a thousand, in which
-nature does not know her own time best, and does not
-take it kindly to be hurried. It has been known, that
-sometimes the quickest deliveries have been the most
-fatal, and the most liable to sudden death, by consequent
-hemorrhages.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. <em>Dr.</em> Smellie <em>has himself</em> (p. 403.) <em>ranked among the
-causes of sudden death to women by violent floodings after delivery
-the following one; “if in separating the</em> placenta <em>the</em>
-accoucheur <em>has</em> scratched <em>or</em> tore <em>the inner surface or membrane
-of the</em> womb.” <em>But if unpared nails, or the rough
-hands of a man, may cause such a dreadful accident, what
-may not be dreaded from iron and steel instruments, blindly
-thrust into parts of a scarce less tender texture than the apple
-of the eye? But of that more hereafter.</em></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Levret’s words, p. 279.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. <em>It is among the smaller mischiefs done to the mother, that
-I here mention my having not unfrequently seen ruptures
-brought on by the practice of men-midwives, upon patients
-in other lyings-in, precedently to the one in which I attended
-them. These ruptures I have sometimes been able to remedy
-by good management in my laying them.</em></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. “Let the <em>forceps</em> be unlocked, and the blade <em>cautiously</em>
-disposed under the cloaths, so as not to be <em>discovered</em>”. Smellie, p. 272.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. See Smellie, p. 307.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. Smellie, p, 291. “When the head presents,
-and <em>cannot</em> be delivered by the labor-pains; when all
-the <em>common methods</em> have been used without success,
-the woman being exhausted, and all her efforts vain;
-and when the child cannot be delivered without such
-<em>force</em> as will <em>endanger</em> the <em>life</em> of the <em>mother</em>, because
-the head is too large, or the <em>pelvis</em> too narrow: it
-then becomes absolutely necessary to open the head,
-and extract with the hand, forceps, or crotchet.
-Indeed this last method formerly was the <em>common</em>
-practice when the child could not be <em>easily</em> turned,
-and is still in use with <em>those</em> who do not know how
-to save the child by delivery with the <em>forceps</em>: for
-this reason their chief care and study was to distinguish,
-whether the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Fœtus</span></i> was dead or alive; and as
-the <em>signs</em> were <em>uncertain</em>, the operation was often delayed
-until the woman was in the most imminent
-danger; or when it was performed sooner, the operator
-was frequently accused with <em>rashness</em>, on the supposition
-that the child <em>might</em> in time have been delivered
-<em>alive</em> by the <em>labor-pains</em>: perhaps he was sometimes
-conscious to himself, of the <em>justice</em> of this <em>imputation</em>,
-although what he had done was with an <em>upright</em>
-intention.”—This last indeed would be too
-uncharitable not to grant.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Smellie, p. 255. “In this case, we find, <em>by</em> experience,
-that, unless the woman has some <span class='fss'>VERY DANGEROUS
-SYMPTOM</span>, the head will in time slide <em>gradually</em>
-down into the <em>pelvis</em>, even when it is too <em>large</em>
-to be <em>extracted</em> with the <em>fillet</em> or <em>forceps</em>, and the
-child be <span class='fss'>SAFELY</span> delivered by the <em>labor-pains</em>, although
-<em>slow</em> and <em>lingering</em>, and the mother seems <em>weak</em>
-and <em>exhausted</em>, provided she be supported with nourishing
-and strengthening cordials.” Now in this
-Dr. Smellie is very right; his wrong consists in not
-making this conclusion more extensive, as that of his
-fellow-practitioners too often does, in fancying or exagerating
-<em>dangerous symptoms</em>: whereas for once that
-nature really occasions them, they are incomparably
-oftener the effects of the operator’s own mispractice:
-this observation I cannot, for the truth and importance
-of it, too often repeat.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. In honor to truth, be it here noted, that a few, and
-very few indeed of the midwives, dazzled with that vogue
-into which the instruments brought the men, to the supplanting
-themselves, attempted to employ them, and
-though certainly they could handle them at least as dextroussly
-as the men, they soon discover’d that they were
-at once insignificant and dangerous substitutes to their
-own hands, with which they were sure of conducting
-their operations both more safely, more effectually,
-and with less pain to the patient.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. At this day archbishop of Cambray.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. By this interest, with respect to the mis-government
-of the infants that fall upon the parish, I do not mean
-such a personal interest, as that the super-intendants of
-the charity put a single farthing into their own private
-pockets, out of the savings, by the with-holding or
-grudging a proper provision for the children, but merely
-the interest of a parish, or the public, in so false and
-inhuman an article of parcimony. A consideration
-which, if that were possible, renders it the more inexcusable
-from the temptation being so much the less.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. I have somewhere read, that brutes have not been
-insensible of this effect, on suckling animals, though even
-of so different a kind from their own, that the most
-mortal enmity naturally existed between them: such
-was the instance, transmitted from Pensylvania, of a
-cat so softened towards a rat, by having accidentally
-given suck to it amongst its own kittens, that it forbore
-exerting towards it its usual hostility to that species.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. The candid reader will please to observe, that in
-giving up so much as I do of the argument from the
-prevalence of fashion, I do not give up a little: since
-I might justly oppose to it the instances of our Royal
-Family, in which we see so many happily living and
-florishing monuments of the midwive’s capacity. <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Accoucheurs</span></i>
-had, I presume, no <em>hand</em> in delivering the
-greatest Lady in this kingdom. The men-midwives
-will perhaps treat this as trifling. But what will they
-say to so victorious a proof in favor of the female-practitioners,
-as that taken from themselves, who, for
-the most part, were obliged to the midwives for their
-ushering them into that world, of which they are so
-much the light and ornament; and out of which world
-they are rather not so gratefully employed in driving
-those, by whose function they were helped into it?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. Pray remark the following directions for the <em>choice</em>
-of a midwife, from Dr. Smellie, p. 448.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She (the midwife) ought to <em>avoid</em> <span class='fss'>ALL</span> <em>reflections</em>
-upon <em>men-practitioners</em>, and when she finds herself
-<em>at a loss</em>, candidly have recourse to their assistence:
-on the other hand, this <em>confidence</em> ought to be <em>encouraged</em>
-by the <em>men</em>, who, when called, instead of openly
-condemning her method of practice (even
-though it should be <em>erroneous</em>) ought to make allowance
-for the weakness of the sex, and rectify what
-is amiss, without exposing her mistakes. This conduct
-will as effectually conduce to the welfare of
-the patient, and operate as a silent rebuke upon the
-conviction of the midwife, who, finding herself
-treated so tenderly, will be more <em>apt</em> to <em>call</em> necessary
-assistence on future occasions, and to consider
-the <span class='sc'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ACCOUCHEUR</span></span> as a <span class='fss'>MAN OF HONOR</span> and a <span class='fss'>REAL
-FRIEND</span>. These gentle methods will prevent that
-calumny, which too often prevail among the male
-and female practitioners; and redound to the <span class='fss'>ADVANTAGE</span>
-of both: for no <span class='sc'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ACCOUCHEUR</span></span> is so
-<em>perfect</em>, but that he may err sometimes, and on such
-occasions he must expect to meet with retaliations
-from those midwives whom he may have roughly
-used.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. As the story is told in Hyginus, it should seem that
-the practice of midwifery at Athens, was, on a season
-interdicted to the women, who, by a fixt resolution to
-die rather than submit to be delivered by the men, procured
-from the Areopagus the repeal of that statute, and
-the saving from imminent condemnation one Agnodice,
-who had dressed herself in men’s cloaths, to elude the
-cognizance of the law. The great practice she had
-obtained by this means had alarmed the physicians, who
-thereon accused her as a seducer of the women: against
-which she easily defended herself by a declaration of her
-sex. But this brought her under the penalty of the law
-against women exercising the midwife’s profession. The
-story imperfectly related in Hyginus, at the same time
-that it does honor to the modesty of the Athenian women,
-that is to say, if modesty is not, according to the
-men-midwives, a false honor, gives room to suspect,
-that the midwives themselves had perhaps occasioned
-the promulgation of so absurd a law. It is well known,
-that<a id='t220'></a> in those antient times, there were for female disorders
-women-physicians in form. Perhaps their encroachments
-on the province of the men, by exercising
-the art of physic in general, might make a restraint necessary,
-which was only so far faulty as that the remedy
-was in this, as it often is in other cases, carried into
-extremes. I would no more justify the women overstepping
-their proper sphere of employment into that
-of the men, than I would the men sinking into that of
-women. They are both reprehensible, both dangerous,
-but assuredly, the last must be the most ridiculous.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. It is from this principle, that, with so fair a field
-for raillery, often not the least forcible of arguments,
-I have, against those who are such advocates for the use
-of <em>anatomy</em> in <em>midwifery</em>, abstained from laying any stress
-on the famous imposition of the Rabbet-woman of Godalmin,
-upon professors of anatomy. I am so far from
-attacking anatomy, that I aver, every good midwife
-ought to know <em>enough</em> of it to assist her practice. This
-would not however constitute her an anatomist, nor is
-it requisite that she should be one.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Il faut d’abord placer convenablement la malade,
-c’est-à-dire, sur le bord de son lit; les cuisses
-élevées et écartées, les pieds rapprochés des fesses, et
-maintenus en cette situation par des aides dont on
-soit sûr.” <em>Levret</em>, <span class='sc'>Utilité du nouveau forceps
-courbe</span>, p. 161.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Si on s’arrêtoit au précepte général, le <em>forceps</em>
-seroit un instrument de pure spéculation et non de
-pratique.” Lev. p. 161.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. The term <em>imaginary</em> is here far from an unjust
-one, and why should not the honor of a deliverance,
-effectuated by Nature, be as well given to a being of flesh
-and blood as to a stone? The virtue of the <em>ætites</em>, or
-Eagle-stone, has currently passed for abridging the pains
-of labor, and accelerating parturition. A French consul
-in Egypt, ordered one of those stones to be tied to
-his wife’s thigh, who was in a lingering labor. The
-stone in this case, more innocent than probably a man-midwife
-would have been, who would have used means
-to hurry the birth, or perhaps have gone to work with
-his <em>forceps</em> at least, suffered Nature quietly to go her
-own pace. What was the consequence? The lady was
-soon after happily delivered, which there is no doubt
-but she would equally have been if a brick-bat had been
-tied to her thigh. But Nature lost the thanks so justly
-due to her: the stone ran away with all her merit; and
-this case was added to the catalogue of the miraculous
-operations of the stone. In how many cases might it
-be said, that the stone here represents the man-midwife,
-if to the stone it was not so much more innocent and
-less dangerous to have a recourse?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. See La Motte, p. 646, of the quarto edition,
-Leyden.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. See La Motte, p. 262. lib. v. chap. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. If these <em>best</em> operators had been examined touching
-their opinion of midwives; they would most probably
-have told you, they were a parcel of poor insignificant
-ignorant creatures.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Dr. Smellie seems to countenance this practice,
-where he says, p. 232. “<em>We have already observed</em>, (p.
-229) <em>that if there is no danger from a flooding, the woman
-may be allowed to rest a little, in order to recover
-from the fatigue she has undergone, and that the uterus
-may in contracting have time to squeeze and separate the
-placenta from its inner surface.</em>”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. It is but fair to observe, that M. De la Motte,
-(Obs. 248) instances, from Peu, two patients perishing
-by the midwife’s trusting to the pure actings of
-Nature in this very case.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. Dyonis in his Treatise, book III. ch. 12. Mauriceau,
-book II. chap. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. This instrument was once as much in vogue, as
-can be supposed of a time, when instruments were
-not so common as they are now. But how much torture
-in vain must it have given before it was discovered,
-that “so far from answering the <em>supposed</em> intention of
-it, namely, to extend the bones of the Pelvis; it
-can serve no other purpose than that of <em>bruising</em> or <em>inflaming</em>
-the parts of the woman.” <span class='sc'>Smellie</span>, p. 296.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Possibly the more modern instruments, which have
-supplanted this now exploded one, under the notion
-of improvement, will, in time be found to be liable to as
-just objection. But in the mean while what lives must
-be lost, what tortures endured, in the experiment!
-How many will have been the victims, women and
-children!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. Even this very Mauriceau allowed, by his brother
-practitioner M. De la Motte, to have been an excellent
-man-midwife, is however very justly animadverted upon
-by him for his weakness in giving into such nonsense,
-as prescribing histeric medicines by way of hastening
-the delivery. His capital receipt was the juice of a Seville
-orange in an infusion of Sena. Let any one imagine,
-what an effect such a laxative potion must have
-on a woman, commonly rather wanting to have her
-strength recruited by proper restoratives, than diminished
-by purges, on so senseless a view. But how many other
-instances might be brought of these same most
-learned men-midwives, making almost as pitiful a figure
-in the character of physicians, as they must for ever do
-in that of manual practitioners of our art! Even the
-works of Daventer, who has such glimpses of true
-theory, prove him not uninfected with a spice of quackery.
-This is generally speaking so true of the men-dabblers
-in practical midwifery, that one would imagine
-the extension of that meanness of theirs, in putting
-their nose into such a function, even to their collateral
-profession, whatever it be, of physician, surgeon,
-chemist or apothecary, was the revenge of Nature, for
-the outrages of their pretended art upon her.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. Page 249, of his treatise of midwifery.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. That is to say, if he touched the woman at all
-with it, and did not sometimes, at least, <em>make believe</em>
-that he delivered her with it though Nature alone should
-have done the work. Sure I am that that piece of
-quackery in him of pretending to hide the instrument,
-might justify such a suspicion, of a less guilt however
-than that of really applying an instrument insignificant
-to any purpose but that of torture in vain.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. How few are there such? consequently how great
-the danger of such instruments, even if they were good
-for any thing, to be introduced into <em>common</em> practice?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. As the practice of midwifery is, properly speaking,
-under no regulation, may not this be too often the case?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. If any one doubts of this, he, in order to settle his
-opinion, needs but to peruse the instructions given by
-Levret, and other instrumentarians, for the use especially
-of the forceps. He will find such obscurity, such
-intrepidity of practices upon flesh not their own, as
-would make one shudder. The very cautions against
-<em>locking in</em> a part of the uterus between the blades of the
-instrument, prove the existence of a danger no caution
-can scarce answer for its being able to avoid. What
-do you think of young or unskilful practitioners thrusting
-up instruments at <span class='fss'>RANDOM</span> into such a place? yet
-Dr. Smellie, p. 288, expressly tells you, there is a case
-in which “<em>The forceps</em> <span class='fss'>MUST</span> <em>be introduced at random</em>.”
-This however may give the practitioner boldness, that
-whatever is his fault, the poor woman it is that is sure
-to suffer for it, and how cruelly!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. “The forceps may be introduced with great <em>ease</em>
-and <em>safety</em>, like a pair of <em>artificial hands</em>, by which the
-head is very <em>little</em> (if at all) <em>marked</em>, and the woman
-very <em>seldom tore</em>.” Smell. p. 257.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. In this case of a monster of two heads, which happens
-so rarely as that it might almost be reputed null
-or of no consideration, <em>once more</em>, it is neither a midwife’s
-business, nor even of one of the common men-practitioners
-of midwifery. Application should be instantly
-made to one of the best and ablest surgeons procurable,
-for reasons too obvious to need specification.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. Smellie, p. 248.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. See Reaumur’s art of hatching domestic fowls, &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. If any of my readers imagine that I have, in my
-objection to the men-midwives, exagerated matters, I
-intreat of them to consider the following quotation from
-a <em>male-practitioner</em>, from Daventer, who endeavoured, as
-much as Nature would allow him, to be a good midwife,
-however he fell short of it. These are his own words
-translated, from p. 11. of the French quarto edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can any thing be more shocking to the mother,
-and to those about her, than to see a man in liquor,
-scarce knowing what he is about, divested of
-all compassion, of all sentiment of humanity, his
-hands <em>armed</em> with a <em>knife</em>, a <em>crotchet</em>, a <em>pair</em> of <em>pinchers</em>,
-or other <em>horrible</em> instruments, come to the <span class='fss'>ASSISTENCE</span>
-of a woman in agonies, begin, for his first
-attestation of skill, by <em>wounding</em> the <em>mother</em>, then go
-on to <em>destroy</em> the <em>child</em>, bring it away piece-meal,
-with exquisite tortures to the woman, and, after all,
-grumble in the notion, that he could not be PAID
-enough for such a fine spot of work? had not such
-better at once take on to be <em>butchers</em> or <em>hangmen</em>, than
-treat thus the image of God, and render the profession
-odious?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Have I any where said any thing <span class='fss'>STRONGER</span> than
-this? Daventer, however, certainly did not mean by it
-to insinuate, that <em>all</em> men-midwives answered intirely
-this description; no, nor I neither. But leaving the
-brutality out of the question, the mischief and mercenariness
-of them all differ perhaps in no very considerable
-degree. Please to remark in the following quotation,
-the <span class='fss'>DOCTRINE</span> and practice of that famous <em>man-midwife</em>
-Peu. “He determines himself, without
-much ceremony, to the <em>breaking</em> a child’s <em>arm</em> or a
-<em>thigh</em>, when he <em>imagines</em> this <em>operation</em> will facilitate the
-delivery, and that, on the <span class='fss'>PRINCIPLE</span> of its being
-<em>easy</em>, to repair such <em>damages</em> of <em>new-born</em> infants. For
-the same reason the luxation of a jaw-bone gives him
-no scruple.” (Translator of Daventer’s Preface.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c003'>
- <li>P. <a href='#t11'>11</a>, changed “at the mercy of these excutioners” to “at the mercy of these
- executioners”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t19'>19</a> and subsequent, changed “womens” to “women’s”. The authors usage was
- inconsistent.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t30'>30</a> and subsequent, changed “it’s” to “its” where possesive was intended. The
- authors usage was inconsistent.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t156'>156</a>, changed “may be reduce” to “may be reduced”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t171'>171</a>, changed “during some lisgering labor” to “during some lingering labor”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t173'>173</a>, changed “sometimes inseparably damaged” to “sometimes irreparably
- damaged”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t175'>175</a>, changed “very uncautions of concealing them” to “very uncautious of
- concealing them”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t208'>208</a>, changed “signs of abborrence” to “signs of abhorrence”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t216'>216</a>, changed “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ames</span>” to “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">âmes</span>”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t220'>220</a>, changed “than in those antient times” to “that in those antient times”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#f25'>237</a>, changed “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">elevées et ecartées, les pieds rapprochés des fesses, et
- maintenus en cette situation par des aides dont on soit sur. Levret, Utilite</span>” to
- “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élevées et écartées, les pieds rapprochés des fesses, et maintenus en cette
- situation par des aides dont on soit sûr. Levret, Utilité</span>”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#f26'>237</a>, changed “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">arrétoit au precepte general</span>” to “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">arrêtoit au
- précepte général</span>”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t241'>241</a>, changed “inaminate things” to “inanimate things”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t246'>246</a>, changed “ballanced by their incompetency” to “balanced by their
- incompetency”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t250'>250</a>, changed “evidently consist less” to “evidently consists less”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t253'>253</a>, changed “they cry down every instrumen of other practitioners” to
- “they cry down every instrument of other practitioners”.
-
- </li>
- <li>P. <a href='#t347'>347</a>, changed “diamatrically opposite” to “diametrically opposite”.
-
- </li>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
-
- </li>
- <li>Footnotes have been re-indexed using numbers and collected together at the end of the
- last chapter.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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