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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Advice to a Mother on the Management of her
+Children, by Pye Henry Chavasse
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Advice to a Mother on the Management of her Children
+
+Author: Pye Henry Chavasse
+
+Release Date: September, 2004 [EBook #6595]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 30, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADVICE TO A MOTHER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Charles Franks, Arno Peters
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+This file was produced from images generously made available by the
+Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions.
+
+
+
+
+
+ADVICE TO A MOTHER
+
+ON THE
+MANAGEMENT OF HER CHILDREN
+AND ON THE
+TREATMENT ON THE MOMENT
+OF SOME OF THEIR MORE PRESSING ILLNESSES
+AND ACCIDENTS
+
+
+BY
+
+PYE HENRY CHAVASSE,
+
+FELLOW OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, FELLOW OF THE
+OBSTETRICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, FORMERLY PRESIDENT OF QUEEN'S COLLEGE
+MEDICO-CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY, BIRMINGHAM.
+
+
+"Lo, children and the fruit of the womb are an heritage and gift that
+cometh of the Lord."
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+This Book has been translated into French, into German, into Polish,
+and into Tamil (one of the languages of India); it has been
+extensively published in America; and is well-known wherever the
+English language is spoken.
+
+The Twelfth Edition--consisting of twenty thousand copies--being
+exhausted in less than three years, the THIRTEENTH EDITION is now
+published.
+
+One or two fresh questions have been asked and answered, and two or
+three new paragraphs have I been added.
+
+PYE HENRY CHAVASSE.
+
+214, HAGLEY ROAD, EDGBASTON,
+BIRMINGHAM, _June_, 1878.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+PART I--INFANCY.
+
+PRELIMINARY CONVERSATION
+ABLUTION
+MANAGEMENT OF THE NAVEL
+NAVEL RUPTURE--GROIN RUPTURE
+CLOTHING
+DIET
+VACCINATION AND RE-VACCINATION
+DENTITION
+EXERCISE
+SLEEP
+THE BLADDER AND THE BOWELS
+AILMENTS, DISEASE, ETC.
+CONCLUDING REMARKS ON INFANCY
+
+
+PART II--CHILDHOOD
+
+ABLUTION
+CLOTHING
+DIET
+THE NURSERY
+EXERCISE
+AMUSEMENTS
+EDUCATION
+SLEEP
+SECOND DENTITION
+DISEASE, ETC.
+WARM BATHS
+WARM EXTERNAL APPLICATIONS
+ACCIDENTS
+
+
+PART III--BOYHOOD AND GIRLHOOD
+
+ABLUTION, ETC.
+MANAGEMENT OF THE HAIR
+CLOTHING
+DIET
+AIR AND EXERCISE
+AMUSEMENTS
+EDUCATION
+HOUSEHOLD WORK FOR GIRLS
+CHOICE OF PROFESSION OR TRADE
+SLEEP
+ON THE TEETH AND GUMS
+PREVENTION OF DISEASE, ETC.
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+ADVICE TO A MOTHER.
+
+
+
+PART I.--INFANCY
+
+
+ _Infant and suckling._--I. SAMUEL
+ _A rose with all its sweetest leaves yet folded._--BYRON.
+ _Man's breathing Miniature!_--COLERIDGE.
+
+
+
+PRELIMINARY CONVERSATION
+
+
+1. _I wish to consult you on many subjects appertaining to the
+management and the care of children; will you favour me with your
+advice and counsel_?
+
+I shall be happy to accede to your request, and to give you the fruits
+of my experience in the clearest manner I am able, and in the simplest
+language I can command--freed from all technicalities. I will
+endeavour to guide you in the management of the health of your
+offspring;--I will describe to you the _symptoms_ of the diseases of
+children;--I will warn you of approaching danger, in order that you
+may promptly apply for medical assistance before disease has gained
+too firm a footing;--I will give you the _treatment_ on the moment; of
+some of their more pressing illnesses--when medical aid cannot at once
+be procured, and where delay may be death;--I will instruct you, in
+case of accidents, on the _immediate_ employment of remedies--where
+procrastination may be dangerous;--I will tell you how a sick child
+should be nursed, and how a sick-room ought to be managed;--I I will
+use my best energy to banish injurious practices from the nursery;--I
+will treat of the means to prevent disease where it be possible;--I
+will show you the way to preserve the health of the healthy,--and how
+to strengthen the delicate;--and will strive to make a medical man's
+task more agreeable to himself,--and more beneficial to his
+patient,--by dispelling errors and prejudices, and by proving the
+importance of your _strictly_ adhering to his rules. If I can
+accomplish any of these objects, I shall be amply repaid by the
+pleasing satisfaction that I have been of some little service to the
+rising generation.
+
+2. _Then you consider it important that I should be made acquainted
+with, and be well informed upon, the subjects you have just named_?
+
+Certainly! I deem it to be your imperative duty to _study_ the
+subjects well. The proper management of children is a vital
+question,--a mother's question,--and the most important that can be
+brought under the consideration of a parent; and, strange to say, it
+is one that has been more neglected than any other. How many mothers
+undertake--the responsible management of children without previous
+instruction, or without forethought; they undertake it, as though it
+may be learned either by intuition or by instinct, or by
+affection. The consequence is, that frequently they are in a sea of
+trouble and uncertainty, tossing about without either rule or compass;
+until, too often, their hopes and treasures are shipwrecked and lost.
+
+The care and management, and consequently the health and future
+well-doing of the child, principally devolve upon the mother, "for it
+is the mother after all that has most to do with the making or marring
+of the man." [Footnote: _Good Words_, Dr W. Lindsay Alexander, March
+1861.] Dr Guthrie justly remarks that--"Moses might have never been
+the man he was unless he had been nursed by his own mother. How many
+celebrated men have owed their greatness and their goodness to a
+mother's training!" Napoleon owed much to his mother. "'The fate of a
+child,' said Napoleon, 'is always the work of his mother;' and this
+extraordinary man took pleasure in repeating, that to his mother he
+owed his elevation. All history confirms this opinion..." The
+character of the mother influences the children more than that of the
+father, because it is more exposed to their daily, hourly
+observation.--_Woman's Mission_.
+
+I am not overstating the importance of the subject in hand when I say,
+that a child is the most valuable treasure in the world, that "he is
+the precious gift of God," that he is the source of a mother's
+greatest and purest enjoyment, that he is the strongest bond of
+affection between her and her husband, and that
+
+ "A babe in a house is a well-spring of pleasure,
+ A messenger of peace and love."--_Tupper_,
+
+I have, in the writing of the following pages, had one object
+constantly in view--namely, health--
+
+ "That salt of life, which does to all a relish give,
+ Its standing pleasure, and intrinsic wealth,
+ The body's virtue, and the soul's good fortune--health."
+
+If the following pages insist on the importance of one of a mother's
+duties more than another it is this,--_that the mother herself look
+well into everything appertaining to the management of her own child_.
+
+Blessed is that mother among mothers of whom it can be said, that "she
+hath done what she could" for her child--for his welfare, for his
+happiness, for his health!
+
+For if a mother hath not "done what she could for her
+child"--mentally, morally, and physically--woe betide the unfortunate
+little creature;--better had it been for him had he never been born!
+
+
+
+ABLUTION
+
+
+3. _Is a new-born infant, for the first time, to be washed in warm
+or in cold water_?
+
+It is not an uncommon plan to use _cold_ water from the first, under
+the impression of its strengthening the child. This appears to be a
+cruel and barbarous practice, and is likely to have a contrary
+tendency. Moreover, it frequently produces either inflammation of the
+eyes, or stuffing of the nose, or inflammation of the lungs, or
+looseness of the bowels. Although I do not approve of _cold_ water, we
+ought not to run into an opposite extreme, as _hot_ water would weaken
+and enervate the babe, and thus would predispose him to disease. Luke
+warm _rain_ water will be the best to wash him with. This, if it be
+summer, should have its temperature gradually lowered, until it be
+quite cold, if it be winter, a _dash_ of warm water ought still to be
+added, to take oft the chill [Footnote: A nursery basin (Wedgwoode
+make is considered the best), holding either six or eight quarts of
+water, and which will be sufficiently large to hold the whole body of
+the child. The baton is generally fitted into a wooden frame which
+will raise it to a convenient height for the washing of the baby.] (By
+thermometer = 90 to 92 degrees.)
+
+It will be necessary to use soap--Castile soap being the best for the
+purpose--it being less irritating to the skin than the ordinary
+soap. Care should be taken that it does not get into the eyes, as it
+may produce either inflammation or smarting of those organs.
+
+If the skin be delicate, or if there be any excoriation or
+"breaking-out" on the skin, then glycerine soap, instead of the
+Castile soap, ought to be used.
+
+4. _At what age do you recommend a mother to commence washing her
+infant either in the tub, or in the nursery basin_?
+
+As soon as the navel string comes away [Footnote: Sir Charles Locock
+strongly recommends that an infant should be washed _in a tub_ from
+the very commencement. He says,--"All those that I superintend _begin_
+with a tub."--_Letter to the Author_.] Do not be afraid of water,--and
+that in plenty,--as it is one of the best strengtheners to a child's
+constitution. How many infants suffer, for the want of water from
+excoriation!
+
+5. _Which do you prefer--flannel or sponge--to wash a child with_?
+
+A piece of flannel is, for the first part of the washing very
+useful--that is to say, to use with the soap, and to loosen the dirt
+and the perspiration; but for the finishing-up process, a sponge--a
+large sponge--is superior to flannel, to wash all away, and to
+complete the bathing. A sponge cleanses and gets into all the nooks,
+corners, and crevices of the skin. Besides, sponge, to finish up with,
+is softer and more agreeable to the tender skin of a babe than
+flannel. Moreover, a sponge holds more water than flannel, and thus
+enables you to stream the water more effectually over him. A large
+sponge will act Like a miniature shower bath, and will thus brace and
+strengthen him.
+
+6. _To prevent a new-born babe from catching cold, is it necessary to
+wash his head with brandy_?
+
+It is _not necessary_. The idea that it will prevent cold is
+erroneous, as the rapid evaporation of heat which the brandy causes is
+more likely to give than to prevent cold.
+
+7. _Ought that tenacious, paste like substance, adhering to the skin
+of a new-born babe, to be washed off at the first dressing_?
+
+It should, provided it be done with a soft sponge and with care. If
+there be any difficulty in removing the substance, gently rub it, by
+means of a flannel, [Footnote: Mrs Baines (who has written so much and
+so well on the Management of Children), in a _Letter_ to the Author,
+recommends flannel to be used in the _first_ washing of an infant,
+which flannel ought afterwards to be burned; and that the sponge
+should be only used to complete the process, to clear off what the
+flannel had already loosened. She also recommends that every child
+should have his own sponge, each of which should have a particular
+distinguishing mark upon it, as she considers the promiscuous use of
+the same sponge to be a frequent cause of _ophthalmia_ (inflammation
+of the eyes). The sponges cannot be kept too clean.] either with a
+little lard, or fresh butter, or sweet-oil. After the parts have been
+well smeared and gently rubbed with the lard, or oil, or butter, let
+all be washed off together, and be thoroughly cleansed away, by means
+of a sponge and soap and warm water, and then, to complete the
+process, gently put him in for a minute or two in his tub. If this
+paste like substance be allowed to remain on the skin, it might
+produce either an excoriation, or a "breaking-out" Besides, it is
+impossible, if that tenacious substance be allowed to remain on it,
+for the skin to perform its proper functions.
+
+8. _Have you any general observations to make on the washing of a
+new-born infant_?
+
+A babe ought, every morning of his life, to be thoroughly washed from
+head to foot, and this can only be properly done by putting him bodily
+either into a tub or into a bath, or into a large nursery basin, half
+filled with water. The head, before placing him in the bath, should be
+first wetted (but not dried), then immediately put him into the water,
+and, with a piece of flannel well soaked, cleanse his whole body,
+particularly his arm pits, between his thighs, his groins, and his
+hams, then take a large sponge in hand, and allow the water from it,
+well filled, to stream all over the body, particularly over his back
+and loins. Let this advice be well observed, and you will find the
+plan most strengthening to your child. The skin must, after every
+bath, be thoroughly but quickly dried with warm, dry, soft towels,
+first enveloping the child in one, and then gently absorbing the
+moisture with the towel, not roughly scrubbing and rubbing his tender
+skin as though a horse were being rubbed down.
+
+The ears must, after each ablution, be carefully and well dried with a
+soft dry napkin, inattention to this advice has sometimes caused a
+gathering in the ear--a painful and distressing complaint, and at
+other times it has produced deafness.
+
+Directly after the infant is dried, all the parts that are at all
+likely to be chafed ought to be well powdered. After he is well dried
+and powdered, the chest, the back, the bowels, and the limbs should be
+gently rubbed, taking care not to expose him unnecessarily during such
+friction.
+
+He ought to be partially washed every evening, indeed it may be
+necessary to use a sponge and a little warm water frequently during
+the day, namely, each time after the bowels have been relieved.
+_Cleanliness is one of the grand incentives to health_, and therefore
+cannot be too strongly insisted upon. If more attention were paid to
+this subject, children would be more exempt from chafings,
+"breakings-out," and consequent suffering, than they at present
+are. After the second month, if the babe be delicate, the addition of
+two handfuls of table-salt to the water he is washed with in the
+morning will tend to brace and strengthen him.
+
+With regard to the best powder to dust an infant with, there is
+nothing better for general use than starch--the old fashioned starch
+_made of wheaten flour_--reduced by means of a pestle and mortar to a
+fine powder, or Violet Powder, which is nothing more than finely
+powdered starch scented, and which may be procured of any respectable
+chemist. Some others are in the habit of using white lead, but as
+this is a poison, it ought _on no account_ to be resorted to.
+
+9. _If the parts about the groin and fundament be excoriated, what is
+then the best application_?
+
+After sponging the parts with tepid _rain water_, holding him over his
+tub, and allowing the water from a well filled sponge to stream over
+the parts, and then drying them with a soft napkin (not rubbing, but
+gently dabbing with the napkin), there is nothing better than dusting
+the parts frequently with finely powdered Native Carbonate of
+Zinc-Calamine Powder. The best way of using this powder is, tying up a
+little of it in a piece of muslin, and then gently dabbing the parts
+with it.
+
+Remember excoriations are generally owing to the want of water,--to
+the want of an abundance of water. An infant who is every morning well
+soused and well swilled with water seldom suffers either from
+excoriations, or from any other of the numerous skin diseases.
+Cleanliness, then, is the grand preventative of, and the best remedy
+for excoriations. Naaman the Syrian was ordered "to wash and be
+clean," and he was healed, "and his flesh came again like unto the
+flesh of a little child and he was clean." This was, of course, a
+miracle; but how often does water, without any special intervention,
+act miraculously both in preventing and in curing skin diseases!
+
+An infant's clothes, napkins especially, ought never to be washed with
+soda; the washing of napkins with soda is apt to produce excoriations
+and breakings-out. "As washerwomen often deny that they use soda, it
+can be easily detected by simply soaking a clean white napkin in fresh
+water and then tasting the water; if it be brackish and salt, soda has
+been employed." [Footnote: Communicated by Sir Charles Locock to the
+Author.]
+
+10. _Who is the proper person to wash and dress the babe_?
+
+The monthly nurse, as long as she is in attendance; but afterwards the
+mother, unless she should happen to have an experienced, sensible,
+thoughtful nurse, which, unfortunately, is seldom the case. [Footnote:
+"The Princess of Wales might have been seen on Thursday taking an
+airing in a brougham in Hyde Park with her baby--the future King of
+England--on her lap, without a nurse, and accompanied only by Mrs
+Brace. The Princess seems a very pattern of mothers, and it is
+whispered among the ladies of the Court that every evening the mother
+of this young gentleman may be seen in a flannel dress, in order that
+she may properly wash and put on baby's night clothes, and see him
+safely in bed. It is a pretty subject for a picture."--_Pall Mall
+Gazette_.]
+
+11. _What is the best kind of apron for a mother, or for a nurse, to
+wear, while washing the infant_?
+
+Flannel--a good, thick, soft flannel, usually called
+bathcoating--apron, made long and full, and which of course ought to
+be well dried every time before it is used.
+
+12. _Perhaps you will kindly recapitulate, and give me further advice
+on the subject of the ablution of my babe_.
+
+Let him by all means, then, as soon as the navel-string has separated
+from the body, be bathed either in his tub, or in his bath, or in his
+large nursery-basin, for if he is to be strong and hearty, in the
+water every morning he must go. The water ought to be slightly warmer
+than new milk. It us dangerous for him to remain for a long period in
+his bath, this, of course, holds good in a ten fold degree if the
+child have either a cold or pain in his bowels. Take care that,
+immediately after he comes out of his tub, he is well dried with warm
+towels. It is well to let him have his bath the first thing in the
+morning, and before he has been put to the breast, let him be washed
+before he has his breakfast, it will refresh him and give him an
+appetite. Besides, he ought to have his morning ablution on an empty
+stomach, or it may interfere with digestion, and might produce
+sickness and pain. In putting him in his tub, let his head be the
+first part washed. We all know, that in bathing in the sea, now much
+better we can bear the water if we first wet our head, if we do not do
+so, we feel shivering and starved and miserable. Let there be no
+dawdling in the washing, let it be quickly over. When he is thoroughly
+dried with warm _dry_ towels, let him be well rubbed with the warm
+hand of the mother or of the nurse. As I previously recommended, while
+drying him and while rubbing him, let him repose and kick and stretch
+either on the warm flannel apron, or else on a small blanket placed on
+the lap. One bathing in the tub, and that in the morning, is
+sufficient, and better than night and morning. During the day, as I
+before observed, he may, after the action either of his bowels or of
+his bladder, require several spongings of lukewarm water, _for
+cleanliness is a grand incentive to health and comeliness_.
+
+Remember it is absolutely necessary to every child from his earliest
+babyhood to have a bath, to be immersed every morning of his life in
+the water. This advice, unless in cases of severe illness, admits of
+no exception. Water to the body--to the whole body--is a necessity of
+life, of health, and of happiness, it wards off disease, it brace? the
+nerves, it hardens the frame, it is the finest tonic in the world. Oh,
+if every mother would follow to the very letter this counsel how much
+misery, how much ill-health might then be averted!
+
+
+MANAGEMENT OF THE NAVEL.
+
+13. _Should the navel-string be wrapped in SINGED rag_?
+
+There is nothing better than a piece of fine old linen rag,
+_unsinged_; when singed, it frequently irritates the infant's skin.
+
+14. _How ought the navel-string to be wrapped in the rag_?
+
+Take a piece of soft linen rag, about three inches wide and four
+inches long, and wrap it neatly round the navel string, in the same
+manner you would around a cut finger, and then, to keep on the rag,
+tie it with a few rounds of whity-brown thread. The navel-string thus
+covered should, pointing upwards, be placed on the belly of the child,
+and must be secured in its place by means of a flannel belly-band.
+
+15. _If after the navel-string has been secured, bleeding should (in
+the absence of the medical man) occur, how must it be restrained_?
+
+The nurse or the attendant ought immediately to take off the rag, and
+tightly, with a ligature composed of four or five whity-brown threads,
+retie the navel-string; and to make assurance doubly sure, after once
+tying it, she should pass the threads a second time around the
+navel-string, and tie it again; and after carefully ascertaining that
+it no longer bleeds, fasten it up in the rag as before. Bleeding of
+the navel-string rarely occurs, yet, if it should do so--the medical
+man not being at hand--the child's after-health, or even his life,
+may, if the above directions be not adopted, be endangered.
+
+16. _When does the navel-string separate from the child_?
+
+From five days to a week after birth; in some cases not until ten days
+or a fortnight, or even, in rare cases, not until three weeks.
+
+17. _If the navel-string does not at the end of a week came away,
+ought any means to be used to cause the separation_?
+
+Certainly not, it ought always to be allowed to drop off, which, when
+in a fit state, it will readily do. Meddling with the navel string
+has frequently cost the babe a great deal of suffering, and in some
+cases even his life.
+
+18. _The navel is sometimes a little sore, after the navel-string
+comes away, what ought then to be done_?
+
+A little simple cerate should be spread on lint, and be applied every
+morning to the part affected, and a white-bread poultice, every night,
+until it is quite healed.
+
+
+NAVEL RUPTURE--GROIN RUPTURE.
+
+19. _What are the causes of a rupture of the navel? What ought to be
+done? Can it be cured_?
+
+(1) A rupture of the navel is sometimes occasioned by a meddlesome
+nurse. She is very anxious to cause the navel-string to separate from
+the infant's body, more especially when it is longer in coming away
+than usual. She, therefore, before it is in a fit state to drop off,
+forces it away. (2) The rapture, at another time, is occasioned by the
+child incessantly crying. A mother, then, should always bear in mind,
+that a rupture of the navel is often caused by much crying, and that
+it occasions much crying, indeed, it is a frequent cause of incessant
+crying. A child, therefore, who, without any assignable cause, is
+constantly crying, should have his navel carefully examined.
+
+A rupture of the navel ought always to be treated early--the earlier
+the better. Ruptures of the navel can only be _cured_ in infancy and
+in childhood. If it be allowed to run on until adult age, a _cure_ is
+impossible. Palliative means can then only be adopted.
+
+The best treatment is a Burgundy pitch plaster, spread on a soft piece
+of wash leather, about the size of the top of a tumbler, with a
+properly-adjusted pad (made from the plaster) fastened on the centre
+of the plaster, which will effectually keep up the rupture, and in a
+few weeks will cure it. It will be necessary, from time to time, to
+renew the plaster until the cure be effected. These plasters will be
+found both more efficacious and pleasant than either truss or bandage;
+which latter appliances sometimes gall, and do more harm than they do
+good.
+
+20. _If an infant have a groin-rupture (an inguinal rupture), can that
+also be cured_?
+
+Certainly, if, soon after birth, it be properly attended to. Consult a
+medical man, and he will supply you with a well-fitting truss, _which
+will eventually cure him_. If the truss be properly made (under the
+direction of an experienced surgeon) by a skilful surgical-instrument
+maker, a beautiful, nicely-fitting truss will be supplied, which will
+take the proper and exact curve of the lower part of the infant's
+belly, and will thus keep on without using any under-strap whatever--a
+great desideratum, as these under-straps are so constantly wetted and
+soiled as to endanger the patient constantly catching cold. But if
+this under-strap is to be superseded, the truss must be made exactly
+to fit the child--to fit him like a ribbon; which is a difficult thing
+to accomplish unless it be fashioned by a skilful workman. It is only
+lately that these trusses have been made without under-straps.
+Formerly the under-straps were indispensable necessaries.
+
+These groin-ruptures require great attention and supervision, as the
+rupture (the bowel) must, before putting on the truss be cautiously
+and thoroughly returned into the belly; and much care should be used
+to prevent the chafing and galling of the tender skin of the babe,
+which an ill-fitting truss would be sure to occasion. But if care and
+skill be bestowed on the case, a perfect cure might in due time be
+ensured. The truss must not be discontinued, until a _perfect_ cure be
+effected.
+
+Let me strongly urge you to see that my advice is carried out to the
+very letter, as a groin-rupture can only be _cured_ in infancy and in
+childhood. If it be allowed to ran on, unattended to, until adult age,
+he will be obliged to wear a truss _all his life_, which would be a
+great annoyance and a perpetual irritation to him.
+
+
+CLOTHING.
+
+21. _Is it necessary to have a flannel cap in readiness to put on as
+soon as the babe is born_?
+
+Sir Charles Locock considers that a flannel cap is _not_ necessary,
+and asserts that all his best nurses have long discarded flannel
+caps. Sir Charles states that since the discontinuance of flannel caps
+infants have not been more liable to inflammation of the eyes. Such
+authority is, in my opinion, conclusive. My advice, therefore, to you
+is, discontinue by all means the use of flannel caps.
+
+22. _What kind of a belly-band do you recommend--a flannel or a calico
+one_?
+
+I prefer flannel, for two reasons--first, on account of its keeping
+the child's bowels comfortably warm; and secondly, because of its not
+chilling him (and thus endangering cold, &c.) when he wets
+himself. The belly-band ought to be moderately, but not tightly
+applied, as, if tightly applied, it would interfere with the necessary
+movement of the bowels.
+
+23. _When should the belly-band be discontinued_?
+
+When the child is two or three months old. The best way of leaving it
+off is to tear a strip off daily for a few mornings, and then to leave
+it off altogether. "Nurses who take charge of an infant when the
+monthly nurse leaves, are frequently in the habit of at once leaving
+off the belly-band, which often leads to ruptures when the child cries
+or strains. It is far wiser to retain it too long than too short a
+time; and when a child catches whooping-cough, whilst still very
+young, it is safer to resume the belly-band." [Footnote: Communicated
+by Sir Charles Locock to the Author.]
+
+24. _Have you any remarks to make on the clothing of on infant_?
+
+A babe's clothing ought to be light, warm, loose, and free from
+pins. (1.) _It should be light_, without being too airy. Many infant's
+clothes are both too long and too cumbersome. It is really painful to
+see how some poor little babies are weighed down with a weight of
+clothes. They may be said to "bear the burden," and that a heavy one,
+from the very commencement of their lives! How absurd, too, the
+practice of making them wear _long_ clothes. Clothes to cover a
+child's feet, and even a little beyond, may be desirable; but for
+clothes, when the infant is carried about, to reach to the ground, is
+foolish and cruel in the extreme. I have seen a delicate baby almost
+ready to faint under the infliction. (2.) _It should be warm_,
+without being too warm. The parts that ought to be kept warm are the
+chest, the bowels, and the feet. If the infant be delicate, especially
+if he be subject to inflammation of the lungs, he ought to wear a fine
+flannel, instead of his usual shirts, which should be changed as
+frequently. (3.) _The dress should be loose_, so as to prevent any
+pressure upon the blood-vessels, which would otherwise impede the
+circulation, and thus hinder a proper development of the parts. It
+ought to be loose about the chest and waist, so that the lungs and the
+heart may have free play. It should be loose about the stomach, so
+that digestion may not be impeded; it ought to be loose about the
+bowels, in order that the spiral motion of the intestines may not be
+interfered with--hence the importance of putting on a belly-band
+moderately slack; it should be loose about the sleeves, so that the
+blood may course, without let or hindrance, through the arteries and
+veins; it ought to be loose, then, everywhere, for nature delights in
+freedom from restraint, and will resent, sooner or later, any
+interference. Oh, that a mother would take common sense, and not
+custom, as her guide! (4.) _As few pins_ should be used in the
+dressing of a baby as possible. Inattention to this advice has caused
+many a little sufferer to be thrown into convulsions.
+
+The generality of mothers use no pins in the dressing of their
+children; they tack every part that requires fastening with a needle
+and thread. They do not even use pins to fasten the baby's
+diapers. They make the diapers with loops and tapes, and thus
+altogether supersede the use of pins in the dressing of an infant.
+The plan is a good one, takes very little extra time, and deserves to
+be universally adopted. If pins be used for the diapers, they ought to
+be the Patent Safety Pins.
+
+25. _Is there any necessity for a nurse being particular in airing an
+infant's clothes before they are put on? If she were less particular,
+would it not make him more hardy_?
+
+A nurse cannot be too particular on this head. A babe's clothes ought
+to be well aired the day before they are put on, as they should _not_
+be put on warm from the fire. It is well, where it can be done, to let
+him have clean clothes daily. Where this cannot be afforded, the
+clothes, as soon as they are taken off at night, ought to be well
+aired, so as to free them from the perspiration, and that they may be
+ready to put on the following morning. It is truly nonsensical to
+endeavour to harden a child, or any one else, by putting on damp
+clothes!
+
+26. _What is your opinion of caps for an infant_?
+
+The head ought to be kept cool; caps, therefore, are unnecessary. If
+caps be used at all, they should only be worn for the first month in
+summer, or for the first two or three months in winter. If a babe take
+to caps, it requires care in leaving them off, or he will catch cold.
+When you are about discontinuing them, put a thinner and a thinner one
+on, every time they are changed, until you leave them off altogether.
+
+But remember, my opinion is, that a child is better _without_ caps;
+they only heat his head, cause undue perspiration, and thus make him
+more liable to catch cold.
+
+If a babe does not wear a cap in the day, it is not at all necessary
+that he should wear one at night. He will sleep more comfortably
+without one, and it will be better for his health. Moreover,
+night-caps injure both the thickness and beauty of the hair.
+
+27. _Have you any remarks to make on the clothing of an infant, when,
+in the winter time, he is sent out for exercise_?
+
+Be sure that he is well wrapped up. He ought to have under his cloak a
+knitted worsted spencer, which should button behind, and if the
+weather be very cold, a shawl over all, and, provided it be dry above,
+and the wind be not in the east or in the north-east, he may then
+brave the weather. He will then come from his walk refreshed and
+strengthened, for cold air is an invigorating tonic. In a subsequent
+Conversation I will indicate the proper age at which a child should be
+first sent out to take exercise in the open air.
+
+28. _At what age ought an infant "to be shortened?"_
+
+This, of course, will depend upon the season. In the summer, the right
+time "for shortening a babe," as it is called, is at the end of two
+months, in the winter, at the end of three months. But if the right
+time for "shortening" a child should happen to be in the spring, let
+it be deferred until the end of May. The English springs are very
+trying and treacherous, and sometimes, in April the weather is almost
+as cold, and the wind as biting as in winter. It is treacherous, for
+the sun is hot, and the wind, which is at this time of the year
+frequently easterly, is keen and cutting I should far prefer "to
+shorten" a child in the winter than in the early spring.
+
+
+DIET
+
+29. _Are you an advocate for putting a baby to the breast soon after
+birth, or for waiting, as many do, until the third day_?
+
+The infant ought to be put to the bosom soon after birth, the
+interest, both of the mother and of the child demands it. It will be
+advisable to wait three or four hours, that the mother may recover
+from her fatigue, and, then, the babe must be put to the breast. If
+this be done, he will generally take the nipple with avidity.
+
+It might be said, at so early a period that there is no milk in the
+bosom; but such is not usually the case. There generally is a
+_little_ from the very beginning, which acts on the baby's bowels like
+a dose of purgative medicine, and appears to be intended by nature to
+cleanse the system. But, provided there be no milk at first, the very
+act of sucking not only gives the child a notion, but, at the same
+time, causes a draught (as it is usually called) in the breast, and
+enables the milk to flow easily.
+
+Of course, if there be no milk in the bosom--the babe having been
+applied once or twice to determine the fact--then you must wait for a
+few hours before applying him again to the nipple, that is to say,
+until the milk be secreted.
+
+An infant, who, for two or three days, is kept from the breast, and
+who is fed upon gruel, generally becomes feeble, and frequently, at
+the end of that time, will not take the nipple at all. Besides, there
+is a thick cream (similar to the biestings of a cow), which, if not
+drawn out by the child, may cause inflammation and gathering of the
+bosom, and, consequently, great suffering to the mother. Moreover,
+placing him _early_ to the breast, moderates the severity of the
+mother's after pains, and lessens the risk of her flooding. A new-born
+babe must _not_ have gruel given to him, as it disorders the bowels,
+causes a disinclination to suck, and thus makes him feeble.
+
+30. _If an infant show any disinclination to suck, or if he appear
+unable to apply his tongue to the nipple, what ought to be done_?
+
+Immediately call the attention of the medical man to the fact, in
+order that he may ascertain whether he be tongue-tied. If he be, the
+simple operation of dividing the bridle of the tongue will remedy the
+defect, and will cause him to take the nipple with ease and comfort.
+
+31. _Provided there be not milk AT FIRST, what ought then to be done_?
+
+Wait with patience; the child (if the mother have no milk) will not,
+for at least twelve hours, require artificial food. In the generality
+of instances, then, artificial food is not at all necessary; but if it
+should be needed, one-third of new milk and two-thirds of warm water,
+slightly sweetened with loaf sugar (or with brown sugar, if the babe's
+bowels have not been opened), should be given, in small quantities at
+a time, every four hours, until the milk be secreted, and then it must
+be discontinued. The infant ought to be put to the nipple every four
+hours, but not oftener, until he be able to find nourishment.
+
+If after the application of the child for a few times, he is unable to
+find nourishment, then it will be necessary to wait until the milk be
+secreted. As soon as it is secreted, he must be applied with great
+regularity, _alternately_ to each breast.
+
+I say _alternately_ to each breast. _This is most important
+advice_. Sometimes a child, for some inexplicable reason, prefers one
+breast to the other, and the mother, to save a little contention,
+concedes the point, and allows him to have his own way. And what is
+frequently the consequence?--a gathered breast!
+
+We frequently hear of a babe having no notion of sucking. This "no
+notion" may generally be traced to bad management, to stuffing him
+with food, and thus giving him a disinclination to take the nipple at
+all.
+
+32. _How often should a mother suckle her infant_?
+
+A mother generally suckles her baby too often, having him almost
+constantly at the breast. This practice is injurious both to parent
+and to child. The stomach requires repose as much as any other part of
+the body; and how can it have if it be constantly loaded with
+breast-milk? For the first month, he ought to be suckled, about every
+hour and a half; for the second month, every two hours,--gradually
+increasing, as he becomes older, the distance of time between, until
+at length he has it about every four hours.
+
+If a baby were suckled at stated periods, he would only look for the
+bosom at those times, and be satisfied. A mother is frequently in the
+habit of giving the child the breast every time he cries, regardless
+of the cause. The cause too frequently is that he has been too often
+suckled--his stomach has been overloaded, the little fellow is
+consequently in pain, and he gives utterance to it by cries. How
+absurd is such a practice! We may as well endeavour to put out a fire
+by feeding it with fuel. An infant ought to be accustomed to
+regularity in everything, in times for sucking, for sleeping, &c. No
+children thrive so well as those who are thus early taught.
+
+33. _Where the mother is MODERATELY strong, do you advise that the
+infant should have any other food than the breast_?
+
+Artificial food must not, for the first five or six months, be given,
+if the parent be _moderately_ strong, of course, if she be feeble, a
+_little_ food will be necessary. Many delicate women enjoy better
+health whilst ambling than at any other period of their lives.
+
+It may be well, where artificial food, in addition to the mother's own
+milk, is needed, and before giving any farinaceous food whatever (for
+farinaceous food until a child is six or seven months old is
+injurious), to give, through a feeding bottle, every night and
+morning, in addition to the mother's breast of milk, the following
+_Milk-Water-and Sugar-of Milk Food_--
+
+ Fresh milk, from ONE cow,
+ Warm water, of each a quarter of a pint,
+ Sugar of milk one tea spoonful
+
+The sugar of milk should first be dissolved in the warm water, and
+then the fresh milk _unboiled_ should be mixed with it. The sweetening
+of the above food with sugar-of-milk, instead of with lump sugar,
+makes the food more to resemble the mother's own milk. The infant will
+not, probably, at first take more than half of the above quantity at a
+time, even if he does so much as that but still the above are the
+proper proportions, and as he grows older, he will require the whole
+of it at a meal.
+
+34. _What food, when a babe is six or seven months old, is the best
+substitute for a mother's milk?_
+
+The food that suits one infant will not agree with another. (1) The
+one that I have found the most generally useful, is made as
+follows--Boil the crumb of bread for two hours in water, taking
+particular care that it does not burn, then add only a _little_
+lump-sugar (or _brown_ sugar, if the bowels be costive), to make it
+palatable. When he is six or seven months old, mix a little new
+milk--the milk of ONE cow--with it gradually as he becomes older,
+increasing the quantity until it be nearly all milk, there being only
+enough water to boil the bread, the milk should be poured boiling hot
+on the bread. Sometimes the two milks--the mother's and the cow's
+milk--do not agree, when such is the case, let the milk be left out,
+both in this and in the foods following, and let the food be made with
+water, instead of with milk and water. In other respects, until the
+child is weaned, let it be made as above directed, when he is weaned,
+good fresh cow's milk MUST, as previously recommended, be used. (2) Or
+cut thin slices of bread into a basin, cover the bread with _cold_
+water, place it in an oven for two hours to bake, take it out, beat
+the bread up with a fork, and then slightly sweeten it. This is an
+excellent food. (3) If the above should not agree with the infant
+(although, if properly made, they almost invariably do), "tous
+les-mois" may be given. [Footnote: "Tous les mois" is the starch
+obtained from the tuberous roots of various species of _canna_, and is
+imported from the West Indies. It is very similar to arrow root. I
+suppose it is called "tous les-mois," as it is good to be eaten all
+the year round.](4) Or Robb's Biscuits, as it is "among the best bread
+compounds made out of wheat-flour, and is almost always readily
+digested."--_Routh_.
+
+(5) Another good food is the following--Take about a pound of flour
+put it in a cloth, tie it up tightly, place it a saucepanful of water,
+and let it boil for four or five hours, then take it out, peel off the
+outer rind, and the inside will be found quite dry, which grate. (6)
+Another way of preparing an infant's food, is to bake flour--biscuit
+flour--in a slow oven, until it be of a light fawn colour. Baked flour
+ought after it is baked, to be reduced, by means of a rolling pin, to
+a fine powder, and should then be kept in a covered tin, ready for
+use. (7) An excellent food for a baby is baked crumbs of bread. The
+manner of preparing it is as follows--Crumb some bread on a plate, put
+it a little distance from the fire to dry. When dry, rub the crumbs in
+a mortar, and reduce them to a fine powder, then pass them through a
+sieve. Having done which, put the crumbs of bread into a slow oven,
+and let them bake until they be of a light fawn colour. A small
+quantity either of the boiled, or of the baked flour, or of the baked
+crumb of bread, ought to be made into food, in the same way as gruel
+is made, and should then be slightly sweetened, according to the state
+of the bowels, either with lump or with brown sugar.
+
+(8) Baked flour sometimes produces constipation, when such is the
+case, Mr. Appleton, of Budleigh Salterton, Devon, wisely recommends a
+mixture of baked flour, and prepared oatmeal, [Footnote: If there is
+any difficulty in obtaining _prepared_ oatmeal, Robinson's Scotch
+Oatmeal will answer equally as well.] in the proportion of two of the
+former and one of the latter. He says--"To avoid the constipating
+effects, I have always had mixed, before baking, one part of prepared
+oatmeal with two parts of flour, this compound I have found both
+nourishing, and regulating to the bowels. One table-spoonful of it,
+mixed with a quarter of a pint of milk, or milk and water, when well
+boiled, flavoured and sweetened with white sugar, produces a thick,
+nourishing, and delicious food for infants or invalids." He goes on to
+remark--"I know of no food, after repeated trials, that can be so
+strongly recommended by the profession to all mothers in the rearing
+of their infants, without or with the aid of the breasts, at the same
+time relieving them of much draining and dragging whilst nursing with
+an insufficiency of milk, as baked flour and oatmeal." [Footnote:
+_British Medical Journal_, Dec 18, 1858]
+
+(9) A ninth food may be made with "Farinaceous Food for Infants,
+prepared by Hards of Dartford". If Hard's Farinaceous food produces
+costiveness--as it sometimes does--let it be mixed either with equal
+parts or with one third of Robinson's Scotch Oatmeal. The mixture of
+the two together makes a splendid food for a baby. (10) A tenth, and
+an excellent one, may be made with rusks, boiled for an hour in water,
+which ought then to be well beaten up, by means of a fork, and
+slightly sweetened with lump sugar. Great care should be taken to
+select good rusks, as few articles vary so much in quality. (11) An
+eleventh is--the top crust of a baker's loaf, boiled for an hour in
+water, and then moderately sweetened with lump sugar. If, at any time,
+the child's bowels should be costive, _raw_ must be substituted for
+_lump_ sugar. (12) Another capital food for an infant is that made by
+Lemann's Biscuit Powder. [Footnote: Lemann's Biscuit Powder cannot be
+too strongly recommended--It is of the finest quality, and may be
+obtained of Lemann, Threadneedle Street, London. An extended and an
+extensive experience confirms me still more in the good opinion I have
+of this food.] (13) Or, Brown and Polson's Patent Corn Flour will be
+found suitable. Francatelli, the Queen's cook, in his recent valuable
+work, gives the following formula for making it--"To one
+dessert-spoonful of Brown and Polson, mixed with a wineglassful of
+cold water, add half a pint of boiling water, stir over the fire for
+five minutes, sweeten lightly, and feed the baby, but if the infant is
+being brought up by the hand, this food should then be mixed with
+milk--not otherwise." (14) A fourteenth is Neaves' Farinaceous Food for
+Infants, which is a really good article of diet for a babe, it is not
+so binding to the bowels as many of the farinaceous foods are, which
+is a great recommendation.
+
+(15) The following is a good and nourishing food for a baby:--Soak for
+an hour, some _best_ rice in cold water; strain, and add fresh water
+to the rice; then let it simmer till it will pulp through a sieve; put
+the pulp and the water in a saucepan, with a lump or two of sugar, and
+again let it simmer for a quarter of an hour; a portion of this should
+be mixed with one-third of fresh milk, so as to make it of the
+consistence of good cream. This is an excellent food for weak bowels.
+
+When the baby is six or seven months old, new milk should be added to
+any of the above articles of food, in a similar way to that
+recommended for boiled bread.
+
+(16.) For a delicate infant, lentil powder, better known as Du Barry's
+"Ravalenta Arabica," is invaluable. It ought to be made into food,
+with new milk, in the same way that arrow-root is made, and should be
+moderately sweetened with loaf-sugar. Whatever food is selected ought
+to be given by means of a nursing bottle.
+
+If a child's bowels be relaxed and weak, or if the motions be
+offensive, the milk _must_ be boiled, but not otherwise. The following
+(17) is a good food when an infant's bowels are weak and
+relaxed:--"Into five large spoonfuls of the purest water, rub smooth
+one dessert-spoonful of fine flour. Set over the fire five spoonfuls
+of new milk, and put two bits of sugar into it; the moment it boils,
+pour it into the flour and water, and stir it over a slow fire twenty
+minutes."
+
+Where there is much emaciation, I have found (18) genuine arrow-root
+[Footnote: Genuine arrow-root, of first-rate quality, and at a
+reasonable price, may be obtained of H. M. Plumbe, arrow-root
+merchant, 8 Alie Place. Great Alie Street. Aldgate, London, E.] a very
+valuable article of food for an infant, as it contains a great deal of
+starch, which starch helps to form fat and to evolve caloric
+(heat)--both of which a poor emaciated chilly child stands so much in
+need of. It must be made with equal parts of water and of good fresh
+milk, and ought to be slightly sweetened with loaf sugar; a small
+pinch of table salt should be added to it.
+
+Arrow-root will not, as milk will, give bone and muscle; but it will
+give--what is very needful to a delicate child--fat and
+warmth. Arrow-root, as it is principally composed of starch, comes
+under the same category as cream, butter, sugar, oil, and
+fat. Arrowroot, then, should always be given with new milk (mixed with
+one-half of water); it will then fulfil, to perfection, the exigencies
+of nourishing, of warming, and fattening the child's body.
+
+New milk, composed in due proportions as it is, of cream and of skim
+milk--the very acme of perfection--is the only food, _which of itself
+alone,_ will nourish and warm and fatten. It is, for a child, _par
+excellence,_ the food of foods!
+
+Arrow-root, and all other farinaceous foods are, for a child, only
+supplemental to milk--new milk being, for the young, the staple food
+of all other kinds of foods whatever.
+
+But bear in mind, _and let there be no mistake about it,_ that
+farinaceous food, be it what it may, until the child be six or seven
+months old, until, indeed, he _begin_ to cut his teeth, is not
+suitable for a child; until then, _The Milk-water-salt-and-sugar Food_
+(see page 29) is usually, if he be a dry-nursed child, the best
+artificial food for him.
+
+I have given you a large and well-tried infant's dietary to chose
+from, as it is sometimes difficult to fix on one that will suit; but,
+remember, if you find one of the above to agree, keep to it, as a babe
+requires a simplicity in food--a child a greater variety.
+
+Let me, in this place, insist upon the necessity of great care and
+attention being observed in the preparation of any of the above
+articles of diet. A babe's stomach is very delicate, and will revolt
+at either ill-made, or lumpy, or burnt food. Great care ought to be
+observed as to the cleanliness of the cooking utensils. The above
+directions require the strict supervision of the mother.
+
+Broths have been recommended, but, for my own part, I think that, for
+a _young_ infant, they are objectionable; they are apt to turn acid on
+the stomach, and to cause flatulence and sickness, they, sometimes,
+disorder the bowels and induce griping and purging.
+
+Whatever artificial food is used ought to be given by means of a
+bottle, not only as it is a more natural way than any other of feeding
+a baby, as it causes him to suck as though he were drawing it from the
+mother's breasts, but as the act of sucking causes the salivary glands
+to press out their contents, which materially assist digestion.
+Moreover, it seems to satisfy and comfort him more than it otherwise
+would do.
+
+One of the best, if not _the best_ feeding bottle I have yet seen, is
+that made by Morgan Brothers, 21 Bow Lane, London. It is called "The
+Anglo-French Feeding Bottle" S Maw, of 11 Aldersgate Street, London,
+has also brought out an excellent one--"The Fountain Infant's Feeding
+Bottle" Another good one is "Mather's Infant's Feeding Bottle" Either
+of these three will answer the purpose admirably. I cannot speak in
+terms too highly of these valuable inventions.
+
+The food ought to be of the consistence of good cream, and should be
+made fresh and fresh. It ought to be given milk warm. Attention must
+be paid to the cleanliness of the vessel, and care should be taken
+that the milk be that of ONE cow, [Footnote: I consider it to be of
+immense importance to the infant, that the milk be had from ONE cow. A
+writer in the _Medical Times and Gazette_ speaking on this subject,
+makes the following sensible remarks--"I do not know if a practice
+common among French ladies when they do not nurse, has obtained the
+attention among ourselves which it seems to me to deserve. When the
+infant is to be fed with cow milk that from various cows is submitted
+to examination by the medical man and if possible, tried on some
+child, and when the milk of any cow has been chosen, no other milk is
+ever suffered to enter the child's lips for a French lady would as
+soon offer to her infant's mouth the breasts of half a dozen
+wet-nurses in the day, as mix together the milk of various cows, which
+must differ, even as the animals themselves, in its constituent
+qualities. Great attention is also paid to the pasture, or other food
+of the cow thus appropriated."] and that it be new and of good
+quality, for if not it will turn acid and sour, and disorder the
+stomach, and will thus cause either flatulence or looseness of the
+bowels, or perhaps convulsions. The only way to be sure of having it
+from _one_ cow, is (if you have not a cow of your own), to have the
+milk from a _respectable_ cow keeper, and to have it brought to your
+house in a can of your own (the London milk cans being the best for
+the purpose). The better plan is to have two cans, and to have the
+milk fresh and fresh every night and morning. The cans, after each
+time of using, ought to be scalded out, and, once a week the can
+should be filled with _cold_ water, and the water should be allowed to
+remain in it until the can be again required.
+
+Very little sugar should be used in the food, as much sugar weakens
+the digestion. A small pinch of table-salt ought to be added to
+whatever food is given, as "the best savour is salt." Salt is most
+wholesome--it strengthens and assists digestion, prevents the
+formation of worms, and, in small quantities, may with advantage be
+given (if artificial food be used) to the youngest baby.
+
+35. _Where it is found to be absolutely necessary to give an infant
+artificial food_ WHILST SUCKLING, _how often ought he to be fed_?
+
+Not oftener than twice during the twenty four hours, and then only in
+_small_ quantities at a time, as the stomach requires rest, and at the
+same time, can manage to digest a little food better than it can a
+great deal. Let me again urge upon you the importance, if it be at
+all practicable, of keeping the child _entirely_ to the breast for the
+first five or six months of his existence. Remember there is no
+_real_ substitute for a mother's milk, there is no food so well
+adapted to his stomach, there is no diet equal to it in developing
+muscle, in making bone, or in producing that beautiful plump rounded
+contour of the limbs, there is nothing like a mother's milk _alone_ in
+making a child contented and happy, in laying the foundation of a
+healthy constitution, in preparing the body for a long life, in giving
+him tone to resist disease, or in causing him to cut his teeth easily
+and well, in short, _the mothers milk is the greatest temporal
+blessing an infant can possess_.
+
+As a general rule, therefore, when the child and the mother are
+tolerably strong, he is better _without artificial_ food until he have
+attained the age of three or four months, then, it will usually be
+necessary to feed him with _The Milk-water-and-sugar-of milk Food_
+(see p 19) twice a day, so as gradually to prepare him to be weaned
+(if possible) at the end of nine months. The food mentioned in the
+foregoing Conversation will, when he is six or seven months old, be
+the best for him.
+
+36. _When the mother is not able to suckle her infant herself, what
+ought to be done_?
+
+It must first be ascertained, _beyond all doubt_, that a mother is not
+able to suckle her own child Many delicate ladies do suckle their
+infants with advantage, not only to their offspring, but to
+themselves. "I will maintain," says Steele, "that the mother grows
+stronger by it, and will have her health better than she would have
+otherwise She will find it the greatest cure, and preservative for the
+vapours [nervousness] and future miscarriages, much beyond any other
+remedy whatsoever Her children will be like giants, whereas otherwise
+they are but living shadows, and like unripe fruit, and certainly if a
+woman is strong enough to bring forth a child, she is beyond all doubt
+strong enough to nurse it afterwards."
+
+Many mothers are never so well as when they are nursing, besides,
+suckling prevents a lady from becoming pregnant so frequently as she
+otherwise would. This, if she be delicate, is an important
+consideration, and more especially if she be subject to miscarry. The
+effects of miscarriage are far more weakening than those of suckling.
+
+A hireling, let her be ever so well inclined, can never have the
+affection and unceasing assiduity of a mother, and, therefore, cannot
+perform the duties of suckling with equal advantage to the baby.
+
+The number of children who die under five years of age is
+enormous--many of them from the want of the mother's milk. There is a
+regular "parental baby-slaughter"--"a massacre of the innocents"--
+constantly going on in England, in consequence of infants being thus
+deprived of their proper nutriment and just dues! The mortality from
+this cause is frightful, chiefly occurring among rich people who are
+either too grand, or, from luxury, too delicate to perform such
+duties; poor married women, as a rule, nurse their own children, and,
+in consequence reap their reward.
+
+If it be ascertained, _past all doubt_, that a mother cannot suckle
+her child, then, if the circumstances of the parents will allow--and
+they ought to strain a point to accomplish it--a healthy wet-nurse
+should be procured, as, of course, the food which nature has supplied
+is far, very far superior to any invented by art. Never bring up a
+baby, then, if you can possibly avoid it, on _artificial_
+food. Remember, as I proved in a former Conversation, there is in
+early infancy no _real_ substitute for either a mother's or a
+wet-nurse's milk. It is impossible to imitate the admirable and subtle
+chemistry of nature. The law of nature is, that a baby, for the first
+few months of his existence, shall be brought up by the breast, and
+nature's law cannot be broken with impunity. [Footnote: For further
+reasons why artificial food is not desirable, at an early period of
+infancy, see answer to 35th question, page 26.] It will be
+imperatively necessary then--
+
+ "To give to nature what is nature's due."
+
+Again, in case of a severe illness occurring during the first nine
+months of a child's life, what a comfort either the mother's or the
+wet-nurse's milk is to him! It often determines whether he shall live
+or die. But if a wet-nurse cannot fill the place of a mother, then
+asses' milk will be found the best substitute, as it approaches
+nearer, in composition, than any other animal's, to human milk; but it
+is both difficult and expensive to obtain. The next best substitute is
+goats' milk. Either the one or the other ought to be milked fresh and
+fresh, when wanted, and should be given by means of a feeding-bottle.
+Asses' milk is more suitable for a _delicate_ infant, and goats' milk
+for a _strong_ one.
+
+If neither asses' milk nor goats' milk can be procured, then the
+following _Milk-water-salt-and-sugar Food_, from the very
+commencement, should be given; and as I was the author of the formula,
+[Footnote: It first appeared in print in the 4th edition of _Advice to
+a Mother_, 1852.] I beg to designate it as--_Rye Chavasse's Milk
+Food_:--
+
+ New milk, the produce of ONE _healthy_ cow;
+ Warm water, of each, equal parts;
+ Table salt, a few grains--a small pinch;
+ Lump sugar, a sufficient quantity, to slightly sweeten it.
+
+The milk itself ought not to be heated over the fire, [Footnote: It
+now and then happens that if the milk be not boiled, the motions of an
+infant are offensive; _when such is the case_, let the milk be boiled,
+but not otherwise.] but should, as above directed, be warmed by the
+water; it must, morning and evening, be had fresh and fresh. The milk
+and water should be of the same temperature as the mother's milk, that
+is to say, at about ninety degrees Fahrenheit. It ought to be given by
+means of either Morgan's, or Maw's, or Mather's feeding-bottle,
+[Footnote: See answer to Question 24, page 24.] and care must be
+taken to _scald_ the bottle out twice a day, for if attention be not
+paid to this point, the delicate stomach of an infant is soon
+disordered. The milk should, as he grows older, be gradually increased
+and the water decreased, until two-thirds of milk and one-third of
+water be used; but remember, that either _much_ or _little_ water must
+_always_ be given with the milk.
+
+The above is my old form, and which I have for many years used with
+great success. Where the above food does not agree (and no food except
+a healthy mother's own milk does _invariably_ agree) I occasionally
+substitute sugar-of milt for the lump sugar, in the proportion of a
+tea spoonful of sugar-of milk to every half pint of food.
+
+If your child bring up his food, and if the ejected matter be
+sour-smelling, I should advise you to leave out the sugar-of milk
+altogether, and simply to let the child live, for a few days, on milk
+and water alone, the milk being of _one_ cow, and in the proportion of
+two-thirds to one-third of _warm_ water--not _hot_ water, the milk
+should not be scalded with _hot_ water, as it injures its properties,
+besides, it is only necessary to give the child his food with the
+chill just off. The above food, where the stomach is disordered, is an
+admirable one, and will often set the child to rights without giving
+him any medicine whatever. Moreover, there is plenty of nourishment in
+it to make the babe thrive, for after all it is the milk that is the
+important ingredient in all the foods of infants, they can live on it,
+and on it alone, and thrive amazingly.
+
+Mothers sometimes say to me, that farinaceous food makes their babes
+flatulent, and that my food (_Pye Chavasse's Milk Food_) has not that
+effect.
+
+The reason of farinaceous food making babes, until they have
+_commenced_ cutting their teeth, "windy" is, that the starch of the
+farinaceous food (and all farinaceous foods contain more or less of
+starch) is not digested, and is not, as it ought to be, converted by
+the saliva into sugar [Footnote: See Pye Chavasse's _Counsel to a
+Mother_, 3d edition.] hence "wind" is generated, and pain and
+convulsions often follow in the train.
+
+The great desideratum, in devising an infant's formula for food, is to
+make it, until he be nine months old, to resemble as much as possible,
+a mother's own milk, and which my formula, as nearly as is
+practicable, does resemble hence its success and popularity.
+
+As soon as a child begins to cut his teeth the case is altered, and
+_farinaceous food, with milk and with water_, becomes an absolute
+necessity.
+
+I wish, then, to call your especial attention to the following-facts,
+for they are facts--Farinaceous foods, _of all kinds_, before a child
+_commences_ cutting his teeth (which is when he is about six or seven
+months old) are worse than useless--they are, positively, injurious,
+they are, during the early period of infant life, perfectly
+indigestible, and may bring on--which they frequently do--
+convulsions. A babe fed on farinaceous food alone would certainly die
+of starvation, for, "up to six or seven months of age, infants have
+not the power of digesting farinaceous or fibrinous substances"--Dr
+Letheby on _Food_.
+
+A babe's salivary glands, until he be six or seven months old, does
+not secrete its proper fluid--namely, ptyalin, and consequently the
+starch of the farinaceous food--and all farinaceous food contains
+starch--is not converted into dextrine and grape-sugar, and is,
+therefore, perfectly indigestible and useless--nay, injurious to an
+infant, and may bring on pain and convulsions, and even death, hence,
+the giving of farinaceous food, until a child be six or seven months
+old, is one and the principal cause of the frightful infant mortality
+at the present time existing in England, and which is a disgrace to
+any civilized land!
+
+In passing, allow me to urge you never to stuff a babe--never to
+overload his little stomach with food, it is far more desirable to
+give him a little not enough, than to give him a little too much. Many
+a poor child has been, like a young bird, killed with stuffing. If a
+child be at the breast, and at the breast alone, there is no fear of
+his taking too much, but if he be brought up on artificial food, there
+is great fear of his over loading his stomach. Stuffing a child brings
+on vomiting and bowel-complaints, and a host of other diseases which
+now it would be tedious to enumerate. Let me, then, urge you on no
+account, to over load the stomach of a little child.
+
+There will, then, in many cases, be quite sufficient nourishment in
+the above. I have known some robust infants brought up on it, and on
+it along, without a particle of farinaceous food, or of any other
+food, in any shape or form whatever. But if it should not agree with
+the child, or if there should not be sufficient nourishment in it,
+then the food recommended in answer to No. 34 question ought to be
+given, with this only difference--a little new milk must from the
+beginning be added, and should be gradually increased, until nearly
+all milk be used.
+
+The milk, as a general rule, ought to be _unboiled_; but if it purge
+violently, or if it cause offensive motions--which it sometimes
+does--then it must be boiled. The moment the milk boils up, it should
+be taken off the fire.
+
+Food ought for the first month to be given about every two hours; for
+the second month, about every three hours; lengthening the space of
+time as the baby advances in age. A mother must be careful not to
+over-feed a child, as over-feeding is a prolific source of disease.
+
+Let it be thoroughly understood, and let there be no mistake about it,
+that a babe during the first nine months of his life, MUST have--it is
+absolutely necessary for his very existence--milk of some kind, as the
+staple and principal article of his diet, either mother's,
+wet-nurse's, or asses', or goats', or cow's milk.
+
+37. _How would you choose a wet-nurse_?
+
+I would inquire particularly into the state of her health; whether she
+be of a healthy family, of a consumptive habit, or if she or any of
+her family have laboured under "king's evil;" ascertaining if there be
+any seams or swellings about her neck; any eruptions or blotches upon
+her skin; if she has a plentiful breast of milk, and if it be of good
+quality [Footnote: "It should be thin, and of a bluish-white colour,
+sweet to the taste, and when allowed to stand, should throw up a
+considerable quantity of cream,"--_Maxell and Evenson on the Diseases
+of Children_.] (which may readily be ascertained by milking a little
+into a glass); if she has good nipples, sufficiently long for the baby
+to hold; that they be not sore; and if her own child be of the same,
+or nearly of the same age, as the one you wish her to nurse.
+Ascertain, whether she menstruate during suckling; if she does, the
+milk is not so good and nourishing, and you had better decline taking
+her. [Footnote: Sir Charles Locock considers that a woman who
+menstruates during lactation is objectionable as a wet-nurse, and
+"that as a mother with her first child is more liable to that
+objection, that a second or third child's mother is more eligible than
+a first"--_Letter to the Author_.] Assure yourself that her own babe
+is strong and healthy that he be free from a sore mouth, and from a
+"breaking-out" of the skin. Indeed, if it be possible to procure such
+a wet-nurse, she ought to be from the country, of ruddy complexion, of
+clear skin, and of between twenty and five-and-twenty years of age, an
+the milk will then be fresh, pure, and nourishing.
+
+I consider it to be of great importance that the infant of the
+wet-nurse should be, as nearly as possible, of the same age as your
+own, as the milk varies in quality according to the age of the
+child. For instance, during the commencement of suckling, the milk is
+thick and creamy, similar to the biestings of a cow, which, if given
+to a babe of a few months old, would cause derangement of the stomach
+and bowels. After the first few days, the appearance of the milk
+changes; it becomes of a bluish-white colour, and contains less
+nourishment. The milk gradually becomes more and more nourishing as
+the infant becomes older and requires more support.
+
+In selecting a wet-nurse for a very small and feeble babe, you must
+carefully ascertain that the nipples of the wet-nurse are good and
+soft, and yet not very large. If they be very large, the child's mouth
+being very small, he may not be able to hold them. You must note, too,
+whether the milk flows readily from the nipple into the child's mouth;
+if it does not, he may not have strength to draw it, and he would soon
+die of starvation. The only way of ascertaining whether the infant
+really draws the milk from the nipple, can be done by examining the
+mouth of the child _immediately_ after his taking the breast, and
+seeing for yourself whether there be actually milk, or not, in his
+mouth.
+
+Very feeble new-born babes sometimes cannot take the bosom, be the
+nipples and the breasts ever so good, and although Maw's nipple-shield
+and glass tube had been tried. In such a case, cow's
+milk-water-sugar-and-salt, as recommended at page 29, must be given in
+small quantities at a time--from two to four tea-spoonfuls--but
+frequently; if the child be awake, every hour, or every half hour,
+both night and day, until he be able to take the breast. If, then, a
+puny, feeble babe is only able to take but little at a time, and that
+little by tea-spoonfuls, he must have little and often, in order that
+"many a little might make a mickle."
+
+I have known many puny, delicate children who had not strength to hold
+the nipple in their mouths, but who could take milk and water (as
+above recommended) by tea-spoonfuls only at a time, with steady
+perseverance, and giving it every half hour or hour (according to the
+quantity swallowed), at length be able to take the breast, and
+eventually become strong and hearty children; but such cases require
+unwearied watching, perseverance, and care. Bear in mind, then, that
+the smaller the quantity of the milk and water given at a time, the
+oftener must it be administered, as, of course, the babe must have a
+certain quantity of food to sustain life.
+
+38. _What ought to be the diet either of a wet-nurse, or of a mother,
+who is suckling_?
+
+It is a common practice to cram a wet-nurse with food, and to give her
+strong ale to drink, to make good nourishment and plentiful milk! This
+practice is absurd; for it either, by making the nurse feverish, makes
+the milk more sparing than usual, or it causes the milk to be gross
+and unwholesome. On the other hand, we must not run into an opposite
+extreme. The mother, or the wet-nurse, by using those means most
+conducive to her own health, will best advance the interest of her
+little charge.
+
+A wet-nurse, ought to live somewhat in the following way:--Let her for
+breakfast have black tea, with one or two slices of cold meat, if her
+appetite demand it, but not otherwise. It is customary for a wet-nurse
+to make a hearty luncheon; of this I do not approve. If she feel
+either faint or low at eleven o'clock, let her have either a tumbler
+of porter, or of mild fresh ale, with a piece of dry toast soaked in
+it. She ought not to dine later than half-past one or two o'clock; she
+should eat, for dinner, either mutton or beef, with either mealy
+potatoes, or asparagus, or French beans, or secale, or turnips, or
+broccoli, or cauliflower, and stale bread. Rich pastry, soups,
+gravies, high-seasoned dishes, salted meats, greens, and cabbage, must
+one and all be carefully avoided; as they only tend to disorder the
+stomach, and thus to deteriorate the milk.
+
+It is a common remark, that "a mother who is suckling may eat
+anything." I do not agree with this opinion. Can impure or improper
+food make pure and proper milk, or can impure and improper milk make
+good blood for an infant, and thus good health?
+
+The wet-nurse ought to take with her dinner a moderate quantity of
+either sound porter, or of mild (but not old or strong) ale. Tea
+should be taken at half past five or six o'clock; supper at nine,
+which should consist either of a slice or two of cold meat, or of
+cheese if she prefer it, with half a pint of porter or of mild ale;
+occasionally a basin of gruel may with advantage be substituted. Hot
+and late suppers are prejudicial to the mother, or to the wet-nurse,
+and, consequently, to the child. The wet-nurse ought to be in bed
+every night by ten o'clock.
+
+It might be said, that I have been too minute and particular in my
+rules for a wet-nurse; but when it is considered of what importance
+good milk is to the well-doing of an infant, in making him strong and
+robust, not only now, but as he grows up to manhood, I shall, I trust,
+be excused for my prolixity.
+
+39. _Have you any more hints to offer with regard to the management of
+a wet-nurse_?
+
+A wet-nurse is frequently allowed to remain in bed until a late hour
+in the morning, and during the day to continue in the house, as if she
+were a fixture! How is it possible that any one, under such
+treatment, can continue healthy! A wet nurse ought to rise early, and,
+if the weather and season will permit, take a walk, which will give
+her an appetite for breakfast, and will make a good meal for her
+little charge. This, of course, cannot, during the winter mouths, be
+done; but even then, she ought, some part of the day, to take every
+opportunity of walking out; indeed, in the summer time she should live
+half the day in the open air.
+
+She ought strictly to avoid crowded rooms; her mind should be kept
+calm and unruffled, as nothing disorders the milk so much as passion,
+and other violent emotions of the mind; a fretful temper is very
+injurious, on which account you should, in choosing your wet-nurse,
+endeavour to procure one of a mild, calm, and placid disposition.
+[Footnote: "'The child is poisoned.'
+
+'Poisoned! by whom?'
+
+'By you. You have been fretting.'
+
+'Nay, indeed, mother. How can I help fretting!'
+
+'Don't tell me, Margaret. A nursing mother has no business to
+fret. She must turn her mind away from her grief to the comfort that
+lies in her lap. Know you not that the child pines if the mother vexes
+herself?'"--_The Cloister and the Hearth_. By Charles Reade.]
+
+A wet-nurse ought never to be allowed to dose her little charge either
+with Godfrey's Cordial, or with Dalby's Carminative, or with Syrup of
+White Poppies, or with medicine of any kind whatever. Let her
+thoroughly understand this, and let there be no mistake in the
+matter. Do not for one moment allow your children's health to be
+tampered and trifled with. A baby's health is too precious to be
+doctored, to be experimented upon, and to be ruined by an ignorant
+person.
+
+40. _Have the goodness to state at what age a child ought to be
+weaned_?
+
+This, of course, must depend both upon the strength of the child, and
+upon the health of the parent; on an average, nine months is the
+proper time. If the mother be delicate, it may be found necessary to
+wean the infant at six months; or if he be weak, or labouring under
+any disease, it may be well to continue suckling him for twelve
+months; but after that time, the breast will do him more harm than
+good, and will, moreover, injure the mother's health, and may, if she
+be so predisposed, excite consumption.
+
+41. _How would you recommend a mother to act when, she weans her
+child_?
+
+She ought, as the word signifies, do it gradually--that is to say, she
+should, by degrees, give him less and less of the breast, and more and
+more of artificial food; at length, she must only suckle him at night;
+and lastly, it would be well for the mother either to send him away,
+or to leave him at home, and, for a few days, to go away herself.
+
+A good plan is, for the nurse-maid to have a half-pint bottle of new
+milk--which has been previously boiled [Footnote: The previous boiling
+of the milk will prevent the warmth of the bed turning the milk sour,
+which it otherwise would do.]--in the bed, so as to give a little to
+him in lieu of the breast. The warmth of the body will keep the milk
+of a proper temperature, and will supersede the use of lamps, of
+candle-frames, and of other troublesome contrivances.
+
+42. _While a mother is weaning her infant, and after she have weaned
+him, what ought to be his diet_?
+
+Any one of the foods recommended in answer to question 34.
+
+43. _If a child be suffering severely from "wind," is there any
+objection to the addition of a small quantity either of gin or of
+peppermint to his food to disperse it_?
+
+It is a murderous practice to add either gin or peppermint of the
+shops (which is oil of peppermint dissolved in spirits) to his
+food. Many children have, by such a practice, been made puny and
+delicate, and have gradually dropped into an untimely grave. An infant
+who is kept, for the first five or six months, _entirely_ to the
+breast--more especially if the mother be careful in her own
+diet--seldom suffers from "wind;" those, on the contrary, who have
+much or improper food, [Footnote: For the first five or six months
+never, if you can possibly avoid it, give artificial food to an infant
+who is sucking. There is nothing, in the generality of cases, that
+agrees, for the first few months, like the mother's milk _alone_.]
+suffer severely.
+
+Care in feeding, then, is the grand preventative of "wind;" but if,
+notwithstanding all your precautions, the child be troubled with
+flatulence, the remedies recommended under the head of Flatulence will
+generally answer the purpose.
+
+44. _Have you any remarks to make on sugar for sweetening a baby's
+food_?
+
+A _small_ quantity of sugar in an infant's food is requisite, sugar
+being nourishing and fattening, and making cow's milk to resemble
+somewhat, in its properties human milk; but, bear in mind, _it must be
+used sparingly._ _Much_ sugar cloys the stomach, weakens the
+digestion, produces acidity, sour belchings, and wind:--
+
+ "Things sweet to taste, prove in digestion sour."
+
+ _Shakspeare._
+
+If a babe's bowels be either regular or relaxed, _lump_ sugar is the
+best for the purpose of sweetening his food; if his bowels are
+inclined to be costive, _raw_ sugar ought to be substituted for lump
+sugar, as _raw_ sugar acts on a young babe as an aperient, and, in the
+generality of cases, is far preferable to physicking him with opening
+medicine. An infant's bowels, whenever it be practicable (and it
+generally is), ought to be regulated by a judicious dietary rather
+than by physic.
+
+
+VACCINATION AND RE-VACCINATION.
+
+45. _Are you an advocate for vaccination_?
+
+Certainly. I consider it to be one of the greatest blessings ever
+conferred upon mankind. Small-pox, before vaccination was adopted,
+ravaged the country like a plague, and carried off thousands annually;
+and those who did escape with their lives were frequently made
+loathsome and disgusting objects by it. Even inoculation (which is
+cutting for the small-pox) was attended with danger, more especially
+to the unprotected--as it caused the disease to spread like wildfire,
+and thus it carried off immense numbers.
+
+Vaccination is one, and an important cause of our increasing
+population; small-pox, in olden times, decimated the country.
+
+46. _But vaccination does not always protect a child from, small-pox_?
+
+I grant you that it does not _always_ protect him, _neither does
+inoculation_; but when he is vaccinated, if he take the infection, he
+is seldom pitted, and very rarely dies, and the disease assumes a
+comparatively mild form. There are a few, very few fatal cases
+recorded after vaccination, and these may be considered as only
+exceptions to the general rule; and, possibly, some of these may be
+traced to the arm, when the child was vaccinated, not having taken
+proper effect.
+
+If children, and adults were _re-vaccinated_,--say every seven years
+after the first vaccination,--depend upon it, even these rare cases
+would not occur, and in a short time small-pox would be known only by
+name.
+
+47. _Do you consider it, then, the imperative duty of a mother, in
+every case, to have, after the lapse of every seven years, her
+children re-vaccinated_?
+
+I decidedly do: it would be an excellent plan for _every_ person, once
+every seven years to be re-vaccinated, and even oftener, if small-pox
+be rife in the neighbourhood. Vaccination, however frequently
+performed, can never do the slightest harm, and might do inestimable
+good. Small-pox is both a pest and a disgrace, and ought to be
+constantly fought and battled with, until it be banished (which it may
+readily be) the kingdom.
+
+I say that small-pox is a pest; it is worse than the plague, for if
+not kept in subjection, it is more general--sparing neither young nor
+old, rich nor poor, and commits greater ravages than the plague ever
+did. Small-pox is a disgrace: it is a disgrace to any civilised land,
+as there is no necessity for its presence, if cow-pox were properly
+and frequently performed, small-pox would be unknown. Cow-pox is a
+weapon to conquer small-pox and to drive it ignominiously from the
+field.
+
+My firm belief, then, is, that if _every_ person were, _every seven
+years_, duly and properly vaccinated, small-pox might be utterly
+exterminated; but as long as there are such lax notions on the
+subject, and such gross negligence, the disease will always be
+rampant, for the poison of small-pox never slumbers nor sleeps, but
+requires the utmost diligence to eradicate it. The great Dr Jenner,
+the discoverer of cow-pox as a preventative of small-pox, strongly
+advocated the absolute necessity of _every_ person being re-vaccinated
+once every seven years, or even, oftener, if there was an epidemic of
+small-pox in the neighbourhood.
+
+48. _Are you not likely to catch not only the cow-pox, but any other
+disease that the child has from whom the matter is taken_?
+
+The same objection holds good in cutting for small pox
+(inoculation)--only in a ten-fold degree--small-pox being such a
+disgusting complaint. Inoculated small-pox frequently produced and
+left behind inveterate "breakings-out," scars, cicatrices, and
+indentations of the skin, sore eyes, blindness, loss of eyelashes,
+scrofula, deafness--indeed, a long catalogue of loathsome diseases. A
+medical man, of course, will be careful to take the cow-pox matter
+from a healthy child.
+
+49. _Would it not be well to take the matter direct from the cow_?
+
+If a doctor be careful--which, of course, he will be--to take the
+matter from a healthy child, and from a well-formed vesicle, I
+consider it better than taking it _direct_ from the cow, for the
+following reasons:--The cow-pox lymph, taken direct from the cow,
+produces much more violent symptoms than after it has passed through
+several persons; indeed, in some cases, it has produced effects as
+severe as cutting for the small-pox, besides, it has caused, in many
+cases, violent inflammation and even sloughing of the arm. There are
+also several kinds of _spurious_ cow-pox to which the cow is subject,
+and which would be likely to be mistaken for the _real_ lymph. Again,
+if even the _genuine_ matter were not taken from the cow _exactly_ at
+the proper time, it would he deprived of its protecting power.
+
+50. _At what age do you recommend an infant to be first vaccinated_?
+
+When he is two months old, as the sooner he is protected the
+better. Moreover, the older he is the greater will be the difficulty
+in making him submit to the operation, and in preventing his arm from
+being rubbed, thus endangering the breaking of the vesicles, and
+thereby interfering with its effects. If small-pox be prevalent in the
+neighbourhood, he may, with perfect safety, be vaccinated at the
+month's end; indeed if the small-pox be near at hand, he _must_ be
+vaccinated, regardless of his age, and regardless of everything else,
+for small-pox spares neither the young nor the old, and if a new-born
+babe should unfortunately catch the disease, he will most likely die,
+as at his tender age he would not have strength to battle with such a
+formidable enemy. "A case, in the General Lying-in-Hospital, Lambeth,
+of small-pox occurred in a woman a few days after her admission, and
+the birth of her child. Her own child was vaccinated when only four
+days old, and all the other infants in the house varying from one day
+to a fortnight and more. All took the vaccination; and the woman's own
+child, which suckled her and slept with her; and all escaped the small
+pox." [Footnote: Communicated by Sir Charles Locock to the Author.]
+
+51. _Do you consider that taking of matter from a child's arm weakens
+the effect of vaccination on the system_?
+
+Certainly not, provided it has taken effect in more than one
+place. The arm is frequently much inflamed, and vaccinating other
+children from it abates the inflammation, and thus affords relief. _It
+is always well to leave one vesicle undisturbed_.
+
+52. _If the infant have any "breaking out" upon the skin, ought that
+to be a reason for deferring the vaccination_?
+
+It should, as two skin diseases cannot well go on together; hence the
+cow-pox might not take, or, if it did, might not have its proper
+effect in preventing small-pox. "It is essential that the vaccine bud
+or germ have a congenial soil, uncontaminated by another poison,
+which, like a weed, might choke its healthy growth."--_Dendy_. The
+moment the skin be free from the breaking-out, he must be
+vaccinated. A trifling skin affection, like red gum, unless it be
+severe, ought not, at the proper age to prevent vaccination. If
+small-pox be rife in the neighbourhood, the child _must_ be
+vaccinated, regardless of any "breaking-out" on the skin.
+
+53. _Does vaccination make a child poorly_?
+
+At about the fifth day after vaccination, and for three or four days,
+he is generally a little feverish; the mouth is slightly hot, and he
+delights to have the nipple in his mouth. He does not rest so well at
+night; he is rather cross and irritable; and, sometimes, has a slight
+bowel-complaint. The arm, about the ninth or tenth day, is usually
+much inflamed--that is to say it is, for an inch or two or more around
+the vesicles, red, hot, swollen, and continues in this state for a day
+or two, at the end of which time the inflammation gradually
+subsides. It might be well to state that the above slight symptoms are
+desirable, as it proves that the vaccination has had a proper effect
+on his system, and that, consequently, he is more likely to be
+thoroughly protected from any risk of catching small-pox.
+
+54. _Do you approve, either during or after vaccination, of giving
+medicine, more especially if he be a little feverish_?
+
+No, as it would be likely to work off some of its effects, and thus
+would rob the cow-pox of its efficacy on the system. I do not like to
+interfere with vaccination _in any way whatever_ (except, at the
+proper time, to take a little matter from the arm), but to allow the
+pock to have full power upon his constitution.
+
+What do you give the medicine for? If the matter that is put into the
+arm be healthy, what need is there of physic! And if the matter be not
+of good quality, I am quite sure that no physic will make it so! Look,
+therefore, at the case in whatever way you like, physic after
+vaccination is _not_ necessary; but, on the contrary, hurtful. If the
+vaccination produce slight feverish attack, it will, without the
+administration of a particle of medicine, subside in two or three
+days.
+
+55. _Have you any directions to give respecting the arm AFTER
+vaccination_?
+
+The only precaution necessary is to take care that the arm be not
+rubbed; otherwise the vesicles may be prematurely broken, and the
+efficacy of the vaccination may be lessened. The sleeve, in
+vaccination, ought to be large and soft, and should not be tied
+up. The tying up of a sleeve makes it hard, and is much more likely to
+rub the vesicles than if it were put on the usual way.
+
+56. _If the arm, AFTER vaccination, be much inflamed, what ought to be
+done_?
+
+Smear frequently, by means of a feather or a camel's hair brush, a
+little cream on the inflamed part. This simple remedy will afford
+great comfort and relief.
+
+57. _Have the goodness to describe the proper appearance, after the
+falling-off of the scab of the arm_?
+
+It might be well to remark, that the scabs ought always to be allowed
+to fall off of themselves. They must not, on any account, be picked or
+meddled with. With regard to the proper appearance of the arm, after
+the falling-off of the scab, "a perfect vaccine scar should be of
+small size, circular, and marked with radiations and indentations."--
+_Gregory_.
+
+
+DENTITION
+
+58. _At what time does dentition commence_?
+
+The period at which it commences is uncertain. It may, as a rule, be
+said that a babe begins to cut his teeth at seven months old. Some
+have cut teeth at three months; indeed, there are instances on record
+of infants having been born with teeth. King Richard the Third is said
+to have been an example. Shakspeare notices it thus:--
+
+ "YORK.--Marry, they say my uncle grew so fast,
+ That he could gnaw a crust at two hours old.
+ 'Twas full two years ere I could get a tooth,
+ Grandam, this would have been a biting jest."
+
+When a babe is born with teeth, they generally drop out. On the other
+hand, teething, in some children does not commence until they are a
+year and a half or two years old, and, in rare cases, not until they
+are three years old. There are cases recorded of adults who have never
+cut any teeth. An instance of the kind came under my own observation.
+
+Dentition has been known to occur in old age. A case is recorded by
+M. Carre, in the _Gazette Medicale de Paris_ (Sept 15, 1860), of an
+old lady, aged eighty-five, who cut several teeth after attaining that
+age!
+
+59. _What is the number of the FIRST set of teeth, and in what order
+do they generally appear_?
+
+The first or temporary set consists of twenty. The first set of teeth
+are usually cut in pairs. "I may say that nearly invariably the order
+is--1st, the lower front incissors [cutting teeth], then the upper
+front, then the _upper_ two lateral incissors, and that not uncommonly
+a double tooth is cut before the two _lower_ laterals; but at all
+events the lower laterals come 7th and 8th, and, not 5th and 6th, as
+nearly all books on the subject testify." [Footnote: Sir Charles
+Locock in a _Letter_ to the Author.] Then the first grinders, in the
+lower jaw, afterwards the first upper grinders, then the lower
+corner-pointed or canine teeth, after which the upper corner or
+eye-teeth, then the second grinders in the lower jaw, and lastly, the
+second grinders of the upper jaw. They do not, of course, always
+appear in this rotation. Nothing is more uncertain than the order of
+teething. A child seldom cuts his second grinders until after he is
+two years old. _He is, usually, from the time they first appear, two
+years in cutting the first set of teeth_. As a rule, therefore, a
+child of two years old has sixteen, and one of two years and a half
+old, twenty teeth.
+
+60. _If an infant be feverish or irritable, or otherwise poorly, and
+if the gums be hot, swollen, and tender, are you an advocate for their
+being lanced_?
+
+Certainly; by doing so he will, in the generality of instances, be
+almost instantly relieved.
+
+61. _But it has been stated that lancing the gums hardens them_?
+
+This is a mistake--it has a contrary effect. It is a well-known fact,
+that a part which has been divided gives way much more readily than
+one which has not been cut. Again, the tooth is bound down by a tight
+membrane, which, if not released by lancing, frequently brings on
+convulsions. If the symptoms be urgent, it may be necessary from time
+to time to repeat the lancing. It would, of course, be the height of
+folly to lance the gums unless they be hot and swollen, and unless the
+tooth, or the teeth, be near at hand. It is not to be considered a
+panacea for every baby's ill, although, in those cases where the
+lancing of the gums is indicated, the beneficial effect is sometimes
+almost magical.
+
+62. _How ought the lancing of a child's gums to be performed_?
+
+The proper person, of course, to lance his gums is a medical man. But
+if, perchance, you should be miles away and be out of the reach of
+one, it would be well for you to know how the operation ought to be
+performed. Well, then, let him lie on the nurse's lap upon his back,
+and let the nurse take hold of his hands in order that he may not
+interfere with the operation.
+
+Then, _if it be the upper gum_ that requires lancing, you ought to go
+to the head of the child, looking over, as it were, and into his
+mouth, and should steady the gum with the index finger of your left
+hand; then, you should take hold of the gum-lancet with your right
+hand--holding as if it were a table-knife at dinner--and cut firmly
+along the inflamed and swollen gum and down to the tooth, until the
+edge of the gum-lancet grates on the tooth. Each incision ought to
+extend along the ridge of the gum to about the extent of each expected
+tooth.
+
+_If it be the lower gum_ that requires lancing, you must go to the
+side of the child, and should steady the outside of the jaw with the
+fingers of the left hand, and the gum with the left thumb, and then
+you should perform the operation as before directed.
+
+Although the lancing of the gums, to make it intelligible to a
+non-professional person, requires a long description, it is, in point
+of fact, a simple affair, is soon performed, and gives but little
+pain.
+
+63. _If teething cause convulsions, what ought to be done_?
+
+The first thing to be done (after sending for a medical man) is to
+freely dash water upon the face, and to sponge the head with cold
+water, and as soon as warm water can be procured, to put him into a
+warm bath [Footnote: For the precautions to be used in putting a child
+into a warm bath, see the answer to question on "Warm Baths."] of 98
+degrees Fahrenheit. If a thermometer be not at hand, [Footnote: No
+family, where there are young children, should be without Fahrenheit's
+thermometer.] you must plunge your own elbow into the water: a
+comfortable heat for your elbow will be the proper heat for the
+infant. He must remain in the bath for a quarter of an hour, or until
+the fit be at an end. The body must, after coming out of the bath, be
+wiped with warm and dry and coarse towels; he ought then to be placed
+in a warm blanket. The gums must be lanced, and cold water should be
+applied to the head. An enema, composed of table salt, of olive oil,
+and warm oatmeal gruel--in the proportion of one table-spoonful of
+salt, of one of oil, and a tea-cupful of gruel--ought then to be
+administered, and should, until the bowels have been well opened, be
+repeated every quarter of an hour; as soon as he comes to himself a
+dose of aperient medicine ought to be given.
+
+It may be well, for the comfort of a mother, to state that a child in
+convulsions is perfectly insensible to all pain whatever; indeed, a
+return to consciousness speedily puts convulsions to the rout.
+
+64. _A nurse is in the habit of giving a child, who is teething,
+either coral, or ivory, to bite: do you approve of the plan_?
+
+I think it a bad practice to give him any hard, unyielding substance,
+as it tends to harden the gums, and, by so doing, causes the teeth to
+come through with greater difficulty. I have found softer substances,
+such as either a piece of wax taper, or an India-rubber ring, or a
+piece of the best bridle leather, or a crust of bread, of great
+service. If a piece of crust be given as a gum-stick, he must, while
+biting it, be well watched, or by accident he might loosen a large
+piece of it, which might choke him. The pressure of any of these
+excites a more rapid absorption of the gum, and thus causes the tooth
+to come through more easily and quickly.
+
+65. _Have you any objection to my baby, when he is cutting his teeth,
+sucking his thumb_?
+
+Certainly not: the thumb is the best gum-stick in the world:--it is
+convenient; it is handy (in every sense of the word): it is of the
+right size, and of the proper consistence, neither too hard nor too
+soft; there is no danger, as of some artificial gum-sticks, of its
+being swallowed, and thus of its choking the child. The sucking of the
+thumb causes the salivary glands to pour out their contents, and thus
+not only to moisten the dry mouth, but assist the digestion; the
+pressure of the thumb eases, while the teeth are "breeding," the pain
+and irritation of the gums, and helps, when the teeth are sufficiently
+advanced, to bring them through the gums. Sucking of the thumb will
+often make a cross infant contended and happy, and will frequently
+induce a restless babe to fall into a sweet refreshing sleep. Truly
+may the thumb be called a baby's comfort. By all means, then, let your
+child suck his thumb whenever he likes, and as long as he chooses to
+do so.
+
+There is a charming, bewitching little picture of a babe sucking his
+thumb in Kingsley's _Water Babies_, which I heartily commend to your
+favourable notice and study.
+
+66. _But if an infant be allowed to suck his thumb, will it not be
+likely to become a habit, and stick to him for years--until, indeed,
+he become a big boy_?
+
+After he have cut the whole of his first set of teeth, that is to say,
+when he is about two years and a half old, he might, if it be likely
+to become a habit, be readily cured by the following method, namely,
+by making a paste of aloes and water, and smearing it upon his
+thumb. One or two dressings will suffice as after just tasting the
+bitter aloes he will take a disgust to his former enjoyment, and the
+habit will at once be broken.
+
+Many persons I know have an objection to children sucking their
+thumbs, as for instance,--
+
+ "Perhaps it's as well to keep children from plums,
+ And from pears in the season, and sucking their thumbs." [Footnote:
+ _Ingoldsby Legends_.]
+
+My reply is,--
+
+ P'rhaps 'tis as well to keep children from pears;
+ The pain they might cause, is oft follow'd by tears;
+ 'Tis certainly well to keep them from plums;
+ But certainly not from sucking their thumbs!
+ If a babe suck his thumb
+ 'Tis an ease to his gum;
+ A comfort; a boon; a calmer of grief;
+ A friend in his need--affording relief;
+ A solace; a good; a soother of pain;
+ A composer to sleep; a charm; and a gain.
+
+ 'Tis handy, at once, to his sweet mouth to glide;
+ When done with, drops gently down by his side;
+ 'Tis fix'd, like an anchor, while the babe sleeps.
+ And the mother, with joy, her still vigil keeps.
+
+67. _A child who is teething dribbles, and thereby wets his chest,
+which frequently causes him to catch cold; what had better be done_?
+
+Have in readiness to put on several _flannel_ dribbling bibs, so that
+they may be changed as often as they become wet; or, if he dribble
+_very much_, the oiled silk dribbling-bibs, instead of the flannel
+ones, may be used, and which may be procured at any baby-linen ware
+house.
+
+68. _Do you approve of giving a child, during teething, much fruit_?
+
+No; unless it be a few ripe strawberries or raspberries, or a roasted
+apple, or the juice of five or six grapes--taking care that he does
+not swallow either the seeds or the skin--or the insides of ripe
+gooseberries, or an orange. Such fruits, if the bowels be in a costive
+state, will be particularly useful.
+
+All stone fruit, _raw_ apples or pears, ought to be carefully avoided,
+as they not only disorder the stomach and the bowels,--causing
+convulsions, gripings, &c.,--but they have the effect of weakening the
+bowels, and thus of engendering worms.
+
+69. _Is a child, during teething, more subject to disease, and, if so,
+to what complaints, and in what manner may they be prevented_?
+
+The teeth are a fruitful source of suffering and of disease; and are,
+with truth, styled "our first and our last plagues." Dentition is the
+most important period of a child's life, and is the exciting cause of
+many infantile diseases; during this period, therefore, he requires
+constant and careful watching. When we consider how the teeth elongate
+and enlarge in his gums, pressing on the nerves and on the surrounding
+parts, and thus how frequently they produce pain, irritation, and
+inflammation; when we further contemplate what sympathy there is in
+the nervous system, and how susceptible the young are to pain, no
+surprise can be felt, at the immense disturbance, and the consequent
+suffering and danger frequently experienced by children while cutting
+their _first_ set of teeth. The complaints or the diseases induced by
+dentition are numberless, affecting almost every organ of the
+body,--the _brain_, occasioning convulsions, water on the brain, &c.;
+the _lungs_, producing congestion, inflammation, cough, &c.; the
+_stomach_, exciting sickness, flatulence, acidity, &c,; the _bowels_,
+inducing griping, at one time costiveness, and at another time
+purging; the _skin_, causing "breakings-out."
+
+To prevent these diseases, means ought to be used to invigorate a
+child's constitution by plain, wholesome food, as recommended under
+the article of diet; by exercise and fresh air; [Footnote: The young
+of animals seldom suffer from cutting their teeth--and what is the
+reason? Because they live in the open air, and take plenty of
+exercise; while children are frequently cooped up in close rooms, and
+are not allowed the free use of their limbs. The value of fresh air
+is well exemplified in the Registrar-General's Report for 1843; he
+says that in 1,000,000 deaths, from all diseases, 616 occur in the
+town from teething while 120 only take place in the country from the
+same cause.] by allowing him, weather permitting, to be out of doors a
+great part of every day; by lancing the gums when they get red, hot,
+and swollen; by attention to the bowels, and if he suffer more than
+usual, by keeping them rather in a relaxed state by any simple
+aperient, such as either castor oil, or magnesia and rhubarb, &c.;
+and, let me add, by attention to his temper: many children are made
+feverish and ill by petting and spoiling them. On this subject I
+cannot do better than refer you to an excellent little work entitled
+Abbot's _Mother of Home_, wherein the author proves the great
+importance of _early_ training.
+
+70. _Have the goodness to describe the symptoms and the treatment of
+Painful Dentition_?
+
+Painful dentition may be divided into two forms--(1) the Mild; and (2)
+the Severe. In the _mild_ form the child is peevish and fretful, and
+puts his fingers, and everything within reach, to his mouth, he likes
+to have his gums rubbed, and takes the breast with avidity, indeed it
+seems a greater comfort to him than ever. There is generally a
+considerable flow of saliva, and he has frequently a more loose state
+of bowels than is his wont.
+
+Now, with regard to the more _severe_ form of painful dentition--The
+gums are red, swollen, and hot, and he cannot without expressing pain
+bear to have them touched, hence, if he be at the breast, he is
+constantly loosing the nipple. There is dryness of the mouth, although
+before there had been a great flow of saliva. He is feverish,
+restless, and starts in his sleep. His face is flashed. His head is
+heavy and hot. He is sometimes convulsed. [Footnote: See answer to
+Question 63.] He is frequently violently griped and purged, and
+suffers severely from flatulence. He is predisposed to many and
+severe diseases.
+
+The _treatment,_ of the _mild_ form, consists of friction, of the gum
+with the finger, with a little "soothing syrup," as recommended by Sir
+Charles Locock, [Footnote: Soothing syrup--Some of them probably
+contain opiates, but a perfectly safe and useful one is a little
+Nitrate of Potass in syrup of Roses--one scruple to half an
+ounce.--_Communicated by Sir Charles Locock to the Author._ This
+'soothing syrup' is not intended to be given us a mixture but to be
+used as an application to rub the gums with. It may be well to state
+that it is a perfectly harmless remedy even if a little of it were
+swallowed by mistake.] a tepid bath of about 92 degrees Fahrenheit,
+every night at bed time, attention to diet and to bowels, fresh air
+and exercise. For the mild form, the above plan will usually be all
+that is required. If he dribble, and the bowels be relaxed, so much
+the better. The flow of saliva and the increased action of the bowels
+afford relief, and therefore must not be interfered with. In the
+_mild_ form, lancing of the gums is not desirable. The gums ought not
+to be lanced, unless the teeth be near at hand, and unless the gums be
+red, hot, and swollen.
+
+In the _severe_ form a medical man should be consulted early, as more
+energetic remedies will be demanded; that is to say, the gums will
+require to be freely lanced, warm baths to be used, and medicines to
+be given, to ward off mischief from the head, from the chest, and from
+the stomach.
+
+If you are living in the town, and your baby suffers much from
+teething, take him into the country. It is wonderful what change of
+air to the country will often do, in relieving a child who is
+painfully cutting his teeth. The number of deaths in London, from
+teething, is frightful; it is in the country comparatively trifling.
+
+71. _Should an infant be purged during teething or indeed, during any
+other time, do you approve of either absorbent or astringent medicines
+to restrain it_?
+
+Certainly not. I should look upon, the relaxation as an effort of
+nature to relieve itself. A child is never purged without a cause;
+that cause, in the generality of instances, is the presence of either
+some undigested food, or acidity, or depraved motions, that want a
+vent.
+
+The better plan is, in such a case, to give a dose of aperient
+medicine, such as either castor oil, or magnesia and rhubarb; and thus
+work it off. IF WE LOCK UP THE BOWELS, WE CONFINE THE ENEMY, AND THUS
+PRODUCE MISCHIEF. [Footnote: I should put this in capitals, it is so
+important and is often mistaken.--C. Locock.] If he be purged more
+than usual, attention should be paid to the diet--if it be absolutely
+necessary to give him artificial food while suckling--and care must be
+taken not to overload the stomach.
+
+72. _A child is subject to a slight cough during dentition--called by
+nurses "tooth-cough"--which a parent would not consider of sufficient
+importance to consult a doctor about: pray tell me, is there any
+objection to a mother giving her child a small quantity either of
+syrup of white poppies, or of paregoric, to ease it_?
+
+A cough is an effort of nature to bring up any secretion from the
+lining membrane of the lungs, or from the bronchial tubes, hence it
+ought not to be interfered with. I have known the administration of
+syrup of white poppies, or of paregoric, to stop the cough, and
+thereby to prevent the expulsion of the phlegm, and thus to produce
+either inflammation of the lungs, or bronchitis. Moreover, both
+paregoric and syrup of white poppies are, for a young child, dangerous
+medicines (unless administered by a judicious medical man), and _ought
+never to be given by a mother_.
+
+In the month of April 1844, I was sent for, in great haste, to an
+infant, aged seventeen months, who was labouring under convulsions and
+extreme drowsiness, from the injudicious administration of paregoric,
+which had been given to him to ease a cough. By the prompt
+administration of an emetic he was saved.
+
+73. _A child, who is teething, is subject to a "breaking-out," more
+especially behind the ears--which is most disfiguring, and frequently
+very annoying what would you recommend_?
+
+I would apply no external application to cure it, as I should look
+upon it as an effort of the constitution to relieve itself, and should
+expect, if the "breaking-out" were repelled, that either convulsions,
+or bronchitis, or inflammation of the lungs, or water on the brain,
+would be the consequence. The only plan I should adopt would be, to be
+more careful in his diet, to give him less meat (if he be old enough
+to eat animal food), and to give him, once or twice a week, a few
+doses of mild aperient medicine, and, if the irritation from the
+"breaking-out" be great, to bathe it, occasionally, either with a
+little warm milk and water, or with rose water.
+
+
+EXERCISE.
+
+74. _Do you recommend exercise in the open air for a baby? and if so,
+how soon after birth_?
+
+I am a great advocate for his having exercise in the open air. "The
+infant in arms makes known its desire for fresh air, by restlessness,
+it cries, for it cannot speak its wants, is taken abroad and is
+quiet."
+
+The age at which he ought to commence taking exercise will, of course,
+depend upon the season and upon the weather. If it be summer, and the
+weather be fine, he should he carried in the open air, a week or a
+fortnight after birth, but if it be winter, he ought not on any
+account to be taken out under the month, and not even then, unless the
+weather be mild for the season, and it be the middle of the day. At
+the end of two months he should breathe the open air more
+frequently. And after the expiration of three months, he ought to be
+carried out _every day_, even if it be wet under foot, provided it be
+fine above, and the wind be neither in an easterly nor in a
+north-easterly direction. By doing so we shall make him strong and
+hearty, and give the skin that mottled appearance which is so
+characteristic of health. He must, of course, be well clothed.
+
+I cannot help expressing my disapprobation of the practice of
+smothering up an infant's face with a handkerchief, with a veil or
+with any other covering, when he is taken out into the air. If his
+face be so muffled up, he may as well remain at home, as under such
+circumstances, it is impossible for him to receive any benefit from
+the invigorating effects of the fresh air.
+
+75. _Can you devise any method to induce a babe himself to take
+exercise_?
+
+He must be encouraged to use muscular exertion, and, for this purpose,
+he ought to be frequently laid either upon a rug, or carpet, or the
+floor. He will then stretch his limbs and kick about with perfect
+glee. It is a pretty sight, to see a little fellow kicking and
+sprawling on the floor. He crows with delight and thoroughly enjoys
+himself. It strengthens his back, it enables him to stretch his limbs,
+and to use his muscles, and is one of the best kinds of exercise a
+very young child can take. While going through his performances his
+diaper, if he wear one, should be unfastened, in order that he might
+go through his exercises untrammelled. By adopting the above plan, the
+babe quietly enjoys himself--his brain is not over excited by it; this
+is an important consideration, for both mothers and nurses are apt to
+rouse, and excite very young children to their manifest detriment. A
+babe requires rest, and not excitement. How wrong it is, then, for
+either a mother or a nurse to be exciting and rousing a new born
+babe. It is most injurious and weakening to his brain. In the early
+period of his existence his time ought to be almost entirely spent in
+sleeping and in sucking!
+
+76. _Do you approve of tossing an infant much about_?
+
+I have seen, a child tossed nearly to the ceiling! Can anything be
+more cruel or absurd! Violent tossing of a young babe ought never to
+be allowed, it only frightens him, and has been known to bring on
+convulsions. He should be gently moved up and down (not tossed), such
+exercises causes a proper circulation of the blood, promotes
+digestion, and soothes to sleep. He must always be kept quiet
+immediately after taking the breast, if he be tossed _directly_
+afterwards, it interferes with his digestion, and is likely to produce
+sickness.
+
+
+SLEEP
+
+77. _Ought the infant's sleeping apartment to be kept warm_?
+
+The lying-in room is generally kept too warm, its heat being, in many
+instances, more that of an oven than of a room. Such a place is most
+unhealthy, and is fraught with danger both to the mother and the
+baby. We are not, of course, to run into an opposite extreme, but are
+to keep the chamber at a moderate and comfortable temperature. The
+door ought occasionally to be left ajar, in order the more effectually
+to change the air and thus to make it more pure and sweet.
+
+A new born babe, then, ought to be kept comfortably warm, but not very
+warm. It is folly in the extreme to attempt to harden a very young
+child either by allowing him, in the winter time, to be in a bedroom
+without a fire, or by dipping him in _cold_ water, or by keeping him
+with scant clothing on his bed. The temperature of a bedroom, in the
+winter time, should be, as nearly as possible, at 60 deg. Fahr. Although
+the room should be comfortably warm, it ought from time to time to be
+properly ventilated. An unventilated room soon becomes foul, and,
+therefore, unhealthy. How many in this world, both children and
+adults, are "poisoned with their own breaths!"
+
+An infant should not be allowed to look at the glare either of a fire
+or of a lighted candle, as the glare tends to weaken the sight, and
+sometimes brings on an inflammation of the eyes. In speaking to, and
+in noticing a baby, you ought always to stand _before_, and not
+_behind_ him, or it might make him squint.
+
+78. _Ought a babe to lie alone from the first_?
+
+Certainly not: at first--say, for the first few months--he requires
+the warmth of another person's body, especially in the winter; but
+care must be taken not to overlay him, as many infants, from
+carelessness in this particular, have lost their lives. After the
+first few months he had better lie alone, on a horse-hair mattress.
+
+79. _Do you approve of rocking an infant to sleep_?
+
+I do not. If the rules of health be observed, he will sleep both
+soundly and sweetly without rocking; if they be not, the rocking might
+cause him to fall into a feverish, disturbed slumber, but not into a
+refreshing, calm sleep. Besides, if you once take to that habit, he
+will not go to sleep without it.
+
+80. _Then don't you approve of a rocking-chair, and of rockers to the
+cradle_?
+
+Certainly not: a rocking-chair, or rockers to the cradle, may be
+useful to a lazy nurse or mother, and may induce a child to sleep, but
+that restlessly, when he does not need sleep, or when he is wet and
+uncomfortable, and requires "changing;" but will not cause him to have
+that sweet and gentle and exquisite slumber so characteristic of a
+baby who has no artificial appliances to make him sleep. No! rockers
+are perfectly unnecessary, and the sooner they are banished the
+nursery the better will it be for the infant community. I do not know
+a more wearisome and monotonous sound than the everlasting rockings to
+and fro in some nurseries, they are often accompanied by a dolorous
+lullaby from the nurse, which adds much to the misery and depressing
+influence of the performance.
+
+81. _While the infant is asleep, do you advise the head of the crib to
+be covered with a handkerchief, to shade his eyes from the light, and,
+if it be summer time, to keep off the flies_?
+
+If the head of the crib be covered, the babe cannot breathe freely,
+the air within the crib becomes contaminated, and thus the lungs
+cannot properly perform their functions. If his sleep is to be
+refreshing, he must breathe pure air. I do not even approve of a head
+to a crib. A child is frequently allowed to sleep on a bed with the
+curtains drawn completely close, as though it were dangerous for a
+breath of air to blow upon him [Footnote: I have somewhere read that
+if a cage containing a canary, be suspended at night within a bed
+where a person is sleeping, and the curtains be drawn closely around,
+that the bird will, in the morning, in all probability, be found
+dead!] This practice is most injurious. An infant must have the full
+benefit of the air of the room, indeed, the bed room door ought to be
+frequently left ajar, so that the air of the apartment may be changed,
+taking care, of course, not to expose him to a draught. If the flies,
+while he is asleep, annoy him, let a net veil be thrown over his face,
+as he can readily breathe through net, but not through a handkerchief.
+
+82. _Have you any suggestions to offer as to the way a babe should be
+dressed when he is put down to sleep_?
+
+Whenever he be put down to sleep, be more than usually particular that
+his dress be loose in every part, be careful that there be neither
+strings nor bands, to cramp him. Let him, then, during repose, be more
+than ordinarily free and unrestrained--
+
+ "If, whilst in cradled rest your infant sleeps.
+ Your watchful eyes unceasing vigil keeps
+ Lest cramping bonds his pliant limbs constrain,
+ And cause defects that manhood may retain."
+
+83. _Is it a good sign for a young child to sleep much_?
+
+A babe who sleeps a great deal thrives much more than one who does
+not. I have known many children, who were born [Footnote: It may be
+interesting to a mother to know the average weight of new born
+infants. There is a paper on the subject in the _Medical Circular_
+(April 10, 1861) and which has been abridged in _Braithwaite's
+Retrospect of Medicine_ (July and December 1861). The following are
+extracts--"Dr. E. von Siebold presents a table of the weights of 3000
+infants (1586 male and 1414 female) weighed immediately after
+birth. From this table (for which we have not space) it results that
+by far the greater number of the children, 2215 weighed between 6 and
+8 lbs. From 5 3/4 to 6 lbs. the number rose from 99 to 268, and from 8 to
+8 1/4 lbs. they fell from 226 to 67, and never rose again at any weight
+to 100. From 8 3/4 to 9 1/2 lbs. they sank from 61 to 8, rising however at
+9 1/2 lbs. to 21. Only six weighed 10 lbs., one 10 3/4 lbs. and two 11
+lbs. The author has never but once met with a child weighing 11
+lbs. The most frequent weight in the 3000 was 7 lbs, numbering 426. It
+is a remarkable fact, that until the weight of 7 lbs the female
+infants exceeded the males in number, the latter thenceforward
+predominating.
+
+From these statements, and those of various other authors here quoted,
+the conclusion may be drawn that the normal weight of a mature new
+born infant is not less than six nor more than 8 lbs., the average
+weight being 6 1/2 or 7 lbs., the smaller number referring to female and
+the higher to male infants."] small and delicate, but who slept the
+greatest part of their time, become strong and healthy. On the other
+hand, I have known those who were born large and strong, yet who slept
+but little, become weak and unhealthy.
+
+The common practice of a nurse allowing a baby to sleep upon her lap
+is a bad one, and ought never to be countenanced. He sleeps cooler,
+more comfortably, and soundly in his crib.
+
+The younger an infant is the more he generally sleeps, so that during
+the early months he is seldom awake, and then only to take the breast.
+
+84. _How is it that much sleep causes a young child to thrive so
+well_?
+
+If there be pain in any part of the body, or if any of the functions
+be not properly performed, he sleeps but little. On the contrary, if
+there be exemption from pain, and if there be a due performance of all
+the functions, he sleeps a great deal, and thus the body becomes
+refreshed and invigorated.
+
+85. _As much sleep is of such advantage, if an infant sleep but
+little, would you advise composing medicine to be given to him_?
+
+Certainly not. The practice of giving composing medicine to a young
+child cannot he too strongly reprobated. If he does not sleep enough,
+the mother ought to ascertain if the bowels be in a proper state,
+whether they be sufficiently opened, that the motions be of a good
+colour--namely, a bright yellow, inclining to orange colour--and free
+from slime or from bad smell. An occasional dose of rhubarb and
+magnesia is frequently the best composing medicine he can take.
+
+86. _We often hear of coroner's inquests upon infants who have been
+found dead in bed--accidentally overlaid what is usually the cause_?
+
+Suffocation, produced either by ignorance, or by carelessness. From
+_ignorance_ in mothers, in their not knowing the common laws of life,
+and the vital importance of free and unrestricted respiration, not
+only when babies are up and about, but when they are in bed and
+asleep. From _carelessness_, in their allowing young and thoughtless
+servants to have the charge of infants at night, more especially as
+young girls are usually heavy sleepers, and are thus too much
+overpowered with sleep to attend to their necessary duties.
+
+A foolish mother sometimes goes to sleep while allowing her child to
+continue sucking. The unconscious babe, after a tune, looses the
+nipple, and buries his head in the bed-clothes. She awakes in the
+morning, finding, to her horror, a corpse by her side, with his nose
+flattened, and a frothy fluid, tinged with, blood, exuding from his
+lips. A mother ought, therefore, never to go to sleep until her child
+have finished sucking.
+
+_The following are a few rules to prevent an infant from being
+accidentally overlaid_--(1.) Let your baby while asleep have plenty of
+room in the bed. (2.) Do not allow him to be too near to you; or if he
+he unavoidably near you (from the small size of the bed), let his face
+be turned to the opposite side. (3.) Let him lie fairly either on his
+side, or on his back. (4.) Be careful to ascertain that his mouth be
+not covered with the bed-clothes; and, (5.) Do not smother his face
+with clothes, as a plentiful supply of pure air is as necessary when
+he is awake, or even more so, than when he is asleep. (6.) Never let
+him lie low in the bed. (7.) Let there be _no_ pillow near the one
+his head is resting on, lest he roll to it, and thus bury his head in
+it Remember, a young child has neither the strength nor the sense to
+get out of danger; and, if he unfortunately either turn on his face,
+or bury his head in a pillow that is near, the chances are that he
+will be suffocated, more especially as these accidents usually occur
+at night, when the mother, or the nurse, is fast asleep. (8.) Never
+intrust him at night to a young and thoughtless servant.
+
+
+THE BLADDER AND THE BOWELS OF AN INFANT.
+
+87. _Have you any hints to offer respecting the bowels and the bladder
+of an infant during the first three months of his existence_?
+
+A mother ought daily to satisfy herself as to the state of the bladder
+and the bowels of her child. She herself should inspect the motions,
+and see that they are of a proper colour (bright-yellow, inclining to
+orange), and consistence (that of thick gruel), that they are neither
+slimy, nor curdled, nor green; if they should be either the one or the
+other, it is a proof that she herself has, in all probability, been
+imprudent in her diet, and that it will be necessary for the future
+that she be more careful both in what she eats and in what she drinks.
+
+She ought, moreover, to satisfy herself that the urine does not smell
+strongly, that it does not stain the diapers, and that he makes a
+sufficient quantity.
+
+A frequent cause of a child crying is, he is wet, and uncomfortable,
+and wants drying and changing, and the only way he has of informing
+his mother of the fact is by crying lustily, and thus telling her in
+most expressive language of her thoughtlessness and carelessness.
+
+88. _How soon may an infant dispense with diapers_?
+
+A babe of three months and upwards, ought to be held out, at least, a
+dozen times during the twenty-four hours; if such a plan were adopted,
+diapers might at the end of three months be dispensed with--a great
+_desideratum_-and he would be inducted into clean habits--a blessing
+to himself, and a comfort to all around, and a great saving of dresses
+and of furniture. "Teach your children to be clean. A dirty child is
+the mother's disgrace," [Footnote: Hints on Household Management, By
+Mrs C. L. Balfour.] Truer words were never written,--A DIRTY CHILD IS
+THE MOTHER'S DISGRACE.
+
+
+AILMENTS, DISEASE, ETC.
+
+89. _A new born babe frequently has a collection of mucus in the air
+passages, causing him to wheeze: is it a dangerous symptom_?
+
+No, not if it occur _immediately_ after birth; as soon as the bowels
+have been opened, it generally leaves him, or even before, if he give
+a good cry, which as soon as he is born he usually does. If there be
+any mucus either within or about the mouth, impeding breathing, it
+must with a soft handkerchief be removed.
+
+90. _Is it advisable, as soon as an infant is born, to give him
+medicine_?
+
+It is now proved that the giving of medicine to a babe _immediately_
+after birth is unnecessary, nay, that it is hurtful--that is, provided
+he be early put to the breast, as the mother's _first_ milk is
+generally sufficient to open the bowels. Sir Charles Locock [Footnote:
+In a _Letter_ to the Author.] makes the following sensible remarks on
+this subject:--"I used to limit any aperient to a new-born infant to
+those which had not the first milk, and who had wet nurses, whose milk
+was, of course, some weeks old, but for many years I have never
+allowed any aperient at all to any new born infant, and I am satisfied
+it is the safest and the wisest plan."
+
+The advice of Sir Charles Locock--_to give no aperient to a new-born
+infant_--is most valuable, and ought to be strictly followed. By
+adopting his recommendation, much after misery might be averted. If a
+new born babe's bowels be costive, rather than give him an aperient,
+try the effect of a little moist sugar, dissolved in a little water,
+that is to say, dissolve half a tea-spoonful of pure unadulterated
+_raw_ sugar in a tea-spoonful of warm water and administer it to him,
+if in four hours it should not operate, repeat the dose. Butter and
+raw sugar is a popular remedy, and is sometimes used by a nurse to
+open the bowels of a new born babe, and where there is costiveness,
+answers the purpose exceedingly well, and is far superior to castor
+oil. Try by all means to do, if possible, without a particle of
+opening medicine. If you once begin to give aperients, you will have
+frequently to repeat them. Opening physic leads to opening physic,
+until at length his stomach and bowels will become a physic shop! Let
+me, then, emphatically say, avoid, if possible, giving a new born babe
+a drop or a gram of opening medicine. If from the first you refrain
+from giving an aperient, he seldom requires one afterwards. It is the
+_first_ step, in this as in all other things, that is so important to
+take.
+
+If a new-born babe have _not_ for twelve hours made water, the medical
+man ought to be informed of it, in order that he may inquire into the
+matter, and apply the proper remedies. Be particular in attending to
+these directions, or evil consequences will inevitably ensue.
+
+91. _Some persons say, that new-born female infants have milk in their
+bosoms, and that it is necessary to squeeze them, and apply plasters
+to disperse the milk_.
+
+The idea of there being real milk in a baby's breast is doubtful, the
+squeezing of the bosom is barbarous, and the application of plasters
+is useless. "Without actually saying," says Sir Charles Locock, "there
+is milk secreted in the breasts of infants, there is undoubtedly not
+rarely considerable swelling of the breasts both in _female_ and
+_male_ infants, and on squeezing them a serous fluid oozes out. I
+agree with you that the nurses should never be allowed to squeeze
+them, but be ordered to leave them alone." [Footnote: _Letter_ to the
+Author.]
+
+92. _Have the goodness to mention the SLIGHT ailments which are not of
+sufficient importance to demand the assistance of a medical man_?
+
+I deem it well to make the distinction between _serious_ and _slight_
+ailments, I am addressing a mother. With regard to serious ailments, I
+do not think myself justified, except in certain _urgent_ cases, in
+instructing a parent to deal with them. It might be well to make a
+mother acquainted with the _symptoms_, but not with the _treatment_,
+in order that she might lose no time in calling in medical aid. This I
+hope to have the pleasure of doing in future Conversations.
+
+_Serious diseases, with a few exceptions_, and which I will indicate
+in subsequent Conversations, ought never to be treated by a parent,
+not even in the _early_ stages, for it is in the early stages that the
+most good can generally be done. It is utterly impossible for any one
+who is not trained to the medical profession to understand a _serious_
+disease in all its bearings, and thereby to treat it satisfactorily.
+
+There are some exceptions to these remarks. It will be seen in future
+Conversations that Sir CHARLES LOCOCK considers that a mother ought to
+be made acquainted with the _treatment_ of _some_ of the more
+_serious_ diseases, where delay in obtaining _immediate_ medical
+assistance might be death. I bow to his superior judgment, and have
+supplied the deficiency in subsequent Conversations.
+
+The ailments and the diseases of infants, such as may, in the absence
+of the doctor, be treated by a parent, are the following:--Chafings,
+Convulsions, Costivenesa, Flatulence, Gripings, Hiccup, Looseness of
+the Bowels (Diarrhoea), Dysentery, Nettle-rash, Red-gum, Stuffing of
+the Nose, Sickness, Thrush. In all these complaints I will tell
+you--_What to do_, and--_What NOT to do_.
+
+93. _What are the causes and the treatment of Chafing_?
+
+The want of water: inattention and want of cleanliness are the usual
+causes of chafing.
+
+_What to do._--The chafed parts ought to be well and thoroughly
+sponged with tepid _rain_ water--allowing the water from a well-filled
+sponge to stream over them,--and, afterwards, they should be
+thoroughly, but tenderly, dried with a soft towel, and then be dusted,
+either with finely-powdered starch, made of wheaten flour, or with
+Violet Powder, or with finely-powdered Native Carbonate of Zinc, or
+they should be bathed with finely-powdered Fuller's-earth and tepid
+water.
+
+If, in a few days, the parts be not healed discontinue the above
+treatment, and use the following application:--Beat up well together
+the whites of two eggs, then add, drop by drop, two table-spoonfuls of
+brandy. When well mixed, put it into a bottle and cork it up. Before
+using it let the excoriated parts be gently bathed with luke-warm rain
+water, and, with a soft napkin, be tenderly dried; then, by means of a
+camel's hair brush, apply the above liniment, having first shaken the
+bottle. But bear in mind, after all that can be said and done, _that
+there is nothing in these cases like water_--there is nothing like
+keeping the parts clean, and the only way of thoroughly effecting this
+object is _by putting him every morning INTO his tub_.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not apply white lead, as it is a poison. Do not
+be afraid of using _plenty_ of water, as cleanliness is one of the
+most important items of the treatment.
+
+94. _What are the causes of Convulsions of an infant_?
+
+Stuffing him, in the early months of his existence, _with food_, the
+mother having plenty of breast milk the while, the constant physicking
+of child by his own mother, teething, hooping-cough, when attacking a
+very young baby.
+
+I never knew a case of convulsions occur--say for the first four
+months--(except in very young infants labouring under hooping-cough),
+where children lived on the breast-milk alone, and where they were
+_not_ frequently quacked by their mothers.
+
+For the treatment of the convulsions from teething, see page 46.
+
+_What to do_ in a case of convulsions which has been caused by feeding
+an infant either with too much or with _artificial_ food. Give him,
+every ten minutes, a tea-spoonful of ipecacuanha wine, until free
+vomiting be excited then put him into a warm bath (see Warm Baths),
+and when he comes out of it administer to him a tea-spoonful of castor
+oil, and repeat it every four hours, until the bowels be well opened.
+
+_What NOT to do_--Do not for at least a month after the fit, give him
+artificial food, but keep him entirely to the breast. Do not apply
+leeches to the head.
+
+_What to do in a case of convulsions from hooping cough_--There is
+nothing better than dashing cold water on the face, and immersing him
+in a warm bath of 98 degrees Fahr. If he be about his teeth, and they
+be plaguing him, let the gums be both freely and frequently
+lanced. Convulsions seldom occur in hooping-cough, unless the child be
+either very young or exceedingly delicate. Convulsions attending an
+attack of hooping-cough make it a _serious_ complication, and requires
+the assiduous and skilful attention of a judicious medical man.
+
+_What NOT to do in such a case_--Do not apply leeches, the babe
+requires additional strength, and not to be robbed of it, and do not
+attempt to treat the case yourself.
+
+95. _What are the best remedies for the Costiveness of an infant_?
+
+I strongly object to the frequent administration of opening medicine,
+as the repetition of it increases the mischief to a tenfold degree.
+
+_What to do_.--If a babe, after the first few months, were held out,
+and if, at regular intervals, he were put upon his chair, costiveness
+would not so much prevail. It is wonderful how soon the bowels, in
+the generality of cases, by this simple plan, may be brought into a
+regular state. Besides, it inducts an infant into clean habits, I know
+many careful mothers who have accustomed their children, after the
+first three months, to do without diapers altogether. It causes at
+first a little trouble, but that trouble is amply repaid by the good
+consequences that ensue; among which must be named the dispensing with
+such encumbrances as diapers. Diapers frequently chafe, irritate, and
+gall the tender skin of a baby. But they cannot of course, at an early
+age be dispensed with, unless a mother have great judgment, sense,
+tact, and perseverance, to bring her little charge into the habit of
+having his bowels relieved and his bladder emptied every time he is
+either held out or put upon his chair.
+
+Before giving an infant a particle of aperient medicine, try, if the
+bowels are costive, the effect of a little _raw_ sugar and water,
+either half a tea-spoonful of raw sugar dissolved in a tea-spoonful or
+two of water, or give him, out of your fingers, half a tea-spoonful of
+raw sugar to eat. I mean by _raw_ sugar, not the white, but the pure
+and unadulterated sugar, and which you can only procure from a
+respectable grocer. If you are wise, you will defer as long as you can
+giving an aperient. If you once begin, and continue it for a while,
+opening medicine becomes a dire necessity, and then woe betide the
+poor unfortunate child. Or, give a third of a tea-spoonful of honey,
+early in the morning, occasionally. Or administer a warm water
+enema--a tablespoonful, or more, by means of a 2 oz. India Rubber
+Enema Bottle.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--There are two preparations of mercury I wish to
+warn you against administering of your own accord, viz.--(1) Calomel,
+and a milder preparation called (2) Grey-powder (mercury with
+chalk). It is a common practice in this country to give calomel, on
+account of the readiness with which it can be administered it being
+small in quantity, and nearly tasteless. Grey powder also, is, with
+many mothers, a favourite in the nursery. It is a medicine of immense
+power--either for good or for evil, in certain cases it is very
+valuable, but in others, and in the great majority, it is very
+detrimental. This practice, then, of a mother giving mercury, whether
+in the form either of calomel or of grey powder, cannot be too
+strongly reprobated, as the frequent administration either of the one
+or of the other weakens the body, predisposes it to cold, and
+frequently excites king's-evil--a disease too common in this
+country. Calomel and grey-powder, then, ought never to be administered
+unless ordered by a medical man.
+
+Syrup of buckthorn and jalap are also frequently given, but they are
+griping medicines for a baby, and ought to be banished from the
+nursery.
+
+The frequent repetition of opening medicines, then, in any shape or
+form, very much interferes with digestion, they must, therefore, be
+given as seldom as possible.
+
+Let me, at the risk of wearying you, again urge the importance of your
+avoiding, as much as possible, giving a babe purgative medicines. They
+irritate beyond measure the tender bowels of an infant, and only make
+him more costive afterwards, they interfere with his digestion, and
+are liable to give him cold. A mother who is always, of her own
+accord, quacking her child with opening physic, is laying up for her
+unfortunate offspring a debilitated constitution--a miserable
+existence.
+
+For further information on this important subject see the 3d edition
+of _Counsel to a Mother (being the companion volume of Advice to a
+Mother)_, on the great importance of desisting from irritating, from
+injuring, and from making still more costive, the obstinate bowels of
+a costive child,--by the administration of opening medicine,--however
+gentle and well-selected the aperients might be. Oh, that the above
+advice could be heard, and be acted upon, through the length and the
+breadth of the land, how much misery and mischief would then be
+averted!
+
+96. _Are there any means of preventing the Costiveness of an infant_?
+
+If greater care were paid to the rules of health, such as attention to
+diet, exercise in the open air, thorough ablution of the _whole_
+body--more especially when he is being washed--causing the water, from
+a large and well-filled sponge, to stream over the lower part of his
+bowels; the regular habit of causing him, at stated periods, to be
+held out, whether he want or not, that he may solicit a stool. If all
+these rules were observed, costiveness would not so frequently
+prevail, and one of the miseries of the nursery would be done away
+with.
+
+Some mothers are frequently dosing their poor unfortunate babes either
+with magnesia to cool them, or with castor oil to heal their bowels!
+Oh, the folly of such practices! The frequent repetition of magnesia,
+instead of cooling an infant, makes him feverish and irritable. The
+constant administration of castor oil, instead of healing the bowels,
+wounds them beyond measure. No! it would be a blessed thing if a babe
+could be brought up without giving ham a particle of opening medicine;
+his bowels would then act naturally and well: but then, as I have just
+now remarked, a mother, must be particular in attending to Nature's
+medicines--to fresh air, to exercise, to diet, to thorough ablution,
+&c. Until that time comes, poor unfortunate babies must be,
+occasionally, dosed with an aperient.
+
+97. _What are the causes of, and remedies for, Flatulence_?
+
+Flatulence most frequently occurs in those infants who live on
+_artificial_ food, especially if they be over-fed. I therefore beg to
+refer you to the precautions I have given, when speaking of the
+importance of keeping a child for the first five or six months
+_entirely_ to the breast; and, if that be not practicable, of the
+times of feeding, and of the _best_ kinds of artificial food, and of
+those which are least likely to cause "wind."
+
+_What to do._--Notwithstanding these precautions, if the babe should
+still suffer, "One of the best and safest remedies for flatulence is
+Sal volatile,--a tea-spoonful of a solution of one drachm to an ounce
+and a half of water" [Footnote: Sir Charles Locock, in a _Letter_ to
+the Author Since Sir Charles did me the honour of sending me, for
+publication, the above prescription for flatulence, a new "British
+Pharmacopoeia" has been published in which the sal volatile is much
+increased in strength it is therefore necessary to lessen the sal
+volatile in the above prescription one half--that is to say, a tea
+spoonful of the solution of _half_ a drachm to an ounce and a half of
+water.] Or, a little dill or aniseed may be added to the food--half a
+tea-spoonful of dill water Or, take twelve drops of oil of dill, and
+two lumps of sugar, rub them well in a mortar together, then add, drop
+by drop, three table-spoonfuls of spring water, let it be preserved in
+a bottle for use. A tea-spoonful of this, first shaking the vial, may
+be added to each quantity of food. Or, three tea-spoonfuls of bruised
+caraway-seeds may be boiled for ten minutes in a tea-cupful of water,
+and then strained. One or two tea-spoonfuls of the caraway tea may be
+added to each quantity of his food, or a dose of rhubarb and magnesia
+may occasionally be given.
+
+Opodeldoc, or warm olive oil, well rubbed, for a quarter of an hour at
+a time, by means of the warm hand, over the bowels, will frequently
+give relief. Turning the child over on his bowels, so that they may
+press on the nurses' lap, will often afford great comfort. A warm
+bath (where he is suffering severely) generally gives _immediate_ ease
+in flatulence, it acts as a fomentation to the bowels. But after all,
+a dose of mild aperient medicine, when the babe is suffering severely,
+is often the best remedy for "wind."
+
+Remember, at all times, prevention, whenever it be--and how frequently
+it is--possible, is better than cure.
+
+_What NOT to do_--"Godfrey's Cordial," "Infants' Preservative," and
+"Dalby's Carminative," are sometimes given in flatulence, but as most
+of these quack medicines contain, in one form or another, either opium
+or poppy, and as opium and poppy are both dangerous remedies for
+children, ALL quack medicines must be banished the nursery.
+
+Syrup of poppies is another remedy which is often given by a nurse to
+afford relief for flatulence; but let me urge upon you the importance
+for banishing it from the nursery. It has (when given by
+unprofessional persons) caused the untimely end of thousands of
+children. The medical journals and the newspapers teem with cases of
+deaths from mothers incautiously giving syrup of poppies to ease pain
+and to procure sleep.
+
+98. _What are the symptoms, the causes, and the treatment of
+"Gripings" of an infant_?
+
+_The symptoms._--The child draws up his legs; screams violently; if
+put to the nipple to comfort him, he turns away from it and cries
+bitterly; he strains, as though he were having a stool; if he have a
+motion, it will be slimy, curdled, and perhaps green. If, in addition
+to the above symptoms, he pass a large quantity of watery fluid from
+his bowels, the case becomes one of _watery gripes_, and requires the
+immediate attention of a doctor.
+
+The _causes_ of "gripings" or "gripes" may proceed either from the
+infant or from the mother. If from the child, it is generally owing
+either to improper food or to over-feeding; if from the mother, it may
+be traced to her having taken either greens, or port, or tart beer, or
+sour porter, or pickles, or drastic purgatives.
+
+_What to do._--The _treatment_, of course, must depend upon the
+cause. If it arise from over-feeding, I would advise a dose of castor
+oil to be given, and warm fomentations to be applied to the bowels,
+and the mother, or the nurse, to be more careful for the future. If it
+proceed from improper food, a dose or two of magnesia and rhubarb in a
+little dill water, made palatable with simple syrup. [Footnote:
+
+ Take of--Powdered Turkey Rhubarb, half a scruple;
+ Carbonate of Magnesia, one scruple;
+ Simple Syrup, three drachms;
+ Dill Water, eight drachms;
+
+Make a Mixture, One or two tea-spoonfuls (according to the age of the
+child) to be taken every four boors, until relief be obtained--first
+shaking the bottle.) If it arise from a mother's imprudence in eating
+trash, or from her taking violent medicine, a warm bath, a warm bath,
+indeed, let the cause of "griping" be what it may, usually affords
+instant relief.
+
+Another excellent remedy is the following--Soak a piece of new
+flannel, folded into two or three thicknesses, in warm water, wring it
+tolerably dry, and apply as hot as the child can comfortably bear it
+to the bowels, then wrap him in a warm, dry blanket, and keep him, for
+at least half an hour, enveloped in it. Under the above treatment, he
+will generally soon fall into a sweet sleep, and awake quite
+refreshed.
+
+_What NOT to do_--Do not give opiates, astringents, chalk, or any
+quack medicine whatever.
+
+If a child suffer from a mother's folly in her eating improper food,
+it will be cruel in the extreme for him a _second_ time to be
+tormented from the same cause.
+
+99. _What occasions Hiccup, and what is its treatment_?
+
+Hiccup is of such a trifling nature as hardly to require
+interference. It may generally be traced to over feeding. Should it be
+severe, four or five grains of calcined magnesia, with a little syrup
+and aniseed water, and attention to feeding are all that will be
+necessary.
+
+100. _Will you describe the symptoms of Infantile Diarrhoea_?
+
+Infantile diarrhoea, or _cholera infantum_, is one of the most
+frequent and serious of infantile diseases, and carries off, during
+the year, more children than any other complaint whatever a knowledge
+of the symptoms, therefore, is quite necessary for a mother to know,
+in order that she may, at the proper tune, call in efficient medical
+aid.
+
+It will be well, before describing the symptoms, to tell you how many
+motions a young infant ought to have a day, their colour, consistence,
+and smell. Well, then, he should have from three to six motions in
+the twenty four hours, the colour ought to be a bright yellow,
+inclining to orange, the consistence should be that of thick gruel;
+indeed, his motion, if healthy, ought to be somewhat of the colour
+(but a little more orange-tinted) and of the consistence of mustard
+made for the table; it should be nearly, if not quite, devoid of
+smell; it ought to have a faint and peculiar, but not a strong
+disagreeable odour. If it have a strong and disagreeable smell, the
+child is not well, and the case should be investigated, more
+especially if there be either curds or lumps in the motions; these
+latter symptoms denote that the food has not been properly digested.
+
+Now, suppose a child should have a slight bowel complaint--that is to
+say, that he has six or eight motions during the twenty-four
+hours,--and that the stools are of a thinner consistence than what I
+have described,--provided, at the same time, that he be not griped,
+that he have no pain, and have not lost his desire for the
+breast:--What ought to be done?_Nothing_. A slight looseness of the
+bowels should _never_ be interfered with,--it is often an effort of
+nature to relieve itself of some vitiated motion that wanted a
+vent--or to act as a diversion, by relieving the irritation of the
+gums. Even if he be not cutting his teeth, he may be "breeding"
+them--that is to say, the teeth may be forming in his gums, and may
+cause almost as much, irritation as though he were actually cutting
+them. Hence, you see the immense good a slight "looseness of the
+bowels" may cause. I think that I have now proved to you the danger of
+interfering in such a case, and that I have shown you, the folly and
+the mischief of at once giving astringents--such as Godfrey's Cordial,
+Dalby's Carminative, &c.--to relieve a _slight_ relaxation.
+
+A moderate "looseness of the bowels," then, is often a safety-valve,
+and you may, with as much propriety, close the safety-valve of a steam
+engine, as stop a moderate "looseness of the bowels!"
+
+Now, if the infant, instead of having from three to six motions,
+should have more than double the latter number; if they be more
+watery; if they become slimy and green, or green in part and curdled;
+if they should have an unpleasant smell; if he be sick, cross,
+restless, fidgety, and poorly; if every time he have a motion he be
+griped and in pain, we should then say that he is labouring under
+Diarrhoea; then, it will be necessary to give a little medicine, which
+I will indicate in a subsequent Conversation.
+
+Should there be both blood and slime mixed with the stool, the case
+becomes more serious; still, with proper care, relief can generally be
+quickly obtained. If the evacuations--instead of being stool--are
+merely blood and slime, and the child strain frequently and violently,
+endeavouring thus, but in vain, to relieve himself, crying at each
+effort, the case assumes the character of Dysentery. [Footnote: See
+Symptoms and Treatment of Dysentery.]
+
+If there be a mixture of blood, slime, and stool from the bowels, the
+case would be called Dysenteric-diarrhoea. The latter case requires
+great skill and judgment on the part of a medical men, and great
+attention and implicit obedience from the mother and the nurse. I
+merely mention these diseases in order to warn you of their
+importance, and of the necessity of strictly attending to a doctor's
+orders.
+
+101. _What are the causes of Diarrhoea--"Looseness of the bowels?"_
+
+Improper food; overfeeding; teething; cold; the mother's milk from
+various causes disagreeing, namely, from her being out of health, from
+her eating unsuitable food, from her taking improper and drastic
+purgatives, or from her suckling her child when she is pregnant. Of
+course, if any of these causes are in operation, they ought, if
+possible, to be remedied, or medicine to the babe will be of little
+avail.
+
+102. _What is the treatment of Diarrhoea_?
+
+_What to do._--If the case be _slight_, and has lasted two or three
+days (do not interfere by giving medicine at first), and if the cause,
+as it probably is, be some acidity or vitiated stool that wants a
+vent, and thus endeavours to obtain one by purging, the best treatment
+is, to assist nature by giving either a dose of castor oil, or a
+moderate one of rhubarb and magnesia, [Footnote: For a rhubarb and
+magnesia mixture prescription, see page 71 (_note_).] and thus to work
+off the enemy. After the enemy has been worked off, either by the
+castor oil, or by the magnesia and rhubarb, the purging will, in all
+probability, cease; but if the relaxation still continue, that is to
+say, for three or four days--then, if medical advice cannot be
+procured, the following mixture should be given:--
+
+ Take of--Aromatic Powder of Chalk and Opium, ten grains;
+ Oil of Dill, five drops;
+ Simple Syrup, three drachms;
+ Water, nine drachms;
+
+Make a Mixture, [Footnote: Let the mixture be made by a chemist.] Half
+a tea-spoonful to be given to an infant of six months and under, and
+one tea-spoonful to a child above that age, every four hours--first
+shaking the bottle.
+
+If the babe be at the breast, he ought, for a few days, to be kept
+_entirely_ to it. The mother should be most particular in her own
+diet.
+
+_What NOT to do._--The mother must neither take greens, nor cabbage,
+nor raw fruit, nor pastry, nor beer; indeed, while the diarrhoea of
+her babe continues, she had better abstain from wine, as well as from
+fermented liquors. The child, if at the breast, ought _not_, while
+the diarrhoea continues, to have any artificial food. He must neither
+be dosed with grey-powder (a favourite, but highly improper Remedy, in
+these cases), nor with any quack medicines, such as Dalby's
+Carminative or Godfrey's Cordial.
+
+103. _What are the symptoms of Dysentery_?
+
+Dysentery frequently arises from a neglected diarrhoea. It is more
+dangerous than diarrhoea, as it is of an inflammatory character; and
+as, unfortunately, it frequently attacks a delicate child, requires
+skilful handling; hence the care and experience required in treating a
+case of dysentery.
+
+Well, then, what are the symptoms? The infant, in all probability, has
+had an attack of diarrhoea--bowel complaint as it is called--for
+several days; he having had a dozen or two of motions, many of them
+slimy and frothy, like "frog-spawn," during the twenty-four hours.
+Suddenly the character of the motion changes,--from being principally
+stool, it becomes almost entirely blood and mucus; he is dreadfully
+griped, which causes him to strain violently, as though his inside
+would come away every time he has a motion,--screaming and twisting
+about, evidently being in the greatest pain, drawing his legs up to
+his belly and writhing in agony. Sickness and vomiting are always
+present, which still more robs him of his little remaining strength,
+and prevents the repair of his system. Now, look at his face! It is
+the very picture of distress. Suppose he has been a plump, healthy
+little fellow, you will see his face, in a few days, become
+old-looking, care-worn, haggard, and pinched. Day and night the enemy
+tracks him (unless proper remedies be administered); no sleep, or if
+he sleep, he is, every few minutes, roused. It is heart-rending to
+have to attend a bad case of dysentery in a child,--the writhing, the
+screaming, the frequent vomiting, the pitiful look, the rapid wasting
+and exhaustion, make it more distressing to witness than almost any
+other disease a doctor attends.
+
+104. _Can anything be done to relieve such a case_?
+
+Yes. A judicious medical man will do a great deal. But, suppose that
+yon are not able to procure one, I will tell you _what to do_ and
+_what NOT to do_.
+
+_What to do_.--If the child be at the breast, keep him to it, and let
+him have nothing else for dysentery is frequently caused by improper
+feeding. If your milk be not good, or it be scanty, _instantly_
+procure a healthy wet-nurse. _Lose not a moment;_ for in dysentery,
+moments are precious. But, suppose that you have no milk, and that no
+wet-nurse can be procured: what then? Feed him entirely on cow's
+milk--the milk of _one_ healthy cow; let the milk be unboiled, and be
+fresh from the cow. Give it in small quantities at a time, and
+frequently, so that it may be retained on the stomach. If a
+table-spoonful of the milk make him sick, give him a dessert-spoonful;
+if a dessert-spoonful cause sickness, let him only have a tea-spoonful
+at a time, and let it be repeated every quarter of an hour. But,
+remember, in such a case the breast milk--the breast milk alone--is
+incomparably superior to any other milk or to any other food whatever.
+
+If he be a year old, and weaned, then feed him, as above recommended,
+on the cow's milk. If there be extreme exhaustion and debility, let
+fifteen drops of brandy be added to each table-spoonful of new milk,
+and let it be given every half hour.
+
+Now with regard to medicine. I approach this part of the treatment
+with some degree of reluctance,--for dysentery is a case requiring
+opium--and opium I never like a mother of her own accord to
+administer. But suppose a medical man cannot be procured in time, the
+mother must then prescribe, or the child will die! _What then is to
+be done?_ Sir Charles Locock considers "that, in severe dysentery,
+especially where there is sickness, there is no remedy equal to pure
+Calomel, in a full dose without opium." [Footnote: Communicated by Sir
+Charles Locock to the Author.] Therefore, at the very _onset_ of the
+disease, let from three to five grains (according to the age of the
+patient) of Calomel, mixed with an equal quantity of powdered white
+sugar, be put dry on the tongue. In three hours after let the
+following mixture be administered:--
+
+ Take of--Compound Powder of Ipecacuanha, five grains;
+ Ipecacuanha Wine, one drachm;
+ Simple Syrup, three drachms;
+ Cinnamon Water, nine drachms;
+
+To make a Mixture, A tea-spoonful to be given every three or four
+hours, first _well_ shaking the bottle.
+
+Supposing he cannot retain the mixture--the stomach rejecting it as
+soon as swallowed--what then? Give the opium, mixed with small doses
+of mercury with chalk and sugar, in the form of powder, and put one of
+the powders _dry_ on the tongue, every three hours:--
+
+ Take of--Powdered Opium, half a grain;
+ Mercury with chalk, nine grains;
+ Sugar of Milk, twenty-four grains;
+
+Mix well in a mortar, and divide into twelve powders.
+
+Now, suppose the dysentery has for several days persisted, and that,
+during that time, nothing but mucus and blood--that no real stool--has
+come from the bowels, then a combination of castor oil and opium
+[Footnote: My friend, the late Dr Baly, who had made dysentery his
+particular study, considered the combination of opium and castor oil
+very valuable in dysentery.] ought, instead of the medicine
+recommended above, to be given:--
+
+ Take of--Mucilage of Gum Acacia, three drachms;
+ Simple Syrup, three drachms;
+ Tincture of Opium, ten drops (_not_ minims);
+ Castor Oil, two drachms;
+ Cinnamon water, four drachms:
+
+Make a Mixture. A tea spoonful to be taken every four hours, first
+_well_ shaking the bottle.
+
+A warm bath, at the commencement of the disease, is very efficacious;
+but it must be given at the _commencement_. If he has had dysentery
+for a day or two, he will be too weak to have a warm bath; then,
+instead of the bath, try the following:--Wrap him in a blanket, which
+has been previously wrung out of hot water; over which envelope him in
+a _dry_ blanket. Keep him in this hot, damp blanket for half an hour;
+then take him out, put on his nightgown and place him in bed, which
+has been, if it be winter time, previously warmed. The above "blanket
+treatment" will frequently give great relief, and will sometimes cause
+him to fall into a sweet sleep. A flannel bag, filled with hot
+powdered table salt, made hot in the oven, applied to the bowels, will
+afford much comfort.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not give aperients unless it be, as before
+advised, the castor oil guarded with the opium; do not stuff him with
+artificial food; do not fail to send for a judicious and an
+experienced medical man; for, remember, it requires a skilful doctor
+to treat a case of dysentery, more especially in a child.
+
+105. _What are the symptoms, the causes and the treatment of
+Nettle-rash_?
+
+Nettle-rash consists of several irregular, raised wheals, red at the
+base, and white on the summit, on different parts of the body; _but it
+seldom attacks the face_. It is not contagious, and it may occur at
+all ages and many times. It comes and goes, remaining only a short
+time in a place. It puts on very much the appearance of the child
+having been stung by nettles--hence its name. It produces great heat,
+itching, and irritation, sometimes to such a degree as to make him
+feverish, sick, and fretful. He is generally worse when he is warm in
+bed, or when the surface of his body is suddenly exposed to the air.
+Rubbing the skin, too, always aggravates the itching and the tingling,
+and brings out a fresh crop.
+
+The _cause_ of nettle-rash may commonly be traced to improper feeding;
+although, occasionally, it proceeds from teething.
+
+_What to do_.--It is a complaint of no danger, and readily gives way
+to a mild aperient, and to attention to diet. There is nothing better
+to relieve the irritation of the skin than a warm bath. If it be a
+severe attack of nettle-rash, by all means call in a medical man.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not apply cold applications to his skin, and do
+not wash him (while the rash is out) in quite _cold_ water. Do not
+allow him to be in a draught, but let him be in a well-ventilated
+room. If he be old enough to eat meat, keep it from him for a few
+days, and let him live on milk and farinaceous diet. Avoid strong
+purgatives, and calomel, and grey-powder.
+
+106. _What are the symptoms and the treatment of Red-gum_?
+
+Red-gum, tooth-rash, red-gown, is usually owing to irritation from
+teething; not always from the cutting but from the evolution--the
+"breeding," of the teeth. It is also sometimes owing to unhealthy
+stools irritating the bowels, and showing itself, by sympathy, on the
+skin. Red-gum consists of several small papulae, or pimples, about the
+size of pins' heads, and may be known from measles--the only disease
+for which it is at all likely to be mistaken--by its being unattended
+by symptoms of cold, such as sneezing, running, and redness of the
+eyes, &c., and by the patches _not_ assuming a crescentic--half-moon
+shape; red-gum, in short, may readily he known by the child's health
+being unaffected, unless, indeed, there be a great crop of pimples;
+then there will be slight feverishness.
+
+_What to do_.--Little need be done. If there be a good deal of
+irritation, a mild aperient should be given. The child ought to be
+kept moderately, but not very warm.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Draughts of air, or cold should be carefully
+avoided; as, by sending the eruption suddenly in, either convulsions
+or disordered bowels might be produced. Do not dose him with
+grey-powder.
+
+107. _How would you prevent "Stuffing of the nose" in a new-born
+babe_?
+
+Rubbing a little tallow on the bridge of the nose is the old-fashioned
+remedy, and answers the purpose. It ought to be applied every evening
+just before putting him to bed. If the "stuffing" be severe, dip a
+sponge in hot water, as hot as he can comfortably bear; ascertain that
+it be not too hot, by previously applying it to your own face, and
+then put it for a few minutes to the bridge of his nose. As soon as
+the hard mucus is within reach, it should be carefully removed.
+
+108. _Do you consider sickness injurious to an infant_?
+
+Many thriving babies are, after taking the breast, frequently sick;
+still we cannot look upon sickness otherwise than as an index of
+either a disordered or of an overloaded stomach. If the child be sick,
+and yet be thriving, it is a proof that he overloads his stomach. A
+mother, then, must not allow him to suck so much, at a time. She
+should, until he retain all he takes, lessen the quantity of milk. If
+he be sick and does _not_ thrive, the mother should notice if the milk
+he throws up has a sour smell; if it have, she must first of all look
+to her own health; she ought to ascertain if her own stomach be out of
+order; for if such be the case, it is impossible for her to make good
+milk. She should observe whether in the morning her own tongue be
+furred and dry; whether she have a disagreeable taste in her mouth, or
+pains at her stomach, or heart-burn, or flatulence. If she have all,
+or any of these symptoms, the mystery is explained why he is sick and
+does not thrive. She ought then to seek advice, and a medical man will
+soon put her stomach into good order; and, by so doing, will, at the
+same time, benefit her child.
+
+But if the mother be in the enjoyment of good health, she must then
+look to the babe himself, and ascertain if he be cutting his teeth; if
+the gums require lancing; if the secretions from the bowels be proper
+both in quantity and in quality; and, if he have had _artificial_
+food--it being absolutely necessary to give such food--whether it
+agree with him.
+
+_What to do_.--In the first place, if the gums be red, hot, and
+swollen, let them be lanced; in the second, if the secretion from the
+bowels be either unhealthy or scanty, give him a dose of aperient
+medicine, such as caster oil, or the following:--Take two or three
+grains of powdered Turkey rhubarb, three grains of pure carbonate of
+magnesia, and one grain of aromatic powder--Mix. The powder to be
+taken at bed-time, mixed in a tea-spoonful of sugar and water, and
+which should, if necessary, be repeated the following night. In the
+third place, if the food he be taking does not agree with him, change
+it (_vide_ answer to question 33). Give it in smaller quantities at a
+time, and not so frequently; or what will be better still, if it be
+possible, keep him, for a while, entirely to the breast.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not let him overload his stomach either with
+breast milk, or with _artificial food_. Let the mother avoid, until
+his sickness be relieved, greens, cabbage, and all other green
+vegetables.
+
+109. _What are the causes, the symptoms, the prevention, and the cure
+of Thrush_?
+
+The thrush is a frequent disease of an infant, and is often brought on
+either by stuffing or by giving him improper food. A child brought up
+_entirely_, for the first three or four months, on the breast, seldom
+suffers from this complaint. The thrush consists of several irregular,
+roundish, white specks on the lips, the tongue, the inside and the
+angles of the mouth, giving the parts affected the appearance of curds
+and whey having been smeared upon them. The mouth is hot and painful,
+and he is afraid to suck; the moment the nipple is put to his mouth he
+begins to cry. The thrush, sometimes, although but rarely, runs
+through the whole of the alimentary canal. It should be borne in mind
+that nearly every child, who is sucking, has his or her tongue white
+or "frosted," as it is sometimes called. The thrush may be mild or
+very severe.
+
+Now with regard to what to do.--As the thrush is generally owing to
+improper and to artificial feeding, _if the child be at the breast_,
+keep him, for a time, entirely to it. Do not let him be always
+sucking, as that will not only fret his month, but will likewise
+irritate and make sore the mother's nipple.
+
+_If he be not at the breast_, but has been weaned, then keep him for a
+few days entirely to a milk diet--to the milk of ONE cow--either
+boiled, if it be hot weather, to keep it sweet; or unboiled, in cool
+weather--fresh as it comes from the cow, mixed with warm water.
+
+The best medicine is the old-fashioned one of Borax, a combination of
+powdered lump-sugar and borax being a good one for the purpose: the
+powdered lump-sugar increases the efficacy, and the cleansing
+properties of the borax; it tends, moreover, to make it more
+palatable.--
+
+ Take of--Borax, half a drachm;
+ Lump Sugar, two scruples;
+
+To be well mixed together, and made into twelve powders. One of the
+powders to be put dry on the tongue every four hours.
+
+The best _local_ remedy is Honey of Borax, which ought to be smeared
+frequently, by means of the finger, on the parts affected.
+
+Thorough ventilation of the apartment must be observed; and great
+cleanliness of the vessels containing the milk should be insisted
+upon.
+
+In a bad case of thrush, change of air to the country is most
+desirable; the effect is sometimes, in such cases, truly magical.
+
+If the thrush be brought on either by too much or by improper food; in
+the first case of course, a mother must lessen the quantity; and, in
+the second, she should be more careful in her selection.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not use either a calf's teat or wash leather for
+the feeding-bottle; fortunately, since the invention of India-rubber
+teats, they are now nearly exploded; they were, in olden times,
+fruitful causes of thrush. Do not mind the trouble of ascertaining
+that the cooking-vessels connected with the baby's food are perfectly
+clean and sweet. Do not leave the purity and the goodness of the cow's
+milk (it being absolutely necessary to feed him on artificial food) to
+be judged either by the milk-man, or by the nurse, but taste and prove
+it yourself. Do not keep the milk in a warm place, but either in the
+dairy or in the cellar; and, if it be summer time, let the jug holding
+the milk be put in a crock containing lumps of ice. Do not use milk
+that has been milked longer than twelve hours, but if practicable,
+have it milked direct from the cow, and use it _immediately_--let it
+be really and truly fresh and genuine milk.
+
+When the disease is _severe_, it may require more active
+treatment--such as a dose of calomel; _which medicine must never be
+given unless it be either under the direction of a medical man, or
+unless it be in an extreme case,--such as dysentery_; [Footnote: See
+the Treatment of Dysentery.] therefore, the mother had better seek
+advice.
+
+In a _severe_ case of thrush, where the complaint has been brought on
+by _artificial_ feeding--the babe not having the advantage of the
+mother's milk--it is really surprising how rapidly a wet-nurse--if the
+case has not been too long deferred--will effect a cure, where all
+other means have been tried and have failed. The effect has been truly
+magical! In a severe case of thrush pure air and thorough ventilation
+are essential to recovery.
+
+110. _Is anything to be learned from the cry of an infant_?
+
+A babe can only express his wants and his necessities by a cry; he can
+only tell his aches and his pains by a cry; it is the only language of
+babyhood; it is the most ancient of all languages; it is the language
+known by our earliest progenitors; it is, if listened to aright, a
+very expressive language, although it is only but the language of a
+cry--
+
+ "Soft infancy, that nothing canst but cry."--_Shakspeare_.
+
+There is, then, a language in the cry of an infant, which to a mother
+is the most interesting of all languages, and which a thoughtful
+medical man can well interpret. The cry of a child, to an experienced
+doctor, is, each and all, a distract sound, and is as expressive as
+the notes of the gamut. The cry of passion, for instance, is a furious
+cry; the cry of sleepiness is a drowsy cry; the cry of grief is a
+sobbing cry; the cry of an infant when roused from sleep is a shrill
+cry; the cry of hunger is very characteristic,--it is unaccompanied
+with tears, and is a wailing cry; the cry of teething is a fretful
+cry; the cry of pain tells to the practised ear the part of pain; the
+cry of ear-ache is short, sharp, piercing, and decisive, the head
+being moved about from side to side, and the little hand being often
+put up to the affected side of the head; the cry of bowel-ache is also
+expressive,--the cry is not so piercing as from ear-ache, and is an
+interrupted, straining cry, accompanied with a drawing-up of the legs
+to the belly; the cry of bronchitis is a gruff and phlegmatic cry; the
+cry of inflammation of the lungs is more a moan than a cry; the cry of
+croup is hoarse, and rough, and ringing, and is so characteristic that
+it may truly be called "the croupy cry;" the cry of inflammation of
+the membranes of the brain is a piercing shriek--a danger signal--most
+painful to hear; the cry of a child recovering from a severe illness
+is a cross, and wayward, and tearful cry; he may truly be said to be
+in a quarrelsome mood; he bursts out, without rhyme or reason, into a
+passionate flood of tears--into "a tempest of tears:" tears are
+always, in a severe illness, to be looked upon as a good omen, as a
+
+ "The tears that heal and bless"--_H. Bonar_.
+
+Tears, when a child is dangerously ill, are rarely, if ever, seen; a
+cry, at night, for light--a frequent cause of a babe crying--is a
+restless cry:--
+
+ "An infant--crying in the night;
+ An infant crying for the light:
+ And with no language hat a cry."--_Tennyson_.
+
+111. _If an infant be delicate, have you any objection to his having
+either veal or mutton broth, to strengthen him_?
+
+Broths seldom agree with a babe at the breast I have known them
+produce sickness, disorder the bowels, and create fever. I recommend
+you, therefore, not to make the attempt.
+
+Although broth and beef-tea, when taken by the mouth, will seldom
+agree with an infant at the breast, yet, when used as an enema, and in
+small quantities, so that they may be retained, I have frequently
+found them to be of great benefit, they have in some instances
+appeared to have snatched delicate children from the brink of the
+grave.
+
+112. _My baby's ankles are very weak: what do you advise to strengthen
+them_?
+
+If his ankles be weak, let them every morning be bathed, after the
+completion of his morning's ablution, for fire minutes each time, with
+bay-salt and water, a small handful of bay-salt dissolved in a quart
+of rain water (with the chill of the water off in the winter, and of
+its proper temperature in the summer time); then let them be dried;
+after the drying, let the ankles he well rubbed with the following
+liniment:--
+
+ Take of--Oil of Rosemary, three drachms;
+ Liniment of Camphor, thirteen drachms:
+
+To make a Liniment
+
+Do not let him be put on his feet early; but allow him to crawl, and
+sprawl, and kick about the floor, until his body and his ankles become
+strong.
+
+Do not, on any account, without having competent advice on the
+subject, use iron instruments, or mechanical supports of any kind: the
+ankles are generally, by such artificial supports, made worse, in
+consequence of the pressure causing a further dwindling away and
+enfeebling of the ligaments of the ankles, already wasted and
+weakened.
+
+Let him wear shoes with straps over the insteps to keep them on, and
+not boots: boots will only, by wasting the ligaments, increase the
+weakness of the ankles.
+
+113. _Sometimes there is a difficulty in restraining the bleeding of
+leech bites. What is the best method_?
+
+The difficulty in these cases generally arises from the improper
+method of performing it. For example--a mother endeavours to stop the
+haemorrhage by loading the part with rag; the more the bites discharge,
+the more rag she applies. At the same time, the child probably is in a
+room with a, large fire, with two or three candles, with the doors
+closed, and with perhaps a dozen people in the apartment, whom the
+mother has, in her fright, sent for. This practice is strongly
+reprehensible.
+
+If the bleeding cannot be stopped,--in the first place, the fire most
+be extinguished, the door and windows should be thrown open, and the
+room ought to be cleared of persons, with the exception of one, or, at
+the most, two; and every rag should be removed. "Stopping of leech
+bites.--The simplest and most certain way, till the proper assistance
+is obtained, is the pressure of the finger, with nothing
+intervening. It _cannot_ bleed through that." [Footnote: Sir Charles
+Locock, in a _Letter_ to the Author.]
+
+Many babies, by excessive loss of blood from leech bites, have lost
+their lives from a mother not knowing how to act, and also from the
+medical man either living at a distance, or not being at
+hand. Fortunately for the infantile community, leeches are now very
+seldom ordered by doctors.
+
+114. _Supposing a baby to be poorly, have you any advice to give to
+his mother as to her own management_?
+
+She must endeavour to calm her feelings or her milk will be
+disordered, and she will thus materially increase his illness. If he
+be labouring under any inflammatory disorder, she ought to refrain
+from the taking of beer, wine, and spirits, and from all stimulating
+food; otherwise, she will feed his disease.
+
+Before concluding the first part of my subject--the Management of
+Infancy--let me again urge upon you the importance--the paramount
+importance--if you wish your babe to be strong and hearty,--of giving
+him as little opening physic as possible. The best physic for him is
+Nature's physic--fresh air, and exercise, and simplicity of living. A
+mother who is herself always drugging her child, can only do good to
+two persons--the doctor and the druggist!
+
+If an infant from his birth be properly managed,--if he have an
+abundance of fresh air for his lungs,--if he have plenty of exercise
+for his muscles (by allowing him to kick and sprawl on the floor),--if
+he have a good swilling and sousing of water for his skin,--if, during
+the _early_ months of his life, he have nothing but the mother's milk
+for his stomach,--he will require very little medicine--the less the
+better! He does not want his stomach to be made into a doctor's shop!
+The grand thing is not to take every opportunity of administering
+physic, but of using every means of with-holding it! And if physic be
+necessary, not to doctor him yourself, unless it be in extreme and
+urgent cases (which in preceding and succeeding Conversations I either
+have or will indicate), but to employ an experienced medical man. A
+babe who is always, without rhyme or reason, being physicked, is sure
+to be puny, delicate, and unhealthy, and is ready at any moment to
+drop into an untimely grave!
+
+I will maintain that a healthy child _never_ requires drugging with
+opening physic, and that costiveness is brought on by bad
+management. Aperient medicines to a healthy child are so much poison!
+_Let me impress the above remarks on every mother's mind;_ for it is a
+subject of vital importance. Never, then, give a purgative to a
+healthy child; for, if he be properly managed, he will never require
+one. If you once begin to give aperients, you will find a difficulty
+discontinuing them. Finally, I will only say with _Punch_,--"Don't"
+
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS ON INFANCY.
+
+115. In concluding the first part of our subject--Infancy--I beg to
+remark: there are four things essentially necessary to a babe's
+well-doing, namely, (1) plenty of water for his skin; (2) plenty of
+fresh genuine milk mixed with water for his stomach (of course, giving
+him ONLY his mother's milk during the first six, eight, or nine
+months of his existence); (3) plenty of pure air for his lungs; (4)
+plenty of sleep for his brain: these are the four grand essentials for
+an infant; without an abundance of one and all of them, perfect health
+is utterly impossible! Perfect health! the greatest earthly blessing,
+and more to be coveted than ought else beside! There is not a more
+charming sight in the universe than the beaming face of a perfectly
+healthy babe,--
+
+ "His are the joys of nature, his the smile,
+ The cherub smile, of innocence and health."--_Knox._
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+CHILDHOOD.
+
+
+ _The child is father of the man_.--WORDSWORTH.
+ _Bairns are blessings_--SHAKESPEARE.
+ _These are MY jewels!_--CORNELLA.
+
+
+ABLUTION.
+
+116. _At twelve months old, do you still recommend a child to be_ PUT
+IN HIS TUB _to be washed_?
+
+Certainly I do, as I have previously recommended at page 6, in order
+that his skin may be well and thoroughly cleansed. If it be summer
+time, the water should be used cold; if it be winter, a dash of warm
+must be added, so that it may be of the temperature of new milk: but
+do not, on any account use _very warm_ water. The head must be washed
+(but not dried) before he be placed in a tub, then, putting him in the
+tub (containing the necessary quantity of water, and washing him as
+previously recommended), [Footnote: See Infancy-Ablution, page 6.] a
+large sponge should be filled with the water and squeezed over his
+head, so that the water may stream over the whole surface of his
+body. A jugful of water should, just before taking him out of his
+bath, be poured over and down his loins; all this ought rapidly to be
+done, and he must be quickly dried with soft towels, and then
+expeditiously dressed. For the washing of your child I would recommend
+you to use Castile soap in preference to any other; it is more pure,
+and less irritating, and hence does not injure the texture of the
+skin. Take care that the soap does not get into his eyes, or it might
+produce irritation and smarting.
+
+117. _Some mothers object to a child's STANDING in the water._
+
+If the head be wetted before he be placed in the tub, and if he be
+washed as above directed, there can be no valid objection to it. He
+must not be allowed to remain in his tab more than five minutes.
+
+118. _Does not washing the child's head, every morning, make him more
+liable to catch cold, and does it not tend to weaken his sight_?
+
+It does neither the one nor the other; on the contrary, it prevents
+cold, and strengthens his sight; it cleanses his scalp, prevents
+scurf, and, by that means, causes a more beautiful bead of hair. The
+head, after each washing, ought, with a soft brush, to be well
+brushed, but should not be combed. The brushing causes a healthy
+circulation of the scalp; but combing the hair makes the head scurfy,
+and pulls out the hair by the roots.
+
+119. _If the head, notwithstanding the washing, be scurfy, what should
+be done_?
+
+After the head has been well dried, let a little cocoa-nut oil be well
+rubbed, for five minutes each time, into the roots of the hair, and,
+afterwards, let the head be well brushed, but not combed. The
+fine-tooth comb will cause a greater accumulation of scurf, and will
+scratch and injure the scalp.
+
+120. _Do you recommend a child to be washed_ IN HIS TUB _every night
+and morning_?
+
+No; once a day is quite sufficient; in the morning in preference to
+the evening; unless he be poorly, then, evening instead of morning;
+as, immediately after he has been washed and dried, he can be put to
+bed.
+
+121. _Ought a child to be placed in his tub whilst he is in a state of
+perspiration_?
+
+Not whilst he is perspiring _violently,_ or the perspiration might he
+checked suddenly, and ill consequences would ensue; _nor ought he to
+be put in his tub when he is cold,_ or his blood would be chilled, and
+would be sent from the skin to some internal vital part, and thus
+would be likely to light up inflammation--probably of the lungs. His
+skin, when he is placed in his bath, ought to be moderately and
+comfortably warm; neither too hot nor too cold.
+
+122. _When the child is a year old, do you recommend cold or warm
+water to be used_?
+
+If it be winter, a little warm water ought to be added, so as to raise
+the temperature to that of new milk. As the summer advances, less and
+less warm water is required, so that, at length, none is needed.
+
+123. _If a child be delicate, do you recommend anything to be added to
+the water which may tend to brace and strengthen him_?
+
+Either a handful of table-salt, or half a handful of bay-salt, or of
+Tidman's sea-salt, should be previously dissolved in a quart jug of
+_cold_ water; then, just before taking the child out of his morning
+bath, let the above be poured over and down the back and loins of the
+child--holding the jug, while pouring its contents on the back, a foot
+distant from the child, in order that it might act as a kind of douche
+bath.
+
+124. _Do you recommend the child, after he has been dried with the
+towel, to be rubbed with the hand_?
+
+I do; as friction encourages the cutaneous circulation, and causes the
+skin to perform its functions properly, thus preventing the
+perspiration (which is one of the impurities of the body) from being
+sent inwardly either to the lungs or to other parts. The back, the
+chest, the bowels, and the limbs are the parts that ought to be well
+rubbed.
+
+
+CLOTHING
+
+125. _Have you any remarks to make on the clothing of a child_?
+
+Children, boys and girls, especially if they be delicate, ought always
+to wear high dresses up to their necks. The exposure of the upper
+part of the chest (if the child be weakly) is dangerous. It is in the
+_upper_ part of the lungs, in the region of the collar bones, that
+consumption first shows itself. The clothing of a child, more
+especially about the chest, should be large and full in every part,
+and be free from tight strings, so that the circulation of the blood
+may not be impeded, and that there may be plenty of room for the fall
+development of the rapidly-growing body.
+
+His frock, or tonic, ought to be of woollen material--warm, light, and
+porous, in order that the perspiration may rapidly evaporate. The
+practice of some mothers in allowing their children to wear tight
+bands round their waists, and tight clothes, is truly reprehensible.
+
+_Tight_ bands or _tight_ belts around the waist of a child are very
+injurious to health; they crib in the chest, and thus interfere with
+the rising and the falling of the ribs--so essential to
+breathing. _Tight_ hats ought never to be worn; by interfering with
+the circulation they cause headaches. Nature delights in freedom, and
+resents interference!
+
+126. _What parts of the body in particular ought to be kept warm_?
+
+The chest, the bowels, and the feet, should be kept comfortably
+warm. We must guard against an opposite extreme, and not keep them too
+hot. The head alone should be kept cool, on which account I do not
+approve either of night or of day caps.
+
+127. _What are the best kinds of hat for a child_?
+
+The best covering for the head, when he is out and about, is a
+loose-fitting straw hat, which will allow the perspiration to
+escape. It should have a broad rim, to screen the eyes. A sun-shade,
+that is to say, a sea-side hat--a hat made of cotton--with a wide brim
+to keep off the sun, is also an excellent hat for a child; it is very
+light, and allows a free escape of the perspiration. It can be
+bought, ready made, at a baby-linen warehouse.
+
+A knitted or crocheted woollen hat, with woollen rosettes to keep the
+ears warm, and which may be procured at any baby-linen warehouse,
+makes a nice and comfortable winter's hat for a child. It is also a
+good hat for him to wear while performing a long journey. The colour
+chosen is generally scarlet and white, which, in cold weather, gives
+it a warm and comfortable appearance.
+
+It is an abominable practice to cover a child's head with beaver or
+with felt, or with any thick impervious material It is a
+well-ascertained fact, that beaver and silk hats cause men to suffer
+from headache, and to lose their hair--the reason being, that the
+perspiration cannot possibly escape through them. Now, if the
+perspiration cannot escape, dangerous, or at all events injurious,
+consequences must ensue, as it is well known that the skin is a
+breathing apparatus, and that it will not with impunity bear
+interference.
+
+Neither a child nor any one else should be permitted to be in the
+glare of the son without his hat. If he be allowed, he is likely to
+have a sun-stroke, which might either at once kill him, or might make
+him an idiot for the remainder of his life; which latter would be the
+worse alternative of the two.
+
+128. _Have you, any remarks to make on keeping a child's hands and
+legs warm when in the winter time he it carried out_?
+
+When a child either walks or is carried out in wintry weather, be sure
+and see that both his hands and legs are well protected from the
+cold. There is nothing for this purpose like woollen gloves, and
+woollen stockings coming up over the knees.
+
+129. _Do you approve of a child wearing a flannel nightgown_?
+
+He frequently throws the clothes off him, and has occasion to be taken
+up in the night, and if he have not a flannel gown on, is likely to
+catch cold; on which account I recommend it to be worn. The usual
+calico night-gown should be worn _under_ it.
+
+130. _Do you advise a child to be LIGHTLY clad, in order that he may
+be hardened thereby_?
+
+I should fear that such a plan, instead of hardening, would be likely
+to produce a contrary effect. It is an ascertained fact that more
+children of the poor, who are thus lightly clad, die, than of those
+who are properly defended from the cold. Again, what holds good with a
+young plant is equally applicable to a young child; and we all know
+that it is ridiculous to think of unnecessarily exposing a tender
+plant to harden it. If it were thus exposed, it would wither and die.
+
+131. _If a child be delicate, if he have a cold body, or a languid
+circulation, or if he be predisposed to inflammation of the lungs, do
+you approve of his wearing flannel instead of linen shirts_?
+
+I do; as flannel tends to keep the body at an equal temperature, thus
+obviating the effects of the sudden changes of the weather, and
+promotes by gentle friction the cutaneous circulation, thus warming
+the cold body, and giving an impetus to the languid circulation, and
+preventing an undue quantity of blood from being sent to the lungs,
+either to light up or to feed inflammation _Fine_ flannel, of course,
+ought to be worn, which should be changed as frequently as the usual
+shirts.
+
+If a child have had an attack either of bronchitis or of inflammation
+of the lungs, or if he have just recovered from scarlet fever, by all
+means, if he have not previously worn flannel, _instantly_ let him
+begin to do so, and let him, _next_ to the skin, wear a flannel
+waistcoat. _This is important advice, and ought not to be
+disregarded_.
+
+_Scarlet_ flannel is now much used instead of _white_ flannel; and as
+scarlet flannel has a more comfortable appearance, and does not shrink
+so much in washing, it may be substituted for the white.
+
+132. _Have you any remarks to make on the shoes and stockings of a
+child? and on the right way of cutting the toe-nails_?
+
+He ought, daring the winter, to wear lamb's wool stockings that will
+reach _above_ the knees, and _thick_ calico drawers that will reach a
+few inches _below_ the knees; as it is of the utmost importance to
+keep the lower extremities comfortably warm. It is really painful to
+see how many mothers expose the bare legs of their little ones to the
+frosty air, even in the depths of winter.
+
+Be sure and see that the boots and shoes of your child be sound and
+whole; for if they be not so, they will let in the damp, and if the
+damp, disease and perhaps death. "If the poor would take better care
+of their children's feet half the infantile mortality would
+disappear. It only costs twopence to put a piece of thick felt or cork
+into the bottom of a boot or shoe, and the difference is often between
+that and a doctors bill, with, perhaps, the undertaker's
+besides."--_Daily Telegraph_,
+
+Garters ought not to be worn, as they impede the circulation, waste
+the muscles, and interfere with walking. The stocking may be secured
+in its place by means of a loop and tape, which should be fastened to
+a part of the dress.
+
+Let me urge upon you the importance of not allowing your child to wear
+_tight_ shoes; they cripple the feet, causing the joints of the toes,
+which ought to have free play, and which should assist in walking, to
+be, in a manner, useless; they produce corns and bunions, and
+interfere with the proper circulation of the foot. A shoe ought to be
+made according to the shape of the foot--rights and lefts are
+therefore desirable. The toe-part of the shoe must be made broad, so
+as to allow plenty of room for the toes to expand, and that one toe
+cannot overlap another. Be sure, then, that there be no pinching and
+no pressure. In the article of shoes you ought to be particular and
+liberal; pay attention to having nicely fitting ones, and let them be
+made of soft leather, and throw them on one side the moment they are
+too small. It is poor economy, indeed, because a pair of shoes be not
+worn out, to run the risk of incurring the above evil consequences.
+
+_Shoes are far preferable to boots:_ boots weaken instead of
+strengthen the ankle. The ankle and instep require free play, and
+ought not to be hampered by boots. Moreover, boots, by undue
+pressure, decidedly waste away the ligaments of the ankle. Boots act
+on the ankles in a similar way that stays do on the waist--they do
+mischief by pressure. Boots waste away the ligaments of the ankle;
+stays waste away the muscles of the back and chest; and thus, in both
+cases, do irreparable mischief.
+
+A shoe for a child ought to be made with a narrow strap over the
+instep, and with button and button-hole; if it be not made in this
+way, the shoe will not keep on the foot.
+
+It is a grievous state of things, that in the nineteenth century there
+are but few shoemakers who know how to make a shoe! The shoe is made
+not to fit a real foot, but a fashionable imaginary one! The poor
+unfortunate toes are in consequence screwed up as in a vice!
+
+Let me strongly urge you to be particular that the sock, or stocking,
+fits nicely--that it is neither too small nor too large; if it be too
+small, it binds up the toes unmercifully, and makes one toe to ride
+over the other, and thus renders the toes perfectly useless in
+walking; if it be too large, it is necessary to lap a portion of the
+sock, or stocking, either under or over the toes, which thus presses
+unduly upon them, and gives pain and annoyance. It should be borne in
+mind, that if the toes have full play, they, as it were, grasp the
+ground, and greatly assist in locomotion--which, of course, if they
+are cramped up, they cannot possibly do. Be careful, too, that the
+toe-part of the sock, or stocking, be not pointed; let it be made
+square in order to give room to the toes. "At this helpless period of
+life, the delicately feeble, outspreading toes are wedged into a
+narrow-toed stocking, often so short as to double in the toes,
+diminishing the length of the rapidly growing foot! It is next,
+perhaps, tightly laced into a boot of less interior dimensions than
+itself; when the poor little creature is left to sprawl about with a
+limping, stumping gait, thus learning to walk as it best can, under
+circumstances the most cruel and torturing imaginable." [Footnote:
+_The Foot and its Covering_, second edition. By James Dowie. London:
+1872. I beg to call a mother's especial attention to this valuable
+little book: it is written by an earnest intelligent man, by one who
+has studied the subject in all its bearings, and by one who is himself
+a shoemaker.]
+
+It is impossible for either a stocking, or a shoe, to fit nicely
+unless the toe-nails be kept in proper order. Now, in cutting the
+toe-nails, there is, as in everything else, a right and a wrong
+way. The _right_ way of cutting a toe-nail is to cut it straight--in a
+straight line. The _wrong_ way is to cut the corners of the nail--to
+round the nail as it is called. This cutting the corners of the nails
+often makes work for the surgeon, as I myself can testify; it
+frequently produces "growing-in" of the nail, which sometimes
+necessitates the removal of either the nail, or a portion of it.
+
+133. _At what time of the year should a child leave off his winter
+clothing_?
+
+A mother ought not to leave off her children's winter clothing until
+the spring be far advanced: it is far better to be on the safe side,
+and to allow the winter clothes to be worn until the end of May. The
+old adage is very good, and should be borne in mind:--
+
+ "Button to chin
+ Till May be in;
+ Ne'er cast a clout
+ Till May be out."
+
+134. _Have you any general remarks to make on the present fashion of
+dressing children_?
+
+The present fashion is absurd. Children are frequently dressed like
+mountebanks, with feathers and furbelows and finery; the boys go
+bare-legged; the little girls are dressed like women, with their
+stuck-out petticoats, crinolines, and low dresses! Their poor little
+waists are drawn in tight, so that they can scarcely breathe; their
+dresses are very low and short, the consequence is, that a great part
+of the chest is exposed to our variable climate; their legs are bare
+down to their thin socks, or if they be clothed, they are only covered
+with gossamer drawers; while their feet are encased in tight shoes of
+paper thickness! Dress! dress! dress! is made with them, at a tender
+age, and when first impressions are the strongest, a most important
+consideration. They are thus rendered vain and frivolous, and are
+taught to consider dress "as the one thing needful" And if they live
+to be women--which the present fashion is likely frequently to
+prevent--what are they? Silly, simpering, delicate, lack-a-daisical
+nonentities; dress being their amusement, their occupation, their
+conversation, their everything, their thoughts by day and their dreams
+by night! Truly they are melancholy objects to behold! Let children be
+dressed as children, not as men and women. Let them be taught that
+dress is quite a secondary consideration. Let health, and not
+fashion, be the first, and we shall then have, with God's blessing,
+blooming children, who will, in time, be the pride and strength of
+dear old England!
+
+
+DIET.
+
+135. _At TWELVE months old, have you any objection to a child having
+any other food besides that you mentioned in answer to the 34th
+question_?
+
+There is no objection to his _occasionally_ having, for dinner, either
+a mealy, _mashed_ potato and gravy, or a few crumbs of bread and
+gravy. Rice-pudding or batter-pudding may, for a change, be given; but
+remember, the food recommended in a former Conversation is what, until
+he be eighteen months old, must be principally taken. During the early
+months of infancy--say, for the first six or seven--if artificial food
+be given at all, it should be administered by means of a
+feeding-bottle. After that time, either a spoon, or a nursing boat,
+will be preferable. The food as he becomes older, ought to be made
+more solid.
+
+136. _At_ EIGHTEEN _months old, have you any objection to a child
+having meat_?
+
+He ought not to have meat until he have several teeth to chew it
+with. If he has most of his teeth--which he very likely at this age
+will have--there is no objection to his taking a small slice either of
+mutton, or occasionally of roast beef, which should be well cut into
+very small pieces, and mixed with a mealy _mashed_ potato, and a few
+crumbs of bread and gravy; either _every_ day, if he be delicate, or
+every _other_ day, if he be a gross or a fast-feeding child. It may be
+well, in the generality of cases, for the first few months to give him
+meat _every other_ day, and either potato or gravy, or rice or
+suet-pudding or batter-pudding on the alternate days; indeed, I think
+so highly of rice, of suet, and of batter-puddings, and of other
+farinaceous puddings, that I should advise you to let him have either
+the one or the other even on those days that he has meat--giving it
+him _after_ his meat. But remember, if he have meat _and_ pudding, the
+meat ought to be given sparingly. If he be gorged with food, it makes
+him irritable, cross, and stupid; at one time, clogging up his bowels,
+and producing constipation; at another, disordering his liver, and
+causing either clay-coloured stools--denoting a _deficiency_ of bile,
+or dark and offensive motions--telling of _vitiated_ bile; while, in a
+third case, cramming him with food might bring on convulsions.
+
+137. _As you are to partial to puddings for a child, which do you
+consider the best for him_?
+
+He ought, every day, to have a pudding for his dinner--either rice,
+arrow-root, sago, tapioca, suet-pudding, batter-pudding, or
+Yorkshire-pudding, mixed with crumbs of bread and gravy--free from
+grease. A well boiled suet-pudding, with plenty of suet in it, is one
+of the best puddings he can have; it is, in point of fact, meat and
+farinaceous food combined, and is equal to, and will oftentimes
+prevent the giving of, cod-liver oil; before cod-liver oil came into
+vogue, suet boiled in milk was _the_ remedy for a delicate child. He
+may, occasionally, have fruit-pudding, provided the pastry be both
+plain and light.
+
+The objection to fruit pies and puddings is, that the pastry is often
+too rich for the delicate stomach of a child; there is so objection,
+certainly not, to the fruit--cooked fruit being, for a child, most
+wholesome; if, therefore, fruit puddings and pies be eaten, the pastry
+part ought to be quite plain. There is, in "Murray's Modern Cookery
+Book," an excellent suggestion, which I will take the liberty of
+quoting, and of strongly urging my fair reader to carry into
+practice:--"_To prepare fruit for children, a far more wholesome way
+than in pies and puddings_, is to put apples sliced, or plums,
+currants, gooseberries, &c., into a stone jar; and sprinkle among them
+as much Lisbon sugar as necessary. Set the jar on an oven or on a
+hearth, with a tea-cupful of water to prevent the fruit from burning;
+or put the jar into a saucepan of water, till its contents be
+perfectly done. Slices of bread or some rice may be put into the jar,
+to eat with the fruit."
+
+_Jam_--such as strawberry, raspberry, gooseberry--_is most wholesome
+for a child_, and ought occasionally to be given, in lieu of sugar,
+with the rice, with the batter, and with the other puddings.
+Marmalade, too, is very wholesome.
+
+Puddings ought to be given _after_ and not _before_ his meat and
+vegetables; if you give him pudding before his meat, he might refuse
+to eat meat altogether. By adopting the plan of giving puddings
+_every_ day, your child will require _less_ animal food; _much_ meat
+is injurious to a young child. But do not run into an opposite
+extreme: a _little_ meat ought, every day, to be given, _provided he
+has cut the whole of his first set of teeth_; until then, meat every
+_other_ day will be often enough.
+
+138. _As soon as a child has cut the whole of his first set of teeth,
+what ought to be his diet?--What should be his breakfast_?
+
+He can, then, have nothing better, where it agrees, than scalding hot
+new milk poured on sliced bread, with a slice or two of bread and
+butter to eat with it. Butter, in moderation, is nourishing,
+fattening, and wholesome. Moreover, butter tends to keep the bowels
+regular. These facts should be borne in mind, as some mothers
+foolishly keep their children from butter, declaring it to be too rich
+for their children's stomachs! New milk should be used in preference
+either to cream or to skim-milk. Cream, as a rule, is too rich for
+the delicate stomach of a child, and skim-milk is too poor when robbed
+of the butter which the cream contains. But give cream and water,
+where new milk (as is _occasionally_ the case) does not agree; but
+never give skim-milk. _Skim_-milk (among other evils) produces
+costiveness, and necessitates the frequent administration of
+aperients. Cream, on the other hand, regulates and tends to open the
+bowels.
+
+Although I am not, as a rule, so partial to cream as I am to good
+genuine fresh milk, yet I have found, in cases of great debility, more
+especially where a child is much exhausted by some inflammatory
+disease, such as inflammation of the lungs, the following food most
+serviceable:--Beat up, by means of a fork, the yolk of an egg, then
+mix, little by little, half a tea-cupful of very weak _black_ tea,
+sweeten with one lump of sugar, and add a table-spoonful of cream. Let
+the above, by tea-spoonfuls at a time be frequently given. The above
+food is only to be administered until the exhaustion be removed, and
+is not to supersede the milk diet, which must, at stated periods, be
+given, as I have recommended in answers to previous and subsequent
+questions.
+
+When a child has costive bowels, there is nothing better for his
+breakfast than well-made and well-boiled oatmeal stir-about, which
+ought to be eaten with milk fresh from the cow. Scotch children
+scarcely take anything else, and a finer race is not in existence;
+and, as for physic, many of them do not even know either the taste or
+the smell of it! You win find Robinson's Pure Scotch Oatmeal (sold in
+packets) to be very pure, and sweet, and good. Stir-about is truly
+said to be--
+
+ "The halesome parritch, chief of Scotia's food."--_Burns._
+
+Cadbury's Cocoa Essence, made with equal parts of boiling water and
+fresh milk, slightly sweetened with lump sugar, is an admirable food
+for a delicate child. Bread and butter should be eaten with it.
+
+139. _Have you any remarks to make on cow's milk as an article of
+food_?
+
+Cow's milk is a valuable, indeed, an indispensable article of diet,
+for the young; it is most nourishing, wholesome, and digestible. The
+finest and the healthiest children are those who, for the first four
+or five years of their lives, are fed _principally_ upon it. Milk
+ought then to be their staple food. No child, as a rule, can live, or,
+if he live, can be healthy, unless milk be the staple article of his
+diet. There is no substitute for milk. To prove the fattening and
+strengthening qualities of milk, look only at a young calf who lives
+on milk, and on milk alone! He is a Samson in strength, and is "as fat
+as butter;" and all young things if they are in health are fat!
+
+Milk, then, contains every ingredient to build up the body, which is
+more than can be said of any other known substance besides. A child
+may live entirely, and grow, and become both healthy and strong, on
+milk and on milk alone, as it contains every constituent of the human
+body. A child cannot "live by bread alone," but he might on milk
+alone! Milk is animal and vegetable--it is meat and bread--it is food
+and drink--it is a fluid, but as soon as it reaches the stomach it
+becomes a solid [Footnote: How is milk in the making of cheese,
+converted into curds? By rennet. What is rennet? The juice of a
+calf's maw or stomach. The moment the milk enters the human maw or
+stomach, the juice of the stomach converts it into curds--into solid
+food, just as readily as when it enters a calfs maw or stomach, and
+much more readily than by rennet, as the _fresh_ juice is stronger
+than the _stale_. An ignorant mother often complains that because,
+when her child is sick, the milk curdles, that it is a proof that it
+does not agree with him! If, at those times, it did _not_ curdle, it
+would, indeed, prove that his stomach was in a wretchedly weak state;
+she would then have abundant cause to be anxious.]--solid food; it is
+the most important and valuable article of diet for a child in
+existence. It is a glorious food for the young, and must never, on any
+account whatever, in any case be dispensed with. "Considering that
+milk contains in itself most of the constituents of a perfect diet,
+and is capable of maintaining life in infancy without the aid of any
+other substance, it is marvellous that the consumption of it is
+practically limited to so small a class; and not only so, but that in
+sick-rooms, where the patient is surrounded with every luxury,
+arrow-root, and other compounds containing much less nutriment, should
+so often be preferred to it."--_The Times._
+
+Do not let me be misunderstood. I do not mean to say, but that the
+mixing of farinaceous food--such as Lemann's Biscuit Powder, Robb's
+Biscuit, Hard's Farinaceous Food, Brown and Polson's Corn Flour, and
+the like, with the milk, is an improvement, in some cases--a great
+improvement; but still I maintain that a child might live and thrive,
+and that for a lengthened period, on milk--and on milk alone!
+
+A dog will live and fatten for six weeks on milk alone; while he will
+starve and die in a shorter period on strong beef-tea alone!
+
+It is a grievous sin for a milkman to adulterate milk. How many a
+poor infant has fallen a victim to that crime!--for crime it may be
+truly called.
+
+It is folly in the extreme for a mother to bate a milkman down in the
+price of his milk; if she does, the milk is sure to be either of
+inferior quality, or adulterated, or diluted with water; and woe
+betide the poor unfortunate child if it be either the one or the
+other! The only way to insure good milk is, to go to a respectable
+cow-keeper, and let him be made to thoroughly understand the
+importance of your child having _genuine_ milk, and that you are then
+willing to pay a fair remunerative price for it. Rest assured, that if
+you have to pay one penny or even twopence a quart more for _genuine_
+milk, it is one of the best investments that you ever have made, or
+that you are ever likely to make in this world! Cheap and inferior
+milk might well be called cheap and nasty; for inferior or adulterated
+milk is the very essence, the conglomeration of nastiness; and,
+moreover, is very poisonous to a child's stomach. One and the
+principal reason why so many children are rickety and scrofulous, is
+the horrid stuff called milk that is usually given to them. It is a
+crying evil, and demands a thorough investigation and reformation, and
+the individual interference of every parent. Limited Liability
+Companies are the order of the day; it would really be not a bad
+speculation if one were formed in every large town, in order to insure
+good, genuine, and undiluted milk.
+
+_Young_ children, as a rule, are allowed to eat too much meat. It is a
+mistaken notion of a mother that they require so much animal food. If
+more milk were given and less meat, they would he healthier, and would
+not be so predisposed to disease, especially to diseases of debility,
+and to skin-disease.
+
+I should strongly recommend you, then, to be extravagant in your milk
+score. Each child ought, in the twenty-four hours, to take at least a
+quart of good, fresh, new milk. It should, of course, be given in
+various ways,--as bread and milk, rice-puddings, milk and differents
+kinds of farinaceous food, stir-about, plain milk, cold milk, hot
+milk, any way, and every way, that will please his palate, and that
+will induce him to take an abundant supply of it. The "advice" I have
+just given you is of paramount importance, and demands your most
+earnest attention. There would be very few rickety children in the
+world if my "counsel" were followed out to the very letter.
+
+140. _But suppose my child will not take milk, he having an aversion
+to it, what ought then to be done_?
+
+Boil the milk, and sweeten it to suit his palate. After he has been
+accustomed to it for a while, he will then, probably, like
+milk. Gradually reduce the sugar, until at length it be dispensed
+with. A child will often take milk this way, whereas he will not
+otherwise touch it.
+
+If a child will not drink milk, he _must_ eat meat; it is absolutely
+necessary that he should have either the one or the other; and, if he
+have cut nearly all his teeth, he ought to have both meat and
+milk--the former in moderation, the latter in abundance.
+
+141. _Supposing milk should not agree with my child, what must then be
+done_?
+
+Milk, either boiled or unboiled, almost always agrees with a child. If
+it does not, it must be looked upon as the exception, and not as the
+rule. I would, in such a case, advise one-eighth of lime water to be
+added to seven-eighths of new milk--that is to say, two
+table-spoonfuls of lime water should be mixed with half a pint of new
+milk.
+
+142. _Can you tell me of a way to prevent milk, in hot weather, from
+turning sour_?
+
+Let the jug of milk be put into a crock, containing ice--Wenham Lake
+is the best--either in the dairy or in the cellar. The ice may at any
+time, be procured of a respectable fishmonger, and should be kept,
+wrapped either in flannel or in blanket, in a cool place, until it be
+wanted.
+
+143. _Can you tell me why the children of the rich suffer so much more
+from costiveness than do the children of the poor_?
+
+The principal reason is that the children of the rich drink milk
+without water, while the children of the poor drink water without, or
+with very little, milk--milk being binding, and water opening to the
+bowels. Be sure then, and bear in mind, _as this is most important
+advice_, to see that water is mixed with all the milk that is given to
+your child. The combination of milk and water for a child is a
+glorious compound--strengthening, fattening, refreshing, and
+regulating to the bowels, and thus doing away with that disgraceful
+proceeding so common in nurseries, of everlastingly physicking,
+irritating and irreparably injuring the tender bowels of a child.
+
+My opinion is, that aperients, as a rule, are quite unnecessary, and
+should only be given in severe illness, and under the direction of a
+judicious medical man. How much misery, and injury, might be averted
+if milk were always given to a child in combination with water!
+
+Aperients, by repetition, unlike water, increase the mischief tenfold,
+and cork them up most effectually; so that the bowels, in time, will
+not act without them!
+
+A mother before she gives an aperient to her child should ponder well
+upon what I have said upon the subject, it being a vital question,
+affecting, as it does, the well-being and the well-doing of her child.
+
+144. _But, if a child's bowels be very costive, what is to be done to
+relieve them_?
+
+Do not give him a grain or a drop of opening medicine, but in lieu
+thereof, administer, by means of a 6 oz. India-rubber Enema Bottle,
+half a tea-cup or a tea-cupful, according to the age of the child,
+[Footnote: For a babe, from birth until he be two years old, one, two,
+or three table-spoonfuls of warm water will be sufficient, and a 2
+oz. Enema Bottle will be the proper size for the purpose of
+administering it.] of warm water; now this will effectually open the
+bowels, without confining them afterwards, which opening physic would
+most assuredly do!
+
+145. _Is it necessary to give a child luncheon_?
+
+If he want anything to eat between breakfast and dinner let him have a
+piece of dry bread; and if he have eaten very heartily at dinner, and,
+like Oliver Twist, "asks for more!" give him, to satisfy his craving,
+a piece of _dry_ bread. He will never eat more of that than will do
+him good, and yet he will take sufficient to satisfy his hunger, which
+is very important.
+
+146. _What ought now to be his dinner_?
+
+He should now have meat, either mutton or beef, daily, which must be
+cut up very small, and should be mixed with mealy, _mashed_ potato and
+gravy. He ought _always_ to be accustomed to eat salt with his
+dinner. Let a mother see that this advice is followed, or evil
+consequences will inevitably ensue. Let him be closely watched, to
+ascertain that he well masticates his food, and that he does not eat
+too quickly; for young children are apt to bolt their food.
+
+147. _Have you any objection to pork for a change_?
+
+I have a great objection to it for the young. It is a rich, gross, and
+therefore unwholesome food for the delicate stomach of a child. I have
+known it, in several instances, produce violent pain, sickness,
+purging, and convulsions. If a child be fed much, upon such meat, it
+will be likely to produce "breakings-out" on the skin. In fine, his
+blood will put on the same character as the food he is fed
+with. Moreover, pork might be considered a _strong meat_, and
+"_strong_ meat and _strong_ drink can only be taken by _strong_ men."
+
+148. _Do you approve of veal for a child_?
+
+My objection to pork was, that it was rich and gross; this does not
+apply to veal; but the objection to it is, that it is more difficult
+of digestion that either mutton or beef; indeed, all young meats are
+harder of digestion than meats of maturity; thus mutton is more
+digestible than lamb, and beef than veal.
+
+149. _Do you disapprove of salted and boiled beef for a child_?
+
+If beef be _much_ salted it is hard of digestion, and therefore ought
+not to be given to him; but if it have been but _slightly_ salted,
+then for a change there will be no objection to a little. There is no
+necessity in the _winter_ time to _salt_ meat intended for boiling;
+then boiled _unsalted_ meat makes a nice change for a child's dinner.
+Salt, of course, _must_ with the unsalted meat be eaten.
+
+150. _But suppose there is nothing on the table that a child may with
+impunity eat_?
+
+He should then have either a grilled mutton chop, or a lightly-boiled
+egg; indeed, the latter, at any time, makes an excellent change. There
+is great nourishment in an egg; it will not only strengthen the frame,
+but it will give animal heat as well: these two qualities of an egg
+are most valuable; indeed, essential for the due performance of
+health: many articles of food contain the one qualification, but not
+the other: hence the egg is admirably suitable for a child's
+_occasional_ dinner.
+
+151. _Are potatoes an unwholesome food for a child_?
+
+New ones are; but old potatoes well cooked and mealy, are the best
+vegetable he can have. They ought to be _well mashed_, as I have known
+lumps of potatoes cause convulsions.
+
+152. _Do you approve of any other vegetables for a child_?
+
+Occasionally: either asparagus or broccoli, or cauliflower, or
+turnips, or French beans, which latter should be cut up fine, may with
+advantage be given. Green peas may occasionally be given, provided
+they be thoroughly well boiled, and mashed with the knife on the
+plate. Underdone and unmashed peas are not fit for a child's stomach:
+there is nothing more difficult of digestion than underdone peas. It
+is important, too, to mash them, even if they be well done, as a child
+generally bolts peas whole; and they pass through the alimentary canal
+without being in the least digested.
+
+153. _Might not a mother be too particular in dieting her child_?
+
+Certainly not. If blood can be too pure and too good she might! When
+we take into account that the food we eat is converted into blood;
+that if the food be good the blood is good; and that if the food be
+improper or impure, the blood is impure likewise; and, moreover, when
+we know that every part of the body is built up by the blood, we
+cannot be considered to be too particular in making our selection of
+food. Besides if indigestible or improper food be taken into the
+stomach, the blood will not only be made impure, but the stomach and
+the bowels will be disordered. Do not let me be misunderstood: I am no
+advocate for a child having the same food one day as another--
+certainly not. Let there be variety, but let it be _wholesome_
+variety. Variety in a child's (not in infant's) food is necessary. If
+he were fed, day after day, on mutton, his stomach would, at length be
+brought into that state, that in time it would not properly digest any
+other meat, and a miserable existence would be the result.
+
+154. _What ought a child to drink with his dinner_?
+
+Toast and water, or, if he prefer it, plain spring water. Let him
+have as much as he likes. If you give him water to drink, there is no
+fear of his taking too much; Nature will tell him when he has had
+enough. Be careful of the quality of the water, and the source from
+which you procure it. If the water be _hard_--provided it be free from
+organic matter--so much the better. [Footnote: See the _third_ edition
+of _Counsel to a Mother_, under the head of "Hard or soft water as a
+beverage!"] Spring water from a moderately deep well is the best. If
+it come from a land spring, it is apt, indeed, is almost sure to be
+contaminated by drains, &c.; which is a frequent cause of fevers, of
+diphtheria, of Asiatic cholera, and of other blood poisons.
+
+Guard against the drinking water being contaminated with lead; never,
+therefore, allow the water to be collected in leaden cisterns, as it
+sometimes is if the water be obtained from Water-works companies. Lead
+pumps, for the same reason, ought never to be used for drinking
+purposes. Paralysis, constipation, lead colic, dropping of the wrist,
+wasting of the ball of the thumb, loss of memory, and broken and
+ruined health, might result from neglect of this advice.
+
+The drinking fountains are a great boon to poor children, as water and
+plenty of it, is one of the chief necessaries of their existence; and,
+unfortunately, at their own homes they are not, oftentimes, able to
+obtain a sufficient supply. Moreover, drinking fountains are the best
+advocates for Temperance.
+
+Some parents are in the habit of giving their children beer with their
+dinners--making them live as they live themselves! This practice is
+truly absurd, and fraught with great danger! not only so, but it is
+inducing a child to be fond of that which in after life might be his
+bane and curse! No good end can be obtained by it; it will _not_
+strengthen so young a child; it will on the contrary, create fever,
+and will thereby weaken him; it will act injuriously upon his
+delicate, nervous, and vascular systems, and by means of producing
+inflammation either of the brain or of its membranes, might thus cause
+water on the brain (a disease to which young children are subject), or
+it might induce inflammation of the lungs.
+
+155. _What ought a child who has cut his teeth to have for his
+supper_?
+
+The same that he has for breakfast. He should sup at six o'clock.
+
+156. _Have you any general remarks to make on a child's meals_?
+
+I recommended a great sameness in an _infant's_ diet; but a _child's_
+meals, his dinners especially, ought to be much varied. For instance,
+do not let him have day after day mutton; but ring the changes on
+mutton, beef, poultry, game, and even occasionally fish--sole or cod.
+
+Not only let there be a change of meat, but let there be a change in
+the manner of cooking it; let the meat sometimes be roasted; let it at
+other times be boiled. I have known a mother who has prided herself as
+being experienced in these matters, feed her child, day after day, on
+mutton chops! Such a proceeding is most injurious to him, as after a
+while his unfortunate stomach will digest nothing but mutton chops,
+and, in time, not even those!
+
+With regard to vegetables, potatoes--_mashed_ potatoes--ought to be
+his staple vegetable; but, every now and then, cauliflower, asparagus,
+turnips, and French beans, should be given.
+
+With respect to puddings, vary them; rice, one day; suet, another;
+batter, a third; tapioca, a fourth; or, even occasionally, he might
+have either apple or gooseberry or rhubarb pudding--provided the
+pastry be plain and light.
+
+It is an excellent plan, as I have before remarked, to let her child
+eat jam--such as strawberry, raspberry, or gooseberry--and that
+without stint, either with rice or with batter puddings.
+
+_Variety of diet_, then, is _good for a child:_ it will give him
+muscle, bone, and sinew; and, what is very important, it will tend to
+regulate his bowels, and it will thus prevent the necessity of giving
+him aperients.
+
+But do not stuff a child--do not press him, as is the wont of some
+mothers, to eat more than he feels inclined. On the contrary, if you
+think that he is eating too much--that he is overloading his
+stomach--and if he should ask for more, then, instead of giving him
+either more meat or more pudding, give him a piece of dry bread. By
+doing so, you may rest assured that he will not eat more than is
+absolutely good for him.
+
+157. _If a child be delicate, is there any objection to a little wine,
+such as cowslip or tent, to strengthen him_?
+
+Wine ought not to be given to a child unless it be ordered by a
+medical man; it is even more injurious than beer. Wine, beer, and
+spirits, principally owe their strength to the alcohol they contain;
+indeed, nearly _all_ wines are _fortified_ (as it is called) with
+brandy. Brandy contains a large quantity of alcohol, more than any
+other liquor, namely 55.3 per cent. If, therefore, you give wine, it
+is, in point of fact, giving diluted brandy--diluted alcohol; and
+alcohol acts, unless it be used as a medicine, and under skilful
+medical advice, as a poison to a child.
+
+158. _Suppose a child suddenly to lose his appetite? is any notice to
+be taken of it_?
+
+If he cannot eat well, depend upon it, there is something wrong about
+the system. If he be teething, let a mother look well to his gums, and
+satisfy herself that they do not require lancing. If they be red, hot,
+and swollen, send for a medical man, that he may scarify them. If his
+gums be not inflamed, and no tooth appears near, let her look well to
+the state of his bowels; let her ascertain that they be sufficiently
+opened, and that the stools be of a proper consistence, colour, and
+smell. If they be neither the one nor the other, give a dose of
+aperient medicine, which will generally put all to rights. If the gums
+be cool, and the bowels be right, and his appetite continue bad, call
+in medical aid.
+
+A child asking for something to eat, is frequently, in a severe
+illness, the first favourable symptom; we may generally then
+prognosticate that all will soon be well again.
+
+If a child refuse his food, neither coax nor tempt him to eat: as food
+without an appetite will do him more harm than it will do him good; it
+may produce either sickness, bowel-complaint, or fever. Depend upon
+it, there is always a cause for a want of appetite;--perhaps his
+stomach has been over-worked, and requires repose; or his bowels are
+loaded, and Nature wishes to take time to use up the old
+material;--there might be fever lurking in his system; Nature stops
+the supplies, and thus endeavours, by not giving it food to work with,
+to nip it in the bud;--there might be inflammation; food would then be
+improper, as it would only add fuel to the fire; let, therefore, the
+cause be either an overworked stomach, over-loaded bowels, fever, or
+inflammation, food would be injurious. Kind Nature if we will but
+listen to her voice, will tell us when to eat, and when to refrain.
+
+159. _When a child is four or five years old, have you any objection
+to his drinking tea_?
+
+Some parents are in the habit of giving their children strong (and
+frequently green) tea. This practice is most hurtful. It acts
+injuriously upon their delicate, nervous system, and thus weakens
+their whole frame. If milk does not agree, a cup of very weak tea,
+that is to say, water with a dash of _black_ tea in it, with a
+table-spoonful of cream, may be substituted for milk; but a mother
+must never give tea where milk agrees.
+
+160. _Have you any objection to a child occasionally having either
+cakes or sweetmeats_?
+
+I consider them as so much slow poison. Such things both cloy and
+weaken the stomach, and thereby take away the appetite, and thus
+debilitate the frame. Moreover "sweetmeats are coloured with poisonous
+pigments." A mother, surely, is not aware, that when she is giving
+her child Sugar Confectionery she is, in many cases, administering a
+deadly poison to him? "We beg to direct the attention of our readers
+to the Report of the Analytical Sanitary Commission, contained in the
+_Lancet_ of the present week (Dec. 18, 1858), on the pigments employed
+in colouring articles of Sugar Confectionery. From this report it
+appears that metallic pigments of a highly dangerous and even
+poisonous character, containing chromic acid, lead, copper, mercury,
+and arsenic, are commonly used in the colouring of such articles."
+
+If a child be never allowed to eat cakes and sweetmeats, he will
+consider a piece of dry bread a luxury, and will eat it with the
+greatest relish.
+
+161. _Is bakers' or is home-made bread the most wholesome for a
+child_?
+
+Bakers' bread is certainly the lightest; and, if we could depend upon
+its being unadulterated, would, from its lightness, be the most
+wholesome; but as we cannot always depend upon bakers' bread,
+home-made bread, as a rule should be preferred. If it be at all heavy,
+a child must not be allowed to partake of it; a baker's loaf ought
+then to be sent for, and continued to be eaten until light home-made
+bread can be procured. Heavy bread is most indigestible. He must not
+be allowed to eat bread until it be two or three days old. If it be a
+week old, in cold weather, it will be the more wholesome.
+
+162. _Do you approve either of caraway seeds or of currants in bread
+or in cakes--the former to disperse wind, the latter to open the
+bowels_?
+
+There is nothing better than plain bread: the caraway-seeds generally
+pass through the bowels undigested, and thus might irritate, and might
+produce, instead of disperse wind. [Footnote: Although caraway seeds
+_whole_ are unwholesome, yet caraway tea, made as recommended in a
+previous Conversation, is an excellent remedy to disperse wind.] Some
+mothers put currants in cakes, with a view of opening the bowels of
+their children; but they only open them by disordering them.
+
+163. _My child has an antipathy to certain articles of diet: what
+would you advise to be done_?
+
+A child's antipathy to certain articles of diet should be respected:
+it is a sin and a shame to force him to eat what he has a great
+dislike to: a child, for instance, sometimes dislikes the fat of meat,
+underdone meat, the skin off boiled milk and off rice-pudding. Why
+should he not have his likes and dislikes as well as "children of a
+larger growth?" Besides, there is an idiosyncrasy--a peculiarity of
+the constitution in some children--and Nature oftentimes especially
+points out what is good and what is bad for them individually, and we
+are not to fly in the face of Nature. "What is one man's meat is
+another man's poison." If a child be forced to eat what he dislikes,
+it will most likely not only make him sick, but will disorder his
+stomach and bowels; food, if it is really to do him good, must be
+eaten by him with a relish, and not with disgust and aversion. Some
+mothers, who are strict disciplinarians, pride themselves on
+compelling their children to eat whatever they choose to give them!
+Such children are to be pitied!
+
+164. _When ought a child to commence to dine with his parents_?
+
+As soon as he be old enough to sit up at the table, provided the
+father and mother either dine or lunch in the middle of the day. "I
+always prefer having children about me at meal tines. I think it makes
+them little gentlemen and gentlewomen in a manner that nothing else
+will."--_Christian's Mistake_.
+
+
+THE NURSERY.
+
+165. _Save you any remarks to make on the selection, the ventilation,
+the warming, the temperature, and the arrangements of a nursery? and
+have you any further observations to offer conducive to the well-doing
+of my child_?
+
+The nursery ought to be the largest and the most airy room in the
+house. In the town, if it be in the topmost story (provided the
+apartment be large and airy) so much the better, as the air will then
+be purer. The architect, in the building of a house, ought to be
+particularly directed to pay attention to the space, the loftiness,
+the ventilation, the light, the warming, and the conveniences of a
+nursery. A bath-room attached to it will be of great importance and
+benefit to the health of a child.
+
+It will be advantageous to have a water-closet near at hand, which
+should be well supplied with water, be well drained, and be well
+ventilated. If this be not practicable, the evacuations ought to be
+removed as soon as they are passed. It is a filthy and an idle habit
+of a nurse-maid to allow a motion to remain for any length of time in
+the room.
+
+The VENTILATION of a nursery is of paramount importance. There ought
+to be a constant supply of fresh pure air in the apartment. But how
+few nurseries have fresh, pure air! Many nurseries are nearly
+hermetically sealed--the windows are seldom, if ever, opened; the
+doors are religiously closed; and, in summer time, the chimneys are
+carefully stuffed up, so that a breath of air is not allowed to enter!
+The consequences are, the poor unfortunate children "are poisoned by
+their own breaths," and are made so delicate that they are constantly
+catching cold; indeed, it might be said that they are labouring under
+chronic catarrhs, all arising from Nature's laws being set at
+defiance.
+
+The windows ought to be large, and should be made to freely open both
+top and bottom. Whenever the child is out of the nursery, the windows
+ought to be thrown wide open; indeed, when he is in it, if the weather
+be fine, the upper sash should be a little lowered. A child should be
+encouraged to change the room, frequently, in order that it may be
+freely ventilated; for good air is as necessary to his health as
+wholesome food, and air cannot be good if it be not frequently
+changed. If you wish to have a strong and healthy child, ponder over
+and follow this advice.
+
+I have to enter my protest against the use of a stove in a nursery. I
+consider a gas stove _without a chimney_ to be an abomination, most
+destructive to human life. There is nothing like the old-fashioned
+open fire-place with a good-sized chimney, so that it may not only
+carry off the smoke, but also the impure air of the room.
+
+Be strict in not allowing your child either to touch or to play with
+fire; frightful accidents have occurred from mothers and nurses being
+on these points lax. The nursery ought to have a large fire-guard, to
+go all round the hearth, and which should be sufficiently high to
+prevent a child from climbing over. Not only must the nursery have a
+guard, but every room where he is allowed to go should he furnished
+with one on the bars.
+
+Moreover, it will be advisable to have a guard in every room where a
+fire is burning, to prevent ladies from being burned. Fortunately for
+them, preposterous crinolines are out of fashion: when they were in
+fashion, death from burning was of every-day occurrence; indeed,
+lady-burning was then to be considered one of the institutions of our
+land!
+
+A nursery is usually kept too hot; the temperature in the winter time
+ought _not to exceed_ 60 degrees Fahrenheit A _good_ thermometer
+should be considered an indispensable requisite to a nursery. A child
+in a hot, close nursery is bathed in perspiration; if he leave the
+room to go to one of lower temperature, the pores of his skin are
+suddenly closed, and either a severe cold or an inflammation of the
+lungs, or an attack of bronchitis, is likely to ensue. Moreover, the
+child is both weakened and enervated by the heat, and thus readily
+falls a prey to disease.
+
+A child ought never to be permitted to sit with his back to the fire;
+if he be allowed, it weakens the spine, and thus his whole frame; it
+causes a rash of blood to the head and face, and predisposes him to
+catch cold.
+
+Let a nurse make a point of opening the nursery window every time that
+she and her little charge leave the nursery, if her absence be only
+for half an hour. The mother herself ought to see that this advice is
+followed, pure air is so essential to the well-being of a child. Pure
+air and pure water, and let me add, pure milk, are for a child the
+grand and principal requirements of health.
+
+Look well to the DRAINAGE of your house and neighbourhood. A child is
+very susceptible to the influence of bad drainage. Bad drains are
+fruitful sources of scarlet fever, of diphtheria, of diarrhoea,
+&c. "It is sad to be reminded that, whatever evils threaten the health
+of population, whether from pollutions of water or of air,--whether
+from bad drainage or overcrowding, they fall heaviest upon the most
+innocent victims--upon children of tender years. Their delicate frames
+are infinitely more sensitive than the hardened constitutions of
+adults, and the breath of poison, or the chill of hardships, easily
+blights their tender life."--_The Times._
+
+A nursery floor ought not to be _washed_ oftener than once a week; and
+then the child or children should, until it be dry, be sent into
+another room. During the drying of the floor, the windows must, of
+course, be thrown _wide_ open.
+
+The constant _wetting_ of a nursery is a frequent source of illness
+among children. The floor ought, of course, to be kept clean; but this
+may be done by the servant thoroughly sweeping the room out every
+morning before her little charge makes his appearance.
+
+Do not have your nursery wall covered with green paper-hangings. Green
+paper-hangings contain large quantities of arsenic--arsenite of copper
+(Scheele's green)--which, I need scarcely say, is a virulent poison,
+and which flies about the room in the form of powder. There is
+frequently enough poison on the walls of a room to destroy a whole
+neigbourhood.
+
+There is another great objection to having your nursery walls covered
+with _green_ paper-hangings; if any of the paper should become loose
+from the walls, a little child is very apt to play with it, and to put
+it, as he does every thing else, to his mouth. This is not an
+imaginary state of things, as four children in one family have just
+lost their lives from sucking green paper-hangings.
+
+Green dresses, as they are coloured with a preparation of arsenic, are
+equally as dangerous as green paper-hangings; a child ought,
+therefore, never to wear a green dress. "It may be interesting to some
+of our readers," says _Land and Water_, "to know that the new green,
+so fashionable for ladies' dresses, is just as dangerous in its nature
+as the green wall-paper, about which so much was written some time
+since. It is prepared with a large quantity of arsenic; and we have
+been assured by several of the leading dressmakers, that the workwomen
+employed in making up dresses of this colour are seriously affected
+with all the symptoms of arsenical poisoning. Let our lady friends
+take care."
+
+Children's toys are frequently painted of a green colour with arsenite
+of copper, and are consequently, highly dangerous for him to play
+with. The best toy for a child is a box of _unpainted_ wooden bricks,
+which is a constant source of amusement to him.
+
+If you have your nursery walls hung with paintings and engravings, let
+them be of good quality. The horrid daubs and bad engravings that
+usually disfigure nursery walls, are enough to ruin the taste of a
+child, and to make him take a disgust to drawing, which would be a
+misfortune. A fine engraving and a good painting expand and elevate
+his mind. We all know that first impressions are the most vivid and
+the most lasting. A taste in early life for everything refined and
+beautiful purifies his mind, cultivates his intellect, keeps him from
+low company, and makes him grow up a gentleman!
+
+Lucifer matches, in case of sudden illness, should, both in the
+nursery and in the bedroom, be always in readiness; but they must be
+carefully placed out of the reach of children, as lucifer matches are
+a deadly poison. Many inquests have been held on children who have,
+from having sucked them, been poisoned by them.
+
+166. _Have you any observation to make on the LIGHT of a nursery_?
+
+Let the window, or what is better, the windows, of a nursery be very
+large, so as to thoroughly light up every nook and corner of the room,
+as there is nothing more conducive to the health of a child than an
+abundance of light in the dwelling. A room cannot, then, be too light.
+The windows of a nursery are generally too small. A child requires as
+much light as a plant. Gardeners are well aware of the great
+importance of light in the construction of their greenhouses, and yet
+a child, who requires it as much, and is of much greater importance,
+is cooped up in dark rooms!
+
+The windows of a nursery ought not only to be frequently opened to let
+in fresh air, but should be _frequently cleaned_, to let in plenty of
+light and of sunshine, as nothing is so cheering and beneficial to a
+child as an abundance of light and sunshine!
+
+_With regard to the best artificial light for a nursery._--The air of
+a nursery cannot be too pure; I therefore do not advise you to have
+gas in it, as gas in burning gives off quantities of carbonic acid and
+sulphuretted hydrogen, which vitiate the air. The paraffine lamp, too,
+makes a room very hot and close. There is no better light for a
+nursery than either Price's patent candles or the old-fashioned
+tallow-candle.
+
+Let a child's _home_ he the happiest _house_ to him in the world; and
+to be happy he must be merry, and all around him should be merry and
+cheerful; and he ought to have an abundance of playthings, to help on
+the merriment. If he have a dismal nurse, and a dismal home, he may
+as well be incarcerated in a prison, and be attended by a gaoler. It
+is sad enough to see dismal, doleful men and women, but it is a truly
+lamentable and unnatural sight to see a doleful child! The young ought
+to be as playful and as full of innocent mischief as a kitten. There
+will be quite time enough in after years for sorrow and for sadness.
+
+Bright colours, plenty of light, _clean_ windows (mind this, if you
+please), an abundance of _good_-coloured prints, and toys without
+number, are the proper furnishings of a nursery. Nursery! why, the
+very name tells you what it ought to be--the home of childhood--the
+most important room in the house,--a room that will greatly tend to
+stamp the character of your child for the remainder of his life.
+
+167. _Have you any more hints to offer conducive to the well-doing of
+my child_?
+
+You cannot be too particular in the choice of those who are in
+constant attendance upon him. You yourself, of course, must be his
+_head-nurse_--you only require some one to take the drudgery off your
+hands! You ought to be particularly careful in the selection of his
+nurse. She should be steady, lively, truthful, and good tempered; and
+must be free from any natural imperfection, such as squinting,
+stammering, &c., for a child is such an imitative creature that he is
+likely to acquire that defect, which in the nurse is natural.
+"Children, like babies, are quick at 'taking notice.' What they see
+they mark, and what they mark they are very prone to copy."--_The
+Times_.
+
+She ought not to be very young, or she may be thoughtless, careless,
+and giggling. You have no right to set a child to mind a child; it
+would be like the blind leading the blind. No! a child is too precious
+a treasure to be entrusted to the care and keeping of a young girl.
+Many a child has been ruined for life by a careless young nurse
+dropping him and injuring his spine.
+
+A nurse ought to be both strong and active, in order that her little
+charge may have plenty of good nursing; for it requires great strength
+in the arms to carry a heavy child for the space of an hour or two at
+a stretch, in the open air; and such is absolutely necessary, and is
+the only way to make him strong, and to cause him to cut his teeth
+easily, and at the same time to regulate his bowels; a noise,
+therefore, most be strong and active, and not mind hard, work, for
+hard work it is; but, after she is accustomed to it, pleasant
+notwithstanding.
+
+Never should a nurse be allowed to wear a mask, nor to dress up and
+paint herself as a ghost, or as any other frightful object. A child is
+naturally timid and full of fears, and what would not make the
+slightest impression upon a grown-up person might throw a child into
+fits--
+
+ "The sleeping, and the dead,
+ Are but as pictures: 'tis the age of childhood
+ That fears a painted devil."--_Shakspeare_.
+
+Never should she be permitted to tell her little charge frightful
+stories of ghosts and hobgoblins; if this be allowed, the child's
+disposition will become timid and wavering, and may continue so for
+the remainder of his life.
+
+If a little fellow were not terrified by such stories, the darkness
+would not frighten him more than the light. Moreover, the mind thus
+filled with fear, acts upon the body, and injures the health. A child
+must never be placed in a dark cellar, nor frightened by tales of
+rats, &c. Instances are related of fear thus induced impairing the
+intellect for life; and there are numerous examples of sudden fright
+causing a dangerous and even a fatal illness.
+
+_Night-terrors_.--This frightening of a child by a silly nurse
+frequently brings on night-terrors. He wakes up suddenly, soon after
+going to sleep, frightened and terrified; screaming violently, and
+declaring that he has seen either some ghost, or thief, or some object
+that the silly nurse had been previously in the day describing, who is
+come for him to take him away. The little fellow is the very picture
+of terror and alarm; he hides his face in his mother's bosom, the
+perspiration streams down him, and it is some time before he can be
+pacified--when, at length, he falls into a troubled feverish slumber,
+to awake in the morning unrefreshed. Night after night these terrors
+harass him, until his health materially suffers, and his young life
+becomes miserable looking forward with dread to the approach of
+darkness.
+
+_Treatment of night terrors_.--If they have been brought on by the
+folly of the nurse, discharge her at once, and be careful to select a
+more discreet one. When the child retires to rest, leave a candle
+burning, and let it burn all night, sit with him until he be asleep,
+and take care, in case he should rouse up in one of his night-terrors,
+that either yourself or some kind person be near at hand. Do not scold
+him for being frightened--he cannot help it, but soothe him, calm him,
+fondle him, take him into your arms and let him feel that he has some
+one to rest upon, to defend and to protect him. It is frequently in
+these cases necessary before he can be cared to let him have change of
+air and change of scene. Let him live, in the day time, a great part
+of the day in the open air.
+
+A nurse maid should never, on any account whatever, be allowed to whip
+a child. "Does ever any man or woman remember the feeling of being
+'whipped' as a child, the fierce anger, the insupportable ignominy,
+the longing for revenge, which blotted out all thought of contrition
+for the fault or rebellion against the punishment? With this
+recollection on their own parts, I can hardly suppose any parents
+venturing to inflict it, much less allowing its infliction by another
+under any circumstances whatever. A nurse-maid or domestic of any
+sort, once discovered to have lifted up her hand against a child,
+ought to meet instant severe rebuke, and on a repetition of the
+offence instant dismissal." [Footnote: _A Woman's Thoughts about
+Women_.]
+
+I have seen in the winter tune a lazy nurse sit before the fire with a
+child on her lap, rubbing his cold feet just before putting him to his
+bed. Now, this is not the way to warm his feet. The right method is to
+let him romp and run either about the room, or the landing, or the
+hall--this will effectually warm them, but, of course, it will entail
+a little extra trouble on the nurse, as she will have to use a little
+exertion to induce him to do so, and this extra trouble a lazy nurse
+will not relish. Warming the feet before the fire will give the
+little fellow chilblains, and will make him when he is in bed more
+chilly. The only way for him to have a good romp before he goes to
+bed, is for the mother to join in the game. She may rest assured, that
+if she does so, her child will not be the only one to benefit by
+it. She herself will find it of marvellous benefit to her own health;
+it will warm her own feet, it will be almost sure to insure her a good
+night, and will make her feel so light and buoyant as almost to fancy
+that she is a girl again! Well, then, let every child, before going to
+bed, hold a high court of revelry, let him have an hour--the
+Children's Hour--devoted to romp, to dance, to shout, to sing, to
+riot, and to play, and let him be the master of the revels--
+
+
+ "Between the dark and the daylight,
+ When the night is beginning to lower,
+ Comes a pause in the day's occupation,
+ Which is known as the Children's Hour."
+
+ _Longfellow_.
+
+Let a child be employed--take an interest in his employment, let him
+fancy that he is useful--_and he is useful_, he is laying in a stock
+of health. He is much more usefully employed than many other grown-up
+children are!
+
+A child should be happy; he must, in every way, be made happy;
+everything ought to be done to conduce to his happiness, to give him
+joy, gladness, and pleasure. Happy he should be, as happy as the day
+is long. Kindness should be lavished upon him. Make a child
+understand that you love him; prove it in your actions--these are
+better than words; look after his little pleasures--join in his little
+sports; let him never hear a morose word--it would rankle in his
+breast, take deep root, and in due time bring forth bitter
+fruit. Love! let love be his pole-star; let it be the guide and the
+rule of all you do and all you say unto him. Let your face, as well as
+your tongue speak love. Let your hands be ever ready to minister to
+his pleasures and to his play. "Blessed be the hand that prepares a
+pleasure for a child, for there is no saying when and where it may
+again bloom forth. Does not almost everybody remember some
+kind-hearted man who showed him a kindness in the dulcet days of
+childhood? The writer of this recollects himself, at this moment, a
+bare-footed lad, standing at the wooden fence of a poor little garden
+in his native village, while, with longing eyes, he gazed on the
+flowers which were blooming there quietly in the brightness of the
+Sabbath morning. The possessor came from his little cottage. He was a
+wood-cutter by trade, and spent the whole week at work in the
+woods. He had come into the garden to gather flowers to stick in his
+coat when he went to church. He saw the boy, and breaking off the most
+beautiful of his carnations (it was streaked with red and white), he
+gave it to him. Neither the giver nor the receiver spoke a word, and
+with bounding steps the hoy ran home. And now, here, at a vast
+distance from that home, after so many events of so many years, the
+feeling of gratitude which agitated the breast of the boy, expressed
+itself on paper. The carnation has long since faded, but it now
+bloometh afresh."--_Douglas Jerrold_.
+
+The hearty ringing laugh of a child is sweet music to the ear. There
+are three most joyous sounds in nature--the hum of a bee, the purr of
+a cat, and the laugh of a child. They tell of peace, of happiness, and
+of contentment, and make one for a while forget that there is so much
+misery in the world.
+
+A man who dislikes children is unnatural, he has no "milk of human
+kindness" in him; he should be shunned. Give me, for a friend, a man--
+
+ "Who takes the children on his knee,
+ And winds their curls, about his hand."--_Tennyson_.
+
+168. _If a child be peevish, and apparently in good health, have you
+any plan to propose to allay his irritability_?
+
+A child's troubles are soon over--his tears are soon dried; "nothing
+dries sooner than a tear"--if not prolonged by improper management--
+
+ "The tear down childhood's check that flows
+ Is like the dew-drop on the rose;
+ When next the summer breeze comes by,
+ And waves the bush, the flower is dry."--_Scott_.
+
+Never allow a child to be teased; it spoils his temper. If he be in a
+cross humour take no notice of it, but divert his attention to some
+pleasing object. This may be done without spoiling him. Do not combat
+bad temper with bad temper--noise with noise. Be firm, be kind, be
+gentle, [Footnote: "But we were gentle among you, even as a women
+cherisheth her children."--1 Thess. ii. 7.] be loving, speak quietly,
+smile tenderly, and embrace him fondly, but _insist upon implicit
+obedience_, and you will have, with God's blessing, a happy child--
+
+ "When a little child is weak
+ From fever passing by,
+ Or wearied out with restlessness
+ Don't scold him if he cry.
+
+ Tell him some pretty story--
+ Don't read it from a book;
+ He likes to watch you while you speak,
+ And take in every look.
+
+ Or sometimes singing gently--
+ A little song may please,
+ With quiet and amusing words,
+ And tune that flows with ease.
+
+ Or if he is impatient,
+ Perhaps from time to time
+ A simple hymn may suit the best,
+ In short and easy rhyme.
+
+ The measured verses flowing
+ In accents clear and mild,
+ May blend into his troubled thought,
+ And soothe the little child.
+
+ But let the words be simple,
+ And suited to his mind,
+ And loving, that his weary heart
+ A resting-place may find."--_Household Verses_.
+
+Speak, _gently_ to a child; speak _gently_ to all; but more especially
+speak _gently_ to a child. "A gentle voice is an excellent thing in a
+woman," and is a jewel of great price, and is one of the concomitants
+of _perfect_ lady. Let the hinges of your disposition be well
+oiled. "'I have a dear friend. He was one of those well-oiled
+dispositions which turn upon the hinges of the world without
+creaking.' Would to heaven there were more of them! How many there are
+who never turn upon the hinges of this world without a grinding that
+sets the teeth of a whole household on edge! And somehow or other it
+has been the evil fate of many of the best spirits to be so
+circumstanced; both men and women, to whom life is 'sweet habitude of
+being,' which has gone far to reconcile them to solitude as far less
+intolerable! To these especially the creakings of those said rough
+hinges of the world is one continued torture, for they are all too
+finely strung; and the oft-recurring grind jars the whole sentient
+frame, mars the beautiful lyre, and makes cruel discord in a soul of
+music. How much of sadness there is in such thoughts! Seems there not
+a Past in some lives, to which it is impossible ever to become
+reconciled!"--_Life's Problems_.
+
+Pleasant words ought always to be spoken to a child; there must be
+neither snarling, nor snapping, nor snubbing, nor loud contention
+towards him. If there be it will ruin his temper and disposition, and
+will make him hard and harsh, morose and disagreeable.
+
+Do not always be telling your child how wicked he is; what a naughty
+boy he is; that God will never love him, and all the rest of such
+twaddle and blatant inanity! Do not, in point of fact, bully him, as
+many poor little fellows are bullied! It will ruin him if you do; it
+will make him in after years either a coward or a tyrant. Such
+conversations, like constant droppings of water, will make an
+impression, and will cause him to feel that it is of no use to try to
+be good--that he is hopelessly wicked! Instead of such language, give
+him confidence in himself; rather find out his good points and dwell
+upon them; praise him where and whenever you can; and make him feel
+that, by perseverance and God's blessing, he will make a good
+man. Speak truthfully to your child; if you once deceive him, he will
+not believe you for the future. Not only so, but if you are truthful
+yourself you are likely to make him truthful--like begets like. There
+is something beautiful in truth! A lying child is an abomination! Sir
+Walter Scott says "that he taught his son to ride, to shoot, and to
+tell the truth" Archdeacon Hare asserts "that Purity is the feminine,
+Truth the masculine of Honour."
+
+As soon as a child can speak he should be made to lisp the noble words
+of truth, and to love it, and to abhor a lie! What a beautiful
+character he will then make! Blessed is the child that can say,--
+
+ "Parental cares watched o'er my growing youth,
+ And early stamped it with the love of truth."
+
+ _Leadbeater Papers._
+
+Have no favourites, show no partiality; for the young are very
+jealous, sharp-sighted, and quick-witted, and take a dislike to the
+petted one. Do not rouse the old Adam in them. Let children be taught
+to be "kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love;" let
+them be encouraged to share each other's toys and playthings, and to
+banish selfishness.
+
+Attend to a child's _little_ pleasures. It is the _little_ pleasures
+of a child that constitute his happiness. Great pleasures to him and
+to us all (as a favourite author remarks) come but seldom, and are the
+exceptions, and not the rule.
+
+Let a child he nurtured in love. "It will be seen," says the author of
+_John Halifax_, "that I hold this law of kindness as the Alpha and
+Omega of education. I once asked one, in his own house, a father in
+everything but the name, his authority unquestioned, his least word
+held in reverence, his smallest wish obeyed--'How did you ever manage
+to bring up these children?' He said: '_By love_.'"
+
+Let every word and action prove that you love your children. Enter
+into all their little pursuits and pleasures. Join them in their play,
+and be a "child again!" If they are curious, do not check their
+curiosity; but rather encourage it; for they have a great deal--as we
+all have--to learn, and how can they know if they are not taught? You
+may depend upon it the knowledge they obtain from observation is far
+superior to that obtained from books. Let all you teach them, let all
+you do, and let all you say bear the stamp of love. "Endeavour, from
+first to last, in your intercourse with your children, to let it bear
+the impress of _love_. It is not enough that you _feel_ affection
+towards your children--that you are devoted to their interests; you
+must show in your manner the fondness of your hearts towards
+them. Young minds cannot appreciate great sacrifices made for them;
+they judge their parents by the words and deeds of every-day
+life. They are won by _little_ kindnesses, and alienated by _little_
+acts of neglect or impatience. One complaint unnoticed, one appeal
+unheeded, one lawful request arbitrarily refused, will be remembered
+by your little ones more than a thousand acts of the most devoted
+affection."--_The Protoplast_.
+
+A placid, well-regulated temper is very conducive to health. A
+disordered, or an over-loaded stomach, is a frequent cause of
+peevishness. Appropriate treatment in such a case will, of course, be
+necessary.
+
+169. _My child stammers: can you tell me the cause, and can you
+suggest a remedy_?
+
+A child who stammers is generally "nervous," quick, and impulsive. His
+ideas flow too rapidly for speech. He is "nervous;" hence, when he is
+alone, and with those he loves, he oftentimes speaks fluently and
+well; he stammers more both when he is tired and when he is out of
+health--when the nerves are either weak or exhausted. He is
+emotional: when he is either in a passion or in excitement, either of
+joy or of grief, he can scarcely speak--"he stammers all over." He is
+impulsive: he often stammers in consequence. He is in too great a
+hurry to bring out his words; they do not flow in proper sequence:
+hence his words are broken and disjointed.
+
+Stammering, of course, might be owing either to some organic defect,
+such as from defective palate, or from defective brain, then nothing
+will cure him; or it might be owing to "nervous" causes--to "irregular
+nervous action," then a cure might, with care and perseverance, be
+usually effected.
+
+In all cases of stammering of a child, let both the palate of his
+mouth and the bridle of his tongue be carefully examined, to see that
+neither the palate be defective, nor the bridle of the tongue be too
+short--that he be not tongue-tied.
+
+_Now, with regard to Treatment._--Make him speak slowly and
+deliberately: let him form each word, without clipping or chopping;
+let him be made, when you are alone with him, to exercise himself in
+elocution. If he speak quickly, stop him in his mid-career, and make
+him, quietly and deliberately, go through the sentence again and
+again, until he has mastered the difficulty; teach him to collect his
+thoughts, and to weigh each word ere he give it utterance; practise
+him in singing little hymns and songs for children; this you will find
+a valuable help in the cure. A stammerer seldom stutters when he
+sings. When he sings, he has a full knowledge of the words, and is
+obliged to keep in time--to sing neither too fast nor too
+slow. Besides, he sings in a different key to his speaking voice. Many
+professors for the treatment of stammering cure their patients by
+practising lessons of a sing-song character.
+
+Never jeer him for stammering, nor turn him to ridicule; if you do, it
+will make him ten times worse; but be patient and gentle with him, and
+endeavour to give him confidence, and encourage him to speak to you as
+quietly, as gently, and deliberately as you speak to him; tell him not
+to speak, until he has arranged his thoughts and chosen his words; let
+him do nothing in a hurry.
+
+Demosthenes was said, in his youth, to have stammered fearfully, and
+to have cured himself by his own prescription, namely, by putting a
+pebble in his mouth, and declaiming, frequently, slowly quietly, and
+deliberately, on the sea-shore--the fishes alone being his audience,--
+until at length he cured himself, and charmed the world with his
+eloquence and with his elocution. He is held up, to this very day, as
+the personification and as the model of an orator. His patience,
+perseverance, and practice ought, by all who either are, or are,
+interested in a stammerer, to be borne in mind and followed.
+
+170. _Do you approve of a carpet in a nursery_?
+
+No, unless it be a small piece for a child to roll upon. A carpet
+harbours dirt and dust, which dust is constantly floating about the
+atmosphere, and thus making it impure for him to breathe. The truth of
+this may be easily ascertained by entering a darkened room, where a
+ray of sunshine is struggling through a crevice in the shutters. If
+the floor of a nursery must be covered, let drugget be laid down, and
+this may every morning be taken up and shaken. The less furniture a
+nursery contains the better, for much furniture obstructs the free
+circulation of the air, and, moreover, prevents a child from taking
+proper play and exercise in the room--an abundance of which are
+absolutely necessary for his health.
+
+171. _Supposing there is not a fire in the nursery grate, ought the
+chimney to be stopped to prevent a draught in the room_?
+
+Certainly not. I consider the use of a chimney to be two-fold--first,
+to carry off the smoke, and secondly (which is of quite as much
+importance), to ventilate the room, by carrying off the impure air,
+loaded as it is with carbonic acid gas--the refuse of respiration. The
+chimney, therefore, should never, either winter or summer, be allowed
+for one moment to be stopped. This is important advice, and requires
+the strict supervision of every mother, as servants will, if they have
+the chance, stop all chimneys that have no fires in the grates.
+
+
+EXERCISE.
+
+172. _Do you approve, during the summer months, of sending a child out
+BEFORE breakfast_?
+
+I do, when the weather will permit, and provided the wind be neither
+in an easterly nor in a north-easterly direction; indeed, _he can
+scarcely be too much in the open air_. He must not be allowed to stand
+about draughts or about entries, and the only way to prevent him doing
+so is for the mother herself to accompany the nurse. She will then
+kill two birds with one stone, as she will, by doing so, benefit her
+own as well as her child's health.
+
+173. _Ought a child to be early put on his feet to walk_?
+
+No: let him learn to walk himself. He ought to be put upon a carpet;
+and it will be found that when he is strong enough, he will hold by a
+chair, and will stand alone: when he can do so, and attempts to walk,
+he should then be supported. You must, on first putting him upon his
+feet, be guided by his own wishes. He will, as soon as he is strong
+enough to walk, have the inclination to do so. When he has the
+inclination and the strength it will be folly to restrain him; if he
+have neither the inclination nor the strength, it will be absurd to
+urge him on. Rely, therefore, to a certain extent, upon the
+inclination of the child himself. Self-reliance cannot be too early
+taught him, and, indeed, every one else. In the generality of
+instances, however, a child is put on his feet too soon, and the
+bones, at that tender age, being very flexible, bend, causing bowed
+and bandy-legs; and the knees, being weak, approximate too closely
+together, and thus they become knock-kneed. This advice of _not_
+putting a child _early_ on his feet, I must strongly insist on, as
+many mothers are so ridiculously ambitious that their young ones
+should walk early--that they should walk before other children of
+their acquaintance have attempted--that they have frequently caused
+the above lamentable deformities; which is a standing reproach to them
+during the rest of their lives.
+
+174. _Do you approve of perambulators_?
+
+I do not, for two reasons:--first, because when a child is strong
+enough, he had better walk as much as he will; and, secondly, the
+motion is not so good, and the muscles are not so much put into
+action, and consequently cannot be so well developed, as when he is
+earned. A perambulator is very apt to make a child stoop, and to make
+him both crooked and round-shouldered. He is cramped by being so long
+in one position. It is painful to notice a babe of a few months old in
+one of these newfangled carriages. His little head is bobbing about
+first on one side and then on the other--at one moment it is dropping
+on his chest, the next it is forcibly jolted behind: he looks, and
+doubtless feels, wretched and uncomfortable. Again, these
+perambulators are dangerous in crowded thoroughfares. They are a
+public nuisance, inasmuch as they are wheeled against and between
+people's legs, and are a fruitful source of the breaking of shins, of
+the spraining of ankles, of the crushing of corns, and of the ruffling
+of the tempers of the foot-passengers who unfortunately come within
+their reach; while, in all probability, the gaping nurses are staring
+another way, and every way indeed but the right, more especially if
+there be a redcoat in the path!
+
+Besides, in very cold weather, or in a very young infant, the warmth
+of the nurse's body, while he is being carried, helps to keep him
+warm, he himself being naturally cold. In point of fact, the child,
+while being borne in the nurse's arms, reposes on the nurse, warm and
+supported, as though he were in a nest! While, on the other hand, if
+he be in a perambulator, he is cold and unsupported, looking the very
+picture of misery, seeking everywhere for test and comfort, and
+finding none!
+
+A nurse's arm, then, is the only proper carriage for a _young_ child
+to take exercise on. She ought to change about, first carrying frim on
+the one arm, and then on the other. Nursing him on one arm only might
+give his body a twist on one side, and thus might cause deformity.
+
+When he is old enough to walk, and is able properly to support the
+weight of his own neck and back, then there will be no objection,
+provided it be not in a crowded thoroughfare, to his riding
+occasionally in a perambulator; but when he is older still, and can
+sit either a donkey or a pony, such exercise will be far more
+beneficial, and will afford him much greater pleasure.
+
+175. _Supposing it to be wet under foot, but dry above, do you then
+approve of sending a child out_?
+
+If the wind be neither in the east nor the north-east, and if the air
+be not damp, let him be well wrapped up and be sent out. If he be
+labouring under an inflammation of the lungs, however slight, or if he
+be just recovering from one, it would, of coarse, be highly improper.
+In the management of a child, we must take care neither to coddle nor
+to expose him unnecessarily, as both are dangerous.
+
+Never send a child out to walk in a fog; he will, if you do, be almost
+sure to catch cold. It would be much safer to send him out in rain
+than in fog, though neither the one nor the other would be desirable.
+
+176. _How many times a day in fine weather ought a child to be sent
+out_?
+
+Let him be sent out as often as it be possible. If a child lived more
+in the open air than he is wont to do, he would neither be so
+susceptible of disease, nor would he suffer so much from teething, nor
+from catching cold.
+
+177. _Supposing the day to be wet, what exercise would you then
+recommend_?
+
+The child ought to run either about a large room, or about the hall;
+and if it does not rain violently, you should put on his hat and throw
+up the window, taking care while the window is open that he does not
+stand still. A wet day is the day for him to hold his high court of
+revelry, and "to make him as happy as the day is long."
+
+Do not on any account allow him to sit any length of time at a table,
+amusing himself with books, &c.; let him be active and stirring, that
+his blood may freely circulate as it ought to do, and that his muscles
+may be well developed. I would rather see him actively engaged in
+mischief than sitting still, doing nothing! He ought to be put on the
+carpet, and should then be tumbled and rolled about, to make the blood
+bound merrily through, the, vessels, to stir up the liver, to promote
+digestion, and to open the bowels. The misfortune of it is, the
+present race of nurses are so encumbered with long dresses, and so
+screwed in with tight stays (aping their betters), that they are not
+able to stoop properly, and thus to have a good game of romps with
+their little charges. "Doing nothing is doing ill" is as true a saying
+as was ever spoken.
+
+178. _Supposing it to be winter, and the weather to be very cold,
+would you still send a child out_?
+
+Decidedly, provided he be well wrapped up. The cold will brace and
+strengthen him. Cold weather is the finest tonic in the world.
+
+In frosty weather, the roads being slippery, when you send him out to
+walk, put a pair of large old woollen stockings over his boots or
+shoes. This will not only keep his feet and his legs warm, but it will
+prevent him from falling down and hurting himself. While thus
+equipped, he may even walk on a slide of ice without falling down!
+
+A child, in the winter time, requires, to keep him warm, plenty of
+flannel and plenty of food, plenty of fresh and genuine milk, and
+plenty of water in his tub to wash and bathe him in a morning, plenty
+of exercise and plenty of play, and then he may brave the frosty air.
+It is the coddled, the half-washed, and the half-starved child
+(half-washed and half-starved from either the mother's ignorance or
+from the mother's timidity), that is the chilly starveling,--catching
+cold at every breath of wind, and every time he either walks or is
+carried out,--a puny, skinny, scraggy, scare-crow, more dead than
+alive, and more fit for his grave than for the rough world he will
+have to struggle in! If the above advice be strictly followed, a child
+may be sent out in the coldest weather, even--
+
+ "When icicles hang by the wall,
+ And Dick, the shepherd, blows his nail;
+ And Tom bears logs into the hall,
+ And milk comes frozen home in pail."
+
+ _Shakspeare_.
+
+
+AMUSEMENTS.
+
+179. _Have you any remarks to make on the amusements of a child_?
+
+Let the amusements of a child be as much as possible out of doors; let
+him spend the greater part of every day in the open air; let him exert
+himself as much as he please, his feelings will tell him when to rest
+and when to begin again; let him be what Nature intended Mm to be--a
+happy, laughing, joyous child. Do not let him be always poring over
+books:--
+
+ "Books! 'tis a dull and endless strife,
+ Come, hear the woodland linnet!
+ How sweet his music! On my life,
+ There's more of wisdom in it.
+
+ And hark! how blithe the throstle sings!
+ He, too, is no mean preacher:
+ Come forth into the light of things,--
+ Let Nature be your teacher.
+
+ She has a world of ready wealth,
+ Our minds and hearts to bless,--
+ Spontaneous wisdom breathed by health,
+ Truth breathed by cheerfulness.
+
+ One impulse from a vernal wood
+ May teach you more of man,
+ Of moral evil and of good,
+ Than, all the sagea can."--_Wordsworth._
+
+He ought to be encouraged to engage in those sports wherein the
+greatest number of muscles are brought into play. For instance, to
+play at ball, or hoop, or football, to play at horses, to run to
+certain distances and back; and, if a girl, to amuse herself with a
+skipping rope, such, being excellent exercise--
+
+ "By sports like these are all their cares beguiled,
+ The sports of children satisfy the child."--_Goldsmith._
+
+Every child, where it be practicable, should have a small plot of
+ground to cultivate, that he may dig and delve in, and make dirt-pies
+if he choose. Children now-a-days, unfortunately, are not allowed to
+soil their hands and their fine clothes. For my own part, I dislike
+such model children; let a child be natural--let him, as far as is
+possible, choose his own sports. Do not be always interfering with his
+pursuits, and be finding fault with him. Remember, what may be amusing
+to you may be distasteful to him. I do not, of course, mean but that
+you should constantly have a watchful eye over him; yet do not let him
+see that he is under restraint or surveillance; if you do, you will
+never discover his true character and inclinations. Not only so, but
+do not dim the bright sunshine of his early life by constantly
+checking and thwarting him, Tupper beautifully says--
+
+ "And check not a child in his merriment,--
+ Should not his morning be sunny?"
+
+When, therefore, he is either in the nursery or in the play-ground,
+let him shout and riot and romp about as much as he please. His lungs
+and his muscles want developing, and his nerves require strengthening;
+and how can such be accomplished unless you allow them to be developed
+and strengthened by natural means?
+
+The nursery is a child's own domain; it is his castle, and he should
+be Lord Paramount therein. If he choose to blow a whistle, or to
+spring a rattle, or to make any other hideous noise, which to him is
+sweet music, he should be allowed, without let or hindrance, to do
+so. If any members of the family have weak nerves, let them keep at a
+respectful distance.
+
+A child who never gets into mischief must be either sly, or delicate,
+or idiotic; indeed, the system of many persons, in bringing up
+children, is likely to make them either the one or the other. The
+present plan of training children is nearly all work (books), and very
+little play. Play, and plenty of it, is necessary to the very
+existence of a child.
+
+A boy not partial to mischief, innocent mischief, and play, is
+unnatural; he is a man before his time, he is a nuisance, he is
+disagreeable to himself and to every one around. He is generally a
+sneak, and a little humbug.
+
+Girls, at the present time, are made clever simpletons; their brains
+are worked with useless knowledge, which totally unfits them for
+every-day duties. Their muscles are allowed to be idle, which makes
+them limp and flabby. The want of proper exercise ruins the
+complexion, and their faces become of the colour of a tallow candle!
+And precious wives and mothers they make when they do grow up! Grow
+up, did I say? They grow all manner of ways, and are as crooked as
+crooked sticks!
+
+What an unnatural thing it is to confine a child several hours a day
+to his lessons; why, you might as well put a colt in harness, and make
+him work for his living! A child is made for play; his roguish little
+eye, his lithe figure, his antics, and his drollery, all point out
+that he is cut out for play--that it is as necessary to his existence
+as the food he eats, and as the air he breathes!
+
+A child ought not to be allowed to have playthings with which he can
+injure either himself or others, such as toy-swords, toy-cannons,
+toy-paint-boxes, knives, bows and arrows, hammers, chisels, saws,
+&c. He will not only be likely to injure himself and others, but will
+make sad havoc on furniture, house, and other property. Fun, frolic,
+and play ought, in all innocent ways, to be encouraged; but wilful
+mischief and dangerous games ought, by every means, to be
+discountenanced. This advice is frequently much needed, as children
+prefer to have and delight in dangerous toys, and often coax and
+persuade weak and indulgent mothers to gratify their wishes.
+
+_Painted_ toys are, many of them, highly dangerous, those painted
+_green_ especially, as the colour generally consists of Scheele's
+green--arsenite of copper.
+
+Children's paint-boxes are very dangerous toys for a child to play
+with; many of the paints are poisonous, containing arsenic, lead,
+gamboge, &c, and a child, when painting, is apt to put the brush into
+his mouth, to absorb the superabundant fluid. Of all the colours, the
+_green_ paint is the most dangerous, as it is frequently composed of
+arsenite of copper--arsenic and copper--two deadly poisons.
+
+There are some paint-boxes warranted not to contain a particle of
+poison of any kind these ought, for a child, to be chosen by a mother.
+
+But, remember, although he ought not to be allowed to have poison
+paint-boxes and poison painted toys, _he must have an abundance of
+toys,_ such as the white wood toys--brewers' drays, millers' waggons,
+boxes of wooden bricks, &c. The Noah's Ark is one of the most amusing
+and instructive toys for a child. "Those fashioned out of brown,
+unpainted pine-wood by the clever carvers of Nuremberg or the Black
+Forest are the best, I think, not only because they are the most
+spirited, but because they will survive a good deal of knocking about
+and can be sucked with impunity From the first dawn of recollection,
+children are thus familiarised with the forms of natural objects, and
+may be well up in natural history before they have mastered the ABC"
+[Footnote: From an excellent article _About Toys,_ by J Hamilton Fyfe
+in _Good Words_ for December 1862.]
+
+Parents often make Sunday a day of gloom; to this I much object. Of
+all the days in the week, Sunday should be the most cheerful and
+pleasant. It is considered by our Church a festival, and a glorious
+festival it ought to be made, and one on which our Heavenly Father
+wishes to see all His children happy and full of innocent joy. Let
+Sunday, then, be made a cheerful, joyous, innocently happy day, and
+not, as it frequently is, the most miserable and dismal in the
+week. It is my firm conviction that many men have been made
+irreligious by the ridiculously strict and dismal way they were
+compelled, as children, to spend their Sundays. You can no more make
+a child religious by gloomy asceticism, than yon can make people good
+by Act of Parliament.
+
+One of the great follies of the present age is, children's parties,
+where they are allowed to be dressed up like grown-up women, stuck out
+in petticoats, and encouraged to eat rich cake and pastry, and to
+drink wine, and to sit up late at night! There is something disgusting
+and demoralising in all this. Their pure minds are blighted by it. Do
+not let me be misunderstood: there is not the least objection, but, on
+the contrary, great advantage, for friends' children to meet friends'
+children; but then let them be treated as children, and not as men and
+women!
+
+180. _Do you approve of public play-grounds for children_?
+
+It would be well, in every village, and in the outskirts of every
+town, if a large plot of ground were set apart for children to play
+in, and to go through regular gymnastic exercises. Play is absolutely
+necessary to a child's very existence, as much as food and sleep; but
+in many parts of England where is he to have it? Playgrounds and play
+are the best schools we have; they teach a great deal not taught
+elsewhere; they give lessons in health, which is the grandest wealth
+that can be bestowed--"for health is wealth;" they prepare the soil
+for the future schoolmaster; they clear the brain, and thus the
+intellect, they strengthen the muscles; they make the blood course
+merrily through the arteries; they bestow healthy food for the lungs;
+they give an appetite; they make a child, in due time, become every
+inch a man! Play-grounds and play are one of the finest institutions
+we possess. What would our large public schools be without their play
+and cricket grounds? They would be shorn of half their splendour and
+their usefulness!
+
+There is so much talk now-a-days about _useful_ knowledge, that the
+importance of play and play-grounds is likely to be forgotten. I
+cannot help thinking however, that a better state of things is
+dawning. "It seems to be found out that in our zeal for useful
+knowledge, that knowledge is found to be not the least useful which
+treat boys as active, stirring, aspiring, and ready." [Footnote: _The
+Saturday Review_, December 13, 1862.]
+
+181. _Do you approve of infant schools_?
+
+I do, if the arrangements be such that health is preferred before
+learning. [Footnote: "According to Aristotle, more care should be
+taken of the body than of the mind for the first seven years; strict
+attention to diet be enforced, &c. . . . . . The eye and ear of the
+child should be most watchfully and severely guarded against
+contamination of every kind, and unrestrained communication with
+servants be strictly prevented. Even his amusements should be under
+due regulation, and rendered as interesting and intellectual as
+possible."--The Rev John Williams, in his _Life and Actions of
+Alexander the Great_] Let children be only confined for three or four
+hours a day, and let what little they learn be taught as an amusement
+rather than as a labour. A play-ground ought to be attached to an
+infant school; where, in fine weather, for every half-hour they spend
+in-doors, they should spend one in the open air; and, in wet weather,
+they ought to have, in lieu of the play-ground, a large room to romp,
+and shout, and riot in. To develop the different organs, muscles, and
+other parts of the body, children require fresh air, a free use of
+their lungs, active exercise, and their bodies to be thrown into all
+manner of attitudes. Let a child mope in a corner, and he will become
+stupid and sickly. The march of intellect, as it is called, or rather
+the double quick march of intellect, as it should be called, has
+stolen a march upon health. Only allow the march of intellect and the
+march of health to take equal strides, and then we shall have "_mens
+sana in corpore sano_" (a sound mind in a sound body).
+
+In the education of a young child, it is better to instruct him by
+illustration, by pictures, and by encouraging observation on things
+around and about him, than by books. It is surprising how much,
+without endangering his health, may be taught in this way. In
+educating your child, be careful to instil and to form good
+habits--they will then stick to him for life.
+
+Children at the present day are too highly educated--their brains are
+over-taxed, and thus weakened. The consequence is, that as they grow
+up to manhood, if they grow up at all, they become fools! _Children_
+are now taught what formerly _youths_ were taught. The chord of a
+child's life is ofttimes snapped asunder in consequence of over
+education:--
+
+ "Screw not the cord too sharply, lest it snap"--_Tennyson_.
+
+You should treat a child as you would a young colt. Think only at
+first of strengthening his body. Let him have a perfectly free, happy
+life, plenty of food to eat, abundance of air to breathe, and no work
+to do; there is plenty of time to think of his learning--of giving him
+brain work. It will come sadly too soon; but do not make him old
+before his time.
+
+182. _At what age do you advise my child to begin his course of
+education--to have his regular lessons_?
+
+In the name of the prophet,--Figs! Fiddlesticks! about courses of
+education and regular lessons for a child! You may as well ask me
+when he, a child, is to begin Hebrew, the Sanscrit, and Mathematics!
+Let him have a course of education in play; let him go through regular
+lessons in foot-ball, bandy, playing at tic, hares and hounds, and
+such like excellent and really useful and health-giving lessons. Begin
+his lessons! Begin brain work, and make an idiot of him! Oh! for
+shame, ye mothers! You who pretend to love your children so much, and
+to tax, otherwise to injure, irreparably to injure their brains, and
+thus their intellects and their health, and to shorten their very
+days. And all for what? To make prodigies of them! Forsooth! to make
+fools of them in the end,
+
+183. _Well, then, as you have such a great objection to a child
+commencing his education early in life, at what age may he, with
+safety, commence his lessons? and which do you prefer--home or school
+education_?
+
+Home is far preferable to a school education. He is, if at home, under
+your own _immediate_ observation, and is not liable to be contaminated
+by naughty children; for, in every school, there is necessarily a
+great mixture of the good and of the bad; and a child, unfortunately,
+is more likely to be led by the bad than by the good. Moreover, if he
+be educated at home, the mother can see that his brain is not
+over-worked. At school the brain is apt to be over-worked, and the
+stomach and the muscles to be under-worked.
+
+Remember, as above stated, _the brain must have but very little work
+until the child be seven years old;_ impress this advice upon your
+memory, and let no foolish ambition to make your child a clever child
+allow you, for one moment, to swerve from this advice.
+
+Build up a strong, healthy body, and in due time the brain will bear a
+_moderate_ amount of intellectual labour.
+
+As I have given _you_ so much advice, permit me, for one moment, to
+address a word to the father of your child:--
+
+Let me advise you, then, Mr. _Pater familias_, to be careful how you
+converse, what language you use, while in the company of your
+child. Bear in mind, a child is very observant, and thinks much,
+weighs well, and seldom forgets all you say and all you do! Let no
+hasty word, then, and more especially no oath, or no impious language,
+ever pass your lips, if your child be within hearing. It is, of
+course, at all times wicked to swear; but it is heinously and
+unpardonably sinful to swear in the presence of your child! "Childhood
+is like a mirror, catching and reflecting images. One impious or
+profane thought, uttered by a parent's lip, may operate upon the young
+heart like a careless spray of water thrown upon polished steel,
+staining it with rust, which no after scouring can efface."
+
+Never talk secrete before a child--"little pitchers have long ears;"
+if you do, and he disclose your secrets--as most likely he will--and
+thus make mischief, it will be cruel to scold him; you will, for your
+imprudence, have yourself only to blame. Be most careful, then, in the
+presence of your child, of what you say, and of whom you speak. This
+advice, if followed, might save a great deal of annoyance and
+vexation.
+
+184. _Are you an advocate for a child being taught singing?_
+
+I am: I consider singing a part of his education. Singing expands the
+walls of his chest, strengthens and invigorates his lungs, gives
+sweetness to his voice, improves his pronunciation, and is a great
+pleasure and amusement to him.
+
+
+SLEEP.
+
+185. _Do you approve of a child sleeping on a_ FEATHER _bed_?
+
+A _feather_ bed enervates his body, and, if he be so predisposed,
+causes rickets, and makes him crooked. A horse-hair mattress is the
+best for a child to lie on. The pillow, too, should be made of
+horse-hair. A _feather_ pillow often causes the bead to be bathed in
+perspiration, thus enervating the child, and making him liable to
+catch cold. If he be at all rickety, if he be weak in the neck, if he
+be inclined to stoop, or if he be at all crooked, let him, by all
+means, lie without a pillow.
+
+186. _Do you recommend a child, in the middle of the day, to be put to
+sleep_?
+
+Let him be put on his mattress _awake_, that he may sleep for a couple
+of hours before dinner, then he will rise both refreshed and
+strengthened for the remainder of the day. I said, let him be put down
+_awake_. He might, for the first few times, cry, but, by perseverance,
+he will without any difficulty fall to sleep. The practice of sleeping
+before dinner ought to be continued until he be three years old, and,
+if he can be prevailed upon, even longer. For if he do not have sleep
+in the middle of the day, he will all the afternoon and the evening be
+cross; and when he does go to bed, he will probably be too tired to
+sleep, or his nerves having been exhausted by the long wakefulness, he
+will fall into a troubled, broken slumber, and not into that sweet,
+soft, gentle repose, so characteristic of healthy, happy childhood!
+
+187. _At what hour ought a child to be put to bed in the evening_?
+
+At six in the winter, and at seven o'clock in the summer. _Regularity_
+ought to be observed, _as regularity is very conducive to health._ It
+is a reprehensible practice to keep a child up until nine or ten
+o'clock at night. If this be done, he will, before his time, become
+old, and the seeds of disease will be sown,
+
+As soon as he can run, let him be encouraged, for half an hour before
+he goes to bed, to race either about the hall, or the landing, or a
+large room, which will be the best means of warming his feet, of
+preventing chilblains, and of making him sleep soundly.
+
+188. _Have you any directions to give me at to the placing of my child
+in his bed_?
+
+If a child lie alone, place him fairly on his aide in the middle of
+the bed; if it be winter time, see that his arms and hands be covered
+with the bed-clothes; if it be summer, his hands might be allowed to
+be outside the clothes. In putting him down to sleep, you should
+ascertain that his face be not covered with the bedclothes; if it be,
+he will he poisoned with his own breath--the breath constantly giving
+off carbonic acid gas; which gas must, if his face be smothered in the
+clothes; be breathed--carbonic acid gas being highly poisonous.
+
+You can readily prove the existence of carbonic and gas in the
+breathing, by simply breathing into a little lime-water; after
+breathing for a few seconds into it, a white film will form on the
+top; the carbonic acid gas from the breath unites with the lime of the
+lime-water and the product of the white film is carbonate of lime.
+
+189. _Do you advise a bedroom to be darkened at night_?
+
+Certainly: a child sleeps sounder and sweeter in a dark than in a
+light room. There is nothing better for the purpose of darkening a
+bedroom, than Venetian blinds. Remember, then, a well-ventilated, but
+a darkened, chamber at night. The cot or the crib ought _not_ to face
+the window, "as the light is best behind." [Footnote: Sir Charles
+Locock in a Letter to the Author. ]
+
+190. _Which is the beat position for a child when sleeping--on his
+back, or on his side_?
+
+His side: he ought to be accustomed to change about on the right side
+one night, on the left another; and occasionally, for a change, he
+should lie on his back. By adopting this plan, you will not only
+improve his figure, but likewise his health. Lying, night after night,
+in one position, would be likely to make him crooked.
+
+191. _Do you advise, in the winter time, that there should be a fire
+in the night nursery_?
+
+Certainly not, unless the weather be intensely cold. I dislike fires
+in bedrooms, especially for children; they are very enervating, and
+make a child liable to catch cold. Cold weather is very bracing,
+particularly at night "Generally speaking," says the _Siecle_, "during
+winter, apartments are too much heated. The temperature in them ought
+not to exceed 16 deg. Centigrade (59 deg. Fahrenheit); and even in periods of
+great cold scientific men declare that 12 deg. or 14 deg. had better not be
+exceeded. In the wards of hospitals, and in the chambers of the sick,
+care is taken not to have greater heat than 15 deg.. Clerks in offices,
+and other persons of sedentary occupations, when rooms in which they
+sit are too much heated, are liable to cerebral [brain] congestion and
+to pulmonary [lung] complaints. In bedrooms, and particularly those of
+children, the temperature ought to be maintained rather low; it is
+even prudent only rarely to make fires in them, especially during the
+night"
+
+If "a cold stable make a healthy horse," I am quite sure that a
+moderately cold and well-ventilated bedroom helps to make a healthy
+child. But, still, in the winter time, if the weather be biting cold,
+a _little_ fire in the bedroom grate is desirable. In bringing up
+children, we must never run into extremes--the coddling system and the
+hardening system are both to be deprecated; the coddling system will
+make the strong child weakly, while the hardening system will probably
+kill a delicate one.
+
+A child's bed ought, of course, to be comfortably clothed with
+blankets--I say blankets, as they are much superior to coverlids; the
+perspiration will more readily pass through a blanket than a
+coverlid. A _thick_ coverlid ought never to be used; there is nothing
+better, for a child's bed, than the old-fashioned patchwork coverlid,
+as the perspiration will easily escape through it.
+
+192. _Should a child be washed and dressed_ AS SOON AS HE AWAKE _in
+the morning_?
+
+He ought, if he awake in anything like reasonable time; for if he doze
+after he be once awake, such slumber does him more harm than good. He
+should be up every morning as soon as it is light If, as a child, he
+be taught to rise early, it will make him an early riser for life, and
+will tend greatly to prolong both his existence and his happiness.
+
+_Never awake a child from his sleep_ to dress him, to give him
+medicine, or for any other purpose; _let him always sleep as long as
+he can;_ but the moment he awakes let him be held out, and then let
+him be washed and dressed, and do not wait, as many a silly nurse
+does, until he have wet his bed, until his blood be chilled, and until
+he be cross, miserable, and uncomfortable! How many babes are made
+ill by such foolish practices!
+
+The moment he leaves his bed, turn back to the fullest extent the
+clothes, in order that they may be thoroughly ventilated and
+sweetened. They ought to be exposed to the air for at least an hour
+before the bed be made. As soon as he leaves his room, be it winter or
+summer, throw open the windows.
+
+193. _Ought a child to lie alone_?
+
+He should, after he is weaned. He will rest more comfortably, and his
+sleep will be more refreshing.
+
+194. _Supposing a child should not sleep well, what ought to be done?
+Would you give him a dose of composing medicine_?
+
+Certainly not. Try the effects of exercise. Exercise in the open air
+is the best composing medicine in the world. Let the little fellow be
+well tired out, and there will be little fear of his not sleeping.
+
+195. _Have you any further observations to make on the subject of
+sleep_?
+
+Send a child joyful to bed. Do not, if you can possibly help it, let
+him go to bed crying. Let the last impressions he has at night be of
+his happy home, and of his loving father and mother and let his last
+thoughts be those of joy and gladness. He will sleep all the sounder
+if he be sent to bed in such a frame of mind, and he will be more
+refreshed and nourished in the morning by his sleep.
+
+196. _What are the usual causes of a child walking in his sleep, and
+what measures during such times, ought to be adopted to prevent his
+injuring himself_?
+
+A disordered stomach, in a child of nervous temperament, or worms, are
+usually the causes. The means to be adopted to prevent his throwing
+himself out of the window, are to have bars to his chamber present,
+and if that be not practicable, to have either nails or screws driven
+into the window sash to allow the window to open only for a sufficient
+space for ventilation, and to have a screw window fastening, in order
+that he cannot, without difficulty, open the window, to have a trusty
+person to sleep in his room, who should have directions given not to
+rouse him from his sleep, but to gently lead him back to his bed,
+which may frequently be done without awaking him, and to consult a
+medical man, who will adopt means to destroy the worms, to put his
+stomach into order, to brace his nerves, and to strengthen his general
+system. A trip to the coast and sea bathing, in such a case, is often
+of great service.
+
+
+SECOND DENTITION.
+
+197. _When does a child commence to cut his SECOND set of teeth_?
+
+Generally at seven years old. He _begins to cut_ them at about that
+time: but it should be borne in mind (so wonderful are the works of
+God) that the _second_ crop of teeth, _in embryo_, is actually bred
+and formed from the very commencement of his life, _under_ the first
+tier of teeth, but which remain in abeyance for years, and do not come
+into play until the _first_ teeth, having done their duty, loosen and
+fall out, and thus make room for the more numerous, larger, stronger,
+and more permanent teeth, which latter have to last for the remainder
+of his existence. The _first_ set is sometimes cut with a great deal
+of difficulty, and produces various diseases; the _second_, or
+permanent teeth, come easily, and are unaccompanied with any disorder.
+The following is the process:--One after another of the _first_ set
+gradually loosen, and either drop out, or with little pain are readily
+pulled out; under these, the _second_--the permanent--teeth make their
+appearance, and fill up the vacant spaces. The fang of the tooth that
+has dropped out is nearly all absorbed or eaten away, leaving little
+more than the crown. The _first_ set consists of twenty; the _second_
+(including the wise-teeth, which are not, generally cut until after
+the the age of twenty-seven) consists of thirty-two.
+
+I would recommend you to pay particular attention to the teeth of your
+children; for, besides their being ornamental, their regularity and
+soundness are of great importance to the present as well as to the
+future health of your offspring. If there be any irregularity in the
+appearance of the _second_ set, lose no time in consulting an
+experienced and respectable dentist.
+
+
+ON DISEASE, ETC.
+
+198. _Do you think it important that I should be made acquainted with
+the symptoms of the SERIOUS diseases of children_?
+
+Certainly I am not advocating the doctrine of a mother _treating
+serious_ diseases; far from it, it is not her province, except in
+certain cases of extreme urgency, where a medical man cannot be
+procured, and where delay might be death; but I do insist upon the
+necessity of her knowing the _symptoms_ of disease. My belief is, that
+if parents were better informed on such subjects, many children's
+lives might be saved, much suffering averted, and sorrow spared. The
+fact is, the knowledge of the symptoms of disease is, to a mother,
+almost a sealed book. If she were better acquainted with these
+matters, how much more useful would she be in a sick-room, and how
+much more readily would she enter into the plans and views of the
+medical man! By her knowledge of the symptoms, and by having his
+advice in time, she would nip disease in the bud, and the fight might
+end in favour of life, for "sickness is just a fight between life and
+death."--_Geo. M'Donald._
+
+It is really lamentable to contemplate the amount of ignorance that
+still exists among mothers in all that appertains to the diseases of
+children; although, fortunately, they are beginning to see and to feel
+the importance of gaining instruction on such subjects; but the light
+is only dawning. A writer of the _Medical Times and Gazette_ makes the
+following remarks, which somewhat bear on the subject in question. He
+observes--"In spite of the knowledge and clear views possessed by the
+profession on all that concerns the management of children, no fact is
+more palpable than that the most grievous ignorance and incompetency
+prevail respecting it among the public. We want some means of making
+popular the knowledge which is now almost restricted to medical men,
+or, at most, to the well-educated classes."
+
+In the earlier editions of this work I did not give the _treatment_ of
+any serious diseases, however urgent. In the eight last editions, I
+have been induced, for reasons I will presently state, to give the
+_treatment_ of some of the more urgent _serious_ diseases, when a
+medical man cannot instantly be procured, and where delay might be
+death.
+
+Sir CHARLES LOCOCK, who has taken a kind interest in this little work,
+has given me valid reasons why a mother should be so enlightened. The
+following extracts are from a letter which I received from Sir CHARLES
+on the subject, and which he has courteously allowed me to publish. He
+says,--"As an old physician of some experience in complaints of
+infants and children, I may perhaps be allowed to suggest that in a
+future edition you should add a few words on the actual treatment of
+some of the more urgent infantile diseases. It is very right to
+caution parents against superseding the doctor, and attempting to
+manage serious illness themselves, but your advice, with very small
+exceptions, always being 'to lose no tune in sending for a medical
+man,' much valuable and often irremediable time may be lost _when a
+medical man is not to be had_. Take, for instance, a case of croup
+there are no directions given at all, except to send for a medical
+man, and always to keep medicines in the house which he may have
+directed. But how can this apply to a first attack? You state that a
+first attack is generally the worst. But why is it so? Simply because
+it often occurs when the parents do not recognise it, and it is
+allowed to get a worse point than in subsequent attacks, when they are
+thoroughly alive to it. As the very best remedy, and often the only
+essential one, if given early, is a full emetic, surely it is better
+that you should give some directions as to this in a future edition,
+and I can speak from my own experience when I say that an emetic,
+_given in time_, and repeated to free vomiting, will cut short _any_
+case of croup. In nine cases out of ten the attack takes place in the
+evening or early night, and when vomiting is effected the dinner of
+that day is brought up nearly undigested, and the seventy of the
+symptoms at once cut short. Whenever any remedy is valuable, the more
+by its being administered _in time_, it is surely wiser to give
+directions as to its use, although, as a general rule, it is much
+better to advise the sending for medical advice."
+
+The above reasons, coming from such a learned and experienced
+physician as Sir Charles Locock, are conclusive, and have decided me
+to comply with his advice, to enlighten a mother on the _treatment_ of
+some of the more urgent diseases of infants and of children. In a
+subsequent letter addressed to myself, Sir Charles has given me the
+names of those _urgent_ diseases, which he considers may be treated by
+a mother "where a medical man cannot be procured quickly, or not at
+all." They are Croup: Inflammation of the Lungs; Diptheria; Dysentry;
+Diarrhoea; Hooping Cough, in its various stages; and Shivering
+Fit. Sir Charles sums up his letter to me by saying, "Such a book
+ought to be made as complete as possible, and the objections to
+medical treatment being so explained as to induce mothers to try to
+avoid medical men is not so serious as that of leaving them without
+any guide in those instances where every delay is dangerous, and yet
+where medical assistance is not to be obtained or not to be had
+quickly."
+
+In addition to the above I shall give you the _treatment_ of
+Bronchitis, Measles, and Scarlet Fever. Bronchitis is one of the most
+common diseases incidental to childhood, and, with judicious
+treatment, is, in the absence of the medical man, readily managed by a
+sensible mother. Measles is very submissive to treatment. Scarlet
+Fever, _if it be not malignant_, and, _if it be not complicated with
+diphtheric-croup_, and if certain rules be strictly followed, is also
+equally amenable to treatment.
+
+I have been fortunate in treating Scarlet Fever, and I therefore think
+it desirable to enter fully into the _treatment_ of a disease which is
+looked upon by many parents, and, according to the usual mode of
+treatment, with just cause, with great consternation and dread. By
+giving my plan of treatment, fully and simply, and without the
+slightest reservation, I am fully persuaded, through God's blessing,
+that I may be the humble means of saving the lives of numbers of
+children.
+
+The diseases that might be treated by a mother, in the absence of a
+medical man, will form the subject of future Conversations.
+
+I think it right to promise that in all the prescriptions for a child
+I have for the use of a mother given, I have endeavoured to make them
+as simple as possible, and have, whenever practicable, avoided to
+recommend powerful drugs. Complicated prescriptions and powerful
+medicines might, as a rule, to be seldom given; and when they are,
+should only be administered by a judicious medical man: a child
+requiring much more care and gentleness in his treatment than an
+adult: indeed, I often think it would be better to leave a child to
+nature rather than to give him powerful and large doses of
+medicines. A remedy--calomel, for instance--has frequently done more
+mischief than the disease itself; and the misfortune of it is, the
+mischief from that drug has oftentimes been permanent, while the
+complaint might, if left alone, have only been temporary.
+
+199. _At what age does Water in the Brain usually occur, and how is a
+mother to know that her child is about to labour under that disease_?
+
+Water on the brain is, as a rule, a disease of childhood: after a
+child is seven years old it is comparatively rare. It more frequently
+attacks delicate children--children who have been dry nursed
+(especially if they have been improperly fed), or who have been
+suckled too long, or who have had consumptive mothers, or who have
+suffered severely from toothing, or who are naturally of a feeble
+constitution. Water on the brain sometimes follows an attack of
+inflammation of the lungs, more especially if depressing measures
+(such as excessive leeching and the administration of emetic tartar)
+have been adopted. It occasionally follows in the train of contagious
+eruptive diseases, such as either small-pox or scarlatina. We may
+divide the symptoms of water on the brain into two stages. The
+first--the premonitory stage--which lasts for or five days, in which
+medical aid might be of great avail: the second--the stage of
+drowsiness and of coma--which usually ends in death.
+
+I shall dwell on the first--the premonitory stage--in order that a
+mother may see the importance without loss of time of calling in a
+medical man:--
+
+If her child be feverish and irritable, if his stomach be disordered,
+if he have urgent vomitings, if he have a foul breath, if his appetite
+be capricious and bad, if his nights be disturbed (screaming out in
+his sleep), if his bowels be disordered, more especially if they be
+constipated, if he be more than usually excited, if his eye gleam with
+unusual brilliancy, if his tongue run faster than it is wont, if his
+cheek be flushed and his head be hot, and if he be constantly putting
+his hand to his head; there is cause for suspicion. If to these
+symptoms be added, a more than usual carelessness in tumbling about,
+in hitching his foot in the carpet, or in dragging one foot after the
+other; if, too, he has complained of darting, shooting, lancinating
+pains in his head, it may then be known that the _first_ stage of
+inflammation (the forerunner of water on the brain) either has taken,
+or is about taking place. Remember no time ought to be lost in
+obtaining medical aid; for the _commencement_ of the disease is the
+golden opportunity, when life might probably be saved.
+
+200. _At what age, and in what neighbourhood, is a child most liable
+to croup, and when is a mother to know that it is about to take
+place_?
+
+It is unusual for a child until he be twelve months old to have croup:
+but, from that time until the age of two years, he is more liable to
+it than at any other period. The liability after two years, gradually,
+until he be ten years old, lessens, after which time it is rare.
+
+A child is more liable to croup in a low and damp, than in a high and
+dry neighbourhood; indeed, in some situations, croup is almost an
+unknown disease; while in others it is only too well understood. Croup
+is more likely to prevail when the wind is either easterly or
+north-easterly.
+
+There is no disease that requires more prompt treatment than croup,
+and none that creeps on more insidiously. The child at first seems to
+be labouring under a slight cold, and is troubled with a little _dry_
+cough, he is hot and fretful, and hoarse when he cries. Hoarseness is
+one of the earliest symptoms of croup, and it should be borne in mind
+that a young child, unless he be going to have croup, is seldom
+hoarse, if, therefore, your child be hoarse, he should be carefully
+watched, in order that, as soon as croup be detected, not a moment be
+lost in applying the proper remedies.
+
+His voice at length becomes gruff, he breathes as though it were
+through muslin, and the cough becomes crowing. These three symptoms
+prove that the disease is now fully formed. These latter symptoms
+sometimes come on without any previous warning, the little fellow
+going to bed apparently quite well, until the mother is awakened,
+perplexed and frightened, in the middle of the night, by finding him
+labouring under the characteristic cough and the other symptoms of
+croup. If she delay either to send for assistance, _or if proper
+medicines be not instantly given_, in a few hours it will probably be
+of no avail, and in a day or two the little sufferer will be a corpse.
+
+When once a child has had croup the after attacks are generally
+milder. If he has once had an attack of croup, I should advise you
+always to have in the house medicine--a 4 oz. bottle of Ipecacuanha
+Wine, to fly to at a moments notice, [Footnote: In case of a sudden
+attack of croup, _instantly_ give a teaspoonful of Ipecacuanha Wine,
+and repeat it every fire minutes natal free vomiting be excited.] but
+never omit, where practicable, in a case of croup, whether the case be
+severe or mild to send _immediately_ for medical aid. There is no
+disease in which time is more precious than in croup, and where the
+delay of an hour may decide either for life or for death.
+
+201. _But suppose a medical man is not IMMEDIATELY to be procured,
+what then am I to do? more especially, as you say, that delay might be
+death_?
+
+_What to do_.--I never, in my life, lost a child with croup with
+catarrhal croup where I was called in at the _commencement_ of the
+disease, and where my plans were carried out to the very letter. Let
+me begin by saying, look well to the goodness and purity of the
+medicine, for the life of your child may depend upon the medicine
+being genuine. What medicine! _Ipecacuanha Wine!_ At the earliest dawn
+of the disease give a few spoonful of Ipecacuanha Wine every five
+minutes, until free vomiting be exerted. In croup, then, before he be
+safe, free vomiting _must_ be established, and that without loss of
+time. If, _after_ the expiration of an hour, the Ipecacuanha Wine
+(having given during that hour one or two tea-spoonfuls of it every
+five minutes) be not sufficiently powerful for the purpose--although
+it generally is so--(_if the Ipecacuanha Wine be good_)--then let the
+following mixture be substituted--
+
+ Take of--Powdered Ipecacuanha, one scruple,
+ Wine of Ipecacuanha, one ounce and a half
+
+Make a mixture. One or two tea spoonfuls to be given every five
+minutes, until free vomiting be excited, first well shaking the
+bottle.
+
+After the vomiting, place the child for a quarter of an hour in a warm
+bath. [Footnote: See "Warm Baths"--directions and precautions to be
+observed.] When out of the bath give him small doses of Ipecacuanha
+Wine every two or three hours. The following is a palatable form for
+the mixture--
+
+ Take of--Wine of Ipecacuanha, three drachms;
+ Simple syrup, three drachms,
+ Water, six drachms
+
+Make a Mixture. A tea-spoonful to be taken every two or three hours.
+
+But remember the emetic which is given at _first_ is _pure Ipecacuanha
+Wine, without a drop of either water or of syrup._
+
+A large sponge dipped out of very hot water, and applied to the
+throat, and frequently renewed, oftentimes affords great relief in
+croup, and ought during the time the emetic is being administered in
+all cases to be adopted.
+
+If it be a _severe_ case of croup, and does not in the course of two
+hours yield to the free exhibition of the Ipecacuanha Emetic, apply a
+narrow strip of _Smith's Tela Vesicularia_ to the throat, prepared in
+the same way as for a case of inflammation of the lungs (see the
+Conversation on the _treatment_ of inflammation of the lungs). With
+this only difference, let it be a narrower strip, only one-half the
+width there recommended, and apply it to the throat instead of to the
+chest. If a child has a very short, fat neck, there may not be room
+for the _Tela_, then you ought to apply it to the _upper_ part of the
+chest--just under the collar-bones.
+
+Let it be understood, the the _Tela Vesicularia_ is not a severe
+remedy, that the _Tela_ produces very little pain--not nearly so much
+as the application of leeches; although, in its action, it is much
+more beneficial, and is not nearly so weakening to the system.
+
+Keep the child from all stimulants; let him live on a low diet, such
+as milk and water, toast and water, arrowroot, &c.; and let the room
+be, if practicable, at a temperate heat--60 deg. Fahrenheit, and be well
+ventilated.
+
+So you see that the _treatment_ of croup is very simple, and the the
+plan might be carried out by an intelligent mother. Notwithstanding
+which, it is your duty, where practicable, to send, at the very
+_onset_ of the disease, for a medical man.
+
+Let me again reiterate that, if your child is to be saved, the
+_Ipecacuanha Wine must be genuine and good_. This can only be effected
+by having the medicine from a highly respectable chemist. Again, if
+ever your child has had croup, let me again urge you _always_ to have
+in the house a 4 oz. bottle of Ipecacuanha Wine, that you may resort
+to at a moment's notice, in case there be the slightest return of the
+disease.
+
+Ipecacuanha Wine, unfortunately, is not a medicine that keeps well,
+therefore, every three or four months a fresh bottle ought to be
+procured, either from a medical man or from a chemist. As long as the
+Ipecacuanha Wine remains _clear_, it is good; but as soon as it
+becomes _turbid_, it is bad, and ought to be replaced by a fresh
+supply. An intelligent correspondent of mine makes the following
+valuable remarks on the preservation of Ipecacuanha Wine:--"Now, I
+know that there are some medicines and chemical preparations which,
+though they spoil rapidly when at all exposed to the air, yet will
+keep perfectly good for an indefinite time if hermetically sealed up
+in a _perfectly full_ bottle. If so, would it not be a valuable
+suggestion if the Apothecaries' Hall, or some other London firm of
+_undoubted_ reliability, would put up 1 oz. phials of Ipecacuanha Wine
+of guaranteed purity, sealed up so as to keep good so long as
+unopened, and sent out in sealed packages, with the guarantee of their
+name. By their keeping a few such ounce bottles in an unopened state
+in one's house, one might rely in being ready for any emergency. If
+you think this suggestion worth notice, and could induce some
+first-rate house to carry it out, and mention the fact in a subsequent
+edition of your book, you would, I think, be adding another most
+valuable item to an already invaluable book."
+
+The above suggestion of preserving Ipecacuanha Wine in ounce bottles,
+quite full, and hermetically sealed, is a very good one. The best way
+of hermetically sealing the bottle would be, to cut the cork level
+with the lip of the bottle, and to cover the cork with sealing-wax, in
+the same manner wine merchants serve some kinds of their wines, and
+then to lay the bottles on their sides in sawdust in the cellar. I
+have no doubt, if such a plan were adopted, the Ipecacuanha Wine would
+for a length of time keep good. Of course, if the Wine of Ipecacuanha
+be procured from the Apothecaries' Hall Company, London (as suggested
+by my correspondent), there can be no question as to the genuineness
+of the article.
+
+_What NOT to do_--Do not give emetic tartar, do not apply leeches, do
+not keep the room very warm, do not give stimulants, do not omit to
+have always in the house either a 4 oz. bottle, or three or four 1
+oz. bottles, of Ipecacuanha Wine.
+
+202. _I have heard Child crowing mentioned as a formidable disease,
+would you describe the symptoms_?
+
+Child-crowing, or spasm of the glottis, or _spurious croup_, as it is
+sometimes called, is occasionally mistaken for _genuine croup_. It is
+a more frequent disorder than the latter, and requires a different
+plan of treatment Child crowing is a disease that invariably occurs
+only during dentition, and is _most perilous_, indeed, painful
+dentition is _the_ cause--_the_ only cause--of child crowing. But, if
+a child labouring under it can fortunately escape suffocation until he
+have cut the whole of his first set of teeth--twenty--he is then safe.
+
+Child-crowing comes on in paroxysms. The breathing during the
+intervals is quite natural--indeed, the child appears perfectly well,
+hence, the dangerous nature of the disease is either overlooked, or is
+lightly thought of, until perhaps a paroxysm worse than common takes
+place, and the little patient dies of suffocation, overwhelming the
+mother with terror, with confusion, and dismay.
+
+The _symptoms_ in a paroxysm of child-crowing are as follows--The
+child suddenly loses and fights for his breath, and in doing so, makes
+a noise very much like that of crowing, hence the name child-crowing.
+The face during the paroxysm becomes bluish or livid. In a favourable
+case, after either a few seconds, or even, in some instances, a
+minute, and a frightful straggle to breathe, he regains his breath,
+and is, until another paroxysm occurs, perfectly well. In an
+unfavourable case, the upper part (chink) of the windpipe--the
+glottis--remains for a minute or two closed, and the child, not being
+able to breathe, drops a corpse in his nurse's arms! Many children,
+who are said, to have died of fits, hare really died of child-crowing.
+
+Child-crowing is very apt to cause convulsions, which complication, of
+course, adds very much to the danger. Such a complication requires
+the constant supervision of an experienced and skilful medical man.
+
+I have entered thus rather fully into the subject, as nearly every
+life might be saved, if a mother knew the nature and the treatment of
+the complaint, and of the _great necessity during the paroxysm of
+prompt and proper measures_. For, too frequently, before a medical man
+has had time to arrive, the child has breathed his last, the parent
+himself being perfectly ignorant of the necessary treatment; hence the
+vital importance of the subject, and the paramount necessity of
+imparting such information, in a _popular_ style, in conversations of
+this kind.
+
+203. _What treatment, then, during a paroxysm of Child-crowing should
+you advise_?
+
+The first thing, of course, to be done, is to send _immediately_ for a
+medical man. Have a plentiful supply of cold and of hot water always
+at hand, ready at a moment's notice for use. The instant the paroxysm
+is upon the child, plentifully and perseveringly dash _cold_ water
+upon his head and face. Put his foot and legs in _hot_ salt, mustard,
+and water; and, if necessary, place him up to his neck in a hot bath,
+still dashing water upon his face and head. If he does not quickly
+come round, sharply smack his back and buttocks.
+
+In every severe paroxysm of child-crowing, put your fore-finger down
+the throat of the child, and pull his tongue forward. This plan of
+pulling the tongue forward opens the epiglottis (the lid of the
+glottis), and thus admits air (which is so sorely needed) into the
+glottis and into the lungs, and thus staves off impending
+suffocation. If this plan were generally known and adopted, many
+precious lives might be saved. [Footnote: An intelligent correspondent
+first drew my attention to the efficacy of pulling forward the tongue
+in every severe paroxysm of child-crowing.]
+
+There is nothing more frightfully agonising to a mother's feelings
+than to see her child strangled,--as it were,--before her eyes, by a
+paroxysm of child crowing.
+
+As soon as a medical man arrives, he will lose no time in thoroughly
+lancing the gums, and in applying other appropriate remedies.
+
+Great care and attention ought, during the intervals, to be paid to
+his diet. If the child be breathing a smoky, close atmosphere, he
+should be immediately removed to a pure one. In this disease, indeed,
+there is no remedy equal to a change of air--to a dry, bracing
+neighbourhood. Change of air, even if it be winter, is the best
+remedy, either to the coast or to a healthy mountainous district. I am
+indebted to Mr Roberton of Manchester (who has paid great attention to
+this disease, and who has written a valuable essay on the subject
+[Footnote: See the end of the volume of "Physiology and Diseases of
+Women," &c. Churchill, 1851.]) for the knowledge of this fact. Where,
+in a case of this kind, it is not practicable to send a child _from_
+home, then let him be sent out of doors the greater part of every day;
+let him, in point of fact, almost live in the open air. I am quite
+sure, from an extensive experience, that in this disease, fresh air,
+and plenty of it, is the best and principal remedy. Cold sponging of
+the body too is useful.
+
+Mr Roberton, who, at my request, has kindly given me the benefit of
+his extensive experience in child-crowing, considers that there is no
+remedy, in this complaint, equal to fresh air--to dry cold winds--that
+the little patient ought, in fact, nearly to live, during the day, out
+of doors, whether the wind be in the east or in the north-east,
+whether it be biting cold or otherwise, provided it be dry and
+bracing, for "if the air be dry, the colder the better,"--taking care,
+of course, that he be well wrapped up. Mr Roberton, moreover, advises
+that the child should be sent away at once from home, either to a
+bracing sea-side place, such as Blackpool or Fleetwood; or to a
+mountainous district, such as Buxton.
+
+As the subject is so important, let me recapitulate: the gums ought,
+from time to time, to be well lanced, in order to remove the
+irritation of painful dentition--painful dentition being the real
+cause of the disease. Cold sponging should be used twice or thrice
+daily. The diet should be carefully attended to (see Dietary of
+Child); and everything conducive to health should (as recommended in
+these Conversations) be observed. But, remember, after all that can
+be said about the treatment, there is nothing like change of air, of
+fresh air, of cold, dry pure air, and of plenty of it--the more the
+little fellow can inhale, during the day, the better it will be for
+him, it will be far better than any drug contained in the
+pharmacopoeia.
+
+I have dwelt on this subject at some length--it being a most important
+one--as, if the above advice were more generally known and followed,
+nearly every child, labouring under this complaint, would be saved;
+while now, as coroners' inquests abundantly testify, the disease
+carries off yearly an immense number of victims.
+
+204. _When is a mother to know that a cough is not a "tooth cough" but
+one of the symptoms of Inflammation of the lungs_?
+
+If the child has had a shivering fit; if his skin be very hot and very
+dry; if his lips be parched; if there be great thirst; if his cheeks
+be flushed; if he be dull and heavy, wishing to be quiet in his cot or
+crib; if his appetite be diminished; if his tongue be furred; if his
+mouth be _burning_ hot and dry; [Footnote: If you put your finger into
+the mouth of a child labouring under inflammation of the lungs, it is
+like putting your finger into a hot apple pie, the heat is so great.]
+if his urine be scanty and high-coloured, staining the napkin or the
+linen; _if his breathing be short, panting, hurried, and oppressed; if
+there be a hard dry cough, and if his skin be burning hot;_--then
+there is no doubt that inflammation of the lungs has taken place.
+
+No time should be lost in sending for medical aid; indeed, the _hot,
+dry mouth and skin, and short, hurried breathing_ would be sufficient
+cause for your procuring _immediate_ assistance. If inflammation of
+the lungs were properly treated at the _onset_, a child would scarcely
+ever be lost by that disease. I say this advisedly, for in my own
+practice, _provided I am called in early, and if my plans are strictly
+carried out_, I scarcely ever lose a child from inflammation of the
+lungs.
+
+You may ask--What are your plans? I will tell you, in case _you cannot
+promptly obtain medical advice,_ as delay might be death!
+
+_The treatment of Inflammation of the Lungs, what to do._--Keep the
+child to one room, to his bedroom, and to his bed. Let the chamber be
+properly ventilated. If the weather be cool, let a small fire be in
+the grate; otherwise, he is better without a fire. Let him live on low
+diet, such as weak black tea, milk and water (in equal quantities),
+and toast and water, thin oatmeal gruel, arrow-root, and such like
+simple beverages, and give him the following mixture:--
+
+ Take of--Wine of Ipecacuanha, three drachms;
+ Simple Syrup, three drachms;
+ Water, six drachms;
+
+Make a Mixture. A tea-spoonful of the mixture to be taken every four
+hours.
+
+Be careful that you go to a respectable chemist, in order _that the
+totality of the Ipecacuanha Wine may be good, as the child's life may
+depend upon it._
+
+If the medicine produce sickness, so much the better; continue it
+regularly until the short, oppressed, and hurried breathing has
+subsided, and has become natural.
+
+If the attack be very severe, in addition to the above medicine, at
+once apply a blister, not the common blister, but _Smith's Tela
+Vesicatoria_ [Footnote: Manufactured by T. & H. Smith, chemists,
+Edinburgh, and may be procured of Southalls, chemists, Birmingham.]--a
+quarter of a sheet. If the child be a year old, the blister ought to
+be kept on for three hours, and then a piece of dry, soft linen rag
+should be applied for another three hours. At the end of which
+time--six hours--there will be a beautiful blister, which must then,
+with a pair of scissors, be cut, to let out the water, and then let
+the blister be dressed, night and morning, with simple cerate spread
+on lint.
+
+If the little patient be more than one year, say two years old, let
+the Tela remain on for five hours, and the dry linen rag for five
+hours more, before the blister, as above recommended, be cut and
+dressed.
+
+If in a day or two the inflammation still continue violent, let
+another Tela Vesicatoria be applied, not over the old blister, but let
+a narrow strip of it be applied on each side of the old blister, and
+managed in the same manner as before directed.
+
+_I cannot speak too highly of Smith's Tela Vesicatoria._ It has, in my
+hands, through God's blessing, saved the lives of scores of
+children. It is far, very far, superior to the old fashioned
+blistering plaster. It seldom, if the above rules be strictly
+observed, fails to rise, it gives much less pain than the common
+blister, when it has had the desired effect, it readily heals, which
+cannot always be said of the common fly blister, more especially with
+children.
+
+My sheet anchors, then, in the inflammation of the lungs of children
+are, Ipecacuanha Wine and Smith's _Tela Vesicatoria_. Let the greatest
+care, as I before advised, be observed in obtaining the Ipecacuanha
+Wine genuine and good. This can be only depended upon by having the
+medicine from a highly respectable chemist, Ipecacuanha Wine, when
+genuine and good, is, in many children's diseases, is one of the most
+valuable of medincies.
+
+_What, in a case of inflammation of the lungs, NOT to do_--Do not, on
+any account, apply leeches. They draw out the life of the child, but
+not his disease. Avoid--_emphatically let me say so_--giving emetic
+tartar It is one of the most lowering and death-dealing medicines that
+can be administered either to an infant or to a child! If you wish to
+try the effect of it, take a dose yourself, and I am quite sure that
+you will then never be inclined to poison a child with such an
+abominable preparation! In olden times--many, many years ago--I myself
+gave it in inflammation of the lungs, and lost many children! Since
+leaving it off, the recoveries of patients by the Ipecacuanha
+treatment, combined with the external application of Smith's _Tela
+Vesicatoria_, have been in many cases marvellous. Avoid broths and
+wine, and all stimulants. Do _not_ put the child into a warm bath, it
+only oppresses the already oppressed breathing. Moreover, after he is
+out of the bath, it causes a larger quantity of blood to rush back to
+the lungs and to the bronchial tubes, and thus feeds the
+inflammation. Do not, by a large fire, keep the temperature of the
+room high. A small fire, in the winter time, encourages ventilation,
+and in such a case does good. When the little patient is on the
+mother's or on the nurse's lap, do not burden him either with a
+_heavy_ blanket or with a _thick_ shawl. Either a _thin_ child's
+blanket, or a _thin_ woollen shawl, in addition to his usual
+nightgown, is all the clothing necessary.
+
+205. _Is Bronchitis a more frequent disease than Inflammation of the
+Lungs? Which is the most dangerous? What are the symptoms of
+Bronchitis_?
+
+Bronchitis is a much more frequent disease than inflammation of the
+lungs, indeed, it is one of the most common complaints both of infants
+and of children, while inflammation of the lungs is comparatively a
+rare disease. Bronchitis is not nearly such a dangerous disease as
+inflammation of the lungs.
+
+_The symptoms_--The child for the first few days labours under
+symptoms of a heavy cold, he has not his usual spirits. In two or
+three days, instead of the cold leaving him, it becomes more
+confirmed, he is now really poorly, fretful, and feverish, his
+breathing becomes rather hurried and oppressed, his cough is hard and
+dry, and loud, he wheezes, and if you put your ear to his naked back,
+between his shoulder blades, you will hear the wheezing more
+distinctly. If at the breast, he does not suck with his usual avidity;
+the cough, notwithstanding the breast is a great comfort to him,
+compels him frequently to loose the nipple; his urine is scanty, and
+rather high-coloured, staining the napkin, and smelling strongly. He
+is generally worse at night.
+
+Well, then, remember if the child be feverish, if he have symptoms of
+a heavy cold, if he have an oppression of breathing, if he wheeze, and
+if he have a tight, dry, noisy cough, you may be satisfied that he has
+an attack of bronchitis.
+
+206. _How can I distinguish between Bronchitis and Inflammation of the
+Lungs_?
+
+In bronchitis the skin is warm, but moist; in inflammation of the
+lungs it is hot and dry: in bronchitis the mouth is warmer than usual,
+but moist; in inflammation of the lungs it is burning hot: in
+bronchitis the breathing is rather hurried, and attended with
+wheezing; in inflammation of the lungs it is very short and panting,
+and is unaccompanied with wheezing, although occasionally a very
+slight crackling sound might be heard: in bronchitis the cough is long
+and noisy; in inflammation of the lungs it is short and feeble: in
+bronchitis the child is cross and fretful; in inflammation of the
+lungs he is dull and heavy, and his countenance denotes distress.
+
+We have sometimes a combination of bronchitis and of inflammation of
+the lungs, an attack of the latter following the former. Then the
+symptoms will be modified, and will partake of the character of the
+two diseases.
+
+207. _How would you treat a case of Bronchitis_?
+
+If a medical man cannot be procured, I will tell you _What to do_:
+Confine the child to his bedroom, and if very ill, to his bed. If it
+be winter time, have a little fire in the grate, but be sure that the
+temperature of the chamber be not above 60 degrees Fahrenheit, and let
+the room be properly ventilated, which may be effected by occasionally
+leaving the door a little ajar.
+
+Let him lie either _outside_ the bed or on a sofa, if he be very ill,
+_inside_ the bed, with a sheet and a blanket only to cover him, but no
+thick coverlid. If he be allowed to be on the lap, it only heats him
+and makes him restless. If he will not lie on the bed, let him rest on
+a pillow placed on the lap, the pillow will cause him to lie cooler,
+and will more comfortably rest his weaned body. If he be at the
+breast, keep him to it, let him have no artificial food, unless, if he
+be thirsty a little toast and water. If he be weaned, let him have
+either milk and water, arrow root made with equal parts of milk and
+water, toast and water, barley water, or weak black tea, with plenty
+of new milk in it, &c., but, until the inflammation have subsided,
+neither broth nor beef tea.
+
+Now, with regard to medicine, the best medicine is Ipecacuanha Wine,
+given in large doses, so as to produce constant nausea. The
+Ipecacuanha abates fever, acts on the skin, loosens the cough, and, in
+point of fact, in the majority of cases, will rapidly effect a cure. I
+have in a preceding Conversation given you a prescription for the
+Ipecacuanha Wine Mixture. Let a tea-spoonful of the mixture be taken
+every four hours.
+
+If in a day or two he be no better, but worse, by all means continue
+the mixture, whether it produce sickness or otherwise, and put on the
+chest a _Tela Vesicatoria_, a quarter of a sheet.
+
+The Ipecacuanha Wine and the Tela Vesicatoria are my sheet anchors in
+the bronchitis, both of infants and of children. They rarely, even in
+very severe cases, fail to effect a cure, provided the Tela
+Vesicatorina be properly applied, and the Ipecacuanha Wine be genuine
+and of good quality.
+
+If there be any difficulty in procuring _good_ Ipecacuanha Wine, the
+Ipecacuanha may be given in powder instead of the wine The following
+is a pleasant form--
+
+ Take of--Powder of Ipecacuanha, twelve grains
+ White Sugar thirty six grains
+
+Mix well together and divide into twelve powders. One of the powders
+to be put dry on the tongue every four hours.
+
+The Ipecacuanha Powder will keep better than the Wine--an important
+consideration to those living in country places, nevertheless, if the
+Wine can be procured fresh and good, I far prefer the Wine to the
+Powder.
+
+When the bronchitis has disappeared, the diet ought gradually to be
+improved--rice, sago, tapioca, and light batter-pudding, &c.; and, in
+a few days, either a little chicken or a mutton chop, mixed with a
+well-mashed potato and crumb of bread, should be given. But let the
+improvement in his diet be gradual, or the inflammation might return.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not apply leeches. Do not give either emetic
+tartar or antimonial wine, which is emetic tartar dissolved in
+wine. Do not administer either paregoric or syrup of poppies, either
+of which would stop the cough, and would thus prevent the expulsion of
+the phlegm. Any fool can stop a cough, but it requires a wise man to
+rectify the mischief. A cough is an effort of Nature to bring up the
+phlegm, which would otherwise accumulate, and in the end cause
+death. Again, therefore, let me urge upon you the immense importance
+of _not_ stopping the cough of a child. The Ipecacuanha Wine will, by
+loosening the phlegm, loosen the cough, which is the only right way to
+get rid of a cough. Let what I have now said be impressed deeply upon
+your memory, as thousands of children in England are annually
+destroyed by having their coughs stopped. Avoid, until the bronchitis
+be relieved, giving him broths, and meat, and stimulants of all
+kinds. For further observations on _what NOT to do_ in bronchitis, I
+beg to refer you to a previous Conversation we had on _what NOT to do_
+in inflammation of the lungs. That which is injurious in the one case
+is equally so in the other.
+
+208. _What are the symptoms of Diphtheria, or, as it is sometimes
+called, Boulogne Sore-throat_?
+
+This terrible disease, although by many considered to be a new
+complaint, is, in point of fact, of very ancient origin. Homer, and
+Hippocrates, the Father of Physic, have both described it. Diphtheria
+first appeared in England in the beginning of the year 1857, since
+which time it has never totally left our shores.
+
+_The symptoms_--The little patient, before the disease really shows
+itself, feels poorly, and is "out of sorts." A shivering fit, though
+not severe, may generally be noticed. There is heaviness, and slight
+headache, principally over the eyes. Sometimes, but not always, there
+is a mild attack of delirium at night The next day he complains of
+slight difficulty of swallowing. If old enough, he will complain of
+constriction about the swallow. On examining the throat, the tonsils
+will be found to be swollen and redder--more darkly red than
+usual. Slight specks will be noticed on the tonsils. In a day or two
+an exudation will cover them, the back of the swallow, the palate, the
+tongue, and sometimes the inside of the cheeks and of the
+nostrils. This exudation of lymph gradually increases until it becomes
+a regular membrane, which puts on the appearance of leather, hence its
+name diphtheria. This membrane peels off in pieces, and if the child
+be old and strong enough he will sometimes spit it up in quantities,
+the membrane again and again rapidly forming as before. The discharges
+from the throat are occasionally, but not always, offensive. There is
+danger of croup from the extension of the membrane into the wind
+pipe. The glands about the neck and under the jaw are generally much
+swollen, the skin is rather cold and clammy, the urine is scanty and
+usually pale, the bowels at first are frequently relaxed. This
+diarrhoea may, or may not, cease as the disease advances.
+
+The child is now in a perilous condition, and it becomes a battle
+between his constitution and the disease. If, unfortunately, as is
+too often the case--diphtheria being more likely to attack the
+weakly--the child be very delicate, there is but slight hope of
+recovery. The danger of the disease is not always to be measured by
+the state of the throat. Sometimes, when the patient appears to be
+getting well, a sudden change for the worse rapidly carries him
+off. Hence the importance of great caution, in such cases, in giving
+an opinion as to ultimate recovery. I have said enough to prove the
+terrible nature of the disease, and to show the necessity of calling
+in, at the earliest period of the symptoms, an experienced and skilful
+medical man.
+
+209. _Is Diphtheria contagious_?
+
+_Decidedly_. Therefore, when practicable, the rest of the children
+ought instantly to be removed to a distance. I say _children_, for it
+is emphatically a disease of childhood. When adults have it, it is the
+exception and not the rule: "Thus it will be seen, in the account
+given of the Boulogne epidemic, that of 366 deaths from this cause,
+341 occurred amongst children under ten years of age. In the
+Lincolnshire epidemic, in the autumn of 1858, all the deaths at
+Horncastle, 25 in number, occurred amongst children under twelve years
+of age." [Footnote: _Diphtheria_: by Ernest Hart. A valuable pamphlet
+on the subject. Dr Wade of Birmingham has also written an interesting
+and useful monograph on Diphtheria. I am indebted to the above authors
+for much valuable information.]
+
+210. _What are the causes of Diphtheria_?
+
+Bad and imperfect drainage; [Footnote: "Now all my carefully conducted
+inquiries induce me to believe that the disease comes from
+drain-poison. All the cases into which I could fully inquire, have
+brought conviction to my mind that there is a direct law of sequence
+in some peculiar conditions of atmosphere between diphtheria and bad
+drainage; and, if this be proved by subsequent investigations, we may
+be able to prevent a disease which, in too many cases, our known
+remedies cannot cure."--W. Carr, Esq., Blackheath, _British Medical
+Journal_, December 7, 1861.] want of ventilation; overflowing privies;
+low neighbourhoods in the vicinity of rivers; stagnant waters; indeed,
+everything that vitiates the air, and thus depresses the system, more
+especially if the weather be close and muggy; poor and, improper food;
+and last, though not least, contagion. Bear in mind, too, that a
+delicate child is much more predisposed to the disease than a strong
+one.
+
+211. _What is the treatment of Diptheria_?
+
+_What to do_--Examine well into the ventilation, for as diphtheria is
+frequently caused by deficient ventilation, the best remedy is
+thorough ventilation. Look well both to the drains and to the privies,
+and see that the drains from the water-closets and from the privies do
+not in any way contaminate the pump-water. If the drains be defective
+or the privies be full, the disease in your child will be generated,
+fed, and fostered. Not only so, but the disease will spread in your
+family and all around you.
+
+Keep the child to his bedroom and to his bed. For the first two or
+three days, while the fever runs high, put him on a low diet, such as
+milk, tea, arrow root, &c.
+
+Apply to his throat every four hours a warm barm and oatmeal
+poultice. If he be old enough to have the knowledge to use a gargle,
+the following will be found serviceable--
+
+ Take of--Permanganate of Potash, pure, four grams,
+ Water eight ounces
+
+To make a Gargle
+
+Or,
+
+ Take of--Powdered Alum, one drachm,
+ Simple Syrup one ounce,
+ Water, seven ounces
+
+To make a Gargle
+
+The best medicine for the first few days of the attack, is the
+following mixture--
+
+ Take of--Chlorate of Potash two drachms,
+ Boiling Water seven ounces
+ Syrup of Red Poppy one ounce
+
+To Make a mixture. A table spoonful to be taken every four hours.
+
+
+Or the chlorate of potash might be given in the form of powder--
+
+ Take of--Chlorate of Potash two scruples,
+ Lump Sugar one drachm
+
+Mix and divide into eight powders. One to be put into a dry tea spoon
+and then placed on the tongue every three hours, These powders are
+very useful in diphtheria; they are very cleansing to the tongue and
+throat. If they produce much smarting as where the mouth is very sore
+they sometimes do, let the patient, after taking one, drink
+plentifully of milk, indeed I have known these powders induce a
+patient to take nourishment, in the form of milk, which he otherwise
+would not have done, and thus to have saved him from dying of
+starvation, which, before taking the powders, there was every
+probability of his doing. An extensive experience has demonstrated to
+me the great value of these powders in diphtheria, but they must be
+put on the tongue dry.
+
+As soon as the skin has lost its preternatural heat, beef tea and
+chicken broth ought to be given. Or if great prostration should
+supervene, in addition to the beef tea, port wine, a table spoonful
+every four hours, should be administered. If the child be cold, and
+there be great sinking of the vital powers, brandy and water should be
+substituted for the port wine. Remember, in ordinary cases, port wine
+and brandy are not necessary, _but in cases of extreme exhaustion_
+they are most valuable.
+
+As soon as the great heat of the skin has abated and the debility has
+set in, one of the following mixtures will be found useful--
+
+ Take of--Wine of Iron, one ounce and a half,
+ Sample Syrup, one ounce,
+ Water, three ounces and a half
+
+To make a Mixture. A table spoonful to be taken every four hours.
+
+Or,
+
+ Take of--Tincture of Perchloride of Iron, one drachm
+ Simple Syrup, one ounce,
+ Water, three ounces
+
+To make a Mixture. A table spoonful to be taken three times a day.
+
+If the disease should travel downwards, it will cause all the symptoms
+of croup, then it must be treated as croup, with this only difference,
+that a blister (_Tela Vesicatoria_) must _not_ be applied, or the
+blistered surface may be attacked by the membrane of diphtheria, which
+may either cause death or hasten that catastrophe. In every other
+respect treat the case as croup, by giving an emetic, a tea spoonful
+of Ipecacuanha Wine every five minutes, until free vomiting be
+excited, and then administer smaller doses of Ipecacuanha Wine every
+two or three hours, as I recommended when conversing with you on the
+treatment of croup.
+
+_What NOT to do_--Do not, on any account, apply either leeches or a
+blister. If the latter be applied, it is almost sure to be covered
+with the membrane of diphtheria, similar to that inside of the mouth
+and of the throat, which would be a serious complication. Do not give
+either calomel or emetic tartar. Do not depress the system by
+aperients, for diphtheria is an awfully depressing complaint of
+itself, the patient, in point of fact, is labouring under the
+depressing effects of poison, for the blood has been poisoned either
+by the drinking water being contaminated by faecal matter from either a
+privy or from a water-closet, by some horrid drain, by proximity to a
+pig-sty, by an overflowing privy, especially if vegetable matter be
+rotting at the same time in it, by bad ventilation, or by
+contagion. Diphtheria may generally be traced either to the one or to
+the other of the above causes, therefore let me urgently entreat you
+to look well into all these matters, and thus to stay the pestilence!
+Diphtheria might long remain in a neighbourhood if active measures be
+not used to exterminate it.
+
+212. _Have the goodness to describe the symptoms of Measles_?
+
+Measles commences with symptoms of a common cold, the patient is at
+first chilly, then hot and feverish, he has a running at the nose,
+sneezing, watering, and redness of the eyes, headache, drowsiness, a
+hoarse and peculiar ringing cough, which nurses call "measle-cough,"
+and difficulty of breathing. These symptoms usually last three days
+before the eruption appears, on the fourth it (the eruption) generally
+makes its appearance, and continues for four days and then disappears,
+lasting altogether, from the commencement of the symptoms of cold to
+the decline of the eruption, seven days. It is important to bear in
+mind that the eruption consists of _crescent-shaped--half
+moon-shaped--patches_, that they usually appear first about the face
+and the neck, in which places they are the best marked; then on the
+body and on the arms; and, lastly, on the legs, and that they are
+slightly raised above the surface of the skin. The face is swollen,
+more especially the eye-lids which are sometimes for a few days
+closed.
+
+Well, then, remember, _the running at the nose, the, sneezing, the
+peculiar hoarse cough, and the half-moon-shaped patches_, are the
+leading features of the disease, and point out for a certainty that it
+is measles.
+
+213. _What constitutes the principal danger in Measles_?
+
+The affection of the chest. The mucous or lining membrane of the
+bronchial tubes is always more or less inflamed, and the lungs
+themselves are sometimes affected.
+
+214. _Do you recommend "surfeit water" and saffron tea to throw out
+the eruption in Measles_?
+
+Certainly not. The only way to throw out the eruption, as it is
+called, is to keep the body comfortably warm, and to give the
+beverages ordered by the medical man, with the chill off. "Surfeit
+water," saffron tea, and remedies of that class, are hot and
+stimulating. The only effect they can have, will be to increase the
+fever and the inflammation--to add fuel to the fire.
+
+215. _What is the treatment of Measles_?
+
+_What to do_.--The child ought to be confined both to his room and to
+his bed, the room being kept comfortably warm; therefore, if it be
+winter time, there should be a small fire in the grate; in the summer
+time, a fire would be improper. The child must not be exposed to
+draughts; notwithstanding, from time to time, the door ought to be
+left a little ajar in order to change the air of the apartment; for
+proper ventilation, let the disease be what it may, is absolutely
+necessary.
+
+Let the child, for the first few days, be kept on a low diet, such as
+on milk and water, arrow-root, bread and butter, &c.
+
+If the attack be mild, that is to say, if the breathing be not much
+affected (for in measles it always is more or less affected), and if
+there be not much wheezing, the Acidulated Infusion of Roses' Mixture
+[Footnote: See page 178] will be all that is necessary.
+
+But suppose that the breathing is short, and that there is a great
+wheezing, then instead of giving him the mixture just advised, give
+him a tea-spoonful of a mixture composed of Ipecacuanha Wine, Syrup,
+and Water, [Footnote: See page 161] every four hours. And if, on the
+following day, the breathing and the wheezing be not relieved in
+addition to the Ipecacuanha Mixture, apply a Tola Vesicatoria, as
+advised under the head of Inflammation of the Lungs.
+
+When the child is convalescing, batter puddings, rice, and sago
+puddings, in addition to the milk, bread and butter, &c, should be
+given, and, a few days later, chicken, mutton chops, &c.
+
+The child ought not, even in a mild case of measles, and in favourable
+weather to be allowed to leave the house under a fortnight, or it
+might bring on an attack of bronchitis.
+
+_What NOT to do_--Do not give either "surfeit water" or wine. Do not
+apply leeches to the chest. Do not expose the child to the cold
+air. Do not keep the bed room very hot, but comfortably warm. Do not
+let the child leave the house, even under favourable circumstances,
+under a fortnight. Do not, while the eruption is out, give
+aperients. Do not, "to ease the cough," administer either emetic
+tartar or paregoric--the former drug is awfully depressing, the latter
+will stop the cough, and will thus prevent the expulsion of the
+phlegm.
+
+216. _What is the difference between Scarlatina and Scarlet Fever_?
+
+They are indeed one and the same disease, scarlatina being the Latin
+for scarlet fever. But, in a _popular_ sense, when the disease is
+mild, it is usually called scarlatina. The latter term does not sound
+so formidable to the ears either of patients or of parents.
+
+217. _Will you describe the symptoms of Scarlet Fever_?
+
+The patient is generally chilly, languid, drowsy, feverish, and poorly
+for two days before the eruption appears. At the end of the second
+day, the characteristic, bright scarlet efflorescence, somewhat
+similar to the colour of a boiled lobster, usually first shows itself.
+The scarlet appearance is not confined to the skin; but the tongue,
+the throat, and the whites of the eyes put on the same appearance;
+with this only difference, that on the tongue and on the throat the
+scarlet is much darker; and, as Dr Elliotson accurately describes
+it,--"the tongue looks as if it had been slightly sprinkled with
+Cayenne pepper;" the tongue, at other times, looks like a strawberry;
+when it does, it is called "the strawberry tongue." The eruption
+usually declines on the fifth, and is generally indistinct on the
+sixth day; on the seventh it has completely faded away. There is
+usually, after the first few days, great itching on the surface of the
+body. The skin, at the end of the week, begins to peel and to dust
+off, making it look as though meal had been sprinkled upon it.
+
+There are three forms of scarlet fever;--the one where the throat is
+little, if at all, affected, and this is a mild form of the disease;
+the second, which is generally, especially at night, attended with
+delirium, where the throat is _much_ affected, being often greatly
+inflamed and ulcerated; and the third (which is, except in certain
+unhealthy districts, comparatively rare, and which is VERY dangerous),
+the malignant form.
+
+218. _Would it be well to give a little cooling, opening physic as
+soon as a child begins to sicken for Scarlet Fever_?
+
+_On no account whatever._ Aperient medicines are, in my opinion,
+highly improper and dangerous both before and during the period of the
+eruption. It is my firm conviction, that the administration of opening
+medicine, at such times, is one of the principal causes of scarlet
+fever being so frequently fatal. This is, of course, more applicable
+to the poor, and to those who are unable to procure a skilful medical
+man.
+
+219. _What constitutes the principal danger in Scarlet Fever_?
+
+The affection of the throat, the administration of opening medicine
+during the first ten days, and a peculiar disease of the kidneys
+ending in _anasarca_ (dropsy), on which account, the medical man
+ought, when practicable, to be sent for at the onset, that no time may
+be lost in applying _proper_ remedies.
+
+When Scarlet Fever is complicated--as it sometimes is--with
+diphtheria, the diphtheric membrane is very apt to travel into the
+wind-pipe, and thus to cause diphtheric croup, it is almost sure, when
+such is the case, to end in death. When a child dies from such a
+complication, the death might truly be said to be owing to the
+diphtheric croup, and not to the Scarlet Fever, for if the diphtheric
+croup had not occurred, the child would, in all probability, have been
+saved. The deaths from diphtheria are generally from diphtheric croup,
+if there be no croup, there is, as a rule, frequent recovery.
+
+220. _How would you distinguish between Scarlet Fever and Measles_?
+
+Measles commences with symptoms of a common cold, scarlet fever does
+not. Measles has a _peculiar hoarse_ cough, scarlet fever has not. The
+eruption of measles is in patches of a half moon shape, and is
+slightly raised above the skin, the eruption of scarlet fever is _not_
+raised above the skin at all, and is one continued mass. The colour of
+the eruption is much more vivid in scarlet fever than in measles. The
+chest is the part principally affected in measles, and the throat in
+scarlet fever.
+
+There is an excellent method of determining, for a certainty, whether
+the eruption be that of scarlatina or otherwise. I myself have, in
+several instances, ascertained the truth of it--"For several years M
+Bouchut has remarked in the eruptions of scarlatina a curious
+phenomenon, which serves to distinguish this eruption from that of
+measles, erythema, erysipelas &c., a phenomenon essentially vital,
+and which is connected with the excessive contractability of the
+capillaries. The phenomenon in question is a _white line_, which can
+be produced at pleasure by drawing the back of the nail along the skin
+where the eruption, is situated. On drawing the nail, or the extremity
+of a hard body (such as a pen-holder), along the eruption, the skin is
+observed to grow pale, and to present a white trace, which remains for
+one or two minutes, or longer, and then disappears. In this way the
+diagnosis of the disease may be very distinctly written on the skin;
+the word 'Scarlatina' disappears as the eruption regains its uniform
+tint."--_Edinburgh Medical Journal._
+
+221. _Is it of so much importance, then, to distinguish between
+Scarlet fever and Measles_?
+
+It is of great importance, as in measles the patient ought to be kept
+_moderately_ warm, and the drinks should be given with the chill off;
+while in scarlet fever the patient ought to be kept cool--indeed, for
+the first few days, _cold_--and the beverages, such as spring-water,
+toast and water, &c., should be administered quite cold.
+
+222. _Do you believe in "Hybrid" Scarlet Fever--that is to say, in a
+cross between Scarlet Fever and Measles_?
+
+I never in my life saw a case of "hybrid" scarlet fever--nor do I
+believe in it. Scarlet fever and measles are both blood poisons, each
+one being perfectly separate and distinct from the other. "Hybrid"
+Scarlet fever is, in my opinion, an utter impossibility. In olden
+times, when the symptoms of diseases were not so well and carefully
+distinguished as now, scarlet fever and measles were constantly
+confounded one with the other, and was frequently said to be
+"hybrid"--a cross between measles and scarlet fever--to the patient's
+great detriment and danger, the two diseases being as distinct and
+separate as their treatment-and management ought to be.
+
+223. _What is the treatment of Scarlet Fever?_ [Footnote: On the 4th
+of March 1856, I had the honour to read a _Paper on the Treatment of
+Scarlet Fever_ before the members of Queens College Medico-Chirugical
+Society, Birmingham--which _Paper_ was afterwards published in the
+_Association Journal_ (March 15 1856) and in Braithwaite's _Retrospect
+of Medicine_ (January--June, 1856) and in Rankings _Half Yearly
+Abstract of the Medical Sciences_ (July--December, 1856), besides in
+other publications. Moreover the _Paper_ was translated into German,
+and published in _Canstatts Jahresbericht_, iv 456, 1859]
+
+_What to do_--Pray pay attention to my rules, and carry out my
+directions to the letter--I can then promise, _that if the scarlet
+fever be neither malignant nor complicated with diphtheria_, the plan
+I am about to advise will, with God's blessing, be usually successful.
+
+What is the first thing to be done? Send the child to bed, throw open
+the windows, be it winter or summer, and have a thorough ventilation,
+for the bedroom must be kept cool, I may say cold. Do not be afraid of
+fresh air, for fresh air, for the first few days, is essential to
+recovery. _Fresh air, and plenty of it, in scarlet fever, is the best
+doctor_ a child can have let these words be written legibly on your
+mind. [Footnote: In the _Times_ of Sept 4, 1863, is the following
+copied from the _Bridgewater Mercury_--
+
+GROSS SUPERSTITION--In one of the streets of Taunton, there resides a
+man and his wife who have the care of a child This child was attacked
+with scarlatina, and to all appearance death was inevitable. A jury of
+matrons was as it were empanelled, and to prevent the child 'dying
+hard' all the doors in the house all the drawers, all the boxes all
+the cupboards were thrown wide open, the keys taken out and the body
+of the child placed under a beam, whereby a sure, certain, and easy
+passage into eternity could be secured. Watchers held their vigils
+throughout the weary night, and in the morning the child, to the
+surprise of all, did not die, and is now gradually recovering.
+
+These old women--this jury of matrons--stumbled on the right remedy,
+"all the doors in the house....were thrown vide open," and thus they
+thoroughly ventilated the apartment. What was the consequence? The
+child who, just before the opening of the doors, had all the
+appearances "that death was inevitable," as soon as fresh air was let
+in showed symptoms of recovery, "and in the morning the child, to the
+surprise of all, did not die, and is now gradually recovering." There
+is nothing wonderful--there is nothing surprising to my mind--in all
+this. Ventilation--thorough ventilation--is the grand remedy for
+scarlatina! Oh, that there were in scarlet fever cases a good many
+such old women's--such a "jury of matrons'"--remedies! We should not
+then be horrified, as we now are, at the fearful records of death,
+which the Returns of the Registrar General disclose!]
+
+If the weather be either intensely cold, or very damp, there is no
+objection to a small fire in the grate provided there be, at the same
+time, air--an abundance of fresh air--admitted into the room.
+
+Take down the curtains of the bed, remove the valances. If it be
+summer time, let the child be only covered with a sheet. If it be
+winter time, in addition to the sheet, he should have one blanket over
+him.
+
+Now for the throat--The best _external_ application is a barm and
+oatmeal poultice How ought it to be made, and how applied? Put half a
+tea-cupful of barm into a saucepan, put it on the fire to boil; as
+soon as it boils, take it off the fire, and stir oatmeal into it,
+until it be of the consistence of a nice soft poultice; then place it
+on a rag, and apply it to the throat, carefully fasten it on with a
+bandage, two or three turns of the bandage going round the throat, and
+two or three over the crown of the head, so as nicely to apply the
+poultice where it is wanted--that is to say, to cover the tonsils.
+Tack the bandage: do not pin it. Let the poultice be changed three
+times a day. The best medicine is the Acidulated Infusion of Roses,
+sweetened with syrup:--
+
+ Take of--Dilated Sulphuric Acid, half a drachm;
+ Simple Syrup, one ounce and a half;
+ Acid Infusion of Roses, four ounces and a half:
+
+To make a Mixture. A table-spoonful to be taken every four hours.
+
+It is grateful and refreshing, it is pleasant to take, it abates fever
+and thirst, it cleanses the throat and tongue of mucus, and is
+peculiarly efficacious in scarlet fever; as soon as the fever is
+abated it gives an appetite. My belief is that the sulphuric acid in
+the mixture is a specific in scarlet fever, as much as quinine is in
+ague, and sulphur in itch. I have reason to say so, for, in numerous
+cases I have seen its immense value.
+
+Now, with regard to food.--If the child be at the breast, keep him
+entirely to it. If he be weaned, and under two years old, give him
+milk and water, and cold water to drink. If he be older, give him
+toast and water, and plain water from the pump, as much as he chooses;
+let it be quite cold--the colder the better. Weak black tea, or thin
+gruel, may be given, but not caring, unless he be an infant at the
+breast, if he take nothing but _cold_ water. If the child be two years
+old and upwards, roasted apples with sugar, and grapes, will be very
+refreshing, and will tend to cleanse both the mouth and the throat
+Avoid broths and stimulants.
+
+When the appetite returns, you may consider the patient to be
+safe. The diet ought now to be gradually improved. Bread and butter,
+milk and water, and arrowroot made with equal parts of new milk and
+water, should for the first two or three days be given. Then a light
+batter or rice pudding may be added, and in a few days, either a
+little chicken or a mutton chop.
+
+The essential remedies, then, in scarlet fever, are, for the first few
+days--(1) plenty of fresh air and ventilation, (2) plenty of cold
+water to drink, (3) barm poultices to the throat, and (4) the
+Acidulated Infusion of Roses Mixture as a medicine.
+
+Now, then, comes very important advice. After the first few days,
+probably five or six, sometimes as early as the fourth day--_watch
+carefully and warily, and note the time, the skin will suddenly become
+cool_, the child will say that he feels chilly; then is the time you
+must now change your tactics--_instantly close the windows and put
+extra clothing_, a blanket or two, on his bed. A flannel nightgown
+should, until the dead skin have peeled off, be now worn next to the
+skin, when the flannel nightgown should be discontinued. The patient
+ought ever after to wear, in the day time, a flannel waistcoat.
+[Footnote: On the importance--the vital importance--of the wearing of
+flannel next to the skin, see "Flannel Waistcoats."] His drinks must
+now be given with the chill off; he ought to have a warm cup of tea,
+and gradually his diet should, as I have previously advised, be
+improved.
+
+There is one important caution I wish to impress upon you,--_do not
+give opening medicine during the time the eruption is out_. In all
+probability the bowels will be opened: if so, all well and good; but
+do not, on any account, for the first ten days, use artificial means
+to open them. It is my firm conviction that the administration of
+purgatives in scarlet fever is a fruitful source of dropsy, of
+disease, and death. When we take into consideration the sympathy there
+is between the skin and the mucous membrane, I think that we should
+pause before giving irritating medicines, such as purgatives. The
+irritation of aperients on the mucous membrane may cause the poison of
+the skin disease (for scarlet fever is a blood-poison) to be driven
+internally to the kidneys, to the throat, to the pericardium (bag of
+the heart), or to the brain. You may say, Do you not purge if the
+bowels be not open for a week? I say emphatically, No!
+
+I consider my great success in the treatment of scarlet fever to be
+partly owing to my avoidance of aperients during the first ten days of
+the child's illness.
+
+If the bowels, after the ten days, be not properly opened, a dose or
+two of syrup of senna should be given: that is to say, one or two
+tea-spoonfuls should be administered early in the morning, and should,
+if the first dose does not operate, be repeated in four hours.
+
+In a subsequent Conversation, I shall strongly urge you not to allow
+your child, when convalescent, to leave the house under at least a
+month from the commencement of the illness; I, therefore, beg to refer
+you to that Conversation, and hope that you will give it your best and
+earnest consideration! During the last twenty years I have never had
+dropsy from scarlet fever, and I attribute it entirely to the plan I
+have just recommended, and in not allowing my patients to leave the
+house under the month--until, in fact, the skin that had peeled off
+has been renewed.
+
+Let me now sum up the plan I adopt, and which I beg leave to designate
+as--Pye Chavasse's Fresh Air Treatment of Scarlet Fever:--
+
+1. Thorough ventilation, a cool room, and scant clothes on the bed,
+for the first five or six days.
+
+2. A change of temperature of the skin to be carefully regarded. As
+soon as the skin is cool, closing the windows, and putting additional
+clothing on the bed.
+
+3. The Acidulated Infusion of Hoses with Syrup is _the_ medicine for
+scarlet fever.
+
+4. Purgatives to be religiously avoided for the first ten days at
+least, and even afterwards, unless there be absolute necessity.
+
+5. Leeches, blisters, emetics, cold and tepid spongings, and painting
+the tonsils with caustic, inadmissible in scarlet fever.
+
+6. A strict antiphlogistic (low) diet for the first few days, during
+which time cold water to be given _ad libitum_.
+
+7. The patient not to leave the house in the summer under the month;
+in the winter, under six weeks.
+
+_What NOT to do._--Do not, then, apply either leeches or blisters to
+the throat; do not paint the tonsils with caustic; do not give
+aperients; do not, on any account, give either calomel or emetic
+tartar; do not, for the first few days of the illness, be afraid of
+_cold air_ to the skin, and of cold water as a beverage; do not,
+emphatically let me say, _do not_ let the child leave the house for at
+least a month from the commencement of the illness.
+
+My firm conviction is, that purgatives, emetics, and blisters, by
+depressing the patient, sometimes cause ordinary scarlet fever to
+degenerate into malignant scarlet fever.
+
+I am aware that some of our first authorities advocate a different
+plan to mine. They recommend purgatives, which I may say, in scarlet
+fever, are my dread and abhorrence. They advise cold and tepid
+spongings--a plan which I think dangerous, as it will probably drive
+the disease internally. Blisters, too, have been prescribed; these I
+consider weakening, injurious, and barbarous, and likely still more to
+inflame the already inflamed skin. They recommend leeches to the
+throat, which I am convinced, by depressing the patient, will lessen
+the chance of his battling against the disease, and will increase the
+ulceration of the tonsils. Again, the patient has not too much blood;
+the blood is only poisoned. I look upon scarlet fever as a specific
+poison of the blood, and one which will be eliminated from the system,
+_not_ by bleeding, _not_ by purgatives, _not_ by emetics but by a
+constant supply of fresh and cool air, by the acid treatment, by cold
+water as a beverage, and for the first few days by a strict
+antiphlogistic (low) diet. Sydenham says that scarlet fever is
+oftentimes "fatal through the officiousness of the doctor." I
+conscientiously believe that a truer remark was never made; and that,
+under a different system to the usual one adopted, scarlet fever would
+not be so much dreaded. [Footnote: If any of my medical brethren
+should do me the honour to read these pages, let me entreat them to
+try my plan of treating scarlet fever, as my success has been great. I
+have given full and minute particulars, in order that they and mothers
+(if mothers cannot obtain medical advice) may give my plan a fair and
+impartial trial. My only stipulations are that they must _begin_ with
+my treatment, and _not mix_ any other with it, and carry out my plan
+to the very letter. I then, with God's blessing, provided the cases be
+neither malignant nor complicated with diphtheria, shall not fear the
+result. If any of my _confreres_ have tried my plan of treatment of
+scarlet fever--and I have reason to know that many have--I should feel
+grateful to them if they would favour me with their opinion as to its
+efficacy. Address--"Pye Chavasse, 214 Hagley Road, Birmingham."]
+
+Dr Budd, of Bristol, recommends, in the _British Medical Journal_,
+that the body, including the scalp, of a scarlet fever patient,
+should, after about the fourth day, be anointed, every night and
+morning, with camphorated oil; this anointing to be continued until
+the patient is able to take a warm bath and use disinfectant soap:
+this application will not only be very agreeable to the patient's
+feelings, as there is usually great irritation and itching of the
+skin, but it will, likewise, be an important means of preventing the
+dead skin, which is highly infectious, and which comes off partly in
+flakes and partly floats about the air as dust, from infecting other
+persons. The plan is an excellent one, and cannot be too strongly
+recommended.
+
+If the case be a combination of scarlet fever and of diphtheria, as it
+unfortunately now frequently is, let it be treated as a case of
+diphtheria.
+
+224. _I have heard of a case of Scarlet Fever, where the child, before
+the eruption showed itself, was suddenly struck prostrate, cold, and
+almost pulseless: what, in such a case, are the symptoms, and what
+immediate treatment do you advise_?
+
+There is an _exceptional_ case of scarlet fever, which now and then
+occurs, and which requires _exceptional_ and prompt treatment, or
+death will quickly ensue. We will suppose a case: one of the number,
+where nearly all the other children of a family are labouring under
+scarlet fever, is quite well, when suddenly--in a few hours, or even,
+in some cases, in an hour--utter prostration sets in, he is very cold,
+and is almost pulseless, and is nearly insensible--comatose.
+
+Having sent instantly for a judicious medical man, apply, until he
+arrives, hot bottles, hot bricks, hot bags of salt to the patient's
+feet and legs and back, wrap him in hot blankets, close the window,
+and give him hot brandy and water--a tablespoonful of brandy to half a
+tumblerful of hot water--give it him by teaspoonfuls, continuously--to
+keep him alive; when he is warm and restored to consciousness, the
+eruption will probably show itself, and he will become hot and
+feverish; then your tactics must, at once, be changed, and my Fresh
+Air Treatment, and the rest of the plan I have before advised must in
+all its integrity, be carried out.
+
+We sometimes hear of a child, before the eruption comes out and within
+twenty-four hours of the attack, dying of scarlet fever. When such be
+the case it is probably owing to low vitality of the system--to utter
+prostration--he is struck down, as though for death, and if the plan
+be not adopted of, for a few hours, keeping him alive by heat, and by
+stimulants, until, indeed, the eruption comes out, he will never rally
+again, but will die from scarlet fever poisoning and from utter
+exhaustion. These cases are comparatively rare, but they do, from
+time to time, occur, and, when they do, they demand exceptional and
+prompt and energetic means to save them from ending in almost
+immediate and certain death. "To be forewarned is to be forearmed."
+[Footnote: I have been reminded of this _exceptional_ case of scarlet
+fever by a most intelligent and valued patient of mine, who had a
+child afflicted as above described, and whose child was saved from
+almost certain death, by a somewhat similar plan of treatment as
+advised in the text.]
+
+225. _How soon ought a child to be allowed to leave the house after an
+attack of Scarlet Fever_?
+
+He must not be allowed to go out for at least a month from the
+commencement of the attack, in the summer, and six weeks in the
+winter; and not even then without the express permission of a medical
+man. It might be said that this is an unreasonable recommendation: but
+when it is considered that the whole of the skin generally
+desquamates, or peels off, and consequently leaves the surface of the
+body exposed to cold, which cold flies to the kidneys, producing a
+peculiar and serious disease in them, ending in dropsy, this warning
+will not be deemed unreasonable.
+
+Scarlet fever dropsy, which is really a _formidable disease, generally
+arises from, the carelessness, the ignorance, and the thoughtlessness
+of parents in allowing a child to leave the house before the new skin
+be properly formed and hardened._ Prevention is always better than
+cure.
+
+Thus far with regard to the danger to the child himself. Now, if you
+please, let me show you the risk of contagion that you inflict upon
+families, in allowing your child to mix with others before a month at
+least has elapsed. Bear in mind, a case is quite as contagious, if not
+more so, while the skin is peeling off, as it was before. Thus, in ten
+days or a fortnight, there is as much risk of contagion as at the
+_beginning_ of the disease, and when the fever is at its height. At
+the conclusion of the month, the old skin has generally all peeled
+off, and the new skin has taken its place; consequently there will
+then be less fear of contagion to others. But the contagion of scarlet
+fever is so subtle and so uncertain in its duration, that it is
+impossible to fix the exact time when it ceases.
+
+Let me most earnestly implore you to ponder well on the above
+important facts. If these remarks should be the means of saving only
+one child from death, or from broken health, my labour will not have
+been in vain.
+
+226. _What means do you advise to purify a house, clothes, and
+furniture, from the contagion of Scarlet Fever_?
+
+Let every room in the house, together with its contents, and clothing
+and dresses that cannot be washed, be well fumigated with
+sulphur--taking care the while to close both windows and door; let
+every room be _lime-washed_ and then be white-washed; if the contagion
+have been virulent, let every bedroom be freshly papered (the walls
+having been previously stripped of the old paper and then
+lime-washed); let the bed, the holsters, the pillows, and the
+mattresses be cleansed and purified; let the blankets and coverlids be
+thoroughly washed, and then let them be exposed to the open air--if
+taken into a field so much the better; let the rooms be well scoured;
+let the windows, top and bottom, be thrown wide open; let the drains
+be carefully examined; let the pump water be scrutinised, to see that
+it be not contaminated by faecal matter, either from the water-closet,
+from the privy, from the pig-stye, or from the stable; let privies be
+emptied of their contents--_remember this is most important
+advice_--then put, into the empty places, either lime and powdered
+charcoal or carbolic acid, for it is a well ascertained fact that it
+is frequently impossible to rid a house of the infection of scarlet
+fever without adopting such a course. "In St George's, Southwark, the
+medical officer reports that scarlatina 'has raged fatally, almost
+exclusively where privy or drain, smells are to be perceived in the
+houses.'" [Footnote: _Quarterly Report of the Board of Health_ upon
+Sickness in the Metropolis.] Let the children, who have not had, or
+who do not appear to be sickening for scarlet fever, be sent away from
+home--if to a farm house so much the better. Indeed, leave no stone
+unturned, no means untried, to exterminate the disease from the house
+and from the neighbourhood. Remember the young are more prone to catch
+contagious diseases than adults; for
+
+ "in the morn and liquid dew of youth
+ Contagious blastments are most imminent."--_Shakspeare_.
+
+227. _Have you any further observations to offer on the precautions to
+be taken against the spread of Scarlet Fever_?
+
+Great care should be taken to separate the healthy from the
+infected. The nurses selected for attending scarlet fever patients
+should be those who have previously had scarlet fever themselves.
+Dirty linen should be removed at once, and be put into boiling
+water. Very little furniture should be in the room of a scarlet fever
+patient--the less the better--it only obstructs the circulation of the
+air, and harbours the scarlet fever poison. The most scrupulous
+attention to cleanliness should, in these cases, be observed. A
+patient who has recovered from scarlet fever, and before he mixes with
+healthy people, should, for three or four consecutive mornings, have a
+warm bath, and well wash himself, while in the bath, with soap; he
+will, by adopting this plan, get rid of the dead skin, and thus remove
+the infected particles of the disease. If scarlet fever should appear
+in a school, the school must for a time be broken up, in order that
+the disease might be stamped out There must be no half measures where
+such a fearful disease is in question. A house containing scarlet
+fever patients should, by parents, be avoided as the plague; it is a
+folly at any time to put one's head into the lion's mouth! Chloralum
+and carbolic acid, and chloride of lime, and Condy's fluid, are each
+and all good disinfectants; but not one is to be compared to perfect
+cleanliness and to an abundance of fresh and pure air--the last of
+which may truly _par excellence_ be called God's disinfectant! Either
+a table-spoonful of chloralum, or two tea-spoonfuls of carbolic acid,
+or two tea-spoonfuls of Condy's fluid, or a tea-spoonful of chloride
+of lime in a pint of water, are useful to sprinkle the soiled
+handkerchiefs as soon as they be done with, and before the be washed,
+to put in the _pot-de-chambre_, and to keep in saucers about the room;
+but, remember, as I have said before, and cannot repeat too often,
+there is no preventative like the air of heaven, which should be
+allowed to permeate and circulate freely through the apartment and
+through the house: air, air, air is the best disinfectant, curative,
+and preventative of scarlet fever in the world!
+
+I could only wish that my _Treatment of Scarlet Fever_ were, in all
+its integrity, more generally adopted; if it were, I am quite sure
+that thousands of children would annually be saved from broken health
+and from death. Time still further convinces me that my treatment is
+based on truth as I have every year additional proofs of its value and
+of its success; but error and prejudice are unfortunately ever at
+work, striving all they can to defeat truth and common sense. One of
+my principal remedies in the treatment of scarlet fever is an
+abundance of fresh air; but many people prefer their own miserable
+complicated inventions to God's grand and yet simple remedies--they
+pretend that they know better than the Mighty Framer of the universe!
+
+228. _Will you describe the symptoms of Chicken pox_?
+
+It is occasionally, but not always, ushered in with a slight shivering
+fit; the eruption shows itself in about twenty-four hours from the
+child first appearing poorly. It is a vesicular [Footnote:
+_Vesicles_. Small elevations of the cuticle, covering a fluid which
+is generally clear and colourless at first, but afterwards whitish and
+opaque, or pearly.--_Watson_.] disease. The eruption comes out in the
+form of small pimples, and principally attacks the scalp, the neck,
+the back, the chest, and the shoulders, but rarely the face; while in
+small-pox the face is generally the part most affected. The next day
+these pimples fill with water, and thus become vesicles; on the third
+day they are at maturity. The vesicles are quite separate and distinct
+from each other. There is a slight redness around each of them. Fresh
+ones, whilst the others are dying away, make their appearance.
+Chicken-pox is usually attended with a slight itching of the skin;
+when the vesicles are scratched the fluid escapes, and leaves hard
+pearl-like substances, which, in a few days, disappear. Chicken-pox
+never leaves pit marks behind. It is a child's complaint; adults
+scarcely, if ever, have it.
+
+229. _Is there any danger in Chicken-pox; and what treatment do you
+advise_?
+
+It is not at all a dangerous, but, on the contrary, a trivial
+complaint. It lasts only a few days, and requires but little
+medicine. The patient ought, for three or four days, to keep the
+house, and should abstain from animal food. On the sixth day, but not
+until then, a dose or two of a mild aperient is all that will be
+required.
+
+230. _Is Chicken-pox infectious_?
+
+There is a diversity of opinion on this head, but one thing is
+certain--it cannot be communicated by inoculation.
+
+231. _What are the symptoms of Modified Small-pox_?
+
+The Modified Small-pox--that is to say, small-pox that has been robbed
+of its virulence by the patient having been either already vaccinated,
+or by his having had a previous attack of small-pox--is ushered in
+with severe symptoms, with symptoms almost as severe as though the
+patient had not been already somewhat protected either by vaccination
+or by the previous attack of small-pox--that is to say, he has a
+shivering fit, great depression of spirits and debility, _malaise_,
+sickness, headache, and occasionally delirium. After the above
+symptoms have lasted about three days, the eruption shows itself. The
+immense value of the previous vaccination, or the previous attack of
+small-pox, now comes into play. In a case of _unprotected_ small-pox,
+the appearance of the eruption _aggravates_ all the above symptoms,
+and the danger begins; while in the _modified_ small-pox, the moment
+the eruption shows itself the patient feels better, and, as a rule,
+rapidly recovers. The eruption, of _modified_ small-pox varies
+materially from the eruption of the _unprotected_ small-pox. The
+former eruption assumes a varied character, and is composed, first, of
+vesicles (containing water); and, secondly, of pustules (containing
+matter), each of which pustules has a depression in the centre; and,
+thirdly, of several red pimples without either water or matter in
+them, and which sometimes assume a livid appearance. These
+"breakings-out" generally show themselves more upon the wrist, and
+sometimes up one or both of the nostrils. While in the latter
+disease--the _unprotected_ small-pox--the "breaking-out" is composed
+entirely of pustules containing matter, and which pustules are more on
+the face than on any other part of the body. There is generally a
+peculiar smell in both diseases--an odour once smelt never to be
+forgotten.
+
+Now, there is one most important remark I have to make,--the _modified
+small-pox is contagious_. This ought to be borne in mind, as a person
+labouring under the disease must, if there be children in the house,
+either be sent away himself, or else the children ought to be banished
+both the house and the neighbourhood. Another important piece of
+advice is,--let _all_ in the house--children and adults, one and
+all--be vaccinated, even if any or all have been previously
+vaccinated.
+
+_Treatment_.--Let the patient keep his room, and if he be very ill,
+his bed. Let the chamber be well ventilated. If it be winter time, a
+small fire in the grate will encourage ventilation. If it be summer, a
+fire is out of the question; indeed, in such a case, the window-sash
+ought to be opened, as thorough ventilation is an important requisite
+of cure, both in small-pox and in _modified_ small-pox. While the
+eruption is out, do not on any account give aperient medicine. In ten
+days from the commencement of the illness a mild aperient may be
+given. The best medicine in these cases is, the sweetened Acidulated
+Infusion of Roses, [Footnote: See page 178] which ought to be given
+from the commencement of the disease, and should be continued until
+the fever be abated. For the first few days, as long as the fever
+lasts, the patient ought not to be allowed either meat or broth, but
+should be kept on a low diet, such as on gruel, arrow-root,
+milk-puddings, &c. As soon as the fever is abated he ought gradually
+to resume his usual diet. When he is convalescent, it is well, where
+practicable, that he should have change of air for a month.
+
+232. _How would you distinguish between Modified Small-pox and
+Chicken-pox_?
+
+Modified small-pox may readily be distinguished from chicken-pox, by
+the former disease being, notwithstanding its modification, much more
+severe and the fever much more intense before the eruption shows
+itself than chicken-pox; indeed, in chicken-pox there is little or no
+fever either before or after the eruption; by the former disease--the
+modified small-pox--consisting _partly_ of pustules (containing
+matter), each pustule having a depression in the centre, and the
+favourite localities of the pustules being the wrists and the inside
+of the nostrils; while, in the chicken-pox, the eruption consists of
+vesicles (containing water), and _not_ pustules (containing matter),
+and the vesicles having neither a depression in the centre, nor having
+any particular partiality to attack either the wrists or the inside of
+the nose. In modified small-pox each pustule is, as in unprotected
+small-pox, inflamed at the base; while in chicken-pox there is only
+very slight redness around each vesicle. The vesicles in chicken-pox
+are small--much smaller than the pustules in modified small-pox.
+
+233. _Is Hooping-cough an inflammatory disease_?
+
+Hooping-cough in itself is not inflammatory, it is purely spasmodic;
+but it is generally accompanied with more or less of bronchitis--
+inflammation of the mucous membrane of the bronchial tubes--on which
+account it is necessary, _in all cases_ of hooping-cough, to consult a
+medical man, that he may watch the progress of the disease and nip
+inflammation in the bud.
+
+234. _Will you have the goodness to give the symptoms, and a brief
+history of, Hooping-cough_?
+
+Hooping-cough is emphatically a disease of the young; it is rare for
+adults to have it; if they do, they usually suffer more severely than
+children. A child seldom has it but once in his life. It is highly
+contagious, and therefore frequently runs through a whole family of
+children, giving much annoyance, anxiety, and trouble to the mother
+and the nurses; hence hooping-cough is much dreaded by them. It is
+amenable to treatment. Spring and summer are the best seasons of the
+year for the disease to occur. This complaint usually lasts from six
+to twelve weeks--sometimes for a much longer period, more especially
+if proper means are not employed to relieve it.
+
+Hooping-cough commences as a common cold and cough. The cough, for ten
+days or a fortnight, increases in intensity; at about which time it
+puts on the characteristic "hoop." The attack of cough comes on in
+paroxysms. In a paroxysm, the child coughs so long and so violently,
+and _expires_ so much air from the lungs without _inspiring_ any, that
+at times he appears nearly suffocated and exhausted; the veins of his
+neck swell; his face is nearly purple; his eyes, with the tremendous
+exertion, almost seem to start from their sockets; at length there is
+a sudden _inspiration_ of air through the contracted chink of the
+upper part of the wind-pipe--the glottis--causing the peculiar "hoop;"
+and after a little more coughing, he brings up some glairy mucus from
+the chest; and sometimes, by vomiting, food from the stomach; he is at
+once relieved, until the next paroxysm occur, when the same process is
+repeated, the child during the intervals, in a favourable case,
+appearing quite well, and after the cough is over, instantly returning
+either to his play or to his food. Generally, after a paroxysm he is
+hungry, unless, indeed, there be severe inflammation either of the
+chest or of the lungs. Sickness, as I before remarked, frequently
+accompanies hooping-cough; when it does, it might be looked upon as a
+good sign. The child usually knows when an attack is coming on; he
+dreads it, and therefore tries to prevent it; he sometimes partially
+succeeds; but, if he does, it only makes the attack, when it does
+come, more severe. All causes of irritation and excitement ought, as
+much as possible, to be avoided, as passion is apt to bring on a
+severe paroxysm.
+
+A new-born babe--an infant of one or two months old--commonly escapes
+the infection; but if, at that tender age, he unfortunately catch
+hooping-cough, it is likely to fare harder with him than if he were
+older--the younger the child, the greater the risk. But still, in such
+a case, do not despair, as I have known numerous instances of new-born
+infants, with judicious care, recover perfectly from the attack, and
+thrive after it as though nothing of the kind had ever happened.
+
+A new-born babe, labouring under hooping-cough, is liable to
+convulsions, which is in this disease one, indeed the great, source of
+danger. A child, too, who is teething, and labouring under the
+disease, is also liable to convulsions. When the patient is
+convalescing, care ought to be taken that he does not catch cold, or
+the "hoop" might return. Hooping-cough may either precede, attend, or
+follow an attack of measle.
+
+235. _What is the treatment of Hooping-cough_?
+
+We will divide the hooping-cough into three stages, and treat each
+stage separately,
+
+_What to do.--In the first stage_, the commencement of hooping-cough:
+For the first ten days give the Ipecacuanha Wine Mixture, [Footnote:
+For the prescription of the Ipecacuanha Wine Mixture, see page 161.] a
+tea-spoonful three times a day. If the child be not weaned, keep him
+entirely to the breast, if he be weaned, to a milk and farinaceous
+diet. Confine him for the first ten days to the house, more especially
+if the hooping-cough be attended, as it usually is, with more or less
+bronchitis. But take care that the rooms be well ventilated; for good
+air is essential to the cure.
+
+If the bronchitis attending the hooping-cough be severe, confine him
+to his bed, and treat him as though it were simply a case of
+bronchitis. [Footnote: For the treatment of bronchitis, see answer to
+207th question.]
+
+_In the second stage_, discontinue the Ipecacuanha Mixture, and give
+Dr Gibb's remedy--namely, Nitric Acid--which I have found to be an
+efficacious and valuable one in hooping-cough:--
+
+ Take of--Diluted Nitric Acid, two drachms;
+ Compound Tincture of Cardamons, half a drachm;
+ Simple Syrup, three ounces;
+ Water, two ounces and a half:
+
+Make a Mixture. One or two tea-spoonfuls, or a table-spoonful,
+according to the age of the child--one tea-spoonful for an infant of
+six months, and two tea-spoonfuls for a child of twelve months, and
+one table-spoonful for a child of two years, every four hours, first
+shaking the bottle.
+
+Let the spine and the chest be well rubbed every night and morning
+either with Roche's Embrocation, or with the following stimulating
+liniment (first shaking the bottle):--
+
+ Take of--Oil of Cloves, one drachm;
+ Oil of Amber, two drachms;
+ Camphorated Oil, nine drachms:
+
+Make a Liniment.
+
+Let him wear a broad band of new flannel, which should extend round
+from his chest to his back, and which ought to be changed every night
+and morning, in order that it may be dried before putting on again. To
+keep it in its place it should be fastened by means of tapes and with
+shoulder-straps.
+
+The diet ought now to be improved--he should gradually return to his
+usual food; and, weather permitting, should almost live in the open
+air--fresh air being, in such a case, one of the finest medicines.
+
+_In the third stage_, that is to say, when the complaint has lasted a
+month, if by that time the child is not well, there is nothing like
+change of air to a high, dry, healthy, country place. Continue the
+Nitric Acid Mixture, and either the Embrocation or the Liniment to the
+back and the chest, and let him continue to almost live in the open
+air, and be sure that he does not discontinue wearing the flannel
+until he be quite cured, and then let it be left off by degrees.
+
+If the hooping-cough have caused debility, give him Cod-liver Oil--a
+tea-spoonful twice or three times a day, giving it him on a full
+stomach, after his meals. But, remember, after the first three or four
+weeks, change of air, and plenty of it, is for hooping-cough the grand
+remedy.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--"Do not apply leeches to the chest, for I would
+rather put blood into a child labouring under hooping-cough than take
+it out of him--hooping-cough is quite weakening enough to the system
+of itself without robbing him of his life's blood; do not, on any
+account whatever, administer either emetic tartar or antimonial wine;
+do not give either paregoric or syrup of white poppies; do not drug
+him either with calomel or with grey-powder; do not dose him with
+quack medicine; do not give him stimulants, but rather give him plenty
+of nourishment, such as milk and farinaceous food, but _no_
+stimulants; do not be afraid, after the first week or two, of his
+having fresh air, and plenty of it--for fresh, pure air is the grand
+remedy, after all that can be said and done, in hooping-cough.
+Although occasionally we find that, if the child to labouring under
+hooping-cough, and is breathing a pure country air, and is not getting
+well so rapidly as we could wish, change of air to a smoky gas-laden
+town will sometimes quickly effect a cure; indeed, some persons go so
+far as to say that the _best_ remedy for an _obstinate_ case of
+hooping-cough is, for the child to live, the great part of every day,
+in gas-works!"
+
+236. _What is to be done during a paroxysm of Hooping-cough_?
+
+If the child be old enough, let him stand up; but if he be either too
+young or too feeble, raise his head, and bend his body a little
+forward; then support his back with one hand, and the forehead with
+the other. Let the mucus, the moment it be within reach, be wiped with
+a soft handkerchief out of his mouth.
+
+237. _In an obstinate case of Hooping-cough, what is the best remedy_?
+
+Change of air, provided there be no active inflammation, to any
+healthy spot. A farm-house, in a high, dry, and salubrious
+neighbourhood, is as good a place as can be chosen. If, in a short
+time, he be not quite well, take him to the sea-side: the sea breezes
+will often, as if by magic, drive away the disease.
+
+238. _Suppose my child should have a shivering fit, is it to be looked
+upon as an important symptom_?
+
+Certainly. Nearly all _serious_ illnesses commence with a shivering
+fit: severe colds, influenza, inflammations of different organs,
+scarlet fever, measles, small-pox, and very many other diseases, begin
+in this way. If, therefore, your child should ever have a shivering
+fit, _instantly_ send for a medical man, as delay might be
+dangerous. A few hours of judicious treatment, at the commencement of
+an illness, is frequently of more avail than days and weeks, nay
+months, of treatment, when disease has gained a firm footing. A
+_serious_ disease often steals on insidiously, and we have perhaps
+only the shivering fit, which might be but a _slight_ one, to tell us
+of its approach.
+
+A _trifling_ ailment, too, by neglecting the premonitory symptom,
+which, at first might only be indicated by a _slight_ shivering fit,
+will sometimes become a mortal disorder:--
+
+ "The little rift within the lute,
+ That by-and-by will make the music mute,
+ And ever widening slowly silence all." [Footnote: The above extract
+ from Tennyson is, in my humble opinion, one of the most beautiful
+ pieces of poetry in the English language. It is a perfect gem, and a
+ volume in itself, so truthful, so exquisite, so full of the most
+ valuable reflections; for instance--(1.) "The little rift within the
+ lute,"--the little tubercle within the lung "that by-and-by will
+ make the music mute, and ever widening slowly silence all," and the
+ patient eventually dies of consumption. (2.) The little rent--the
+ little rift of a very minute vessel in the brain, produces an attack
+ of apoplexy, and the patient dies. (3.) Each and all of us, in one
+ form or another, sooner or later, will have "the little rift within
+ the lute." But why give more illustrations?--a little reflection
+ will bring numerous examples to my fair reader's memory.]
+
+239. _In case of a shivering fit, perhaps you will tell me what to
+do_?
+
+_Instantly_ have the bed warmed, and put the child to bed. Apply
+either a hot bottle or a hot brick, wrapped in flannel, to the soles
+of his feet. Put an extra blanket on his bed, and give him a cup of
+hot tea. As soon as the shivering fit is over, and he has become hot,
+gradually lessen the _extra_ quantity of clothes on his bed, and take
+away the hot bottle or the hot brick from his feet.
+
+_What NOT to do_.--Do not give either brandy or wine, as inflammation
+of some organ might be about taking place. Do not administer opening
+medicine, as there might be some "breaking out" cooling out on the
+skin, and an aperient might check it.
+
+240. _My child, apparently otherwise healthy, screams out in the night
+violently in his sleep, and nothing for a time will pacify him: what
+is likely to be the cause, and what is the treatment_?
+
+The causes of these violent screamings in the night are various. At
+one time, they proceed from teething; at another, from worms;
+sometimes, from night-mare; occasionally, from either disordered
+stomach or bowels. Each of the above causes will, of course, require
+a different plan of procedure; it will, therefore, be necessary to
+consult a medical man on the subject, who will soon, with appropriate
+treatment, be able to relieve him.
+
+241. _Have the goodness to describe the complaint of children called
+Mumps_.
+
+The mumps, inflammation of the "parotid" gland, is commonly ushered in
+with a slight feverish attack. After a short time, a swelling, of
+stony hardness, is noticed before and under the ear, which swelling
+extends along the neck towards the chin. This lump is exceedingly
+painful, and continues painful and swollen for four or five days. At
+the end of which time it gradually disappears, leaving not a trace
+behind. The swelling of mumps never gathers. It may affect one or both
+sides of the face. It seldom occurs but once in a lifetime. It is
+contagious, and has been known to run through a whole family or
+school; but it is not dangerous, unless, which is rarely the case, it
+leaves the "parotid" gland, and migrates either to the head, to the
+breast, or to the testicle.
+
+242. _What is the treatment of Mumps_?
+
+Foment the swelling, four or five times a day, with a flannel wrung
+out of hot camomile and poppy-head decoction; [Footnote: Four
+poppy-heads and four ounces of camomile blows to be boiled in four
+pints of water for half an hour, and then strained to make the
+decoction.] and apply, every night, a barm and oatmeal poultice to the
+swollen gland or glands. Debar, for a few days, the little patient
+from taking meat and broth, and let him live on bread and milk, light
+puddings, and arrow-root. Keep him in a well-ventilated room, and shut
+him out from the company of his brothers, his sisters, and young
+companions. Give him a little mild, aperient medicine. Of course, if
+there be the slightest symptom of migration to any other part or
+parts, instantly call in a medical man.
+
+243. _What is the treatment of a Boil_?
+
+One of the best applications is a Burgundy-pitch plaster spread on a
+soft piece of wash leather. Let a chemist spread a plaster, about the
+size of the hand; and, from this piece, cut small plasters, the size
+of a shilling or a florin (according to the dimensions of the boil),
+which snip around and apply to the part. Put a fresh one on
+daily. This plaster will soon cause the boil to break; when it does
+break, squeeze out the contents--the core and the matter--and then
+apply one of the plasters as before, which, until the boil be well,
+renew every day.
+
+The old-fashioned remedy for a boil--namely, common yellow soap and
+brown-sugar, is a capital one for the purpose. It is made with equal
+parts of brown sugar and of shredded yellow soap, and mixed by means
+of a table-knife on a plate, with a few drops of water, until it be
+all well blended together, and of the consistence of thick paste; it
+should then be spread either on a piece of wash-leather, or on thick
+linen, and applied to the boil, and kept in its place by means either
+of a bandage or of a folded handkerchief; and should he removed once
+or twice a day. This is an excellent application for a boil--soothing,
+comforting, and drawing--and will soon effect a cure. A paste of honey
+and flour, spread on linen rag, is another popular and good
+application for a boil.
+
+_If the boils should arise from the child being in a delicate state of
+health_, give him cod-liver oil, meat once a day, and an abundance of
+milk and farinaceous food. Let him have plenty of fresh air,
+exercise, and play.
+
+_If the boil should arise from gross and improper feeding_, then keep
+him for a time from meat, and let him live principally on a milk and
+farinaceous diet.
+
+_If the child be fat and gross_, cod-liver oil would he improper; a
+mild aperient, such as rhubarb and magnesia, would then be the best
+medicine.
+
+244. _What are the symptoms of Ear-ache_?
+
+A young child screaming shrilly, violently, and continuously, is
+oftentimes owing to ear-ache; carefully, therefore, examine each ear,
+and ascertain if there be any discharge; if there be, the mystery is
+explained.
+
+Screaming from ear-ache may be distinguished from the screaming from
+bowel-ache by the former (ear-ache) being more continuous--indeed,
+being one continued scream, and from the child putting his hand to his
+head; while, in the latter (bowel-ache), the pain is more of a coming
+and of a going character, and he draws up his legs to his
+bowels. Again, in the former (ear-ache), the secretions from the
+bowels are natural; while, in the latter (bowel-ache), the secretions
+from the bowels are usually depraved, and probably offensive. But a
+careful examination of the ear will generally at once decide the
+nature of the case.
+
+213. _What is the best remedy for Ear-ache_?
+
+Apply to the ear a small flannel bag, filled with hot salt--as hot as
+can be comfortably borne, or foment the ear with a flannel wrung out
+of hot camomile and poppy head decoction. A roasted onion, inclosed in
+muslin applied to the ear, is an old-fashioned and favourite remedy,
+and may, if the bag of hot salt, or if the hot fomentation do not
+relieve, be tried. Put into the ear, but not very far, a small piece
+of cotton wool, moistened with warm olive oil. Taking care that the
+wool is always removed before a fresh piece be substituted, as if it
+be allowed to remain in any length of time, it may produce a discharge
+from the ear. Avoid all _cold_ applications. If the ear-ache be
+severe, keep the little fellow at home, in a room of equal
+temperature, but well-ventilated, and give him, for a day or two, no
+meat.
+
+If a discharge from the ear should either accompany or follow the
+ear-ache, _more especially if the discharge be offensive_, instantly
+call in a medical man, or deafness for life may be the result.
+
+A knitted or crotcheted hat, with woollen rosettes over the ears, is,
+in the winter time, an excellent hat for a child subject to
+ear-ache. The hat may be procured at any baby-linen warehouse.
+
+246. _What are the causes and the treatment of discharges from the
+Ear_?
+
+Cold, measles, scarlet fever, healing up of "breakings out" behind the
+ear; pellets of cotton wool, which had been put in the ear, and had
+been forgotten to be removed, are the usual causes of discharges from
+the ear. It generally commences with ear-ache.
+
+The _treatment_ consists in keeping the parts clean, by syringing the
+ear every morning with warm water, by attention to food--keeping the
+child principally upon a milk and a farmaceous diet, and by change of
+air--more especially to the coast. If change of air be not
+practicable, great attention should be paid to ventilation. As I have
+before advised, in all cases of discharge from the ear call in a
+medical man, as a little judicious medicine is advisable--indeed,
+essential; and it may be necessary to syringe the ear with lotions,
+instead of with warm water; and, of course, it is only a doctor who
+has actually seen the patient who can decide these matters, and what
+is best to be done in each case.
+
+247. _What is the treatment of a "stye" on the eye-lid_?
+
+Bathe the eye frequently with warm milk and water, and apply, every
+night at bedtime, a warm white-bread poultice.
+
+No medicine is required; but, if the child be gross, keep him for a
+few days from meat, and let him live on bread and milk and farinaceous
+puddings.
+
+248. _If a child have large bowels, what would you recommend as likely
+to reduce their size_?
+
+It ought to be borne in mind, that the bowels of a child are larger in
+proportion than those of an adult. But, if they be actually larger
+than they ought to be, let them be well rubbed for a quarter of an
+hour at a time night and morning, with soap liniment, and then apply a
+broad flannel belt. "A broad flannel belt worn night and day, firm but
+not tight, is very serviceable." [Footnote: Sir Charles Locock, in a
+_Letter_ to the Author.] The child ought to be prevented from drinking
+as much as he has been in the habit of doing; let him be encouraged to
+exercise himself well in the open air; and let strict regard be paid
+to his diet.
+
+249. _What are the best aperients for a child_?
+
+If it be _actually_ necessary to give him opening medicine, one or two
+tea-spoonfuls of Syrup of Senna, repeated, if necessary, in four
+hours, will generally answer the purpose; or, for a change, one or two
+tea-spoonfuls of Castor Oil may be substituted. Lenitive Electuary
+(Compound Confection of Senna) is another excellent aperient for the
+young, it being mild in its operation, and pleasant to take; a child
+fancying it is nothing more than jam, and which it much resembles both
+in appearance and in taste. The dose is half or one tea-spoonful
+early in the morning occasionally. Senna is an admirable aperient for
+a child, and is a safe one, which is more than can be said of many
+others. It is worthy of note that "the taste of Senna may be concealed
+by sweeting the infusion, [Footnote: Infusion of Senna may be procured
+of any respectable druggist. It will take about one or two
+table-spoonfuls, or even more, of the infusion (according to the age
+of the child, and the obstinacy of the bowels), to act as an
+aperient. Of course, you yourself will be able, from time to time, as
+the need arises, to add the milk and the sugar, and thus to make it
+palatable. It ought to be given warm, so as the more to resemble tea.]
+adding milk, and drinking as ordinary tea, which, when thus prepared,
+it much resembles" [Footnote: _Waring's Manual of Practical
+Therapeutics._] Honey, too, is a nice aperient for a child--a
+tea-spoonful ought to be given either by itself, or spread on a slice
+of bread.
+
+Some mothers are in the habit of giving their children jalap
+gingerbread. I do not approve of it, as jalap is a drastic, griping
+purgative; besides, jalap is very nasty to take--nothing will make it
+palatable.
+
+Fluid Magnesia--Solution of Carbonate of Magnesia--is a good aperient
+for a child; and, as it has very little taste, is readily given, more
+especially if made palatable by the addition either of a little syrup
+or of brown sugar. The advantages which it has over the old solid form
+are, that it is colourless and nearly tasteless, and never forms
+concretions in the bowels, as the _solid_ magnesia, if persevered in
+for any length of time, sometimes does. A child of two or three years
+old may take one or two table-spoonfuls of the fluid; either by itself
+or in his food, repeating it every four hours until the bowels be
+open. When the child is old enough to drink the draught off
+_immediately_, the addition of one or two tea-spoonfuls of Lemon Juice
+to each dose of the Fluid Magnesia, makes a pleasant effervescing
+draught, and increases its efficacy as an aperient.
+
+Bran-bread [Footnote: One-part of bran to three parts of flour, mixed
+together and made into bread.] and _treacle_ will frequently open the
+bowels; and as treacle is wholesome, it may be substituted for butter
+when the bowels are inclined to be costive. A roasted apple, eaten
+with _raw_ sugar, is another excellent mild aperient for a child. Milk
+gruel--that is to say, milk thickened with oatmeal--forms an excellent
+food for him, and often keeps his bowels regular, and thus (_which is
+a very important consideration_) supersedes the necessity of giving
+him an aperient. An orange (taking care he does not eat the peel or
+the pulp), or a fig after dinner, or a few Muscatel raisins, will
+frequently regulate the bowels.
+
+Stewed prunes is another admirable remedy for the costiveness of a
+child. The manner of stewing them is as follows:--Put a pound of
+prunes in a brown jar, add two table-spoonfuls of _raw_ sugar, then
+cover the prunes and the sugar with cold water; place them in the
+oven, and let them stew for four hours. A child should every morning
+eat half a dozen or a dozen of them, until the bowels be relieved,
+taking care that he does not swallow the stones. Stewed prunes may be
+given in treacle--treacle increasing the aperient properties of the
+prunes.
+
+A suppository is a mild and ready way of opening the bowels of a
+child. When he is two or three years old and upwards, a _Candle_
+suppository is better than a _Soap_ suppository. The way of preparing
+it is as follows:--Cut a piece of dip-tallow candle--the length of
+three inches--and insert it as you would a clyster pipe, about two
+inches up the fundament, allowing the remaining inch to be in sight,
+and there let the suppository remain until the bowels be opened.
+
+Another excellent method of opening a child's bowels is by means of an
+enema of warm water,--from half a tea-cupful to a tea-cupful, or even
+more, according to the age of the child. I cannot speak too highly of
+this plan as a remedy for costiveness, as it entirely, in the
+generality of cases, prevents the necessity of administering a
+particle of aperient medicine by the mouth. The fact of its doing so
+stamps it as a most valuable remedy--opening physic being, as a rule,
+most objectionable, and injurious to a child's bowels. Bear this
+fact--for it is a fact--in mind and let it be always remembered.
+
+450. _What are the most frequent causes of Protrusion of the
+lower-bowel_?
+
+The too common and reprehensible practice of a parent administering
+frequent aperients, especially calomel and jalap, to her
+child. Another cause, is allowing him to remain for a quarter of an
+hour or more at a time on his chair; this induces him to strain, and
+to force the gut down.
+
+251. _What are the remedies_?
+
+If the protrusion of the bowel have been brought on by the abase of
+aperients, abstain, for the future from giving them; but if medicine
+be absolutely required, give the mildest--such as either Syrup of
+Senna or Castor Oil--_and the less of those the better._
+
+If the _external_ application of a purgative will have the desired
+effects it will in such cases, be better than the _internal_
+administration of aperients. Castor Oil used as a Liniment is a good
+one for the purpose. Let the bowels be well rubbed, every night and
+morning, for five minutes at a time with the oil.
+
+A wet compress to the bowels will frequently open them, and will thus
+do away with the necessity of giving an aperient--_a most important
+consideration_. Fold a napkin in six thicknesses, soak it in _cold_
+water, and apply it to the bowels; over which put either a thin
+covering or sheet of gutta-percha, or a piece of oiled-silk; keep it
+in its place with a broad flannel roller; and let it remain on the
+bowels for three or four hours, or until they be opened.
+
+Try what diet will do, as opening the bowels by a regulated diet is
+far preferable to the giving of aperients. Let him have either
+bran-bread or Robinson's Patent Groats, or Robinson's Pure Scotch
+Oatmeal made into gruel with new milk, or Du Barry's Arabica
+Revalenta, or a slice of Huntly and Palmer's lump gingerbread. Let him
+eat stewed prunes, stewed rhubarb, roasted apples, strawberries,
+raspberries, the inside of grapes and gooseberries, figs, &c. Give him
+early every morning a draught of _cold_ water.
+
+Let me, again, urge you _not_ to give aperients in these cases, or in
+any case, unless you are absolutely compelled. By following my advice
+you will save yourself an immense deal of trouble, and your child a
+long catalogue of misery. Again, I say, look well into the matter, and
+whenever it be practicable avoid purgatives.
+
+Now, with regard to the best manner of returning the bowel, lay the
+child upon the bed on his face and bowels, with his hips a little
+raised; then smear lard on the forefinger of your right hand (taking
+care that the nail be cut close), and gently with, your fore-finger
+press the bowel into its proper place. Remember, if the above methods
+be observed, you cannot do the slightest injury to the bowel; and the
+sooner it be returned, the better it will be for the child; for if the
+bowel be allowed to remain long down, it may slough or mortify, and
+death may ensue. The nurse, every time he has a motion, must see that
+the bowel does not come down, and if it does, she ought instantly to
+return it. Moreover, the nurse should be careful _not_ to allow the
+child to remain on his chair more than two or three minutes at a time.
+
+Another excellent remedy for the protrusion of the lower bowel, is to
+use every morning a cold salt and water sitz bath. There need not be
+more than a depth of three inches of water in the bath; a small
+handful of table salt should be dissolved in the water; a dash of warm
+water in the winter time must be added, to take off the extreme chill;
+and the child ought not to be allowed to sit in the bath for more than
+one minute, or whilst the mother can count a hundred; taking care, the
+while, to throw either a square of flannel or a small shawl over his
+shoulders. The sitz bath ought to be continued for months, or until
+the complaint be removed. I cannot speak in too high praise of these
+baths.
+
+252. _Do you advise me, every spring and fall, to give my child
+brimstone to purify and sweeten his blood, and as a preventive
+medicine_?
+
+Certainly not; if you wish to take away his appetite, and to weaken
+and depress him, give brimstone! Brimstone is not a remedy fit for a
+child's stomach. The principal use and value of brimstone is as an
+external application in itch, and as an internal remedy, mixed with
+other laxatives, in piles--piles being a complaint of adults. In olden
+times poor unfortunate children were dosed, every spring and fall,
+with brimstone and treacle to sweeten their blood! Fortunately for the
+present race, there is not so much of that folly practised, but still
+there is room for improvement. To dose a _healthy_ child with physic
+is the grossest absurdity. No, the less physic a delicate child has
+the better it will be for him, but physic to a healthy child is
+downright poison! And brimstone of all medicines! It is both weakening
+and depressing to the system, and by opening the pores of the skin and
+by relaxing the bowels, is likely to give cold, and thus to make a
+healthy, a sickly child. Sweeten his blood! It is more likely to
+weaken his blood, and thus to make his blood impure! Blood is not made
+pure by drugs, but by Nature's medicine; by exercise, by pure air, by
+wholesome diet, by sleep in a well-ventilated apartment, by regular
+and thorough ablution. Brimstone a preventive medicine! Preventive
+medicine--and brimstone especially in the guise of a preventive
+medicine--is "a mockery, a delusion, and a snare."
+
+253. _When a child is delicate, and his body, without any assignable
+cause, is gradually wasting away, and the stomach rejects all food
+that is taken, what plan can be adopted likely to support his
+strength, and thus probably be the means of saving his life_?
+
+I have seen, in such a case, great benefit to arise from half a
+tea-cupful of either strong mutton-broth or of strong beef-tea, used
+as an enema every four hours. [Footnote: An enema apparatus is an
+important requisite in every nursery; it may be procured of any
+respectable surgical instrument maker. The India-rubber Enema Bottle
+is, for a child's use, a great improvement on the old syringe, as it
+is not so likely to get out of order, and, moreover, is more easily
+used.] It should be administered slowly, in order that it may remain
+in the bowel. If the child be sinking, either a dessert-spoonful of
+brandy, or half a wine-glassful of port wine, ought to be added to
+each enema.
+
+The above plan ought only to be adopted if there be _no_ diarrhoea. If
+there be diarrhoea, an enema must _not_ be used. Then, provided there
+be great wasting away, and extreme exhaustion, and other remedies
+having failed, it would be advisable to give, by the mouth, _raw_ beef
+of the finest quality, which ought to be taken from the hip bone, and
+should be shredded very fine. All fat and skin must be carefully
+removed. One or two tea-spoonfuls (according to the age of the child)
+ought to be given every four hours. The giving of _raw_ meat to
+children in exhaustive diseases, such as excessive long-standing
+diarrhoea, was introduced into practice by a Russian physician, a
+Professor Wiesse of St Petersburg. It certainly is, in these cases, a
+most valuable remedy, and has frequently been the means of snatching
+such patients from the jaws of death. Children usually take raw meat
+with avidity and with a relish.
+
+254. _If a child be naturally delicate, what plan would you recommend
+to strengthen him_?
+
+I should advise strict attention to the rules above mentioned, and
+_change of air_--more especially, if it be possible, to the
+coast. Change of air, sometimes, upon a delicate child, acts like
+magic, and may restore him to health when all other means have
+failed. If a girl be delicate, "carry her off to the farm, there to
+undergo the discipline of new milk, brown bread, early hours, no
+lessons, and romps in the hay-field."--_Blackwood_. This advice is, of
+course, equally applicable for a delicate boy, as delicate boys and
+delicate girls ought to be treated alike. Unfortunately in these very
+enlightened days there is too great a distinction made in the
+respective management and treatment of boys and girls.
+
+The best medicines for a delicate child will be the wine of iron and
+cod-liver oil. Give them combined in the manner I shall advise when
+speaking of the treatment of Rickets.
+
+In diseases of long standing, and that resist the usual remedies,
+there is nothing like _change of air_. Hippocrates, the father of
+medicine, says--
+
+ "In longis morbis solum mutare."
+ (In tedious diseases to change the place of residence.)
+
+A child who, in the winter, is always catching cold, whose life during
+half of the year is one continued catarrh, who is in consequence,
+likely, if he grow up at all, to grow up a confirmed invalid, ought,
+during the winter months, to seek another clime; and if the parents
+can afford the expense, they should at the beginning of October, cause
+him to bend his steps to the south of Europe--Mentone being as good a
+place as they could probably fix upon.
+
+255. _Do you approve of sea bathing for a delicate young child_?
+
+No: he is frequently so frightened by it that the alarm would do him
+more harm than the bathing would do him good. The better plan would be
+to have him every morning well sponged, especially his back and loins,
+with sea water; and to have him as much as possible carried on the
+beach, in order that he may inhale the sea breezes. When he be older,
+and is not frightened at being dipped, sea bathing will be very
+beneficial to him. If bathing is to do good, either to an adult or to
+a child, it must be anticipated with pleasure, and neither with dread
+nor with distaste.
+
+256. _What is the best method for administering medicine to a child_?
+
+If he be old enough, appeal to his reason; for, if a mother endeavour
+to deceive her child, and he detect her, he will for the future
+suspect her. If he be too young to be reasoned with, then, if he will
+not take his medicine, he must be compelled. Lay him across your
+knees, let both his hands and his nose be tightly held, and then, by
+means of the patent medicine-spoon, or, if that be not at hand, by
+either a tea or a dessert-spoon, pour the medicine down his throat,
+and he will be obliged to swallow it.
+
+It may be said that this is a cruel procedure; but it is the only way
+to compel an unruly child to take physic, and is much less cruel than
+running the risk of his dying from the medicine not having been
+administered. [Footnote: If any of my medical brethren should
+perchance read these Conversations, I respectfully and earnestly
+recommend them to take more pains in making medicines for children
+pleasant and palatable. I am convinced that, in the generality of
+instances, provided a little more care and thought were bestowed on
+the subject, it may be done; and what an amount of both trouble and
+annoyance it would save! It is really painful to witness the struggles
+and cries of a child when _nauseous_ medicine is to be given; the
+passion and excitement often do more harm than the medicine does
+good.]
+
+257. _Ought a sick child to be roused from his sleep to give him
+physic, when it is time for him to take it_?
+
+On no account, as sleep, being a natural restorative, must not be
+interfered with. A mother cannot be too particular in administering
+the medicine, at stated periods, whilst he is awake.
+
+258. _Have you any remarks to make on the management of a sick-room,
+and have you any directions to give on the nursing of a child_?
+
+In sickness select a large and lofty room; if in the town, the back of
+the house will be preferable--in order to keep the patient free from
+noise and bustle--as a sick-chamber cannot be kept too quiet. Be sure
+that there be a chimney in the room--as there ought to be in _every_
+room in the house--and that it be not stopped, as it will help to
+carry off the impure air of the apartment. Keep the chamber _well
+ventilated_, by, from time to time, opening the window. The air of the
+apartment cannot be too pure; therefore, let the evacuations from the
+bowels be instantly removed, either to a distant part of the house, or
+to an out-house or to the cellar, as it might be necessary to keep
+them for the medical man's inspection.
+
+Before using either the night-commode, or the _pot-de-chambre_, let a
+little water, to the depth of one or two inches, be put in the pan, or
+_pot_; in order to sweeten the motion, and to prevent the faecal
+matter from adhering to the vessel.
+
+Let there be frequent change of linen, as in sickness it is even more
+necessary than in health, more especially if the complaint be
+fever. In an attack of fever, clean sheets ought, every other day, to
+be put on the bed; clean body-linen every day. A frequent change of
+linen in sickness is most refreshing.
+
+If the complaint be fever, a fire in the grate will not be
+necessary. Should it be a case either of inflammation of the lungs or
+of the chest, a small fire in the winter time is desirable, keeping
+the temperature of the room as nearly as possible at 60 degrees
+Fahrenheit. Bear in mind that a large fire in a sick-room cannot be
+too strongly condemned; for if there be fever--and there are scarcely
+any complaints without--a large fire only increases it. Small fires,
+in cases either of inflammation of the lungs or of the chest, in the
+winter time, encourage ventilation of the apartment, and thus carry
+off impure air. If it be summer time, of course fires would be
+improper. A thermometer is an indispensable requisite in a sick-room.
+
+In fever, free and thorough ventilation is of vital importance, more
+especially in scarlet fever; then a patient cannot have too much air;
+in scarlet fever, for the first few days the windows, be it winter or
+summer, must to the widest extent be opened. The fear of the patient
+catching cold by doing so is one of the numerous prejudices and
+baseless fears that haunt the nursery, and the sooner it is exploded
+the better it will he for human life. The valances and bed-curtains
+ought to be removed, and there should be as little furniture in the
+room as possible.
+
+If it be a case of measles, it will be necessary to adopt a different
+course; then the windows ought not to be opened, but the door must
+from time to time be left ajar. In a case of measles, if it be winter
+time, a _small_ fire in the room will be necessary. In inflammation of
+the lungs or of the chest, the windows should not be opened, but the
+door ought occasionally to be left unfastened, in order to change the
+air and to make it pure. Remember, then, that ventilation, either by
+open window or by open door, is in all diseases most necessary.
+Ventilation is one of the best friends a doctor has.
+
+In fever, do not load the bed with clothes; in the summer a sheet is
+sufficient, in winter a sheet and a blanket.
+
+In fever, do not be afraid of allowing the patient plenty either of
+cold water or of cold toast and water; Nature will tell him when he
+has had enough. In measles, let the chill be taken off the toast and
+water.
+
+In _croup_, have always ready a plentiful supply of hot water, in case
+a warm bath might he required.
+
+In _child-crowing_, have always in the sick-room a supply of cold
+water, ready at a moment's notice to dash upon the face.
+
+In fever, do not let the little patient lie on the lap; he will rest
+more comfortably on a horse-hair mattress in his crib or cot. If he
+have pain in the bowels, the lap is most agreeable to him; the warmth
+of the body, either of the mother or of the nurse, soothes him;
+besides, if he be on the lap, he can be turned on his stomach and on
+his bowels, which, often affords him great relief and comfort. If he
+be much emaciated, when he is nursed, place a pillow upon the lap and
+let him lie upon it.
+
+In _head affections_, darken the room with a _green_ calico blind;
+keep the chamber more than usually quiet; let what little talking is
+necessary be carried on in whispers, but the less of that the better;
+and in _head affections_, never allow smelling salts to be applied to
+the nose, as they only increase the flow of blood to the head, and
+consequently do harm.
+
+It is often a good sign for a child, who is seriously ill, to suddenly
+become cross. It is then he begins to feel his weakness and to give
+vent to his feelings. "Children are almost always cross when
+recovering from an illness, however patient they may have been during
+its severest moments, and the phenomenon is not by any means confined
+to children."--Geo. McDonald.
+
+A sick child must _not_ be stuffed with _much_ food at a time. He will
+take either a table-spoonful of new milk or a table-spoonful of
+chicken broth every half hour with greater advantage than a tea-cupful
+of either the one or the other every four hours, which large quantity
+would very probably be rejected from his stomach, and may cause the
+unfortunately treated child to die of starvation!
+
+If a sick child be peevish, attract his attention either by a toy or
+by an ornament; if he be cross, win him over to good humour by love,
+affection, and caresses, but let it be done gently and without
+noise. Do not let visitors see him; they will only excite, distract,
+and irritate him, and help to consume the oxygen of the atmosphere,
+and thus rob the air of its exhilarating health-giving qualities and
+purity; a sick-room, therefore, is not a proper place, either for
+visitors or for gossips.
+
+In selecting a sick-nurse, let her be gentle, patient, cheerful,
+quiet, and kind, but firm withal; she ought to be neither old nor
+young: if she be old she is often garrulous and prejudiced, and thinks
+too much of her trouble; if she he young, she is frequently
+thoughtless and noisy; therefore choose a middle-aged woman. Do not
+let there be in the sick-room more than, besides the mother, one
+efficient nurse; a greater number can he of no service--they will only
+be in each other's way, and will distract the patient.
+
+Let stillness, especially if the head be the part affected, reign in a
+sick-room. Creaking shoes [Footnote: Nurses at these times ought to
+wear slippers, and not shoes. The best slippers in sick-rooms are
+those manufactured by the North British Rubber Company, Edinburgh;
+they enable nurses to walk in them about the room without causing the
+slightest noise; indeed, they might truly be called "the noiseless
+slipper," a great desideratum in such cases, more especially in all
+head affections of children. If the above slippers cannot readily be
+obtained, then list slippers--soles and all bring made of list--will
+answer the purpose equally as well.] and rustling silk dresses ought
+not to be worn in sick-chambers--they are quite out of place there. If
+the child be asleep, or if he be dozing, perfect stillness must he
+enjoined, not even a whisper should be heard:--
+
+ "In the sick-room be calm,
+ More gently and with care.
+ Lest any jar or sudden noise,
+ Come sharply unaware.
+
+ You cannot tell the harm.
+ The mischief it may bring,
+ To wake the sick one suddenly,
+ Besides the suffering.
+
+ The broken sleep excites
+ Fresh pain, increased distress;
+ The quiet slumber undisturb'd
+ Soothes pain and restlessness.
+
+ Sleep is the gift of God:
+ Oh! bear these words at heart,
+ 'He giveth His beloved sleep,'
+ And gently do thy part."
+
+[Footnote: _Household verses on Health and Happiness._ London: Jarrold
+and Sons. A most delightful little volume.]
+
+If there be other children, let them be removed to a distant part of
+the house; or, if the disease be of an infectious nature, let them be
+sent away from home altogether.
+
+In all illnesses--and bear in mind the following is most important
+advice--a child must be encouraged to try and make water, whether he
+ask or not, at least four times during the twenty-four hours; and at
+any other time, if he express the slightest inclination to do so. I
+have known a little fellow to hold his water, to his great detriment,
+for twelve hours, because either the mother bad in her trouble
+forgotten to inquire, or the child himself was either too ill or too
+indolent to make the attempt.
+
+See that the medical man's directions are, to the very letter, carried
+out. Do not fancy that you know better than he does, otherwise you
+have no business to employ him. Let him, then, have your implicit
+confidence and your exact obedience. What _you_ may consider to be a
+trifling matter, may frequently be of the utmost importance, and may
+sometimes decide whether the case shall end either in life or death!
+
+_Lice_.--It is not very poetical, as many of the grim facts of
+every-day life are not, but, unlike a great deal of poetry, it is
+unfortunately too true that after a severe and dangerous illness,
+especially after a bad attack of fever, a child's head frequently
+becomes infested with vermin--with lice. It therefore behoves a mother
+herself to thoroughly examine, by means of a fine-tooth comb,
+[Footnote: Which fine-tooth comb ought not to be used at any other
+time except for the purpose of examination, as the constant use of a
+fine-tooth comb would scratch the scalp, and would encourage a
+quantity of scurf to accumulate.] her child's head, in order to
+satisfy her mind that there be no vermin there. As soon as he be well
+enough, he ought to resume his regular ablutions--that is to say, that
+he must go again regularly into his tub, and have his head every
+morning thoroughly washed with soap and water. A mother ought to be
+particular in seeing that the nurse washes the hair-brush at least
+once every week; if she does not do so, the dirty brush which had
+during the illness been used, might contain the "nits"--the eggs of
+the lice--and would thus propagate the vermin, as they will, when on
+the head of the child, soon hatch. If there be already lice on the
+head, in addition to the regular washing every morning with the soap
+and water, and after the head has been thoroughly dried, let the hair
+be well and plentifully dressed with camphorated oil--the oil being
+allowed to remain on until the next washing on the following
+morning. Lice cannot live in oil (more especially if, as in
+camphorated oil, camphor be dissolved in it), and as the camphorated
+oil will not, in the slightest degree, injure the hair, it is the best
+application that can be used. But as soon as the vermin have
+disappeared, let the oil be discontinued, as the _natural oil_ of the
+hair is, at other times, the only oil that is required on the head.
+
+The "nit"--the egg of the louse--might be distinguished from scurf
+(although to the _naked_ eye it is very much like it in appearance) by
+the former fastening firmly on one of the hairs as a barnacle would on
+a rock, and by it not being readily brushed off as scurf would, which
+latter (scurf) is always loose.
+
+259. _My child, in the summer time, is much tormented with fleas: what
+are the best remedies_?
+
+A small muslin bag, filled with camphor, placed in the cot or bed,
+will drive fleas away. Each flea-bite should, from time to time, be
+dressed by means of a camel's hair brush, with a drop or two of Spirit
+of Camphor; an ounce bottle of which ought, for the purpose, to be
+procured from a chemist. Camphor is also an excellent remedy to
+prevent bugs from biting. Bugs and fleas have a horror of camphor; and
+well they might, for it is death to them!
+
+There is a famous remedy for the destruction of fleas manufactured in
+France, entitled "_La Poudre Insecticide,_" which, although perfectly
+harmless to the human economy, is utterly destructive to fleas. Bugs
+are best destroyed either by Creosote or by oil of Turpentine: the
+places they do love to congregate in should be well saturated by means
+of a brush, with the creosote or with the oil of turpentine. A few
+dressings will effectually destroy both them and their young ones.
+
+260. _Is not the pulse a great sign either of health or of disease_?
+
+It is, and every mother should have a general idea of what the pulse
+of children of different ages should be both in health and in
+disease. "Every person should know how to ascertain the state of the
+pulse in health; then, by comparing it with what it is when he is
+ailing, he may have some idea of the urgency of his case. Parents
+should know the healthy pulse of each child, since now and then a
+person is born with a peculiarly slow or fast pulse, and the very case
+in hand may be of such peculiarity. An infant's pulse is 140, a child
+of seven about 80, and from 20 to 60 years it is 70 beats a minute,
+declining to 60 at fourscore. A healthful grown person beats 70 times
+in a minute, declining to 60 at fourscore. At 60, if the pulse always
+exceeds 70, there is a disease; the machine working itself out, there
+is a fever or inflammation somewhere, and the body is feeding on
+itself, as in consumption, when the pulse is quick."
+
+261. _Suppose a child to have had an attack either of inflammation of
+the lungs or of bronchitis, and to be much predisposed to a return:
+what precautions would you take to prevent either the one or the other
+for the future_?
+
+I would recommend him to wear fine flannel instead of lawn shirts; to
+wear good lamb's-wool stockings _above the knees_, and good, strong,
+dry shoes to his feet; to live, weather permitting, a great part of
+every day in the open air; to strengthen his system by good nourishing
+food--by an abundance of both milk and meat (the former especially);
+to send him, in the autumn, for a couple of months, to the sea-side;
+to administer to him, from time to time, cod-liver oil; in short, to
+think only of his health, and to let learning, until he be stronger,
+be left alone. I also advise either table salt or bay salt, or
+Tidman's Sea Salt, to be added to the water in which the child is
+washed with in the morning, in a similar manner as recommended in
+answer to a previous question.
+
+262. _Then do you not advise such a child to be confined within
+doors_?
+
+If any inflammation be present, or if he have but just recovered from
+one, it would be improper to send him into the open air, but not
+otherwise, as the fresh air would be a likely means of strengthening
+the lungs, and thereby of preventing an attack of inflammation for the
+future. Besides, the more a child is coddled within doors, the more
+likely will he be to catch cold, and to renew the inflammation. If the
+weather be cold, yet neither wet nor damp, he ought to be sent out,
+but let him be well clothed; and the nurse should have strict
+injunctions _not_ to stand about entries or in any draughts--indeed,
+not to stand about at all, but to keep walking about all the time she
+is in the open air. Unless you have a trustworthy nurse, it will be
+well for you either to accompany her in her walk with your child, or
+merely to allow her to walk with him in the garden, as you can then
+keep your eye upon both of them.
+
+263. _If a child be either chicken-breasted, or if he be
+narrow-chested, are there any means of expanding and of strengthening
+his chest_?
+
+Learning ought to be put out of the question, attention must be paid
+to his health alone, or consumption will probably mark him as its own!
+Let him live as much as possible in the open air; if it be country, so
+much the better. Let him rise early in the morning, and let him go to
+bed betimes; and if he be old enough to use the dumb-bells, or what is
+better, an India-rubber chest-expander, he should do so daily. He
+ought also to be encouraged to use two short sticks, similar to, but
+heavier than, a policeman's staff, and to go, every morning, through
+regular exercises with them. As soon as he is old enough, let him have
+lessons from a drill-sergeant and from a dancing master. Let him be
+made both to walk and to sit upright, and let him be kept as much as
+possible upon a milk diet, [Footnote: Where milk does not agree, it may
+generally be made to do so by the addition of one part of lime water
+to seven parts of new milk. Moreover, the lime will be of service in
+hardening his bones, and, in these cases, the bones require
+hardening.] and give him as much as he can eat of fresh meat every
+day. Cod liver oil, a tea-spoonful or a dessert-spoonful, according to
+his age, twice a day, is serviceable in these cases. Stimulants ought
+to be carefully avoided. In short, let every means be used to nourish,
+to strengthen, and invigorate the system, without, at the same time,
+creating fever. Such a child should be a child of nature, he ought
+almost to live in the open air, and throw his books to the winds. Of
+what use is learning without health? In such a case as this you
+cannot have both.
+
+264. _If a child be round-shouldered, or if either of his
+shoulder-blades have "grown out," what had better be done_?
+
+Many children have either round shoulders, or have their shoulder
+blades grown out, or have their spines twisted, from growing too fast,
+from being allowed to slouch in their gait, and from not having
+sufficient nourishing food, such as meat and milk, to support them
+while the rapid growth of childhood is going on.
+
+If your child be affected as above described, nourish him well on milk
+and on farinaceous food, and on meat once a day, but let milk be his
+staple diet; he ought, during the twenty four hours, to take two or
+three pints of new milk. He should almost live in the open air, and
+must have plenty of play. If you can so contrive it, let him live in
+the country. When tired, let him lie, for half an hour, two or three
+times daily, flat on his back on the carpet. Let him rest at night on
+a horse-hair mattress, and not on a feather bed.
+
+Let him have every morning, if it be summer, a thorough cold water
+ablution, if it be winter, let the water be made tepid. Let either two
+handfuls of table salt or a handful of bay salt be dissolved in the
+water. Let the salt and water stream well over his shoulders and down
+his back and loins. Let him be well dried with a moderately coarse
+towel, and then let his back be well rubbed, and his shoulders be
+thrown back-exercising them much in the same manner as in skipping,
+for five or ten minutes at a time. Skipping, by-the-by, is of great
+use in these cases, whether the child be either a boy or a girl-using,
+of course, the rope backwards, and not forwards.
+
+Let books be utterly discarded until his shoulders have become strong,
+and thus no longer round, and his shoulder-blades have become
+straight. It is a painful sight to see a child stoop like an old man.
+
+Let him have, twice daily, a tea-spoonful or a dessert-spoonful
+(according to his age) of cod-liver oil, giving it him on a full and
+not on an empty stomach.
+
+When he is old enough, let the drill-sergeant give him regular
+lessons, and let the dancing-master be put in requisition. Let him go
+through regular gymnastic exercises, provided they are not of a
+violent character.
+
+But, bear in mind, let there be in these cases no mechanical
+restraints--no shoulder-straps, no abominable stays. Make him straight
+by natural means--by making him strong. Mechanical means would only,
+by weakening and wasting the muscles, increase the mischief, and thus
+the deformity. In this world of ours there is too much reliance placed
+on artificial, and too little on natural means of cure.
+
+265. _What are the causes of Bow Legs in a child; and what is the
+treatment_?
+
+Weakness of constitution, poor and insufficient nourishment, and
+putting a child, more especially a fat and heavy one, on his legs too
+early.
+
+_Treatment._--Nourishing food, such as an abundance of milk, and, if
+he be old enough, of meat; iron medicines; cod-liver-oil; thorough
+ablution, every morning of the whole body; an abundance of exercise,
+either on pony, or on donkey, or in carriage, but not, until his legs
+be stronger, on foot. If they are much bowed, it will be necessary to
+consult an experienced surgeon.
+
+266. _If a child, while asleep, "wet his bed" is there any method of
+preventing him from doing so_?
+
+Let him be held out just before he himself goes to bed, and again when
+the family retires to rest. If, at the time, he be asleep, he will
+become so accustomed to it, that he will, without awaking, make water.
+He ought to be made to lie on his side; for, if he be put on his back,
+the urine will rest upon an irritable part of the bladder, and, if he
+be inclined to wet his bed, he will not be able to avoid doing so. He
+must not be allowed to drink much with his meals, especially with his
+supper. Wetting the bed is an infirmity with some children--they
+cannot help it. It is, therefore, cruel to scold and chastise them for
+it. Occasionally, however, wetting the bed arises from idleness; in
+which case, of course, a little wholesome correction might be
+necessary.
+
+Water-proof Bed-sheeting--one yard by three-quarters of a yard--will
+effectually preserve the bed from being wetted, and ought always, on
+these occasions, to be used.
+
+A mother ought, every morning, to ascertain for herself, whether a
+child have wet his bed; if he have, and if, unfortunately, the
+water-proof cloth have not been used, the mattress, sheets, and
+blankets must be instantly taken to the kitchen fire and be properly
+dried. Inattention to the above has frequently caused a child to
+suffer either from cold, from a fever, or from an inflammation; not
+only so, but, if they be not dried, he is wallowing in filth and in an
+offensive effluvium. If both mother and nurse were more attentive to
+their duties--in frequently holding a child out, whether he ask or
+not--a child wetting his bed would be the exception, and not, as it
+frequently is, the rule. If a child be dirty, you may depend upon it,
+the right persons to blame are the mother and the nurse, and not the
+child!
+
+267. _If a child should catch Small-pox, what are the best means to
+prevent pitting_?
+
+He ought to be desired neither to pick nor to rub the pustules. If he
+be too young to attend to these directions, his hands must be secured
+in bags (just large enough to hold them), which bags should he
+fastened round the wrists. The nails must be cut very close.
+
+Cream smeared, by means of a feather, frequently in the day, on the
+pustules, affords great comfort and benefit. Tripe liquor (without
+salt) has, for the same purpose, been strongly recommended. I myself,
+in several cases, have tried it, and with the happiest results. It is
+most soothing, comforting, and healing to the skin.
+
+268. _Can you, tell me of any plan to prevent Chilblaine, or, if a
+child be suffering from them, to cure them_?
+
+_First, then, the way to prevent them._--Let a child, who is subject
+to them, wear, in the winter time, a square piece of wash-leather over
+the toes, a pair of warm lamb's-wool stockings, and good shoes; but,
+above all, let him be encouraged to run about the house as much as
+possible, especially before going to bed; and on no account allow him
+either to warm has feet before the fire, or to bathe them in hot
+water. If the feet be cold, and the child be too young to take
+exercise, then let them be well rubbed with the warm hand. If adults
+suffer from chilblains, I have found friction, night and morning, with
+horse-hail flesh-gloves, the best means of preventing them.
+
+_Secondly, the way to cure them._--If they be unbroken: the
+old-fashioned remedy of onion and salt is one of the best of
+remedies. Cut an onion in two; take one-half of it, dip it in table
+salt and well rub, for two or three minutes, the chilblain with
+it. The onion and salt is a famous remedy to relieve that intolerable
+itching which sometimes accompanies chilblains: then let them be
+covered with a piece of lint, over which a piece of wash-leather
+should be placed.
+
+_If they be broken_, let a piece of lint be spread with
+spermaceti-cerate, and be applied, every morning, to the part, and let
+a white-bread poultice be used every night.
+
+269. _During the winter time my child's hands, legs, &c., chap very
+much; what ought I to do_?
+
+Let a tea-cupful of bran be tied up in a muslin bag, and be put, over
+the night, into either a large water-can or jug of _rain_ water;
+[Footnote: _Rain_ water ought _always_ to be used in the washing of a
+child; pump water is likely to chap the skin, and to make it both
+rough and irritable.] and let this water from the can or jug be the
+water he is to be washed with on the following morning, and every
+morning until the chaps be cured. As often as water is withdrawn,
+either from the water-can or from the jog, let fresh rain water take
+its place, in order that the bran may be constantly soaking in it. The
+bran in the bag should be renewed about twice a week.
+
+Take particular care to dry the skin well every time he be washed;
+then, after each ablution, as well as every night at bed-time, rub a
+piece of deer's suet over the parts affected: a few dressings will
+perform a cure. The deer's suet may be bought at any of the shops
+where venison is sold. Another excellent remedy is glycerine,
+[Footnote: Glycerine prepared by Price's Patent Candle Company is by
+far the best. Sometimes, if the child's skin be very irritable, the
+glycerine requires diluting with water--say, two ounces of glycerine
+to be mixed in a bottle with four ounces of rain water--the bottle to
+be well shaken just before using it.] which should be smeared, by
+means of the finger or by a camel's hair brush, on the parts affected,
+two or three times a day. If the child be very young, it might be
+necessary to dilute the glycerine with rose-water; fill a small bottle
+one-third with glycerine, and fill up the remaining two-thuds of the
+bottle with rose-water--shaking the bottle every time just before
+using it. The best soap to use for chapped hands is the glycerine
+soap: no other being required.
+
+270. _What is the best remedy for Chapped Lips_?
+
+Cold-cream (which may be procured of any respectable chemist) is an
+excellent application for _chapped lips_. It ought, by means of the
+finger, to be frequently smeared on the parts affected.
+
+271. _Have the goodness to inform me of the different varieties of
+Worms that infest a child's bowels_?
+
+Principally three--1, The tape-worm; 2, the long round-worm; and 3,
+the most frequent of all, the common thread or maw-worm. The tape-worm
+infests the whole course of the bowels, both small and large: the long
+round-worm, principally the small bowels, occasionally the stomach; it
+sometimes crawls out of the child's mouth, causing alarm to the
+mother; there is, of course, no danger in its doing so: the common
+thread-worm or maw-worm infests the rectum or fundament.
+
+272. _What are the causes of Worms_?
+
+The causes of worms are: weak bowels; bad and improper food, such as
+unripe, unsound, or uncooked fruit, and much green vegetables; pork,
+especially underdone pork; [Footnote: One frequent, if not the most
+frequent, cause of tape-worm is the eating of pork, more especially if
+it be underdone. _Underdone_ pork is the most unwholesome food that
+can he eaten, and is the most frequent cause of tape-worm
+known. _Underdone_ beef also gives tape-worm; let the meat, therefore,
+be well and properly cooked. These facts ought to be borne in mind, as
+prevention is always better than cure.] an abundance of sweets; the
+neglecting of giving salt in the food.
+
+273. _What are the symptoms and the treatment of Worms_?
+
+_The symptoms_ of worms are--emaciation; itching and picking of the
+nose; a dark mark under the eyes; grating, during sleep, of the teeth;
+starting in the sleep; foul breath; furred tongue; uncertain
+appetite--sometimes voracious, at other times bad, the little patient
+sitting down very hungry to his dinner, and before scarcely tasting a
+mouthful, the appetite vanishing; large bowels; colicky pains of the
+bowels; slimy motions; itching of the fundament. Tape-worm and
+round-worm, more especially the former, are apt, in children, to
+produce convulsions. Tape-worm is very weakening to the constitution,
+and usually causes great emaciation and general ill-health; the
+sooner, therefore, it is expelled from the bowels the better it will
+be for the patient.
+
+Many of the obscure diseases of children arise from worms. In all
+doubtful cases, therefore, this fact should be borne in mind, in order
+that a thorough investigation may be instituted.
+
+With regard to _treatment_, a medical man ought, of course, to be
+consulted. He will soon use means both to dislodge them, and to
+prevent a future recurrence of them.
+
+Let me caution a mother never to give her child patent medicines for
+the destruction of worms. There is one favourite quack powder, which
+is composed principally of large doses of calomel, and which is quite
+as likely to destroy the patient as the worms! No, if your child have
+worms, put him under the care of a judicious medical man, who will
+soon expel them, without, at the same tune, injuring health or
+constitution!
+
+274. _How may worms be prevented from infesting a child's bowels_?
+
+Worms generally infest _weak_ bowels; hence, the moment a child
+becomes strong worms cease to exist. The reason why a child is so
+subject to them is owing to the improper food which is usually given
+to him. When he be stuffed with unsound and with unripe fruits, with
+much sweets, with rich puddings, and with pastry, and when he is
+oftentimes allowed to eat his meat _without_ salt, and to _bolt_ his
+food without chewing it, is there any wonder that he should suffer
+from worms? The way to prevent them is to avoid such things, and, at
+the same time, to give him plenty of salt to his _fresh_ and
+well-cooked meat. Salt strengthens and assists digestion, and is
+absolutely necessary to the human economy. Salt is emphatically a worm
+destroyer. The truth of this statement may be readily tested by
+sprinkling a little salt on the common earth-worm. "What a comfort
+and real requisite to human life is salt! It enters into the
+constituents of the human blood, and to do without it is wholly
+impossible."--_The Grocer_. To do without it is wholly impossible!
+These are true words. Look well to it, therefore, ye mothers, and
+beware of the consequences of neglecting such advice, and see for
+yourselves that your children regularly eat salt with their food. If
+they neglect eating salt with their food, they _must of necessity have
+worms_, and worms that will eventually injure them, and make them
+miserable. All food, then, should be "flavoured with salt;"
+_flavoured_, that is to say, salt should be used in each and every
+kind of food--_not in excess, but in moderation_.
+
+275. _You have a great objection to the frequent administration of
+aperient medicines to a child: can you advise any method to prevent
+their use_?
+
+Although we can scarcely call constipation a disease, yet it sometimes
+leads to disease. The frequent giving of aperients only adds to the
+stubbornness of the bowels.
+
+I have generally found a draught, early every morning, of _cold_ pump
+water, the eating either of Huntley and Palmer's loaf ginger-bread, or
+of oatmeal gingerbread, a variety of animal and vegetable food, ripe
+sound fruit, Muscatel raisins, a fig, or an orange after dinner, and,
+when he be old enough, _coffee_ and milk instead of _tea_ and milk, to
+have the desired effect, more especially if, for a time, aperients be
+studiously avoided.
+
+276. _Have you any remarks to make on Rickets_?
+
+Rickets is owing to a want of a sufficient quantity of earthy matter
+in the bones; hence the bones bend and twist, and lose their shape,
+causing deformity. Rickets generally begins to show itself between the
+first and second years of a child's life. Such children are generally
+late in cutting their teeth, and when the teeth do come they are bad,
+deficient of enamel, discoloured, and readily decay. A rickety child
+is generally stunted in stature; he has a large head, with overhanging
+forehead, or what nurses call a watery-head-shaped forehead. The
+fontanelles, or openings of the head, as they are called, are a long
+time in closing. A rickety child is usually talented; his brain seems
+to thrive at the expense of his general health. His breast-bone
+projects out, and the sides of his chest are flattened; hence he
+becomes what is called chicken-breasted or pigeon-breasted; his spine
+is usually twisted, so that he is quite awry, and, in a bad case, he
+is hump-backed; the ribs, from the twisted spine, on one side bulge
+out; he is round-shouldered; the long bones of his body, being soft,
+bend; he is bow-legged, knock-kneed, and weak-ankled.
+
+Rickets are of various degrees of intensity, the humpbacked being
+among the worst There are many mild forms of rickets; weak ankles,
+knocked-knees, bowed-legs, chicken-breasts, being among the latter
+number. Many a child, who is not exactly hump-backed, is very
+round-shouldered, which latter is also a mild species of rickets.
+
+Show me a child that is rickety, and I can generally prove that it is
+owing to poor living, more especially to poor milk. If milk were
+always genuine, and if a child had an abundance of it, my belief is
+that rickets would be a very rare disease. The importance of genuine
+milk is of national importance. We cannot have a race of strong men
+and women unless, as children, they have had a good and plentiful
+supply of milk. It is utterly impossible. Milk might well be
+considered one of the necessaries of a child's existence. Genuine,
+fresh milk, then, is one of the grand preventatives, as well as one of
+the best remedies, for rickets. Many a child would not now have to
+swallow quantities Of cod-liver oil if previously he had imbibed
+quantities of good genuine milk. An insufficient and a poor supply of
+milk in childhood sows the seeds of many diseases, and death often
+gathers the fruit. Can it be wondered at, when there is so much poor
+and nasty milk in England, that rickets in one shape or another is so
+prevalent?
+
+When will mothers arouse from their slumbers, rub their eyes, and see
+clearly the importance of the subject? When will they know that all
+the symptoms of rickets I have just enumerated _usually_ proceed from
+the want of nourishment, more especially from the want of genuine, and
+of an abundance of, milk? There are, of, course, other means of
+warding off rickets besides an abundance of nourishing food, such as
+thorough ablution, plenty of air, exercise, play, and sunshine; but of
+all these splendid remedies, nourishment stands at the top of the
+list.
+
+I do not mean to say that rickets _always_ proceeds from poorness of
+living--from poor milk. It sometimes arises from scrofula, and is an
+inheritance of one or of both the parents.
+
+Rickety children, if not both carefully watched and managed,
+frequently, when they become youths, die of consumption.
+
+A mother, who has for some time neglected the advice I have just
+given, will often find, to her grievous cost, that the mischief has,
+past remedy, been done, and that it is now "too late!--too late!"
+
+277. _How may a child be prevented from becoming rickety? or, if he be
+rickety, how ought he to be treated_?
+
+If a child be predisposed to be rickety, or if he be actually rickety,
+attend to the following rules:--
+
+Let him live well, on good nourishing diet, such as on tender
+rump-steaks, cut very fine, and mixed with mashed potatoes, crumb of
+bread, and with the gravy of the meat. Let him have, as I have before
+advised, an abundance of good new milk--a quart or three pints during
+every twenty-four hours. Let him have milk in every form--as milk
+gruel, Du Barry's Arabica Revalenta made with milk, batter and rice
+puddings, suet puddings, bread and milk, etc.
+
+_To harden the bones_, let lime water be added to the milk (a
+table-spoonful to each tea-cupful of milk.)
+
+Let him have a good supply of fresh, pure, dry air. He must almost
+live in the open air--the country, if practicable, in preference to
+the town, and the coast in summer and autumn. Sea bathing and sea
+breezes are often, in these cases, of inestimable value.
+
+He ought not, at an early age, to be allowed to bear his weight upon
+his legs. He must sleep on a horse-hair mattress, and not on a feather
+bed. He should use every morning cold baths in the summer and tepid
+baths in the winter, with bay salt (a handful) dissolved in the water.
+
+Friction with the hand must, for half an hour at a time, every night
+and morning, be sedulously applied to the back and to the limbs. It is
+wonderful how much good in these cases friction does.
+
+Strict attention ought to be paid to the rules of health as laid down
+in these Conversations. Whatever is conducive to the general health is
+preventive and curative of rickets.
+
+Books, if he be old enough to read them, should be thrown aside;
+health, and health alone, must be the one grand object.
+
+The best medicines in these cases are a combination of cod-liver oil
+and the wine of iron, given in the following manner:--Put a
+tea-spoonful of wine of iron into a wine-glass, half fill the glass
+with water, sweeten it with a lump or two of sugar, then let a
+tea-spoonful of cod-liver oil swim on the top; let the child drink it
+all down together, twice or three times a day. An hour after a meal is
+the _best_ time to give the medicine, as both iron and cod-liver oil
+sit better on a _full_ than on an _empty_ stomach. The child in a
+short time will become fond of the above medicine, and will be sorry
+when it is discontinued.
+
+A case of rickets requires great patience and steady perseverance;
+let, therefore, the above plan have a fair and long-continued trial,
+and I can then promise that there will be every probability that great
+benefit will be derived from it.
+
+278. _If a child be subject to a scabby eruption about the mouth, what
+is the best local application_?
+
+Leave it to nature. Do not, on any account, apply any local
+application to heal it; if you do, you may produce injury; you may
+either bring on an attack of inflammation, or you may throw him into
+convulsions. No! This "breaking-out" is frequently a safety-valve,
+and must not therefore be needlessly interfered with. Should the
+eruption be severe, reduce the child's diet; keep him from butter,
+from gravy, and from fat meat, or, indeed, for a few days from meat
+altogether; and give him mild aperient medicine; but, above all
+things, do not quack him either with calomel or with grey-powder.
+
+279. _Will you have the goodness to describe the eruption on the face
+and on the head of a young child, called Milk-Crust or Running Scall_?
+
+Milk-crust is a complaint of very young children--of those who are
+cutting their teeth--and, as it is a nasty looking complaint, and
+frequently gives a mother a great deal of trouble, of anxiety, and
+annoyance, it will be well that you should know its symptoms, its
+causes, and its probable duration.
+
+_Symptoms_.--When a child is about nine months or a year old, small
+pimples are apt to break out around the ears, on the forehead, and on
+the head. These pimples at length become vesicles (that is to say,
+they contain water), which run into one large one, break, and form a
+nasty dirty-looking yellowish, and sometimes greenish, scab, which
+scab is moist, indeed, sometimes quite wet, and gives out a
+disagreeable odour, and which is sometimes so large on the head as
+actually to form a skullcap, and so extensive on the face as to form a
+mask. These, I am happy to say, are rare cases. The child's beauty
+is, of, course, for a time completely destroyed, and not only his
+beauty, but his good temper; for as the eruption causes great
+irritation and itching, he is constantly clawing himself, and crying
+with annoyance the great part of the day, and sometimes also of the
+night--the eruption preventing him from sleeping. It is not
+contagious, and soon after he has cut the whole of his first set of
+teeth it will get well, provided it has not been improperly interfered
+with.
+
+_Causes_.--Irritation from teething; stuffing him with overmuch meat,
+thus producing a humour, which Nature tries to get rid of by throwing
+it out on the surface of the body; the safest place she could fix on
+for the purpose; hence the folly and danger of giving medicines and
+applying _external_ applications to drive the eruption in. "Diseased
+nature oftentimes breaks forth in strange eruptions," and cures
+herself in this way, if she be not too much interfered with, and if
+the eruption be not driven in by injudicious treatment. I have known
+in such cases disastrous consequences to follow over-officiousness and
+meddlesomeness. Nature is trying all she can to drive the humour out,
+while some wiseacres are doing all they can to drive the humour in.
+
+_Duration_.--As milk-crust is a tedious affair, and will require a
+variety of treatment, it will be necessary to consult an experienced
+medical man; and although he will be able to afford great relief, the
+child will not, in all probability, be quite free from the eruption
+until he have cut the whole of his first set of teeth--until he be
+upwards of two years and a half old--when, with judicious and careful
+treatment, it will gradually disappear, and eventually leave not a
+trace behind.
+
+It will be far better to leave the case alone--to get well of
+itself--rather than to try to cure the complaint either by outward
+applications or by strong internal medicines; "the remedy is often
+worse than the disease," of this I am quite convinced.
+
+280. _Have you any advice to give me as to my conduct towards my
+medical man_?
+
+Give him your entire confidence. Be truthful and be candid with
+him. Tell him the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
+truth. Have no reservations; give him, as near as you can, a plain,
+unvarnished statement of the symptoms of the disease. Do not magnify,
+and do not make too light of any of them. Be prepared to state the
+exact time the child first showed symptoms of illness. If he have had
+a shivering fit, however slight, do not fail to tell your medical man
+of it. Note the state of the skin; if there be a "breaking-out"--be it
+ever so trifling--let it be pointed out to him. Make yourself
+acquainted with the quantity and with the appearance of the urine,
+taking care to have a little of it saved, in case the doctor may wish
+to see and examine it. Take notice of the state of the motions--their
+number during the twenty-four hours, their colour, their smell, and
+their consistence, keeping one for his inspection. Never leave any of
+these questions to be answered by a servant; a mother is the proper
+person to give the necessary and truthful answers, which answers
+frequently decide the fate of the patient. Bear in mind, then, a
+mother's untiring care and love, attention and truthfulness,
+frequently decide whether, in a serious illness, the little fellow
+shall live or die! Fearful responsibility!
+
+A medical man has arduous duties to perform; smooth, therefore, his
+path as much as you can, and you will be amply repaid by the increased
+good he will be able to do your child. Strictly obey a doctor's
+orders--in diet, in medicine, in everything. Never throw obstacles in
+his way. Never omit any of his suggestions; for, depend upon it that
+if he be a sensible man, directions, however slight, ought never to be
+neglected; bear in mind, with a judicious medical man,
+
+ "That nothing walks with aimless feet."--_Tennyson_.
+
+If the case be severe, requiring a second opinion, never of your own
+accord call in a physician, without first consulting and advising with
+your own medical man. It would be an act of great discourtesy to do
+so. Inattention to the foregoing advice has frequently caused injury
+to the patient, and heart-burnings and ill-will among doctors.
+
+Speak, in the presence of your child, with respect and kindness of
+your medical man, so that the former may look upon the latter as a
+friend--as one who will strive, with God's blessing, to relieve his
+pain and suffering. Remember the increased power of doing good the
+doctor will have if the child be induced to like, instead of dislike,
+him. Not only be careful that you yourself speak before your child,
+respectfully and kindly of the medical man, but see that your
+domestics do so likewise; and take care that they are never allowed to
+frighten your child, as many silly servants do, by saying that they
+will send for the doctor, who will either give him nasty medicine, or
+will perform some cruel operation upon him. A nurse-maid should, then,
+never for one moment be permitted to make a doctor an object of terror
+or of dislike to a child.
+
+Send, whenever it be practicable, for your doctor _early_ in the
+morning, as he will then make his arrangements accordingly, and can by
+daylight better ascertain the nature of the complaint, more especially
+if it be a skin disease. It is utterly impossible for him to form a
+correct opinion of the nature of a "breaking-out" either by gas or by
+candle light. If the illness come on at night, particularly if it be
+ushered in either with a severe shivering, or with any other urgent
+symptom, no time should be lost, be it night or day, in sending for
+him,
+
+ "A little fire is quietly trodden out,
+ Which, being sufier'd, rivers cannot quench."
+
+ _Shakespeare_.
+
+
+WARM BATHS
+
+281. _Have the goodness to mention the complaints of a child for which
+warm baths are useful_.
+
+1. Convulsions; 2. Pains in the bowels, known by, the child drawing up
+his legs, screaming violently, etc.; 3. Restlessness from teething;
+4. Flatulence. The warm bath acts as a fomentation to the stomach and
+the bowels, and gives ease where the usual remedies do not rapidly
+relieve.
+
+282. _Will you mention the precautions, and the rules to be observed
+in gutting a child info a warm bath_?
+
+Carefully ascertain before he be immersed in the bath that the water
+be neither too hot nor too cold. Carelessness, or over-anxiety to put
+him in the water as quickly as possible, has frequently, from his
+being immersed in the bath when the water was too hot, caused him
+great pain and suffering. From 96 to 98 degrees of Fahrenheit is the
+proper temperature of a warm bath. If it be necessary to add fresh
+warm water, let him be either removed the while, or let it not be put
+in when very hot; for if boiling water be added to increase the heat
+of the bath, it naturally ascends, and may scald him. Again, let the
+fresh water be put in at as great a distance from him as possible. The
+usual time for him to remain in a bath is a quarter of an hour or
+twenty minutes. Let the chest and the bowels be rubbed with the hand
+while he is in the bath. Let him be immersed in the bath as high up as
+the neck, taking care that he be the while supported under the
+armpits, and that his head be also rested. As soon as he comes out of
+the bath, he ought to be carefully but quickly rubbed dry; and if it
+be necessary to keep up the action on the skin, he should be put to
+bed, between the blankets; or if the desired relief has been obtained,
+between the sheets, which ought to have been previously warmed, where,
+most likely, he will fall into a sweet refreshing sleep.
+
+
+WARM EXTERNAL APPLICATIONS.
+
+283. _In case of a child suffering pain either in his stomach or in
+his bowels, or in case he has a feverish cold, can you tell me of the
+best way of applying heat to them_?
+
+In pain either of the stomach or of the bowels, there is nothing
+usually affords greater or speedier relief than the _external_
+application of heat The following are four different methods of
+applying heat:--1. A bag of hot salt--that is to say, powdered
+table-salt--put either into the oven or into a frying-pan over the
+fire, and thus made hot, and placed in a flannel bag, and then
+applied, as the case may be, either to the stomach or to the
+bowels. Hot salt is an excellent remedy for these pains. 2. An
+india-robber hot-water bottle, [Footnote: Every house where there are
+children ought to have one of these India-rubber hot-water bottles. It
+may be procured at any respectable Vulcanised India-rubber warehouse.]
+half filled with hot water--it need not be boiling--applied to the
+stomach or to the bowels, will afford great comfort 3. Another and an
+excellent remedy for these cases is a hot bran poultice. The way to
+make it is as follows:--Stir bran into a Vessel containing either a
+pint or a quart (according to size of poultice required) of boiling
+water, until it be the consistence of a nice soft poultice, then put
+into a flannel bag and apply it to the part affected. When cool, dip
+it from time to time in _hot_ water. 4. In case a child has a feverish
+cold, especially if it be attended, as it sometimes is, with pains in
+the bowels, the following is a good external application.--Take a yard
+of flannel, fold it in three widths, then dip it in very hot water,
+wring it out tolerably dry, and apply it evenly and neatly round and
+round the bowels; over this, and to keep it in its place, and to keep
+in the moisture, put on a _dry_ flannel bandage, four yards long and
+four inches wide. If it be put on at bed-time, it ought to remain on
+all night. Where there are children, it is desirable to have the yard
+of flannel and the flannel bandage in readiness, and then a mother
+will be prepared for emergencies. Either the one or the other, then,
+of the above applications will usually, in pains of the stomach and
+bowels, afford great relief. There is one great advantage of the
+_external_ application of heat--it can never do harm; if there be
+inflammation, it will do good; if there be either cramps or spasms of
+the stomach, it will be serviceable; if there be colic, it will be one
+of the best remedies that can be used; if it be a feverish cold, by
+throwing the child into a perspiration, it will be beneficial.
+
+It is well for a mother to know how to make a white bread poultice;
+and as the celebrated Abernethy was noted for his poultices, I will
+give you his directions, and in his very words:--"Scald out a basin,
+for you can never make a good poultice unless you have perfectly
+boiling water, then, having put in some hot water, throw in coarsely
+crumbled bread, and cover it with a plate. When the bread has soaked
+up as much water as it will imbibe, drain off the remaining water, and
+there will be left a light pulp. Spread it a third of an inch thick on
+folded linen, and apply it when of the temperature of a warm bath. It
+may be said that this poultice will be very inconvenient if there be
+no lard in it, for it will soon get dry; but this is the very thing
+you want, and it can easily be moistened by dropping warm water on it,
+whilst a greasy poultice will be moist, but not wet."--_South's
+Household Surgery_.
+
+
+ACCIDENTS.
+
+284. _Supposing a child to cut his finger, what is the best
+application_?
+
+There is nothing better than tying it up with rag in its blood, as
+nothing is more healing than blood. Do not wash the blood away, but
+apply the rag at once, taking care that no foreign substance be left
+in the wound. If there be either glass or dirt in it, it will of
+course be necessary to bathe the cut in warm water, to get rid of it
+before the rag be applied. Some mothers use either salt or Fryar's
+Balsam, or turpentine, to a fresh wound; these plans are cruel and
+unnecessary, and frequently make the cut difficult to heal. If it
+bleed immoderately, sponge the wound freely with cold water. If it be
+a severe cut, surgical aid, of course, will be required.
+
+285. _If a child receive a blow, causing a bruise, what had better be
+done_?
+
+Immediately smear a small lump of _fresh_ butter on the part affected,
+and renew it every few minutes for two or three hours; this is an
+old-fashioned, but a very good remedy. Olive oil may--if _fresh_
+butter be not at hand--be used, or soak a piece of brown-paper in one
+third of French brandy and two-thirds of water, and immediately apply
+it to the part; when dry renew it. Either of these simple plans--the
+butter plan is the best--will generally prevent both swelling and
+disfiguration.
+
+A "_Black Eye_."--If a child, or indeed any one else, receive a blow
+over the eye, which is likely to cause a "black eye," there is no
+remedy superior to, nor more likely to prevent one, than well
+buttering the parts for two or three inches around the eye with fresh
+butter, renewing it every few minutes for the space of an hour or two;
+if such be well and perseveringly done, the disagreeable appearance of
+a "black eye" will in all probability be prevented. A capital remedy
+for a "black eye" is the Arnica Lotion,--
+
+ Take of--Tincture of Arnica, one ounce;
+ Water, seven ounces;
+
+To make a Lotion. The eye to be bathed by means of a soft piece of
+linen rag, with this lotion frequently; and, between times, let a
+piece of linen rag, wetted in the lotion, be applied: to the eye, and
+be fastened in its place by means of a bandage.
+
+The white lily leaf, soaked in brandy, is another excellent remedy for
+the bruises of a child. Gather the white lily blossoms when in full
+bloom, and put them in a wide-mouthed bottle of brandy, cork the
+bottle, and it will then always be ready for use. Apply a leaf to the
+part affected, and bind it on either with a bandage or with a
+handkerchief. The white lily root sliced is another valuable external
+application for bruises.
+
+286. _If a child fall upon his head and be stunned, what ought to be
+done_?
+
+If he fall upon his head and be stunned, he will look deadly pale,
+very much as if he had fainted. He will in a few minutes, in all
+probability, regain his consciousness. Sickness frequently
+supervenes, which makes the case more serious, it being a proof that
+injury, more or less severe, has been done to the brain; send,
+therefore, instantly for a medical man.
+
+In the meantime, loosen both his collar and neckerchief, lay him flat
+on his back, sprinkle cold water upon his face, open the windows so as
+to admit plenty of fresh air, and do not let people crowd round him,
+nor shout at him, as some do, to make him speak.
+
+While he is in an unconscious state, do not on any account whatever
+allow a drop of blood to be taken from him, either by leeches or from
+the arm-venesection; if you do, he will probably never rally, but will
+most likely "sleep the sleep that knows not breaking."
+
+287. _A nurse sometimes drops an infant and injures his back; what
+ought to be done_?
+
+Instantly send for a surgeon; omitting to have proper advice in such a
+case has frequently made a child a cripple for life. A nurse
+frequently, when she has dropped her little charge, is afraid to tell
+her mistress; the consequences might then be deplorable. If ever a
+child scream violently without any assignable cause, and the mother is
+not able for some time to pacify him, the safer plan is that she send
+for a doctor, in order that he might strip and carefully examine him;
+much after misery might often be averted if this plan were more
+frequently followed.
+
+288. _Have you any remarks to make and directions to give on
+accidental poisoning by lotions, by liniments, etc_?
+
+It is a culpable practice of either a mother or nurse to leave
+_external_ applications within the reach of a child. It is also
+highly improper to put a mixture and an _external_ application (such
+as a lotion or a liniment) on the same tray or on the same
+mantel-piece. Many liniments contain large quantities of opium, a
+tea-spoonful of which would be likely to cause the death of a
+child. "Hartshorn and oil," too, has frequently been swallowed by
+children, and in several instances has caused death. Many lotions
+contain sugar of lead, which is also poisonous. There is not,
+fortunately, generally sufficient lead in the lotion to cause death;
+but if there be not enough to cause death, there may be more than
+enough to make the child very poorly. All these accidents occur from
+disgraceful carelessness.
+
+A mother or a nurse ought _always_, before administering a dose of
+medicine to a child, to read the label on the bottle; by adopting this
+simple plan many serious accidents and much after misery might be
+averted. Again, I say, let every lotion, every liniment, and indeed
+everything for external use, be either locked up or be put out of the
+way, and far away from all medicine that is given by the mouth. This
+advice admits of no exception.
+
+If your child have swallowed a portion of a liniment containing opium,
+instantly send for a medical man. In the meantime force a strong
+mustard emetic (composed of two tea-spoonfuls of flour of mustard,
+mixed in half a tea-cupful of warm water) down his throat. Encourage
+the vomiting by afterwards forcing him to swallow warm water. Tickle
+the throat either with your finger or with a feather. Souse him
+alternately in hot and then in a cold bath. Dash cold water on his
+head and face. Throw open the windows. Walk him about in the open
+air. Rouse him by slapping him, by pinching him, and by shouting to
+him; rouse him, indeed, by every means in your power, for if you allow
+him to go to sleep, it will, in all probability, be the sleep that
+knows no waking!
+
+If a child have swallowed "hartshorn and oil," force him to drink
+vinegar and water, lemon-juice and water sweetened with sugar, barley
+water, and thin gruel.
+
+If he have swallowed a lead lotion, give him a mustard emetic, and
+then vinegar and water, sweetened either with honey or with sugar, to
+drink.
+
+289. _Are not lucifer matches poisonous_?
+
+Certainly, they are very poisonous; it is, therefore, desirable that
+they should be put out of the reach of children. A mother ought to be
+very strict with servants on this head. Moreover, lucifer matches are
+not only poisonous but dangerous, as a child might set himself on fire
+with them. A case bearing on the subject has just come under my own
+observation. A little boy three years old, was left alone for two or
+three minutes, during which time he obtained possession of a lucifer
+match, and struck a light by striking the match against the
+wall. Instantly there was a blaze. Fortunately for him, in his fright,
+he threw the match on the floor. His mother at this moment entered the
+room. If his clothes had taken fire, which they might have done, had
+he not have thrown the match away, or if his mother had not been so
+near at hand, he would, in all probability, have either been severely
+burned or have been burned to death.
+
+290. _If a child's clothes take fire, what ought to be done to
+extinguished them_?
+
+Lay him on the floor, then roll him either in the rug, or in the
+carpet, or in the door-mat, or in any thick article of dress you may
+either have on, or have at hand--if it be woollen, so much the better;
+or, throw him down, and roll him over and over on the floor, as, by
+excluding the atmospheric air, the flame will go out:--hence the
+importance of a mother cultivating presence of mind. If parents were
+better prepared for such emergencies, such horrid disfigurations and
+frightful deaths would be less frequent.
+
+You ought to have a proper fire-guard before the nursery grate, and
+should be strict in not allowing your child to play with fire. If he
+still persevere in playing with it, when he has been repeatedly
+cautioned not to do so, he should be punished for his temerity. If
+anything would justify corporal chastisement, it would surely be such
+an act of disobedience. There are only two acts of disobedience that I
+would flog a child for--namely, the playing with fire and the telling
+of a lie! If after various warnings and wholesome corrections he still
+persist, it would be well to let him slightly taste the pain of his
+doing so, either by holding his hand for a moment very near the fire,
+or by allowing him to slightly touch either the hot bar of the grate
+or the flame of the candle. Take my word for it the above plan, will
+effectually cure him--he will never do it again. It would be well for
+the children of the poor to have pinafores made either of woollen or
+of stuff materials. The dreadful deaths from burning, which so often
+occur in winter, too frequently arise from _cotton_ pinafores first
+taking fire. [Footnote: It has been computed that upwards of 1000
+children are annually burned to death by accident in England.]
+
+If all dresses after being washed, and just before being dried, were,
+for a short time, soaked in a solution of tungstate of soda, such
+clothes, when dried, would, be perfectly fire-proof.
+
+Tangstate of soda may be used either with or without starch; but full
+directions for the using of it will, at the time of purchase, be given
+by the chemist.
+
+291. _Is a burn more dangerous than a scald_?
+
+A burn is generally more serious than a scald. Burns and scalds are
+more dangerous on the body, especially on the chest, than either on
+the face or on the extremities. The younger the child, the greater
+the danger.
+
+Scalds both of the mouth and the throat, from a child drinking boiling
+water from the spout of a tea-kettle, are most dangerous. A poor
+person's child is, from the unavoidable absence of the mother,
+sometimes shut up in the kitchen by himself, and being very thirsty,
+and no other water being at hand, he is tempted, in his ignorance, to
+drink from the tea-kettle: If the water be unfortunately boiling, it
+will most likely prove to him to be a fatal draught!
+
+292. _What are the best immediate applications to a scald or to a
+burn_?
+
+There is nothing more efficacious than flour. It ought to be thickly
+applied over the part affected, and should be kept in its place either
+with a rag and a bandage, or with, strips of old linen. If this be
+done, almost instantaneous relief will be experienced, and the burn or
+the scald, if superficial, will soon be well. The advantage of flour
+as a remedy, is this, that it is always at hand. I have seen some
+extensive bums and scalds cured by the above simple plan. Another
+excellent remedy is, cottonwool of superior quality, purposely made
+for surgeons. The burn or the scald ought to be enveloped in it;
+layer after layer should be applied until it be several inches
+thick. The cotton-wool must not be removed for several days. These two
+remedies, flour and cotton-wool, may be used in conjunction; that is
+to say, the flour may be thickly applied to the scald or to the burn,
+and the cotton wool over all.
+
+Prepared lard--that is to say, lard without salt [Footnote: If there
+be no other lard in the house but lard _with_ salt, the salt may be
+readily removed by washing the lard in cold water. Prepared
+lard--that is to say, lard _without_ salt--can, at any moment, be
+procured from the nearest druggist in the neighbourhood]--is an
+admirable remedy for burns and for scalds. The advantages of lard
+are,--(1.) It is almost always at hand; (2.) It is very cooling,
+soothing, and unirritating to the part, and it gives almost immediate
+freedom from pain; (3.) It effectually protects and sheathes the burn
+or the scald from the air; (4.) It is readily and easily applied: all
+that has to be done is to spread the lard either on pieces of old
+linen rag, or on lint, and then to apply them smoothly to the parts
+affected, keeping them in their places by means of bandages--which
+bandages may be readily made from either old linen or calico shirts.
+Dr John Packard, of Philadelphia, was the first to bring this remedy
+for burns and scalds before the public--he having tried it in numerous
+instances, and with the happiest results. I myself have, for many
+years been in the habit of prescribing lard as a dressing for
+blisters, and with the best effects. I generally advise equal parts of
+prepared lard and of spermaceti-cerate to be blended together to make
+an ointment. The spermaceti-cerate gives a little more consistence to
+the lard, which, in warm weather especially, is a great advantage.
+
+Another valuable remedy for burns is "carron-oil;" which is made by
+mixing equal parts of linseed-oil and lime-water in a bottle, and
+shaking it up before using it.
+
+Cold applications, such as cold water, cold vinegar and water, and
+cold lotions, are most injurious, and, in many cases, even
+dangerous. Scraped potatoes, sliced cucumber, salt, and spirits of
+turpentine, have all been recommended; but, in my practice, nothing
+has been so efficacious as the remedies above enumerated.
+
+Do not wash the wound, and do not dress it more frequently than every
+_other_ day. If there be much discharge, let it be gently sopped up
+with soft old linen rag; but do not, _on any_ account, let the burn be
+rubbed or roughly handled. I am convinced that, in the majority of
+cases, wounds are too frequently dressed, and that the washing of
+wounds prevents the healing of them. "It is a great mistake," said
+Ambrose Pare, "to dress ulcers too often, and to wipe their surfaces
+clean, for thereby we not only remove the useless excrement, which is
+the mud or sanies of ulcers, but also the matter which forms the
+flesh. Consequently, for these reasons, ulcers should not be dressed
+too often."
+
+It is nature, and not the surgeon, that really cures the wound, and it
+is done, like all Nature's works, principally in secret, by degrees,
+and by patience, and resents much interference. The seldom-dressing of
+a wound and patience are, then, two of the best remedies for effecting
+a cure. Shakspeare, who seemed to know surgery, as he did almost
+everything else beside was quite cognisant of the fact:--
+
+ "How poor are they, that have not patience
+ What wound did ever heal, but by degrees"
+
+The burn or the scald may, after the first two days, if severe,
+require different dressings; but, if it be severe, the child ought of
+course to be immediately placed under the care of a surgeon.
+
+If the scald be either on the leg or on the foot, a common practice is
+to take the shoe and the stocking off; in this operation the skin is
+also at the same time very apt to be removed. Now, both the shoe and
+the stocking ought to be slit up, and thus be taken off, so that
+neither unnecessary pain nor mischief may be caused.
+
+293. _If a bit of quick-lime should accidentally enter the eye of my
+child, what ought to be done_?
+
+Instantly, but tenderly remove, either by means of a camel's hair
+brush, or by a small spill of paper, any bit of lime that may adhere
+to the ball of the eye, or that may be within the eye or on the
+eye-lashes; then well bathe the eye (allowing a portion to enter it)
+with vinegar and water-one part of vinegar to three parts of water,
+that is to say, a quarter fill a clean half-pint medicine bottle with
+vinegar, and then fill it up with spring water, and it will be ready
+for use. Let the eye be bathed for at least a quarter of an hour with,
+it The vinegar will neutralise the lime, and will rob it of its
+burning properties.
+
+Having bathed the eye with vinegar and water for a quarter of an hour,
+bathe it for another quarter of an hour simply with a little warm
+water, after which, drop into the eye two or three drops of the best
+sweet-oil, put on an eye-shade made of three thicknesses of linen rag,
+covered with green silk, and then do nothing more until the doctor
+arrive.
+
+If the above rules be not _promptly_ and _properly_ followed out, the
+child may irreparably lose his eyesight; hence the necessity of
+conversations of this kind, to tell a mother, provided _immediate_
+assistance cannot be obtained, what ought _instantly_ to be done; for
+moments, in such a case, are precious.
+
+While doing all that I have just recommended, let a surgeon be sent
+for, as a smart attack of inflammation, of the eye is very apt to
+follow the burn of lime; but which inflammation will, provided the
+_previous_ directions have been _promptly_ and _efficiently_ followed
+out, with appropriate treatment, soon subside.
+
+The above accident is apt to occur to a child who is standing near a
+building when the slacking of quicklime is going on, and where
+portions of lime in the form of powder are flying about the air. It
+would be well not to allow a child to stand about such places, as
+prevention is always better than cure. _Quicklime_ is sometimes called
+_caustic-lime_--it well deserves its name, for it is a _burning-lime_,
+and if proper means be not promptly used, will soon burn away the
+sight.
+
+294. _If any other foreign substance should enter the eye, what is the
+best method of removing it_?
+
+If there be grit, or sand, or dust, or particle of coal, or gnat, or a
+hair, or an eye-lash in the eye, it ought to be tenderly removed by a
+small tightly-folded paper spill, holding down the lower lid with the
+fore-finger of the left hand the while; and the eye, if inflamed,
+should be frequently bathed with warm milk and water; but generally as
+soon as the cause is removed the effect will cease, and after
+treatment will be unnecessary.
+
+If a particle of metal be sticking on the cornea of the eye, as it
+sometimes does, it will require the skilled hand of a surgeon to
+remove it.
+
+Any foreign substance, however minute, in the eye, is very painful;
+but a piece of burning lime is excruciating. Shakspeare gives a
+graphic description of the pain from the presence of any foreign
+substance, however small, in the eye:--
+
+ "Oh heaven!--that there were but a mote in yours,
+ A grain, a dust, a gnat, a wand'ring hair,
+ Any annoyance in that precious sense!
+ Then, feeling what small things are boist'rous there,
+ Your vile intent must needs seem horrible."
+
+295. _What ought to be done in a case of choking_?
+
+How often does a hungry little child, if not carefully watched, fill
+his mouth so full, and swallow lumps of food in such hot haste, as to
+choke himself--
+
+ "With eager feeding, food doth choke the feeder"
+
+ _Shakespeare._
+
+_Treatment_.-Instantly put your finger into the throat and feel if the
+substance be within reach; if it be food, force it down, and thus
+liberate the breathing; should it be a hard substance, endeavour to
+hook it out; if you cannot reach it, give a good smart blow or two
+with the flat of the hand on the back; or, as recommended by
+contributor to the _Lancet_, on the chest, taking care to "seize the
+little patient, and place him between your knees side ways, and in
+this or some other manner to _compress the abdomen_ [the belly],
+otherwise the power of the blow will be lost by the yielding of the
+abdominal parieties [walls of the belly], and the respiratory effort
+will not be produced." If that does not have the desired effect,
+tickle the throat with your finger, so as to ensure immediate
+vomiting, and the subsequent ejection of the offending substance.
+
+296. _Should my child be bitten by a dog supposed to be mad, what
+ought to be done_?
+
+Instantly well rub for the space of five or ten _seconds_--seconds,
+_not_ minutes--a stick of nitrate of silver (lunar-caustic) into the
+wound. The stick of lunar-caustic should be pointed, like a cedar
+pencil for writing, in order the more thoroughly to enter the
+wound. [Footnote: A stick of pointed nitrate of silver, in a case,
+ready for use, may be procured of any respectable chemist.] This, if
+properly done directly after the bite, will effectually prevent
+hydrophobia. The nitrate of silver acts not only as a caustic to the
+part, but it appears effectually to neutralise the poison, and thus,
+by making the virus perfectly innocuous, is a complete antidote. If it
+be either the lip, or the parts near the eye, or the wrist, that have
+been bitten, it is far preferable to apply the caustic than to cut the
+part out; as the former is neither so formidable, nor so dangerous,
+nor so disfiguring as the latter, and yet it is equally as
+efficacious. I am indebted to the late Mr Youatt, the celebrated
+veterinary surgeon, for this valuable antidote or remedy for the
+_prevention_ of the most horrible, heart-rending, and incurable
+disease known. Mr Youatt had an immense practice among, dogs as well
+as among horses. He was a keen observer of disease, and a dear lover
+of his profession, and he had paid great attention to rabies--
+dog-madness. He and his assistants had been repeatedly bitten by
+rabid dogs; but knowing that he was in possession of an infallible
+preventive remedy, he never dreaded the wounds inflicted either upon
+himself or upon his assistants. Mr Youatt never knew lunar-caustic, if
+properly and _immediately_ applied, to fail. It is, of course, only a
+preventive. If hydrophobia be once developed in the human system, no
+antidote has ever yet, for this fell and intractable disease, been
+found.
+
+While walking the London Hospitals, upwards of forty years ago, I
+received an invitation from Mr Youatt to attend a lecture on
+rabies--dog-madness. He had, during the lecture, a dog present
+labouring under _incipient_ madness. In a day or two after the
+lecture, he requested me and other students to call at his infirmary
+and see the dog, as the disease was at that time fully developed. We
+did so, and found the poor animal raving mad--frothing at the mouth,
+and snapping at the iron bars of his prison. I was particularly struck
+with a peculiar brilliancy and wildness of the dog's eyes. He seemed
+as though, with affright and consternation, he beheld objects unseen
+by all around. It was pitiful to witness his frightened and anxious
+countenance. Death soon closed the scene!
+
+I have thought it my duty to bring the value of lunar-caustic as a
+preventive of hydrophobia prominently before your notice, and to pay a
+tribute of respect to the memory of Mr Youatt--a man of talent and of
+genius.
+
+Never kill a dog supposed to be mad who has bitten either a child, or
+any one else, until it has, past all doubt, been ascertained whether
+he be really mad or not. He ought, of course, to be tied up; and be
+carefully watched, and be prevented the while from biting any one
+else. The dog by all means should be allowed to live at least for some
+weeks, as the fact of his remaining well will be the best guarantee
+that there is no fear of the bitten child having caught hydrophobia.
+
+There is a foolish prejudice abroad, that a dog, be he mad or not, who
+has bitten a person ought to be _immediately_ destroyed; that although
+the dog be not at the time mad, but should at a future period become
+so, the person who had been bitten when the dog was _not_ mad, would,
+when the dog became mad, have hydrophobia! It seems almost absurd to
+bring the subject forward; but the opinion is so very general and
+deep-rooted, that I think it well to declare that there is not the
+slightest foundation of truth in it, but that it is a ridiculous
+fallacy!
+
+A cat sometimes goes mad, and its bite may cause hydrophobia; indeed,
+the bite of a mad cat is more dangerous than the bite of a mad dog. A
+bite from a mad cat ought to be treated precisely in the same
+manner-namely, with the lunar-caustic--as for a mad dog.
+
+Hydrophobia was by our forefathers graphically called _water-fright_:
+it was well named, for the horror of swallowing water is, by an
+hydrophobic patient, most intense, and is _the_ leading symptom of
+this fell and incurable disease.
+
+A bite either from a dog or from a cat _who is not mad_, from a cat
+especially, is often venomous and difficult to heal. The best
+application is, _immediately_ to apply a large hot white bread
+poultice to the part, and to renew it every four hours; and, if there
+be much pain in the wound, to well foment the part, every time before
+applying the poultice, with a hot camomile and poppy-head fomentation.
+
+Scratches of a cat are best treated by smearing, and that freely and
+continuously for an hour, and then afterwards at longer intervals,
+fresh butter on the part affected. If fresh butter Be not at hand,
+fresh lard--that is to say, lard _without_ salt--will answer the
+purpose. If the pain of the scratch be very intense, foment the part
+affected with hot water, and then apply a hot white bread poultice,
+which should be frequently renewed.
+
+297. _What are the best remedies in ease of a sting from either a bee
+or a wasp_?
+
+Extract the sting, if it have been left behind, either by means of the
+pair of dressing forceps, or by the pressure of the hollow of a small
+key--a watch-key will answer the purpose; then, the blue-bag (which is
+used in washing) moistened with water, should be applied to the part;
+or a few drops of solution of potash, [Footnote: Which may be
+instantly procured of a druggist.] or "apply moist snuff or tobacco,
+rubbing it well in," [Footnote: A Bee-master. _The Times_, July
+28,1864.] and renew from time to time either of them: if either of
+these be not at hand, either honey, or treacle, or fresh butter, will
+answer the purpose. Should there be much swelling or inflammation,
+foment the part with hot water, and then apply hot bread poultice, and
+renew it frequently. In eating apricots, or peaches, or other fruit,
+they ought beforehand to be carefully examined, in order to ascertain
+that no wasp is lurking in them; otherwise, it may sting the throat,
+and serious consequences will ensue.
+
+298. _If a child receive a fall, causing the skin to be grazed, can
+you tell me of a good application_?
+
+You will find gummed paper an excellent remedy: the way of preparing
+it is as follows:--Apply evenly, by means of a small brush, thick
+mucilage of gum-arabic to cap-paper; hang it up to dry, and keep it
+ready for use. When wanted, cut a portion as large as may be
+requisite, then moisten it with your tongue, in the same manner you
+would a postage stamp, and apply it to the grazed part. It may be
+removed when necessary by simply wetting it with water. The part in
+two or three days will be well. There is usually a margin of gummed
+paper sold with postage stamps; this will answer the purpose equally
+well. If the gummed paper be not at hand, then frequently, for the
+space of an hour or two, smear the part affected with fresh butter.
+
+299. _In case of a child swallowing by mistake either laudanum, or
+paregoric, or Godfrey's Cordial, or any other preparation of opium,
+what ought to be done_?
+
+Give, as _quickly as possible_, a strong mustard emetic; that is to
+say, mix two tea-spoonfuls of flour of mustard in half a tea-cupful
+of water, and force it down his throat. If free vomiting be not
+induced, tickle the upper part of the swallow with a feather, drench
+the little patient's stomach with large quantities of warm water. As
+soon as it can be obtained from the druggist, give him the following
+emetic draught--
+
+ Take of--Sulphate of Zinc, one scruple;
+ Simple Syrup, one drachm.
+ Distilled Water, seven drachms;
+
+To make a Draught.
+
+Smack his buttocks and his back, walk him, or lead him, or carry him
+about in the fresh air, shake him by the shoulders, pat his hair,
+tickle his nostrils, shout and holler in his ears, plunge him into a
+warm bath and then into a cold bath alternately. Well sponge his head
+and face with cold water, dash cold water on his head, face, and neck,
+and do not, on any account, until the effects of the opiate are gone
+off, allow him to go to sleep, if you do, he will never wake again!
+While doing all those things, of course, you ought to lose no time in
+sending for a medical man.
+
+300. _Have you any observation to make on parent's allowing the Deadly
+Nightshade (Atropa Belladonna) to grow in their gardens_?
+
+I wish to caution you not on any account to allow the Belladonna--the
+Deadly Nightshade--to grow in your garden. The whole plant--root,
+leaves, and berries--is poisonous and the berries, being attractive to
+the eye, are very alluring to children.
+
+301. _What is the treatment of poisoning by Belladonna_?
+
+Instantly send for a medical man, but, in the mean time, give an
+emetic-a mustard emetic--mix two teaspoonfuls of flour of mustard in
+half a tea-cupful of warm water, and force it down the child's throat
+then drench him with warm water, and tickle the upper part of his
+swallow either with a feather or with the finger, to make him sick as
+the grand remedy is an emetic to bring up the offending cause. If the
+emetic has not acted sufficiently, the medical man when he arrives may
+deem it necessary to use the stomach pump, but remember not a moment
+must be lost, for moments are precious in a case of belladonna
+poisoning, in giving a mustard emetic, and repeating it again and
+again until the enemy be dislodged. Dash cold water upon his head and
+face; the best way of doing which is by means of a large sponge,
+holding his head and his face over a wash-hand basin, half filled with
+cold water, and filling the sponge from the basin, and squeezing it
+over his head and face, allowing the water to continuously stream over
+them for an hour or two, or until the effects of the poison have
+passed away. This sponging of the head and face is very useful in
+poisoning by opium, as well as in poisoning by belladonna; indeed, the
+treatment of poisoning by the one is very similar to the treatment of
+poisoning by the other. I, therefore, for the further treatment of
+poisoning by belladonna, beg to refer you to a previous Conversation,
+on the treatment of poisoning by opium.
+
+302. _Should a child put either a pea or a bead, or any other foreign
+substance, up the nose, what ought to be done_?
+
+Do not attempt to extract it yourself, or you might push it further
+in, but send instantly for a surgeon, who will readily remove it,
+either with a pair of forceps, or by means of a bent probe, or with a
+director. If it be a pea, and it be allowed for any length of time to
+remain in, it will swell, and will thus become difficult to extract,
+and may produce great irritation and inflammation. A child ought not
+to be allowed to play with peas or with beads (unless the beads are on
+a string), as he is apt, for amusement, to push them up his nose.
+
+303. _If a child have put either a pea, a bean, a bead, a
+cherry-stone, or any other smooth substance, into his ear, what ought
+to be done to remove it_?
+
+Turn his head on one side, in order to let the ear with the pea or the
+bead in it be undermost, then give with the flat of your hand two or
+three sharp, sudden slaps or boxes on the other, or _upper_most ear,
+and most likely the offending substance will drop out. Poking at the
+ear will, in the majority of cases, only send the substance further
+in, and will make it more difficult (if the above simple plan does not
+succeed) for the medical man to remove. The surgeon will, in all
+probability, syringe the ear; therefore have a supply of warm water in
+readiness for him, in order that no time may be lost.
+
+304. _If an earwig or any other living thing, should get into the ear
+of a child, what ought to be done_?
+
+Lay the child on his side, the affected ear being uppermost, and fill
+the ear, from a tea-spoon, with either water or sweet oil. The water
+or oil will carry the living thing, whatever it be, out of the ear,
+and the child is at once relieved.
+
+305. _If a child swallow a piece of broken glass, what ought to be
+done_?
+
+Avoid purgatives, as the free action on the bowels would be likely to
+force the spiculae of glass into the mucous membrane of the bowels, and
+thus would wound them, and might cause ulceration, and even death.
+"The object of treatment will be to allow them to pass through the
+intestines well enveloped by the other contents of the tube, and for
+this purpose a solid, farinaceous diet should be ordered, and
+purgatives scrupulously avoided."--_Shaw's Medical Remembrancer_, by
+Hutchinson.
+
+306. _If a child swallow a pin, what should be done_?
+
+Treat him as for broken glass. Give him no aperients, or it might, in
+action, force the pin into the bowel. I have known more than one
+instance where a child, after swallowing a pin, to have, voided it in
+his motion.
+
+307. _If a child swallow a coin of any kind, is danger likely, to
+ensue, and what ought to be done_?
+
+There is, as a rule, no danger. A dose or two of castor oil will be
+all that is usually necessary. The evacuations ought to be carefully
+examined until the coin be discovered. I once knew a child swallow a
+pennypiece, and pass it in his stool.
+
+308. _If a child, while playing with a small coin (such as either a
+threepenny or a fourpenny piece), or any other substance, should toss
+it into his mouth, and inadvertently allow it to enter the windpipe,
+what ought to be done_?
+
+Take hold of him by the legs, allowing his head to hang downwards;
+then give him with the palm of your hand several sharp blows on his
+back, and you may have the good fortune to see the coin coughed out of
+his mouth. Of course, if this plan does not succeed, send instantly,
+for a medical man.
+
+309. _How can a mother prevent her child from having an accident_?
+
+By strict supervision over frim on her own part, and by not permitting
+her child to be left to the tender mercies of servants; by not
+allowing him to play with fire, to swing over banisters, and to have
+knives and playthings of a dangerous character; to keep all poisonous
+articles and cutting instruments out of his reach; and, above all and
+before all, insisting, lovingly, affectionately, but firmly, upon
+implicit obedience.
+
+Accidents generally arise from one of three causes, namely, either
+from wilful disobedience, or from gross carelessness, or from
+downright folly. I quite agree with Davenant, that they do not arise
+from chance--
+
+ "If we consider accident,
+ And how, repugnant unto sense,
+ It pays desert with bad event,
+ We shall disparage Providence."
+
+
+
+
+PART III.
+
+BOYHOOD AND GIRLHOOD.
+
+
+ _Just at the age 'twixt boy and youth
+ When thought is speech and speech is truth_--SCOTT
+
+ _'Tis with him e'en standing water.
+ Between man and boy_--SHAKESPEARE
+
+ _Standing with reluctant feet,
+ Where the brook and river meet,
+ Womanhood and childhood fleet_--LONGFELLOW
+
+
+ABLUTION, ETC.
+
+310. _Have you any remarks to make on the ablution of boys and girls_?
+
+How is it that a mother thinks it absolutely necessary (which it
+really is) that her babe's _whole_ body should, every morning, be
+washed; and yet who does not deem it needful that her girl or boy, of
+twelve years old, should go through the process of daily and
+_thorough_ ablution? If the one case be necessary, sure I am that the
+other is equally if not more needful.
+
+Thorough ablution of the body every morning at least is essential to
+health. I maintain that no one can be in the enjoyment of perfect
+health who does not keep his skin--the whole of his skin--clean. In
+the absence of cleanliness, a pellicle forms on the skin which
+engenders disease. Moreover, a person who does not keep his skin clean
+is more susceptible of contracting contagious disease, such as
+small-pox, typhus fever, cholera, diphtheria, scarlet fever, etc.
+
+Thorough ablution of the body is a grand requisite of I maintain that
+no one can be perfectly healthy unless he thoroughly wash his
+body--the whole of his body; if filth accumulate which, if not washed
+off, it is sure to do, disease must, as a matter of course, follow.
+Besides, ablution is a delightful process; it makes one feel fresh and
+sweet, and young and healthy; it makes the young look handsome, and
+the old look young! Thorough ablution might truly be said both to
+renovate and to rejuvenise! A scrupulously clean skin is one of the
+grand distinctive characteristics both of a lady and of a gentleman,
+
+Dirty people are not only a nuisance to themselves, but to all around;
+they are not only a nuisance but a danger, as their dirty bodies are
+apt to carry from place to place contagious diseases.
+
+It is important that parts that are covered should be kept cleaner
+than parts exposed to the air, as dirt is more apt to fester in dark
+places; besides, parts exposed to the air have the advantage of the
+air's sweetening properties; air acts as a bath, and purifies the skin
+amazingly.
+
+It is desirable to commence a complete system of washing early in
+life, as it then becomes a second nature, and cannot afterwards be
+dispensed with. One accustomed to the luxury of his morning ablution,
+if anything prevented him from taking it, would feel most
+uncomfortable; he would as soon think of dispensing with his breakfast
+as with his bath.
+
+Every boy, every girl, and every adult, ought each to have either a
+room or a dressing-room to himself or to herself, in order that he or
+she might strip to the skin and thoroughly wash themselves; no one can
+wash properly and effectually without doing so.
+
+Now, for the paraphernalia required for the process--(1.) A large
+nursery basin, one that will hold six or eight quarts of water
+(Wedgwood's make being considered the best); (2.) A piece of coarse
+flannel, a yard long and half a yard wide; (3.) A large sponge; (4.) A
+tablet either of the best yellow or of curd soap; (5.) Two towels-one
+being a diaper, and the other a Turkish rubber. Now, as to the manner
+of performing ablution. You ought to fill the basin three parts full
+with _rain_ water, then, having well-soaped and cleansed your hands,
+re-soap them, dip your head and face into the water, then with the
+soaped hands well rub and wash your head, face, neck, chest, and
+armpits; having done which, take the wetted sponge, and go over all
+the parts previously travelled over by the soaped hands; then fold the
+flannel, as you would a neck-kerchief, and dip it in the water, then
+throw it, as you would a skipping-rope, over your shoulders and move
+it a few times from right to left and from left to right, and up and
+down, and then across the back and loins; having done which, dip the
+sponge in the water, and holding your head over the water, let the
+water stream from the sponge a time or two over your head, neck, and
+face. Dip your head and face in the water, then put your hands and
+arms (as far as they will go) into the water, holding them there while
+you can count thirty. Having reduced the quantity of water to a third
+of a basinful, place the basin on the floor, and sit (while you can
+count fifty) in the water; then put one foot at a time in the water,
+and quickly rub, with soaped hands, up and down your leg, over the
+foot, and pass your thumb between each toe (this latter procedure
+tends to keep away soft corns); then take the sponge, filled with
+water, and squeeze it over your leg and foot, from the knee
+downwards,--then serve your other leg and foot in the same way. By
+adopting the above plan, the whole of the body will, every morning, be
+thoroughly washed.
+
+A little warm water might at first, and during the winter time, be
+added, to take off the chill; but the sooner quite cold water is used
+the better. The body ought to be quickly dried (taking care to wipe
+between each toe), first with the diaper, and then with the Turkish
+rubber. In drying your back and loins, you ought to throw as you would
+a skipping-rope, the Turkish rubber over your shoulders, and move it a
+few times front side to side, until the parts be dry.
+
+Although the above description is necessarily prolix, the washing
+itself ought to be very expeditiously performed; there should be no
+dawdling over it, otherwise the body will become chilled, and harm
+instead of good will be the result. If due dispatch be used, the whole
+of the body might, according to the above method, be thoroughly washed
+and dried in the space of ten minutes.
+
+A boy ought to wash his head, as above directed, every morning, a
+girl, who has much hair, once a week, with soap and water, with
+flannel and sponge. The hair, if not frequently washed, is very dirty,
+and nothing is more repulsive than a dirty head!
+
+It might be said, "Why do you go into particulars? why dwell so much
+upon minutiae? Every one, without being told, knows how to wash
+himself!" I reply, "That very few people do know how to wash
+themselves properly; it is a misfortune that they do not--they would
+be healthier and happier and sweeter if they did!"
+
+311. _Have you any remarks to make on boys and girls learning to
+swim_?
+
+Let me strongly urge you to let your sons and daughters be _early_
+taught to swim. Swimming is a glorious exercise--one of the best that
+can be taken; it expands the chest; it promotes digestion; it develops
+the muscles, and brings into action some muscles that in any other
+form of exercise are but seldom brought into play; it strengthens and
+braces the whole frame, and thus makes the swimmer resist the
+liability of catching cold; it gives both boys and girls courage,
+energy, and self-reliance,--splendid qualities in this rough world of
+ours. Swimming is oftentimes the means of saving human life; this of
+itself would be a great recommendation of its value. It is a
+delightful amusement; to breast the waves is as exhilarating to the
+spirits as clearing on horse-back a five-barred gate.
+
+The art of learning to swim is quite as necessary to be learned by a
+girl as by a boy; the former has similar muscles, lungs, and other
+organs to develop as the latter.
+
+It is very desirable that in large towns swimming-baths for ladies
+should be instituted. Swimming ought, then, to be a part and parcel of
+the education of every boy and of every girl.
+
+Swimming does not always agree. This sometimes arises from a person
+being quite cold before he plunges into the water. Many people have an
+idea that they ought to go into the water while their bodies are in a
+cool state. Now this is a mistaken notion, and is likely to produce
+dangerous consequences. The skin ought to be comfortably warm, neither
+very hot nor very cold, and then the bather will receive every
+advantage that cold bathing can produce, If he go into the bath whilst
+the body is cold, the blood becomes chilled, and is driven to internal
+parts, and thus mischief is frequently produced.
+
+A boy, after using cold bathing, ought, if it _agree_ with him, to
+experience a pleasing glow over the whole surface of his body, his
+spirits and appetite should be increased, and he ought to feel
+stronger; but if it _disagree_ with him, a chilliness and coldness, a
+lassitude and a depression of spirits, will be the result; the face
+will be pale and the features will be pinched, and, in some instances,
+the lips and the nails will become blue; all these are signs that
+_cold_ bathing is injurious, and, therefore, that it ought on no
+account to be persevered in, unless these symptoms have hitherto
+proceeded from his going into the bath whilst he was quite cold. He
+may, previously to entering the bath, warm himself by walking briskly
+for a few minutes. Where cold, sea water bathing does not agree,
+_warm_ sea bathing should be substituted.
+
+312. _Which do you prefer--sea bathing or fresh water bathing_?
+
+Sea bathing. Sea bathing is incomparably superior to fresh water
+bathing; the salt water is far more refreshing and invigorating; the
+battling with the waves is more exciting; the sea breezes, blowing on
+the nude body, breathes (for the skin is a breathing apparatus) health
+and strength into the frame, and comeliness into the face; the sea
+water and the sea breezes are splendid cosmetics; the salt water is
+one of the finest applications, both for strengthening the roots and
+brightening the colour of the hair, provided grease and pomatum have
+not been previously used.
+
+313. _Have you any directions to give as to the time and the seasons,
+and the best mode of sea bathing_?
+
+Summer and autumn are the best seasons of the year for cold sea
+bathing--August and September being the best months. To prepare the
+skin for the cold sea bathing, it would be well, before taking a dip
+in the sea, to have on the previous day a warm salt water bath. It is
+injurious, and even dangerous, to bathe _immediately_ after a _full_
+meal; the best time to bathe is about two hours after breakfast-that
+is to say, at about eleven or twelve o'clock in the forenoon. The
+bather as soon as he enters the water, ought _instantly_ to wet his
+head; this may be done either by his jumping at once from the machine
+into the water, or, if he have not the courage to do so, by plunging
+his head without loss of time _completely_ under the water. He should
+remain in the water about a quarter of an hour, but never longer than
+half an hour. Many bathers by remaining a long time in the water do
+themselves great injury. If sea bathing be found to be invigorating--
+and how often to the delicate it has proved to be truly magical--a
+patient may bathe once every day, but on no account oftener. If he be
+not strong, he had better, at first, bathe only every other day, or
+even only twice a week. The bather, after leaving the machine, ought
+for half an hour to take a brisk walk in order to promote a reaction,
+and thus to cause a free circulation of the blood.
+
+314. _Do you think a tepid bath [Footnote: A tepid bath from 62 to 96
+degrees of, Fahrenheit.] may be more safely used_?
+
+A tepid bath may be taken at almost any time, and a bather may remain
+longer in one, with safety, than in a cold bath.
+
+315. _Do you approve of warm bathing_?
+
+A warm, bath [Footnote: A warm bath from 97 to 100 degrees of
+Fahrenheit] may with advantage be occasionally used--say, once a
+week. A warm bath cleanses the skin more effectually than either a
+cold or a tepid bath; but, as it is more relaxing, ought not to be
+employed so often as either of them. A person should not continue
+longer than ten minutes in a warm bath. Once a week, as a rule is
+quite often enough for a warm bath; and it would be an excellent plan
+if every boy and girl and adult would make a practice of having one
+regularly every week, unless any special reason should arise to forbid
+its use.
+
+316. _But does not warm bathing, by relaxing the pores of the skin,
+cause a person to catch cold if he expose himself to the air
+immediately afterwards_?
+
+There is, on this point, a great deal of misconception and unnecessary
+fear. A person, _immediately_ after using a warm bath, should take
+proper precautions--that is to say, he must not expose himself to
+draughts, neither ought he to wash himself in _cold_ water, nor should
+he, _immediately_ after taking one, drink _cold_ water. But he may
+follow his usual exercise or employment, provided the weather be fine,
+and the wind be neither in the east nor the north-east.
+
+Every house of any pretension ought to have a bathroom. Nothing would
+be more conducive to health than regular systematic bathing. A hot and
+cold bath, a sitz bath, and a shower bath--each and all in their
+turn--are grand requisites to preserve and procure health. If the
+house cannot boast of a bath-room, then the Corporation Baths (which
+nearly every large town possesses) ought to be liberally patronised.
+
+
+MANAGEMENT OF THE HAIR
+
+317. _What is the best application for the hair_?
+
+A sponge and _cold_ water, and two good hair-brushes. Avoid grease,
+pomatum, bandoline, and all abominations of that kind. There is a
+natural oil of the hair, which is far superior to either Rowland's
+Macassar Oil or any other oil! The best scent for the hair is an
+occasional dressing of soap and water; the best beautifier of the hair
+is a downright thorough good brushing with two good hair brushes!
+Again, I say, _avoid grease of all kinds to the hair_. "And as for
+woman's hair, don't plaster it with scented and sour grease, or with
+any grease; it has an oil of its own. And don't tie up your hair
+tight, and make it like a cap of iron over your skull. And why are
+your ears covered? You hear all the worse, and they are not the
+cleaner. Besides, the ear is beautiful in itself, and plays its own
+part in the concert of the features." [Footnote: _Health._ By John
+Brown, M.D.]
+
+If the hair cannot, without some application, be kept tidy, then a
+little castor oil, scented, might, by means of an old tooth-brush, be
+used to smooth it; castor oil is, for the purpose, one of the most
+simple and harmless of dressings; but, as I said before, the hair's
+own natural oil cannot be equalled, far less surpassed!
+
+If the hair fall off, the castor oil, scented with a few drops either
+of otto of roses or of essence of bergamot, is a good remedy to
+prevent its doing so; a little of it ought, night and morning, to be
+well rubbed into the roots of the hair. Cocoa-nut oil is another
+excellent application for the falling off of the hair, and can never
+do harm, which is more than can be said of many vaunted remedies for
+the Hair!
+
+
+CLOTHING.
+
+318. _Do you approve of a boy wearing flannel next to the skin?_
+
+England is so variable a climate, and the changes from heat to cold,
+and from dryness to moisture of the atmosphere, are so sudden, that
+some means are required to guard against their effects. Flannel, as it
+is a bad conductor of heat, prevents the sudden changes from affecting
+the body, and thus is a great preservative against cold.
+
+Flannel is as necessary in the summer as in the winter time; indeed,
+we are more likely both to sit and to stand in draughts in the summer
+than in the winter; and thus we are more liable to become chilled and
+to catch cold.
+
+Woollen shirts are now much worn; they are very comfortable and
+beneficial to health. Moreover, they simplify the dress, as they
+supersede the necessity of wearing either both flannel and linen, or
+flannel and calico shirts.
+
+319. _Flannel sometimes produces great irritation of the skin: what
+ought to be done to prevent it_?
+
+Have a moderately fine flannel, and persevere in its use; the skin in
+a few days will bear it comfortably. The Angola and wove-silk
+waistcoats have been recommended as substitutes, but there is nothing
+equal to the old-fashioned Welsh flannel.
+
+320. _If a boy have delicate lungs, do you approve of his wearing a
+prepared hare-skin over the chest_?
+
+I do not: the chest may be kept too warm as well as too cold. The
+hare-skin heats the chest too much, and thereby promotes a violent
+perspiration; which, by his going into the cold air, may become
+suddenly checked, and may thus produce mischief. If the chest be
+delicate, there is nothing like flannel to ward off colds.
+
+321. _After an attack of Rheumatic Fever, what extra clothing do you
+advise_?
+
+In the case of a boy, or a girl, just recovering from a severe attack
+of Rheumatic Fever, flannel next the skin ought always, winter and
+summer, to be worn--flannel drawers as well as a flannel vest.
+
+322. _Have you any remarks to make on boys' waistcoats_?
+
+Fashion in this, as in most other instances, is at direct variance
+with common sense. It would seem that fashion was intended to make
+work for the doctor, and to swell the bills of mortality! It might be
+asked, What part of the chest, in particular, ought to be kept warm?
+The upper part needs it most. It is in the _upper_ part of the lungs
+that tubercles (consumption) usually first make their appearance; and
+is it not preposterous to have such parts, in particular, kept cool?
+
+Double-breasted waistcoats cannot be too strongly recommended for
+_delicate_ youths, and for all men who have _weak_ chests.
+
+323. _Have you any directions to give respecting the shoes and the
+stockings_?
+
+The shoes for winter should be moderately thick and waterproof. If
+boys and girls be delicate, they ought to have double soles to their
+shoes, with a piece of bladder between each sole, or the inner sole
+may be made of cork; either of the above plans will make the soles of
+boots and shoes completely water-proof. In wet or dirty weather
+India-rubber over-shoes are useful, as they keep the _upper_ as well
+as the _under_ leathers perfectly dry.
+
+The socks, or stockings, for winter, ought to be either lambs-wool or
+worsted; it is absurd to wear _cotton_ socks or stockings all the year
+round. I should advise a boy to wear socks not stockings, as he will
+then be able to dispense with garters. Garters, as I have remarked in
+a previous Conversation, are injurious--they not only interfere with
+the circulation of the blood, but also, by pressure, injure the bones,
+and thus the shape of the legs.
+
+Boys and girls cannot be too particular in keeping their feet warm and
+dry, as cold wet feet are one of the most frequent exciting causes of
+bronchitis, of sore throats, and of consumption.
+
+324. _When should a girl begin to wear stays_?
+
+She ought never to wear them.
+
+325. _Do not stays strengthen the body_?
+
+No; on the contrary, they weaken it (1.) _They, weaken the
+muscles_. The pressure upon them causes them to waste; so that, in the
+end, a girl cannot do without them, as the stays are then obliged to
+perform the duty of the wasted muscles. (2.) _They weaken the lungs_
+by interfering with their functions. Every inspiration is accompanied
+by a movement of the ribs. If this movement be impeded, the functions
+of the lungs are impeded likewise, and, consequently, disease is
+likely to follow, and either difficulty of breathing, or cough, or
+consumption, may ensue. (3) _They weaken the heart's action_, and thus
+frequently produce palpitation, and, perhaps, eventually, organic or
+incurable disease of the heart (4) _They weaken the digestion_, by
+pushing down the stomach and the liver, and by compressing the latter,
+and thus induce indigestion, flatulence, and liver-disease. [Footnote:
+Several years ago, while prosecuting my anatomical studies in London
+University College Dissecting rooms, on opening a young women, I
+discovered an immense indentation of the liver large enough to admit a
+rolling pin, produced by tight lacing!] (5) _They weaken the bowels_,
+by impeding their proper peristaltic (spiral) motion, and thus might
+produce either constipation or a rupture. Is it not presumptuous to
+imagine that man can improve upon God's works, and that if more
+support had been required, the Almighty would not have given it?--
+
+ "God never made his work for man to mend"--_Dryden._
+
+326. _Have you any remarks to make on female dress_?
+
+There is a perfect disregard of health in everything appertaining to
+fashion. Parts that ought to be kept warm, remain unclothed, the
+_upper_ portion of the chest, most prone to tubercles (consumption),
+is completely exposed, the feet, great inlets to cold, are covered
+with thin stockings, and with shoes as thin as paper. Parts that
+should have full play are cramped and hampered, the chest is cribbed
+in with stays, the feet with _tight_ shoes,--hence causing deformity,
+and preventing a free circulation of blood. The mind, that ought to be
+calm and unruffled, is kept in a constant state of excitement by
+balls, and concerts, and plays. Mind and body sympathise with each
+other, and disease is the consequence. Night is turned into day, and
+a delicate girl leaves the heated ball room, decked out in her airy
+finery, to breathe the damp and cold air of night. She goes to bed,
+but, for the first few hours, she is too much excited to sleep,
+towards morning, when the air is pure and invigorating, and, when to
+breathe it, would be to inhale health and life, she falls into a
+feverish slumber, and wakes not until noon-day. Oh, that a mother
+should be so blinded and so infatuated!
+
+327. _Have you any observations to make on a girl wearing a green
+dress_?
+
+It is injurious to wear a green dress, if the colour have been
+imparted to it by means of _Scheele's green_, which is arsenite of
+copper--a deadly poison. I have known the arsenic to fly off from a
+_green_ dress in the form of powder, and to produce, in consequence,
+ill-health. Gas-light green is a lovely green, and free from all
+danger, and is fortunately superseding the Scheele's green both in
+dresses and in worsted work. I should advise my fair reader, when she
+selects green as her colour, always to choose the gas-light green, and
+to wear and to use for worsted work no other green besides, unless it
+be imperial green.
+
+
+DIET.
+
+328. _Which is the more wholesome, coffee or tea, where milk does not
+agree, for a youth's breakfast_?
+
+Coffee, provided it be made properly, and provided the boy or the girl
+take a great deal of out-door exercise; if a youth be much confined
+within doors, black tea is preferable to coffee. The usual practice of
+making coffee is to boil it, to get out the strength! But the fact is,
+the process of boiling boils the strength away; it drives off that
+aromatic, grateful principle, so wholesome to the stomach, and so
+exhilarating to the spirits; and, in lieu of which, extracts its dregs
+and impurities, which are both heavy and difficult of digestion. The
+coffee ought, if practicable, to be _freshly_ ground every morning, in
+order that you may be quite sure that it be perfectly genuine, and
+that none of the aroma of the coffee has flown off from long exposure
+to the atmosphere. If a youth's bowels be inclined to be costive,
+coffee is preferable to tea for breakfast, as coffee tends to keep the
+bowels regular. Fresh milk ought always to be added to the coffee in
+the proportion of half coffee and half new milk. If coffee does not
+agree, then _black_ tea should be substituted, which ought to be taken
+with plenty of fresh milk in it. Milk may be frequently given in tea,
+when it otherwise would disagree.
+
+When a youth is delicate, it is an excellent plan to give him, every
+morning before he leaves his bed, a tumblerful of _new_ milk. The
+draught of milk, of course, is not in any way to interfere with his
+regular breakfast.
+
+329. _Do you approve of a boy eating meat with his breakfast_?
+
+This will depend upon the exercise he uses. If he have had a good walk
+or run before breakfast, or if he intend, after breakfast, to take
+plenty of athletic out-door exercise, meat, or a rasher or two of
+bacon, may, with advantage, be eaten; but not otherwise.
+
+330. _What is the best dinner for a youth_?
+
+Fresh mutton or beef, a variety of vegetables, and a farinaceous
+pudding. It is a bad practice to allow him to dine, exclusively,
+either on a fruit pudding, or on any other pudding, or on
+pastry. Unless he be ill, he must, if he is to be healthy, strong, and
+courageous, eat meat every day of his life. "All courageous animals
+are carnivorous, and greater courage is to be expected in a people,
+such as the English, whose food is strong and hearty, than in the
+half-starved commonalty of other countries."--Sir W. Temple.
+
+Let him be debarred from rich soups and from high-seasoned dishes,
+which only disorder the stomach and inflame the blood. It is a mistake
+to give a boy or a girl broth or soup, in lieu of meat for dinner; the
+stomach takes such slops in a discontented way, and is not at all
+satisfied. It may be well, occasionally, to give a youth with his
+dinner, _in addition to his meat_, either good soup or good broth not
+highly seasoned, made of good _meat_ stock. But after all that can be
+said on the subject, a plain joint of meat, either roast or boiled, is
+far superior for health and strength than either soup or broth, let it
+be ever so good or so well made.
+
+He should be desired to take plenty of time over his dinner, so that
+he may be able to chew his food well, and thus that it may be reduced
+to an impalpable mass, and be well mixed with the saliva,--which the
+action of the jaws will cause to be secreted--before it passes into
+the stomach. If such were usually the case, the stomach would not have
+double duty to perform, and a boy would not so frequently lay the
+foundation of indigestion, etc., which may embitter, and even make
+miserable, his after-life. Meat, plain pudding, vegetables, bread, and
+hunger for sauce (which exercise will readily give), is the best, and,
+indeed, should be, as a rule, the only dinner he should have. A youth
+ought not to dine later than two o'clock.
+
+331. _Do you consider broths and soups wholesome_?
+
+The stomach can digest solid much more readily than it can liquid
+food; on which account the dinner, specified above, is far preferable
+to one either of broth or of soup. Fluids in large quantities too
+much dilute the gastric juice, and over-distend the stomach, and hence
+weaken it, and thus produce indigestion: indeed, it might truly be
+said that the stomach often takes broths and soups in a grumbling way!
+
+332. _Do you approve of a boy drinking beer with his dinner_?
+
+There is no objection to a little good, mild table-beer, but _strong_
+ale ought never to be allowed. It is, indeed, questionable whether a
+boy, unless he take unusual exercise, requires anything but water with
+his meals.
+
+333. _Do you approve of a youth, more especially if he be weakly,
+having a glass or two of wine after dinner_?
+
+I disapprove of it: his young blood does not require to be inflamed,
+and his sensitive nerves excited, with wine; and, if he he delicate, I
+should be sorry to endeavour to strengthen him by giving him such an
+inflammable fluid. If he be weakly, he is more predisposed to put on
+either fever or inflammation of some organ; and, being thus
+predisposed, wine would be likely to excite either the one or the
+other of them into action.
+
+ "Wine and youth are fire upon fire."--_Fielding._
+
+A parent ought on no account to allow a boy to touch spirits, however
+much diluted; they are, to the young, still more deadly in their
+effects than wine.
+
+334. _Have you any objection to a youth drinking tea_?
+
+Not at all, provided it be not _green_ tea, that it be not made
+strong, and that it have plenty of milk in it. Green tea is apt to
+make people nervous, and boys and girls ought not even to know what it
+is to be nervous.
+
+335. _Do you object to supper for a youth_?
+
+Meat suppers are highly prejudicial. If he be hungry (and if he have
+been much in the open air, he is almost sure to be), a piece of bread
+and cheese, or of bread and butter, with a draught either of new milk
+or of table beer, will form the best supper he can have. He ought not
+to sup later than eight o'clock.
+
+336. _Do you approve of a boy having anything between meals_?
+
+I do not; let him have four meals a day, and he will require nothing
+in the intervals. It is a mistaken notion that "little and often is
+best," The stomach requires rest as much as, or perhaps more than (for
+it is frequently sadly over-worked) any other part of the body. I do
+not mean that he is to have "_much_ and seldom:" moderation, in
+everything, is to be observed. Give him as much as a growing boy
+requires (_and that is a great deal_), but do not let him eat
+gluttonously, as many indulgent parents encourage their children to
+do. Intemperance in eating cannot be too strongly condemned.
+
+337. _Have you any objection to a boy having pocket money_?
+
+It is a bad practice to allow a boy _much_ pocket money; if he be so
+allowed, he will be loading his stomach with sweets, fruit, and
+pastry, and thus his stomach will become cloyed and disordered, and
+the keen appetite, so characteristic of youth, will be blunted, and
+ill-health will ensue. "In a public education, boys early learn
+intemperance, and if the parents and friends would give them less
+money upon their usual visits, it would be much to their advantage,
+since it may justly be said that a great part of their disorders arise
+from surfeit, '_plus occidit gula quam gladius_' (gluttony kills more
+than the sword)."--_Goldsmith._
+
+How true is the saying that "many people dig their graves with their
+teeth." You may depend upon it that more die from stuffing than from
+starvation! There would be little for doctors to do if there were not
+so much stuffing and imbibing of strong drinks going on in the world!
+
+
+AIR AND EXERCISE.
+
+338. _Have you any remarks to make on fresh air and exercise for boys
+and girls_?
+
+Girls and boys, especially the former, are too much confined within
+doors. It is imperatively necessary, if you wish them to be strong and
+healthy, that they should have plenty of fresh air and exercise;
+remember, I mean fresh air--country air, not the close air of a town.
+By exercise, I mean the free unrestrained use of their limbs. Girls,
+in this respect, are unfortunately worse off than boys, although they
+have similar muscles to develop, similar lungs that require fresh air,
+and similar nerves to be braced and strengthened. It is not considered
+lady-like to be natural--all then: movements must be measured by rule
+and compass!
+
+The reason why so many young girls of the present day are so sallow,
+under-sized, and ill-shaped, is for the want of air and
+exercise. After a time the want of air and exercise, by causing ill
+health, makes them slothful and indolent-it is a trouble for them to
+move from their chairs!
+
+Respiration, digestion, and a proper action of the bowels,
+imperatively demand fresh air and exercise. Ill health will inevitably
+ensue if boys and girls are cooped up a great part of the day in a
+close room. A distinguished writer of the present day says: "The
+children of the very poor are always out and about. In this respect
+they are an example to those careful mammas who keep their children,
+the whole day long, in their chairs, reading, writing, ciphering,
+drawing, practising music lessons, doing crotchet work, or anything,
+in fact, except running about in spite of the sunshine always peeping
+in and inviting them out of doors; and who, in the due course of time,
+are surprised to find their children growing up with incurable heart,
+head, lung, or stomach complaints."
+
+339. _What is the lest exercise for a youth_?
+
+Walking or running: provided either of them be not carried to
+fatigue,--the slightest approach to it should warn a youth to desist
+from carrying it further. Walking exercise is not sufficiently
+insisted upon. A boy or a girl, to be in the enjoyment of good health,
+ought to walk at least ten miles every day. I do not mean ten miles at
+a stretch, but at different times of the day. Some young ladies think
+it an awfully long walk if they manage a couple of miles! How can
+they, with such exercise, expect to be well? How can their muscles be
+developed? How can their nerves be braced? How can their spines be
+strengthened and be straight? How can their blood course merrily
+through their blood-vessels? How can their chests expand and be
+strong? Why, it is impossible! Ill health must be the penalty of such
+indolence, for Nature will not be trifled with! Walking exercise,
+then, is the finest exercise that can be taken, and must be taken, and
+that without stint, if boys and girls are to be strong and well! The
+advantage of our climate is, that there is not a day in the whole year
+that walking exercise cannot be enjoyed. I use the term enjoyed
+advisedly. The roads may, of course, be dirty; but what of that A good
+thick pair of boots will be the remedy.
+
+Do then, let me entreat you, insist upon your--girls and boys taking
+plenty of exercise; let them almost live in the open air! Do not
+coddle them; this is a rough; world of ours, and they must rough it;
+they must be knocked about a great deal, and the knocks will do them,
+good. Poor youths who are, as it were, tied to their mother's apron
+strings, are much to be pitied; they are usually puny and delicate,
+and effeminate, and utterly deficient of self-reliance.
+
+340. _Do you approve of--horse or pony exercise for boys and girls_?
+
+Most certainly I do; but still it ought not to supersede
+walking. Horse or pony exercise is very beneficial, and cannot be too
+strongly recommended. One great advantage for those living in towns,
+which it has over walking, is, that a person may go further into the
+country, and thus be enabled to breathe a purer and more healthy
+atmosphere. Again, it is a much more amusing exercise than walking,
+and this, for the young, is a great consideration indeed.
+
+Horse exercise is for both boys and girls a splendid exercise; it
+improves the figure, it gives grace to the movements, it strengthens
+the chest, it braces the muscles, and gives to the character energy
+and courage. Both boys and girls ought to be early taught to ride.
+There is nothing that gives more pleasure to the young than riding
+either on a pony or on a horse, and for younger children, even on that
+despised, although useful animal, a donkey. Exercise, taken with
+pleasure, is doubly beneficial.
+
+If girls were to ride more on horseback than they now do, we should
+hear less of crooked spines and of round shoulders, of chlorosis and
+of hysteria, and of other numerous diseases of that class, owing,
+generally, to debility and to mismanagement.
+
+Those ladies who "affect the saddle" are usually much healthier,
+stronger, and straighter than those who either never or but seldom
+ride on horseback.
+
+Siding on horseback is both an exercise and an amusement, and is
+peculiarly suitable for the fair sex, more especially as their modes
+of exercise are somewhat limited, ladies being excluded from following
+many games, such as cricket, and foot-ball, both of which are
+practised, with such zest and benefit, by the rougher sex.
+
+341. _Do you approve of carriage exercise_?
+
+There is no muscular exertion in carriage exercise; its principal
+advantage is, that it enables a person to have a change of air, which
+may be purer than the one he is in the habit of breathing. But,
+whether it be so or not, change of air frequently does good, even, if
+the air be not so pure. Carriage exercise, therefore, does only
+partial good, and ought never to supersede either walking or horse
+exercise.
+
+342. _What is the best time of the day, for the taking of exercise_?
+
+In the summer time, early in the morning and before breakfast, as
+"cool morning air exhilarates young blood like wine." If a boy cannot
+take exercise upon an empty stomach, let him have a slice of bread and
+a draught of milk. When he returns home he will be able to do justice
+to his breakfast. In fine weather he cannot take too much exercise,
+provided it be not carried to fatigue.
+
+343. _What is the best time for him to keep quiet_?
+
+He ought not to take exercise immediately after--say for half an hour
+after--a hearty meal, or it will be likely to interfere with his
+digestion.
+
+
+AMUSEMENTS.
+
+344. _What amusements do you recommend for a boy as being most
+beneficial to health_?
+
+Manly games--such as rowing, skating, cricket, quoits, foot-ball,
+rackets, single-stick, bandy, bowls, skittles, and all gymnastic
+exercises. Such games bring the muscles into proper action, and thus
+cause them to be fully developed. They expand and strengthen the
+chest; they cause a due circulation of the blood, making it to bound
+merrily through the blood-vessels, and thus to diffuse health and
+happiness in its course. Another excellent amusement for boys, is the
+brandishing of clubs. They ought to be made in the form of a
+constable's staff, but should be much larger and heavier. The manner
+of handling them is so graphically described by Addison that I cannot
+do better than transcribe it--"When I was some years younger than I am
+at present, I used to employ myself in a more laborious diversion,
+which I learned from a Latin treatise of exercises that is written
+with great erudition; it is there called the [Greek: skiomachia] or
+the fighting with a man's own shadow, and consists in the brandishing
+of two short sticks grasped in each hand, and loaded with plugs of
+lead at either end. This opens the chest, exercises the limbs, and
+gives a man all the pleasure of boxing without the blows. I could wish
+that several learned men would lay out that time which they employ in
+controversies and disputes about nothing, in this method of fighting
+with their own shadows. It might conduce very much to evaporate the
+spleen which makes them uneasy to the public as well as to
+themselves."
+
+Another capital, healthful game is single-stick, which makes a boy "to
+gain an upright and elastic carriage, and to learn the use of his
+limbs."--_H. Kingsley_. Single-stick may be taught by any
+drill-sergeant in the neighbourhood. Do everything to make a boy
+strong. Remember, "the glory of young men is their strength."
+
+If games were more patronised in youth, so many miserable, nervous,
+useless creatures would not abound. Let a boy or girl, then, have
+plenty of play; let half of his or her time be spent in play.
+
+There ought to be a gymnasium established in every town of the
+kingdom. The gymnasium, the cricket ground, and the swimming bath, are
+among our finest establishments, and should be patronised accordingly.
+
+First of all, by an abundance of exercise and fresh air make your boys
+and girls strong, and then, in due time, they will be ready and be
+able to have their minds properly cultivated. Unfortunately, in this
+enlightened age, we commence at the wrong end--we put the cart before
+the horse--we begin by cultivating the mind, and we leave the body to
+be taken care of afterwards; the results are, broken health,
+precocious, stunted, crooked, and deformed youths, and premature
+decay.
+
+One great advantage of gymnastic exercise is, it makes the chest
+expand, it fills the lungs with air, and by doing so strengthens them
+amazingly, and wards off many diseases. The lungs are not sufficiently
+exercised and expanded; boys and girls, girls especially, do not as a
+rule half fill their lungs with air; now air to the lungs is food to
+the lungs, and portions of the lungs have not half their proper food,
+and in consequence suffer.
+
+It is very desirable that every boy and girl should, every day of his
+or her life, and for a quarter of an hour at least each time, go
+through a regular _breathing exercise_--that is to say, should be made
+to stand upright, throw back the shoulders, and the while alternately
+and regularly fully fill and fully empty the lungs of air. If this
+plan were daily followed, the chest and lungs would be wonderfully
+invigorated, and the whole body benefited.
+
+345. _Is playing the flute, blowing the bugle, or any other wind
+instrument, injurious to health_?
+
+Decidedly so: the lungs and the windpipe are brought into unnatural
+action by them. If a boy be of a consumptive habit, this will, of
+course, hold good with tenfold force. If a youth must be musical let
+him be taught singing, as that, provided the lungs be not diseased,
+will be beneficial.
+
+346. _What amusements do you recommend for a girl_?
+
+Archery, skipping, horse exercise, croquet, the hand-swing, the
+fly-pole, skating, and dancing, are among the best. Archery expands
+the chest, throws back the shoulders, thus improving the figure, and
+develops the muscles. Skipping is exceedingly good exercise for a
+girl, every part of the body being put into action by it Horse
+exercise is splendid for a girl; it improves the figure amazingly--it
+is most exhilarating and amusing; moreover, it gives her courage and
+makes her self-reliant Croquet develops and improves the muscles of
+the arms, beautifies the complexion, strengthens the back, and throws
+out the chest. Croquet is for girls and women what cricket is for boys
+and men--a glorious game. Croquet has improved both the health and
+the happiness of womankind more than any game ever before invented.
+Croquet, in the bright sunshine, with the winds of heaven blowing
+about the players, is not like a ball in a stifling hot ball-room,
+with gas-lights poisoning the air. Croquet is a more sensible
+amusement than dancing; it brings the intellect as well as the muscles
+into play. The man who invented croquet has deserved greater glory,
+and has done more good to his species, than many philosophers whose
+names are emblazoned in story. Hand-swing is a capital exercise for a
+girl, the whole of the body is thrown into action by it, and the
+spine, the shoulders, and the shoulder-blades, are especially
+benefited. The fly-pole, too, is good exercise for the whole of the
+muscles of the body, especially of the legs and the arms. Skating is
+for a girl excellent exercise, and is as exhilarating as a glass of
+champagne, but will do her far more good! Skating improves the figure,
+and makes a girl balance and carry herself upright and well; it is a
+most becoming exercise for her, and is much in every way to be
+commended. Moreover, skating gives a girl courage and self-reliance.
+Dancing, followed as a rational amusement, causes a free circulation
+of the blood, and provided it does not induce her to sit up late at
+night, is most beneficial.
+
+347. _If dancing be so beneficial why are balls such fruitful sources
+of coughs, of cold, and consumptions_?
+
+On many accounts. They induce young ladies to sit up late at night;
+they cause them to dress more lightly than they are accustomed to do;
+and thus thinly clad, they leave their homes while the weather is
+perhaps piercingly cold, to plunge into a suffocating, hot ballroom,
+made doubly injurious by the immense number of lights, which consume
+the oxygen intended for the due performance of the healthy functions
+of the lungs. Their partners, the brilliancy of the scene, and the
+music, excite their nerves to undue and thus to unnatural, action, and
+what is the consequence? Fatigue, weakness, hysterics, and extreme
+depression follow. They leave the heated ball-room when the morning
+has far advanced, to breathe the bitterly cold and frequently damp air
+of a winter's night, and what is the result? Hundreds die of
+consumption, who might otherwise have lived. Ought there not, then, to
+be a distinction between a ball at midnight and a dance in the
+evening?
+
+348. _But still, would you have a girl brought up to forego the
+pleasure of a ball_?
+
+If a parent prefer her so-called pleasures to her health, certainly
+not; to such a mother I do not address myself.
+
+349. _Have you any remarks to make on singing, or on reading aloud_?
+
+Before a mother allows her daughter to take lessons in singing, she
+should ascertain that there be no actual disease of the lungs, for if
+there be, it will probably excite it into action; but if no disease
+exist, singing or reading aloud is very conducive to health. Public
+singers are seldom known to die of consumption. Singing expands the
+chest, improves the pronunciation, enriches the voice for
+conversation, strengthens the lungs, and wards off many of their
+diseases.
+
+350. _Do you approve of corporal punishments in schools_?
+
+I do not. I consider it to be decidedly injurious both to body and
+mind. Is it not painful to witness the pale cheeks and the dejected
+looks of those boys who are often flogged? If their tempers are mild,
+their spirits are broken; if their dispositions are at all obstinate,
+they become hardened and wilful, and are made little better than
+brutes. [Footnote: "I would have given him, Captain Fleming, had he
+been my son," quoth old Pearson the elder, "such's good sound drubbing
+as he never would have forgotten--never!"
+
+"Pooh! pooh! my good sir. Don't tell me. Never saw flogging in the
+navy do good. Kept down brutes; never made a man yet."--Dr Norman
+Macleod in _Good Words_, May 1861.] A boy who is often flogged loses
+that noble ingenuousness and fine sensibility so characteristic of
+youth. He looks upon his school as his prison, and his master as his
+gaoler, and as he grows up to manhood, hates and despises the man who
+has flogged him. Corporal punishment is revolting, disgusting, and
+demoralising to the boy; and is degrading to the schoolmaster as a man
+and as a Christian,
+
+If schoolmasters must flog, let them flog their own sons. If they must
+ruin the tempers, the dispositions, and the constitution of boys, they
+have more right to practise upon their own than on other people's
+children! Oh! that parents would raise--and that without any
+uncertain sound--their voices against such abominations, and the
+detestable cane would soon be banished the school-room! "I am
+confident that no boy," says Addison, "who will not be allured by
+letters without blows, will never be brought to anything with them. A
+great or good mind must necessarily be the worse for such indignities;
+and it is a sad change to lose of its virtue for the improvement of
+its knowledge. No one has gone through what they call a great school,
+but must have remembered to have seen children of excellent and
+ingenuous natures (as have afterwards appeared in their manhood). I
+say, no man has passed through this way of education but must have
+seen an ingenuous creature expiring with shame, with pale looks,
+beseeching sorrow, and silent tears, throw up its honest sighs, and
+kneel on its tender knees to an inexorable blockhead, to be forgiven
+the false quantity of a word in making a Latin verse. The child is
+punished, and the next day he commits a like crime, and so a third,
+with the same consequence. I would fain ask any reasonable man whether
+this lad, in the simplicity of his native innocence, full of shame,
+and capable of any impression from that grace of soul, was not fitter
+for any purpose in this life than after that spark of virtue is
+extinguished in him, though he is able to write twenty verses in an
+evening?"
+
+How often is corporal punishment resorted to at school because the
+master is in a passion, and he vents his rage upon the poor
+school-boy's unfortunate back!
+
+Oh! the mistaken notion that flogging will make a bad-behaved boy a
+good boy; it has the contrary effect. "'I dunno how 'tis, sir,' said
+an old farm labourer, in reply to a question from his clergyman
+respecting the bad behaviour of his children, 'I dunno how 'tis; I
+beats 'em till they're black and blue, and when they won't kneel down
+to pray I knocks 'em down, and yet they ain't good.'"--_The Birmingham
+Journal._
+
+In an excellent article in _Temple Bar_(November 1864) on flogging in
+the army, the following sensible remarks occur:--"In nearly a quarter
+of a century's experience with soldiers, the writer has always, and
+without a single exception, found flogging makes a good man bad, and a
+bad man worse." With equal truth it may be said that, without a single
+exception, flogging makes a good boy bad, and a bad boy worse. How
+many men owe their ferocity to the canings they received when
+school-boys! The early floggings hardened and soured them, and blunted
+their sensibility.
+
+Dr Arnold of Rugby, one of the best schoolmasters that England ever
+produced, seldom caned a boy--not more than once or twice during the
+half year; but when he did cane him, he charged for the use of the
+cane each time in the bill, in order that the parents might know how
+many times their son had been punished. At some of our public schools
+now-a-days, a boy is caned as many times in a morning as the worthy
+doctor would have caned him during the whole half year; but then, the
+doctor treated the boys as gentlemen, and trusted much to their
+honour; but now many schoolmasters trust much to fear, little to
+honour, and treat them as brute beasts.
+
+It might be said that the discipline of a school cannot be maintained
+unless the boys be frequently caned, that it must be either caning or
+expulsion. I deny these assertions. Dr Arnold was able to conduct his
+school with honour to himself, and with immense benefit to the rising
+generation, without either frequent canings or expulsions. The humane
+plan, however, requires at first both trouble and patience; and
+trouble some schoolmasters do not like, and patience they do not
+possess; the use of the cane is quick, sharp, decisive, and at the
+time effective.
+
+If caning be ever necessary, which it might occasionally be, for the
+telling of lies for instance, or for gross immorality, let the head
+master himself be the only one to perform the operation, but let him
+not be allowed to delegate it to others. A law ought in all public
+schools to be in force to that effect. High time that something were
+done to abate such disgraceful practices.
+
+Never should a schoolmaster, or any one else, be allowed, _on any
+pretence whatever_, to strike a boy upon his head. Boxing of the ears
+has sometimes caused laceration of the drum of the ear, and consequent
+partial deafness for life. Boxing of the ears injures the brain, and
+therefore the intellect.
+
+It might be said, that I am travelling out of my province in making
+remarks on corporal chastisement in schools? But, with deference, I
+reply that I am strictly in the path of duty. My office is to inform
+you of everything that is detrimental to your children's health and
+happiness; and corporal punishment is assuredly most injurious both to
+their health and happiness. It is the bounden duty of every man, and
+especially of every medical man, to lift up his voice against the
+abominable, disgusting, and degrading system of flogging, and to warn
+parents of the danger and the mischief of sending boys to those
+schools where flogging is, except in rare and flagrant cases,
+permitted.
+
+351. _Have you any observations to make on the selection, of a female
+boarding-school_?
+
+Home education, where it be practicable, is far preferable to sending
+a girl to school; as _at_ home, her health, her morals, and her
+household duties, can be attended to much more effectually than _from_
+home. Moreover, it is a serious injury to a girl, in more ways than
+one, to separate her from her own brothers: they very much lose their
+affection for each other, and mutual companionship (so delightful and
+beneficial between brothers and sisters) is severed.
+
+If home education be not practicable, great care must be taken in
+making choice of a school. Boarding school education requires great
+reformation. Accomplishments, superficial acquirements, and
+brain-work, are the order of the day; health is very little
+studied. You ought, in the education of your daughters, to remember
+that they, in a few years, will be the wives and the mothers of
+England; and, if they have not health and strength, and a proper
+knowledge of household duties to sustain their characters, what
+useless, listless wives and mothers they will make!
+
+Remember, then, the body, and not the mind, ought, in early life, to
+be principally cultivated and strengthened, and that the growing brain
+will not bear, with impunity, much book learning. The brain of a
+school-girl is frequently injured by getting up voluminous questions
+by rote, that are not of the slightest use or benefit to her, or to
+any one else. Instead of this ridiculous system, educate a girl to be
+useful and self-reliant. "From babyhood they are given to understand
+that helplessness is feminine and beautiful; helpfulness, except in
+certain received forms of manifestation, unwomanly and ugly. The boys
+may do a thousand things which are 'not proper for little girls.'"--_A
+Woman's Thoughts about Women_.
+
+From her twelfth to her seventeenth year, is the most important epoch
+of a girl's existence, as regards her future health, and consequently,
+in a great measure, her future happiness; and one, in which, more than
+at any other period of her life, she requires a plentiful supply of
+fresh air, exercise, recreation, a variety of innocent amusements, and
+an abundance of good nourishment--more especially of fresh meat; if
+therefore you have determined on sending your girl to school, you must
+ascertain that the pupils have as much plain wholesome nourishing food
+as they can eat, [Footnote: If a girl have an _abundance_ of good
+nourishment, the schoolmistress must, of coarse, be remunerated for
+the necessary and costly expense; and how can this be done on the
+paltry sum charged at _cheap_ boarding schools? It is utterly
+impossible! And what are we to expect from poor and insufficient
+nourishment to a fast-growing girl, and at the time of life, remember,
+when she requires an _extra_ quantity of good sustaining, supporting
+food? A poor girl, from such treatment, becomes either consumptive or
+broken down in constitution, and from which she never recovers, but
+drags on a miserable existence.] that the school be situated in a
+healthy spot, that it be well-drained, that there be a large
+play-ground attached to it, that the young people are allowed plenty
+of exercise in the open air--indeed, that at least one-third of the
+day is spent there in croquet, skipping, archery, battle-dore and
+shuttlecock, gardening, walking, running, &c.
+
+Take care that the school-rooms are well-ventilated, that they are not
+over-crowded, and that the pupils are allowed chairs to sit upon, and
+not those abominations--forms and stools. If you wish to try the
+effect of them upon yourselves, sit for a couple of hours without
+stirring upon a form or upon a stool, and, take my word for it, you
+will insist that forms and stools be banished for ever from the
+schoolroom.
+
+Assure yourself that the pupils are compelled to rise early in the
+morning, and that they retire early to rest; that each young lady has
+a separate bed [Footnote: A horse-hair mattress should always be
+preferred to a feather-bed. It is not only better for the health, but
+it improves the figure] and that many are not allowed to sleep in the
+same room, and that the apartments are large and well-ventilated. In
+fine, their health and their morals ought to be preferred far above
+all their accomplishments.
+
+352. _They use, in some schools, straight-backed chairs to make a girl
+sit upright, and to give strength to her back: do you approve of
+them_?
+
+Certainly not: the natural and the graceful curve of the back is not
+the curve of a straight-backed chair. Straight-backed chairs are
+instruments of torture, and are more likely to make a girl crooked
+than to make her straight. Sir Astley Cooper ridiculed straight-backed
+chairs, and well he might. It is always well for a mother to try, for
+some considerable time, such ridiculous inventions upon herself before
+she experiments upon her unfortunate daughter. The position is most
+unnatural. I do not approve of a girl lounging and lolling on a sofa;
+but, if she be tired and wants to rest herself, let her, like any
+other reasonable being, sit upon a comfortable ordinary chair.
+
+If you want her to be straight, let her be made strong; and if she is
+to be strong, she must use plenty of exercise and exertion, such as
+drilling, dancing, skipping, archery, croquet, hand-swinging,
+horse-exercise, swimming, bowls, etc. This is the plan to make her
+back straight and her muscles strong. Why should we bring up a girl
+differently from a boy? Muscular exercises, gymnastic performances,
+and health-giving exertion, are unladylike, forsooth!
+
+
+HOUSEHOLD WORK FOR GIRLS.
+
+353. _Do you recommend household work as a means of health for my
+daughter_?
+
+Decidedly: whatever you do, do not make a fine lady of her, or she
+will become puny and delicate, listless, and miserable. A girl, let
+her station be what it might, ought, as soon as she be old enough, to
+make her own bed. There is no better exercise to expand the figure and
+to beautify the shape than is bed-making. Let her make tidy her own
+room. Let her use her hands and her arms. Let her, to a great extent,
+be self-reliant, and let her wait upon herself. There is nothing
+vulgar in her being useful. Let me ask, of what use are many girls of
+the present day? They are utterly useless. Are they happy? No, for
+the want of employment, they are miserable--I mean bodily employment,
+household work. Many girls, now-a-days, unfortunately, are made to
+look upon a pretty face, dress, and accomplishments, as the only
+things needed! And, when they do become women and wives--if ever they
+do become women and wives--what miserable lackadaisical wives, and
+what senseless, useless mothers they will make!
+
+
+CHOICE OF PROFESSION OR TRADE.
+
+354. _What profession or trade would you recommend a boy of a delicate
+or of a consumptive habit to follow_?
+
+If a youth be delicate, it is a common practice among parents either
+to put him to some light in-door trade, or, if they can afford it, to
+one of the learned professions. Such a practice is absurd, and
+fraught with danger. The close confinement of an in-door trade is
+highly prejudicial to health. The hard reading requisite to fit a man
+to fill, for instance, the sacred office, only increases delicacy of
+constitution. The stooping at a desk, in an attorney's office, is most
+trying to the chest. The harass, the anxiety, the disturbed nights,
+the interrupted meals, and the intense study necessary to fit a man
+for the medical profession, is still more dangerous to health than
+either law, divinity, or any in-door trade. "Sir Walter Scott says of
+the country surgeon, that he is worse fed and harder wrought than any
+one else in the parish, except it be his fiorse."--_Brown's Horoe
+Subsecivoe._
+
+A modern writer, speaking of the life of a medical man, observes,
+"There is no career which so rapidly wears away the powers of life,
+because there is no other which requires a greater activity of mind
+and body. He has to bear the changes of weather, continued fatigue,
+irregularity in his meals, and broken rest; to live in the midst of
+miasma and contagion. If in the country, he has to traverse
+considerable distances on horseback, exposed to wind and storm; to
+brave all dangers to go to the relief of suffering humanity. A fearful
+truth for medical men has been established by the table of mortality
+of Dr. Caspar, published in the _British Review_. Of 1000 members of
+the medical profession, 600 died before their sixty-second year;
+whilst of persons leading a quiet life--such as agriculturists or
+theologians--the mortality is only 347. If we take 100 individuals of
+each of these classes, 43 theologians, 40 agriculturists, 35 clerks,
+32 soldiers, will reach their seventieth year; of 100 professors of
+the healing art, 24 only will reach that age. They are the sign-posts
+to health; they can show the road to old age, but rarely tread it
+themselves."
+
+If a boy, therefore, be of a delicate or of a consumptive habit, an
+out-door calling should be advised, such as that of a farmer, of a
+tanner, or a land-surveyor; but, if he be of an inferior station of
+society, the trade of a butcher may be recommended. Tanners and
+butchers are seldom known to die of consumption.
+
+I cannot refrain from reprobating the too common practice among
+parents of bringing up their boys to the professions. The anxieties
+and the heartaches which they undergo if they do not succeed (and how
+can many of them succeed when there is such a superabundance of
+candidates?) materially injure their health. "I very much wonder,"
+says Addison, "at the humour of parents, who will not rather choose to
+place their sons in a way of life where an honest industry cannot but
+thrive, than in stations where the greatest probity, learning, and
+good sense, may miscarry. How many men are country curates, that might
+have made themselves aldermen of London by a right improvement of a
+smaller sum of money than what is usually laid out upon a learned
+education? A sober, frugal person, of slender parts and a slow
+apprehension, might have thrived in trade, though he starves upon
+physic; as a man would be well enough pleased to buy silks of one whom
+he could not venture to feel his pulse. Vagellius is careful,
+studious, and obliging, but withal a little thick-skulled; he has not
+a single client, but might have had abundance of customers. The
+misfortune is that parents take a liking to a particular profession,
+and therefore desire their sons may be of it; whereas, in so great an
+affair of life, they should consider the genius and abilities of their
+children more than their own inclinations. It is the great advantage
+of a trading nation, that there are very few in it so dull and heavy
+who may not be placed in stations of life which may give them an
+opportunity of making their fortunes. A well-regulated commerce is
+not, like law, physic, or divinity, to be overstocked with hands; but,
+on the contrary, flourishes by multitudes, and gives employment to all
+its professors. Fleets of merchantmen are so many squadrons of
+floating shops, that vend our wares and manufactures in all the
+markets of the world, and find out chapmen under both the tropics."
+
+355. _Then, do you recommend a delicate youth to be brought up either
+to a profession or to a trade_?
+
+Decidedly; there is nothing so injurious for a delicate boy, or for
+anyone else, as idleness. Work, in moderation, enlivens the spirits,
+braces the nerves, and gives tone to the muscles, and thus strengthens
+the constitution. Of all miserable people, the idle boy, or the idle
+man, is the most miserable! If you be poor, of course you will bring
+him up to some calling; but if you be rich, and your boy be delicate
+(if he be not actually in a consumption), you will, if you are wise,
+still bring him up to some trade or profession. You will, otherwise,
+be making a rod for your own as well as for your son's back. Oh, what
+a blessed thing is work!
+
+356. _Have you any remarks to make on the sleep of boys and girls_?
+
+Sleeping-rooms, are, generally, the smallest in the house, whereas,
+for health's sake, they ought to be the largest If it be impossible to
+have a _large_ bedroom, I should advise a parent to have a dozen or
+twenty holes (each about the size of a florin) bored with a centre-bit
+in the upper part of the chamber door, and the same number of holes in
+the lower part of the door, so as constantly to admit a free current
+of air from the passages. If this cannot readily be done, then let the
+bedroom door be left ajar all night, a door chain being on the door to
+prevent intrusion; and, in the summer time, during the night, let the
+window-sash, to the extent of about two or three inches, be left open.
+
+If there be a dressing-room next to the bedroom, it will be well to
+have the dressing-room window, instead of the bedroom window, open at
+night. The dressing-room door will regulate the quantity of air to be
+admitted into the bedroom, opening it either little or much, as the
+weather might be cold or otherwise.
+
+_Fresh air during deep is indispensable to health._--If a bedroom be
+close, the sleep, instead of being calm and refreshing, is broken and
+disturbed; and the boy, when he awakes in the morning, feels more
+fatigued than when he retired to rest.
+
+If sleep is to be refreshing, the air, then, must be pure, and free
+from carbonic acid gas, which, is constantly being evolved from the
+lungs. If sleep is to be health-giving, the lungs ought to have their
+proper food--oxygen, and not to be cheated by giving them instead a
+poison--carbonic acid gas.
+
+It would be well for each boy to have a separate room to himself, and
+each girl a separate room to herself. If two boys are obliged, from
+the smallness of the house, to sleep in one room, and if two girls,
+from the same cause, are compelled to occupy the same chamber, by all
+means let each one have a _separate_ bed to himself and to herself, as
+it is so much more healthy and expedient for both boy and girl to
+sleep alone.
+
+The roof of the bed should be left open--that is to say, the top of
+the bedstead ought not to be covered with bed furniture, but should be
+open to the ceiling, in order to encourage a free ventilation of
+air. A bed-curtain may be allowed on the side of the bed where there
+are windy currents of air; otherwise bed-curtains and valances ought
+on no account to be allowed. They prevent a free circulation of the
+air. A youth should sleep on a horse-hair mattress. Such mattresses
+greatly improve the figure and strengthen the frame. During the day
+time, provided it does not rain, the windows must be thrown wide open,
+and, directly after he has risen from bed, the clothes ought to be
+thrown entirely back, in order that they may become, before the bed be
+made, well ventilated and purified by the air--
+
+ "Do yon wish to be healthy?--
+ Then keep the home sweet,
+ As soon as you're up
+ Shake each blanket and sheet.
+
+ Leave the beds to get fresh
+ On the close crowded floor
+ Let the wind sweep right through--
+ Open window and door
+
+ The bad air will rush out
+ As the good air comes in,
+ Just as goodness is stronger
+ And better than sin.
+
+ Do this, it's soon done,
+ In the fresh morning air,
+ It will lighten your labour
+ And lessen your care
+
+ You are weary--no wonder,
+ There's weight and there's gloom
+ Hanging heavily round
+ In each over full room.
+
+ Be sure all the trouble
+ Is profit and gain
+ For there's head ache and heart-ache,
+ And fever and pain
+
+ Hovering round, settling down
+ In the closeness and heat
+ Let the wind sweep right through
+ Till the air's fresh and sweet,
+
+ And more cheerful you'll feel
+ Through the toil of the day,
+ More refreshed you'll awake
+ When the night's paved away" [Footnote: _Household Verses on
+ Health and Happiness_ London. Jarrold and Sons. Every mother
+ should read these _Verses_.]
+
+Plants and flowers ought not to be allowed to remain in a chamber at
+night. Experiments have proved that plants and flowers take up, in
+the day-time, carbonic acid gas (the refuse of respiration), and give
+off oxygen (a gas so necessary and beneficial to health), but give
+out, in the night season, a poisonous exhalation.
+
+Early rising cannot be too strongly insisted upon; nothing is more
+conducive to health and thus to long life. A youth is frequently
+allowed to spend the early part of the morning in bed, breathing the
+impure atmosphere of a bedroom, when he should be up and about,
+inhaling the balmy and health-giving breezes of the morning:--
+
+ "Rise with the lark, and with the lark to bed: The breath of night's
+ destructive to the hue Of ev'ry flower that blows. Go to the field,
+ And ask the humble daisy why it sleeps Soon as the sun departs? Why
+ close the eyes Of blossoms infinite long ere the moon Her oriental
+ veil puts off? Think why, Nor let the sweetest blossom Nature
+ boasts Be thus exposed to night's unkindly damp. Well may it droop,
+ and all its freshness lose, Compell'd to taste the rank and
+ pois'nous steam Of midnight theatre and morning ball Gire to repose
+ the solemn hour she claims; And from the forehead of the morning
+ steal The sweet occasion. Oh! there is a charm Which morning has,
+ that gives the brow of age, a smack of youth, and makes the lip of
+ youth Shed perfume exquisite. Expect it not Ye who till noon upon a
+ down-bed lie, Indulging feverish sleep."--_Hurdis_.
+
+If early rising be commenced in childhood it becomes a habit, and will
+then probably be continued through life. A boy ought on no account to
+be roused from his sleep; but, as soon as he be awake in the morning,
+he should be encouraged to rise. Dozing--that state between sleeping
+and waking--is injurious; it enervates both body and mind, and is as
+detrimental to health as dram drinking! But if he rise early he must
+go to bed betimes; it is a bad practice to keep him up until the
+family retire to rest. He ought, winter and summer, to seek his pillow
+by nine o'clock, and should rise as soon as he awake in the morning.
+
+Let me urge upon a parent the great importance of _not_ allowing the
+chimney of any bedroom, or of any room in the house, to be stopped, as
+many are in the habit of doing to prevent, as _they_ call it, a
+draught, but to prevent, as _I_ should call it, health.
+
+357. _How many hours of deep ought a boy to have_?
+
+This, of course, will depend upon the exercise he takes: but, on an
+average, he should have every night at least eight hours. It is a
+mistaken notion that a boy does _better_ with _little_ sleep. Infants,
+children, and youths require more than those who are further advanced
+in years; hence old people can frequently do with little sleep. This
+may in a measure be accounted for from the quantity of exercise the
+young take. Another reason may be, the young have neither racking
+pain, nor hidden sorrow, nor carking care, to keep them awake; while,
+on the contrary, the old have frequently, the one, the other, or
+all:--
+
+ "Care keeps his watch on every old man's eye,
+ And where care lodges, sleep will never lie."--_Shakspeare_.
+
+
+ON THE TEETH AND THE GUMS.
+
+358. _What are the beet means of keeping the teeth and the gums in a
+healthy state_?
+
+I would recommend the teeth and the gums to be well brushed with warm
+salt and water, in the proportion of one large tea-spoonful of, salt
+to a tumbler of water. I was induced to try the above plan by the
+recommendation of an American writer--_Todd_. The salt and water
+should be used _every night_.
+
+The following is an excellent tooth-powder:--
+
+ Take of--Finely-powder Peruvian Bark;
+ '' Prepared Coral;
+ '' Prepared Chalk;
+ '' Myrrh, of each half an ounce
+ '' Orris root, a quarter of an ounce:
+
+Mix them well together in a mortar, and preserve the powder in a wide
+mouthed stoppered bottle.
+
+The teeth ought to be well brushed with the above tooth-powder every
+morning.
+
+If the teeth be much decayed, and if, in consequence, the breath be
+offensive, two ounces of finely-powdered charcoal well mixed with the
+above ingredients will be found a valuable addition. Some persons
+clean their teeth every morning with soap; if soap be used it ought to
+be Castile soap; and if the teeth be not white and clean, Castile soap
+is an excellent cleanser of the teeth, and may be used in lieu of the
+tooth powder as before recommended.
+
+There are few persons who brush their teeth properly. I will tell you
+the right way. First of all procure a tooth brush of the best make,
+and of rather hard bristles, to enable it to penetrate into all the
+nooks and corners of the teeth; then, having put a small quantity of
+warm water into your mouth, letting the principal of it escape into
+the basin, dip your brush in warm water, and if you are about using
+Castile soap, rub the brush on a cake of the soap, and then well brush
+your teeth, first upwards and then downwards, then from side to
+side--from right to left, and from left to right--then the backs of
+the teeth, then apply the brush to the tops of the crowns of the teeth
+both of the upper and of the lower jaw,--so that _every_ part of each
+tooth, including the gums, may in turn be well cleansed and be well
+brushed. Be not afraid of using the brush; a good brushing and
+dressing will do the teeth and the gums an immensity of good; it will
+make the breath sweet, and will preserve the teeth sound and
+good. After using the brush the mouth must, of course, be well rinsed
+out with warm water.
+
+The finest get of teeth I ever saw m my life belonged to a middle-aged
+gentleman; the teeth had neither spot nor blemish, they were like
+beautiful pearls. He never had toothache in his life, and did not know
+what toothache meant! He brushed his teeth, every morning, with soap
+and water, in the manner I have previously recommended. I can only say
+to you--go and do likewise!
+
+Camphor ought never to be used as an ingredient of tooth-powder, it
+makes the teeth brittle. Camphor certainly has the effect of making
+the teeth, for a time, look very white; but it is an evanescent
+beauty.
+
+Tartar is apt to accumulate between and around the teeth; it is better
+in such a case not to remove it by sealing instruments, but to adopt
+the plan recommended by Dr Richardson, namely, to well brush the teeth
+with pure vinegar and water.
+
+
+PREVENTION OF DISEASE, ETC
+
+359. _If a boy or a girl show great precocity of intellect, is any
+organ likely to become affected_?
+
+A greater quantity of arterial blood is sent to the brain of those who
+are prematurely talented, and hence it becomes more than ordinarily
+developed. Such advantages are not unmixed with danger; this same
+arterial blood may exite and feed inflammation, and either
+convulsions, or water on the brain, or insanity, or, at last, idiocy
+may follow. How proud a mother is in having a precocious child! How
+little is she aware that precocity is frequently an indication of
+disease!
+
+360. _How can danger in such a case be warded off_?
+
+It behoves a parent, if her son be precocious, to restrain him--to
+send him to a quiet country place, free from the excitement of the
+town; and when he is sent to school, to give directions to the master
+that he is not on any account to tax his intellect (for a master is
+apt, if he have a clever boy, to urge him forward); and to keep him
+from those institutions where a spirit of rivalry is maintained, and
+where the brain is thus kept in a state of constant excitement. Medals
+and prizes are well enough for those who have moderate abilities, but
+dangerous, indeed, to those who have brilliant ones.
+
+An over-worked precocious brain is apt to cause the death of the
+owner; and if it does not do so, it in too many instances injures the
+brain irreparably, and the possessor of such an organ, from being one
+of the most intellectual of children becomes one of the most
+commonplace of men.
+
+Let me urge you, if you have a precocious child, to give, and that
+before it be too late, the subject in question your best
+consideration.
+
+361. _Are precocious boys in their general health usually strong or
+delicate_?
+
+Delicate: nature seems to have given a delicate body to compensate for
+the advantages of a talented mind. A precocious youth is predisposed
+to consumption, more so than to any other disease. The hard study
+which he frequently undergoes excites the disease into action. It is
+not desirable, therefore, to have a precocious child. A writer in
+"Eraser's Magazine" speaks very much to the purpose when he says,
+"Give us intellectual beef rather than intellectual veal."
+
+362. _What Habit of body is most predisposed to scrofula_?
+
+He or she who has a moist, cold, fair, delicate and almost transparent
+skin, large prominent blue eyes, protuberant forehead, light-brown or
+auburn hair, rosy cheeks, pouting lips, milk-white teeth, long neck,
+high shoulders, small, flat, and contracted chest, tumid bowels, large
+joints, thin limbs, and flabby muscles, is the person, most
+predisposed to scrofula. The disease is not entirely confined to the
+above; sometimes she or he who has black hair, dark eyes and
+complexion, is subject to it, but yet, far less frequently than the
+former. It is a remarkable fact that the most talented are the most
+prone to scrofula, and being thus clever their intellects are too
+often cultivated at the expense of their health. In infancy and
+childhood, either water on the brain or mesenteric disease; in youth,
+pulmonary consumption is frequently their doom: they are like shining
+meteors; their life is short, but brilliant.
+
+363. _How may scrofula be warded off_?
+
+Strict attention to the roles of health is the means to prevent
+scrofula. Books, unless as an amusement, ought to be discarded. The
+patient must almost live in the open air, and his residence should be
+a healthy country place, where the air is dry and bracing; if it be at
+a farm-house, in a salubrious neighbourhood, so much the better. In
+selecting a house for a patient predisposed to scrofula, _good pure
+water should be an important requisite;_ indeed for every one who
+values his health. Early rising in such a case is most beneficial.
+Wine, spirits, and all fermented liquors ought to be avoided.
+Beef-steaks and mutton-chops in abundance, and plenty of milk and of
+farinaceous food--such as rice, sago, arrowroot, &c., should be his
+diet.
+
+Scrofula, if the above rules be strictly and perseveringly followed,
+may be warded off; but there must be no half measures, no trying to
+serve two masters--to cultivate at the same time the health and the
+intellect. The brain, until the body becomes strong, must _not_ be
+taxed. "You may prevent scrofula by care, but that some children are
+originally predisposed to the disease there cannot be the least doubt,
+and in such cases the education and the habits of youth should be so
+directed as to ward off a complaint, the effects of which are so
+frequently fatal."--_Sir Astley Cooper on Scrofula_.
+
+364. _But suppose the disease to be already formed, what must then be
+done_?
+
+The plan recommended above must still be pursued, not by fits and
+starts, but steadily and continuously, for it is a complaint that
+requires a vast deal of patience and great perseverance. Warm and cold
+sea-bathing in such a case are generally most beneficial. In a patient
+with confirmed scrofula it will of course be necessary to consult a
+skilful and experienced doctor.
+
+But do not allow without a second opinion any plan to be adopted that
+will weaken the system, which is already too much depressed. No,
+rather build up the body by good nourishing diet (as previously
+recommended), by cod-liver oil, by a dry bracing atmosphere, such as,
+either Brighton, or Ramsgate, or Llandudno; or if the lungs be
+delicate, by a more sheltered coast, such as, either St Leonards or
+Torquay.
+
+Let no active purging, no-mercurials, no violent, desperate remedies
+be allowed. If the patient cannot be cured _without_ them, I am
+positive that he will not be cured _with_ them.
+
+But do not despair; many scrofulous patients are cured by time and by
+judicious treatment But if desperate remedies are to be used, the poor
+patient had better by jar be left to Nature: "Let me fall now into the
+hand of the Lord; for very great are his mercies; but let me not fall
+into the hand of man."--_Chronicles_.
+
+365. _Have you any remarks to make on a girl stooping_?
+
+A girl ought never to be allowed to stoop: stooping spoils the figure,
+weakens the chest, and interferes with the digestion. If she cannot
+help stooping, you may depend upon it that she is in bad health, and
+that a medical man ought to be consulted. As soon as her health is
+improved the dancing-master should be put in requisition, and
+calisthenic and gymnastic exercises should be resorted to. Horse
+exercise and swimming in such a case are very beneficial The girl
+should live well, on good nourishing diet, and not be too closely
+confined either to the house or to her lessons. She ought during the
+night to lie on a horsehair mattress, and during the day, for two or
+three hours, flat on, her back on a reclining board. Stooping, if
+neglected, is very likely to lead to consumption.
+
+366. _If a boy be round-shouldered and slouching in his gait, what
+ought to be done_?
+
+Let him be drilled; there is nothing more likely to benefit him than
+drilling. You never see a soldier round-shouldered nor slouching in
+his gait He walks every inch like a man. Look at the difference in
+appearance between a country bumpkin and a soldier! It is the drilling
+that makes the difference: "Oh, for a drill-sergeant to teach them to
+stand upright, and to turn out their toes, and to get rid of that
+slouching, hulking gait, which gives such a look of clumsiness and
+stupidity!" [Footnote: A. K, H. B., _Fraser's Magazine_, October
+1861.]
+
+367. _My daughter has grown out of shape, she has grown on one ride,
+her spine is not straight, and her ribs bulge out more on the one side
+than on the other; what is the cause, and can anything be done to
+remedy the deformity_?
+
+The causes of this lateral curvature of the spine, and consequent
+bulging out of the ribs that you have just now described, arise either
+from delicacy of constitution, from the want of proper exercise, from
+too much learning, or from too little play, or from not sufficient or
+proper nourishment for a rapidly-growing body. I am happy to say that
+such a case, by judicious treatment, can generally be cured--namely,
+by gymnastic exercises, such as the hand-swing, the fly-pole, the
+patent parlour gymnasium, the chest-expander, the skipping rope, the
+swimming bath; all sorts of out-door games, such as croquet, archery,
+&c.; by plenty of good nourishment, by making her a child of Nature,
+by letting her almost live in the open air, and by throwing books to
+the winds. But let me strongly urge you not, unless ordered by an
+experienced surgeon, to allow any mechanical restraints or appliances
+to be used. If she be made strong, the muscles themselves will pull
+both the spine and the ribs into their proper places, more especially
+if judicious games and exercises (as I have before advised), and other
+treatment of a strengthening and bracing nature, which a medical man
+will indicate to you, be enjoined. Mechanical appliances will, if not
+judiciously applied, and in a proper case, waste away the muscles, and
+will thus increase the mischief; if they cause the ribs to be pushed
+in in one place, they will bulge them out in another, until, instead
+of being one, there will be a series of deformities. No, the giving of
+strength and the judicious exercising of the muscles are, for a
+lateral curvature of the spine and the consequent bulging out of one
+side of the ribs, the proper remedies, and, in the majority of cases,
+are most effectual, and quite sufficient for the purpose.
+
+I think it well to strongly impress upon a mother's mind the great
+importance of early treatment. If the above advice be followed, every
+curvature in the beginning might be cured. Cases of several years'
+standing might, with judicious treatment, be wonderfully relieved.
+
+Bear in mind, then, that if the girl is to be made straight, she is
+first of all to be made strong; the latter, together with the proper
+exercises of the muscles, will lead to the former; and the _earlier_ a
+medical man takes it in hand, the more rapid, the more certain, and
+the more effectual will be the cure.
+
+An inveterate, long-continued, and neglected case of curvature of the
+spine and bulging out of the ribs on one side might require mechanical
+appliances, but such a case can only be decided on by an experienced
+surgeon, who ought always, _in the first place_, to be consulted.
+
+368. _Is a slight spitting of blood to be looked upon as a dangerous
+symptom_?
+
+Spitting of blood is always to be looked upon with suspicion; even
+when a youth appears, in other respects, to be in good health, it is
+frequently the forerunner of consumption. It might be said that, by
+mentioning the fact, I am unnecessarily alarming a parent, but it
+would be a false kindness if I did not do so:--
+
+ "I most be cruel, only to be kind."--_Shakspeare_.
+
+Let me ask, When is consumption to be cured? Is it at the onset, or is
+it when it is confirmed? If a mother had been more generally aware
+that spitting of blood was frequently the forerunner of consumption,
+she would, in the management of her offspring, have taken greater
+precautions; she would have, made everything give way to the
+preservation of their health; and, in many instances, she would have
+been amply repaid by having the lives of her children spared to
+her. We frequently hear of patients, in _confirmed_ consumption, being
+sent to Mentone, to Madeira, and to other foreign parts. Can anything
+be more cruel or absurd? If there be any disease that requires the
+comforts of home--and truly may an Englishman's dwelling be called
+_home!_--and good nursing more than another, it is consumption.
+
+369. _What it the death-rate of consumption in England? At what age
+does consumption most frequently occur? Are girls more liable to it
+than boys? What are the symptoms of this disease_?
+
+It is asserted, on good authority, that there always are in England,
+78,000 cases of consumption, and that the yearly death-rate of this
+fell disease alone is 39,000! Consumption more frequently shows
+itself between the ages of fourteen and twenty-one: after then, the
+liability to the disease gradually diminishes, until, at the age of
+forty-five, it becomes comparatively rare. Boys are more prone to this
+complaint than girls. Some of the most important symptoms of pulmonary
+consumption are indicated by the stethoscope; but, as I am addressing
+a mother, it would, of course, be quite out of place to treat of such
+signs in Conversations of this kind. The symptoms it might be well for
+a parent to recognise, in order that she may seek aid early, I will
+presently describe. It is perfectly hopeless to expect to cure
+consumption unless advice be sought at the _onset_, as the only
+effectual good in this disease is to be done _at first_.
+
+It might be well to state that consumption creeps on insidiously. One
+of the earliest symptoms of this dreadful scourge is a slight, dry,
+short cough, attended with tickling and irritation at the top of the
+throat. This cough generally occurs in the morning; but, after some
+time, comes on at night, and gradually throughout the day and the
+night. Frequently during the early stage of the disease _a slight
+spitting of blood occurs_. Now, this is a most dangerous symptom;
+indeed, I may go so far as to say that, as a rule, it is almost a sure
+sign that the patient is in the _first_ stage of a consumption.
+
+There is usually hoarseness, not constant, but coming on if the
+patient be tired, or towards the evening; there is also a sense of
+lassitude and depression, shortness of breath, a feeling of being
+quickly wearied--more especially on the slightest exertion. The hair
+of a consumptive person usually falls off, and what little remains is
+weak and poor; the joints of the fingers become enlarged, or clubbed
+as it is sometimes called; the patient loses flesh, and, after some
+time, night sweats make their appearance: then we may know that hectic
+fever has commenced.
+
+Hectic begins with chilliness, which is soon followed by flushings of
+the face, and by burning heat of the hands and the feet, especially of
+the palms and the soles. This is soon succeeded by perspirations. The
+patient has generally, during the day, two decided paroxysms of hectic
+fever--the one at noon, which lasts above five hours; the other in the
+evening, which is more severe, and ends in violent perspirations,
+which perspirations continue the whole night through. He may, during
+the day, have several attacks of hectic flushes of the face,
+especially after eating; at one moment he complains of being too hot,
+and rushes to the cool air; the next moment he is too cold, and almost
+scorches himself by sitting too near the fire. Whenever the
+circumscribed hectic flush is on the cheek, it looks as though the
+cheek had been painted with vermilion, then is the time when the palms
+of the hands are burning hot. Crabbe, in the following lines,
+graphically describes the hectic flush:--
+
+ "When his thin cheek assumed a deadly hue,
+ And all the rose to one small spot withdrew:
+ They call'd it hectic; 'twas a fiery flush,
+ More fix'd and deeper than the maiden blush."
+
+The expectoration at first is merely mucus, but after a time it
+assumes a characteristic appearance; it has a roundish, flocculent,
+woolly form, each portion of phlegm keeping, as it were, distinct; and
+if the expectoration be stirred in water, it has a milk-like
+appearance. The patient is commonly harassed by frequent bowel
+complaints, which rob him of what little strength he has left. The
+feet and ankles swell. The perspiration, as before remarked, comes on
+in the evening, continues all night--more especially towards morning,
+and while the patient is asleep; during the time he is awake, even at
+night, he seldom sweats much. The thrush generally shows itself
+towards the close of the disease, attacking the tongue, the tonsils,
+and the soft palate, and _is a sure harbinger of approaching
+death_. Emaciation rapidly sets in.
+
+If we consider the immense engines of destruction at work-viz.,
+the-colliquative (melting) sweats, the violent bowel complaints, the
+vital parts that are affected, the harassing cough, the profuse
+expectoration, the hectic fever, the distressing exertion of
+struggling to breathe--we cannot be surprised that "consumption had
+hung out her red flag of no surrender," and that death soon closes the
+scene. In girls, provided they have been previously regular,
+menstruation gradually declines, and then entirely disappears.
+
+370. _What are the causes of consumption_?
+
+The _predisposing_ causes of consumption are the tuberculous habit of
+body, hereditary predisposition, narrow or contracted chest, deformed
+spine, delicacy of constitution, bad and scanty diet, or food
+containing but little nourishment, impure air, close in-door
+confinement in schools, in shops, and in factories, ill-ventilated
+apartments, dissipation, late hours, over-taxing with book-learning
+the growing brain, thus producing debility, want of proper out-door
+exercises and amusements, tight lacing; indeed, anything and
+everything, that either will debilitate the constitution, or will
+interfere with, or will impede, the proper action of the lungs, will
+be the predisposing causes of this fearful and lamentable disease.
+
+An ill, poor, and insufficient diet is the mother of many diseases,
+and especially of consumption: "Whatsoever was the father of a
+disease, an ill diet was the mother."
+
+The most common _exciting_ causes of consumption are slighted colds,
+neglected inflammation of the chest, long continuance of influenza,
+sleeping in damp beds, allowing wet clothes to dry on the body,
+unhealthy employments--such as needle-grinding, pearl button making
+etc.
+
+371. _Supposing a youth to have spitting of blood, what precautions
+would you take to prevent it from ending in consumption_?
+
+Let his health be the first consideration; throw books to the winds;
+if he be at school, take him away; if he be in trade, cancel his
+indentures; if he be in the town, send him to a sheltered healthy spot
+in the country, or to the south coast; as, for instance, either to St
+Leonards-on-Sea, to Torquay, or to the Isle of Wight.
+
+I should be particular in his clothing, taking especial care to keep
+his chest and feet warm. If he did not already wear flannel
+waistcoats, let it be winter or summer, I should recommend him
+immediately to do so: if it be winter, I should advise him also to
+take to _flannel_ drawers. The feet must be carefully attended to;
+they ought to be kept both warm and dry, the slightest dampness of
+either shoes or stockings should cause them to be immediately
+changed. If a boy, he ought to wear double-breasted waistcoats; if a
+girl, high dresses.
+
+The diet must be nutritious and generous; he should be encouraged to
+eat plentifully of beef and mutton. There is nothing better for
+breakfast, where it agree, than milk; indeed, it may be frequently
+made to agree by previously boiling it. Good home-brewed ale or sound
+porter ought, in moderation, to be taken. Wine and spirits must on no
+account be allowed. I caution parents in this particular, as many have
+an idea that wine, in such cases, is strengthening, and that _rum_ and
+milk is a good thing either to cure or to prevent a cough!
+
+If it be summer, let him be much in the open air, avoiding the evening
+and the night air. If it be winter, he should, unless the weather be
+mild for the season, keep within doors. Particular attention ought to
+be paid to the point the wind is in, as he should not be allowed to go
+out if it is either in the north, in the east, or in the north-east;
+the latter is more especially dangerous. If it be spring, and the
+weather be favourable, or summer or autumn, change of air, more
+especially to the south-coast--to the Isle of Wight, for instance--
+would be desirable; indeed, in a case of spitting of blood, I know of
+no remedy so likely to ward off that formidable, and, generally,
+intractable complaint--consumption--as change of air. The beginning of
+the autumn is, of course, the beat season for visiting the coast. It
+would be advisable, at the commencement of October, to send him either
+to Italy, to the south of France--to Mentone [Footnote: See _Winter
+and Spring on the Shores of the Mediterranean_, By J. Henry Bennet,
+M.D., London: Churchill.]--or to the mild parts of England--more
+especially either to Hastings, or to Torquay, or to the Isle of
+Wight--to winter. But remember, if he be actually in a _confirmed_
+consumption, I would not on any account whatever let him leave his
+home; as then the comforts of home will far, very far, out-weigh any
+benefit of change of air.
+
+372. _Suppose a youth to be much predisposed to a sore throat, what
+precautions ought he to take to ward off future attacks_?
+
+He must use every morning thorough ablution of the body, beginning
+cautiously; that is to say, commencing with the neck one morning, then
+by degrees, morning after morning, sponging a larger surface, until
+the whole of the body be sponged. The chill at first must be taken off
+the water; gradually the temperature ought to be lowered until the
+water be quite cold, taking care to rub the body thoroughly dry with a
+coarse towel--a Turkish rubber being the best for the purpose.
+
+He ought to bathe his throat externally every night and morning with
+luke-warm salt and water, the temperature of which must be gradually
+reduced until at length no warm water be added. He should gargle his
+throat either with barm, vinegar, and sage tea, [Footnote: A
+wine-glassful of barm, a wine-glassful of vinegar, and the remainder
+sage tea, to make a half-pint bottle of gargle.] or with salt and
+water--two tea-spoonfuls of table salt dissolved in a tumbler of
+water. He ought to harden himself by taking plenty of exercise in the
+open air. He must, as much as possible, avoid either sitting or
+standing in a draught, if he be in one, he should face it. He ought to
+keep his feet warm and dry. He should take as little aperient
+medicine as possible, avoiding especially both calomel and blue
+pill. As he grows up to manhood he ought to allow his beard to grow,
+as such would be a natural covering for his throat. I have known great
+benefit to arise from this simple plan. The fashion is now to wear the
+beard, not to use the razor at all, and a sensible fashion I consider
+it to be. The finest respirator in the world is the beard. The beard
+is not only good for sore throats, but for weak chests. The wearing of
+the beard is a splendid innovation, it saves no end of trouble, is
+very beneficial to health, and is a great improvement "to the human
+face divine."
+
+373. _Have you any remarks to make on the almost universal habit of
+boys and of very young men smoking_?
+
+I am not now called upon to give an opinion of the effects of tobacco
+smoking on the middle-aged and on the aged. I am addressing a mother
+as to the desirability of her sons, when boys, being allowed to smoke.
+I consider tobacco smoking one of the most injurious and deadly habits
+a boy or young man can indulge in. It contracts the chest and weakens
+the lungs, thus predisposing to consumption. It impairs the stomach,
+thus producing indigestion. It debilitates the brain and nervous
+system, thus inducing epileptic fits and nervous depression. It stunts
+the growth, and is one cause of the present race of pigmies. It makes
+the young lazy and disinclined for work. It is one of the greatest
+curses of the present day. The following cases prove, more than any
+argument can prove, the dangerous and deplorable effects of a boy
+smoking. I copy the first case from _Public Opinion_. "The _France_
+mentions the following fact as a proof of the evil consequences of
+smoking for boys--'A pupil in one of the colleges, only twelve years
+of age, was some tune since seized with epileptic fits, which became
+worse and worse in spite of all the remedies employed. At last it was
+discovered that the lad had been for two years past secretly indulging
+in the weed. Effectual means were adopted to prevent his obtaining
+tobacco, and he soon recovered.'"
+
+The other case occurred about fifteen years ago in my own
+practice. The patient was a youth of nineteen. He was an inveterate
+smoker. From being a bright intelligent lad, he was becoming idiotic,
+and epileptic fits were supervening. I painted to him, in vivid
+colours, the horrors of his case, and assured him that if he still
+persisted in his bad practices, he would soon become a drivelling
+idiot! I at length, after some trouble and contention, prevailed upon
+him to desist from smoking altogether. He rapidly lost all epileptic
+symptoms, his face soon resumed its wonted intelligence, and his mind
+asserted its former power. He remains well to this day, and is now a
+married man with a family.
+
+374. _What are the best methods to restrain a violent bleeding from
+the nose_?
+
+Do not, unless it be violent, interfere with a bleeding from the
+nose. A bleeding from the nose is frequently an effort of Nature to
+relieve itself, and therefore, unless it be likely to weaken the
+patient, ought not to be restrained. If it be necessary to restrain
+the bleeding, press firmly, for a few minutes, the nose between the
+finger and the thumb; this alone will often stop the bleeding; if it
+should not, then try what bathing the nose and the forehead and the
+nape of the neck with water quite cold from the pump, will do. If that
+does not succeed, try the old-fashioned remedy of putting a cold large
+door-key down the back. If these plans fail, try the effects either of
+powdered alum or of powdered matico, used after the fashion of
+snuff--a pinch or two either of the one or of the other, or of both,
+should be sniffed up the bleeding nostril. If these should not answer
+the purpose, although they almost invariably will, apply a large lump
+of ice to the nape of the neck, and put a small piece of ice into the
+patient's mouth for him to suck.
+
+If these methods do not succeed, plunge the hand and the fore-arm into
+cold water, keep them in for a few minutes, then take them out, and
+either hold, or let be held up, the arms and the hands high above the
+head: this plan has frequently succeeded when others have failed. Let
+the room he kept cool, throw open the windows, and do not have many in
+the room to crowd around the patient.
+
+Doubtless Dr Richardson's local anaesthetic--the ether spray--playing
+for a few seconds to a minute _on_ the nose and _up_ the bleeding
+nostril, would act most beneficially in a severe case of this kind,
+and would, before resorting to the disagreeable operation of plugging
+the nose, deserve a trial. I respectfully submit this suggestion to my
+medical brethren. The ether--rectified ether--used for the spray ought
+to be perfectly pure, and of the specific gravity of 0.723.
+
+If the above treatment does not soon succeed, send for a medical man,
+as more active means, such as plugging of the nostrils--_which, is not
+done unless in extreme cases_--might be necessary.
+
+But before plugging of the nose is resorted to, it will be well to try
+the effects of a cold solution of alum:--
+
+ Take of--Powdered Alum, one drachm;
+ Water, half a pint:
+
+To make a Lotion.
+
+A little of the lotion should be put into the palm of the hand and
+sniffed up the bleeding nostril; or, if that does not succeed, some of
+the lotion ought, by means of a syringe, to be syringed up the nose.
+
+375. _In case of a young lady fainting, what had better be done_?
+
+Lay her flat upon her back, taking care that the head be as low as, or
+lower than, the body; throw open the-windows, do not crowd around
+her, [Footnote: Shakspeare knew the great importance of not crowding
+around a patient who has fainted. He says--
+
+ "So play the foolish throngs with one that swoons; Come all to help
+ him, and so stop the air By which he should revive."] unloosen her
+ dress as quickly as possible; ascertain if she have been guilty of
+ tight-lacing--for fainting is sometimes produced by that
+ reprehensible practice. Apply smelling salts to her nostrils; if
+ they be not at hand, burn a piece of rag under her nose; dash cold
+ water upon her face; throw open the window; fan her; and do not, as
+ is generally done, crowd round her, and thus prevent a free
+ circulation of air. As soon as she can swallow, give her either a
+ draught of _cold_ water or a glass of wine, or a tea-spoonful of
+ sal-volatile in a wine-glassful of water.
+
+_To prevent fainting for the future._--I would recommend early hours;
+country air and exercise; the stays, if worn at all, to be worn slack;
+attention to diet; avoidance of wine, beer, spirits, excitement, and
+fashionable amusements.
+
+Sometimes the cause of a young lady fainting, is either a disordered
+stomach, or a constipated state of the bowels. If the fainting have
+been caused by _disordered stomach_, it may be necessary to stop the
+supplies, and give the stomach, for a day or two, but little to do; a
+fast will frequently prevent the necessity of giving medicine. Of
+course, if the stomach be _much_ disordered, it will be desirable to
+consult a medical man.
+
+If your daughter's fainting have originated from a _costive state of
+the bowels_ (another frequent cause of fainting), I beg to refer you
+to a subsequent Conversation, in which I will give you a list of
+remedies for the prevention and the treatment of constipation.
+
+A young lady's fainting occasionally arises from debility--from
+downright weakness of the constitution; then the best remedies will
+be, change of air to the coast, good nourishing diet, and the
+following strengthening mixture:
+
+ Take of--Tincture of Perchloride of Iron, two drachms;
+ Tincture of Calumba, six drachms;
+ Distilled Water, seven ounces:
+
+Two table-spoonfuls of this mixture to be taken three times a day.
+
+Or for a change, the following:--
+
+ Take of--Wine of Iron, one ounce and a half
+ Distilled Water, six ounces and a half
+
+To make a Mixture. Two table spoonfuls to be taken three times a day.
+
+Iron medicines ought always to be taken _after_ instead of _before_ a
+meal. The best times of the day for taking either of the above
+mixtures will be eleven o'clock, four o'clock, and seven o'clock.
+
+376. _You had a great objection to a mother administering calomel
+either to an infant or to a child, have you the same objection to a
+boy or a girl taking it when he or she requires an aperient_?
+
+Equally as great. It is my firm belief that the frequent use, or
+rather the abuse, of calomel and of other preparations of mercury, is
+often a source of liver disease and an exciter of scrofula. It is a
+medicine of great value in some diseases, when given by a _judicious_
+medical man, but, at the same time, it is a drag of great danger when
+either given indiscriminately, or when too often prescribed. I will
+grant that in liver diseases it frequently gives temporary relief, but
+when a patient has once commenced the regular use of it, he cannot do
+without it, until, at length, the _functional_ ends in _organic_
+disease of the liver. The use of calomel predisposes to cold, and thus
+frequently brings on either inflammation or consumption. Family
+aperient pills ought never to contain, in any form whatever, a
+particle of mercury.
+
+377. _Will you give me a list of remedies for the prevention and for
+the cure of constipation_?
+
+If you find it necessary to give your son or daughter an aperient, the
+mildest should be selected, for instance, an agreeable and effectual
+one, is an electuary composed of the following ingredients--
+
+ Take of--Beat Alexandria Senna, powdered, one ounce
+ Best figs, two ounces,
+ Best Raisins (stoned), two ounces,
+
+All chopped very fine. The size of a nutmeg or two to be eaten, either
+early in the morning or at bedtime.
+
+Or, one or two tea-spoonfuls of Compound Confection. of Senna
+(lenitive electuary) may occasionally, early in the morning, be
+taken. Or, for a change, a tea-spoonful of Henry's Magnesia, in half a
+tumblerful of warm water. If this should not be sufficiently active,
+a tea-spoonful of Epsom salts should be given with the magnesia. A
+Seidlitz Powder forms another safe and mild aperient, or one or two
+Compound Rhubarb Pills may be given at bed time. The following
+prescription for a pill, where an aperient is absolutely necessary, is
+a mild, gentle, and effective one for the purpose--
+
+ Take of--Extract of Socotrine Aloes, eight grains,
+ Compound Extract of Colocynth, forty-eight grains,
+ Hard Soap, twenty four grains,
+ Treacle, a sufficient quantity
+
+To make twenty four Pills. One or two to be taken at bedtime
+occasionally.
+
+But, after all, the best opening medicines are--cold ablutions every
+morning of the whole body, attention to diet, variety of food,
+bran-bread, grapes, stewed prunes, French plums, Muscatel raisins,
+figs, fruit both cooked and raw--if it be ripe and sound, oatmeal
+porridge, lentil powder, in the form of Du Barry's Arabica Revalenta,
+vegetables of all kinds, especially spinach, exercise in the open air,
+early rising, daily visiting the water-closet at a certain hour--there
+is nothing keeps the bowels open so regularly and well as establishing
+the habit of visiting the water-closet at a certain hour every
+morning, and the other rules of health specified in these
+Conversations. If more attention were paid to these points, poor
+school boys and school girls would not be compelled to swallow such
+nauseous and disgusting messes as they usually do to their aversion
+and injury.
+
+Should these plans not succeed (although in the majority of cases,
+with patience and perseverance, they will) I would advise an enema
+once or twice a week, either simply of warm water, or of one made of
+gruel, table-salt, and olive-oil, in the proportion of two
+table-spoonfuls of salt, two of oil, and a pint of warm gruel, which a
+boy may administer to himself, or a girl to herself, by means of a
+proper enema apparatus.
+
+Hydropathy is oftentimes very serviceable in preventing and in curing
+costiveness; and as it will sometimes prevent the necessity of
+administering medicine, it is both a boon and a blessing. "Hydropathy
+also supplies us with various remedies for constipation. From the
+simple glass of cold water, taken early in the morning, to the various
+douches and sea-baths, a long list of useful appliances might be made
+out, among which we may mention the 'wet compresses' worn for three
+hours over the abdomen [bowels], with a gutta percha covering."
+
+I have here a word or two to say to a mother who is always physicking
+her family. It is an unnatural thing to be constantly dosing either a
+child, or any one else, with medicine. One would suppose that some
+people were only sent into the world to be physicked! If more care
+were paid to the rules of health, very little medicine would be
+required! This is a hold assertion; but I am confident that it is a
+true one. It is a strange admission for a medical man to make, but,
+nevertheless, my convictions compel me to avow it.
+
+378. _What is the reason girls are so subject to costiveness_?
+
+The principal reason why girls suffer more from costiveness than boys,
+is that their habits are more sedentary; as the best opening medicines
+in the world are an abundance of exercise, of muscular exertion, and
+of fresh air. Unfortunately, poor girls in this enlightened age must
+be engaged, sitting all the while, several hours every day at fancy
+work, the piano, and other accomplishments; they, consequently, have
+little time for exercise of any kind. The bowels, as a matter of
+course, become constipated; they are, therefore, dosed with pills,
+with black draughts, with brimstone and treacle--Oh! the abomination!
+--and with medicines of that class, almost _ad infinitum_. What is the
+consequence? Opening medicines, by constant repetition, lose their
+effects, and, therefore, require to be made stronger and still
+stronger, until at length, the strongest will scarcely act at all, and
+the poor unfortunate girl, when she becomes a woman, _if she ever does
+become one_, is spiritless, heavy, doll, and listless, requiring daily
+doses of physic, until she almost lives on medicine!
+
+All this misery and wretchedness proceed from Nature's laws having
+been set at defiance, from _artificial_ means taking the place of
+_natural_ ones--from a mother adopting as her rule and guide fashion
+and folly, rather than reason and common sense. When will a mother
+awake from her folly and stupidity? This is strong language to address
+to a lady, but it is not stronger than the subject demands.
+
+Mothers of England do, let me entreat you, ponder well upon what I
+have said. Do rescue your girls from the bondage of fashion and of
+folly, which is worse than the bondage of the Egyptian task masters,
+for the Israelites did, in making bricks without straw, work m the
+open air--"So the people were scattered abroad throughout all the land
+of Egypt to gather stubble instead of straw," but your girls, many of
+them, at least, have no work, either in the house or in the open
+air--they have no exercise whatever. They are poor, drawling,
+dawdling, miserable nonentities, with muscles, for the want of proper
+exercise, like ribands, and with faces, for the lack of fresh air, as
+white as a sheet of paper. What a host of charming girls are yearly
+sacrificed at the shrine of fashion and of folly.
+
+Another, and a frequent cause of costiveness, is the bad habit of
+disobeying the call of having the bowels opened. The moment there is
+the slightest inclination to relieve the bowels, _instantly_ it ought
+to be attended to, or serious results will follow. Let me urge a
+mother to instil into her daughter's mind the importance of this
+advice.
+
+379. _Young people are subject to pimples on the face, what is the
+remedy_?
+
+These hard red pimples (acne--"the grub pimple") are a common and an
+obstinate affection of the skin, affecting the forehead, the temples,
+the nose, the chin, and the cheeks, occasionally attacking the neck,
+the shoulders, the back, and the chest; and as they more frequently
+affect the young, from the age of 15 to 35, and are disfiguring, they
+cause much annoyance. "These pimples are so well known by most persons
+as scarcely to need description; they are conical, red, and hard;
+after a while, they become white, and yellow at the point, then
+discharge a thick, yellow-coloured matter, mingled with a whitish
+substance, and become covered by a hard brown scab, and lastly,
+disappear very slowly, sometimes very imperfectly, and often leaving
+an ugly scar behind them. To these symptoms are not unfrequently added
+considerable pain, and always much unsightliness. When these little
+cones have the black head of a 'grub' at their point, they constitute
+the variety termed _spotted acne_. These latter often remain
+stationary for months, without increasing or becoming red; but when
+they inflame, they are in nowise different in their course from the
+common kind."--_Wilson on Healthy Skin_.
+
+I find, in these cases, great benefit to be derived from bathing the
+face, night and morning, with strong salt and water--a table-spoonful
+of table-salt to a tea-cupful of water; by paying attention to the
+bowels; by living on plain, wholesome, nourishing food; and by taking
+a great of out-door exercise. Sea-bathing, in these cases, is often
+very beneficial. Grubs and worms have a mortal antipathy to salt.
+
+380. _What is the cause of a Gum-boil_?
+
+A decayed root of a tooth, which causes inflammation and abscess of
+the gum, which abscess breaks, and thus becomes a gum-boil.
+
+381. _What is the treatment of a Gum-boil_?
+
+Foment the outside of the face with a hot camomile and poppy head
+fomentation, [Footnote: Four poppy heads and four ounces of camomile
+blows to be boiled in four pints of water for half an hoar, and then
+to be strained to make the fomentation.] and apply to the gum-boil,
+between the cheek and the gum, a small white bread and milk poultice,
+ [Footnote: Cut a piece of bread, about the size of the little finger--
+without breaking it into crumb--pour boiling hot milk upon it, cover
+it over, and let it stand for five minutes, then apply the soaked
+bread over the gum-boil, letting it rest between the cheek and the
+gum.] which renew frequently.
+
+As soon as the gum-boil has become quiet, _by all means_ have the
+affected tooth extracted, or it might cause disease, and consequently
+serious injury of the jaw; and whenever the patient catches cold there
+will be a renewal of the inflammation, of the abscess, and of the
+gum-boil, and, as a matter of course, renewed pain, trouble, and
+annoyance. Moreover, decayed fangs of teeth often cause the breath to
+be offensive.
+
+382. _What is the best remedy for a Corn_?
+
+The best remedy for a _hard corn_ is to remove it. The usual method of
+cutting, or of paring a corn away, is erroneous. The following is the
+right way--Cut with a _sharp_ pair of pointed scissors around the
+circumference of the corn. Work gradually round and round and towards
+the centre. When you have for some considerable distance well loosened
+the edges, you can either with your fingers or with a pair of forceps
+generally remove the corn bodily, and that without pain and without
+the loss of any blood: this plan of treating a corn I can recommend to
+you as being most effectual.
+
+If the corn be properly and wholly removed it will leave a small
+cavity or round hole in the centre, where the blood-vessels and the
+nerve of the corn--vulgarly called the root--really were, and which,
+in point of fact, constituted the very existence or the essence of the
+corn. Moreover, if the corn be entirely removed, you will, without
+giving yourself the slightest pain, be able to squeeze the part
+affected between your finger and thumb.
+
+_Hard corns_ on the sole of the foot and on the sides of the foot are
+best treated by filing--by filing them with a sharp cutting file (flat
+on one side and convex on the other) neither too coarse nor too fine
+in the cutting. The corn ought, once every day, to be filed, and
+should daily be continued until you experience a slight pain, which
+tells you that the end of the corn is approaching. Many cases of _hard
+corn_ that have resisted every other plan of treatment, have been
+_entirely_ cured by means of the file. One great advantage of the file
+is, it cannot possibly do any harm, and may be used by a timid
+person--by one who would not readily submit to any cutting instrument
+being applied to the corn.
+
+The file, if properly used, is an effectual remedy for a _hard_ corn
+on the sole of the foot. I myself have seen the value of it in several
+cases, particularly in one case, that of an old gentleman of ninety
+five, who had had a corn on the sole of his foot for upwards of half a
+century, and which had resisted numerous, indeed almost innumerable
+remedies, at length I recommended the file, and after a few
+applications entire relief was obtained, and the corn was completely
+eradicated.
+
+The corns between the toes are called _soft corns_. A _soft corn_ is
+quickly removed by the strong Acetic Acid--Acid. Acetic Fort--which
+ought to be applied to the corn every night by means of a camel's hair
+brush. The toes should be kept asunder for a few minutes, in order
+that the acid may soak in, then apply between the toes a small piece
+of cotton wool.
+
+Galbanum Plaster spread either on wash leather, or on what is better,
+on an old white kid glove, has been, in one of our medical journals,
+strongly recommended as a corn plaster, it certainly is an admirable
+one, and when the corn is between the toes is sometimes most
+comfortable--affording immense relief.
+
+Corns are like the little worries of life--very teazing and
+troublesome a good remedy for a corn--which the Galbanum Plaster
+undoubtedly is-is therefore worth knowing.
+
+_Hard corns_, then, on the sole and on the side of the foot are best
+treated by the file, _hard corns_ on the toes by the scissors, and
+_soft corns_ between the toes either by the strong Acetic Acid or by
+the Galbanum Plaster.
+
+In the generality of cases the plans recommended above, if properly
+performed, will effect a cure, but if the corn, from pressure or from
+any other cause, should return, remove it again, and proceed as before
+directed. If the corn have been caused either by tight or by ill
+fitting shoes, the only way to prevent a recurrence is, of course, to
+have the shoes, properly made by a clever shoemaker--by one who
+thoroughly understands his business, and who will have a pair of lasts
+made purposely for the feet. [Footnote: As long as fashion instead of
+common sense is followed in the making of both boots and shoes, men
+and women will, as a matter of course, suffer from corns.
+
+It has, often struck me as singular, when all the professions and
+trades are so overstocked, that there should be, as there is in every
+large town, such a want of chiropodists (corn-cutters)--of respectable
+chiropodists--of men who would charge a _fixed_ sum for every visit
+the patient may make, for instance to every working man a shilling,
+and to every gentleman half-a-crown or five shillings for _each_
+sitting, and not for _each_ corn (which latter system is a most
+unsatisfactory way of doing business). I am quite sure that of such a
+plan were adopted, every town of any size in the kingdom would
+employee regularly one chiropodist at least. However we might dislike
+some few of the American customs, we may copy them with advantage in
+this particular--namely, in having a regular staff of chiropodists
+both in civil and in military life.]
+
+The German method of making boots and shoes is a capital one for the
+prevention of corns, as the boots and shoes are made, scientifically
+to fit a _real_ and not an _ideal_ foot.
+
+One of the best preventatives of as well as of the best remedies for
+corns, especially of soft corns between the toes, is washing the feet
+every morning as recommended in a previous Conversation, [Footnote:
+Youth--Ablution, page 250.] taking especial care to wash with the
+thumb, and afterwards to wipe with the towel between each toe.
+
+383. _What are the best remedies to destroy a Wart_?
+
+Pure nitric acid, [Footnote: A very small quantity of Pure Nitric
+Acid--just a drain at the bottom of a stoppered bottle--is all that is
+needed, and which may be procured of a chemist.] carefully applied to
+the wart by means of a small stick of cedar wood--a camel's hair
+pencil-holder--every other day, will soon destroy it. Care must be
+taken that the acid does not touch the healthy skin, or it will act as
+a caustic to it. The nitric acid should be preserved in a stoppered
+bottle and must be put out of the reach of children.
+
+Glacial Acetic Acid is another excellent destroyer of warts: it
+should, by means of a camel's hair brush, be applied to each wart,
+every night just before going to bed. The warts will, after a few
+applications, completely disappear.
+
+384. _What is the best remedy for tender feet, for sweaty feet, and
+for smelling feet_?
+
+Cold water: bathing the feet in cold water, beginning with tepid
+water; but gradually from day to day reducing the warm until the water
+be quite cold. A large nursery-basin one-third full of water, ought to
+be placed on the floor, and one foot at a time should be put in the
+water, washing the while with a sponge the foot, and with the thumb
+between each toe. Each foot should remain in the water about half a
+minute. The feet ought, after each washing, to be well dried, taking
+care to dry with the towel between each toe. The above process must be
+repeated at least once every day--every morning, and if the annoyance
+be great, every night as well. A clean pair of stockings ought in
+these cases to be put on daily, as perfect cleanliness is absolutely
+necessary both to afford relief and to effect a cure.
+
+If the feet be tender, or if there be either bunions, or corns, the
+shoes and the boots made according to the German method (which are
+fashioned according to the actual shape of the foot) should alone be
+worn.
+
+385. _What are the causes of so many young ladies of the present day
+being weak, nervous, and unhappy_?
+
+The principal causes are--ignorance of the laws of health, Nature's
+laws being set at nought by fashion and by folly, by want of fresh air
+and exercise, by want of occupation, and by want of self-reliance.
+Weak, nervous, and unhappy! Well they might be! What have they to
+make them strong and happy? Have they work to do to brace the
+muscles? Have they occupation--useful, active occupation--to make
+them happy? No! they have neither the one nor the other!
+
+386. What diseases are girls most subject to?
+
+The diseases peculiar to girls are--Chlorosis--Green-sickness--and
+Hysterics.
+
+387. What are the usual causes of Chlorosis? Chlorosis is caused by
+torpor and debility of the whole frame, especially of the womb. It is
+generally produced by scanty or by improper food, by the want of air
+and of exercise, and by too close application within doors. Here we
+have the same tale over again--close application within doors, and the
+want of fresh air and of exercise. When will the eyes of a mother he
+opened, to this important subject?--the most important that can engage
+her attention!
+
+388. What is the usual age for Chlorosis to occur and what are the
+symptoms?
+
+Chlorosis more frequently attacks girls from fifteen to twenty years
+of age; although unmarried women, much older, occasionally have it. I
+say _unmarried_, for, as a rule, it is a complaint of the _single_.
+
+The patient, first of all, complains of being languid, tired, and out
+of spirits; she is fatigued with the slightest exertion; she has
+usually palpitation of the heart (so as to make her fancy that she has
+a disease of that organ, which, in all probability, she has not); she
+has shortness of breath, and a short dry cough; her face is flabby and
+pale; her complexion gradually assumes a yellowish or greenish
+hue--hence the name of chlorosis; there is a dark, livid circle around
+her eyes; her lips lose their colour, and become almost white; her
+tongue is generally white and pasty, her appetite is bad, and is
+frequently depraved--the patient often preferring chalk, slate pencil,
+cinder, and even dirt, to the daintiest food, indigestion frequently
+attends chlorosis, she has usually pains over the short-ribs, on the
+_left_ side, she suffers greatly from "wind"--is frequently nearly
+choken by it, her bowels are generally costive, and the stools are
+unhealthy, she has pains in her hips, loins, and back, and her feet
+and ankles are oftentimes swollen. _The menstrual discharge is either
+suspended or very partially performed_, if the latter, it is usually
+almost colourless. Hysterical fits not unfrequently occur during an
+attack of chlorosis.
+
+389. _How may Chlorosis be prevented_?
+
+If health were more and fashion were less studied, chlorosis would not
+be such a frequent complaint. This disease generally takes its rise
+from mismanagement--from Nature's laws having been set at defiance. I
+have heard a silly mother express an opinion that it is not _genteel_
+for a girl to eat _heartily!_ Such language is perfectly absurd and
+cruel. How often, too, a weak mother declares that a healthy, blooming
+girl looks like a milk maid! It would be well if she did! How true and
+sad it is, that "a pale, delicate face, and clear eyes, indicative of
+consumption, are the fashionable _desiderata_ at present for
+complexion."--_Dublin University Magazine._
+
+A growing girl requires _plenty_ of _good_ nourishment--as much as her
+appetite demands, and if she have it not, she will become either
+chlorotic, or consumptive, or delicate. Besides, _the greatest
+beautifier in the world is health_, therefore, by a mother studying
+the health of her daughter, she will, at the same time, adorn her body
+with, beauty! I am sorry to say that too many parents think more of
+the beauty than of the health of their girls. Sad and lamentable
+infatuation! Nathaniel Hawthorne--a distinguished American--gives a
+graphic description of a delicate young lady. He says--"She is one of
+those delicate nervous young creatures not uncommon in New England,
+and whom I suppose to have become what we find them by the gradually
+refining away of the physical system among young women. Some
+philosophers choose to glorify this habit of body by terming it
+spiritual, but in my opinion, it is rather the effect of unwholesome
+food, bad air, lack of out-door exercise, and neglect of bathing, on
+the part of these damsels and their female progenitors, all resulting
+in a kind of hereditary dyspepsia."
+
+Nathaniel Hawthorne was right. Such ladies, when he wrote, were not
+uncommon, but within the last two or three years, to their great
+credit be it spoken, "a change has come o'er the spirit of their
+dreams," and they are wonderfully improved in health, for, with all
+reverence be it spoken, "God helps them who help themselves," and they
+have helped themselves by attending to the rales of health--"The women
+of America are growing more and more handsome every year for just this
+reason. They are growing rounder of chest, fuller of limb, gaining,
+substance and development in every direction. Whatever may be urged to
+the contrary we believe this to be a demonstrable fact. When the
+rising generation of American girls once begin to wear thick shoes, to
+take much exercise in the open air, to skate, to play at croquet, and
+to affect the saddle, it not only begins to grow more wise but more
+healthful, and which must follow as the night the day--more
+beautiful"--_The Round Table_.
+
+If a young girl had plenty-of wholesome meat, varied from day to day,
+either plain roast or boiled, and neither stewed, nor hashed, nor
+highly seasoned for the stomach, if she has had an abundance of fresh
+air for her lungs, if she had plenty of active exercise, such as
+skipping, dancing, running, riding, swimming, for her muscles, if her
+clothing were warm and loose, and adapted to the season, if her mind
+were more occupied with active _useful_ occupation, such as household
+work, than at present, and if she were kept calm and untroubled from
+the hurly-burly and excitement of fashionable life--chlorosis would
+almost be an unknown disease. It is a complaint of rare occurrence
+with country girls, but of great frequency with fine city ladies.
+
+390. _What treatment should you advise_?
+
+The treatment which would prevent should be adopted when the complaint
+first makes its appearance. If the above means do not quickly remove
+it, the mother must then apply to a medical man, and he will give
+medicines _which will soon have the desired effect_. Chlorosis is very
+amenable to treatment. If the disease be allowed for any length of
+time to run on, it may produce either organic--incurable--disease of
+the heart, or consumption or indigestion, or confirmed ill-health.
+
+391. _At what period of life is a lady most prone in Hysterics, and
+what are the symptoms_?
+
+The time of life when hysterics occur is generally from the age of
+fifteen to fifty. Hysterics come on by paroxysms--hence they are
+called hysterical fits. A patient, just before an attack, is
+low-spirited; crying without a cause; she is "nervous," as it is
+called; she has flushings of the face; she is at other times very
+pale; she has shortness of breath and occasional palpitations of the
+heart; her appetite is usually bad; she passes quantities of
+colourless limpid urine, having the appearance of pump water; she is
+much troubled with flatulence in her bowels, and, in consequence, she
+feels bloated and uncomfortable. The "wind" at length rises upwards
+towards the stomach, and still upwards to the throat, giving her the
+sensation of a ball stopping her breathing, and producing a feeling of
+suffocation. The sensation of a ball in the throat (_globus
+hystericus_) is the commencement of the fit.
+
+She now becomes _partially_ insensible, although she seldom loses
+_complete_ consciousness. Her face becomes flushed, her nostrils
+dilated, her head thrown back, and her stomach and bowels enormously
+distended with "wind." After a short time she throws her arms and her
+legs about convulsively, she beats her breast, tears her hair and
+clothes, laughs boisterously and screams violently; at other times she
+makes a peculiar noise; sometimes she sobs and her face is much
+distorted. At length she brings up enormous quantities of wind; after
+a time she bursts into a violent flood of tears, and then gradually
+comes to herself.
+
+As soon as the fit is at an end she generally passes enormous
+quantities of colourless limpid urine. She might, in a short time,
+fall into another attack similar to the above. When she comes to
+herself she feels exhausted and tired, and usually complains of a
+slight headache, and of great soreness of the body and limbs. She
+seldom remembers what has occurred during the fit. Hysterics are
+sometimes frightful to witness, but, in themselves, are not at all
+dangerous.
+
+Hysterics--an hysterical fit--is sometimes styled hysterical
+passion. Shakspeare, in one of his plays, calls it _hysterica
+passio_--
+
+ "Oh how this, mother, swells up toward my Heart! _Hysterica
+ passio!_"
+
+Sir Walter Scott graphically describes an attack--"The hysterical
+passion that impels tears is a terrible violence--a sort of throttling
+sensation--then succeeded by a state of dreaming stupidity"
+
+392. _What are the causes of Hysterics_?
+
+Delicate health, chlorosis, improper and not sufficiently nourishing
+food, grief, anxiety, excitement of the mind, closely confined rooms,
+want of exercise, indigestion, flatulence and tight-lacing, are the
+causes which usually produce hysterics. Hysterics are frequently
+feigned, indeed, oftener than any other complaint, and even a genuine
+case is usually much aggravated by a patient herself giving way to
+them.
+
+393. _What do you recommend an hysterical lady to do_?
+
+To improve her health by proper management, to rise early and to take
+a walk, that she may breathe pure and wholesome air,--indeed, she
+ought to live nearly half her time in the open air, exercising herself
+with walking, skipping, etc., to employ her mind with botany, croquet,
+archery, or with any out-door amusement, to confine herself to plain,
+wholesome, nourishing food, to avoid tight lacing; to eschew
+fashionable amusements; and, above all, not to give way to her
+feelings, but, if she feel an attack approaching, to rouse herself.
+
+_If the fit be upon her_, the better plan is, to banish all the _male_
+sex from the room, and not even to have many women about her, and for
+those around to loosen her dress; to lay her in the centre of the
+room, flat upon the ground, with a pillow under her head, to remove
+combs and pins and brooches from her person; to dash cold water upon
+her face; to apply cloths, or a large sponge wetted in cold water, to
+her head; to throw open the window, and then to leave her to herself;
+or, at all events, to leave her with only one _female_ friend or
+attendant. If such be done, she will soon come round; but what is the
+usual practice? If a girl be in hysterics, the whole house, and
+perhaps the neighbourhood, is roused; the room is crowded to
+suffocation; fears are openly expressed by those around that she is in
+a dangerous state; she hears what they say, and her hysterics are
+increased ten-fold.
+
+394. _Have you any remarks to make on a patient recovering from a
+severe illness_?
+
+There is something charming and delightful in the feelings of a
+patient recovering from a severe illness: it is like a new birth: it
+is almost worth the pain and anguish of having been ill to feel quite
+well again: everything around and about him wears a charming aspect--a
+roseate hue: the appetite for food returns with pristine vigour; the
+viands, be they ever so homely, never tasted before so deliciously
+sweet; and a draught of water from the spring has the flavour of
+ambrosial nectar: the convalescent treads the ground as though he were
+on the ambient air; and the earth to him for a while is Paradise: the
+very act of living is a joy and gladness:--
+
+ "See the wretch that long has tost
+ On the thorny bed of pain
+ Again repair his vigour lost
+ And walk and run again.
+
+ The meanest flow'ret of the vale,
+ The amplest note that swells the gale,
+ The common air, the earth, the skies,
+ To him are opening Paradise."--_Grey_
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONCLUDING REMARKS
+
+If this book is to be of use to mothers and to the rising generation,
+as I humbly hope and trust that it has been, and that it will be still
+more abundantly, it ought not to be listlessly read, merely as a novel
+or as any other piece of fiction; but it must be thoughtfully and
+carefully studied, until its contents, in all its bearings, be
+completely mastered and understood.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+In conclusion: I beg to thank you for the courtesy, confidence, and
+attention I have received at your hands; and to express a hope that my
+advice, through God's blessing, may not have been given in vain; but
+that it may be--one among many--an humble instrument for improving the
+race of our children--England's priceless treasures! O, that the time
+may come, and may not be far distant, "That our sons may grow up as
+the young plants, and that our daughters may be as the polished
+corners of the temple!"
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ABLUTION of a child
+
+ of an infant
+
+ of a youth
+
+ thorough, of boy and girl
+
+Accidents of children
+
+ how to prevent
+
+Acne, symptoms and treatment of
+
+Advice to a mother if her infant be poorly
+
+ to _Mr Pater familias_
+
+Ailments, the distinction between between _serious_ and _slight_
+
+ of infants
+
+Air and exercise for youth
+
+ the importance of good
+
+ the necessity of fresh, and changing the
+
+Airing an infant's clothes
+
+Alternately to each breast
+
+American ladies
+
+Amusements for a child
+
+ for a boy
+
+ for a girl
+
+Ankles, weak
+
+Antipathies of a child
+
+Aperients for a child
+
+ for an infant
+
+ for a new-born babe
+
+ for a youth
+
+ danger of frequent
+
+Appeal to mothers
+
+Appetite, on a child losing his
+
+Applications, hot
+
+Apron, washing
+
+Archery
+
+Arnold, Dr, on corporal punishment
+
+Arrow-root for an infant
+
+Artificial food for an infant at breast
+
+Asses' milk
+
+
+BABES should kick on floor
+
+Babe's clothing
+
+Babe himself taking exercise
+
+Babyhood, the language of
+
+Baby daughter
+
+Baked crumb of bread for an infant
+
+ flour for an infant
+
+Bakers' and home made bread
+
+Bathing after _full_ meal
+
+Baths, cold, tepid, and warm
+
+ warm, as a remedy for flatulence
+
+Beard, best respirator
+
+Bed, on placing child in
+
+Beds, feather
+
+ purification of
+
+Bed-rooms, the ventilation of
+
+ cool
+
+ large
+
+ a plan to ventilate
+
+Bee, the sting of
+
+Beef, salted or boiled
+
+Beer, on giving child
+
+Belladonna, poisoning by
+
+Belly-band, best kind
+
+ when to discontinue
+
+Beverage for a child
+
+"Black-eye," remedies for
+
+Bladder and bowels of an infant
+
+Bleeding from navel, how to restrain
+
+ of nose
+
+Blood, spitting of
+
+Blows and bruises
+
+Boarding schools for females
+
+ on cheap (note)
+
+Boiled bread for infants' food
+
+ flour for infants' food
+
+Boils, the treatment of
+
+Boots and shoes
+
+Bottles, the best nursing
+
+Boulogne sore-throat
+
+Bow-legs
+
+Bowels, large, of children
+
+ looseness of
+
+ protrusion of lower
+
+ regulation of, by diet
+
+Boys should be made strong
+
+Brain, water on the
+
+Bran to soften water
+
+Bran Poultices
+
+Breakfast of a child
+
+ of a youth
+
+Breast on early putting an infant to
+
+Breathing exercise
+
+Brimstone and treacle
+
+Brown and Polson's Corn Flour
+
+Bronchitis, the treatment of
+
+Broth for Infants
+
+ for a new born infant
+
+ and soup
+
+Brothers and sisters
+
+Bruises, remedies for
+
+Bullying a child
+
+Burns and scalds
+
+Butter, wholesome
+
+
+CADBURY'S Cocoa Essence
+
+Calomel, the danger of a mother prescribing
+
+ the ill effects of
+
+Camphor makes teeth brittle
+
+Caning a boy
+
+Caps, flannel
+
+Care in preparation of food
+
+Carpets in nurseries
+
+Carriage exercise
+
+Carron oil in burns
+
+Castor oil to heal the bowels
+
+Cat, bites and scratches of a
+
+"Chafings" of infants, the treatment of
+
+Chairs, straight backed
+
+Change of air
+
+ linen in sickness
+
+Chapped hands, legs, &c
+
+ lips
+
+Chest, keeping warm the upper part of the
+
+"Chicken breasted" and narrow breasted children
+
+ pox
+
+Chilblains
+
+Child should dine with parents
+
+"Child-crowing"
+
+ the treatment of a paroxysm of
+
+Children's hour
+
+ parties
+
+Chimneys, on the stopping of
+
+Chiropodists (_note_)
+
+Chloralum as a disinfectant
+
+Chlorosis and green sickness
+
+ not in rural districts
+
+Choking, what to be done in a case of
+
+_Cholera infantum_
+
+Cisterns, best kind of
+
+Clothes, on airing an infant's
+
+ the ill effects of tight
+
+Clothing of children
+
+ of infants
+
+ during winter
+
+ of youths
+
+Coffee as an aperient
+
+ and tea
+
+Coin, on the swallowing of a
+
+Cold bed-room healthy
+
+Cold, a feverish
+
+ on child always catching
+
+ feet, method to warm
+
+Concluding remarks on infancy
+
+Conclusion
+
+Constipation, prevention and cure of
+
+Consumption attacks the _upper_ part of the lungs
+
+ the age at which it usually appears
+
+ causes of
+
+ death rate
+
+ importance of early consulting a medical man in
+
+ spitting of blood in
+
+ symptoms of
+
+Consumptive patient, the treatment of a
+
+Convulsions of children
+
+ cause insensibility
+
+ from hooping-cough
+
+ no pain in
+
+Cooked fruit for child
+
+Corns
+
+Corn plaster, an excellent
+
+Coroners inquests on infants
+
+Corporal punishment at schools
+
+Costiveness of infants, the means to prevent
+
+ remedies for
+
+ the reason why so prevalent
+
+ in weak children
+
+Cough, the danger of stopping a
+
+Cow, the importance of having the milk from one
+
+ pox lymph direct from heifer
+
+ from healthy child
+
+Cream and egg, 200
+
+ and water for babe
+
+Crinoline and burning of ladles
+
+Crib, covering head of
+
+Croquet for girls
+
+Crossness in a sick child
+
+Croup
+
+ the treatment of
+
+Cry of infant
+
+Cure, artificial and natural
+
+"Curious phenomenon" in scarlet fever
+
+Cut finger, the application for
+
+
+DANCING, and skipping
+
+Danger of constantly giving physic
+
+Delicate child, plan to strengthen a
+
+Dentition
+
+ lancing of gums
+
+ second
+
+ painful
+
+Diarrhoea of infants
+
+ treatment of
+
+Diet of a child who has cut his teeth
+
+ of children
+
+ of a dry nursed child
+
+ of infants
+
+ on a mother being particular in attending to
+
+ variety of for child
+
+ of youth
+
+Dietary in infants
+
+Dieting a child
+
+Dinner for a child
+
+ youth
+
+Diphtheria symptoms, causes, and treatment of
+
+Dirty child
+
+Diseased nature and strange eruptions
+
+Diseases of children
+
+ girls
+
+ infants
+
+ obscure
+
+ the prevention of
+
+ produced by tight lacing
+
+ symptoms of _serious_
+
+Disinfectants in scarlet fever
+
+Doctor on early calling in
+
+Dog the bide of a
+
+Doleful child
+
+Don't
+
+Dowle on _The Foot and its Covering_
+
+Drainage
+
+Dress, female
+
+ of a child while asleep
+
+ of a babe, child, and youth
+
+Dresses, high for delicate child
+
+Dressing babe for sleep
+
+Dribbling bibs
+
+Drinking fountains
+
+Dropping child, danger of
+
+Dry nursed children, the best food for
+
+"Dusting powder" for infants
+
+Dysentery, symptoms and treatment of
+
+
+EAR, discharges from
+
+ removal of a pea or bead from
+
+Ear-ache, treatment of
+
+ wig in ear
+
+Early rising
+
+Education of children
+
+ infant schools
+
+ home, the best for girls
+
+Education, modern
+
+ for youth
+
+Eggs for children
+
+Electuary of figs
+
+Emetic tarter dangerous for child
+
+Eneme apparatus (_note_)
+
+ of warm water
+
+Engravings in nurseries
+
+Eruptions about the mouth
+
+Excorations applications for
+
+ best remedy for
+
+Exercise
+
+ best composing medicine
+
+ during teething
+
+ for children
+
+ in wet weather
+
+ on violently tossing infants
+
+ horse and pony
+
+ an infant himself taking
+
+ in very cold weather
+
+ in wet weather
+
+ for youth
+
+Eve, substances in
+
+
+FAECAL matter in pump-water
+
+Fainting
+
+ from constipation
+
+ from debility
+
+ from disordered stomach
+
+Falling-off of hair
+
+Falls on the head
+
+Farinaceous food give _babes_ wind
+
+Fash on dangerous effects of strictly attending to
+
+ the present, of dressing children
+
+Fashionable _desiderata_ for complexion
+
+Favouritism
+
+Feeding bottles
+
+ infants, proper times for at breast
+
+ new born babe with gruel
+
+Feet smelling
+
+ sweating
+
+ tender
+
+Female dress
+
+Fire, on a child playing with
+
+ danger of back to
+
+ in night nursery
+
+ the manner of extinguishing, if clothes be on
+
+ guards
+
+Fire-proof, making dresses
+
+Flannel cap for babe
+
+ night-gowns
+
+ shifts for a delicate child
+
+ waistcoats
+
+ to wash child with
+
+Flatulence, remedies for
+
+Fleas, to drive away
+
+Flute, bugle and other wind-instruments
+
+Fly pole
+
+Fog, on sending a child out in
+
+Folly, of giving physic after vaccination
+
+Food, artificial, during snacking
+
+ care in preparing infant's
+
+ for dry-nursed infants
+
+ for infants who are sucking
+
+Formula, for milk, water, salt, and sugar
+
+Friction after ablation
+
+Frightening a child
+
+Fruit as an aperient
+
+ during teething
+
+
+GARTERS impede circulation
+
+Gently speak to child
+
+Gin or pepperment in infant's food
+
+Giving joy to a child
+
+Glass, a child swallowing broken
+
+Gluttony
+
+Glycerine
+
+Goats' milk
+
+_Godfrey's Cordial_
+
+ poisoning by treatment
+
+Grazed skin
+
+Green dresses poisonous
+
+ paper hangings for nurseries
+
+ peas as a vegetable
+
+"Gripings" for infants
+
+Groin rupture
+
+"Gross superstition,"
+
+"Grub-pimple"
+
+Gums, the lancing of the
+
+Gum-bod, cause and treatment
+
+Gum-sticks, the best
+
+Gymnasium, value of
+
+
+HAIR, the best application for
+
+ falling off
+
+ making tidy
+
+ management of
+
+Half-washed and half starved child
+
+Hand-swing
+
+Happiness to a child
+
+Happy child
+
+Hard's Farinaceous Food
+
+Hardening of children's constitutions
+
+ of infants
+
+Hartehorn, on swallowing
+
+Hats for a child, the best kind
+
+Hawthorn, Nathaniel, on American ladies
+
+Head, fall upon
+
+Heat, external application of
+
+Hectic flush, description of
+
+Hiccups of infants
+
+Hints conducive to the well-doing of a child
+
+Home of childhood--the nursery
+
+Hooping-cough
+
+ obstinate
+
+ treatment of
+
+Horse exercise for boys or girls
+
+ and pony exercise
+
+Hot-water bag or bottle
+
+Household work for girls
+
+Hurdle on early rising
+
+Hydrophobia
+
+_Hysterica passio_
+
+Hysterics
+
+
+ICE, on the value of
+
+Illness, recovery from
+
+Importance of our subject
+
+India-rubber hot-water bottle
+
+Ingoldsby Legend on thumb-sucking
+
+Infants should be encouraged to use exertion
+
+Infant schools
+
+Ipecacuantis wine, preservation of
+
+
+JOYFUL to bed, on sending child
+
+
+LADIES "affecting the saddle"
+
+Laudanum, poisoning by
+
+Laugh of a child
+
+Law, physic, and divinity
+
+Leaden cisterns
+
+Learning without health
+
+Leech bites, the way to restrain bleeding from
+
+Lessons for child
+
+Lice in head after illness
+
+Light, best artificial, for nursery
+
+ the importance of, to health
+
+Lightly clad child
+
+Lime in the eye
+
+ to harden the bones
+
+Lime-water and milk
+
+"Looseness of the the bowels" the treatment
+
+Love of children
+
+Lucifer-matches the poisonous effects of
+
+Luncheon for a child
+
+Lungs, inflammation of
+
+ precautions to
+
+ symptoms of
+
+ treatment of
+
+Lying lips of a child
+
+
+MAD DOG, the bite of
+
+ description of
+
+Magnesia to cool a child
+
+Management of child's mother's question
+
+Massacre of innocents
+
+Mattresses, horse-hair, best for child
+
+May, the month of
+
+Meals, a child's
+
+Measles
+
+ and scarlet fever
+
+ treatment of
+
+Meat, daily, on giving
+
+ raw in long-standing diarrhoea
+
+ in exhaustive diseases
+
+ when a child should commence taking
+
+Meddlesome treatment
+
+Medical man, a mother's treatment towards
+
+Medicine, the best way of administering
+
+ on giving new-born infants
+
+ on making palatable (_note_)
+
+Menstruating female during suckling
+
+Mercury, on the danger of parents giving
+
+Milk, on the importance of having it from ONE cow
+
+ bad, very nasty
+
+ for babe indispensable
+
+ in every form
+
+ or meat, or both
+
+ a plan to make a child take
+
+ sugar of, and water
+
+ the value of, for children
+
+ unboiled
+
+ a way to prevent, turning sour
+
+ -crust
+
+Mismanaged baby
+
+Modified small-pox and chicken-pox
+
+Mother fretting, injurious to infant
+
+ a foolish
+
+ of many diseases
+
+Mother's and cow's milk, on mixing
+
+ health during suckling
+
+ influence
+
+Motions, healthy, of babe
+
+Mumps
+
+
+NAAMAN, the Syrian
+
+Napkins, when to dispense with
+
+Nature's physic
+
+Navel, management of the
+
+ rupture of
+
+ sore
+
+ -string separation of
+
+Neaves' Farinaceous Food
+
+Nervous and unhappy young ladies
+
+Nettle-rash
+
+New-born infants and aperients
+
+ when feeble
+
+Night-commode
+
+Night-terrors
+
+Nose, removal of foreign substances from
+
+ bleeding from, means to restrain
+
+Nurse, on the choice of a
+
+ a lazy
+
+ strong and active
+
+ young, not desirable
+
+ for the sick
+
+Nursery-basin
+
+ of a sick child
+
+ a child's own domain
+
+ selection, warming, ventilation, arrangements of
+
+ on the light of a
+
+ must be airy
+
+ observations, further
+
+ windows to be often opened
+
+Nursing-bottles, the best
+
+
+OPIUM, a case of poisoning by
+
+ the danger of administering to infants
+
+ the treatment of poisoning by
+
+Over-education
+
+Over-lying a child
+
+
+PAIN, convulsions, and death
+
+Paint-boxes dangerous as toys
+
+Parental baby-slaughter
+
+Parritch, the halesome
+
+Peevishness of a child, the plan to allay
+
+Perambulators
+
+Physicking a child, on the frequent
+
+Pies and Puddings
+
+Pimples on the face, treatment of
+
+Pin, on a child swallowing
+
+Pins, in dressing of babe
+
+Play, a course of education in
+
+Play-grounds for children
+
+ and play
+
+Pleasant words to a child
+
+Poisoning, accidental
+
+ by the breath
+
+Poppy-syrup
+
+Pork an improper meat for children
+
+Position of a sleeping child
+
+Potatoes for children
+
+Poultice, a white-bread
+
+Powder, "dusting"
+
+_Precocity of intellect_
+
+Precocious youths, the health of
+
+Prescriptions for a child
+
+Princess of Wales and her baby (note)
+
+Professions and trades
+
+Proper person to wash an Infant
+
+Prunes, the best way of stewing
+
+Profession or trade, choice of, for delicate youth
+
+ delicate youth should be brought up to
+
+Puddings for children
+
+Pals of child
+
+Pye Chavasse's Fresh Air Treatment of scarlet fever
+
+ Milk Food
+
+
+QUACK MEDICINES
+
+Quacking an infant
+
+Quick lime in eye
+
+
+RAIN WATER
+
+Recapitulation of ablution
+
+Red gum
+
+Respiration, products of poisonous
+
+Rest, the best time for a child to retire to
+
+Re-vaccination, Importance of
+
+ every seven years
+
+ recommended by Jenner
+
+Revalenta Arabica
+
+Rheumatic fever, flannel vest and drawers
+
+Ribs, bulging out of
+
+Rice, prepared as an infant's food
+
+Rich children
+
+_Richardson, Dr, ether spray_
+
+Rickets
+
+ various degrees of
+
+Roberton on child-crowing
+
+Rocking-chairs, and rockers to cradle,
+
+Rocking infants to sleep
+
+Rooms ill effects, of dark
+
+Round shoulders
+
+Round worm
+
+Running scall
+
+Rupture
+
+Rusks
+
+
+
+SALLOWNESS, cause of in young girls
+
+Salt water and fresh water
+
+ should be added to an infants food
+
+ bag of hot
+
+ necessary to human life
+
+Salt-and water ablations for a delicate child
+
+ for teeth and gums
+
+ meats for children
+
+Scalds and burns
+
+ of mouth
+
+Scarlatina
+
+Scarlet-fever
+
+ and diphtheria
+
+ the contagion of
+
+ the danger of giving aperients in
+
+ the dropsy of
+
+ Fresh Air Treatment of
+
+ hybrid
+
+ management of child after
+
+ and measles, the importance of distinguishing between
+
+ the principal danger of
+
+ purification of house after
+
+ treatment of
+
+ utter prostration in
+
+Schools, female boarding
+
+ public
+
+Screaming in sleep
+
+Scrofula
+
+ prevention of
+
+Scurfy head
+
+Sea-bathing and fresh-water bathing
+
+ for a young child
+
+Secrets, talking, before child
+
+Senna as an aperient
+
+Shivering fit, importance of attending to a
+
+ treatment of
+
+Shoes, _plan to waterproof_
+
+ preferable to boots
+
+ sound and whole
+
+ and stockings for children and youths
+
+ the ill effects of tight
+
+"Shortening" an infant
+
+Shoulder-blades "growing out"
+
+Sick child, the nursing of a
+
+ not to be staffed with food
+
+Sick-room, management of,
+
+Sickness of infants
+
+Singing and reading aloud
+
+ beneficial to a child
+
+Single-stick
+
+Sitting with back to fire
+
+Sitz-bath for protrusion of bowels
+
+Skating for boys and girls
+
+Skin, grazed
+
+Sleep of children
+
+Sleep, infant's
+
+ in middle of day beneficial
+
+ much, necessary for infants
+
+ temperature of an infant's bedroom during
+
+ right time of putting a child to
+
+ putting infants to
+
+ of youth
+
+ -walker
+
+Sleeping on lap
+
+ -rooms, importance of well-ventilating
+
+Sleepless child
+
+Slippers, the best for sick-room (_note_)
+
+Small-pox
+
+ a pest and disgrace
+
+ modified
+
+ when in neighborhood,
+
+ to prevent pitting of
+
+Smoking, on a boy
+
+Smothering of infants, the cause
+
+Socks and Stockings for a child
+
+Soda, ill effects of washing clothes with
+
+Sounds, joyful
+
+Soups and broths
+
+Speak gently to a child
+
+Spencer, a knitted worsted
+
+Spines, distorted
+
+Spine, injury to
+
+ curvature of
+
+ twisted
+
+Spirits, deadly effects of, to the young
+
+Spitting of blood
+
+ precautions
+
+Spurious croup
+
+Stammering, cause of
+
+ cure of
+
+Stays, the ill effects of
+
+Stillness of sick-room
+
+Sting of bee or wasp
+
+Stir-about and milk
+
+Stockings and shoes
+
+Stooping in a girl
+
+Stopping of chimneys
+
+Stoves in nursery
+
+Strawberry-tongue
+
+Stuffing a sick child with food
+
+ a babe
+
+"Stuffing of the nose" of infants
+
+Stunning of a child
+
+"Stye," treatment of
+
+Substitute for mother's milk
+
+Sucking of thumb
+
+Suckling, the proper times of
+
+Suet pudding
+
+Sugar for infants
+
+ confectionery
+
+ -of-milk
+
+ _raw_, as an aperient
+
+Sun-stroke
+
+Sunday
+
+Supper for a child and for a youth
+
+Surfeit water and saffron tea
+
+Sweet things and sour digestion
+
+Sweetmeats and cakes
+
+Swimming, on boys and girls
+
+Symptoms of serious diseases
+
+
+TAPE-WORM
+
+Taste for things refined
+
+Tea, on giving a child
+
+ green, the ill effects of
+
+Teeth, attention to, importance of
+
+ child should not have meat till he have cut several
+
+ the diet of a child who has cut all his
+
+ and gums
+
+ right way of brushing
+
+ appearance and number of _first_ set of
+
+ _second_ set of
+
+ second crop of
+
+Teething
+
+ causing convulsions
+
+ eruptions from
+
+ frequent cause of sickness
+
+ fruitful source of disease
+
+ purging during
+
+ restlessness from
+
+ second
+
+ symptoms and treatment of painful
+
+ in town or country
+
+Temperature and ventilation of a nursery
+
+ of a warm-bath
+
+Thread-worm
+
+Throats, sore, precautions to prevent
+
+Thrush, cause, symptoms, prevention and cure of
+
+Thumb best gum-stick
+
+Tight bands, belts, and hats
+
+Tight-lacing, the ill effects of
+
+Times for suckling an infant
+
+Tobacco-smoking for boys
+
+ cases illustrating the danger of
+
+Toe-nails, the right way of cutting,
+
+Tongue-tied, an infant
+
+"Tooth-cough,"
+
+Tooth-powder, an excellent
+
+Top-crust of bread as infant's food
+
+Tossing an infant
+
+Tous-les-mois
+
+Toys, children's
+
+ painted with arsenic
+
+Trade or profession for delicate youth,
+
+Treatment of a delicate child
+
+ of some urgent serious diseases
+
+Troubles of child
+
+Truth, the love of
+
+Tub, commencement of washing infant
+in
+
+Tubbing a child
+
+Tumbling and rolling of a child
+
+
+VACCINATION
+
+ appearance of scab
+
+ arm after
+
+ giving medicine after,
+
+ making babe poorly
+
+Veal for a child
+
+Vegetables for a child
+
+Ventilation, and stopping of chimneys
+
+ and sleep
+
+ of a nursery
+
+Violet-powder
+
+
+WALKING, on the early, of infants
+
+ exercise, value
+
+ in his sleep, a child
+
+Warm-bathe for children
+
+ external applications
+
+Warts
+
+Washing of boys and girls
+
+Washing a child
+
+ an infant
+
+ a new-born infant's head with brandy
+
+Washing a nursery floor
+
+Wasp, the sting of a
+
+Water, on the importance of good,
+
+ on the brain
+
+ closet, on going regularly to,
+
+ cold and warm for ablution,
+
+ hard for drinking
+
+ -fright
+
+ pure, essential to health
+
+ to whole of skin
+
+Weaned child, the diet of a
+
+Weaning, proper time and manner of
+
+Weather, on a child almost living in the air in flue
+
+ on the sending a child out in wet
+
+Weight of new-born infants (_note_)
+
+Wet flannel application
+
+Wet-nurse
+
+ diet of
+
+ for feeble babe
+
+ management of
+
+"Wetting the bed" during sleep
+
+Wheezing of a new-born infant
+
+White lily leaf for bruises
+
+"Wind," babe suffering from
+
+Windows of a nursery
+
+Wind pipe, foreign substance in
+
+Wine and youth
+
+Wine for children and youths
+
+Winter clothing
+
+Woolen garments
+
+Worms
+
+ quick medicines for
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Advice to a Mother on the Management
+of her Children, by Pye Henry Chavasse
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADVICE TO A MOTHER ***
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