登陆注册
20274900000037

第37章

So here, again, I was entirely afloat, launched on the seas of doubt without chart or compass. The life and well-being of the race seemed to hang on the slender thread of such traditions as were handed down by ignorant mothers and nurses. One powerful ray of light illuminated the darkness; it was the work of Andrew Combe on "Infancy." He had, evidently watched some of the manifestations of man in the first stages of his development, and could tell, at least, as much of babies as naturalists could of beetles and bees. He did give young mothers some hints of what to do, the whys and wherefores of certain lines of procedure during antenatal life, as well as the proper care thereafter. I read several chapters to the nurse.

Although, out of her ten children, she had buried five, she still had too much confidence in her own wisdom and experience to pay much attention to any new idea that might be suggested to her. Among other things, Combe said that a child's bath should be regulated by the thermometer, in order to be always of the same temperature. She ridiculed the idea, and said her elbow was better than any thermometer, and, when I insisted on its use, she would invariably, with a smile of derision, put her elbow in first, to show how exactly it tallied with the thermometer. When I insisted that the child should not be bandaged, she rebelled outright, and said she would not take the responsibility of nursing a child without a bandage. I said, "Pray, sit down, dear nurse, and let us reason together. Do not think I am setting up my judgment against yours, with all your experience. I am simply trying to act on the opinions of a distinguished physician, who says there should be no pressure on a child anywhere; that the limbs and body should be free; that it is cruel to bandage an infant from hip to armpit, as is usually done in America; or both body and legs, as is done in Europe; or strap them to boards, as is done by savages on both continents.

Can you give me one good reason, nurse, why a child should be bandaged?"

"Yes," she said emphatically, "I can give you a dozen."

"I only asked for one," I replied.

"Well," said she, after much hesitation, "the bones of a newborn infant are soft, like cartilage, and, unless you pin them up snugly, there is danger of their falling apart."

"It seems to me." I replied, "you have given the strongest reason why they should be carefully guarded against the slightest pressure. It is very remarkable that kittens and puppies should be so well put together that they need no artificial bracing, and the human family be left wholly to the mercy of a bandage. Suppose a child was born where you could not get a bandage, what then? Now I think this child will remain intact without a bandage, and, if I am willing to take the risk, why should you complain?"

"Because," said she, "if the child should die, it would injure my name as a nurse. I therefore wash my hands of all these new-fangled notions."

So she bandaged the child every morning, and I as regularly took it off. It has been fully proved since to be as useless an appendage as the vermiform. She had several cups with various concoctions of herbs standing on the chimney-corner, ready for insomnia, colic, indigestion, etc., etc., all of which were spirited away when she was at her dinner. In vain I told her we were homeopathists, and afraid of everything in the animal, vegetable, or mineral kingdoms lower than the two-hundredth dilution. I tried to explain the Hahnemann system of therapeutics, the philosophy of the principle similia similibus curantur, but she had no capacity for first principles, and did not understand my discourse. I told her that, if she would wash the baby's mouth with pure cold water morning and night and give it a teaspoonful to drink occasionally during the day, there would be no danger of red gum; that if she would keep the blinds open and let in the air and sunshine, keep the temperature of the room at sixty-five degrees, leave the child's head uncovered so that it could breathe freely, stop rocking and trotting it and singing such melancholy hymns as "Hark, from the tombs a doleful sound!" the baby and I would both be able to weather the cape without a bandage. I told her I should nurse the child once in two hours, and that she must not feed it any of her nostrums in the meantime; that a child's stomach, being made on the same general plan as our own, needed intervals of rest as well as ours. She said it would be racked with colic if the stomach was empty any length of time, and that it would surely have rickets if it were kept too still. I told her if the child had no anodynes, nature would regulate its sleep and motions. She said she could not stay in a room with the thermometer at sixty-five degrees, so I told her to sit in the next room and regulate the heat to suit herself; that I would ring a bell when her services were needed.

The reader will wonder, no doubt, that I kept such a cantankerous servant.

同类推荐
  • 炙毂子诗格

    炙毂子诗格

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 对作篇

    对作篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太平天国战记

    太平天国战记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上正一延生保命箓

    太上正一延生保命箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 清微斋法

    清微斋法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 名门弃少

    名门弃少

    一场夺取沐家祖传玉简的阴谋,瞬间剥夺了纨绔大少沐天佑的一切。父亲身死,妻子、弟弟纷纷背叛,自己更是被诬陷成了通缉逃犯!玉简的神秘力量让他返老还童,改换身份得以偷生。失去至亲让沐天佑洗心革面,依靠玉简的力量,开始了自己的复仇计划……
  • 悲惨世界(世界文学名著典藏)

    悲惨世界(世界文学名著典藏)

    《悲惨世界》是法国作家维克多·雨果于1862年所发表的一部长篇小说。是十九世纪最著名的小说之一。小说涵盖了拿破仑战争和之后的十几年的时间。故事的主线围绕主人公获释罪犯冉·阿让(JeanValjean)试图赎罪的历程,融进了法国的历史、建筑、政治、道德哲学、法律、正义、宗教信仰。
  • 笑着爱你

    笑着爱你

    一次公司聚会,因老板的玩笑,他送花给她,之后送她回家。从此,他们成了朋友,一起聊天,看电影,偶尔小聚。在寂寞的城市,两颗心互相慰藉,在平凡的日子中体味琐碎的幸福。
  • 极夜无双

    极夜无双

    大千世界,诸王并起,万族林立,东有人类至强所向披靡,西有异族噬魅霍乱天地,南有上古水族称霸一方,北有天玄古龙群雄割据。九天之外,谁主沉浮,强者为尊的世界,弱既是原罪。身怀异古血脉的卑微少年,在小家族中苟延残喘着,只待血脉初醒。既然天不容我,那便成魔,“我要这天,因我而变”。踏金身,入淬魂,晓神通,渡天劫,破苍穹,问鼎乾坤。黑暗遮天,极夜永恒。
  • 绯红纪元

    绯红纪元

    二十一世纪的小职员莫龙因为一场车祸穿越到了一个异界的“绝世天才”身上修炼无瓶颈……极速提升等级……一飞冲天称霸天下,把妹成群……这一切的一切,似乎都不再是梦想然而,这个“天才”真的那么简单么?这场死而复生的穿越,又当真只是偶然么?……当猩红之眼在天空延展,当神灵伴随着星辰陨落有光,从黑暗中生
  • 遮天妖王

    遮天妖王

    在通往强者的路上,他从一届平凡之人不断往上,最终到达了那个高位。
  • 媚水荷花粉未乾

    媚水荷花粉未乾

    她,国师府的嫡长女,太后的侄女,皇帝的表妹,天衍王朝第一才女,一朝入宫,利欲与权谋,荣耀与生死,一切都无可逃遁,一路的漫长与黑暗,她蕙质兰心,看透一切。“天衍王朝史上最惊心的后宫之争,最动魄的前朝之乱”震撼来袭。
  • 千城

    千城

    世人有心,一心一城。红尘千人,故有千城。这是小慕儿女们的爱情故事。
  • 混乱与规则

    混乱与规则

    在一个玄幻的世界里,一个帅哥(猪脚)在另一位帅哥(悲情男子)的指导下,一步步的走向武道的巅峰……本书定义为玄幻,内涵各种感情纠葛……我随意写写,你随便看看。若能博你一笑,便是皆大欢喜……
  • 钟经理姓钟

    钟经理姓钟

    随便写写,想弄个短骗集,但无法改名,算了。