*HM: m t^m SOLD AT T. J. CEOWEWS Bookstore andiiprtny,. DG7 Broadwayfc^^ '/* ' * rs*&- Surgeon General's Office D ejection, k THIS ECONOMY OF HEALTH; OR, THE STREAM OF HUMAN LIFE, FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE. WITH REFLECTIONS, MORAL, PHYSICAL, AND PHILOSOPHICAL, ON THE SEPTENNIAL PHASES OF HUMAN EXISTENCE. / BY JAMES JOHNSON, M. D., PHYSICIAN EXTRAORDINARY TO THE KIKe>{t '3X89}*• ^ " The proper study of mankind is 46" LI CILA. I> J < ft NEW-YORK:^ ••//JfWIH HARPER & BROTHERS, 82 CLIFF-STREET 18 37. QTA J£7e I83T PREFACE. The following essay, though small in size, is the result of long experience and observa- tion. It consists of the deductions which have been drawn from facts and reflections, rather than the processes through which these deduc- tions had been arrived at. After all, it is but an outline of the subject, the details of which would fill many volumes. The author will not be accused of having followed or borrowed much from his predeces- sors in this walk. The various " arts of pro- longing life," and the ponderous " codes of health and longevity," though read by many, have been remembered by few—and practised by still fewer. Even where the precepts have been put in execution, they have often done more harm than good. The reason is not dif- ficult to divine. From the cradle to the grave, man is perpetually changing, both in mind and IV PREFACE. body. He is not to-day what he was yester- day, and will be to-morrow. Though these changes are not perceptible to the eye, at very short intervals, yet, if an individual is only seen every four or five years, the alterations will appear very remarkable. In tracing the suc- cessive phases of human existence, it was necessary to adopt some arbitrary division of time—and, after long observation and reflec- tion, the septennial periods appeared to the author the most natural epochs into which the journey of life could be divided. In respect to the execution of the work, whether good or bad, the author can safely aver that the great object aimed at was utility. Pecuniary emolument was out of the question —the race of competition is abandoned—and the goal of ambition has dropped the mask, and assumed its real character—the scoffing ter minus of man's vain hopes—the withering finger-post pointing to the tomb ! " Inveni portum—spes et fortuna valete— Sat me lusistis—ludite nunc aliis !" In a survey of human life, there was much temptation to moral reflection, and even some PREFACE. V excuse for metaphysical speculation. Into the latter the author has seldom ventured, and then with great brevity. In fine, he has endeav- oured to simplify the leading principles of pre- serving health and attaining happiness, rather than to multiply details and amplify precepts that can only be applied by each individual to himself. Suffolk Place, November, 1836. A2 CONTENTS. Preliminary Observations—Definition of Health, 13.—The chief Ingredient in Happiness, 14.—Power, Riches, Fame, Beauty, &c. without Health, 15.—Religion, Philosophy, Ma- terialism, 16.—Public Health, or Hygiene, 17.—Bramins, Jews, and Greeks, 19.—Sanitary Code of Lycurgus, 20.— Spartan Gymnastics, 21.—Ancient Persian Dietetics, ib.—Py- thagorean Precepts, 22.—Influence of Animal and Vegetable Food, ib.—Man omnivorous, ib.—Division of Life into Ten Septenniads, 25. FIRST SEPTENNIAD. One to seven years. Picture of Earliest Infancy, 26.—State of the Brain and Interna; Organs in early Infancy, 27.—Intellectual Operations almost null, ib.—Danger of Early Mental Exertions, ib.—Physical Education ofthe First Septenniad,28.—Food.ib.—Cloth- ing, 29.—Calido-frigid Fortifier, 30.—Exercise, 32.—Moral Education of the First Septenniad, ib.—Habits and Man- ners to be formed in this Epoch, 33.—Importance of Order, Regularity, Punctuality, 34. SECOND SEPTENNIAD. Seven to fourteen years. The Schoolmaster-^unhappy Wight, 35.—Precocious Culture of the Intellect, 36.—Swords turned into Pens, ib.—Modes of Elementary Instruction, 37.—Private Tuition—Public Schools, 38.—Disproportion between Mental and Corporeal Exercise, ib.—Grand Principle of Education, 39.—Proper Premium for Mental Attention, ib.—Systematic Exercise, 40. —Dietetic Regimen during the Scholastic Septenniad, 41.— Modern Errors at the Home Table, ib.—Barbarous System of Vlll CONTENTS. " Fagging" at Schools, 42.—Contagion of Vice in Public Sem- inaries, ib.—Lancastrian System of " Mutual Destruction, 43.—Cardinal Objects of Education, ib.—Comparative Advan- tages of Learning and Science, 44.—Classics and Mathematics compared, ib.—Value of Time in the present State ol the World, 46.—Remarks on Originals and Translations, lb — Ed- ucation of Females, 47.—Mania for Music, 48.—Aristocracy of the " Factory Girls," 49.—Misappropriation of Time, 50. THIRD SEPTENNIAD. Fourteen to twenty-one years. Change from the Schoolmaster to the Taskmaster—from the Seminary to the Counting-house—from the Academy to the College, 51.—Manifold Dangers of the Third Septenniad, 52. —Secrets of the Prison-house, 53.—Evils of the Arts and Manufactures, 55.—Insalubrious Avocations and Professions, 56—Wear and Tear of University Wrangling, 57.—High Mental Cultivation of Mind injuiious to the Body, 58.—Com- parative Effects of Classics and Mathematics, 59.—Dawn of certain Passions and Propensities, 61.—Love the Master-pas- sion in this Septenniad, ib.—Two Cupids—one heaven-born, the other the Offspring of Nox and Erebus, 62.—Picture of a Lovesick Maiden, 63.—Marriage Maxims of Modern Life, 64.—Evil direction of Female Education, 65.—Morbid Exci- tability produced by Music, 66.—Seeds of Female Diseases sown at this Period, 68.—Want of Exercise—Exposure to Night Air, 69.—Deplorable Effects of Tight Lacing, 70.—Ef- fects of too early Matrimony, 74. FOURTH SEPTENNIAD. Twenty-one to twenty-eight years. Typical Representation of Time, 75.—Nature ever changing, never changed, 76.—Time, as estimated by different Individ- uals, ib.—Unjust Complaints against Time, 77.—Majority at- tained, and M anhood gained, 78.—False Estimates of good and bad Fortune, ib.—Remarkable Illustration—" all for the best," 79.—Majority of Years not Acme of Powers, ib.—Age of twenty-five the Age of Maturity, ib.—Difference between Males and Females, 80.—Fourth Septenniad the most critical for both Sexes, ib.—Structure and Functions of the Human Frame indicative of infinite Wisdom, 81.—Sum Total of the Functions constitutes Health, ib.—Sources of Pleasure and Suffering, 82.—Man apparently designed for Immortality, CONTENTS. IX 83.—Immortality in this World would be a dreadful Curse, 84.—Acme of Physical Development at twenty-five not the Acme of Firmness and Strength, ib.—Temperance and Exer- cise consolidate the Constitution, 85.—Youth of Labour and Age of Ease, ib.—Exercise almost always in our Power, 86.— Fourth Septenniad claimed by Hymen, 87.—Question of the proper Time for Marriage, 88.—Consequences of Prema- ture Marriage in the Female, ib.—Choice of a Mate—Marriage a Lottery, 89.—Courtship a State of Warfare, ib.—Best Chance of Happiness in Matrimony, 90.—All Contrasts produce Har- mony, 91.—Wisdom of Providence, ib. FIFTH AND SIXTH SEPTENNIADS. Twenty-eight to forty-two years. THE GOLDEN ERA. Fifth and Sixth Septenniads the double Keystone of the Arch of Human Life, 92.—Remarks on Dr. S. Johnson's " Decline of Life," ib.—Remarks on Dr. S. Smith's " Merid- ian of Life," 93.—Life nearly stationary from twenty-eight to forty-two, ib.—Equilibrium of Waste and Supply, ib.—Argu- ments against Materialism, 94.—Phrenology, 95.—Different Organs and different Functions in the Brain, ib —Plurality of Organs in the Brain no Argument in favour of Materialism, ib. —Material Organs not the Causes but the Instruments of the Mental Faculties, 96.—Drawbacks on Phrenology, 98.—Auto- phrenology, or the Study of our own Propensities, the best Study—and easiest, 99.—Difficulty and Danger of studying the Organs of our Neighbours, ib.—Insanity and Monomania best Illustrations of Phrenology, 101.—Mind acquires Strength after the Body begins to decline, 102.—Imagination strongest in the Golden Era, ib.—Shakspeare—Scott—Byron, &c. as examples, ib.—Exceptions to this Rule—Milton—Johnson, &c, 103.—Judgment stronger after the Meridian, ib.—Bacon, Newton, Locke, Linnaeus, &c. in illustration, ib.—Novum Organon, at the age of fifty-nine, ib.—Newton's Vigour of Mind at seventy-three, 104.—Powers of Mind and Body do not appear to rise and fall, pari passu, as the Materialists maintain, ib.—Explanation of this Difference, ib.—Practical Applica- tion, 105.—Emulation of Youth glides into the Ambition of Manhood, ib.—Ambition, its Rewards and Punishments, 106. —Alexander, Hannibal, Caesar, Sidney, Woolsey, Napoleon, ib.—Ambition, the universal Passion in Middle Age, 107.— No Organ of Ambition discovered by Phrenologists, ib.—Suc- cession of the Passions and Propensities, 108.—All Brains X CONTENTS. equally blank at Birth ; but all Brains not equal on that Ac- count, 109.—Our Talents are hereditary—our Acquirements depend on ourselves, 110—Examples of Emulation.growing into Ambition, ib.—Napoleon, Peel, Byron, Brougham, &c, ib.—Men are not born equal, ib.—At thirty-five Love and Am- bition nearly equipotent, 111.—The Seeds of many Diseases called into Activity during the Fifth and Sixth Septenni ads, 113.—Modern Maladies—Dyspepsy, &c, ib.—March oi Intellect and its Miseries, 115.—Torrent of Knowledge not to be stopped, ib.—Health deteriorated, though Life be not cur tailed, by the March of Improvement, 116.—Nervous Com plaints from Mental Exertion, 117.—Action and reaction ol Mind and Body, 118.—Chief Sources of Modern Disorders in the Mind, 120.—Illustrations of Mental Depressions predis posing to Bodily Disease, ib.—Walcheren and Batavia, 121.— Development of a grand Principle in Hygiene—Activity of Body as an Antidote to Depression of Mind, 122.—II lustrations—Retreat of the Te'n Thousand Greeks, under Xenophon, 123—Siege of Mantua, 126.—Shipwreck of Cap- tain Byron, ib.—Retreat of Sir John Moore, 127.—Narratives of Bligh and Wilson, 128.—Retreat of the French from Mos- cow, 129.—Application of this Principle of Hygiene to Private Life, 130.—GraecoByronian Precept—" Keep the Body ac- tive, and the Stomach empty," 131.—Misfortunes of the Female Sex, ib.—Ingratitude to Mothers, ib.—Maternal Affec- tion, 132.—Filial Affection, 133.—Punishments in this World, 134.—Suicide, 135.—Hope of Rewards, ib.—Zenith of the Journey of Life, 136.—Retrospection, 138.—Tree of Knowl- edge, 139.—Probable Effects of Knowledge, 140.—On Intel- lect, 143.—On Learning, ib— On Wealth, 145.—On Rank, 146.—On Happiness, 147.—On Equalisation, 148. SEVENTH SEPTENNIAD. Forty-two to forty-nine years. Ebb-tide of Life commences at forty-two, 150.—Decadence of the Stream scarcely perceptible, ib.—Melancholy Monitors, ib.—The three Master-passions equipoised, 151.—Grand Clim- acteric of Woman, ib.—Patho-Protean Malady—Origin and Sources of this Multiform Disorder, 152.—Not an En- tity, but a Modern Constitution or Disposition, 153.—Chief Source in the Brain—Chief Action on the Digestive Organs, 154.—Multitudinous Causes, 155.—Injuries offered to the Stomach by all Classes, 156.—Nature of the Vital Organs, 157.—Stomach Intellectualized, 158.—Morbid Circle of Asso- ciation, ib.—Melancholy Case of Periodical Monomania, end- CONTENTS, XI ing in Suicide, 160.—Fatal Effects of Ambition, 161.—Modern Habits and Pursuits, 164.—Redundant Population—Ardent Competition, 165.—" Feast of Reason," 167.—Mental Intem- perance, 168.—Morbid Sensibility, 170.—Central Seat of the Protean Fiend, 171.—Imitates various Diseases, 172.—Parox- ysm of the Patho-Proteus, 173.—Invasion of the Intellectual Powers, 175.—Dire Effects of the Patho-Proteus on Temper, 176.—Temper not entirely under the Control of Reason, 177. —Remarks on Insanity, ib.—Hygiene, or Prevention of the Protean Malady—Temperance and Exercise the grand Preventives and Correctives, 179.—Baleful Effects of Seden- tary Habits, 180.—Inactivity the Parent of Irritability, 182.— Incentives to Exercise, 183.—Travelling Exercise in the open Air, 185.—First Tour of Health, in 1823, 186.—Second Tour of Health, 1829, 190.—Remark^ on the Salutary Effects of Travelling Exercise, 191.—Narrow Escapes from Malaria and Atmospheric Vicissitudes, 193.—Third Tour of Health—The Highlands and Hebrides, 200-.—Fourth Tour of Health—Hol- land, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy, 202.—Description of the Baths of Pfeffers, 203.—Tremendous Scene over the Torrent of the Tamina, 207.—Source of the Thermae, 211.— Mrs. Bodington's Description of the Pfeffers, 214.—The Waters of Pfeffers, 215.—Disorders for which the Pfeffers are recommended, 216.—Description of the Baths, 217.—Locale of the Baths, 218.—Stupendous Scenery in the Vicinity of the Baths, 219.—Scenic Effects among the Alps, ib.—Cautions respecting Hot Baths in general, 221.—Chronic Diseases in which they are serviceable, 223.—Dyspepsy and Hypochon- driasis, 225.—Moral Effkcts of Travelling Exercise, 227.—Physical Effects of Travelling Exercise, 231.— Remarkable Effects in Neutralizing Vicissitudes of Temper- ature, ib.—Effects on the Digestive Organs, 233.—Effects on various other Organs and Functions, 237. EIGHTH SEPTENNIAD. Forty-nine to fifty-six years. Comparative Position of the three Master-passions in this Sep. tenniad, 241.—Pleasures and Miseries of Memory, ib.—Dan- ger of Attempting to change Habits or Avocations in this Sep- tenniad, 243.—Unequal Matrimonial Alliances, 244.—Melan- choly Mementoes in this Septenniad,ib—Cowper's Life,246. —Resources of Art in counteracting Decay of Life, 247.— Tendency to Obesity in the Eighth Septenniad, 248.—Cautions necessary at this Period, 250. XII CONTENTS. NINTH SEPTENNIAD. Fifty-six to sixty-three years. GRAND CLIMACTERIC. Reflections on the Lapse of Time in Youth and in Age, 251.— Love of Money becomes the predominant Passion, 252.— Grand Climacteric—" Fifth Age" of Shakspeare—Ration ale of the Grand Climacteric, 253.—Description of the Clim acteric Decline, 256.—Imitation of the Climacteric Decline in Young Females, 257.—Means of checking the Climacteric Decline, 258.—Various Terminations of the Climacteric Dis- ease, 259.—Remedies or Palliatives, 260.—Other Diseases of the Ninth Septenniad, 261.—Fate of Scott and Byron, 262.— Desire for Retirement at this Period of Life, ib.—Fatal Effects of too early Retirement from Business, 263.—Remarkable Ex- ample, 264.—Retrospective and Prospective Views at sixty- three, 267.—Religion, 268. TENTH SEPTENNIAD. Sixty-three to seventy years. Sixth Age of Shakspeare, Remarks on, 269.—Portrait of Old Age—Marlborough and Swift, 271.—Modern Failure of the Teeth, 272.—General Dilapidation of the whole Frame, 273.— Departure of some Ruling Passions, 274.—Avarice remains— Remarkable Examples, ib.—Supposed Coruscations of Intel- lect at the Close of Life, 276. ULTRA-LIMITES. Seventy to naught. Shakspeare's "Last Scene of All," 278.—Man hopes for a little Protraction of Existence till the last, ib.—The Skeptic's Hor- ror of Death, 279.—Consolation of Christianity in the Last Scene, 280. Appendix 281 THE ECONOMY OF HEALTH; OR, THE STREAM OF HUMAN LIFE. Health has been denned the natural and easy exercise of all the functions—constituting a state of actual pleasure, " The usual, the permanent, the natural condition of each organ, and of the en- tire system, is pleasurable."* This might be true, if we were in a state of nature ; but in our present condition there is scarcely such a thing as perfect health. It is, unfortunately, often a negative, rather than a positive quality—an immunity from suffer- ing, rather than the pleasurable condition described by Dr. Smith. All must acknowledge that there is no such thing as moral perfection in this world;— neither is there physical perfection. Man brings with him the seeds of sickness as well as of death ; and although, in their early growth, these seeds may be imperceptible, yet so many noxious agents surround us, that we rarely arrive at maturity before the foul weeds become cognizable, and disorder usurps the place of health ! I am ready to grant, with the talented author already quoted, that, " ab- stracting from the aggregate amount of pleasure (health) the aggregate amount of pain, the balance ^ * Dr. S. Smith's Philosophy of Health. B 14 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. in favour of pleasure is immense." It is to be remembered, however, that our pleasurable or healthy moments pass with rapid wing, and that we are often scarcely conscious of their existence. Not so while under pain or sickness. Then the hours drag heavily along, and the perception of time is only experience of suffering! But whether a positive or a negative quality— whether a complete or merely a comparative free- dom from disease, is health estimated as the great- est blessing ?—is it appreciated at its real value 1 It would appear not to be so by the following decla- ration of the poet:— " Oh happiness Tour being's end and aim, Good, pleasure, ease, content, whate'er thy name!" No one knew better than Pope the blessing of health, or rather the miseries of sickness; and therefore the bard ought to have placed health at the head of the short category in the second line. Let that category be extended to the utmost limit of the poet's imaginings—let all its items, if possi- ble, be brought within the grasp of some fortunate individual—yet omit health, and all the other ob- jects of men's wishes and hopes would prove stale, flat, and unprofitable. Strike out health from the list of regal prerogatives, and the imperial diadem proves a crown of thorns. Without health, the armorial bearings, and all those glittering symbols of ancestral pride and noble birth, grow insipid, nay, hateful to the eye of the possessor, as laughing in mockery at human suffering, and pointing to the grave as the only certain refuge from human woes —the only asylum which opens its gates indiscrim- inately to the relief of the high and the low! Without health, riches cannot procure ease, much less happiness. It would have been an un- just dispensation of Providence, if gold had been permitted to purchase that which is the poor man'9 NO HAPPINESS WITHOUT HEALTH. 15 chief wealth, and the want of which reduces the affluent to worse than indigence ! The bed of sick- ness is the greatest of all levellers on this side of the grave. Can the embroidered pillow or the pur- le canopy still the fierce throbbings of the fevered rain, or arrest the dire tortures of lacerating gout 1 No, verily! But, it will be said, each Crossus or Dives may console himself with the reflection that he can summon to his aid, when overtaken with illness, a conclave of grave, learned, and skilful physicians. True. The pauper and the peasant confide their fates to the parish doctor or the vil- lage apothecary, whose remedies may be less palat- able, but not less potent, than those of their prouder brethren. At all events, they are not cursed with consultations, nor liable to have their maladies mis- nomered, if not mismanaged, by conflicting doc- trines and fashionable doctors. The pains of the poor man may be as strong as those of the rich; but his sensibilities are less acute, because more accustomed to privations and hardships. He has little to lose in this world, except a load of misery. To poverty, death often appears as the welcome termination of a long and unsuccessful struggle against wants and woes. From affluence, the grisly king demands an unconditional surrender of all the good things transmitted to him by heritage, acquired by industry, or accumulated by avarice. Can fame defy the stings of sickness ? No. The plaudits of the multitude can no more assuage the tortures of pain than can " flattery sooth the dull cold ear of death." The renown of a thousand victories could not diffuse an anodyne influence over the pillow of Napoleon. The laurels of Ma- rengo did not defend him against the fogs of St. Helena! Can power, the darling object even of great and ambitious minds, neutralize the stings of pain, and compensate for loss of health ? No indeed! A 16 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. motion of that magic wand, the sceptre, can cause joy or sorrow, sickness or health, in the subject; but neither the diadem nor the purple can lull the aching head or quiet the palpitating heart of the prince. Is beauty inaccessible to sickness ? Of all the gifts which Heaven can bestow, the " fortune of a face" (so earnestly implored by every " teeming mother," at each successive birth) is the most doubtful in value. It is a mark at which every malignant star directs its hostile influence—a light that leads both its bearer and followers more fre- quently upon rocks and quicksands than into the haven of repose. Between beauty and disease there is perpetual warfare. They cannot coexist for any length of time—and the latter is sure to be the victor in a protracted contest. Can literature or science close the avenues to corporeal sufferings, or render the mind superior to the infirmities of the body! Far from it. Intel- lectual cultivation sows the seeds of physical dete- rioration ; and the evils thus inflicted on the flesh fail not to grow up, and ultimately retaliate, with interest, on the spirit. Is there, then, no condition or state in this world exempt from disease 1 None. Are there no mean? of restoring lost health, or of rendering the loss compatible with happiness, or at least with content- ment 1 Many diseases may be prevented—many are curable—and many may be mitigated; but there is only one thing, so far as I have observed, that can promise patience, resignation, and even cheer- fulness under permanent or long-continued afflic- tion, whether of body or mind—and that is religion. Philosophy, which is always strongly tinctured with natural religion, makes a noble stand, for a time, against physical as well as moral ills; but, being based on human doctrines, and supported chiefly by human pride, it fails in all protracted CAUSES OF SUICIDE. 17 struggles, and lies prostrate without resource. Ma- terialism is in a still worse condition. " When all the blandishments of life are gone"—when health has fled, and pleasure taken, of course, its last adieu, the skeptic, or rather the materialist, has nothing to hope on this side of the grave, and noth- ing to fear beyond that bourn. He is furnished with no arguments against self-destruction, except a contemplation of the pain attending the act—the stain that may attach to reputation or survivers— and that horror of annihilation, corresponding with the instinctive fear of death, implanted in the breast of every living creature. These being overcome, the skeptic determines to put an end, at one and the same time, to his sufferings and to his existence. The only causes of suicide, in my opinion, are in- sanity and materialism. No man of sane mind and of firm Christian belief ever yet destroyed himself. A gust of passion or a momentary inebriation may occasionally lead to such attempts; but they form no exception to the rule; for such states are states of temporary insanity. It is but right to observe that, in ninety-nine out of a hundred instances, the suicide is insane at the moment of perpetrating the horrid deed. While a ray of hope remains, the materialist clings to life—the idea of annihilation having terrors peculiar to itself, and being often more repugnant to the human mind than even the conviction of a future state of punishment. In fine, were there no other advantages resulting from early cultivation of religious principles, and a steady adherence to them afterward, than those which relate exclusively to our present state of existence—namely, the acquisition of patience under temporary affliction, and resignation under irreme- diable loss of health, these advantages would be in- valuable. They would be the best legacy of the parent—the best heritage of the child. Health may be considered under two points of B2 18 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. view—that which relates to the community, and that which respects the individual. In modern times, and especially in this country, there is little other attention paid by government to public health than the removal of a few nuisances, and the establishment of quarantines against plague, which is not likely to visit a country where it would be starved to death in a month—and against cholera, which, when inclined to visit a place, can leap over a triple cordon of Prussian bayonets, with as much ease as a wolf vaults over the palisades of a sheep- fold ! It may be both curious and instructive to glance at the difference between ancient and modern legislation on the subject of public health. There can be little doubt that the minute regulations re- specting diet, ablution, &c, enforced by the Hindoos, the Egyptians, the Hebrews, and the Greeks, were directed to the preservation of health, though under the form of religious ceremonies ; the priests, who were the physicians, wisely concluding that injunc- tions would be better obeyed, when they were af- firmed to be mandates from Heaven, than if they were considered as merely of human invention. Thus Brama enjoined vegetable diet, and prohibited animal food, from an opinion that such diet was the best calculated for the inhabitants of a burning cli- mate. Though mistaken in his opinion as to the salubrity of exclusive vegetable food, yet the Hindoo proselyte perseveres in the supposed divine dogma to the present hour. And so with the Jews. It will hardly be con- tended that the prohibition of pork (the most nutri- tious food of man) was a command from the Al- mighty for the salvation of a Hebrew's soul. But when it is recollected that leprosy was prevalent in Judea, and that swine were believed to be very subject to that loathsome malady, the prohibition of bacon, as an item in the decalogue, may be ac- counted for. The sentence of uncleanness nassed SPARTAN SANITARY LAWS. 19 by Moses on so many beasts, birds, and fishes, is inexplicable on any other supposition than that it was based on some sanitary code of diet, however erroneous. It is possible that this restriction and uniformity of diet, so tenaciously maintained by the Israelites in all ages and countries, may be one of several causes conducing to that similarity of fea- tures and constitutions presented by this remarkable people, however scattered over the surface of the earth. Their religious ablutions are explicable on the same principle—and so are their laws of segre- gation, directed against contagion. But we shall now come to less debatable ground. It is clear that the Greeks in general, and Lycurgus in particular, considered a full expansion of the cor- poreal organs as essential to a complete develop- ment of the mental faculties :—in other words, that strength of mind resulted from, or was intimately associated with, strength of body. The first law which Lycurgus placed on the national sanitary code was somewhat singular, namely, the destruc- tion of all children born with deformity or defect of any kind ! This was a pretty effectual mode of improving the breed of Spartans! It certainly was more preventive of bad health than conducive to longevity in the individual. It is manifest that Lycurgus was more solicitous to ensure a race of able-bodied citizen soldiers to defend the state than of philosophers and poets to instruct or delight mankind. It is impossible he could be ignorant that a great mind might inhabit a feeble body—and that genius and talent were not incompatible with a crooked spine or a club-foot. Had Pope been born in Laconia, the Poet of Twick- enham would never have " lisped in numbers," or tuned his lyre to the Rape of the Lock. Had Byron, even, been a Spartan, Child Harold would have found a watery grave in the Eurotas, or been hurled over Mount Taygeta, and Don Juan would never 20 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. have invoked the ashes of Greece from the towers of Missalounghi. The Spartan law was as impolitic as it was in- human. Intellectual vigour is as necessary to a nation as physical force. Brain is at least as useful to the individual as muscle. One man of talent and probity is more valuable to society than a hundred giants. The Grecian camp would rather have spared Ajax than Ulysses. Should any utilitarian law, like that of Lycurgus, be ever revived in this world, the principle- of it ought to be reversed. Instead of a jury of doctors to pronounce on the physical imperfections of the body, we should have a board of phrenologists to gauge the vicious propensities of the mind. In such cases, if all those whose heads presented a preponderance of the mere ani- mal over the intellectual organization were drowned, we should then indeed be going to the root of the evil, and have a radical reform in human nature ! But, passing over the barbarous ordeal in the san- itary code of Lycurgus, let us see whether the laws, or rather the customs (which are stronger) of the Spartans, furnish any useful information towards the present inquiry. During the first seven years of life, the Spartan youth, of 'both sexes, were left under the care of their parents, who permitted the energies of Nature to develop the physical powers of their offspring, without any check to their exuberant and plastic elasticity. The propriety of the custom will be in- quired into presently. At the completion of the seventh year, the education, mental and corporeal, was undertaken or superintended by the state. Both sexes were subjected to a regular system or discipline of bodily and intellectual culture. Their sports, their studies, their exercises, and probably their repasts, were all in public and in common. They were early and gradually exposed to atmo- spherical vicissitudes.of every kind. Although moral SPARTAN GYMNASTICS. 21 religious, and literary instruction formed part of this discipline and education, it is indisputable that physical perfection was more anxiously aimed at than intellectual. The exercises of the body in the gymnasia were great and prolonged, according as years advanced —while the food for the support of that body was simple, frugal, and but little varied. Hunger was the only sauce—and muscular exertion was the sole provocative.* Such a uniform and rigid system of training (in which the females, before marriage, participated) must have produced a remarkable sim- ilarity of constitution, and a considerable conge- niality of sentiment. Military glory being more the object of education than literary fame, the la- bours of the gymnasium (as has been observed be- fore) preponderated exceedingly over those of the portico. The influence of such systematic training on health must have been astonishing—and scarcely less so on the morale than on the physique. Such strenuous exercise and simple food must have con- trolled the passions, and nurtured the virtues of man, beyond all the precepts of priests or philoso- phers. For it is to be remembered that, however Utopian such a system might be in our days, it was actually reduced to practice in former ages, and its results recorded in authentic history. It developed the bodily powers to the utmost—it nearly annihi- lated all other kinds of disease than that of death, the inevitable lot of mankind. Even in our own times, this rigid regimen and discipline have been successfully adopted by individuals, from various motives. * According to Xenophon, the discipline of the Persian youth, in the time of Cyrus, was still more severe than that of the La- cedaemonian. Coarse bread and herbs formed the diet of ad- vanced youth, though they were undergoing the fatigues of mil- itary exercises, while their beds were the earth, with the canopy of heaven for their curtains. 22 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. With all these advantages, it may be asked, how and why did these people degenerate ? Alas ! there is a principle of decay in nations as well as individ- uals. It is also to be borne in mind, that the an- cients had no true religion to check the vices of hu- man nature, and guide the principles which lead to happiness and prosperity. It is curious, however, that all those states where paganism or idolatry pre- vailed, have crumbled into dust, or are tottering on the verge of ruin ; while no Christian nation has yet degenerated into barbarism or lapsed into igno- rance since the dark ages. Even Italy, where the worst forms of government are united with the least pure forms of Christianity, is not an exception. Even there, science, literature, art, and even moral- ity are steadily tkough slowly advancing. Before quitting the subject of public hygiene, it may be proper to glance at the precepts of Pythag- oras and his disciples. These precepts or doc- trines appear to have been founded partly on reli- gious, partly on moral, and partly on sanitary prin- ciples. The constant conversion of every kind of matter from one form into others—of man into earth, of earth into vegetables, and of vegetables into animated beings, coupled with the belief that the souls of men migrated into the bodies of ani- mals, may have generated scruples in the minds of the Braminical and Pythagorean philosophers, as to the propriety of eating any thing that had life, though a deeper philosophy would have taught them that the same objection lay against vegetable food, But it is probable that Pythagoras was swayed more by philanthropic than by theological princi- ples in his doctrines. He may have thought, and not without reason, that those who slaughtered and fed on the flesh of animals, would acquire a callos- ity or insensibility to the shedding of human blood. That Jhis was the view of Pythagoras, has been DOCTRINES OF BRAMA AND PYTHAGORAS. 23 maintained by a modern philosopher and physician of supereminent talents. " So erst the sage, with scientific truth, In Grecian temples taught th' attentive youth, With ceaseless change, how restless atoms pass, From life to life, a transmigrating mass. How the same organs which, to-day, compose The poisonous henbane or the fragrant rose, May, with to-morrow's sun, new forms compile, Frown in the hero, in the beauty smile :— Hence drew th' enlightened sage the moral plan, That man should ever be the friend of man— Should view with tenderness all living forms, His brother-emmets and his sister-worms." Will those who are best versed in a knowledge of mankind, and who have best observed the influ- ence of habits, regimen, and other external agents on the human race, deny that there is any truth in the doctrines of Pythagoras 1 For my own part, I had rather trust my life to the tender mercies of the shepherd who tends his flocks on the wild moun- tain's side, than to the butcher who slays those flocks in his shambles, and inhales, from morn till night, the reeking odour of animal gore. Are not the Hindoos, whose food is almost exclusively ve- getable, less implacable, ferocious, and passionate than the carnivorous nations 1 Does not a survey of the animal kingdom bring us to the same conclu- sion ! The carnivore are much more fierce, rapa- cious, and cruel in their nature than the herbivore. Compare the horse with the tiger—the dove with the vulture—the fawn with the leopard. The Pythagorean doctrines, however, were very erroneous in a sanitary point of view. Man was decidedly designed to eat both animal and vegetable food—and the Hindoos do not attain longer life than other people under similar circumstances as to climate. They are not so strong as the Mahometans of the same country, who eat animal food. But, although Brama and Pythagoras greatly overrated 24 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. the salutary influence of their dietetic systems on health, they were not totally in error. There are many disorders which do not materially curtail the usual range of existence, but yet disturb many of its enjoyments. Such disorders are often dependant on the quantity of animal food consumed by Europe- ans, and especially by Englishmen. There are sys- tems of diet, on the other hand, which do not, per- haps, conduce to longevity, or to robust health, but which render the stream of time much more placid, and life itself less dolorous, than they otherwise would be. Such, for instance, is the slender and unirritating food of the Hindoo. The foregoing observations are sufficient to show that, in ancient times, public hygiene, or the health of the community, was often made the subject of religious, legislative, or philosophical enactments, from each of which some useful hints may be ob- tained. In our times, all is changed. Every indi- vidual now legislates for himself in respect to his health, or intrusts it, when impaired, to the care of the physician. But, since legislators, divines, and philosophers have ceased to impose their sanitary regulations on the people, many thousand volumes have been written on health and longevity. Al- most the only one, and perhaps the best, which is consulted in England, is the voluminous compilation of our countryman, Sir John Sinclair, who was not a physician. He, like his predecessors, has fallen into the error of giving us a multiplicity of details, with a paucity of principles :—the former, too often inapplicable or impracticable—the latter, very gen- erally unintelligible or erroneous. The plans or ar- rangements of authors on this subject have been innumerable. Neither these nor the materials ol their tomes shall I copy; but draw on the resources of my own observation and reflection for whatevei I adduce in this essay. I shall divide the life of man—brief as it is found LIFE DIVIDED INTO TEN SEPTENNIADS. 25 in final retrospect, but interminable as it appears in early perspective—into ten epochs or periods, of seven years each, which, though blending and amal- gamating at their junctions, are yet clearly marked by distinctive characteristics in their several phases. Simple and isolated as the subject of health may seem, in these ten Septenniads, it will probably be found to touch, if not embrace " Quicquid agunt homines, votum, timor, ira, voluptas," many—perhaps most of those actions, passions, en- joyments, and sufferings that constitute the drama of human life! C 26 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. FIRST SEPTENNIAD. One to seven years* For some time after man's entrance into the world, his existence is merely animal, or physical. He cries, feeds, and sleeps. His intellectual func- tions are nearly null; while those of the little bod- ily fabric are in a state of the most intense activity. Gradually the senses awake, and the avenues of communication between the surrounding world and the living microcosm are opened. External im- pressions are conveyed to the sensorium or organ of the mind, and there produce sensations, which become progressively more distinct, and, by fre- quent reiteration, lay the foundation of memory and association. During the first septenary period, re- flection can hardly be said to take place. Nature is busily employed in building up the corporeal structure—and the mind is occupied, almost exclu- sively, in storing up those materials for future thought, which the vivid senses are incessantly pouring in on the sensory of the soul. These few facts (and they might be multiplied to any extent) may furnish important hints to the pa- rent, the pedagogue, and the philanthropist. It is during the first and second Septenniads that the foundations of liealth and happiness, of physical force, intellectual acquirements, and moral recti- tude, are all laid! Yet the arch-enemy of mankind would have found it difficult to devise a system or * The latter year in each Septenniad is always included and considered as completed. EDUCATION. 27 code of education for body and mind, better calcu- lated to mar each and every of the above objects, than that which is adopted by the wise men of the earth at this moment. The first and second Septen- niads are probably the most important to the inter- ests of the individual and of society, of the whole ten. It is while the wax is ductile that the model is easily formed. In the early part of childhood, and even of youth, every fibre is so full—so exuberant of vitality, that rest is pain, and motion is pleasure. In infancy the organ of the mind presides over, and furnishes energy to, every other organ and function in the body. At this period, be it remembered, these organs and functions are in the greatest de- gree of growth and activity; and therefore the brain (or organ of the mind) requires to be at liberty to direct its undivided influence to their support. If it were possible to bring intellectual operations into play in the mind of the infant, the brain could not supply the proper nervous power for digestion, assim- ilation, and nutrition; and the whole machine would languish or decay. Now these facts apply, more or less, to a great part of the first Septenniad—or even of the second—and here we have the true physio- logical cause and explanation of the havoc which is produced in youthful frames by premature exertion of the intellectual faculties ! Nor is it the body ex- clusively that suffers from precocious culture of the mind. The material tenement of the soul cannot be shattered without injury to its spiritual tenant. It may be true, in some figurative sense, that " The soul's dark cottage, batter'd and decay'd, Admits new lights through chinks which time has made." This can only refer to the common wear and tear of body, and the lights of age and experience—but, even in this point of view, I doubt the dogma of the bard, and apprehend that the said lights would shine full as well through the proper windows of the 28 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. " soul's dark cottage," as through those cracks and rents that are effected by time and infirmity. I have alluded to the Spartan custom of leaving the youth, during the first seven years, under the guidance of the parents, who permitted the physi- cal powers of their offspring to develop themselves without control. What is the case with us 1 Du- ring a considerable portion of that period the youth is " got out of the way," and imprisoned in a scho- lastic hotbed or nursery, where the " young ideas," instead of being left to shoot out slowly, are forced out rapidly, to the great detriment of the intellect- ual soil, thus exhausted by too early and too fre- quent crops. It has been shown that the organ of the mind, in the first stages of our existence, is exclusively oc- cupied with its animal functions. It soon, however, is able to allot a portion of its power to the opera- tions of the immaterial tenant. If this power were more gradually and gently exercised than it now is, we would have stronger frames and sounder minds. We might unite, in a considerable degree, the strength of the savage with the wisdom of the sage. As education, in this as well as in the two succeed- ing Septenniads, is both physical and moral, we shall adopt this division of the subject. PHYSICAL EDUCATION OF THE FIRST SEPTEN- NIAD. 1. Food.—It is fortunate for man that nature fur- nishes him with sustenance during the first nine months of his existence. The milk of a healthy nurse is a more salutary and scientific compound of animal and vegetable nutriment than he ever after- ward imbibes. He has hardly left his mother's bo- som, however, before the work of mischief com- mences, which seldom ceases till he approaches a second childhood, or has suffered severely by the PHYSICAL EDUCATION--CLOTHING. 29 imprudence of his parents and the early indulgence of his own appetites! Nature furnishes teeth, as solid food becomes necessary; and the transition from milk to meat should not be too abrupt. The . teeth are protruded slowly and successively; and, during this period, milk and farinaceous food should preponderate over that which is purely animal. But errors of diet, in the first Septenniad, do not consist so much in the quantity of food as in the provocative variety with which the infantile and un sophisticated palate is daily stimulated. The rapid growth of infancy requires an abundant supply ol plain nutritious aliment; but it is at this early pe riod that simplicity in kind, and regularity in the periods of meals, would establish the foundation for order and punctuality in many other things, and thus conduce to health and happiness through life. As the first nutriment which Nature furnishes is a compound of animal and vegetable matters, so should it be for ever afterward. In youth, and es- pecially during the first Septenniad, milk and farina- ceous substances should form the major part of the diet, with tender animal food once a day. As the teeth multiply, the proportions of the two kinds of sus- tenance ought gradually and progressively to vary. 2. Clothing.—Because we come naked into the world, it does not follow that we should remain so. Nature supplies animals with coats, because the pa- rents of animals have no manufactories of linen and woollen. The dress with which Nature clothes the young animal is nearly uniform over the whole body ; but not so that which man, or rather woman, constructs for the infant. Some parts are covered five-fold—some left naked. In many of the most civilized countries of the world, the child is placed in " durance vile"—in bondage—or at least in band- age, the moment it sees the light! This practice, which commences in ignorance, is continued by 30 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. fashion, till it ends in disease, and entails misery and sufferings on the individual and the offspring, from generation to generation. But more of this hereafter. If many of our disorders are produced through the agency of improper food or deleterious substan- ces on the internal organs, so a great number of maladies are induced through the medium of atmo- spheric impressions and vicissitudes on the exter- nal surface of the body. These cannot be counter- acted or rendered harmless by either very warm or very light clothing. The great antidote to alter- nations of climate consists in early and habitual exposure to transitions of temperature, drought, hu- midity, &c. This may be safely effected at all pe- riods of life, from infancy to old age; and the prac- tice, which is both easy and pleasant in opera- tion, would save annually an immense waste of life, and a prodigious amount of sufferings in this country. It is simply the alternate application of warm and cold water (by immersion or sponging) during the first year or two to the whole body, and afterward to the face, neck, and upper parts of the chest every morning. The application of cold water alone will not be sufficient. There must be the sudden and rapid succession of heat and cold—which I would term the calido-frigid fortifier, or prophy- lactic. This process not only imitates and obviates the atmospheric vicissitudes of our own climate, but is, in itself, salutary in any climate. The hot water excites the surface to which it is applied, and fills the capillary vessels with blood. The cold wa- ter braces the vessels thus distended, without repel- ling the fluid too forcibly towards the interior, 01 producing a chill—since the heat and excitement of the surface secure us against a sudden retrocession It may be asked, " How does this protect us from the introduction of cold air into the lungs 1" I an- swer, that Nature provides against this daily ano CLOTHING. 31 nourly contingency. The temperature of the at- mospheric air is brought to a par with that of the body while passing down through the air-tubes, and before it reaches the air-cells of the lungs. For one cold that is caught by inhaling cold air, one hundred colds are induced by the agency of cold and moisture on the surface of the body. The ca- lido-frigid lavation or sponging, above mentioned, secures us effectually from faceaches, earaches, toothaches,* and headaches; besides rendering us insusceptible of colds, coughs—and, in no small number of instances—of consumption itself. The practice is common in Russia and some other coun- tries ; and the principle is well understood by the profession in all countries ; but the adoption of the practice is exceedingly limited in Great Britain, where it would prove extremely salutary. Except- ing in infancy, there is no occasion for the calido- frigid application to the whole body, by means of immersion or sponging: at all periods of life af- terward, the mere sponging of the upper parts of the body, already mentioned (to which I would add the feet), first with hot, and then immediately with cold water, will be quite sufficient to prevent a mul- titude of ills, a host of infirmities—and, let me add, a number of deformities to which flesh is heir, with- out this precaution. As to clothing during the first Septenniad, I shall say little more than that it should be warm, light, and loose. It will be time enough—alas ! too soon —to imitate the Egyptian mummy, when girls be- come belles, and boys beaux. I beg, for the first and second Septenniads at least, full liberty for the lungs to take air, the stomach food, and the limbs exercise, before they are " cribb'd, cabin'd, and con- * The mouth should be* rinsed with hot water and then im- mediately with cold, every morning throughout the year. If this were regularly done from infancy, the dentist might shut up shop. 32 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. fined" by those destructive operatives, the milliner, the tailor, and the bootmaker, cum multis aliis, who rank high among the purveyors or jackals to the doctor and the undertaker ! Much stress has been laid upon the use of flannel in all periods of our life. If the preservative against vicissitudes of climate to which I have alluded be employed, flannel will seldom be necessary, except where the constitution is very infirm, or the dis- position to glandular affections prominent. At all events, it should be very light, and worn outside of the linen, in this tender age. 3. Exercise.—During the first Septenniad, exer- cise may be left almost entirely to the impulses of Nature. The great modern error is the prevention of bodily exercise by too early and prolonged culture of the mind. In the first years of life, exercise should be play, and play should be exercise. To- wards the end of the first Septenniad, some degree of order or method may be introduced into playful exercise, because it will be essential to health in the second and third epochs. Even in this first epoch, exercise in the open air should be enjoined, as much as the season and other circumstances will permit. The windows of the nursery ought to be open du- ring the greater part of the day, and nursery-maids and mistresses who cannot bear the air are very unfit for the physical education of children. MORAL EDUCATION OF THE FIRST SEPTENNIAD. The first seven years of life must not be given up entirely to the physical development of the con- stitution ; though that is a most important part of the parent's duty. A great deal of moral culture may be effected in this period ; but I apprehend that it ought to be very different in kind, in mode, and in degree, from what it is at present. During several years' MORAL EDUCATION. 33 of this first Septenniad, the children of the lower, and even of the middle classes, are cooped up in a crowded and unwholesome schoolroom, for many hours in the day, to the great detriment of their health and morals, and with very little benefit to their intellectual faculties. Among the higher classes it is not so bad; yet there the children are too much drilled by tutor or governess, and by far too little exercised in body. The principle which I advocate is this: that, du- ring the first and even during the second Septenniad, the amount of elementary learning required should be less, and the daily periods of study shorter :—that sport and exercise should be the regular and unfail- ing premium on prompt and punctual acquisition of the lessons prescribed—in short, that elementary education should be acquired " cito, tute, ac jucunde" —instead of being a wearisome task, irksome to the mind, and injurious to the body. But if I declare myself adverse to the system of precocious exercise of the intellect, I am an advocate for early moral culture of the mind. It is during the first years of our existence that, the foundation of habits and manners is laid ; and these will be good or bad afterward, according to their foundations. Order is truly said to be " Heaven's first law"—and so it should be the first injunction on childhood. The brightest talents are often rendered useless by the want of order and system in our amusements, studies, and avocations. The best temper or the purest intention will not compensate for want of regularity, industry, and punctuality. Habit is the result of impression, rather than of reflection; and youth is the age for receiving impressions, rather than for exercising the judgment. Order may be instilled into the juvenile mind long before that mind is capable of perceiving the utility of the discipline; in the same way that the rules of grammar are learned before the application of these rules can be 34 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. even imagined by the pupil. From long study, and perhaps, a considerable knowledge of human nature, I most earnestly exhort parents, guardians, and tu- tors to enforce, with all their energy, the most rigid system of order, regularity, and punctuality, from the very earliest period of infancy up to the age of discretion. Half, and more than half of our miseries, crimes, and misfortunes, in after life, are attributable to the misplaced indulgence or culpable negligence of our parents. " Spare the rod and spoil the child," is a maxim that was founded in ex- perience, though it has been nearly exploded by speculative philanthropists not deeply versed in the knowledge of man. The rod, in most cases, may be spared; but, if order and obedience cannot be enforced by other means, the rod should be applied. The whole material world, and, as far as we can iudge, the whole universe, is subjected to, and governed by, certain laws of periodicity, which pre- serve order and harmony everywhere. Our mental and corporeal constitutions are controlled by simi- lar laws of periodicity, and we should subject all our actions, passions, pleasures, and labours to laws, in imitation of those which Nature has established. Thus, in infancy and youth, the sleep, exercise, play, meals—every thing, in short, which is done, should be done at regular and stated periods, and the habit of regularity, thus early established, would become a second nature, and prove a real blessing through life. There is not a single office, profes- sion, or avocation, from the high duties of the mon- arch down to the vile drudgery of the dustman, that does not owe half its honours, respectability, and success to punctuality. THE SCHOOLMASTER. 35 SECOND SEPTENNIAD. Seven to fourteen years. " Creeping, like snail, unwillingly to school." TnE second (too oft the first) Septenniad intro- duces us to one of the most important personages in this world—a personage whose image is never effaced from our memory to the latest day of our existence ! Who has ever forgotten that happy or unhappy epoch of our lives, and that stern arbiter of our fate, when we were wont " To trace The day's disaster in his morning face ?" After the lapse of half a century, the lineaments of his countenance are as fresh on the tablet of my memory as on the first day of their impression. These reminiscences are not unaccompanied by some compunctions of conscience. The personage in question is one who is " more sinned against than sinning." His office can only be envied by that public functionary who executes the last and most painful sentence of the law—or perhaps by the vic- tim who ascends the scaffold without hope of re- prieve ! He who cultivates the soil under his foot, has generally a fair recompense for his labour— and, at all events, is not upbraided for the failure of his harvests. But he who cultivates the brains of pupils, whether male or female, has often a most ungrateful task to perform. To expect a good crop of science or literature from some intellects, is about as hopeless as to expect olives to thrive on the craggy summit of Ben Nevis, or the pineapple 36 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. to expand amid the glaciers of Grindenwalde. Yet, from these steril regions of mind, the hapless peda- gogue is expected by parents to turn out. Miltons, Lockes, and Newtons, with as much facility as a gardener raises brocoli or cauliflowers from the rich alluvial grounds about Fulham! It is in vain for poor Syntax to urge in excuse, that " Non ex aliquovis ligno fit Mercurius." This is only adding insult to injury, in the eyes of the parents, who consider that any hint of imper- fection in the offspring is, by innuendo, a reproach cast on themselves. Under such circumstances, it is not much to be wondered at if the preceptor, thus compelled " To force a churlish soil for scanty bread," should sometimes become a little severe and mo- rose himself. Be this as it may, I believe that few of our youth (of either sex) who evinced talent or assiduity in their juvenile studies, have much reason to asso- ciate the memory of the schoolmaster with feel- ings of resentment or reproach. It is in this Septenniad, which may be styled, par excellence, the scholastic, that the seeds of much bodily ill and moral evil are sown. In this, and often in the latter part of the first Septenniad, the powers of the mind are forced, and those of the body are crippled. The progress of civilization, lit- erature, science, and refinement has rendered this state of things unavoidable. It may be mitigated, but it cannot be prevented. Knowledge is power. Bodily strength is now of little use in the struggle for power, riches, or fame:—mental endowments and acquirements are all in all. Togae cedant Ar- ma! The soldier of a hundred battles, and as many victories, doffs the glittering helmet and nod- SCHOOLS. 37 ding plume, to assume the scholar's cap and golden tassel. He throws aside the baton, and takes up the pen. Instead of the short and spirit-stirring addresses to his compact cohorts on the carnage- covered field, he harangues whole comitia of learned doctors and grave divines, in the accents, and even in the language of Cicero! If this be not the " march of intellect," from bannered tents to aca- demic bowers, I know not what is. It is a striking illustration and proof that the star of the morale is in the ascendant over that of the physique—that mind transcends matter—and that genius is supe- rior to strength. But this does not prove that we are steering quite free from error, in cultivating the mind at the expense of the body. It is the duty of the medical philosopher, therefore, who has the best means of ascertaining the effects of excessive education, to point out the evil, and, if possible, to suggest the remedy. It will not be necessary to advert to more than the three principal modes of elementary instruction, viz., private tuition—public day-schools—and board- ing-schools or seminaries. If we were to look merely to the health of the body, I should prefer the domestic tutor; but, all things considered, the sec- ond mode, or middle course—a public day-school (as the Westminster, London University, King's College, &c, &c.) is the best—verifying the old maxim, " in medio tutissimus ibis." The first mode is the most expensive—the second is the most beneficial, and the third is the most convenient. The private or domestic tuition is best calculated for the nobility, and higher grades of the aristoc- racy, among some of whom there seems to prevail, whether for good or evil, an idea that there are two species in the human race, between which there should be as little intercourse as possible. The second mode of education (the public day- D 38 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. school) is best adapted for all those who are to depend on their intellects through life—namely, the whole of the learned and scientific professions—more es- pecially divinity, law, and physic. Those who are hkely to mix much with their fellow-creatures du- ring their sojourn in this world, had better begin to do so in a public school. Knives are sharpened by being rubbed against each other:—so are intellects. The flint and the steel will not emit sparks unless they come into collision :—neither will brains. The coldest marble and the basest metal will glow with heat by friction; and the solid oak will burst into flame by the same operation. The emulation of a public school will call energies into action that would otherwise lie for ever dormant in the human mind. To the boarding-school there are objections, more or less cogent, according to the extent of the estab- lishment, and the degree of wisdom with which it is conducted. It cannot afford such a field for com- petition as a public school; and the youth is not under the parental roof and eye during extra-scho- lastic hours. But as boarding-schools must ever be the seminaries of education for nine tenths of the better classes of society, it is of the utmost conse- quence that the conductors of such institutions should have enlightened views on the subject of education, both as respects the morale and the physique—the health and the happiness of the pupil. Whether the scholastic institutions be large or small, public or private, one radical evil is sure to pervade the system of education pursued therein— namely (and I cannot repeat it too often), the dis- proportion between exercise of the mind and exer- cise of the body—not merely as respects the sum total of each species of exercise, but the mode of its distribution. The grasp at learning is preter- natural, overreaching, and exhausting. It is engen- dered and sustained by the diffusion of knowledge, SCHOOLS. 39 the density of population, and the difficulty of pro- viding for families. Our ambition to become great is perpetually increasing with the augmentation of knowledge, while our means of gratifying that am- bition are constantly diminishing. If this be true, and I believe it cannot be controverted, we are evi- dently in a fair way to illustrate the picture drawn by the Roman poet some twenty centuries ago :— " Hie vivimus ambitiosa Paupertate omnes." But to return to the school. The lessons im- posed on youth are too long ; and so, of course, are the periods of study. The consequence is, that the lesson is not got well, because it is learned amid languor and fatigue of the intellect. The grand principle of education is, or rather ought to be, the rapid and the perfect acquisition of small portions of learning at a time, the punctual premium being the interval of play. In this way, the idea of knowl- edge would be constantly associated with that of pleasure; and each impression on the juvenile mind being vivid and distinct, would consequently be lasting. ' But if the periods of study in the first years of the second Septenniad were reduced in length, as well as in the whole daily amount, I am far from thinking that the sum total of elementary learning acquired during the scholastic Septenniad would be thereby diminished. What is lost in letters will be gained in health; and this profitable exchange may enable the youth to sustain those increased exertions of the intellect which devolve on ulterior stages of scholastic and collegiate discipline. It is to be remembered, also, that the great majority of pupils are designed for other than the learned pro- fessions ; and to them, a modicum of health is often of more value than a magnum of literature. But, while I adyocate more frequent intervals of 40 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. relaxation from study, I would suggest to the direc- tors of schools a greater attention to systematic ex- ercises. The severe and athletic gymnastics intro- duced some years ago by Voelker, with all the en- thusiasm of a German, were better adapted to the Spartan youth, whose progenitors, male and female, had been trained in like manner, than to the pallid sons of pampered cits, the dandies of the desk, and the squalid tenants of attics and factories. It was like putting the club of Hercules into the hands of a tailor, and sending slender Snip to combat lions in the Nemaean forest—or giving the bow of Ulysses to be bent by the flaccid muscles of the effeminate man-milliner. This ultra-gymnastic enthusiast did much injury to an important branch of hygiene, by carrying it to excess, and consequently by causing its desuetude. Every salutary measure that was ever proposed has been abused; but this forms no just grounds against its use. No school should be without a play-ground ; and no play-ground without a gymnasium of some kind, for the lighter modes of athletic exercise. The swinging-apparatus, at the Military Asylum in Chelsea, seems well calcu- lated for effecting that combination of active and passive exercise, so peculiarly adapted to the hu- man frame in the present state of civilization and refinement. We have more mind and less muscle than the Lacedaemonians; and, therefore, art must accomplish what strength fails to do. It is in a more advanced period of life, that passive exercise is to be preferred to active; in the second Septen- niad, the latter should have the preponderance. In all gymnastic exercises, however, great regard should be paid to the constitutions of individuals. There are some youths, where a disposition to af- fections of the heart and great vessels prevails ; and to these all strong exercise is injurious. Those also, who are predisposed to pulmonary complaints must be cautious of athletic exercise. The profes- FOOD AND BEVERAGE. 41 sional attendant of the family or school should ex- amine into this point. On the subject of dietetic fare during the scholas- tic Septenniad, little need be said. It should be simple and substantial, rather than abstemious. The fabric that is daily building up should have an ample supply of sound materials. These materials might, with advantage, be more varied in kind than they are in most seminaries of education. Al- though game seldom smokes on the table of a board- ing-school, yet " toujours perdrix" is an established canon of the kitchen. In respect to the beverage of youth during the first and second Septenniads, a great error has been committed by modern mothers, in substituting for the salutary prescription of Pindar (" water is best") the daily glass of wine, with cake or condiment, for the smiling progeny round the table after dinner. The juvenile heart dances joyously enough to the music of the animal spirits—and the rosy current of the circulation runs its merry rounds as rapidly as need be, without impetus from wine. The prac- tice in question is reprehensible on more accounts than one. It early establishes the habit of pamper- ing the appetite—a habit that leads to countless ills in after-life. It over-stimulates the organs of diges- tion, at a period when their nerves are supersensi- tive—their excitabilities exuberant—and their sym- pathies most active and multiplied. If such be the case in youth, can we wonder at the universality of dyspeptic complaints in middle age ? It is to be remarked, that this practice is less prevalent among the highest ranks of life, than among the various subordinate grades. It increases as we descend, till we shudder at the sight of liquid fire, exhibited to the sickly infant in the sordid hovel! On such a subject need I say more? or could I say less? Bad habits are early enough learned—they ought never to be taught! D2 42 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. In the second Septenniad, the schoolmaster should pursue the path which the parent had trodden; and enforce, with the utmost rigour, a system of order, regularity, and punctuality, in every thing which the pupil does. It is in this epoch, as in the previous one, that the passions of youth should be controlled —even by punishments, if necessary. If the, boy is taught, in early life, to respect the feelings the comforts, and the happiness of his playmates and schoolfellows, the man will afterward obey the laws of God and his country in society at large. The tyranny which the strong often exercise over the weak in schools, and the annoyances which the vicious occasion to the well-disposed youth, ought to be punished with ten times more severity than neglect of study. The degrading and barbarous system of " fagging," so long prevalent in the West- minster and other schools, would disgrace a horde of Hottentots, or a colony of Siberians. It is a system which often breaks the spirit, and even the health, of many a generous mind; while it fosters those innate propensities to selfishness, arrogance, and cruelty, which require the rein rather than the spur at every period of life. It is to be apprehended that the fear of offending parents, and other motives not the most disinterested, have prevented the ex- pulsion from some private schools of turbulent spirits, or the correction of their vicious habits. Vice is a contagion of the most terrible virulence. It spreads with the rapidity of lightning—and every tainted individual becomes a new focus, both for the concentration and the diffusion of the poison! It is a melancholy truth, that, in exact proportion as human beings (whether men, women, or children) become congregated together, there will evil be en- gendered, propagated, and multiplied. This re- mark applies, of course, to domiciliary associations, and from it the congregations in the senate, the church, and the forum are excepted. It is pecu- OBJECTS AND ENDS OF EDUCATION. 43 liarly applicable to seminaries of education of every kind; and it is perhaps fortunate that society at large is not aware of the number, the species, and the magnitude of ills inflicted on mankind by the Lan- castrian system of education—a system invented and practised many a century before Lancaster was born. But, although the honest Quaker must re- linquish all title to originality on this point, he may fairly claim the superior merit of improvement. Pu- pils, in all ages, were in the habit of teaching each other—mischief : Lancaster caused them to teach each other—knowledge. This last is " mutual in- struction"—the former is " mutual destruction." But the new system did not supersede the old; it was only superadded to it. It is, therefore, the bounden duty, as it should be the paramount object, of all parents, guardians, and tutors, to circumscribe as much as possible this " evil communication," which not only " corrupts good manners," but, per- chance, good morals into the bargain ! Having thus offered some remarks on the manner of education, as connected with health, or at least with happiness, I doubt whether I am justified in touching on the matter of education itself. My re- flections shall be brief, and, if not founded in ob- servation and in reason, they will fall to the ground. The two grand or cardinal objects of education, in my humble opinion, are, first, to curb the evil propensities of our nature, by increasing our knowl- edge or wisdom—and, secondly, to make us useful to society. That learning or knowledge does elevate the mind, humanize the heart, and prevent barba- rism of manners, we have the best authority of anti- quity—" emollit mores nee sinit esse feros." There can be no doubt that these effects flow, more or less, from all kinds of learning or knowledge; they are, however, the more especial results of what may be termed, in a comprehensive sense, classical learn- ing—or the study of great authors, modern as well 44 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. as ancient. But, to obtain the second grand object of education—to become useful members of society, we must acquire knowledge of a very different kind —namely, science. It will not be sufficient to study philosophy, rhetoric, poetry, belles-lettres, &c. —we must learn the exact and the inexact sciences —the nature of things. A good education, then, is a happy combination, or a just proportion of learning and knowledge—or, in other words, of lit- erature and science. The proportions must vary, no doubt, according to the destination of the indi- vidual. The military cadet should not spend too much of his time on Greek and Latin. All that Homer has told us respecting the siege of Troy would avail very little in the siege of Gibraltar or Malta. Even the eloquent and very useful art of running away, transmitted to us by Xenophon and the ten thousand Greeks, would have been of little use to Moore or Moreau, in the mountains of Spain or the forests of Germany. So, again, the various voyages of Ulysses, between the Scamander and the Tiber—from the resounding Hellespont to the Pil- lars of Hercules, would, be next to useless on the chart of a modern Mediterranean cruiser. This reasoning might be pushed to any lengths; but it is not necessary. It appears to me that, among the upper, and even the middle classes of society, learn- ing is cultivated somewhat at the expense of science —words are studied more than things—and the ornamental is preferred to the useful. If man were cast in the antediluvian mould, and could calculate on numbering six or seven hundred years, instead of sixty or seventy, he might, advan- tageously enough, dedicate ten or fifteen years to the study of the dead languages, in order that he might dig, for centuries afterward, in the rich and inexhaustible mines of literature, philosophy, rheto- ric, and poetry, to which these languages open the door. But I venture to doubt the policy of employ- LITERATURE AND SCIENCE. 45 ing one tenth, or more, of our short span of ex- istence in the acquirement of two dead languages, which we are forced to abandon almost immediately after they are learned, and before we can do much more than view, at a distance, the fruits which they display. Suppose a young and adventurous traveller from Otaheite (intending to explore the great continental world) lands at Canton, and there is told that the " Celestial Empire" comprehends the whole of this globe, with the exception of a few islets like his own scattered around its almost boundless shores.* The language of the celestials being wholly unknown to him, it requires seven years to acquire it, even imperfectly. He then sets out on his travels ; and, having crossed a great wall, and wan- dered over many mountains and deserts, he comes to another country, whose language is totally dif- ferent from that which he took such time and pains to study. He has no alternative but to assign an- other seven years to the tongue of the white bear. At the conclusion of this period he finds letters of recall to his native isle, and goes back with his head full of two languages, neither of which enables him to roast a pig or a prisoner better than his country- men, who understand no other language than their own. Now, without meaning to compare Greek and Latin with Chinese and Russian, I may safely aver, that the languages of Homer and Horace are of very little more use to three fourths of those into whose brains they are hammered, than the lan- guage of the Hindoo or Hun would be to the native of Owyhee or Otaheite. To the multitude, indeed, the dead languages are very nearly a dead loss— and for this good reason, that their avocations and pursuits through life prevent them from unlocking the magazines of learning, to which those languages * This is the geographical doctrine of the Chinese, and laid down as such on their charts. 46 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. are merely the keys. Common sense is beginning to impress mankind with this truth. Even among the members of the learned and liberal professions, the time spent on the classics is too great, while that dedicated to the exact and inexact sciences is by far too short. The light of reason has actually penetrated the dark monastic cloisters of Westmin- ster, and forced the sages of antiquity to associate on the same bench with the sons of modern science! As the world grows older—as population multi- plies—as competition becomes more intense—and as the difficulties of subsisting increase, time will be more and more valuable. It is therefore prob- able (though perhaps to be deplored) that the era is not far distant, when the study of dead languages and ancient literature will, in a great measure, give way to that of living tongues and modern discov- eries. A curious problem might here be more easily started than solved, wz., what are the differences, as respects the individual, between the study of an original author, and a good translation ? Suppose we take the Iliad of Homer, and Pope's free trans- lation of it. Would the operations of the intellect, the elevation of sentiment, the excitement of the feelings, and the exercise of the imagination, be materially different in the study of the one, from that which would take place in the study of the other? I very much doubt whether the results would be greatly dissimilar in kind—or perhaps even in de- gree. If this be the case, the study of the dead languages is of little use to the great mass of man- kind. They are necessary, at present, to those who are destined for law, divinity, the senate, and medi- cine. Those also who have nothing to do, may probably as well expend seven or ten years on Greek and Latin, as on any thing else. To authorship, too, now become so very extensive a business, the dead languages are essential; though I question whether FEMALE EDUCATION. 47 they conduce much to originality of thought. How did Homer and the great men of antiquity get on, seeing that they could not all have the dead langua- ges for models of study ? I will hardly be accused of a Gothic or barbarian insensibility to the beauties and benefits of Greek and Latin. My prejudices run in a very different direction. But common sense, and some observa- tion of what is going on in the world, convince me that a day is rapidly approaching, when the neces- sary details of modern science will very much su- persede the elegant pursuits of ancient literature. Some of the remarks on the education of male youth will bear, mutatis mutandis, on that of the female ; but others will not. It cannot be said that too much of their time is dedicated to the Greek and Latin classics. They are much fonder of living tongues than of dead languages. The edu- cation of females is either domestic, or at the board- ing-school. The former is by far the best. Not- withstanding the pains which are taken by the su- perintendents of respectable seminaries, evils attach to congregations of young females, which no care can entirely prevent. Female education is more detrimental to health and happiness than that of the male. Its grasp, its aim, is at accomplishments rather than acquire- ments—at gilding rather than at gold—at such orna- ments as may dazzle by their lustre, and consume themselves, in a few years, by the intensity of their own brightness, rather than those which radiate a steady light till the lamp of life is extinguished. They are most properly termed accomplishments; because they are designed to accomplish a certain object—matrimony. That end, or rather beginning, obtained, they are about as useful to their owner as a rudder is to a sheer hulk, moored head and stern in Portsmouth harbour—the lease of a house 48 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. after the term is expired—or a pair of wooden shoes during a paroxysm of gout. The mania for music injures the health, and everj curtails the life of thousands and tens of thousands, annually, of the fair sex, by the sedentary habits which it enjoins, and the morbid sympathies which it engenders. The story of the sirens is no fable. It is verified to the letter ! " Their song is death, and makes destruction please." Visit the ball-room and the bazar, the park and the concert, the theatre and the temple : among the myriads of young and beautiful, whom you see dancing or dressing, driving or chanting, laughing or praying—you will not find one—no, not one—in the enjoyment of health! No wonder, then, that the doctors, the dentists, and the druggists multiply almost as rapidly as the pianos, the harps, and the guitars! The length of time occupied by music renders it morally impossible to dedicate sufficient attention to the health of the body or the cultivation of the mind. The consequence is, that the corporeal functions languish and become impaired—a con- dition that is fearfully augmented by the peculiar effect which music has upon the nervous system. It will not be denied that every profession, avoca- tion, or pursuit modifies, in some degree, the moral and physical temperament of the individual. No art or science that ever was invented by human in- genuity exerts so powerful an influence on mind and body as music It is the galvanic fluid of harmony which vibrates on the tympanum—electrifies the soul—and thrills through every nerve in the body. Is it possible that so potent an excitant can be daily applied, for many hours, to the sensitive system of female youth, without producing extraordinary ef- MUSIC. 49 fects ? It is impossible. If music have the power (and Shakspeare is our authority) " To soften rocks and bend the knotted oak," is it not likely to subjugate the imagination and shatter the nerves ? All pungent stimuli produce inordinate excitement, followed, in the end, by a train of evils. Every thing that merely delights the senses without improving the understanding, must come under the head of sensual gratifications, which tend, by their very nature, to excess. Music, like wine, exhilarates in small quantities, but intoxicates in large. The indulgence of either beyond the limits of moderation is dangerous. It is fortunate, perhaps, that, on the majority of young females, chained to the piano, like the galley- slave to the oar, the vibrations of music fall inert, and the " concord of sweet sounds" flows from their tongues and their fingers as mechanically as from the rotations of the hurdygurdy, or the wires of the musical snuff-box. They only lose their time, and a certain portion of health, from want of exer- cise. They form the aristocracy of the " factory girls," who have been so fortunate as to get their " ten hours' bill" reduced to six or eight. But there is a considerable portion of these " factory girls" whose organization is more delicate, and whose susceptibilities are more acute. To these, the pres- ent inordinate study and practice of music (for they are inordinate) are injurious in a variety of ways, by deranging a variety of functions. The nature and extent of these injuries are not generally known, even to the faculty ; and cannot be detailed here. But one effect, of immense importance, will not be denied—namely, the length of time absorbed in music, and the consequent deficiency of time for the acquisition of useful knowledge, in the system of female education. If some of that time which E 50 ECONOMY OP HEALTH. is spent on the piano, the harp, and the guitar, were dedicated to the elements of science, or, at all events, to useful information, as modern languages, history, astronomy, geography, and even mathemat- ics, there would be better wives and mothers, than where the mind is left, comparatively, an unculti- vated blank, in order to pamper the single sense of hearing! Mrs. Somerville has stolen harmony from Heaven as well as St. Cecilia ! The subject is so important that, at the risk of tautology, I must take it up again in the third Septenniad, where the evil is even greater than in the second.* * The lovers of prolixity will complain that I have despatched the first fourteen years of life much too briefly. My object, how- ever, is not to work out minute details, that are often useless, or, at least, unnecessary—but to establish principles. When these last are understood, every one may make the application of khem to his own case without difficulty. DANGERS OF THE THIRD SEPTENNIAD. 51 THIRD SEPTENNIAD. Fourteen to twenty-one years. The stream of human life, during the third Sep- tenniad, undergoes no trifling variation in its course, its volume, and its velocity. This epoch is among the most important of the ten. The plebeian youth exchanges the schoolmaster for the taskmaster— the homely hearth for the toilsome workshop— the parental indulgence for the tedious appren- ticeship! A grade higher in the scale of society, and we see the stripling youth leave the semina- ry for the counting-house, the warehouse, or some of the thousand sedentary avocations, in which from five to seven years of the very spring-tide of existence are consumed by the laws of civ- ilization and commerce in a species of servi- tude ! Higher still, and the scene shifts from the academy to the university—the one apparently a continuation of the other—both having the same ob- ject in view, the acquisition of knowledge—but the transition often involving a great revolution in the end. The third Septenniad is indeed the spring of life. In it the seeds of good or of evil, of virtue or vice, of science or ignorance, are sown. In it the physical functions act with boundless energy—the human frame expanding and taking on its form and dimensions; while the mental powers display, in the great majority of instances, their characteristic features, capacities, and propensities. It is in this stage of rapid development, intellectual and corpo- real, that the greatest difficulty exists in preserving 52 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. the physique within the boundaries of health, and confining the morale within the limits of virtue. How many minds are wrecked—how many consti- tutions ruined, during the third Septenniad !! The extent of the mischief—even of the moral evil, is less known to the priest than to the physician. At so early a period of life, when passions so much pre- dominate over principles, it is not,to be expected that the force of precept can be so efficient a pre- ventive as the fear of bodily suffering. If the youth of both sexes could see through the vista of future years, and there behold the catalogue of afflictions and sufferings inseparable attendants on time and humanity, they would pause, ere they added to the number, by originating maladies at a period when nature is endeavouring to fortify the material fabric against the influence of those that must necessarily assail us in the progress of life! Yet it is in this very epoch that some of the most deadly seeds of vice and disease are implanted in our spiritual and corporeal constitutions—seeds which not merely " grow with our growth, and strengthen with our strength," but acquire vigour from our weakness, and obtain victory in our decay. This melancholy reflection is applicable to all classes and both sexes. The plebeian is not secured from the evil by pover- ty—nor the patrician by wealth. Neither are the middle classes protected by the golden mean in which they are supposed to be placed. Civilization has decreed—and society has sanctioned the fiat— that youth, during the third Septenniad, shall expe- rience much more tribulation of mind and affliction of body than was designed for it by Nature or Na- ture's God. The sedentary and insalutary avoca- tions to which young people of both sexes in the middling and lower classes of society are confined between the ages of fourteen and twenty-one, occa- sion dreadful havoc in health, and no small deterio- ration of morals. The drudgery, the scanty cloth- DANGERS OF THE THIRD SEPTENNIAD. 53 ing, the bad food, and the exposure to the elements of the most indigent classes, are scarcely more inju- rious to health and life than the sedentary habits, the impure air, and the depressing passions of the various species of artisans, mechanics, and shop- keepers in the classes immediately above them. The infinite variety of new avocations among these grades has given rise to a corresponding infinity of physical and moral maladies, of which our fore- fathers were ignorant, and for which it requires much ingenuity at present to invent significant names. The incalculable numbers of young females confined to sedentary avocations from morning till night—and, too often, from night till morning—be- come not only unhealthy themselves, but afterward •consign debility and disease to their unfortunate off- spring. It is thus that infirmities of body and mind -are acquired, multiplied, transmitted from parent to progeny, and consequently perpetuated in society. The fashionable world—; " The gaf licentious proud, Whom pleasure, power, and affluence surround—" know not how many thousand females are annually sacrificed, during each season in London, by the sud- den demand and forced supply of modish ornaments and ephemeral habiliments ! They know not that, while they conscientiously believe they are patroni- sing trade and rewarding industry, they are actually depriving many thousand young women of sleep, air, and exercise ; consigning them to dark recesses and crowded attics, where the stimulus of tea, cof- fee, and liquors is rendered necessary to support the corporeal fabric—and where the congregation of juvenile females, under such circumstances, condu- ces to any thing rather than delicacy, or even mo- rality of sentiment! The secrets of the prison- house come out more frequently on the bed of sick- ness than on the bed of death—they come more un- E2 54 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. der the cognizance of the physician than of the di- vine. When the curtain is falling on the last scene of the tragedy, the fair penitent and the hoary of- fender have neither time nor power to recall or re- late the dark incidents of the drama now closing for ever! It is during the bustle of life, when health is in jeopardy, and pains and penalties are in the course of infliction, that the causes of human ills, and the consequences of human frailties, moral and physi- cal, are revealed, with a candour and truth unlikely to obtain under any other circumstances. The dis- closures are as safe in the bosom of the physician as of the priest; and, for very obvious reasons, they are more frequently revealed, in this country at least, for a recovery of health, than for a passport to heaven.* Let not the parson be jealous of the doctor in this case. The services of the latter are nearly as soon forgotten by the patient after emerg- ing into society, as those of the former are when he " shuffles off this mortal coil," and passes the waters of oblivion. But this is by the way. Large as is the class to which I have been allu. ding, it is as a drop of water in the ocean compared with the myriads of youth, male and female, pent * What says Hannah More ? " I used to wonder why people should be so fond of the company of their physician, till I recol- lected that he is the only person with whom one dares (to) talk continually of one's self without interruption, contradiction or censure." This is true so far as it goes. But it falls infinitely short of the mark. The individual does not talk of himself or herself from pure egotism, which is vanity ; but from the uni- versal impulse of human and animal nature—self-preserva- tion. If it was for the pleasure of hearing one's self talk, would man and woman disclose their sins, their foibles, or their mis- takes? No, verily! They do so most wisely, in order that the physician may have a clear knowledge of the causes of their maladies, and consequently a better chance of removing them In this point, at least, wisdom predominates over vanity It is honourable to the medical profession, that hardly an instance is ?? rei° uWhee? any other advantage is taken of free confession than the benefit of the confessor. DEGENERATION OF CONSTITUTION. 55 up in the foul atmospheres of our countless facto- ries, inhaling alike the moral and physical poison 'that corrupts the mind while it enervates the body! Is it improbable that the individual deterioration thus extensively diffused among the lower orders of the community should, in process of time, affect a considerable mass of society at large ? I think it is far from improbable that, some ten or twelve centuries hence, when Australia shall have become ,a powerful nation—Asia be governed by limited monarchs of native birth—the Antilles a swarm of independent republics, of all hues, between jet black and white—when America shall exhibit a long series of disunited states, stretching from Terra del Fuego to the barren coast of Labrador—when Brit- ish dominion shall not extend beyond the British isles, if so far—then, probably, some contemplative philosopher may stand on the banks of the Thames, as Gibbon stood on the tower of the capitol,»mu- sing and meditating on the " decline and fall" of a great empire, and on the degeneracy of a people, whose arms, arts, and commerce had long been the theme of universal admiration and envy! I know not why Britain can expect to escape the fate of Greece, of Rome, and of all the great nations of antiquity. Youth, manhood, decrepitude, and decay are the destiny of kingdoms as well as of individuals. The body politic is subject to the same phases, revolutions, disorders, and decay, as the human body. And although there may be, and I believe there is, something in the climate, soil, genius, and race of Britons that will offer a most obstinate and protracted resistance to the inevitable causes of national deterioration, yet he must be blind indeed who does not perceive the onward working of these causes in our own days. Nations are only aggregations of individuals; and whatever be the influence, whether good or evil, that operates on a considerable number of the population, that influ- 56 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. ence will radiate from ten thousand centres, and diffuse its effects, sooner or later, over the whole surface of the community. There is no special boundary in this country between the different classes of society, that can limit the sphere of moral or physical evil. The same contemplative philosopher, when sur- veying the stunted beings composing the mass of a degenerated manufacturing population, will be likely to exclaim— " 'Twas not the sires of such as these That dared the elements and pathless seas— That made proud Asian monarchs feel How weak their gold was against Europe's steel; But beings of another mould— Rough, hardy, vigorous, manly, bold." In viewing the ascending links of society, there is HO great cause for gratulation. The youth of both sexes, doomed to the counter, the desk, the nursery, and the schoolroom, are little elevated, in point of" salubrity, above their humbler contempo- raries. They have higher notions, but not stronger health—more ambition to rise, but not better means of exaltation—their passions are stronger, but the power of gratifying them is not more extended—in fine, the thirst of enjoyment is augmented, while the supply is diminished. We raise our views still higher along the numer- ous links and classes of society, and what do we behold? The professions, learned and scientific. It is in the course of the third Septenniad that the destiny of youth, for these professions, is fixed. For the senate—for the pulpit—for the bar—for physic—for various pursuits and avocations—and, in many instances, for no pursuits, except the en- joyment of wealth in private life, how many thou- sands of our youths are annually ushered into the academic bowers and halls of our universities ? In OVER-EXERTION OF THE MIND. 57 these there is nothing necessarily or essentially inimical to body or mind; but the congregation of multitudes together, and sometimes the studies themselves, do produce a host of evils, moral and physical. To Oxford and Cambridge many repair, to learn —little more than how to drink Port wine ; many others to study classics and mathematics, for ob- taining their degrees; a smaller band to enter the arena of competition, and engage in the fierce con- flict for honours—honours too frequently purchased at the expense of health ! How often is the laurel converted into the cypress, to wave over the tomb of talent, or over the living wreck of mind and body ! How often is the ship foundered, on this her first voyage, by carrying a press of sail that strained, bent, and sprung those masts, yards, and stays which would have carried the vessel, under ordinary circumstances, through the various storms of life! To those who are not well acquainted with the intimate connexion between mind and matter in this state of our existence, the almost mechanical influences to which the immaterial prin- ciple is subject may appear incredible, and some- what humiliating. Thus, the intellect may be, and every day is, stretched like a ligament or muscle, till it snaps, or loses its elasticity and contractility, and, for a time at least, becomes incapable of its ordinary functions. The human mind is exhausted by protracted thinking, in the same manner as the human body is exhausted by long-continued labour; but it is not so easily recruited by rest, still less by cordials.* The powers of the mind, especially during the * It would doubtless be more correct to say that the organ of the mind, rather than the mind itself, is thus affected. But I have here made use of common parlance, and will explain my- self very fully on this point in a more advanced stage of the volume. 58 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. third Septenniad of life, are still more expansive and elastic than those of the body; and the pos- sessor of talent conceives that there is scarcely any limit to the safe exercise of that gift—till he feels the baneful influence of intellectual exertion on the earthy tabernacle of the soul. Even then, he con- siders (perhaps justly) the exhaustion or inability to proceed as the infirmity of the grosser and more perishable companion of the mind, and only waits the recruit of body before he again spurs the spirit to fresh exertions ! Is it likely that these almost supernatural efforts can be innocuous? No in- deed ! I have so often seen them exemplified in others—I have so frequently and severely felt them myself— " Quseque ipse miserrimus vidi, Et quorum pars magna fui—" that I cannot too urgently warn the student who strives for academic honours, to economize his in- tellectual powers with the view of preserving them, in the same manner that he would guard his bodily health by avoiding intemperance. These observa- tions are not directed to the drones, but to the wranglers of our universities—and not to those only who wrangle within the walls of Oxford and Cambridge, but to the tens of thousands of wran- glers who experience the wear and tear of mind throughout society at large ! Nature, though often liberal, is seldom lavish of her personal gifts to mankind—or even to woman- kind. It is rare to see high cultivation of the mind conjoined with rude health and athletic strength. They may coexist—because there is no rule with- out its exceptions—but it is in cases where inordi- nate talent has been bestowed; and, consequently, where great mental acquirements have been made with little labour. Nature is generally a niggard in this respect. Rarely does she permit the highest CLASSICS AND MATHEMATICS. 59 cultivation of the mind and the most complete development of the body in the same individual. Examples to the contrary may exist—I have never seen one. Now, as it is in the third Septenniad that Nature labours most strenuously to build the arch and fix the keystone of the constitution, is it not reason- able to believe that the great and frequent interrup- tions which she experiences in her work, by the con- tentions of the spirit, in civilized life, must often cause the arch to be imperfect, and the keystone insecure ? In our universities, two channels are open to distinction—through classics and mathemat- ics ; or, in other words, through the paths of literature and science. The former is most ornamental—the latter most useful. The one expands the imagina- tion, the other fortifies the judgment. A moderate combination of the two would appear to be prefera- ble to a high proficiency in any one of the branches. The universities are of a different opinion. Instead of placing the laurel crown on the head of him who combines the greatest quantum of classical lore with the largest amount of mathematical science, they award the prize to him who mounts highest on the scale of one branch, to the almost total neglect of the other !* Nothing can be more injudicious than this plan of stimulating talent and rewarding indus- try. An equal cultivation of the two departments of human acquirements would be more beneficial to the individual—more easy of accomplishment—and less injurious to health. Change or variety of study is like change or variety of posture, exercise, food, or amusement. It is a relief or relaxation, rather than a prolongation of the preceding task. Classi- * The circumstance of the " double first" at Oxford and Cambridge can hardly be said to invalidate this position. It is pretty well known that the double in mathematics at Oxford is nearly synonymous with a single in the same at Cambridge, and vice versa. 60 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. cat literature refreshes the intellect, and gives wings to the fancy, after the dry problems and rigorous demonstrations of geometry; the latter, in turn, cor- rects the wanderings of the imagination among the fairy and fictitious scenes of poetry and mythology —brings back our thoughts to the sober truths of exact science—and disciplines the mind by the ex- ercise of the judgment. I can see no good reason why the tentamen, or examination, should not in- clude both branches of knowledge. We find no practical difficulty in testing a man both in physic and surgery—why should there be any in testing him both in classics and mathematics? He has, however, the option of " going out" in one or other, according to his fancy. In our universities I would throw open instruc- tion of every kind—religious, moral, literary, and sci- entific—to every one who sought it—to the Jew and to the Gentile—to the Catholic and skeptic—to the Protestant and Dissenter. I would make religious attendance compulsory on all those who might be- come entitled to profit by the institution—namely, on all Protestants—for to none others should of- fices, honours, or emoluments, as scholarships, fel- lowships, professorships, &c, be in the remotest way open. As for the danger of proselytism, I think it is quite chimerical. For one Protestant who might turn Dissenter, it is very probable that ten Dis- senters would turn to Protestantism—for reasons not very difficult to divine, and, therefore, not necessary to be stated. The third Septenniad is not the pe- riod of life when religious tenets are usually weighed and discussed with that attention and caution which lead to change of creeds, or adoption of new modes of faith; but granting, for the sake of argument, that a dozen of proselytes were annually made by the Dissenters at each of our universities—what would be the damage of such a defection ? A mere noth- ing, compared with the amount of proselytism an- THE MASTER PASSIONS. 61 nually occurring in later periods of life. But let us change the subject. It is in the third Septenniad that some of the passions, and many of the propensities dawn forth, and even take root. Previous to that period when the appetites for food, drink, pastimes, exercise, and sight-seeings are gratified, the youth falls into pro- found repose, to awake with renovated vigour for running the same round of enjoyments as before. But, in the third Septenniad, a stranger appears upon the stage, and soon assumes the leading char- acter in the dramatis personae—a character which he often sustains till the ninth, or even the tenth Septenniad. I need hardly say that this passion is love. It precedes and overrules the other master passions—as ambition, avarice, &c, which, at this early period of life, are represented by substitutes (emulation and economy), rather than actual occu- pants of the human microcosm. These three grand passions—love, ambition, and avarice—are at all times antagonizing powers. Love is first in the field—and generally the first to quit the arena of contention. Ambition is the second in action, and the second to relinquish the struggle. Avarice is the youngest, that is, the latest born, and generally survives the other two.* It seldom happens that these three dominant pas- sions are long coexistent and coequal. One usually acquires the ascendency over the others, and re- duces them to subjection. It not unfrequently hap- pens, indeed, that this one annihilates its contempo- raries, or holds them in complete abeyance! " One ruling passion in the human breast, Like Aaron's serpent, swallows up the rest." There is little danger, however, of love being in a * In courts, the passion of ambition and intrigue will often antagonize and conquer avarice, in the last years of protracted existence. F 62 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. minority during the third, or even the fourth Sep- tenniad. Avarice, the final conqueror, is rarely born till after these periods—and ambition has little chance with the quiver-bearing deity. Cupid is represented by the ancients as a winged infant, amusing himself with catching butterflies, trundling a hoop, or playing with a nymph. These repre- sentations are not inappropriate to the character of love in the third Septenniad. It is then guileless, innocent, ardent, and devoted! Would that it al- ways maintained this character! But, alas! like every thing in this world, love itself changes with time, and assumes such a different aspect and tem- perament, that the poets were forced to imagine two Cupids—one heaven-born—the other, the off- spring of Nox and Erebus—distinguished for riot, debauchery, falsehood, and inconstancy! Instead of the bundle of golden arrows, designed to pierce, but not wound, the susceptible heart, we too often see the sable quiver surcharged with darts and dag- gers, dipped in poisons more potent than the Upas, and destined to scatter sickness and sorrow through every ramification of society—poisons, both moral and physical, unknown to Greek or Roman, whether philosopher, satirist, or physician; but fearfully cal- culated to taint the springs of life, and involve the innocent and guilty in one common ruin !* An ad- monition from the experienced physician frequently makes a deeper impression on the mind of head- strong youth, in this respect, than a sermon from the priest (a truth which I have often had occasion to verify)—and, therefore, I shall not deem it irrele- vant to strew a moral lesson occasionally in the path, while descending along the current of human life. * Juvenal and PaksEus have given us a long black cata- logue of the evils springing from the " son of Nox and Erebus;" but a modem censor, acquainted with the " ills to which flesh is heir," in our own days, from the son of Jupiter and Venus could add a frightful appendix ! LOVE. 63 The close of the third Septenniad is a critical and dangerous period for youth. It is not against" self- love," as the poet has it, that the reasoning powers are to be arrayed: they have then— " Passion to urge, and Reason to restrain." The latter is often a weak antagonist to the former at this early period! From the quivered son of Ju- piter they have little to fear; but oh ! let them be- ware of that other deity, sprung from Nox and Erebus ! " Hie niger est—hunc tu Romane caveto." Woman, designated the weaker sex, " comes of age" while man is a minor. In consequence of this earlier maturity than the lord of the creation, she does not pass the third Septenniad unscathed by the god of love. She suffers more ills from this cause than the world is aware of. The state of civilization at which we have arrived produces such a wide range of " hopes deferred," and expectations blighted, that their effects are detected by the ex- perienced eye at every step, even in the streets. The exquisite portrait of erotic sickness, drawn by Shakspeare, is only one out of five hundred forms which the malady assumes, under the observance of the physician. It was, however, well adapted for the descriptive pen of the poet. " She never told her love, But let concealment, like a worm i' th' bud, Feed on her damask cheek. She pined in thought, And, with a green and yellow melancholy, She sat like Patience on a monument, Smiling at grief!" But Shakspeare knew not a tithe of the numerous links in that extensive chain of morbid sympathies and associations, that extends from erotomania, down to the most transient emotion of female sen- sibility! It is unquestionable that the difficulties 64 ECONOMY OF HEALTH of settling females of the higher classes in life multiply every year—in other words, the checks to matrimony become more numerous, and the doom to celibacy more widely spread. This may or may not be an evil in itself; but it assuredly is the source of many evils. The modern maxim, as respects females, is—" get married well, if you can—but get married." The prize being matrimony, and the competition constantly augmenting in intensity, the means must be adapted to the end. These are light, showy, and attractive accomplishments, among which music, dancing, drawing, and decorating are the most essential. They are the nets, spread out to entangle lovers and catch husbands—where a hook cannot be baited with a heavy purse. The marriage state and the state of celibacy (one 01 other of which must be the lot of every female) are left unprovided for by this system of education or training! In matrimony, the attractions above mentioned, having obtained their object, are little calculated to support the new character of wife or mother, or aid the new duties that devolve on the change of condition: hence a prolific source of unhappy contracts in wedlock! In celibacy, on the other hand, the superficial acquirements, having failed in their object, become useless—or indeed extinct, after a certain—or, we will admit, an uncer- tain period; and the female is left a double prey— to the tortures of disappointment, and the moth of ennui—without internal resource, or external sym- pathy ! Let parents ponder on these observations, and ask themselves whether or not they are true. The female youth are absolved from blame. They have neither the choice nor the direction of their studies. They are doomed as rigorously, and al- most as many hours daily, to the piano-forte, as the galley-slave is to the oar! A slight analysis of this tedious apprenticeship, in which half the circle of science might be learned, may not be a useless pro- cedure. EVIL DIRECTION OF FEMALE EDUCATION. 65 During several hours of the day, and many years of life, the female mind is employed in deciphering series after series of hieroglyphics, ranged in hori- zontal columns, and resembling a mimic procession of little black dancing sprites or gnomes, with large heads, long legs, and no bodies. They are types or symbols of sound and motion, conveying no in- tellectual idea. This science addresses itself solely to the senses. It leaves no knowledge of good or evil behind—and no impression on the sensorium, but the natural effects of pleasurable or doleful sen- sations. The stimulus of music is of a very subtile and diffusible nature, and the excitement which it produces in the nervous system is of a peculiar character, by no means generally understood. That it is a potent agent, is evident from the excitation which it induces in man the most un- civilized, and even in animals the most savage. No one would think of referring to poets for facts in physiology; Taut where the feelings and passions of mankind are in question, they often afford the most apt illustrations. Shakspeare, Milton, Dry- den, and Pope furnish innumerable examples. The astonishing influence of music on animals, and (as was supposed) on even inanimate nature, enabled the ancient poets to construct fables and fictitious events : for instance, the descent of Orpheus to the infernal regions, and the release of Eurydice from the grasp of Pluto, by means of music. But this was not all. " Orpheus with his lute made trees, And the mountain's tops that freeze, Bow their heads, when he did play." In Alexander's feast (though a fiction), Dryden has illustrated the powers of music. If varied strains could agitate the breast of a soldier and a hero with sentiments of love, glory, ambition, sor- row, &c, is it unreasonable to suppose that the F2 66 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. same agent is capable of exercising a powerful influence over the sensitive soul of a young fe- male ? It is not unreasonable—it is a fact. Nothing is more certain than that any organ or sense that is much exercised will become, for a time, propor- tionally augmented in sensibility—it will become, as the French would say, more "impressionable." The seaman's eye, accustomed to the telescope, will perceive objects at a greater distance than the landsman's. The musician's ear becomes acutely sensitive to sounds—delighted with harmony, and horrified by discord. The palate of the gourmand will distinguish dishes and wines which the plain eater could not discriminate. The "tea-taster" at Canton sets Fukki's arts of adulterating the plant at defiance. The blind man's sense of touch becomes pre-eminently acute—not by a transference of power (as is absurdly supposed) from the eye to the finger; but by greater exercise of the nerves of touch, and minuter attention to the impressions re- ceived through that channel. The muscles become stronger by daily exertion, as is seen in the arm of the blacksmith and gold-beater. The olfactory nerves acquire immense acuteness by the habit of smelling different substances, and estimating them by their odour. In short, the rule is almost with- out exceptions. But is there no reverse to the medal? Every organ or sense thus inordinately exercised and improved becomes, sooner than usual, impaired in its own function, or it deranges the functions of other organs, senses—or perhaps the whole constitution. This is the lot of hu- manity. There is no good without alloy—no near cut to perfection without its attendant tax or draw- back. Thus we frequently find the signal-officer of a fleet with diminished or lost vision of the right eye, from overstraining it by the telescope—or af- fected with headaches and other symptoms from PHYSICAL EFFECTS OF MUSIC IN EXCESS. 67 the same cause.* The tea-taster of Canton soon becomes dyspeptic, sallow, and superannuated. The fate of the gourmand and bacchanal is well known. In short, examples of this kind might be adduced without end. And can the devotee of music ex- pect to escape unhurt ? Musicians, generally speak- ing, are melancholic. Excited themselves, and ex- citing others, their nerves are ultimately unstrung by perpetual vibration; and the natural, the inevi- table consequence is, depression of spirits, often approaching to hypochondriacism. If such be the fact (and it is unquestionable), what must be the case of the young female, whose sensitive nerves, susceptible feelings, exquisite sympathies, tender affections, and delicate organization, are excited, stimulated, electrified, almost constantly by music for several years in succession ? The results are read by the observant physician in the countenance, the complexion, the gait—the whole physical and moral constitution of the female—results which re- quire a new vocabulary, and would be totally unin- telligible to Celsus, or even to Sydenham, could they rise from their graves to survey the progress and effects of civilization! These, however, are not the legitimate conse- quences of music; but of the abuse of music. This " concord of sweet sounds," if used in moderation, would be one of the blessings of human life, and was, no doubt, designed as such by the all-wise Creator. So was food, wine, every gratification of the palate, bodily and mental. But one enjoyment or luxury was never designed to usurp the place of * It is not a little curious that, if we fix the eye on any one particular part of an object, say a feature in a painting, and keep it so fixed for a certain time, the contemplated point gradually becomes obscured, and is ultimately invisible, though surrounding objects may be still depicted in the eye. This is caused by an exhaustion of the visual powers of the retina at the point so strained, and is relieved by directing the eye to other objects till the excitability is recruited. 68 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. several others. Who would think of living entirely on honey and Champagne ? She who spends four or five hours daily in the study and practice of mu- sic, acts with equal impropriety. The extra time thus spent is injuriously abstracted from other im- provements and exercises of mind and body. The time spent at the piano leaves not sufficient space for the acquirement of that "useful knowledge" which strengthens the mind against the vicissitudes of fortune, and the moral crosses to which female life is doomed—nor for healthful exercise of the body, by which the material fabric may be fortified against the thousand causes of disease continually assailing it. I would therefore recommend that one half of the time spent in music should be allotted to bodily exercise, and to the acquisition of useful and ornamental knowledge, embracing history, nat- ural and moral philosophy, geography, astronomy —and, in short, many of the sciences" which man has monopolized to himself, but for which woman is as fit as " the lord of the creation." Woman comes earlier to maturity, by two years at least, than man. The tree of life blossoms and bears fruit sooner in the one sex than in the other —it also sooner withers and sheds its leaves—but does not sooner die. Female life, at any period, caeteris paribus, is fully as good—perhaps a little better, in respect to probable duration, than that of the male.* In this point of view, woman has a longer senectitude than man. More men are annu- ally born than women—and, consequently, more must die. It is in the course of the third Septen- niad that the seeds of female diseases are chiefly sown—or, at least, that the soil is specially pre- pared for their reception and growth. The predis- position to infirmities and disorders of various kinds is effected by acts of omission and commission. In * By a recent statistical writer, it is calculated that female life is 10 per cent, better than male life. WANT OF EXERCISE. 69 the first class, need I mention the deficiency of heal- thy exercise of the body in the open air; and of in- tellectual exercise in judicious studies? We are told by mothers that, in towns and cities, it is im- possible for young females to take bodily exercise. Where there is the will, there will generally be found the means. Even within. the precincts of home, the hoop and the skip-rope might usefully supersede the harp and guitar, for one hour in the day. In schools and seminaries there is no excuse —and indeed, in many of them, this salutary point of hygiene is well attended to. Gymnastic exerci- ses have been hastily thrown aside—partly, because some enthusiasts carried them to excess—partly, because they were supposed to be inimical to the effeminacy of shape and feature so much prized by parent and progeny—but chiefly, I suspect, from that languor and disinclination to exertion, which characterize the higher and even the middle classes of female youth. This deficiency of exercise in the open air may be considered as the parent of one half of female disorders, by multiplying and aug- menting the susceptibilities to all external impres- sions. The pallid complexions, the languid move- ments, the torpid secretions, the flaccid muscles, and disordered functions (including glandular swel- lings), and consumption itself, attest the truth of this assertion! Insufficient exercise is greatly aided by scantiness of clothing. Among the poor, this evil is a misfor- tune rather than a fault—among the rich, it is a fault as well as a misfortune. The delicate female, trained like a hot-house plant, who has lived in a band-box or a boudoir during the rest of the week, issues forth to the ball-room, the opera, or the thea- tre, in a gossamer dress that might suit the skies of the Sandwich Isles or Bengal, but not the humid at- mosphere of winter and spring in England. The consequences are serious; but the manner in which 70 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. they are brought about is far from being generally understood. It is not by the mantle, the furs, and the close carriage, that the injurious effects of light clothing—or rather no clothing, are to be obviated. A little inquiry into this subject will be found of the greatest interest—especially as it bears on acts of commission as well as of omission—on tight cloth- ing as well as on light clothing. It is hardly necessary to state that the vital func- tion of respiration can only be carried on by the al- ternate expansion and compression of the lungs. This apparatus cannot be filled with atmospheric air except by the elevation of the ribs or the de- scent of the diaphragm. In health, and in a state of nature, both these mechanical processes are em- ployed, and then the individual derives all the ad- vantages which free breathing can impart to the whole economy of the constitution. In certain dis- eases, respiration can only be performed by one of these processes—but then it is carried on imper- fectly and laboriously. Thus, when ribs are frac- tured, the chest must be secured from motion by bandages, and breathing is performed by the descent and ascent of the diaphragm. But how is it when both these mechanical processes are crippled at the same time ? Thus, in fashionable female attire (and often in male attire also) tMe abdomen is so com- pressed by the stays, that the diaphragm can only descend in the slightest degree—if at all—while the whole of the middle and lower part of the chest is so firmly girt by the same cincture, that the ribs there are kept motionless! The vital function of respiration, then, is carried on by violent, though in- efficient efforts of the diaphragm to descend, and by an excessive action of the muscles, and extraor- dinary elevation of the ribs in the upper part of the chest, where it is free from the pressure of the stays. Now, in this state of things, three distinct injuries are sustained, or injurious operations car- TIGHT LACING.—MALE AND FEMALE. 71 ried on. First, the too great pressure of the dia- phragm on the stomach and upper bowels, by its vi- olent efforts to descend: secondly, the inaction of the lower lobes of the lungs, from want of space for expansion : and thirdly, the inordinate dilatation of the upper portions of the lungs, where the ribs are free, in order to compensate for the compressed state of the lower portions. All these injurious ef- fects are greatly increased by muscular exertion— as by dancing, singing, &c, when the circulation is hurried, yet impeded; and where demands are made on respiration which the lungs are incapable of supplying. It is at those times that we see the upper part of the chest heaving with almost con- vulsive throes, and the countenance flushed by the impediments thrown in the way of the blood's re- turn to the heart. It is not a little remarkable that, in nine tenths of those who die of consumption in this country (a disease that produces nearly a fourth of the whole mortality), we find that the upper lobes of the lungs, corresponding with those parts of the chest that are most exposed to the atmosphere, least compressed by clothing, and more than usually strained in breathing, are the seat of excavations, commonly termed ulcerations, while the lower lobes of the lungs are generally found to be more or less consol- idated, and comparatively impervious to air. This state of things is too remarkable and too uniform to be the effect of chance; and therefore we are authorized to conclude that it is, partly at least, owing to the exposure of the upper parts of the chest to atmospheric transitions, with slight cover- ing, both in males and females, while the upper lobes of the lungs are violently strained, and the air-cells torn during inordinate exertion. The con- solidated condition of the inferior lobes of the organ of respiration corresponds in a most singular man- ner with the constrained position and impeded func- 72 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. tion of these parts during life, from the causes which I have alread}' described. Let it be remembered that the tight lacing of the lower part of the chest, and the thin clothing of the upper part, are not confined to sex, to age, or to class of society; but extend, more or less, to all, though more, certainly, to females than to males— and to the higher than to the lower orders of the community. A long, an attentive, and a mature consideration of this subject, has led me to draw the conclusion which is sufficiently obvious in the foregoing statement, and which I leave to others for confirmation or rejection. These are not the only evils resulting from the unnatural constriction of the middle of the body by tight lacing—male and female.* The stomach and bowels are so compressed, that it is wonderful how they are able to perform their important functions at all! But although the resources of Nature are almost inexhaustible in overcoming obstacles, yet the injurious effects of the habit alluded to are nu- merous and potent enough to swell, very materially, the long catalogue of nervous and dyspeptic com- plaints. The growth of the whole body and the freedom of all its functions so much depend on per- fect digestion of our food, and conversion of our nutriment into healthy blood, that any impediment to that digestion and that assimilation must inevita- bly derange the whole constitution. Although the evil of tight lacing is as patent as the sun at noon- day in an Italian sky, yet I have never known its * Let any one look around him in the streets, the theatres, the ball-rooms, &c, and he will be compelled to acknowledge that the beaux are nearly as tightly girt as the belles. The ma- nia pervades the dandy creation from the Neva to the Helles- pont. The Hun and the Croat have their upper regions more nearly severed from their Netherlands, than even the Gaul and the Italian! John Bull has caught the phrensy, though his well- stuffed paunch makes a desperate resistance to the girdlo-mania of the continental fop. TIGHT LACING—MALE AND FEMALE. 73 commission to be acknowledged by any fair dame or exquisite dandy. It seems to be considered es- sential to the existence, or rather to the production, of a fine figure; and yet I never could discover any marks of stays in the statues of the Medicean Venus or the Belvidere Apollo. Whether the modern girdle possesses any of the attractive and fascina- ting qualities attributed to the Cestus of Venus, I am not prepared to say; but I venture to aver that the Cyprian goddess was not in the habit of drawing her zone so tight as the modern fair ones, else the sculptor would have recorded the cincture in Parian marble. We have every reason, indeed, to believe that the waist of Venus was left as free from com- pression as her feet—and I need not point out the contrast between these extreme features in the statues of the ancient belles and those of our own days! We seem more inclined to wear the Chinese shoe than the Grecian sandal. We have no right to dispute about tastes; but I may venture to assert that the comfort and motions of the foot are not more abridged and cramped by the Chinese shoe than are the functions of respiration and digestion by the tight stays.* There is one other evil, of commission, that I * I have little doubt that, to the disordered condition of the digestive organs, resulting from the above and other causes, is mainly owing the premature decay of the teeth, now so general a complaint among all, but especially the better classes of soci- ety. So universal is the evil, that dentists are now more numer- ous than druggists ! As one prison formerly served Rome, when under the kings and tribunes— " Sub Regibus atque Tribunis;" so one or two dentists were sufficient for the nobility and gentry of the British metropolis in the days of our forefathers. At present, they would make a very formidable, if not handsome regiment, consisting of three or four strong battalions! To ter- rify their enemies, too, they would require no other weapons than those which they exercise in their daily vocations. 74 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. must advert to before closing this section—the commission of matrimony. I fear that many of my fair young readers may think I have placed this evil under the wrong head, and that it ought to be con- sidered as one of omission rather than commission. I am unable, in an essay of this kind, to state my reasons for postponing matrimony till the comple- tion of the third Septenniad in the female, and of the fourth Septenniad in the male sex. Yet both sexes may safely take it for granted that I have good reasons for advancing this dogma—deduced from long experience and extensive observation. To the male youth of modern times the admonition is hardly necessary, since they are growing amazingly pru- dent and cautious in taking this important step. They seem to have derived immense advantage from the sage advice given to young Phaeton by his father— " Parce puer stimulis, et fortius utere loris." In all matrimonial affairs, they require the spur rather than the bridle, and therefore I may take leave of them for the present, as they are not likely to violate the precept I have laid down. Not so the young ladies—or rather their mothers. But I shall only offer to them one dissuasive argu- ment against too early matrimony. It is this:—that for every month spent in the marriage state during the third Septenniad, a year will be deducted from the usual duration of their beauty and personal at- tractions ! I ought not to say less—and I need not say more TIME. 75 FOURTH SEPTENNIAD. Twenty-one to twenty-eight years. Time advances with steady and equal pace, nei- ther quickening his steps at the ardent solicitation of youth, nor retarding his course at the unheeded prayer of age! He is represented—but improperly —with a scythe, mowing down all things—" omnia metit tempus"—from the cloud-capped pyramid, whose head is shrouded in the darkness of antiquity, to the most ephemeral flower or fly, basking for a day in the sunshine of its momentary existence. This powerful agent of a still more powerful being (far less imaginary than the Jupiter of the hea- thens) is falsely represented as entirely destructive, whereas he is more than half conservative. He ought to be portrayed as a skeleton on one side, with the scythe in his left hand—while the opposite side is clothed in flesh and blood, exhibiting all the characteristics of youth and maturity—his right hand holding a cornucopiae overflowing with seeds, flowers, and fruits, the symbols of perpetual repro- duction and anlimited fertility. Time should rest on a winged globe, the emblem of eternal revolu- tion and motion, while typical of that which has neither beginning nor end,. From his right hand he is profusely scattering the principles and materials of regeneration and life—with his left hand he is scathing, consuming, and obliterating every thing which he had previously called into existence, at the command of his superior! But between the cornucopiae and the scythe—between the right hand and the left of this mysterious agent, there exists a fair and ample field, for ever flourishing in peren. 76 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. nial vigour. The afflux of supply and the efflux of waste are imperceptible to the eye. Parts are con- stantly added, and parts are constantly subtracted; but the whole remains a whole. The body of na- ture is ever changing, but never changed. And, as to the human race, though the individual dies, the species remains immortal. The individual con- stitution exhibits for a time this remarkable condi- tion. During many years, say from the age of thirty to that of forty—every particle that is taken from the material fabric is simultaneously replaced by another particle of new matter, and thus the living machine is secured from the effects of wear and tear—till the adjusting balance is deranged, and the supply becomes inadequate to the waste. Time does not roll over the physical or material world without leaving his impress on the meta- physical or intellectual. The track of his wheels is left in a medium much rarer than the air we breathe —in the thoughts and imaginings of the human mind ! Proteus never presented himself in half so many forms as Time does to different individuals— and even to the same individual under different circumstances. To the galley-slave, the tenant of the prison, the absent lover, the victim of incurable tortures, and to the countless thousands whose daily lot is reiterated misery, how does Time ap- pear to creep, and how unwelcome is his presence! To him whose hours are numbered, whether by the fiat of Nature or the offended laws of his country, how rapidly do the fleeting moments pass ! To the stranded mariner, suspended over the raging wave by a slender rope and exhausted muscles, while the life-boat is struggling through the breakers to his aid, how precious is each moment! For one half hour he would exchange the gems of Golconda ! To the victim of ennui, without object or pursuit, how lag the hours—how slow the progress of the sun through the firmament! To the lawyer, the physician, the TIME. 77 merchant—to all whose time is their fortune—how quickly does the hand move round the dial; how short is the longest summer's sun! The stream of time, in its approach towards us, always seems lan- guid—when past, it appears like a dream, so rapid has been its flight. In exact proportion as age in- creases, Time seems to glide faster over our heads. Time is occupied not merely in the renovation and destruction of all organized beings and things, but also in changing things which are incapable of destruction or reproduction. The primeval granite, under the unfathomed snows of Mont Blanc, is un- dergoing changes—imperceptible and unknown—but not less real. As the darkest and deepest recesses of the earth into which man has penetrated show that changes have taken place, so no man in his senses will maintain that other changes shall not succeed. But, notwithstanding all these reproduc- tions and changes, the same thing is never reinstated in existence, at least in the globe we inhabit. The same human being never reappears on the stage of life—personal identity once destroyed is for ever lost—the same tree never springs up a second time in the forest—the same wave never beats a se- cond time on the sandy shore—the same insect never revives after dissolution—not even the same drop of water ever falls a second time in the shower, though its elements may run the same round of changes, from water to vapour, and from vapour to rain, for a million of years. Man, then, the highest on the scale of created be- ings, is subject to the same law that governs the eagle over his head, and the worm—nay, the dust, beneath his feet. He cannot, therefore, with jus- tice, complain even if this were his final lot. He has capacities for enjoyment and pleasure beyond those of every other organized being, whether of the vegetable or animal world—and if his intellectual endowments and passions lead him into pains and G2 78 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. penalties of mind and body from which his inferi- ors are free, still he cannot reasonably complain of injustice. He has no right to claim a majority of the good and a minority of the evils allotted to cre- ated beings in this sublunary state. These reflections on time may appear digressive; but they are not unnatural, for we are now approach- ing certain epochs of life when reflection will in- trude itself on the mind of man, in spite of the tur- moil of passions and excitements by which he is surrounded. To the slave imprisoned in the dark Peruvian mine—to the shipwrecked mariner on the desolate isle, eying, from day to day, the boundless horizon in search of a friendly sail—the wheels of Time do not appear to revolve more slowly than they do to the minor approaching his majority at the close of the third Septenniad. The happy morn at last ar- rives that stamps the minor a man—that liberates him from the control of parent or guardian—that makes him his own master—too often the slave of his own passions, or the victim of designing syco- phants ! On this, as upon many other eventful pe- riods of our lives, the greatest apparent good fre- quently turns out to be the greatest evil—and that which seems at the moment to be a dire misfortune not seldom eventuates in a most fortunate dispensa- tion.* * A long and checkered life has furnished me with very many illustrations of this position. I shall only glance at one. After a most dangerous illness in his majesty's service, I was invalided at Madras, and procured a passage in a line-of-battle ship for England. After my goods and chattels were on board, the ship was suddenly ordered to sea, while I was making a lit- tle excursion from the presidency. I got back to Madras just in time to see the vessel sail from the roads, while two of my brother officers, more prudent than myself, had wisely (in all human prudence) taken up their births on board, and were now on their voyage to Europe ; while I was left destitute on a for- eign shore, in sickness and in poverty ! After surmounting va- lious difficulties, and repining for months at my misfortunes, I PHASES OF LIFE. 79 But although human laws, at least in this coun- try, convert the minor into the man at the age of twenty-one years, the corporeal frame does not ar- rive at maturity—at its full development—till sev- eral years afterward—till the middle, or rather the end, of the fourth Septenniad—while the intel- lectual faculties require a still longer period for their acme or vigour. Up to this period (twenty- four to twenty-eight years) Nature herself conducts and superintends the growth and successive evolu- tions of the corporeal fabric, its functions, and its powers. No human art or circumstance can mate- rially retard or accelerate the progressive steps by which the body attains its ultimatum of develop- ment. Various deleterious agents may destroy life, and thus prevent maturity from being gained at all; but if the individual live to the age of twenty-four or twenty-five years, he will have acquired all or al- most all the corporeal perfection of which he is sus- ceptible. Up to this point, the supply is greater than the waste, and increase of strength, if not of stature, is the result. In the middle of the fourth Septenniad the balance is nearly equipoised—and Nature only lends her aid to sustain the equilibrium for very many years afterward. But it is in the power of man himself to abridge or extend this period of equilibrium in a most extraordinary degree. The period of this adjusted balance (say from twenty- eight to forty-two) is not so very strictly limited as the period between birth and maturity. At the age of forty-two, the summit of the arch of life is gained —and thence it gradually descends. But this key- stone of the arch is not so fixed as the keystone at length reached my native soil. The line-of-battle ship* foundered at sea, and not a human being of the crew or passen- gers survived to tell the tale! From that day till this (now thirty-six years ago) I have always hailed an apparent misfor- tune as the harbinger, if not the actual agent, of some providen- tial benefit or escape. 80 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. of growth at the age of twenty-four years. By in- temperance, by misfortune, by hereditary or acci- dental diseases, the individual passes his meridian at thirty-five, or even sooner, instead of reaching the meridian of forty-two. Nature, too, who is al- ways indulgent to those who obey her dictates, will sometimes, though rarely, protract this middle period to fifty years ; but it is in the succeeding period of declension from the meridian that the greatest lati- tude or variety is observable. After the completion of the seventh Septenniad—forty-nine years—indul- gent Nature gives a comparatively unlimited scope to the powers of life—at least till the end of the twelfth Septenniad—eighty-four—when it seems that, except on very extraordinary occasions, she determines that those who have arrived at that ad- vanced age shall have only a probability (to use the language of the ensurance-offices) of three years and a half of—decrepitude ! This may be considered as a slight anticipation of the subject; but it is no more than a mere glimpse of the vista in perspec- tive. At the beginning of the fourth Septenniad, the fe- male is as much matured in constitution as the male at the middle of the same epoch—but neither the one at twenty-one, nor the other at twenty-four years, is at the acme of strength and firmness in or- ganization. The human frame will have acquired its ultimate healthy dimensions, but not its solidity and full power of bearing labour and fatigue, till the age of twenty-four in the one sex, and twenty-eight or thirty in the other. The fourth Septenniad, then, is perhaps the most critical and dangerous for both sexes in the whole series—as far as health and happiness are con- cerned. The health of the male sex is most per- illed—the happiness of the female—if indeed it be possible that one of these conditions can be dam- aged without the participation of the other ! The STRUCTURE OF THE HUMAN FRAME. 81 connexion between health and pleasure demands a few remarks at this particular period of life, when the latter is too often sought at the expense of its chief source, the former. The structure of the human frame displays such infinite wisdom, that we may safely infer equal be- nevolence and skill in the Divine Architect. An in- vestigation of the functions of the living machine wiuV convert this inference into a demonstration. There can be little doubt that, as man was first turned out of the hands of his Creator, the whole fabric was calculated to maintain health and expe- rience happiness unalloyed. Even in his present fallen and degraded condition, and during the ordi- nary health enjoyed under ordinary circumstances, the exercise of every function in the body (numer- ous and complicated as these functions are) con- tributes its quota of pleasure to the sum total of happiness. It may reasonably be asked how this can be, seeing that all the great vital functions that sustain our existence are carried on, not only with- out our knowledge, but without our consent. Thus the heart circulates the blood, and the lungs oxyge- nate it, without our consciousness of these impor- tant operations. The stomach digests our food, un- known and unfelt by us. The liver secretes bile! In short, the whole of what are termed the organic or automatic functions, the essential and immediate props of life, are conducted without our privity or assent. Yet, by a wonderful species of intercom- munication (the great sympathetic nerve), the two systems of life—the organic and the animal—the in- voluntary and the voluntary—the vegetable and the spiritual—touch without mingling, and sympathize without surrendering their independence ! The natural and quiet exercise of these vital but involuntary functions amounts to a sum total which cannot be expressed by numbers, nor defined by words. It is the feeling of health and spirits— 82 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. a feeling which, like its source, is independent of the exercise of the animal and intellectual functions. It may exist independently of sensation, motion, perception, or reflection; yet gives acuteness to the first, activity to the second, clearness to the third, and soundness to the fourth of these opera- tions. The truth of these positions is too often and too mournfully proved by the converse. When the functions of organic life (circulation, digestion, se- cretion, &c.) deviate, by any cause, from their nat- ural, and consequently their healthful state, although there may be no external indication or local recog- nition of such deviation, there will yet be some gen- eral or inexplicable feeling of discomfort, distrac- tion, distress, or discontent, varying in degree or intensity, from the slightest malaise up to the most poignant feelings of misery, leading to insanity or suicide ! But the sources of pleasure and of suffering are not limited to the functions of organic or vegetable life. They are far more apparent, tangible, and exquisite in the exercise of the animal or intellec- tual functions. Sensation, through the medium of the five senses (seeing, feeling, hearing, tasting, and smelling), brings with it a host of pleasures or pains. If man had been born with only the single sense of sight, through the medium of which he surveys with delight the myriads of objects, from the starry fir- mament down to the miraculous revelations of the microscope, he would have just cause of gratitude to his Creator. But when we examine the other senses, and the various channels through which pleasure flows upon the moral and physical man, we must acknowledge the infinite beneficence as well as omniscience of God. The capacity for en- joyment increases regularly as one system of organs rises over another. It is lowest in the organic life, or those organs whose functions are not under our will—it is greatly extended in the animal life, or MAN DESIGNED FOR IMMORTALITY. 83 life of relation with the world around us, including all the senses—but it is highest of all, because it is nearly boundless, in the intellectual system—that system which, though connected with matter, and influenced by the lowest of material functions, yet springs far beyond the limits of the visible world, and revels in the boundless domain of reflection. " Say, why was man so eminently raised Amid the vast creation—why ordained Through life and death to dart his piercing eye, With thoughts beyond the limit of his frame; But that the Omnipotent might send him forth, In sight of mortal and immortal powers, As on a boundless theatre, to run The great career of justice ?" When we thus contemplate structure built on structure—function superadded to function—and system raised over system, from the meanest organ that amalgamates man with his mother earth, up to the most ethereal function of the mind, that seems to link him with beings of angelic nature—when we reflect on the wonderful skill with which the whole material fabric is constructed, and the astonishing powers with which it is endued for repairing acci- dental damages and counteracting the wear and tear of time, we are strongly led to the conclusion, or at least the conjecture, that man was designed for im- mortality when first turned out of his Creator's hands. But a further investigation and melancholy experience soon teach us, either that the design of immortality was abandoned by the Divine Architect, or that some mysterious and fatal revolution took place in the destiny, as well as in the constitution •of mankind—when, as— " The Aonian muses say, Both Man and Nature mourn'd their first decay; When every form of death, and every wo Shot from malignant stars to earth below 1" 84 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. Whether this doom of death was consequent on the fall of man, as literally or allegorically portrayed in Genesis, or whether the seeds of decay were sown with the first rudiments of his creation— " Finisque ab origine pendet—" may for ever remain a matter of dispute or conjec- ture—not so the wisdom and justice of the decree. Immortality—or even a considerable prolongation of man's existence in this world, would be the greatest curse that his Creator could inflict on him. It would be incompatible not only with the happi- ness of the individual, but with that of the whole species. Even in the brief space of man's career on this globe, the appetite for pleasure begins to be sated before the ordinary season of enjoyment is passed; and were his years tripled or quadrupled, this earth would'fail to afford novelty, and sameness of scene would sicken every sense ! If a millen- nium should ever obtain in this world, there must first be a new creation of beings; and that of a na- ture by us totally inconceivable, even in imagination. I have already observed, that about the middle of the fourth Septenniad (24 or 25) man arrives at the limit of physical development; but it is rather the acme of dimensions than of density—of structure rather than of strength. During the latter years of growth, especially if it be rapid, Nature appears to be, in some degree, exhausted by the effort of completing the fabric, and requires a temporary economy rather than a profuse expenditure of her powers. The human tabernacle, like other tene- ments of clay, is much better for a few years of seasoning and settlement after the building is com- pleted. The tall and full-grown pine is too soft and succulent to be formed at once into the giddy mast, and bend elastic to the sweeping gale. A stock of temperance and exercise laid in at this EXERCISE. 85 period will return fifty per cent, more of profit in the course of life, than if attempted at any other epoch subsequently. Temperance not only con- duces directly to the consolidation of the constitu- tional edifice just completed, but proves one of the best bulwarks against some of the most fatal rocks on which health and happiness are often wrecked in riper years. Circe could not transform the as- sociates of Ulysses into swine till they had quaffed the intoxicating draught—but the fatal goblet was no sooner drained than— " Instant her circling wand the goddess waved, To hogs transform'd them, and the stye receiv'd : No more was seen the human face divine." Exercise, at this period, not only co-operates with temperance in the invigoration of the body, but powerfully controls those effervescences of temperament, and tides of exuberant energy, that so often burst their proper boundaries, and hurl the youth impetuously along, in " Pleasure's path, or passion's mad career." When the poet apostrophized the good fortune of those who crown a " youth of labour''' with an " age of ease," it is clear that by the term labour he meant industry—and by ease, independence. But the literal acceptation of these significant words is even more applicable than the metaphorical. Exer- cise, in the early years of life, is more certainly fol- lowed by freedom from pain in the advanced epochs of existence, than economy is followed by compe- tence—or, in the words of the poet—labour by ease. If the youth could see, as the physician daily sees, the exorbitant usury which habitual indulgence in pleasure and sloth pays in the sequel—and that, too, not in money, which is dross, but in bodily and mental suffering (the only penalty that will be ac- 86 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. cepted), he would shudder at the prospect—dash the cup from his lip—and tug at the oar of industry like the meanest peasant. It is in the fourth Septenniad that the more ath- letic or gymnastic exercises should be practised, as less likely to strain or injure the fabric, now on the confines of its utmost degree of consolidation. The affluent have no excuse for idleness but the want of will. The professional, mercantile, and even the mechanical classes have a more plausible excuse— the want of time. But there is always a way when there is a will; and this will would be more fre- quently exerted, if the consequences could he fore- seen. A short illustration drawn from fact, and not from fancy, may not be misplaced. There was a time when a gentleman walked—because he could not afford to ride—and then he was seldom ailing. A period came when he kept his carriage—because he could not afford to walk—and then he was seldom well. He hit on a remedy that combined the econ- omy of time with the preservation of health. In- stead of jumping into the carriage on leaving a house, he started off at a quick pace, that kept the horses on a trot after him. When well warmed with walking, a little fatigued, or straitened for time, he sprang into the carriage, closed three of the windows, and read till he arrived at the next rendezvous, after which, the same process of alter- nate pedestrian and passive exercise was reiterated. Now this is a combination of the two kinds of exer- cise which I had proved by experiment, many years previous, to be extremely salutary. * It is one which the rich can command without sacrifice—even of dignity; and which many others might employ with very little sacrifice to that valuable commodity— time, and with great advantage in respect to health, I am well aware that there is a very large class em- * In 1823, during a tour to the Continent, and in many sub- sequent excursions. MATRIMONY. 87 barked in trade, commerce, literature, science, and the professions who may say, and truly, that such a plan is impracticable. It may be so; but inge- nuity may suggest other plans, adapted to the pe- culiar circumstances of each individual. In how many hundred—I might say thousands, of instances have I heard it urged, that intervals of relaxation from business, or periods of salutary exercise in the open air, are totally precluded by the nature of the avocation. It cannot be doubted that great num- bers of both sexes are unfortunately placed in this predicament; and have only the alternative of in- jured health or ruined circumstances. Bad as is the latter, the former is worse. But a great ma- jority of individuals have the means of procuring some portion of exercise, if they would but exert their ingenuity. The example which I have quoted can only be adopted by those who are circum- stanced similarly to the author, but it may serve as a stimulus to invention in other cases. The fourth Septenniad is not perhaps the most proper period for repressing the passion of ambi- tion or avarice, and encouraging exercise of body and relaxation of mind. The love of pleasure has not yet experienced the slightest check from rivals that are, on a future day, to overwhelm and annihi- late it; but indolence is apt to insinuate itself be- tween love and ambition in this period of life, and, having once got the mastery, may injure or even incapacitate the individual, by gradually sapping the moral and physical energies before they are com- pletely developed. The fourth Septenniad is claimed, in an especial manner, by Hymen—Cupid having been for some years previous in the field as pioneer. The most proper age for entering the holy bands of matrimony has been much discussed, but never settled. I am entitled to my opinion; and although I cannot here give the grounds on which it rests, the reader may 88 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. take it for granted that I could adduce, were this the proper place, a great number of weighty rea- sons, both moral and physical, for the dogma which I am going to propound. The maxim, then, which I would inculcate is this—that matrimony should not be contracted before the first year of the fourth Septenniad on the part of the female, nor before the last year of the same in the case of the male. In other words, the female should be, at least, twenty-one years of age, and the male twenty- eight years. That there should be seven years dif- ference between the ages of the sexes, at whatever period of life the solemn contract is entered upon, need not be urged, as it is universally admitted. There is a difference of seven years, not in the ac- tual duration of life in the two sexes, but in the stamina of the constitution, the symmetry of the form, and the lineaments of the face. The wear and tear of bringing up a family might alone account for this inequality—but there are other causes in- herent in the constitution, and independent of mat- rimony or celibacy. In respect to early marriage, as far as it con- cerns the softer sex, I have to observe that, for every year at which the hymeneal knot is tied below the age of twenty-one, there will be, on an average, three years of premature decay of the corporeal fabric, and a considerable abbreviation of the usual range of human existence. It is in vain to point out instances that seem to nullify this calculation. There will be individual exceptions to all general rules. The above will be found a fair average estimate. On the moral consequences of too early marriages it is not my intention to dilate; though I could ad- duce many strong arguments against, and very few in favour of the practice. It has been said that " matrimony may have miseries, but celibacy has no pleasures." As far as too early marriage is MATRIMONY. 89 concerned, the adage ought to run thus—" marriage must have miseries, though celibacy may have no pleasures." The choice of a wife or a husband is rather foreign to my subject, and has occupied much abler pens than mine to little advantage. My own opin- ion is, that were the whole of the adult population registered as they come of age, and each person, male or female, drew a name out of the urn, and thus rendered matrimony a complete lottery, the sums total of happiness, misery, or content, would be nearly, if not exactly the same, as upon the pres- ent principle of selection. This, at first sight, will appear a most startling proposition; but the closer we examine it, the less extravagant it will be found. Courtship is a state of warfare, the art and prin- ciples of which are diligently studied and vigilantly exercised during the whole of that interesting period of life. Each party carefully conceals the weak points, and prominently portrays the strong, the amiable, and the beautiful. Add to this system of intentional deception the fact that Love is blind, and therefore cannot see defects ! What is matri- mony, then, after all, but a lottery, in which many draw blanks, or worse, when they expect great prizes. It is also to be remembered that a very great proportion of matches are based on purely mercenary motives, and " Where love is but an empty sound, The modern fair one's jest." In fine, when we reflect on the ten thousand dan- gers, difficulties, anxieties, and cares which attend on matrimony and its consequences, the wonder is, not that there is so little, but that there is so much happiness or contentment in the state of wedlock. When I adverted to the lottery of matrimony, I H2 90 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. did not mean to propose or recommend it. Such a system would much resemble the ensurance of lives —a system so true in generalities, yet so false in specialities. Thus, if seventy people, of all ages, from one year up to threescore and ten, were en- sured in the Crown, the Pelican, or the Rock, not a single individual, in all probability, would live the time which was calculated on by the ensurers. Yet the average duration of life in the whole seventy would fulfil the expectations that were formed. So I apprehend it would be with the marriage lottery. Not one might be entirely contented with his or her lot, yet the average amount of happiness and misery would probably be little different, in the whole community, from what it is on the present plan of choice and selection.* It may appear paradoxical, but I believe it to be true, that what conduces to the happiness of individ- uals is not the most conducive to the welfare of the state. In respect to matrimony, there can scarcely be a doubt that the best chance of happi- ness will be based on equality of rank and fortune —on similarity of tastes—on congeniality of tem- pers—on identity of religious creeds—and on simi- lar cultivation of moral principles. Yet, if all these things could be balanced and adjusted in the nicest manner, the weal of the whole community would ultimately suffer. The good would be joined with the good, it is true—but the bad would be linked with the bad ; and misery and depravity would be augmented in geometrical progression. Something * In many countries, especially of the East, marriage is worse than a lottery, the females having no choice but the will of their parents, and the parties seldom having an opportunity of seeing each other before the contract is sealed. In this case there is neither choice nor chance ! it would be a curious sub- ject of investigation to ascertain whether the sum total of mat- rimonial felicity or misery is altered by this oriental mode of regulating the hymeneal contract. MATRIMONY. 91 of the kind does actually obtain among the castes of the Hindoos, and among the royal and noble families of Spain and some other countries. The consequent degeneration is notorious. Matrimony is a state into which mankind is al- most as irresistibly impelled or attracted, as into life at the beginning, or death in the end. And, in despite of all the circumspection, vigilance, and se- lection of parents, guardians, and lovers themselves, there will always be a copious effusion into the matrimonial state, of the most heterogeneous ele- ments, conflicting passions, and contrasting dispo- sitions, whether we regard the ages, rank, wealth, temper, taste, or moral qualities of the parties united. And wisely is it so ordained. These jarring elements and incongruous temperaments, which are utterly irreconcilable in the parents, are blended and neutralized in the progeny, so that the general stream of society flows more smoothly in conse- quence ; exemplifying the maxim of the poet— " All partial ill is universal good." That contrasts produce harmonies, we have an il- lustration in a palatable and salubrious beverage, composed of constituents the most opposite. The acidity of the lemon is mollified by the sweetness of the sugar, while the fire of the alcohol is quenched in the insipidity of the water—the whole becoming a mild and homogeneous fluid. It is true that individuals can derive little consolation from the reflection, that their own misery will contribute to the welfare of the community—and that the jarring elements of matrimonial warfare will give peace and happiness to their progeny. Yet the contemplative Christian and philosopher will not fail to trace in this dispensation the wisdom as well as the power of a superintending Providence! 92 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. FIFTH AND SIXTH SEPTENNIADS. Twenty-eight to forty-two years. THE GOLDEN ERA. Although Dr. S. Johnson was not quite correct in his assertion, so often repeated to Mrs. Thrale, that " Life declines from thirty-five," yet it is certain that, after the period in question, the corporeal fabric of man ceases to acquire any addition of power or perfection of function; though it may, and generally does augment in size—the in- crease of dimensions being often diminution of strength. The fifth and sixth Septenniads are, as it were, the double keystone of the arch of human life; but the curve of the arch in this place is so imperceptible, that, during this long period of fourteen years, it cannot often be distinguished from a right line. It is in this respect that the Johnsonian dogma is not strictly correct. Life remains, as it were, at a stand (as far as corporeal structure is concerned) during the fifth and sixth Septenniads —perhaps a little longer.* If the highest point of the arch could be ascertained, I should be inclined * It will be seen from the following extract that Dr. South wood Smith {Philosophy of Health) takes a more favourable view of human life than I do. " Thus the interval between the period of birth and that of adult age includes a term of twenty- three years. The interval between the adult age and that when life just begins to decline from its meridian includes a term of twenty-four years." It may be true that the rate of mortality does not begin to increase till after the 47th year, but that the corporeal powers begin to " decline from their meridian" fivfl years before that period, I fear is but too true.—/, /. MERIDIAN OF LIFE. 93 to place it at the beginning of the sixth Septenniad —that is, about the age of thirty-six or thirty-seven years—namely, several years below the standard of Dr. Smith—and one or two years above that of the great moralist. The point of sensible declina- tion from the meridian, however, is about the age of forty-three years. But whether we determine that the centre of the keystone should be a little on one or on the other side of the point above men- tioned, it will be admitted that the double Septen- niad, between twenty-eight and forty-two, is the golden era of human life—that period in which the material fabric and functions, as well as the intel- lectual faculties and capacities, touch their meridian, in ninety-nine cases out of the hundred. It is in this interval that the body possesses its maximum of so- lidity and strength, without the loss of its elasticity and buoyancy. This is, in fact, the prime of life. This is the epoch, too, of man's existence (pro- vided he has not grossly violated the laws of nature and temperance, or carried into the world with him some hereditary taint) in which all the functions of the body are so nicely balanced that no one inter- feres with another. The circulation in the heart does not disturb the respiration in the lungs—diges- tion is performed without the slightest conscious- ness—sleep is a temporary death without dying—and man springs from his couch with keen appetite for food, and inextinguishable energies for mental or corporeal exertion. The organs of supply are now more than able to compensate for the waste occa- ■ sioned by the ordinary wear and tear of life; be- cause the machine has ceased to make demands for additional growth. Hence it is that we are capa- ble, during the fifth and sixth Septenniads, of under- going fatigues of body and excitations of mind that would be ruinous to health either before or after those epochs of existence. It is between the limits of twenty-eight and forty- 94 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. two, most unquestionably, that the mightiest exploits of corporeal strength have been performed; but, for reasons which will presently appear, it may not al- ways have been within the said limits that the noblest effusions of intellect radiated from the human mind. The doctrine that the powers of the soul and of the body rise, acquire maturity, and decay together, has created great and unnecessary alarm in weak minds, tending, as it is supposed, towards materialism. The parallel does not run straight between mind and body generally—but only between the manifestations of mind, and that organ through which the manifestations are destined to be made by the Divine Architect—namely, the brain. No one will now deny that the brain is the material organ of the mind—and no one will contend that the two are identical. The eye is not the function or faculty of sight, though it is the only organ by which sight can be effected. No one would be so in- sane as to suppose that the eye, or the optic nerve, or even the portion of brain with which the optic nerve communicates, can see : all these parts are only the material instruments by which external images are conveyed to the common sensory of the soul—which sensory is itself but an instrument. The same observations apply to all the other senses, as hearing, smelling, taste, &c. And if they apply to these, how much more strongly do they apply to the higher faculties of the mind! Can the brain think or reflect ? Just as much as the coats or hu- mours of the eye, the retina, the optic nerve, or the thalamus nervi optici can see or judge of colours. The brain is as much the instrument of the mind in thought, as the eye is the organ of vision. The brain, in the act of perception or volition, is as pas, sive and unconscious an instrument as the telegraph that conveys information from Portsmouth to the admiralty, or instructions from the admiralty to Portsmouth. PHRENOLOGY. 95 If certain portions of the brain be injured, certain faculties of the mind will be impaired—if the whole of the material organ be diseased or disordered, the whole of the mental faculties will be deranged—if the brain be destroyed, the soul can be no longer manifested in this world.* If the dread of materialism was great because the manifestations of mind were said to be dependant on the state of the brain, that dread was much in- creased when the phrenologists began to allot cer- tain organs or portions of the brain for the mani- festation of certain faculties of the mind. But, as it is now universally allowed that the brain is the organ of the mind, there can be no increase of ma- terialism in dividing it into a series of organs. Be- fore the anatomist explored the human body, there could but one conclusion be drawn, namely, that the various functions were performed by the body generally. Dissection, however, discovered various organs in the body, each having its own peculiar function. In the brain, we find a great number of curiously and differently constructed parts—in the mind, a great number of different faculties. What is the rational inference 1 The different parts were constructed by the wise Creator for the perform- ance of different functions. If all parts of the brain were equally qualified to manifest all the mental faculties, why was it constructed of such a multi- tude of different parts 1\ We never see Nature take such unnecessary pains. But we have proof that certain portions of the brain have particular functions. Thus, let a certain part of the organ be * The same holds good with respect to every other organ. Impair the coats, humours, or nerves of the eye, and the faculty of vision will be proportionally impaired. Destroy any or all of them, and sight is lost. t If all parts of the brain were engaged in every mental opera- tion, how could two or more different intellectual operations be carried on simultaneously 1 The thing is impossible. 96 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. injured by disease, and the faculty of sight is lost in the corresponding eye—and so on of all the other senses. Now, if there be organs allotted for the perception of external things, why should not there be organs for reflection, volition, and the various faculties of the mind!* The principles of phrenology may be, then, and I believe are correct; though the details, or many of the applications of the doctrine, may be wrong. That the brain is a congeries of organs, we have the evidence of our own senses—that these organs are destined for separate and different functions, we have proofs in several instances, and strong analogical reasons for believing in others. That the doctrine of a plurality of organs for the manifestation of several faculties of the mind should favour materialism more than the doctrine of one organ for all the faculties, is so utterly absurd as to be entirely unworthy of notice :—nor can I see that the said doctrine weakens, in the slightest degree, any moral or religious precept. Suppose it were asserted by a phrenologist that there is an organ of destructiveness, and that the greater develop- ment of that organ in one individual than in an- other indicated a greater propensity to cruelty in * This, indeed, is all but proved by the fact that, in the same filament or bundle of nervous filaments, some of the nervous fibres (if we may use the term) are destined for transmitting impressions from the external world to the mind—while others in the same pacquet are employed in a totally different office, the conveyance of orders from the mind to the muscles. In other words, the same sheath binds up two nerves apparently similar, yet one is for perception and the other for volition! If this be the case in the nerves, which are prolongations of the brain, who can doubt that the same diversity of function obtains in different parts of the brain itself? It was only by detecting the different functions of the two nerves in one sheath, that their different natures were ascertained. The eye could not recognise one from the other} so it is with the organs of the brain. PHRENOLOGY. 97 that one than in the other—does this doctrine di- minish the responsibility for the crime of cruelty or murder, or the necessity for controlling that bad disposition, anymore than the doctrine of propensity to cruelty in the soul itself—a doctrine which no anti-phrenologist will deny 1 If a man should claim an excuse for crime because he has an organ of criminality in his brain, another may claim, with equal justice, an irresponsibility, because he has a propensity to crime in his soul! But there are good and bad organs in the brain, as well as good and bad propensities in the mind; and the obligations we are under to cultivate the good and control the evil, are just as great in the scheme of phrenology as in the systems of ethics and religion established be- fore phrenology was heard of. But there are one or two other considerations which may tend to dispel the fears of the Christian, and diminish the importance of the phrenologist. The grand principle of phrenology is, to trace the correspondence between propensities of the mind and prominences in the head. The material organs could only be ascertained by comparing them with the mental faculties or dispositions of the individ- ual.* The phrenologist does not maintain that the * This was the process by which Gall arrived at his conclu- sions. He did not trace the faculties from their organs, but the organs from their faculties. Thus, he was much struck with the powers of some people's memories, and ultimately discov- ered that they had prominent eyes. He afterward traced this connexion or correspondence between retentive memories and prominent eyes generally, so as to establish a kind of principle. But he never appears to have taken the physical prominence first, and afterward traced its phrenological character. " He did not, as many have imagined, first dissect the brain, and pretend by that means to have discovered the seats of the mental powers; on the contrary, he first observed a concomi- tance between particular talents and dispositions and particular forms of the head."—Combe. This was the true, as well as the original path of investiga I 98 ECONOMY OF HEALTH organ is the cause of the faculty or propensity of the mind. He might as well say that the brain is the cause of the mind (instead of being its instrument), as to say that particular parts of the brain are the causes of particular propensities. Such reasoning would be the very worst species of materialism, and do away with all moral responsibility. But each particular organ of the brain is as much the instrument of each particular faculty or propensity, as the brain, or aggregate of organs, is the general medium of manifestation—or, in other words, the general instrument of the mind. Now let us apply the doctrine to practice. Suppose an individual discovers that he has a prominently bad organ, and a prominently evil propensity—what is he to do? He cannot compress the organ into smaller space; and therefore he ought to control the evil propen- sity. The knowledge of the evil propensity renders the knowledge of the bad organ of little or no use. Then which of the two investigations is the easiest 1 I imagine that it is much more easy, and also much more safe, to ascertain our own evil propensities, than the prominences of our heads which are indic- ative of them. It requires great phrenological ac- curacy to determine the organ by measuring the scull—but no great discrimination to ascertain the faculty or propensity of the mind by attention to our own dispositions. As far, then, as the study of ourselves is con- cerned, phrenology appears to be nearly a work of supererogation. It is like examining with a micro- tion. Deviation from it was the rock on which too many phre- nologists have split. The practice of first ascertaining the fac- ulties and propensities, and then remarking the organization, should have been followed for a century or more. The phre- nologists forsook this path, and, from too limited a number of facts, proceeded to reverse the order of investigation, and to predicate character of mind by dimensions of brain ! The conse- quences have been such as any reasonable man might expect. PHRENOLOGY. 99 scope the papillae of the tongue, in order to ascer- tain whether or not we possess the sense of taste, when the question may be solved in an instant by eating an orange. It is like examining the eye in a mirror to ascertain the sense of sight—the posses- sion or loss of which we must have long been aware of. Who would go to Stevenson or Curtis to have his ears probed, and to learn from these aurists whether or not he had the faculty of hear- ing? But, suppose a man discovers a prominent organ—say combativeness—the corresponding pro- pensity of which he was unconscious of before. What follows ? Will this discovery call into activ- ity the dormant propensity'?* Will it make him more brave ? Will it render him more quarrelsome ? If the propensity did exist, he must have known it —or, at all events, he might soon discover it if he sought it:—and the discovery of the propensity itself renders a discovery of its organ or instru- ment a matter of curiosity rather than of utility. Thus, then, it appears to me that auto-phrenology, or the study of our own minds, may be successfully and safely cultivated without reference to the ma- terial organ of the mind—and that this applies to each particular faculty or propensity, and its mate- rial instrument, as well as to the whole brain col- lectively. The question is different, however, when we come to examine the faculties and propensities of our neighbours. In this case, if the science of phre- nology be exact, and if the phrenologist be master of his art, a man's dispositions may be ascertained by a careful scrutiny of his head. Leaving the uncertainty of a science which is yet in its infancy out of sight, it is evident that the application of phrenological canons to society in general must * Can the propensity lie dormant while the organ is promi- nent ? If so, phrenology is uncertain. 100 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. always be on a very limited scale. People will not subject their heads to the calipers of the curious— especially if they have any propensities or dispo- sitions which they wish to conceal;—and few, I believe, could look inward upon their own hearts, without a suspicion that phrenology, if a true sci- ence, might make inconvenient discoveries on their heads. Thus, then, the application of phrenology to adults is likely to remain a dead letter, or nearly so. The most feasible exercise of the new science is on the heads of children, with the view of deter- mining their dispositions, propensities, and capaci- ties. I think the phrenologist takes upon him a tre- mendous responsibility in predicating the mental character of the man by measuring the brain of the child. It is to be remembered that the propensi- ties, in this case, have not yet developed them- selves, and consequently that their material organs or instruments have acquired no dimensions be- yond those which the hand of Nature gave them. It is well known that all the organs of the body generally, as well as of the brain in particular, ac- quire force, and even size, in proportion as they are exercised. But the instruments or organs of intellect being hardly at all exercised in infancy, it must be a most dangerous, as well as difficult task to estimate the propensities which are yet in abeyance. When a brain was presented to Dr. Spurzheim—and, con- sequently, when the actual organs of the mind were laid bare before him, without any of the embarrass- ments which the scull might occasion, and he was asked to form an estimate of the mental character of the individual—what was his observation ? He said " the experiment was not a fair one, inasmuch as he was not acquainted with the state of health, constitution, or education of the individual, all of which it was essential for him to be aware of before drawing positive inferences."* * Dr. Combe on Insanity. PHRENOLOGY. 101 It is true that Dr. Spurzheim did not venture to give an opinion of the individual's character, from some remarkable phenomena in the cerebellum and back parts of the brain—and he appears to have guessed right. But when we have the authority of one of the founders of phrenology, that without a knowl- edge of the health, constitution, and education of the person we can draw no positive inferences, how can we attach much importance to the examination of children's heads, before the education has well commenced—before the constitution is adjusted— and before many of the faculties and propensities have even dawned? One of the surest modes of investigating the con- nexion between certain portions of the brain and the corresponding faculties of the mind would be through the medium of pathology—namely, by com- paring disease in the organ with disordered mani- festation of the intellect. This is rendered exceed- ingly difficult in consequence of the brain being double. Thus, unless the two organs—say of cora- bativeness—be injured, we cannot discover the loss of function in one. Monomania, or mental derange- ment on a single topic, would seem to promise in- teresting discoveries in this respect; but although we are confident that insanity, whether general or partial, is always occasioned by some disorder or disease of organization—especially of the brain, yet, unfortunately, the traces of these functional disor- ders or structural changes in the organ of the mind cannot always be found after death, or they are so mixed up with other lesions that we are often left in the dark on the subject of phrenology. Still, with all these disadvantages, insanity affords the strongest proofs of the truth of phrenology, while phrenology offers the most rational explanation of insanity. This short digression on phrenology is not de- signed to discourage the study of a science whose 12 102 ECONOMY OF HEALTH., leading principles I believe to be founded in truth; but to check the extravagant expectation of enthu- siasts, and, what is worse, the confident assertions of sciolists. The study of phrenology is one of the most difficult that can be undertaken by man, and no predications are at all worthy of credence, ex- cept from those who have devoted years to the in- vestigation. I have hinted, a few pages back, that, although the mental and corporeal powers attain their acme in the fifth and sixth Septenniads, the intellect may yet display greater prodigies after the completion of that period than it could have done during the gol- den era of moral and physical perfection. The rea- son of this is obvious. The mind continues to ac- quire knowledge long after the body has ceased to gain strength. And although certain powers of the intellect, as memory, imagination, or even percep- tion, may be on the decline, yet the accumulated materials in the granary of the mind may, and often do, enable it to construct edifices of nobler dimen- sions and more durable architecture than at earlier and more vigorous epochs of life. It was in the Golden Septenniad that the Bard of Avon " Exhausted worlds and then imagined new." The almost supernatural genius of Shakspeare, as exhibited in his works, the first of which (Romeo and Juliet) appeared when the author was in his thirty-third year, renders us skeptical as to the possibility of that genius being surpassed after the turn of life. It was in the fifth or sixth Septenniad that " Waverley" was executed—and no one will contend that it was excelled by any of its succes- sors. After the meridian Septenniads, indeed, the Bard of the North exhibited a sad falling off—more, however, from premature exhaustion of the intel- lectual powers by inordinate labour, than from a POWERS OF THE MIND. 103 natural decline of the mental energies. " Child Harold" was born even before the " Golden Era" commenced, and was scarcely excelled by any sub- sequent production of Byron's gigantic intellect! It is to be remembered, however, that in the pro- ductions of these master minds, imagination was the grand agent—a faculty which is early developed, and among the first to feel the withering hand of Time. Yet even here we have ample evidence that the powers of the mind are far more slow to decay than those of the body. Milton composed his " Par- adise Lost" -long after the meridian of life had passed away, and when the author was entering his ninth Septenniad ! ! Johnson composed his Ras- selas in one week, and under the pressure of afflic- tion, at the age of fifty. But let us look to another class of towering in- tellects—those who have built up imperishable truths on immutable bases—who have dealt in facts rather than in fictions—who have exercised the judgment more than the imagination. Bacon, New- ton, Locke, Linnaeus, &c, &c, afford striking illus- trations. The " Father of Philosophy" brought forth his " Novum Organon" in the fifty-ninth year of his age—at a time when Aristotle had obtained supreme authority in the schools, and when men, lost in a labyrinth of definitions, distinctions, and disputations, wasted their time in barren and useless speculations—" when there still was wanted a com- prehensive mind which could survey the whole re- gion of science ; examine the foundations of sys- tems of philosophy that palsied the progress of so- ciety—and suggest a more sure and advantageous mode of cultivating knowledge. Such a command- ing genius was Bacon, and such the grand plan which he executed in his ' instauration of the sci- ences.' The eternally increasing pile of natural knowledge, which philosophers (following his me- thod of experimental investigation) have been able 104 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. to raise, is an imperishable monument to his mem- ory." The father of the exact sciences—the immortal Newton, issued to the world his " Principia" in the last year of the " Golden Era" of human life, viz., at the age of forty-one ; but such was the vigour of his intellect that, in his seventy-third year, he solved in one evening, as a matter of amusement, the fa- mous problem of the trajectories—the most diffi- cult task which Leibnitz, in envy, could devise! It was three years after the " decline of life," ac- cording to Dr. Johnson's estimate—namely, in the thirty-eighth year of his age, that the celebrated Locke " began to form the plan of his Essay on Hu- man Understanding"—which work did not see the light for twenty years afterward, and consequently till the author had advanced into his ninth Septen- niad. However derogatory to the then heads of col- leges in Oxford, that they endeavoured to suppress the treatise on understanding, few will now con- sider the essay as indicative of any decay of intel- lect in its immortal author! Linn.s:us, the celebrated naturalist, published his " Species Plantarum," characterized by Haller as his " Maximum Opus et jEternum," in the forty-sixth year of his age, and consequently after the expira- tion of the golden era. Volumes indeed might be filled with the prodigies performed by the mind long after the body had de- clined from the meridian, and even descended far into the vale of years, proving, beyond a doubt, that the powers of the mind and of the body do not run so parallel, in their rise, progress, or decadence, as the materialists assert. The reason why the mind can put forth gigantic efforts and perform prodigies after the body has become greatly deteriorated, ap- pears to be this:—After a certain age—say thirty years—the body cannot increase in strength, or improve in any of its functions; but the mind is EMULATION AND AMBITION. 105 daily and hourly furnishing itself with knowledge, which is power, for twenty or thirty years subse- quently. With these accumulated materials, the intellect is enabled to erect imperishable memorials of its ac- quirements when the body is tottering on the verge of the grave. But let it not be imagined that these mental monuments are the products of mental powers that have gone on increasing with years. Far from it. They are the results of accumulated stores in the emporium of the soul, while the powers of using them have been gradually declining! If the man of thirty years possessed the knowledge and experi- ence of him who has attained the age of fifty—^and with equal talents—he would be able to erect far more splendid trophies of intellectual prowess than the senior in years. The true and practical infer- ence is this:—if we hope to send forth corrusca- tions of mind in advanced age, we must charge the electric battery (the mind's material organ) in the prime of life. He who attempts, in the vale of years, to astonish the world with the elaboration of knowl- edge acquired after the completion of his sixth Septenniad (42), and with energies of mind not ex- erted strenuously before that epoch, will find him- self lamentably disappointed. It is in the fifth Septenniad that the emulation of youth gradually slides into the ambition of manhood. The change is so gradual as to be scarcely percep- tible—like the mutations of figures in the magic lantern, or the transformations which fancy loves to trace in the moving panorama of clouds on a sum- mer's eve. That which was in early life only a laudable desire to excel in literature, arts, science, or manly exercises, becomes in manhood a pas- sion for outstripping and eclipsing our neighbours in rank, wealth, estimation, power, and all the thou- sand objects, paths, and pursuits of ambition! This passion, wisely conferred on man, though too often 106 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. unwisely exercised, has been differently viewed by different philosophers. By some it has been de- duced from Heaven itself. " Ambition first sprang from the bless'd abodes, The glorious fault of angels and of gods ! Thence to their images on earth it flows, And in the breasts of kings and heroes glows." This, however, was not the sentiment of a man who climbed all its giddy heights—fathomed all its treacherous depths—and tasted all its dangerous sweets! "Cromwell, I charge thee fling away ambition ! By that sin fell the angels!" The hero of Macedon found the reward of his am- bition in the Granicus—Hannibal in exile—Caesar in the senate—Sidney on the scaffold! Sweden's " mad monarch" touched the goal of his ambition at Pultowa—Wolsey in disgrace—Napoleon in cap- tivity ! Ten thousand illustrious victims of ambition might be cited—whose shades may possibly be soothed by the celebrity of their fates; but who could num- ber the myriads who have fallen sacrifices at the above shrine, without the consolation of sympathy from friends, or the honour of record in "history! In every gradation of society, from the minister who steers the vessel of state down to the reckless driver of the cab or the omnibus, ambition, in one or other of its protean shapes, is the ruling passion that too often destroys the body and endangers the soul. Metaphysicians and phrenologists have di- vided and subdivided the passions and propensities rather too minutely, and denominated them some- what capriciously. It is not a little extraordinary that, while the phrenologists have given us organs for constructiveness, wonder, individuality, colour- ing, locality, eventuality, causalty, &c, they have EMULATION AND AMBITION. 107 discovered no organ for the passion of ambition, which is not only the most prominent, but the most predominant principle of the soul, especially during the golden era-of life, the period which the phre- nologists point out to us as that which is the best for ascertaining the faculties *tnd propensities of the human mind. It is in vain for the phrenolo- gist to tell us that ambition is merely the abuse of some minor passion or propensity, as of self- love. I tell the phrenologist, and from no incon- siderable study of human nature, that ambition is a master principle or passion in mental philosophy, and not a subordinate one. It is the parent and not the progeny of many leading propensities, honoured with distinct organs in the brain by phrenologists. It is the impelling power which leads (or drives) to distinction in the senate, the bar, the pulpit, the col- lege, the hall, the stage, and the field of battle. These are the prominent, but not the principal thea- tres on which ambition acts its various parts. Many of those passions and propensities which are known under very different appellations are ambition in disguise. Thus competition, a passion which agi- tates the universal mass of mankind, is the ambition of ordinary life. In the " breasts of kings and he- roes," indeed, it takes the latter title, as more lofty and dignified; but from these exalted personages downward, through the vast chain of human society, the same passion goes under the humbler title of competition. What is ostentation in either sex but the ambition of surpassing our neighbours or equalling our superiors in pomp and show ? Pride itself is often nothing else than ambition, gratified and elated by the supposition, whether well or ill founded, that the individual is superior in personal importance, rank, riches, attainments, or other cir- cumstances, to the generality of mankind. The " love of praise or fame," which has been considered by some philosophers *.s almost a uni- 108 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. versal passion, is, in reality, the ambition of rising higher than others in the world's estimation. One of Johnson's definitions of ambition runs thus:— "going about with studiousness to obtain praise." In fine, that it is the most generally diffused and powerfully operative passion or propensity in the human breast, I appeal to a careful analysis of the human mind itself. The leading definition of the great moralist and lexicographer will strikingly corroborate this assertion. " Ambition ; the desire of something higher than is possessed at present." I apprehend that the most rigid scrutiny of every na- tion and of every individual on the earth's surface would fail to discover a single human being who did not answer to the above definition. The discontent with our present situation, and the desire of im- proving it, have been the themes of poets and phi- losophers, from the " Nemo Contentus" of the Ro- man bard down to the " Essay on Man" of the Twickenham muse. That an organ corresponding with, and represen- tative of, such a prominent and paramount propen- sity of the human mind, should remain unnoticed and undiscovered by the phrenologists, is to me most inexplicable, considering the talents with which the subject has been investigated, and the knowledge of human nature that must have been possessed by the inquirers. Another defect in phrenology has struck me forcibly. It does not ap- pear to me that the phrenologists have paid suffi- cient attention to the progression or succession of the propensities. Thus, some of those which are the most predominant at one period of life are nearly, if not completely, null or void in other stages of ex- istence. The passion of love, in its usual accepta- tion, exists not in infancy and old age, though the organ must exis t. But if we argue that the function of an organ in ti'ie brain changes with time, then we EMULATION AND AMBITION. 109 have a rational explanation of phenomena which cannot be accounted for on any other theory. I have already hinted that the emulation of youth becomes the ambition of middle age. It is highly probable that, if the attendant moral and physical circumstances were equal, there would always be found a due proportion between the energies of these two passions—or rather grades of the same passion as developed at different epochs of exist- ence. There are exceptions to all general rules ; but they are often apparent rather than real. Thus there are instances on record where the youth has dis- played no ability, but rather the reverse, and yet where the man has subsequently astonished the world by the strength or brilliancy of his intellect. Dean Swift affords the illustration which serves as the text for the advocates of this argument. Let us sift it a little. Swift went to college, and there he cultivated poetry and satire, to the entire neglect of mathematics. He was rejected at his examination, and the world set him down as a dunce in youth! How he turned out in manhood need not be told. It is probable that all the exceptions of this kind would prove, if cautiously investigated, to present the same results. Every one who is at all conver- sant with human nature will now acknowledge that what has been said of the talent for poetry applies to every other kind of talent. " Nascitur, non fit." It is quite true, as Locke has said, that the human mind (as well as its material organ, the brain) is devoid of innate ideas, and like a blank sheet of pa- per at birth. All ideas, all knowledge must be subse- quently acquired through the medium of the senses and reflection. But it does not follow that, because all these sheets are blank, they are all equally well calculated for acquiring knowledge. Far from it. Some of them are like thick Bath post—others like thin foolscap—and many of them resemble common blotting paper, incapable of retaining or exhibiting 1 10 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. any distinct or legible impression—the mind and its organ being, in fact, a " rudis indigestaque moles." This part of the subject, in fine, may be summed up in a very few words, though it has occa- sioned interminable discussions among metaphysi- cians. The qualities of our minds, or of the mate- rial organ of our minds, are hereditary, or born with us; but the qualifications or acquirements depend on ourselves and on the circumstances in which we are accidentally placed—men, therefore, are not born equal. The powers of their minds, or of the material organs of their minds, are as diversified as the powers of their bodies or the features of their faces. If many are born with constitutions incapable of lasting more than a few months or years, so many come into this world with minds, or organs of the mind, incapable of acquiring more than the very ru- diments of knowledge—some even without that slender capacity! But to revert to the analogy between emulation in youth and ambition in age. A volume might be filled with proofs of this analogy, or rather identity. I will only cite a very few illustrations from the dead and from the living. The emulation of youth which led Napoleon to distinguish himself from his fellow-students in Brienne, swelled into that ambi- tion afterward which urged him to seize the sceptre of Europe, and grasp at that of the world. The laudability of the emulation cannot be questioned. That of the ambition is another thing. The latter has furnished the most striking example of retribu- tive justice which the annals of the world bear on record. In our own times, that emulation which won a " double first" at Oxford for a plebeian, ripened sub- sequently into that ambition which shrunk not from wielding the destinies of the most powerful nation on this globe. In both cases, the talents were he- reditary, or, at all events, congenital; but fate threw EMULATION AND AMBITION. Ill the two actors upon widely different theatres of ac- tion. Peel would probably have turned out to be a Napoleon in the storms of the revolution—and Na- poleon a Peel in the political conflicts of the sen- ate. Be it remembered, however, that there is more energy of talent required to overcome difficulties than to display the fruits of abilities and acquire- ments under easy circumstances. Though Peel would doubtless have been a great man had he been born in penury, yet his arrival at half his present eminence against the tide of adversity, and under all the disadvantages of the " res angusta domi," would have entitled him to double his present credit. On this account, therefore, the merits of the son ought by no means to eclipse those of the father. The emulation of a "minor" at Harrow, stung with indignation by wanton, if not cruel censure, expanded into that gigantic poetical ambition which spurned mankind, and seemed almost to defy the vengeance of the gods! That emulation which, in the youthful breast of Brougham, grasped at universal knowledge, boiled forth in the shape of ambition in riper years; and, through the power which that knowledge conferred (combined with unequalled talents), carried the own- er forward to his gaol, over the heads of a thousand competitors, who were doomed to " toil after him in vain." These four illustrations—two from the dead and two from the living—might be multiplied ad infini- tum, and easily made to prove several propositions, but especially the following, viz.—First, That the em- ulation of youth becomes the ambition of age. Sec- ondly, That talent is not developed at any period of life unless it has existed from the beginning—in other words, that it is congenital, and not acquired; con- sequently that men are not born equal. Thirdly, That, 112 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. if any thing be entitled to the denomination of " uni- versal passion," it is ambition taken in its extended sense—and, if so, there ought to be an appropriate organ for this passion, if there be any truth in phre- nology. But ambition, as has been already hinted, is not the predominating impulse in every epoch of human existence. In youth, and in the form of emulation, it coexists with, and is often cast in the shade by, love. In the golden era (twenty-eight to forty- two), and when it assumes its proper form, it is still in competition or struggle with its powerful com- panion, and only begins to obtain the mastery to- wards the close of the period in question. Thus it may be laid down that at twenty-eight love is some- what stronger than ambition—at forty-two, weaker —at thirty-five, the two passions are antagonists of nearly equal powers. But love, though it may be sometimes a stronger impulse than ambition, is not so universal. Many pass through life without knowing what love is— none without experiencing ambition in one or other of its multiform shapes. Be this as it may, it is during the two golden Septenniads of life that man, in every gradation of society, while aiming at the objects of his ambition, whatever they may be, too often loses the substance in grasping at the shadow. It is in the meridian of his mental and corporeal powers that the lord of the creation can perceive no limits to their duration or strength. This " Blindness to the future kindly given," is not always wisely exercised. As common econ- omy is most advantageously practised in the period of prosperity, so the economy of health is most beneficially cultivated when we are in the fullest en- joyment of that blessing. The stings of unmerited penury are blunted by habits of previous modera- tion—and so the dangers and sufferings of acciden- MODERN MALADIES—THEIR SOURCES. 113 tal disease are obviated or mitigated by previous at- tention and temperance. It is in these two meri- dian epochs, however, that the seeds of various dis- eases, sown at much earlier periods, now take on activity of growth, and bring forth their bitter fruits. But, independently of these, the germes of many new afflictions, hitherto unknown to the constitu- tion, are firmly implanted, and soon fructify with disastrous fertility. The dry-rot of the human frame, consumption, which may have lain dormant for so many years, is frequently called into ac- tion about the beginning of the fifth or'sixth Sep- tenniads by causes which had not previously oper- ated. But the great evil—the root of innumerable evils—the proteiform malady—dyspepsy—the hy- dra-headed monster of countless brood and Medusa mien, is the progeny of civilization—and is much more indebted for its existence and diffusion to in- tellectual refinement than to bodily intemperance— in other words, its causes, multifarious as they are, may be traced far more frequently to anxieties, cares, and tribulations of mind than to improper in- dulgences of the palate or senses. This " nova pestis" was unknown to, or so rare as to be unde- scribed by, our ancestors. This assertion need not stagger us. All diseases are the creatures, or rather the creations of circumstances. Numerous maladies of antiquity have disappeared from the tablet of nosology, and others have taken their place. It may be sufficient to advert to siphilis and cholera, no authentic types of which can be found among the records of Greek or Roman med- icine. To come nearer home; diseases of the heart, one of the Protean forms of the malady un- der consideration, were so little attended to before the French revolution as to be scarcely noticed by medical writers. The portentous scenes of that eventful period called forth such a multitude of ex-^ amples of this fatal disease that a volume was soon K2 114 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. written on the subject by Corvisart—and the men- tal excitation that has ever since continued has kept up the tendency to affections of the heart, which are now among the most prominent and dreadful of human afflictions ! Dyspepsy, then, is a comparatively new disease —because its sources are now multiplied beyond all former example. The observant physician has better opportunities of tracing the connexion be- tween cause and effect, in this case, than any other inquirer into the state of human nature and of so- ciety. His observations, therefore, are entitled to some attention. We breathe in an atmosphere (speaking some- what allegorically) so dense from the pressure of redundant population, that life is a kind of instinct- ive struggle for existence! Compressing or com- pressed by others, the range for individual exertion is reduced to a very narrow compass, as compared with that which our forefathers enjoyed. But the smaller the space which is left for us to move in, the greater the power that is required for motion. If to this condition of society, which may be con- sidered as a state of rapid transition from rarity to density, we add the fact that there is a proportion- ate increment of emulation, ambition, competition, and even contention diffused throughout all ranks and classes of the community, we shall be able to form some idea of the detriment to health which must ensue from this conflicting turmoil! Although the progressive increase of population would naturally and inevitably tend to the above- mentioned issue, yet there has been fused into this redundancy an element of the most wonderful and active kind, comparatively dormant in all preceding times, but now revolutionizing, with irresistible im- petus, the whole face of things! This is knowl- edge—the product of intellect—as much superior to physical force as the mind is more noble than the MODERN MALADIES—KNOWLEDGE. 115 material fabric which it inhabits. Whatever rela- tion may subsist between redundancy of population and augmentation of knowledge, in respect to cause and effect, one thing is clear, that there is very little proportion in the rate of their progression. Thus, if the number of inhabitants in a town or country be found to double in a given time, it may safely be predicated that the amount of knowledge will quad- ruple, at the very least, in the same space. This proportion is not very likely to decrease, but the contrary. Various circumstances combine to set limits to population ; but the products of mind are not so easily circumscribed. Every year, every day, and every hour, opens out new sources of knowledge, and multiplies the means of diffusing it. Every addition to our stock of information aug- -, ments our thirst for further supplies. Under such circumstances, the attempt to stem the tide of in- tellectual improvement would be little less diffi- cult than to roll back the flood of the Ganges to the Himalaya Mountains. Every rude impediment thrown into the stream of intelligence, with the view of checking its velocity, will only increase its force and render it more turbulent. It will be much more prudent to clear its bottom and widen its channel. It is immaterial how rapid may be the current, provided it is made to run smoothly. This torrent of the mental energies, or, as has been quaintly termed, this " march of intellect," leaves no class of society, from the monarch to the mechanic, unaffected or stationary in the stream of human life, though some are much more under its influence than others. Some are volunteers—others are pressed men. Of the higher orders, many are forced into the vortex by pride—perhaps by shame ; for knowledge is not now an article that can safely be contemned, because it has got among the vulgar. The majority, however, even of the highest in the land, pursue knowledge from a nobler motive than 116 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. the fear of being deemed ignorant. They woo science for its own sake. But the great mass of man- kind, and especially those connected with the various professions, with the senate, diplomacy, arts, arms, and science—with commerce, manufactures, and even mechanics, are all impelled forward into the current of intellectual improvement, and of scien- tific and literary acquirements, by ambition, compe- tition, or—necessity. Nor let this last species of stimulus be despised. It has led to wonderful, not to say glorious results, in all ages of the world. These channels, through which the operations of intellect flow, have been pointed out, because they are conduits through which a host of new disorders have been let loose on society, perplexing to the physician, and destructive of health and comfort, to an extent beyond the power of calculation! The following question may very naturally be asked here :—How is it (if refinement of civiliza- tion and intellectual culture have brought upon so- ciety a new and most extensive class of maladies) that the range of human existence is consider- ably greater than before the introduction of this " march of intellect," and its supposed consequen- ces ? Though this has some appearance of paradox, it is very easily reconciled with the fact, which it- self is undeniable. It does not follow that those disorders which assail the greatest number of peo- ple should produce the greatest degree of mor- tality. Thus, for every one person seized with epi- demic cholera, there were 500 attacked by epidemic influenza; and yet, for every one death from the latter disease, there were fifty or one hundred from the former. This shows that certain kinds of mala- dies may affect great multitudes of people without materially abridging the span of human life. Let us suppose, what is very nearly the fact, that in the first quarter of the 18th century, the annual mortal. ity among an equal number of people was twenty MODERN MALADIES—KNOWLEDGE. 117 per cent, more than in the first quarter of the pres- ent century; but that, per contra, the annual expend- iture of drugs (still on equal masses of the commu- nity) is now fifty per cent, greater than it was one hundred years ago. What is the legitimate infer- ence which we ought to draw from this? It is, that in 1736 death had more annual victims from a given number of the population ; but in 1836 the doctors have more patients among the same num- ber of the community. The changes which time has made on* the whole surface of the country—in our manners, habits, diet, dress, dwellings, avocations—but, above all, in the disproportioned exertions of the mind (whether joy- ous or dolorous) compared with those of the body, these changes, I say, and many others which might be enumerated, have banished some diseases en- tirely—introduced others, de novo—and so modified all, that half of them would not now be recognised by Sydenham, were he to rise from the grave. These maladies of the body clearly illustrate the moral or mental causes from which so many of them spring. Thus the brain, or organ of the mind, being kept in a state of over-exertion or over-ex- citement by emulation, competition, ambition, anx- iety, tribulation, and a thousand other causes, nat- urally exhibits the effects of such a condition in its own functions, or in the functions of other organs with which it is linked in the strictest bonds of sympathy. Irritability of temper, for instance, is among the first links in the chain of morbid phe- nomena—and it is no trifling drop of misery in the cup of life. The nerves, which may be considered as prolon- gations of the brain itself, come next into play, and produce a host of what are called nervous com- plaints, nearly unknown to our forefathers: Thus the long train of painful sensations, from ticdou- loureux down to the most obscure feelings of rheu- 118 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. matism, constituting a whole class of modern mala- dies, under the term neuralgia, are developed through the medium of the brain and nervous sys- tem, and arise from the causes which I have been tracing. Some of these are among the most pain- ful afflictions to which the human frame is subject —and although they do not always proceed directly from moral causes, yet most of them originate through the medium of the mind operating on the body, and deranging some of its functions, thus in- directly inducing the neuralgic class of diseases. These, in themselves, are formidable enough ; but they are much more easily borne than many which follow. It is not a little curious that those organs on which morbid impressions, whether moral or phy- sical, are first made, are not always the first to ex- hibit the effects of these impressions. Doubtless they do suffer at the time ; but the phenomena pro- duced by these causes are seldom noticed, either by the individual or his friends. It is in those or- gans or parts of the body which are most intimately associated with the organ of the mind (the brain) that the consequences of moral impressions are, in general, first observed—more especially the diges- tive organs. Thus a man experiences a sudden reverse of fortune, or a blight of ambition. His mind may appear to bear the shock with consider- able fortitude; but soon will the tongue turn white, the appetite fail, and the complexion grow sallow. These are the preludes to a host of maladies, that, radiating from the organs of digestion, spread their baleful influence over every other organ and func- tion in the body. And here a most singular phenomenon presents itself. The brain, the citadel of the soul, which had withstood the first assaults of the moral enemy, and had, as it were, communicated with the other and inferior organs of the body for support or par- MODERN MALADIES. 119 ticipation, is, on the contrary, assailed rather than assisted by them! Thenceforth there is nothing but action and reaction, of the most unfriendly kind, between organs and functions that had hitherto co- operated in the strictest harmony! The human microcosm, at this time, resembles an unfortunate city beleaguered on all sides by the enemy from without, and torn by the dissensions of hostile fac- tions within its walls! The mind itself, whose manifestations must necessarily, in this sublunary state, correspond with the condition of the material tenement, exhibits phenomena in strict relation with the bodily functions. Though stunted, as it were, by the first collision with the moral cause or misfortune, it would regain a great degree of equanimity were it not for the disorders of the body, which, reflected from organ to organ, as sounds are reverberated from rock to rock, deprive the mind of half its energy, philosophy of half its fortitude, and even religion of half its consola- tion ! In this way is engendered a host of disorders, for which the ingenuity of man would be puzzled to invent designations. A talented friend of mine (Dr. M. Hall) has written a volume on this class of human infirmities, which he christens the " mimosa, or imitators," because they assume the forms of every disease or disorder that has ever yet been described, and of many others thak have had no history or description. It is not, however, strictly philosophical or cor- rect to represent these mimosa, or proteiform mala- dies, as always merely aping the forms and shapes of their predecessors. The truth is, that the dis- orders of our forefathers now take on novel char- acters, corresponding with modern manners and habits ; and thus, in conjunction with really new diseases, appear to demand a remodelled nomen- clature. 120 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. The superior cultivation of intellect now so ea- gerly aimed at, as the means of rising in the world —indeed of getting through it—renders the feelings more acute, the sympathies more active—the whole moral man, in short, more morbidly sensitive to moral impressions. These impressions are annu- ally multiplying in number and augmenting in in- tensity. The principal sources from whence they flow in a thousand streams on suffering humanity are these:—the fury of politics, the hazards and anxieties of commerce, the jealousies, envies, and rivalries of professions, the struggles and conten- tions of trade, the privations, discontents, and de- spair of poverty—to which might perhaps be added the terrors of superstition and the hatreds of sec- tarianism. These, I have said, are the chief foun- tains of our moral ills ; and these perturbations of the mind induce, directly or indirectly, nine tenths of the disorders of the body. It indicates a high degree of intellectual culture in the time of Plato, and a very low ratio of physical causes of disease, when we find that philosopher ascribing " all disor- ders of the body to the soul"— " Omnia corporis mala ab amino." The remark shows, at all events, that the Grecian sage was either a most observant physician, or a veritable prophet. If for " all" we substitute " most" disorders, the maxim of Plato is strictly true and applicable in these our own days. And here it may be both curious and useful to advert to a remarkable relation between the mental and corporeal functions of man, which has appeared to render the influence of the morale over the phy- sique even more extended than it really is, in the production of diseases. It is this : the moral afflic- tion is very often only an accessary or auxiliary to the physical cause in bringing forth maladies of the body. Thus, a man may be daily exposed, for SOURCES OF MODERN MALADIES. 121 weeks or months—perhaps for years—to the conta- gion of typhus fever—to marsh miasma or malaria ■—to the poison of scarlatina or erysipelas diffused in the air—or to that inscrutable agent which pro- duces cholera, with perfect impunity, his mind being easy and tranquil. But let a mental affliction occur, and immediately the morbific poison which had lain dormant in the constitution, or, at all events, was unable to develop itself, bursts forth and displays its specific effects; the moral tribula- tion appearing to be the direct or immediate cause of the bodily disorder. This remarkable and well- known fact shows, not only how anxiety or trouble of mind lays the human frame more open to the operation of purely physical agents of a delete- rious kind, but also how tranquillity or serenity of mind will render the said agents almost innocuous. I could fill a volume with the individual examples of this kind which I have personally observed, and am daily observing ; but I shall only adduce a few illustrations drawn from large masses or classes of men, which I have had opportunities of noting in various parts of the world. One of the most recent and melancholy instances occurred in the fatal ex- pedition to Walcheren. While our troops and sea- men were actively engaged in the siege and bom- bardment of Flushing, exposed to intense heat, heavy rains, and poisonous exhalations from a ma- larious soil, inundated by the turbid waters of the Scheldt, scarcely a man was on the sick list; the excitement of warfare, the prospect of victory, and the expectation of booty, completely fortifying the body against all the potent causes of disease that environed the camp and the fleet. I verily believe that, even after the fatal delay before Flushing, if we had pushed on for Antwerp and captured the fleet, the armament would have returned in health to the British shores, and the fever of Walcheren would scarcely have been recorded. But when L 122 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. culpable mismanagement was crowned with irre- trievable failure of the expedition—and, still worse, when the dispirited troops were kept penned up in- active on the sickly and monotonous plains of Walcheren and Beveland, then, indeed, the pesti- lent miasmata, which our men had been breathing for weeks with impunity, burst like a volcano over their devoted heads, and either swept them in thousands to an inglorious grave, or harassed them for years with all the tortures which the " fiend of the fens" is so well qualified to inflict! To whatever point of the compass we turn, we see striking examples of a similar kind. Edam, on the coast of Java, was a memorable and melancholy prototype of Walcheren, at the mouth of the Scheldt. After the failure of the attack on Batavia, the Isle of Edam was the grave of our troops and tars. Looking westward, who does not remember " Hosier's Ghost," and* the ghosts of hundreds and thousands of our countrymen ? More recently, the waters of the Mississippi were tainted by the corses of our soldiers and sailors, after the repulse from New-Orleans! Our naval history furnishes numer- ous examples. Two ships sail for the East Indies, for instance, under nearly similar circumstances. The one is successful in prizes, and arrives at her destination without any sickness. The other makes no captures—the crew becomes dispirited—and scurvy, dysentery, or fever makes destructive rav- ages. Of this fact I could adduce, and have ad- duced, striking illustrations and proofs in another place.* But knowledge the most precious is sometimes gleaned from calamities the most appalling. Pub- lic disasters, of national interest at the time, have developed a principle, which may be beneficially * " Influence of Tropical Climates on European Constitu- tions."—^ Ed. EFFECTS OF CORPOREAL EXERTION. 123 adopted in the various afflictions of private life. It is wonderful that this principle, so clearly revealed, ©n many melancholy and momentous occasions, is so little appreciated, and so seldom applied practi- cally to the exigences of humanity. The principle is simply this :—that, in all moral afflictions, vigor- ous exertion of the corporeal powers is the very best antidote to the baleful effects of the depress- ing passions of the mind; while, on the other hand, the deleterious consequences of the moral evil are exasperated ten fold by inertness of the body. This latter part of the principle has been sufficiently illustrated by the deplorable instances of Walche- ren, Batavia, &c. I could adduce numerous exam- ples from private life; but that is unnecessary. The first and most important part of the principle deserves some illustration in detail. One of the earliest and most memorable illustra- tions will be found in the celebrated retreat of the " ten thousand Geeeks," under Xenophon and Chei- risophus, after the fall of Cyrus on the plains of Cunaxa. This band of auxiliaries were left with- out commanders, money, or provision, to traverse a space of twelve hundred leagues, under constant alarms from the attacks of barbarous and succes- sive swarms of enemies. They had to cross rapid rivers, penetrate gloomy forests, drag their weary way over vast and burning deserts, scale the sum- mits of rugged mountains, and wade through deep «nows and pestilent morasses, in continual danger of death, or capture, which was far worse than death! This retreat is nearly unparalleled in the annals of war for difficulties and perils; but has been surpassed in disasters within the present cen- tury. The Greek army had infinitely greater cause for mental despondency, when they saw their gen- erals butchered by the treacherous Tissaphernes, and themselves surrounded by ruthless foes, two or three thousand miles from any friendly country, 124 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. than any army since that period. It is not a little remarkable that, in the first stupor of misfortune by which they were overwhelmed, and nearly cap- tured, Xenophon discerned and broached the very principle of conserative hygiene (I allude not to modern political designations) for which I am here contending. In his address to some of his com- panions, in the fearful night that succeeded the mur- der of Clearchus and the other leaders of the pha- lanx, he says:—" The soldiers have, at present, noth- ing before their eyes but misfortune—if any can turn their thoughts int6 action, it would greatly en- courage them." Here is the very principle itself, happily conceived, and most promptly acted on, by the young Athenian general. He tried, and with success, to convert the torpor of despair into the energy of desperation—urging the men to prefer death in the sanguinary, but brief and almost pain- less conflict with the enemy, personally and col- lectively, to the protracted tortures that would be the inevitable consequence of captivity ! Then it was that the tents were burnt, the carriages de- stroyed, the sumpter-horses slaughtered, and every unnecessary encumbrance, besides " the soldier and his sword," abandoned. During 215 days of almost uninterrupted and toil- some march—often in the face of the enemy—often between two enemies, and engaged in front and rear at the same moment, the army lost an uncer- tain, but not a great number of men—partly by the darts and arrows of the barbarians—partly by de- sertion—partly by drowning in the rivers, or sink- ing in the morasses—partly by perishing in the snows of the Armenian mountains—but not one by sickness ! Xenophon is often very minute in his statements of losses, even describing the individual cases, the names of these individuals, and the parts of the body wounded. Only two instances of sick- ness are put on record:—one, a sort of Bulimia, or EFFECTS OF CORPOREAL EXERTION. 125 canine appetite, produced by the cold of the snow, which was observed in a considerable number of men, but did not prove fatal. The other was an illness of twenty-four hours, which was general throughout the army, in consequence of indulgence in a kind of honey-comb, which they found, at one place in Armenia, in great abundance. It produced vomiting and purging among those who ate freely; but a kind of drunken delirium in those who ate a little.* He also describes very minutely the al- most unconquerable disposition to sleep, produced by the frigidity of the snows on the mountains near the sources of the Tigris. The army was in great jeopardy from this cause for some days, and the soldiers could hardly be induced to continue their march. Many of the rear guard lay down, and pre- ferred dying or being captured by the enemy to perseverance against the lethargic sleep that over- powered them. Xenophon was obliged to halt and repulse the enemy, to prevent these men from fall- ing victims to the cold or to the barbarians. The number of the Greeks, at the commence- ment of this memorable retreat, is not stated; but, estimating it at the full complement of ten thou- sand, it is clear that they could not have lost above 500 men at the utmost, since they mustered, in the very last battle which they had (and in which they experienced hardly any loss), nine thousand five hun- dred troops, not including women and slaves!—they never abandoned a single individual; and they had no means of carrying sick men along with them, if any considerable number existed. The fact is, therefore, clearly established, that no sickness, in the common acceptation of the word, occurred in this series of sufferings and privations. * I was informed by Sir Charles Bagot that, after a breakfast among the mountains of Virginia, in which he ate rather freely of honey, he experienced a kind of inebriation, from which he did not get free till after severe sickness. L2 126 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. Now, I am very far from insisting that, this as- tonishing immunity from sickness was solely attribu- table to the constant activity of the body. There can be no doubt that the perpetual excitement of the mind—gloomy and depressing as it generally was, but checkered, as it occasionally must have been, by gleams of hope breaking through the dense clouds of despondency—contributed, in no mean degree, to preserve the health and the lives of the troops. But I am convinced that, without the cor- poreal activity—the perpetual exposure to all the vicissitudes of climate in the open air—the neces- sary1 temperance, which they were forced to ob- serve—the ten thousand Greeks would have expe- rienced a very different fate. This, I think, is proved by numerous modern instances. I shall only allude to one—the Austrians pent up in Man- tua, where they lost double the number of the French who besieged them, though these last were far more exposed to the poisonous miasmata of the marshes than those within the ramparts. But de- spondency and inactivity prevailed among the one class of troops—exhilaration and activity among the other. When I said that the difficulties and perils of the " ten thousand Greeks" were nearly unparalleled, I had in mind the case of our own countrymen—the unfortunate associates of Byron—who experienced perils, toils, and privations infinitely greater than those which befell the Macedonian phalanx. The Greeks marched through hostile, but populous and fertile countries. Xenophon has related no in- stance of sufferings from hunger in the Greek army during the retreat. Byron's men were frequently reduced to the dire necessity of eating grass—and many died from sheer starvation! Often were they so situated, that the faintest ray of hope (" which comes to all") could hardly have twinkled on the horizon of their desperate prospects! EFFECTS OF CORPOREAL EXERTION. 127 " And such thy strength-inspiring aid that bore The hardy Byron to his native shore— In horrid climes, where Chiloe's tempests sweep The foaming surface of the tortured deep ; 'Twas his to mourn Misfortune's rudest shocks, Scourged by the winds, and cradled on the rocks— To wake each joyless morn, and search again The famished haunts of solitary men; Whose race, unyielding as their native storm, Knows not a trace of Nature but the form : Yet at thy call the tardy tar pursued, Pale, but intrepid—sad, but unsubdued— Pierced the deep woods, and hailing from afar The moon's pale planet and the northern star, Paused at each dreary cry, unheard before, Hyenas in the wild, and mermaids on the shore!" That first of poets—Campbell—has here made his favourite, Hope, the guardian angel of our un- fortunate countrymen ; and far am I from wishing to deny or diminish the influence of that exhilara- ting and never-dying passion of the human breast. But I am convinced that Byron and his associates owed their preservation (those few who survived) mainly to incessant exercise of body and vigilance of mind. After a certain duration, indeed, of their miseries and toils, they became so careless of life, and sO completely bereft of hope, that four of them were left to starve and die on that horrid coast, with- out the slightest symptom of reluctance on their part! The boat would not hold them all—and four marines remained, cheering their companions when shoving off from the shore! The boat, some time afterward, was forced back, but the poor marines were nowhere found ! Although nine tenths of the original crew appear to have perished by drowning or starvation, Byron makes no mention of sickness during any period of the long and unparalleled se- ries of sufferings to which this ill-fated ship's com- pany was doomed. The memorable and disastrous retreat of Sir John Moore through the mountains of Spain fur- 128 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. nishes another illustration of the principle in ques- tion. When all hope of success had vanished— when all discipline was at an end—when the daily routine of toil, hunger, and cold was only varied and relieved by conflicts with an overpowering and pur- suing enemy—when drunkenness too often added desperation to valour—there was little or no sick- ness in the harassed and dispirited army! Even at the water's edge, and when Napoleon's order to " drive the leopard into the sea" was being put into execution—the hastily and half-formed phalanx of march-worn, famine-wasted warriors repulsed the legions of the imperial conqueror, as the columnar ranges of Staffa hurl back, in foam, the surges of the Atlantic. But, when danger was over, and safety secured—when activity of body and excite- ment of mind were changed for repose and comfort —then did disease break forth with terrible malig- nity, and thousands perished ingloriously in our hos- pitals, after narrow escapes by flood and field—and after vanquishing the enemy, by which they had been closely pursued and dreadfully harassed. The salvation from shipwreck by means of boats, though often of the most terrible and almost mirac- ulous kind, does not so well illustrate the principle in question as toilsome marches on shore—because there is not that exercise of the body in the former as in the latter case. Yet the vigilance necessary in escapes from shipwreck, combined with the ex- ercise of rowing and managing the sails, keeps the body in a state of health, that could never have been anticipated under such circumstances. A part of the crew of the Bounty, under Captain Bligh, went through most wonderful scenes of suffering as well as danger, with almost entire immunity from sick- ness. Dr. Wilson of the Royal Navy has recently published a narrative, little inferior in interest to that of the Bounty. The vessel in which he was embarked was wrecked on a coral reef in the Indian EFFECTS OF CORPOREAL EXERTION. 129 Ocean, and the crew escaped in two fragile boats, which traversed a distance of nearly a thousand miles, exposed to the elements, and often to sav- ages more dangerous than storms and seas, without the loss of a man, and even without sickness— though they were so reduced by hunger and fatigue that their friends hardly knew them when they got to a friendly port. The last event to which I shall allude, is the dis- astrous retreat of the French from Moscow. This was a catastrophe so terrific, that I fear to approach it, and doubt how to handle it! It looks more like a visitation of Divine displeasure on a guilty nation, than the common result of moral and physical causes, even on the largest scale of operation. Think of more than thirty times the amount of the whole Grecian army, under Xenophon, cut off—ut- terly annihilated—in one fifth part of the time occu- pied by the Macedonian retreat, and, apparently, un- der far less difficulties! More than three hundred thousand men were destroyed by the retreat from Moscow—while the Grecians lost not more than five hundred between the Tigris and Trebizond! The snows of Russia were not more impassable than those of Caucasus; and the soldiers of Napo- leon were surely more accustomed to frigid skies than the troops of Xenophon. But order and disci- pline were preserved in the Grecian ranks, while disorder and insubordination prevailed to a frightful extent in those of the Gaul. Under these last cir- cumstances, and in dire conflict with the elements, the piercing blast swept down their tottering col- umns, as the autumnal tempest scatters the with- ered leaves of the deciduous forest. In this terrific scene, the destroying angel was not accompanied by his usual ghastly attendant—sickness. Those whom the sword and the elements spared were ex- empted from all common maladies till they reached an asylum. There, in safety and at ease, when re- 130 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. flection on the dreadful catastrophe in the army was aided in its deleterious influence on the mind by in- activity of body, the most frightful and extraordi- nary diseases burst forth, and a majority of this ill- fated remnant only escaped one form of death to be cut off by others more lingering and painful! Were it not that historical records have more weight and authenticity than private statements, I would adduce some remarkable illustrations of the principle in question, from my individual observa- tion ; but I think it is unnecessary. The practical application of this principle to a variety of exigen- ces, of daily and hourly occurrence, is what I most strenuously urge on the notice of all classes of readers. Disorders of the body, in these days, are engendered and propagated, to a most fright- ful extent, by moral commotions and anxieties of the mind, as will be shown farther on; and if I have proved that corporeal exertion, especially when aided by any intellectual excitement or pursuit, can obvi- ate the evils that ensue to soul and body from these causes, I shall do some service to the community. The principle in question is neither Utopian nor of difficult application. It is within the reach of high and low—rich and poor—the learned and the unlet- tered. Let moral ills overtake any of these, and he is in the high way to physical illness. To prevent the corporeal malady, and to diminish, as much as possible, the mental affliction itself, the individual must tread in the steps—haud passibus aequis—of Xenophon and Byron. He must " keep the body active, and the stomach empty." I can answer for the value of this precept. It prevents not the indi- vidual from throwing into the prescription as much philosophy, physic, and even theology as he pleases. Of the last ingredient, it becomes not me to speak, even comparatively; but of the two other items, 1 can conscientiously own that they are as " dust in the balance," when weighed against the Grjeco-By INGRATITUDE TO MOTHERS. 131 ronian recipe which I have so strongly recom- mended. The poor man has not far to cast about in quest of the means for putting this principle into practice. Generally speaking, he adopts it, nolens volens; and hence it is that the most indigent suffer less from moral ills and misfortunes than those who are far removed from want. As man rises in rank and riches, he becomes deprived—or rather he de- prives himself—not of the means, but of the incli- nation to embrace the protection which this princi- ple holds out. Among the inferior orders of soci- ety, indolence and inebriety give a fearful impetus to the shock of misfortune, and soon induce a va- riety of corporeal disorders that curtail the range of life, and destroy the springs of happiness. And even in higher quarters, where we might expect better things, the mental affliction, or the moral ad- versity, appears to paralyze the energies of the soul, prostrate all firmness of resolve, and place in com- plete abeyance all fortitude and power of resistance against the overwhelming evil! In such condition, it is no wonder that temporary solace is sought in wine and other deleterious stimulants, which only smother the flame, like coals heaped on a fire, to make the combustion more fierce and destructive afterward. From these sources are derived many of those hypochondriacal miseries, dyspeptic tor- ments, and even*intellectual aberrations, which we every day observe. The application of the coun- teracting principle in question must be left to indi- vidual ingenuity. Women have less facilities for putting it in practice than men, for obvious reasons; but fortunately they bear dispensations and vicissi- tudes with much more fortitude than their boasted superiors—the stronger sex. And here I cannot help adverting to a topic on which I have often meditated with painful feelings —the ingratitude which woman experiences from man, but especially from her male progeny! Had 132 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. not the God of Nature added instinct to reason in the human female breast, the race would, long since, have become extinct. The pains, the penalties, the toils, the cares, the anxieties of a mother are not repaid by any thing like an adequate degree of grat- itude on the part of the offspring! Nothing, indeed, can repay the female parent for what she undergoes on account of her children; and boasted reason would sink under the task, or shrink from the duty, had not the Omniscient Creator infused into the mother's heart the irresistible instinct of the lioness, which prompts the savage animal to die in defence of its progeny! In the savage breast, the instinct- ive feeling soon ceases, and reason being absent, all sympathy between parent and progeny ceases also. Not so with the human female parent. The primary instinct is never entirely obliterated; but cherished through life by the nobler gift of reason, the ties of Nature between mother and child are infinitely stronger than between the father and off spring. It is strange that the ancient poets, when deifying so many meaner attributes of human nature, forgot maternal affection. They have clothed in divinity the barbarous monster who slaughtered the children of Niobe, when they ought to have deified the parental agony which the mother felt, and which even the marble yet breathes forth ! Our own im- mortal poet, Campbell, has actually personified this same maternal love of offspring, in one of the most beautiful forms under which he delineates his " Angel of Life"—his favourite hope. "Lo ! at the couch where infant beauty sleeps, Her silent watch the immortal mother keeps; And weaves a song of melancholy joy— ' Sleep, image of thy father, sleep, my boy ; Thy fame, thy worth, thy filial love, at last Shall sooth this aching heart for al! the past— With many a smile my solitude repay, And chase the world's ungenerous scorn away.'" MATERNAL AFFECTION. 133 That it is the instinctive love of offspring, rather than the hope of a return of love and filial duties from the infant, which fills the mother's breast with the musings so beautifully described by the poet, I firmly believe. Indeed, I think the poet himself has proved it: for soon afterward he breaks forth thus:— " So speaks affection, ere the infant eye Can look regard, or brighten in reply." There is another train of reflections which the poet causes to pass through the mind of the mother, while gazing on the unconscious babe, and which I believe to be more natural—certainly more sublime and disinterested, than that which he has already portrayed. " And say, when summon'd from the world and thee, I lay my head beneath the willow tree, Wilt thou, sweet mourner! at my stone appear, And sooth my parted spirit ling'ring near ? Oh! wilt thou come, at ev'ning hour, to shed The tear of memory o'er my narrow bed ; Breathe a deep sigh to winds that murmur low, And think on all my love, and all my wo ?" There's a train of thought worthy of an immor- tal being, and, in itself, indicative of immortality! But what I maintain is this, that these and all other trains of reflection in the mind of the mother spring from the same grand source—the instinctive love of offspring. This inherent passion is, indeed, sublimed by reason and religion ; and extends itself, in the form of hope, beyond the grave, as the poet has beautifully shown ; but whether the sentiment be sordid or sublime, its origin must be traced to humble animal instinct—if any thing can be humble which emanates from the hand—nay, the design of our Creator. As the philoprogenitive passion is one of the very few instincts common to man and the inferior animals, the locality of its material 134 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. organ or instrument is said to be more accurately ascertained by phrenologists than most other or- gans. It is much larger in the female than in the male, whether human or animal. When I say that the mother is treated with in- gratitude, I speak comparatively. A mother cannot have sufficient gratitude from her children, because no return of filial affection can compensate for ma- ternal sufferings, love, and anxiety. To the honour of human nature, however, it is but justice to state, that hardly any barbarity of manners or malignity of disposition can eradicate from the human breast that sense of obligation which the offspring owes to the parent—and especially a mother. Naturam expellas furca tamen usque recurrit." The female heart is, indeed, the natural channel through which the current of parental love and filial affection runs with the strongest and steadiest course. A son may neglect or forget a mother—a daughter never! Hence the truth of the rude but not inexpressive couplet— " A son is a son till he marries a wife, But a daughter's a daughter all the days of her life." Is there any reward for filial gratitude, and pun- ishment for ingratitude, in this world? It would probably be neither a safe nor an orthodox doctrine to maintain that all sins and crimes are punished in this probationary state, yet I am much inclined to believe that very few of them escape retributive justice, sooner or later, in life. Many punishments are not visible to the world, though keenly felt by the individuals on whom they fall. As the silent and unseen worm corrodes the heart of the solid oak, so a guilty conscience consumes the heart of man, though the countenance may not indicate the gnawings of the worm within ! Whenever we have PUNISHMENTS IN THIS WORLD. 135 an opportunity of tracing the consequences that flow from a breach of the laws of God and Nature, we find those consequences terminate in suffering, moral or physical—generally both. This being the case, we may very safely conclude that such breaches always draw after them a penal infliction, whether that infliction be patent to the world or not. In respect to filial ingratitude, it is to be re- membered that, in the great majority of instances, the ingrate is destined to receive his punishment when, in turn, he becomes a parent. Then, and often not till then, he feels the debt of gratitude which he owed, but did not discharge, to the authors of his being! The penalty is paid in unavailing sorrow and repentance too late! Nor does filial affection or gratitude go unrewarded, even when not returned in the next generation. While memory remains, the consciousness of having done our duty to those who watched over our helpless infancy will smooth the downward journey of life, and sustain us under the neglect or ingratitude of our offspring. Let these considerations induce mankind to foster, even were it only for their own sake, the filial love and kindness which the God of Nature has im- planted in his constitution, and which cannot be violated without punishment in this world. With the consequences of the moral crime, in a future state, it is for the divine to deal. I have seen enough to convince me that part, at least, of our moral and physical punishments is inflicted on this side of the grave. And wisely is it so ordained ! If rewards and penalties for mpral good and evil were postponed to a future stage of existence, vir- tue would flag and vice would flourish in a frightful degree ! If sin did not taste of sorrow—if the in- fraction of human laws only incurred pain and suf- fering in the flesh, it is to be apprehended that our hopes and fears respecting that undiscovered coun- try, whence traveller never returns, would lose 136 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. much of their intensity. The Omniscient Creator foresaw this, and provided against it, by decreeing a foretaste of rewards and punishments, that can neither be evaded nor misunderstood! And wise has been this dispensation ! With all the proofs before our eyes of retributive justice, the laws of God and Nature are often enough violated by head- strong man, under the impulse of his ungovernable passions! What would be the case, then, were there no sensible, tangible, and unequivocal demon- strations of Divine laws and providential penalties during our temporal existence'? The doctrine of future rewards and punishments would become a speculative philosophy, disregarded by the vulgar, and disbelieved by the learned ! To those who have a deep, or even a moderate insight into the nature of man, it must be evident that human laws cannot check a tithe of human delinquencies. Many of the most heinous sins they do not even pretend to prevent—but only to punish, and that when too late. Take, for example, suicide. No human law can prevent a man from cutting his throat, or swallowing poison ; though it inflicts a dastardly ignominy on the corpse (which human charity generally frustrates), or visits the sin of the guilty dead on the innocent surviver.* It may be objected to the doctrine I am preach- ing, that all crimes cannot receive even a portion of punishment in this world—for instance suicide. It may be answered, that suicide is very seldom a crime, because it is generally committed during a * A man ensures his life for ten, twenty, or thirty years, to secure a sum for his widow or children. But, in a fit of tempo- rary insanity, he commits suicide-and his widow and children are punished by the forfeiture of the policy ! In such cases the "value of the policy" should be returned to the survivers—and some respectable companies do so. I knew an instance, in the case of a clergyman at Kensington, who destroyed himself. The Crown Insurance Company returned the " value of the policy," an equitable composition calculated on fixed principles. PUNISHMENTS IN THIS WORLD. 137 paroxysm of insanity—in fact, it is usually the re- sult of a corporeal malady to which the just and unjust are equally liable. But granting (which I willingly do) that self-destruction is sometimes a cool and premeditated act, unconnected with men- tal alienation; is it to be inferred that the delinquent goes unpunished in this world 1 He who comes to this conclusion has very little knowledge of human nature. The agonies experienced by a sane mind before the desperate act of suicide is determined on, or committed, are equal to any that we can con- ceive on the day of final retribution! An exten- sive field of observation, indeed, has convinced me that the amount of mental misery, antecedent to suicide, in the sane mind, is generally sufficient, of itself, to produce the final paroxysm of alienation, during which the horrid deed is consummated! But self-destruction is only the extreme link of a long chain of actions, each of which is a grade of the same thing—a breach of some moral or physical law of nature. Health is impaired, and life itself curtailed by a thousand actions which are not con- sidered criminal, or at least very slightly so, as compared with suicide. The sufferings preceding or accompanying the dire act are with more diffi- culty ascertained than on most other occasions, be- cause the individual is no longer able to throw light on the subject; but as, in every case where the at- tendant circumstances can be investigated, we find perpetration and punishment as inseparable as sub- stance and shadow, we may fairly conclude that the Divine law reaches all grades and shades of guilt, even in this world, though human laws fail to visit a great proportion of evil doings. The same reasoning may apply to rewards as to punishments. Because virtue, and merit, and talent are not apparently rewarded on this globe, it does not follow that they are not really so. If the wick- ed man carries a hell in his bosom, the virtuous M2 138 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. may and does maintain a heaven in his breast. Of all rewards, here or hereafter, happiness must be the greatest—and we have the authority of the great Ethic Bard, as well as daily experience, that " Virtue alone is happiness below." Even the hope of reward in another world, based on conscious rectitude of conduct and religious feel- ings, is in itself a reward beyond all estimation. It is an anchor in the storms of adversity. We have now brought man to the zenith of his mental and corporeal powers—to the highest arch —or rather to the two highest arches of the bridge of life, with the stream of time flowing silently under his feet; his hopes undiminished—his ambition in full activity—and his prospects unclouded by the slightest shadow of doubt or despondency. On the contrary, it is all couleur de rose; for love has, as yet, experienced no reduction of temperature in the human breast, but warms and stimulates to every noble action ! It is no wonder that the histo- rian of the phases of human existence should in- stinctively slacken his pace in this elevated region of the journey, and contemplate the past, the pres- ent, and the future, with intense interest. " Thus with delight we linger to survey The promised joys of life's unmeasured way : Thus from afar each dim discover'd scene More pleasing seems than all the past hath been; While every form that fancy can repair From dull oblivion glows divinely there!" Yes, when we reflect that, at every step from this spot, the horizon behind us grows more obscure, however slowly, while the dreams of hope and imagination become gradually less vivid, Human Nature may well be excused for the attempt to stay the march of inexorable Time, and, if possible, halt, CENITH OF LIFE. 139 for a moment, on this highest point and brightest speck of existence, before passing the rubicon of life ! The " grand climacteric" ought to have been placed at forty-two instead of sixty-three. The for- mer period we may, however, denominate the " cli- max of life." The path of man through the two meridian Septenniads—from twenty-eight to forty- two—bears some analogy to the apparent course of the sun at noonday. For an hour before, and an hour after the meridian altitude, the naked eye can- not recognise the movement of the blazing orb: the sextant only can determine whether he still as- cends, or passes the zenith, and commences his downward journey. The gnomon of the dial alone can detect the otherwise imperceptible progress of the grand luminary, though his course is swifter than lightning and undeviating as fate! It is so with man. When in the prime of life, the stream of time appears to flow past him without moving him onward—though doubtless those physical changes are incessantly at work, which afterward display their effects so conspicuously. Again: as it is at the rising and setting of the sun that the motion of the luminary is most sensible to the eye, so it is in youth and old age, that the rise and fall of life are most remarkably perceptible. It is in the equatorial portion of the voyage or journey of life that man mounts the tree of knowl- edge, and from its various outspread branches en- deavours to extend the natural horizon of his vision, catch glimpses of prospects that lie hidden from the eye at the foot of the tree, and which would almost seem to be designed by the Creator to remain for ever veiled from human scrutiny! I might support this idea by Scripture. The fruit of the tree of knowledge was forbidden in the Garden of Eden, and the first taste of it " Brought death into the world, and all our wo." 140 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. But I will not insist on this authority, because such a procedure arrests all free inquiry. I am not aware that the punishment inflicted on our first parents for tasting the forbidden fruit is extended to a rep- etition of the offence. None of our divines, that I know of, consider the acquisition of knowledge as a crime at present. This, by-the-way, is rather re- markable. But as the state of man was changed by the fall, so what was first a fault may now perhaps be a virtue. One thing is certain, viz., that the tree of knowledge has continued, till very lately, to be cultivated only in gardens, and its fruits to be tasted only by a few of the curious. At no period of the world, and in no nation of the earth, was this tree reared generally in field or forest. Among the Greeks and Romans, science and literature were confined to a very small portion of the population —and in the middle ages they may be said to have become extinct. The invention of the press gen- erated the power of diffusing knowledge throughout every gradation of society; but it was not till the present time that this power has been put into active operation. We have no means, therefore, of judg- ing by past experience of the effects which may re- sult from a universal taste for knowledge and a general acquisition of that article which turned our first parents out of the Garden of Eden ! Hitherto it has been confined to classes of society, and those very small as compared with the community at large. The inferences which we draw from the effects of knowledge on small and isolated masses of mankind may be very imperfect, and even erro- neous, when applied to a general diffusion of knowl- edge ; yet these effects are the only data from which we can safely deduce any inference at all. The following corollaries are the result of some reflection, and no inconsiderable observation. Some of them may be inconsequential—for, in fact, the pretruses are far from being firmly established. KNOWLEDGE. 141 KNOWLEDGE. I. Knowledge (including the whole circle of arts, science, and literature—every thing that is taught and every thing that is learned by man), like wealth and power, begets the love of itself, and rapidly increases the thirst of accumulation. II. Knowledge being the parent of truth, as igno- rance is the parent of error, these two powers must be in a state of perpetual antagonism; and, in proportion as the former (knowledge) becomes diffused, the strongholds of the latter (error) must be successively invaded and over- thrown. III. But when we reflect on the countless multi- tudes, in every country, even the most enlight- ened, who are directly or indirectly interested in the perpetuation of error, whether in religion, politics, morals, legislation, customs, arts, com- merce, arms, or science itself, we may calcu- late on a long and arduous struggle between knowledge and truth on one side, and ignorance and error on the other—a struggle that will not be terminated without many and dire collisions, not only of the morale, but also of the physique! Yet, however protracted the conflict, the final issue cannot be doubtful. There are now no unknown regions, whence myriads of barbarians can again issue forth to extinguish the lights of literature, and destroy the granaries of learning and the arts. Every year, day, hour, illumines some spot on the mental, as well as the mate- rial horizon, that had been shrouded in dark- ness since the creation—and consequently nar- rows the boundaries of superstition, credulity, and preconception. Every year removes a film from the mental optics of mankind, and shows 142 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. them more clearly the paths of truth, of justice, and of wisdom. IV. As the facilities of diffusing knowledge are daily multiplying, and as the avidity for infor- mation augments in a still greater proportion, no estimate can be formed, with any degree of precision, how deeply knowledge may yet strike its roots through the lower orders of so- ciety. It is not probable, indeed, that educa- tion, beyond its mere rudiments, can ever per- meate the lowest orders of the community, for very obvious reasons. But this exception will make little difference in the final result. The lowest and most illiterate class will always be led by those immediately above them—namely, the middle glass. This class, comprehending numerous orders, genera, and species, will, in this country, influence, if not guide, the moral and political machine of government, infinitely beyond what can be conceived in any other country in the world. In these islands, the great mass of wealth is deposited in the middle classes—but so generally diffused as not, by its agglomeration, to check the stimulus to ambi- tion, much less to industry. It will hardly be argued that native talent or capacity is confined to any particular class of society, or that it is likely to be deficient in the wealthy orders of the middle ranks. The diffusion of knowledge, therefore, among these ranks will generate and call forth such an amount of moral force as must operate on, if not direct the energies, physical and moral, of the nation. V. It is said, and truly, that " love levels all dis- tinctions." Knowledge has a very strong ten- dency to produce the same effect. None but a wild enthusiast will imagine that an equality in intellect, learning, wealth, rank, or power, can ever obtain in this world, But men of very KNOWLEDGE—INTELLECT—LEARNING. 143 sober intellects and extensive observation of mankind can easily conceive that a much nearer approach to equality than now exists may yet take place. If this propinquity to an equilibrium should ever arrive, it will be through the agency of education, and its result—knowl- edge. It cannot be uninteresting just to glance at the probable way in which this moral revolution, hith- erto conceived to be ideal, may be effected. Intellect can never be equalized by any human power. But it is, perhaps, more equal now than the magnates of the earth are disposed to admit, and ed- ucation will draw forth and bring into the market an immense supply, which, at present, moulders in ob- scurity. Surmises of this kind must have been floating in the mind of the poet, when pacing the country churchyard. " Perhaps in this neglected spot is laid Some heart once pregnant with Celestial fire Hands that the rod of empire might have sway'd, Or waked to ecstasy the living lyre • But Knowledge to their eyes her ample page, Fraught with the spoils of Time, did ne'er unroll; Chill Penury repressed their noble rage, And froze the genial current of the soul." But talent is, as it were, created by culture, as the physical constitution is improved and fortified by exercise. Even intellect, then, will be much more equalized than at present, by the spread of educa- tion and the aggregate increase of knowledge. Learning.—It may be asked, why should not some men soar as far beyond their competitors in learning, when that learning is diffused, as when it was circumscribed 1 The question may be easily answered. The augmented number of competitors will greatly equalize the claims of the candidates for literary or scientific fame. Suppose, out of a 144 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. population of a million, there were not more than five hundred who had the means of cultivating liter- ature or science with advantage. It is probable that, under such circumstances, a dozen or two would be pre-eminent, and that one would outstrip all the others. But suppose that five thousand out of the million had all the facilities of distinguishing themselves. It is extremely probable that fifty, or even five hundred, would be so nearly on a par that no one would rise over the rest— " Velut inter ignes Luna minores." We may have a literary monarch; but we shall never have a monarch of literature. No. Letters will come back, in fact, to what they were originally in name—a republic The tendency to this state may be plainly recognised, even now, in various de- partments of learning and science. Let us instance the medical profession. We shall never again see a Harvey or a Hunter—a Baillie or a Cline—giants, who strode over the heads of their brethren of the day—monopolizers of fame or fortune—each a pro- fessional prophet, without a touch from whose magic wand, or golden caduceus, the spirits of the great could not with dignity descend to the shades below ! And why should not we have the race of these medical monarchs continued—these beacons —these colossi—these " rari nantes in gurgite vas- to!" Because the diffusion of education has called forth an aristocracy, or rather a democracy of infor- mation, from which it is difficult to select any that are very much elevated above those of the same zone in which they move. The same remark will apply, with more or less force, to other professions and classes of society. There is a greater equilibrium of information among them now than there ever was before—and this explains why the Augustan age of England appears to have vanished. It is not WEALTH. 145 because knowledge has decreased, and the giants of literature and science have dwindled into dwarfs; but because the pigmies have sprung up into men, and the giants no longer appear of colossal stature by comparison. Their individual importance di- minishes in proportion as their aggregate number augments. This will be more and more apparent every year. Wealth.—That education and knowledge lead, directly or indirectly, to wealth, needs no argument to prove. It is true that many individuals, with scarcely the rudiments of knowledge, have amassed riches ; but it has been through low or mechanical avocations, where unwearied industry and rigid economy were the chief requisites. And even these individuals could never attain distinction, un- less they acquired some degree of knowledge, du- ring or subsequent to the realization of wealth. But what are these, when compared with those who have risen, by knowledge and talent, from the lower ranks of life to fame and fortune 1 The spread of knowledge, then, will annually pour into the field of competition, whether in divinity, law, physic, commerce, art, or science, such multitudes of can- didates as will minutely divide and greatly equalize the golden harvests. In the general scramble, many will catch something, though few will catch much. As in the case of knowledge itself, wealth will not only be increased in the aggregate, but dis- tributed through wider circles of the community. No doubt it will still predominate in certain zones, but these will grow broader and broader—and they will present galaxies of the minor stars, rather than sparse and widely-distant luminaries of the first magnitude. Even those mighty mounds of hereditary wealth, fortified as they are supposed to be by the impreg- nable ramparts of pride and primogeniture, will gradually diminish in size, and descend far below N 146 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. their present altitude. Every year will increase the difficulties of providing for the younger branches of noble families, by the pressure of competition and the rigour of political economy. In such cases, the ties of nature will prevail over the laws of man— and the huge ancestral depots must disburse pro- vision for the hungry descendants of ancient man- sions. Rank.—It is very improbable that ranks and dis- tinctions will be levelled by education and knowl- edge. On the contrary, they are likely to be mul- tiplied. But all other kinds of rank and distinction, except what are attained by talent, integrity, and learning, will be depreciated in estimation. Hered- itary rank or title, without wealth, cannot maintain its ancient value, where education and knowledge prevail; and we have just seen that wealth itself will be more and more equalized as civilization ad- vances. Even the circumstance alluded to, under the head of Wealth—the difficulties of providing for the junior offspring of the nobility—will tend, in some measure, to equalize rank, by annually de- taching great numbers of the younger scions of the aristocracy from the higher zones, and compelling them to enter the arena of competition, in various professions and avocations, with more humble, but perhaps not less able candidates for riches and reputation. Those great safety-valves—the army, navy, church, and state—through which the aristo- cratic redundancy used to escape so freely, and thus relieve the pressure on family finances, will henceforth be much narrowed by imperious econo- my and popular competition. In fine, wherever in- telligence spreads deep and wide through a com- munity, the power and privileges of the patrician will be abridged, and the franchise and influence of the plebeian will be enlarged. An autocrat is a demigod, or " something more," holding the desti- FINAL RESULT OF KNOWLEDGE. 147 nies of his semicivilized hordes, with power over life, limb, and property : the constitutional monarch is only the first magistrate of a nation, without the power to make or break any of those laws which he is sworn to maintain and administer. The foregoing are matters of demonstration rather than of speculation ; but still the question may be asked—What will be the result of all this spread of education and knowledge, as respects the benefit or happiness of man 1 Here we enter the region of imagination, for we have no real precedent in his- tory to guide us. As I have observed before, there never has been any thing like a general diffusion of education and information, moral, physical, or polit- ical, in any nation, or at any period of the world. But we have some grounds for reasoning on the subject. We know that our Creator has given in- stinct to animals, which limits them to their spe- cific functions and actions during life, without the possibility of their deviating to the right or to the left. The bee, the ant, and the beaver constructed their habitations with as much skill ten thousand years ago as at the present moment. But man has been endowed with reason, which enables him to improve—or, at all events, to alter his condition. Now when we see such wisdom and goodness in the dispensations of Providence throughout the whole Creation, is it likely that God has given man the faculty of increasing in knowledge, almost with- out limit, for other than beneficent purposes'? I cannot believe it. But there is no unmixed good in this world. The rains that fall from the heavens to fertilize the soil often swell into torrents that leave nothing but ruin in their track. The winds that purify the atmosphere and waft our commerce from shore to shore not seldom acquire the fury of the hurricane, and scatter destruction over earth and ocean. Notwithstanding all the benevolence and wisdom of the Almighty, as seen in his works, the 148 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. great majority of animated beings, from the zoo- phile up to man, are not merely permitted, but des- tined to destroy their fellow-creatures, for the sup- {>ort of their own existence ! It is not, therefore, ikely that such a boon as knowledge should be ac- corded to mankind without a considerable alloy of evil.* All tendencies towards equality among man- kind beget discontent, jealousy, and insubordina- tion, in a greater or less degree. It cannot well be otherwise, where there are numerous and almost imperceptible gradations in society. Where there are but two grades—the high and the low—the pa- trician and plebeian—there j ealousy will not so much obtain. We eye with composure the rank and sta- tion of the monarch, the prince of the blood, or even the peer of the realm ; but we envy—we al- most hate, the gradation of rank immediately above us. The diffusion of knowledge will be the diffu- sion of an opinion—nay, a conviction—that all men are naturally equal, and that talent, learning, and character are the only natural distinctions. In such case, it is clear that the artificial distinctions of hereditary rank and wealth will be regarded with jealousy and discontent—and that there will be a perpetual nisus, or endeavour to level distinctions not founded on natural claims. That this attempt will cause a perpetual and powerful struggle and counteraction on the part of the privileged orders (as they have been denominated), is most certain; and this contest will last—for ever ! We may hope, and even believe, that it will be all for the * The press is the great engine for the dissemination of knowledge—equal, perhaps superior to the schoolmaster—but it is a passive instrument, and may be worked, with equal power, for the distribution of evil as of good. When we calcu- late the amount of malignity in this world, as an active agent, and the extent of ignorance, as a passive recipient, we may well pause and meditate, before we strike the balance between the advantages and disadvantages of an unshackled and cheap press. FINAL RESULT OF KNOWLEDGE. 149 benefit of mankind; but whether it be for good or for evil, it is inevitable! We may as well attempt to hurl back the stream of the Nile to the Nubian fountains—the Rhine to the Rhoetian Alps—or the Ganges to the Hymalaya, as to stem the torrent of Knowledge, and turn it back into the stagnant Lake of Ignorance. N2 150 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. SEVENTH SEPTENNIAD. Forty-two to forty-nine years. Seven times seven ! Awful multiple! This is the crisis of human existence; for, however we may conceal it from others, or even from ourselves, the decline of life commences with the seventh Septenniad. At that period, the tide of existence has swelled to its utmost volume, and its last and highest wave has left its mark on the craggy rock and the golden sands. It is true that, while con- templating the ocean, for some time after the ebb- tide has commenced, we do not remark the subsi- dence of the waters—unless we watch the shores from which they recede. There we will perceive indubitable proofs of the turn of the tide. So it is with human life. For some time after the meridian of manhood, we recognise not the decadence of the stream—until we reluctantly and sorrowfully re- mark certain changes for the worse in our corpo- real—perhaps also in our mental powers! There are, even in this early period of declension from the meridian, certain admonitory phenomena that cannot be wholly overlooked by the most thought- less individual. A gray hair will obtrude its unwel- come presence—and, if plucked out, will return soon, with half a dozen companions ! Pleasures of all kinds, but especially of a material nature, be- gin to lose something of their exquisite relish, and are succeeded by something more than mere sati- ety. Bodily exertions begin to be, not only cur- tailed in their range or amount, but the period of recruit becomes proportionally extended. Impres- EQUIPOISE OF THE MASTER PASSIONS. 151 sions on mind and body are less vivid. Our wine excites us less ; and even the delights of convivial- ity and intellectual intercourse experience a dimi- nution of intensity! It is in the seventh Septenniad, too, that the three master passions of the soul, love, ambition, and avarice, come nearer to an equipoise than at any other epoch. These passions are never, in- deed, exactly equipotent. One is always more pow- erful than either of the other two—sometimes stron- ger than both together. Thus, in youth, love pre- dominates—in manhood, ambition—in age, avarice. Still it is in the seventh Septenniad that the antag- onism of the three passions come nearest to an equilibrium. Ambition has, generally, the mastery. Love has lost much of his influence—and Avarice, under various masks, as domestic economy, desire of providing for a young family, &c, &c, begins to pull against the other passions, with augmenting force and confidence. Having once gained strength, this passion never quits the field till it overcomes, and finally extinguishes one or both of its antago- nists! It is towards the close of this Septenniad, also, that the grand climacteric of woman takes place. Forty-nine is an important epoch in female life—an eventful crisis, which often turns the balance be- tween weal and wo—between steady health and dan- gerous disease ! If woman passes this period un- scathed, she stands a good chance of a serene and quiet descent along the slope of existence into the vale of years, where the last debt of Nature is to be paid! But it behooves her to be on her guard during the whole of the seventh Septenniad, and not to allow fashionable dissipation, late hours, and gossamer dress, to render her grand climacteric the crisis of her fate. 152 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. PATHO-PROTEAN MALADY. It is in the course of the present Septenniad— often sooner—sometimes later—that mankind (in- cluding both sexes) of modern times get introduced to a sinister acquaintance, that imbitters many, if not most of the remaining years of their lives. It is a monster-malady of comparatively recent origin. No name, no description of it is found in the rec- ords of antiquity—or even of the middle ages. It is clearly the offspring of civilization and refinement —of sedentary habits and intellectual culture—of physical deterioration and mental perturbation— of excitement and exhaustion—of the friction (if I am allowed such a term) of mind on matter, and of matter on mind! It is not the progeny of intemper- ance, for our forefathers were more intemperate than we are. It is not the product of effeminacy, as far as indulgence in pleasure or idleness is con- cerned—for the present race is more wore down by labour and care than by ease and dissipation. Though millions have felt it, no one can describe it —though thousands have studied it, no one has been able to frame for it an accurate definition. And no wonder. It is a Proteus which assumes the form, and usurps the attributes of almost every malady, mental and corporeal, that has scourged the human race since the creation of the world! But this is not all. It disdains the character of be- ing merely an imitator. It takes on shapes and at- titudes that have no prototypes in human afflictions. Nor need this excite surprise. We have imported, through the medium of our boundless colonization, the constitutions and maladies of the East and of the West, and incorporated them with those of our own. Every day and hour, the experienced eye will de- tect in the streets of London the Hindoo features, blanched by our skies of their ochery complexion— PATHO-PROTEAN MALADY. 153 the negro nose and lips deprived, by the same agents, of their original companions, the Ethiopian hue and woolly locks. These, however, would have been of little consequence, had we not im- ported with them the bile and the bellyache—the Hindostanee liver and the Caribbean spleen—the phlegm of the North and the choler of the South. In a country like this, where talent and industry—per- haps less estimable qualities also—are constantly forcing up the peasant and artisan into the baronetcy and the peerage - and where money and mercenary motives are perpetually mingling the blood of the plebeian and patrician, we cannot wonder at the hy- brid births of strange and anomalous disorders, to- tally unknown in former times. The attempts to seize and imprison the fabled Proteus of old, were not more numerous or less successful than those that have been made to trace the origin, ascertain the seat, and analyze the char- acter of this Patho-Proteus, or multiform malady, of our own times. It has been attributed to the liver, the stomach, the spleen, the brain, the spinal marrow, the nerves, the colon, &c, each physician drawing the Protean fiend in the shape and hue which it most frequently assumed under his own observance. Hence its various designations. In- digestion, hepatitis, dyspepsy, nervous irritability, bilious disorder, hypochondriasis, &c, &c, have, each in its turn, been the names affixed to the in- firmity. It is not difficult to discover the clew to this diversity of opinion. The Patho-Protean af- fliction is not perhaps, in strict language, an entity —a single disease sent down from Heaven, or springing from the bowels of the earth; but rather a morbid constitution or disposition, produced by the various moral and physical causes above allu- ded to, and moulding numerous other maladies into its own resemblance. Although the multitudinous causes of this evil must operate in a great variety 154 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. of ways, yet there are two principal channels through which it flows upon man and woman, much more frequently than through any others—namely, the brain and the stomach—but chiefly the former. The moral impressions on the brain and nerves are infinitely more injurious than the physical impres- sions of food and drink, however improper, on the stomach. The multifarious relations of man with the world around him, in the present era of social life, are such as must inevitably keep up a constant source of perturbation, if not irritation; and this trouble of mind is not solely, or even chiefly, ex- pended on the organ of the mind—viz., the brain, and its appendages, the nerves—but upon the organs of the body most intimately associated with the brain—namely, the digestive organs, including the stomach, liver, and bowels. Let us exemplify this. A man receives a letter communicating a piece of astounding intelligence— great loss of property, or death of a child, wife, or parent. The mind, the brain, the nervous system, are all agitated and disturbed. But the evil does not rest here. The organs not immediately under the will, or directly connected with the intellectual portion of our frame—the organs of digestion, cir- culation, nutrition, &c, are all consecutively dis- turbed, and their functions disordered. These cor- poreal maladies are those which naturally attract most the sufferer's attention. He seldom compre- hends, or even suspects, the nature and agency of the moral cause. He flies to physic—and it may very ea- sily be conceived that he generally flies to it in vain! But it will probably be remarked that great events and disasters befall only a few, comparatively speak- ing—and those not often. This is true. But the multiplicity and frequency of minor evils are far more than equivalent to the intensity and rarity of the greater ones. Now those who are even moder- ately acquainted with the world, and with human PATHO-PROTEAN MALADY. 155 nature, are well convinced that there is scarcely an individual, from the meanest mendicant to the most absolute monarch, who does not daily and almost hourly experience moral vexations, perturbations, or disquietudes of mind, which sooner or later dis- turb the functions of the body!* In what, then, does this morbid constitution or disposition, the parent of the Protean malady, con- sist ! This is no unimportant inquiry. The nature of disorders may often be ascertained by the causes that produce them. These causes, in the present case, may be all, or nearly all, marshalled under four heads or representatives—anxiety of mind— intensity of thought—sedentary avocations, and ple- nary indulgence. The last but one includes, of course, deficiency of exercise. Now, although some of these, as intensity of thought, may improve the intellectual powers, they all, without exception, tend to weaken the body. But debility is the parent of irritability—and morbid or inordinate irritability, susceptibility, or sensibility, is the distinctive char- acteristic of the wide-spread malady under consid- eration. Thus, moral vicissitudes, troubles, or vex- ations, which in a healthy and strong frame of mind and body would make but a slight impression, will, under the influence of the Patho-Protean constitution, so ruffle the temper and agitate the * The French revolution produced whole classes of diseases— especially those of the heart. These are now rapidly multiply- ing from the excitement of politics. Excitement is a word not sufficiently expressive. The hatred which exists now between people of different politics is such, that health is incompatible with its continuance. One half of the present violent politicians will assuredly die of disease of the heart, or of some great in- ternal organ. Scarcely a day—even an hour—passes without my seeing exemplifications of this principle! If the votaries of political ambition could see with me a few of the effects of that ambition—or even of that perturbation of mind attendant on po- litical struggles, they would fly in dismay from the baleful con- test! 156 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. soul, that every function of the human machine will be disordered. This results from the inordinate sensibility of the brain and nervous system gener- ally. And although the great organs of digestion, nutrition, circulation, &c, are wisely removed from under the direct and immediate influence of mental perturbations from moral causes, yet, unfortunately, they are destined to participate in the afflictions of their more intellectual associates, and suffer most severely in the conflict! They are thus rendered highly susceptible, by moral evils, to the impression of physical ones. The digestive organs are almost the only internal organs which are daily and hourly exposed to the direct contact and agency of external matters. The introduction of atmospheric air into the lungs is the chief exception—if it be one. Now when we try to enumerate the variety of materials drawn from the animal and vegetable world for pampering the ap- petite of man—especially in highly-civilized life— we are lost and bewildered in the fruitless attempt. A single glance round the shelves of an Italian warehouse, in Piccadilly or the Strand, must com- pel any one to admit that the powers of the hu- man stomach are—prodigious ! The pickles and the preserves, the chillies and the condiments, the Scandinavian tongues and Westphalian hams— but, above all, the sausages of Bologna and Ger- many, would alone poison the vulture, the shark, and the jackall. Or, if they did not kill direct these natural gourmands, they would, most assuredly, people the air, the ocean, and the wild woods with rs exquisite dyspeptics—perhaps, hypochondriacs —as ever paced St. James's-stree'., or made the grand tour of Hyde Park, under the full influence of the blue devils. It may be true, that the stomachs of our ancestors were stronger than the gizzard of an ostrich. But it is certain that we, their degenerate offspring, have no such powers of digestion. On PATH0-PROTEAN MALADY. 157 the contrary, the vast majority of moderns, high and low, complain that they cannot digest even the plainest food without great and daily torment! And how or why is this 1 Because the nerves of their digestive organs, participating in the general irrita- bility, susceptibility, or sensibility of the whole nervous system, cannot bear the presence of food, which man and animals, in a state of nature and strong health, can turn with ease into the blandest nutriment. It is well known to every physiologist that the great internal organs, the heart, liver, stomach, &c, perform their vital functions independent of the will, being supplied by the ganglionic nerves, a class en- tirely distinct from those emanating from the brain and spine, which are under the guidance of the mind. These ganglionic organs not only refuse to tell us how they perform their operations in their hidden laboratories, but when they are at work. Thus in a state of health we have no conscious sensations from the vital functions of the circulation, respiration, digestion, assimilation, secretion, &c. The heart feels the presence of the blood, but keeps that feeling to itself. The lungs feel the influence of atmospheric air, but give the mind no intimation of such feeling. The stomach is alive to the presence of food, and performs the important task of digestion, but troubles not the intellect with any intimation of its proceed- ings. And so of all the other internal organs. This is a wise provision of Nature, or rather of Nature's God. But intercourse between the two systems of nerves—the nerves of sense and the nerves of the in- ternal organs—is not absolutely prohibited. They mutually correspond, in a state of health, without our consciousness, and, still more, without pain or incon- venience. But let us overeducate, as it were—that is, let us pamper the digestive organs, for example, by unnatural stimulation ; or, let these said organs be long and strongly associated, in sympathy, with 158 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. excitement of the intellect, and its organ, the brain —and what is the consequence ? The stomach becomes, as it were, intellectualized—that is, denat- uralized ; so that its sensibility rises from the or- ganic or unconscious to the animal or conscious state of feeling! Then it is that the process of digestion not only becomes cognizable to our senses, but exceedingly painful. When the stomach has thus acquired an additional sense—a sense properly appertaining to a superior organ, the organ of the mind—the owner of that stomach has incurred a penalty, which will require months or years for exoneration. He has over- educated an organ which would have performed its function much better in its pristine ignorance. It is like the cook who studies transcendental chym- istry, and spoils the soup—or the tailors of Laputa, who cut their coats on philosophical principles, and never made them to fit any of their customers. The stomach has tasted the fruit of the tree of knowl- edge, presented by the brain—and both parties are turned out of the Garden of Eden, to suffer for their transgressions during the remainder of their lives! Whether or not mutual recriminations took place between the first participators in guilt, I will not pretend to say. Such recriminations are the nat- ural consequences of sin in our present state of ex- istence. But, be that as it may, I can answer for this fact, that the stomach repays with usurious in- terest the injuries and sufferings which it has re- ceived from its contemporary and copartner—the brain. When the malady in question has attained a cer- tain extent, the stomach not only reflects back on the organ of the mind a large share of those afflic- tions which it has sustained from that quarter, but, in consequence of its extensive chain of sympathies with various other organs of its own class, as the liver, kidneys, bowels, heart—in short, the whole PATHO-PROTEAN MALADY. 159 of those organs supplied by the ganglionic nerves, it weaves a tissue of disorders which no human skill can unravel—it constructs a labyrinth of infirmities through which no clew can guide us—it fills an Au- gean stable with evils, which few rivers, except that of Lethe, can cleanse away! But the action and reaction of the organ of the mind and the great organs of the ganglionic system, one on another, are not the only hostilities carried on in this condition of the constitution. Let it be remembered that the whole of the alimentary canal, from one extremity to the other, is studded with myr- iads of glands, whose secretions are under the in- fluence of the nerves distributed to them. Now each minute filament of nerve participates in the gen- eral disorder of the great nervous centres, and the secretions of the smallest follicle are thus vitiated, and become the prolific source of new irritations reflected back on the whole nervous system, and ultimately on the mind itself. When the morbid circle of association between the mental and corporeal organs and functions is once formed, it is extremely difficult to discover the starting point of any one of the various maladies that present themselves, under such circumstances. For the sensations of body and mind springing from this source, there is no vocabulary. The patient is unable to describe them; the practitioner to under- stand them; and thus a whole class of them has got the appellations of " vapours," " hypochondriasis," " maladies imaginaires," &c., &c., &c. Yet every one of them has its corporeal seat, however moral or in- tellectual may have been its origin. Even those that appear to be purely mental, as monomania, illusions, and general insanity itself, are dependant on, or con- nected with, some derangement of structure or func- tion in the material fabric. I could prove this by nu- merous cases, but dare not lay open the secrets of the prison-house. One memorable case, however, which 160 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. could not be concealed from the world, may here be adverted to as an example. It is the case of the un- fortunate gentleman who destroyed his life by prussic acid in Regent-street, on the22d November, 1835, and whose death caused a strong sensation at the time. This gentleman (Mr. Mc Kerrell) had spent nearly thirty years in India—rose to a prominent station in the civil service of the company, and realized an ample fortune. He returned to his native land without much apparent injury of constitution, ex- pecting, no doubt, to crown a youth of toil with an age of enjoyment. But the demon of ambition crossed his path, and the reform bill opened a ■prospect which prudence or philosophy could not resist! The British senate—that splendid meteor which has lured so many gallant barks into shoals and quicksands, drew this unfortunate victim from the enjoyment of competence, and the pursuit of health and happiness, into the vortex of a contested election ! Paisley was to him what Pharsalia was to Pompey! He went through fatigues of body and anxieties of mind that exhausted his strongest friends. But the issue was unsuccessful, and the event was tragical. From that time the even ten- our of his mind was lost, and his nervous system was unpoised. A strange illusion arose, and haunted his imagination every second day. The secret strug- gled long in his breast, and was never revealed but to myself—and that under a promise of inviolable secrecy. The fabled horrors of heathen hells were trifles compared with the tortures which this poor wretch endured—and that without the smallest par- ticle of moral guilt! For some time the illusion appeared to be a re- ality—at least on the alternate days—but afterward he became satisfied, on the good days, that it was a phantom, having no real existence but in a disor- dered imagination. Still later he became sensible that he laboured, on alternate days, under monoma- REMARKABLE CASE OF MONOMANIA. 161 nia, or partial insanity; and this reflection added one more, and a very poignant sting to his accumulated miseries! His sufferings were of two kinds—bodily and mental. He awoke every second morning, under a pressure of horrible feelings, which he could neither account for nor describe! Common pain, though of the most excruciating kind, would have been gladly accepted in lieu of these terrible sensa- tions. With these was associated the illusion, which never for a moment, during the whole of that day, ceased to torture his imagination and blast his sight by its scowling form! The day was an age of agony. Night and sleep brought a tem- porary'oblivion of his woes—and he awoke the next morning free from the illusion, and comparatively free from the indescribable morbid feelings of the body. But contemplation on the past, and antici- pation of the future, rendered life but little desira- ble, though his religious and moral feelings always repudiated (so he alleged) the idea of suicide. The history of this case would furnish materials for a tragical romance, founded, in every particular, on fact—if the term romance could be properly ap- plied to such a narrative. Worn out by mental horrors and corporeal mise- ries, this most pitiable gentleman put an end to his sufferings, on the day of the illusion, by taking nearly two ounces of prussic acid. He left such unequivocal testimonies of a sound mind behind him, in the shape of written documents and oral communications, on the day of his decease, that a verdict of felo-de-se would have, assuredly, been pronounced by a coroner's jury, had I not stepped forward and proved the infirmity of the deceased. I revealed not the nature of the illusion—the only point of secrecy enjoined by my patient— but I preserved a property of seventy thousand pounds from sequestration, and warded off a mor- 02 162 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. al and religious stigma from the memory of the dead. The examination of the body, after death, dis- closed some of the most remarkable phenomena that were ever discovered on dissection. The whole history and post mortem inspection have been laid before the medical profession, through the proper channels. It may suffice to mention here, that there is a pair of nerves in the body (the par vagum) holding intercourse between the seat of intellect and the great involuntary organs of the chest and abdomen, viz., the heart, lungs, stomach, &c. Though it rises in the brain (the or. gan of the mind), it is distributed to various internal organs that are not under our control. It is, there- fore, a great intermediate agent of communication between the soul and the body—in other words, be- tween mind and matter. On this nerve had formed a concretion of stony hardness, with jagged points, as sharp as needles—growing and piercing into the substance of the nerve itself! All the organs to which this most important nerve distributed its in- fluence were, more or less, diseased. The dis- orders of these organs, and of the nerve itself, had, no doubt, reacted on the brain, and thus produced the illusion of the mind.* But it may be asked, why, if the causes were per- manent, should the effects be periodical 1 The case is remarkable, but by no means singular. There are many similitudes in medical science. The ma- laria of the fen is inhaled every day, yet produces an ague only every second day. It is the same with many other agents as well as their disorders. But the chief reason for the introduction of this melancholy case is yet to be stated. All the or- * Had I time—or rather had I talent—I could construct a second Frankenstein from the history of this case—without one fiction—without one of the preterpreposterous supernatu- ralities of that famous romance. AMBITION--A CAUSE OF PATHO-PROTEUS. 163 ganic changes, including the concretion on the pneumo-gastric nerve, must have existed for many years—long before this gentleman returned to Eu- rope, and yet without producing much inconve- nience. At the Paisley election he tired out some of his most powerful friends, in excessive labour of body and mind; consequently his health could not have been much impaired at that time. But the moral causes had not then come into play, and the physical ones were in abeyance. No sooner, how- ever, did ambition take possession of the mind, than the train was laid for the explosion of bodily as well as mental disorder. Blighted hopes, disap- pointments, and losses, called into fatal activity dis- eases which might long have remained quiescent— and from the date of the unsuccessful contest, the tenour of the mind was broken—to be ultimately wrecked in suicide! The present case, though an extraordinary one, in some respects, is exceedingly common in others. Physical, that is, bodily disorders, are either called into existence, or into activity, by mental disquie- tude, so generally, that the rule becomes 'almost absolute. Reaction of the body on the mind is, no doubt, frequent; but the body suffers more often from the mind than the mind from the body. And when mind is afflicted by matter, it is generally where the corporeal frame has first suffered from moral miseries.* Ambition then—that ardent desire, that incessant struggle to be, or to appear, greater than we are— or what others are, adds its powerful quota to the sum total of causes that produce the Patho-Protean scourge. Ambition is not bounded by any particular rank, or confined to any particular classes, but per- vades every ramification of society. It is not en- tirely extinguished in servitude or beggary! I am * Vide Southey's Life of Cowper the Poet. 164 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. inclined to think that it does not diminish, but rather that it increases, as we descend along the scale of rank and wealth—at least to a certain extent. The wife and daughters of the jolly butcher in Bond-street have not less ambition to outshine, in chintz and china, the wife and daughters of their opposite neighbour, the cheesemonger, than have their aristocratic customers in Grosvenor-square to outflank and rout their fashionable friends in the columns of the Morning Post. In fine, throughout every link in the vast chain of society—from the court and the cabinet down to the counter and the cottage—this worst species of ambition is to be found! It drugs the cup of enjoy- ment which is at our lips, infusing into it a thirst for that which is not in our possession. This thirst, it is true, carries with it its own immediate punish- ment—because few can have it slaked; but the ulterior sufferings entailed on the victims of ambi- tion are of a deeper die and graver grade—the dire inflictions of the Protean malady ! These, however, are evils of our own seeking or of our own creation. But in the present state of civilization and refinement there are hosts of others which we cannot or will not avoid. The cares of families—the difficulty of providing for our offspring —the heart-burnings occasioned by the wayward- ness of children—and the thousand anxieties which intrude themselves, independent of any misconduct on our own parts, are now multiplied to an incalcu- lable extent, and have already introduced new and undescribed miseries and maladies, that are con- stantly on the increase. There are numerous causes of this modern scourge, which cannot well be classed under the heads of either the morale or the physique. They partake of both. Such, for instance, are the habits and pursuits of a people. In this country commerce and manufactures preponderate over agriculture and AMBITION--A CAUSE OF PATHO-PROTEUS. 165 pasturage—and therefore sedentary predominate over active habits. The factory and the counting- house are not only more unhealthy, in a physical point of view, than the hills and the vales, but they are much more detrimental to the moral constitution of man. The labour is thrown on the head and the hand—and that in bad air—rather than on the body and legs, under the canopy of heaven. This dif- ference contributes largely to the support of the Protean malady, especially when aided by the competition of trade, the animosity of politics, and the rancour of religious bigotry. These and vari- ous other moral and physical agents have, unfor- tunately, increased since the termination of a long and sanguinary conflict with the common enemy, during which, internal dissensions were swallowed up in national enthusiasm, and redundancy of popu- lation was kept in check by the waste of war! Peace, therefore, with all its blessings and comforts, is not without its alloy. Our gigantic struggles with foreign foes are now transmitted into fierce con- tentions between opposing factions. Every evil passion is enlisted in this domestic strife. The forum, the bench, the hustings—nay, even the pul- pit—pour forth, like volcanoes, the destructive ele- ments of discord, hatred, and animosity, among all ranks and classes of society! Under these circum- stances, is it wonderful that we have new maladies, the products of new causes 1 It would be wonder- ful if we had them not! r I have not attempted a description of the Patho- Protean evil, because, as was stated before, it is not an entity in itself, but rather a morbid state of constitution which mixes itself up with almost every other disease, assuming its form, influencing its character, and modifying its treatment. This last is a purely medical subject—at least in detail— and is discussed by many authors as well as myself in the proper places. But I have pointed out the 166 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. chief causes (moral and physical) of the evil; and this may guide the individual to avoid them. The very specification of the causes of a malady sug- gests the chief remedies, or, at all events, the best means of avoiding it. The pith of nearly all that has been written on hygiene, or the prevention of diseases—and of the Protean disorder among the rest, might be included under two heads—almost in two words—temper- ance and exercise. But temperance means much more than mere moderation in eating and drinking. It comprehends moderation in all our pleasures and enjoyments, mental and corporeal—it prescribes restraint on pur passions—limitation of our desires —but, above all, coercion of our ambition. Our physical wants, like the trade-winds, vary not materially, in direction or force ; not so the pas- sions. They are the tempests of life, which too often set at defiance the sails and the rudder of rea- son, driving the vessel upon shoals or quicksands, and ultimately wrecking her altogether! I am not trenching on the province of the divine in these remarks. I allude only to the effects of the passions on health and happiness—and not on the concerns of the immortal soul. The heathen phi- losopher (Plato, I think) may have carried the idea too far when he traced all diseases of the body to the mind—" omnia corporis mala ab animo"—but assuredly, as far as my observation goes—and it has not been very limited—a great majority of our corporeal disorders spring from, or are aggravated by mental perturbations. This point cannot be too strongly urged, or too often repeated by the phy- sician who treats of the prevention of diseases—and especially of the Patho-Proteus which has been here noticed. But, at the same time, it would be wrong to pass over the various miseries resulting from the " pleasures of the table." The intellec- tual and sensual banquet has too many charms for "feast of reason." 167 loul and body, not to lead into almost daily excess, every class of society, from the savage to the sage! Even here, the immaterial tenant seduces its mate- rial tenement into woful sufferings. We hear a great deal, indeed, of " the feast of reason and the flow of soul;" but, for my own part, I have too often observed this intellectual festival to take place where " Malignant Chemia scowls, And mingles poison with the nectar'd bowls." It is more curious than consolatory to scrutinize, with philosophic eye, the workings of turtle, Cham- pagne, and conviviality, on those finer faculties with which metaphysicians have invested the immortal principle of man. Without diving into these mys- terious and perhaps dangerous investigations, I shall only remark that every faculty of the mind, as well as every function of the body, comes under the in- fluence of the above-mentioned material agents, and in a manner that is well worthy of investigation, in regard to the immediate subjects of this essay— HEALTH and HAPPINESS. In this " feast of reason," as it is called, which is generally accompanied by food of a grosser kind, we find the energies of the mind called forth—one would almost say, created—where they were pre- viously dormant. Sallies of wit and humour—sen- timents of noble philanthropy, exalted morality, and even fervent religion, spring forth at the festive board, which lay in abeyance till that hour! It is then that friendship opens her heart—the miser his purse—bigotry widens the circle of its charity—the debtor forgets his creditor—the creditor forgives his debtor—the slave breathes the air of freedom— penury becomes possessed of temporary, or, at least, ideal wealth—and stranger still, riches are invested with momentary happiness! Are these remarkable phenomena of the mind 168 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. unconnected with, or independent of, any corres- ponding phenomena in our physical organization? Far from it! Savoury viands and generous wines stimulate the material organs, accelerate the circu- lation, and call forth the mere animal spirits, before they elicit the intellectual corruscations. And as excitement of the body produces excitement of the mind, so passions of the mind kindle up excitation in the corporeal fabric. On the stage and at the bar, passion is more frequently feigned than felt; but in the pulpit and the senate, religious fervour and political disputation will call forth the most vio- lent agitation of the body through the medium of the mind. Painting, poetry, music, and oratory cannot raise emotions in the mind, till they have first excited certain nerves of sense, and, through them, the very brain itself—the organ or instru- ment of the mind. This is the grand consideration, as far as health and happiness are concerned. It establishes this important axiom—little understood or attended to by mankind at large—namely, that whenever the stream of life, whether moral or physical, mental or corporeal, is accelerated in its course beyond the normal or medium current, it must experience a corresponding retardation in turn —and these inequalities in the speed of the stream must inevitably damage, sooner or later, the banks between which it is enclosed. There is not an axiom in physic or physiology more certain than this—that the even tenour of the stream prolongs life, preserves health, and maintains happiness; while, on the other hand, the strong excitements, whether of body or mind, afford temporary enjoy- ment, at the expense of permanent sufferings. It is true that the elasticity of youth and health ren- ders the penalties of indulgence short at the begin- ning, and amply repaid by the pleasure of the feast, whether intellectual or corporeal. But the periods of enjoyment gradually shorten, while those of pain CAUSES OF MODERN TEMPERATURE. 169 are protracted, till at length a balance is struck, that awakens the delinquent to a frightful survey of the real condition in which he is placed! It is then, in general, too late to retrace our steps! Now the besetting sin of the present generation is not that of intemperance in eating and drinking— but rather in that of reading and thinking. And why is this 1 When the intellectual powers are much exerted, the physical powers, and more espe- cially the powers of the digestive organs, are weak- ened. Hence, we have neither the relish for glut- tony and inebriation, nor have we the ability to bear their effects. Add to this, that the exercise of the rational faculties dissuades from intemper- ance, independent of its withdrawing the power of indulging in it. In rude states of society, where the higher functions of the mind are but little em- ployed, the sensual gratifications of the palate and stomach constitute the principal pleasures of life— and the organs being strong, these pleasures are exquisitely enjoyed, and borne with comparative facility. The coal-heaver, on the banks of the Thames, whose brain is nearly as inert as the sable load under which his muscles crack, will drink ten or twelve quarts of porter, besides gin, in one day, and go home as sober as a judge at night. But let the judge himself, whose active brain absorbs all energy from his muscles, try this experiment! Here, then, is the true solution of the problem— the real causes why the present generation are more temperate than their ancestors—namely, disrelish for, and inability to bear intemperance, as compared with those of the olden time. But the effects of in- temperance have not diminished in proportion. On the contrary, they have multiplied prodigiously. What was ultra-abstemiousness a hundred years ago, would now be destructive excess. The habits and manners of the hardy Highlander in the days of Waverley and the wassail bowl would ill suit the P 170 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. natives of Glenco and Tobermory in the present day. Tea, politics, and steam have wonderfully impaired the digestive organs of the Celt and Sas- senach laird since the days of Bradwardine and Tulley-veolan, though some of their descendants appear to have, even yet, their stomachs lined with copper, and proof against the fiery impressions of the most potent Glenlivit! Thus, then, a nervous temperament—a morbid sensibility—pervades the whole frame of society, more or less—a supersensitiveness that inflicts pains and penalties on trifling and occasional indis- cretions, which used formerly to be levied only upon habitual and excessive indulgence! There are many millions in this country to whom food is physic of the bitterest kind—and to whom physic is as daily indispensable as food! To the luxurious epicure it may seem incredible that, within the boundaries of the British Isles, there are millions, among the opulent classes, who would give half their wealth to be able to do without food alto- gether—who would gladly give up the pleasure of eating, for an immunity from the misery of digest- ing. Incredible as this may seem, it is neverthe- less strictly true.* I wish I could state, consistently with truth, that the punishment falls exclusively on the intemperate * The sister of the celebrated Mrs. Siddons (Mrs. Whitlock) died under the care of the author, from starvation, without its attendant sufferings of hunger and thirst. An aneurismal en- largement of a vessel in the brain pressed upon the origins of two particular nerves—the eighth and ninth—those which give power to speech, swallowing, and digestion. The consequence was, an inability to speak, to swallow, and to digest. Fortu- nately the paralysis of one of these nerves (the eighth) prevented the sense of hunger—and though this unfortunate lady lived five weeks after the failure of swallowing was complete, she suffered not from either hunger or thirst! During all this time, the faculties of the mind, and the other functions of the body, were unaffected. She was seventy7six years of age. CAUSES OF MODERN TEMPERATURE. 17l —that the gourmand is the only victim, in the end, of indigestion, and all its indescribable horrors. But I am compelled to aver that this penalty falls far more frequently on the innocent than on the guilty—on those who labour with their heads for the good of society, rather than on those who con- sume the fruits of the earth in luxury and idleness —on the unfortunate far more often than on the offender! And now we have approached the den of the dragon—the favourite haunt of the Protean fiend ; for, whatever may have been his origin, whether moral or physical, intellectual or corporeal—the stomach and digestive organs are selected as his head-quarters. There he sits, concealed, like the spider, weaving his web of mischief, forming his lines of communication, and establishing his chains of painful sympathy between every tissue and struc- ture of the human fabric ! If other maladies do not assail the constitution, the Protean enemy is ever ready to assume their forms, and harass his victim with incessant alarms: if they do, he seldom fails to join as a powerful auxiliary, and add poignancy to every sting of the principal assailant! The dis- crimination between the real and the imitating mal- ady is, in fact, the most difficult task of the phy- sician. So accurately does the sympathetic affec- tion enact the part of the idiopathic, that the most experienced—the most talented practitioner is very often deceived.* * Hvsteria is a form which the Patho-Proteus is very prone to assume in females of modern times; and under this guise will stimulate almost every disease, whether of internal or external parts. The celebrated Dupuytren of Paris was one day walking through the wards of a London hospital. His at- tention was attracted to the case of a young and pallid female, who had white-swelling of the knee, to which the nurse was applying leeches. He examined this patient, and pronounced that the white-swelling was hysteria, and that valerian and steel would be more beneficial than leeches and blisters. His diag- 172 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. The Patho-Proteus will so closely imitate or- ganic disease of the heart, the brain, the lungs, and every other internal viscus in the body, that the young practitioner is often deceived, and the old puzzled. With many of the agents which have imposed this nervous temperament, this supersensitive char- acter on our constitutions, in this age of civilization and refinement, we are acquainted, and they have been already mentioned; but of the manner in which they have effected this change—of their modus' ope- randi—we know as little as we do of the modus agendi of gravity or magnetism. We recognise, too painfully, many of their effects—perhaps some of their laws. Thus, when this nervous temperament is established, we find that food and drink, which ought to produce no sensation, or, if any, a pleas- urable one, cause a sense of discomfort, or even of actual pain in the stomach. This fact at once proves, not only that the sensibility of the nerves of the stomach is exalted, but that it is morbidly exalted. That the digestive powers of the stomach are also weakened, is demonstrated by two phenom- ena—-first, that the digestive process is protracted as well as painful—and, secondly, that it is imperfect also, as shown by the food running into the ace- tous fermentation, which augments, perhaps often is the cause of, the uneasy or painful sensations which we experience. But if the distress occa- sioned by painful and protracted digestion were the only evil—and it is no trifling one—the sufferer would have great cause to be thankful. The nerves of the digestive organs sympathize so freely and so universally with the nerves of all other organs and nosis was fully verified by the event! This remarkable species of simulation is well known to experienced practitioners. Sir B. Brodie and others have distinctly alluded to it in their wri> tings and lectures. EFFECTS OF THE PATHO-PROTEUS. 173 parts of the body, that not a single structure or function of the human fabric escapes, at one time or other, from participation in the misery of the part first affected. But this is not all. Corporeal pain is much more easily borne than mental an- guish. The disorders of the body, and especially those of the digestive organs, very soon involve the functions of the mind—and then we have a train of phenomena still more inscrutable and agonizing! The irritation resulting from food undigested in the stomach, or from the decompositions into which that food is resolved, induce the most surprising and afflictive symptoms to which humanity is sub- ject. The following extract from a work which I published more than ten years ago may be intro- duced here in illustration of what I am stating. " In some cases, where this poisonous secretion lurks long in the upper bowels, the nerves of which are so numerous and the sympathies so extensive, there is induced a state of mental despondency and perturbation which it is impossible to describe, and which no one can form a just idea of but he who has felt it in person. The term ' blue devils' is not half expressive enough of this state ; and if my ex- cellent friend, Dr. Marshall Hall, meant to describe it under the head ' mimosis inquieta,' he never ex- perienced it in propria persona! This poison acts in different ways on different individuals. In some, whose nervous systems are not very susceptible, it produces a violent fit of what is called bilious head- ache, with excruciating pains and spasms in the stomach and bowels, generally with vomiting or purging, which is often succeeded by a yellow suf- fusion in the eyes, or even on the skin. Severe as this paroxysm is, the patient may thank his stars that the poison vented its fury on the body instead of the mind. Where the intellectual faculties have been much harassed, and the nervous system weak- ened and rendered irritable, the morbid secretion P2 174 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. acts in that direction, and little or no inconvenience may be felt in the real seat of the offending matter. The mind becomes suddenly overcast, as it were, with a cloud—some dreadful imaginary or even un- known evil seems impending; or some real evil, of trifling importance in itself, is quickly magnified into a terrific form, attended, apparently, with a train of disastrous consequences, from which the mental eye turns in dismay. The sufferer cannot keep in one position, but paces the room in agita- tion, giving vent to his fears in doleful soliloquies, or pouring forth his apprehensions in the ears of his friends. If he is from home when this fit comes on, he hastens back—but soon sets out again, in the vain hope of running from his own wretched feel- ings. If he happen to labour under any chronic complaint at the time, it is immediately converted (in his imagination) into an incurable disease; and the distresses of a ruined and orphaned family rush upon his mind and heighten his agonies. He feels his pulse, and finds it intermitting or irregular; disease of the heart is threatened, and the doctor is summoned. If he ventures to go to bed, and falls into a slumber, he awakes in the midst of a frightful dream, and dares not again lay his head on the pil- low. This state of misery may continue for twenty- four, thirty-six, or forty-eight hours; when a dis- charge of viscid, acrid bile, of horrible fetor, dis- solves at once the spell by which the strongest mind may be bowed down to the earth, for a time, through the agency of a poisonous secretion on the intestinal nerves! or it may go off without any evacuation of offending matter, leaving us in the dark as to the cause of such a train of distressing phenomena. I believe such a train of symptoms seldom obtains, except where there has been a pre- disposition to morbid sensibility, occasioned by men- tal anxiety, vicissitudes of fortune, disappointments in business, failure of speculations, domestic afflic- SYMPATHIES BETWEEN BODY AND MIND. 175 tions, too great labour of the intellect, or some of those thousand moral ills, which render both mind and body so susceptible of disorder."* This, however, is a paroxysm or storm, which soon blows over, and we have a longer or shorter interval of quietude. A much worse condition is too often the fate of the victim of " morbid sensi- bility." The nerves of the digestive organs sympa- thize so extensively and intimately with those of all other organs and parts of the body, that the seat of suffering is generally placed far remote from the seat of its cause. The head, the heart, and other distant parts, are far more frequently referred to by the individual, than the stomach or bowels, where the evil originates ; and to these localities remedies are, of course, ineffectually directed. Here lies the difficulty of discrimination! And if the longest ex- perience and most patient investigation are fre- quently deceived, what must be the case in the routine practice of the fashionable physician, who flies on burning wheels from patient to patient, prescribing for symptoms I But even these corporeal sufferings, bad as they are, constitute but a small share in the sum total of mental afflictions resulting from this nervous temperament—this morbid sensibility of the human constitution, induced by modern civilization and re- finement ! The Patho-Protean fiend too often flies at nobler quarry than the material organs. He can paralyze the energies of the mind as readily as the torpedo benumbs the feelings of the body. Would that this were all! But the sting of the fiend car- ries with it poison as well as paralysis! In this state of sublunary existence, the faculties of the soul are so entwined with the functions of its ma- terial tenement, that one class cannot be acted on without the other being affected. This is a general * Essay on Indigestion, 8th edition, p. 28, 29. 176 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. rule. But the nervous temperament, the morbid sensibility, to which I now allude, exercises a peculiar, a predominant influence over our moral sentiments. It is well known and universally acknowledged, that irritation in the stomach and bowels will fre- quently induce temporary insanity, and especially those violent paroxysms that lead to suicide. If it be admitted (it cannot indeed be denied) that the malady in question is capable of subverting reason entirely, for a time, how can we resist the inference that, in milder grades, it perverts the feelings, the affections, the passions—in one word, the temper of the individual ? Temper is perfectly well under- stood by every one ; yet it cannot be defined by the most subtle metaphysician. It is said to be good—bad—gay — sulky — irritable—phlegmatic— irascible — peevish—placid—quarrelsome—imper- turbable, &c, &c, &c, involving all kinds of con- trasts, and consequently rendering all definitions nugatory. Johnson gives seven different definitions of temper. One of them (the first) will be suffi- cient here, viz., " due mixture of contrary quali- ties." Metaphysicians have not always been the best versed in the knowledge of human nature. How could they, indeed, when we see that they studied but half the subject—the mind and not the body 1 The consequence has been that many qualities, dis- positions, and propensities have been attributed to the mind which belong to the body, and only affect the mind secondarily. Thus temper, for example, is by most people looked upon as a quality of mind, whereas it is solely one of the corporeal constitu- tion. It is, in fact, temperament, which must be material. If this were not true, how is it that a man's temper is often entirely changed by a severe illness 1 Does the mind or soul change thus 1 Not at all. The constitution—the health of the body SYMPATHIES BETWEEN BODY AND MIND. 177 alters—and the temper with it. This view of the subject offers no apology for non-restraint of our temper, passions, and propensities, by means of our reason. On the contrary, it holds out the strongest incentives to employ the moral power in coercing the physical evil. If tempers and passions belonged to the mind, the mind could not. control them, any more than the body itself could control its own tem- perament. As temper and passions, then, are attri- butes of the grosser part of our nature, it is for the immaterial and immortal agent to quell, or at least to restrain them. But let it be observed that the greatest exertions of the mind will not be always able to control com- pletely the passions or temper of the body, without material assistance. All the reasoning in the world will not be adequate to counteract the effects of disordered digestion on the mental faculties, with- out laying the axe to the root of the tree—without striking at the corporeal origin of the evil. Thus a man is affected with depression of spirits, hypo- chondriasis, or even delusion on a particular subject —monomania. He is told to exert his reason, and thus to dissipate his vapours. His reason may enable him to bear his sufferings with greater pa- tience, but it will not remove the malady. And here I would ask, if insanity itself be purely " men- tal derangement," why is it that the metaphysi- cian, whose province it is to treat of mind, is not called in, to decide the question of sanity or insanity of mind, and also to guide the treatment T How is it that the physician, whose business is with the body, is selected to judge of the unsoundness of the mind, and to bring it back from its aberrations 1 It is because theory and practice do not quadrate on this point. The truth is, there is no such thing as pure mental derangement. The disease is in the body—its symptoms appear in disordered manifes- tations of the mind. And it is through the medium 178 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. of the corporeal organs and functions that we can hope to remedy it. We hear a great deal, indeed, of the moral treatment of the insane. This moral man- agement is proper; but when accurately analyzed, it will be found that its agency is directly or ulti- mately felt by the corporeal functions, and thus its chief remedial influence is exerted. Take, for ex- ample, the mild and soothing system of managing the insane during a paroxysm, as contrasted with the harsh and coercive means which were formerly employed. What are the physiological effects] The nervous excitement is lulled; the vascular ac- tion is diminished ; and the maniacal orgasm is, of course, abridged. In what does this treatment differ from that which is pursued in other diseases 1 In fever, gout, or inflammation of the heart, if we irri- tate the morale of the patient, will we not do great mischief? and will we not mitigate these diseases by soothing and quietude 1 In short, the whole of the moral treatment, in any and every case, resolves itself at last into corporeal results or effects, through which the cure or alleviation is consummated.* This reasoning will hold good throughout the whole chain of moral infirmities, from insanity, at the head of the scale, down to the most trifling irrita- bility of temper. Every link in that vast chain is dependant on some corporeal disposition or disor- der, and is only to be broken by a combination of moral and physical remedies. Reason, morality, * Insanity, like gout and some other disorders, is acknowl- edged to be hereditary. Is the mind or soul hereditary ? If it be derived from our parents, immortality is a dream! No, no. The soul's tenement only is transmitted from generation to gen- eration, and with it many of its maladies. The immortal spark is derived from Heaven, the same in every subsequent as in the first creation. It would appear to me a sound or at all events a rational doctrine to consider evil dispositions as attached to the fallen or mortal part of man—the soul or immortal part being responsible in another state of existence for the duty of control- ling and preventing the deeds of the flesh in this world. HYGIENE—EXERCISE. 179 and, above all, religion, will curb, though seldom cure, the minor grades of the evil; but the highest link in the chain, in which the reasoning powers themselves are subverted, defies moral remedies, and requires the aid of physical agents. HYGIENE ; OR, PREVENTION. Enough—perhaps more than enough—has been said on the nature and causes of the Proteiform Malady—the offspring and curse of advanced civil- ization and refinement—the punishment which knowledge and improvement inflict on a redundant population! But the reflections and observations which I have made will not be valueless to the reader if duly considered. In portraying the causes of the malady, 1 have, in fact, indicated the chief preventives, or even the correctives—without na- ming them—and that in a far more effectual manner than by detailing a long catalogue of specific reme- dies. This latter course, indeed, would be inappro- priate in a work of this kind, designed for general perusal. I have already remarked that the essence of hygiene, or prevention of disease, consists in tem- perance and exercise. Of the first I have spoken enough—and taken care to extend the meaning of intemperance to more indulgences than those of the table. Every one who has honoured these pages with perusal must have appreciated the value which I attach to corporeal exercises ; but the sub- ject is one of such vital importance in regard to health and happiness, that a short but special dis- quisition on it will not, perhaps, be deemed superflu- ous from the pen of one who has studied it with un- usual care, and noted its influence on an extended theatre of observation. In the first phases of human life, exercise of the body is positive pleasure, and the want of it is little 180 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. less than actual pain. The muscles of early youth are so imbued with an exuberance of vitality that quietude is irksome, and this exuberance is joyfully as well as profitably expended in active exertion. In the advanced stages of existence, on the contrary, the muscles lose their aptitude for motion—the sinews their elasticity—and then rest is little short of sensible pleasure. In the middle stages of man's journey on earth, when exercise produces neither pain nor pleasure, it is, neverthe- less, necessary to health—but it is at this period that it is too much neglected. Various causes are assigned for this neglect—and various excuses (some of them valid, others not) are made by differ- ent individuals or classes. Our sedentary habits and mental pursuits disincline, and, in some meas- ure, disqualify us for strenuous bodily exertion— but this is a strong argument for early and regular resistance to the growing propensity. " Crescit indulgens sibi dirus hydrops." And so does the indulgence of indolence increase the disposition to inaction. Many people, with reason, aver that they have no time for exercise. The Coan sage begins his aphorisms with this re- markable expression : " Ars longa, vita brevis"— which virtually means, " our labours are many, but our days are few." The aphorism is correct; but the inference drawn from it is often wrong. It is not by dedicating all our hours to labour, repose, and sleep that we shall effect most achievements, whether intellectual or mechanical—consistent, at least, with health. Parsimony is not always econ- omy; and he who abstracts a certain portion of time from his usual mental or corporeal avocations, and dedicates it to simple exercise of the body in the open air, will reach the goal of his ambition sooner—or, at all events, more safely, than he who BENEFIT OF EXERCISE. 181 considers all time lost which is not spent in the spe- cific avocation or pursuit in which he is engaged. I am well aware that thousands—nay, millions, are so circumstanced that their daily wants demand the daily waste of their health and strength! This is particularly the case with females; and affords an additional reason for our sympathy and kindness to the most amiable as well as the most industrious (I had almost said oppressed) half of the human race! Any exercise, however mechanical or partial, as in the various kinds of manufactures or handicrafts, is better than no exercise at all of the body. Throughout the extensive Bureaucracy of this coun- try, including many of the learned and scientific professions, labour is thrown almost exclusively on the head—and it is not of the most cheerful kind. The benefits of corporeal exercise and the injuries resulting from its neglect are by no means general- ly understood. We are told, indeed, that exercise strengthens the muscles and the whole body; and, on the other hand, that indolence debilitates. This is a very imperfect view of the subject. If strength was the only salutary result of exercise, and if de- bility was the only consequence of its desuetude, little would be gained by the one or lost by the other, comparatively speaking. But there are other consequences of a far more important nature. The brain and the nervous system furnish a certain quantum of excitability to the muscles, and to all the various organs and structures of the body; and this excitability ought to be expended in the exer- cise and operations of these various parts—if health is to be ensured. But if, on the one hand, this sensorial power or excitability be expended on men- tal exertions, the other, or corporeal organs, must necessarily be deprived of their stimulus, and their functions languish, as a matter of course. Hence the innumerable disorders of those who work the brain more than the body I The remedy cannot.be 182 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. found, in this class, by forcing the body to exercise after the brain and nervous system are exhausted. Bodily exercise, under such circumstances, will only do injury. They must curtail the exertions of the mind and increase the exercise of the body. But there is a large class of society where neither the mind nor the body is exercised. In the higher grades, there is a portion who, of course, have no avocation or pursuit, mental or corporeal, and with whom indolence and ennui bear sway. In the lower ranges, a few muscles, indeed, as those of the hands and fingers, are daily exercised : but the mind is either little concerned in these minute ma- nipulations, or it is exercised in thoughts by no means conducive to moral or bodily health. In these two classes—and they comprehend an im- mense number of the existing human race in the civ- ilized world—the excitability of the brain and nervous system accumulates for want of expendi- ture, and soon passes into irritability—the bane and misery of millions!! An illustration of this ac- cumulation, as far as the body is concerned, must be familiar to every one who has travelled for twenty- four hours in a stagecoach, and experienced those most disagreeable sensations known by the term " figgets," and arising from the confinement and inactivity of the limbs, without the power or space for stretching them. The analogy extends to our mental as well as to our physical organization. Muscular exercise, whether in high or low life, car- ries off and prevents an accumulation of excitability, and consequently of irritability, and thus conduces, in a very marked manner, to health of body and tranquillity of mind. Want of exercise, especially when combined with mental exertion, disturbs the equilibrium of the circulation, and causes the blood to accumulate more in some organs than in others. Thus the brain is the great sufferer; hence the headaches, confusion, loss of memory, giddiness, BENEFIT OF EXERCISE. 183 and other affections so common among sedentary people. The liver, from its peculiarly languid circu- lation, is the next most common sufferer. The vital current stagnates in the venous system of the bil- iary apparatus, and inert or bad bile is the conse- quence. This deranges the whole of the digestive organs, and through them almost every function of mind and body. Nothing can prove a complete substitute for exercise, whether active or passive, in the prevention of these numerous evils. Exer- cise equalizes the circulation as well as the excita- bility, and thus checks the disposition to congestion and irritability. It is well known that one impression, whether mental or corporeal, will often supersede another, or at least weaken it. This principle is often avail- able in the treatment of that class of human infirm- ities which we are now considering. If the individual's circumstances will permit him to engage in any pursuit that may occupy his atten- tion and exercise his body, it will prove one of the most powerful means of counteracting the original cause of many of his sufferings. Unfortunately, there are but very few whose circumstances will per- mit them to embark in any new pursuit. Yet it is in the power of a great many to engage in a syste- matic exercise of the body, in some mode or other, if they will only summon resolution to make the ex- periment. The languor and listlessness attendant on the disorder are great obstacles to this plan; but they should be urged to it by all the eloquence of their medical attendants. Some caution, however, is necessary here. The debility and exhaustion which supervene on the most trifling exertion deter most people from persevering, and therefore the corporeal exercise must be commenced on the low- est possible scale, and very gradually increased. Thus, a person whose sedentary occupations con- fine him to the house, might begin by going once to 184 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. the top of the stairs the first day, twice the second day, and so on till he could go up and down the same path many times each day. It is wonderful what may be accomplished in this way by perseve- rance. I have known people, who could not go up a flight of steps without palpitation and breathless- ness, acquire, in one month, the power of running up to the top of the house, with scarcely any acceler- ation of the pulse or respiration. If this kind of as- cending and descending exertion, however, is feared, the individual may adopt the plan recommended by Mr. Abernethy, of walking to and fro in the room with the windows open. If the exercise can be ta- ken in the open air, it will be still better, and the quantum may be gradually increased by twenty or thirty steps daily. This task, which should be rep- resented as an infallible remedy in the end, must be performed at first when the stomach is nearly emp- ty ; and when an increase of muscular power is ac- quired, it may be performed at any time—even within two hour's after dinner. Those who can en- gage in any of the lighter gymnastic exercises, should be urged to it by every kind of persuasion, especially in the cool seasons of the year. These are means within the reach of almost all—and the advantages to be derived from such a system are incalculable. By this systematic exertion of the body, with spare diet, most cases of dyspepsy might be completely cured among the middling and lower classes of so- ciety. But there is a large class whose morale has been too far spoiled—whose education has been too re- fined—and whose senses have been too much pam- pered, to benefit by such simple means. There must be some incentive to corporeal exertion stronger than the foregoing plan presents; and moral excitement must be combined with physical agency, if we hope to carry our projects into bene- ficial operation. That the long catalogue of dys- BENEFIT OF TRAVELLING. 185 peptic and hypochondriacal complaints is much more frequently the inheritance of the affluent than the indigent, there can be no doubt; and yet the former class have a remedy in their power which is infi- nitely more efficacious than all the other moral and physical means put together, but which they rarely take advantage of—or, when they do embrace it, they seldom go the proper way to work. This is travelling in the open air. Since the Continent has been open to the English, there has been no lack of this species of exercise; but there are different kinds of travelling now, as there were different kinds of travellers in the days of Sterne. It is one thing to travel for health, and quite another thing to travel for the sake of study- ing architectural ruins, viewing pictures, ransacking libraries, collecting antiquities, exploring geological formations, or collecting rare and beautiful speci- mens of plants. It is entirely with the first kind of travelling that I have to do—namely, that mode which conduces most to the restoration of health, leaving every other consideration entirely out of the question, with the exception of amusement, which I consider as essentially connected with the subject of health. In the course of a wandering life (over almost every part of the globe), I have had many opportunities of studying and ascertaining the effects of travelling on different diseases; but on four dif-r ferent occasions within the last fourteen years, I made one of parties, whose sole object was the trial of a plan which I have devised for recruiting health. It may not be wholly uninteresting to those whom it may concern, if I preface the observations which I have to offer on the effects of travelling, by a con- cise sketch of the plans which were pursued in these instances. Q2 186 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. FIRST TOUR OF HEALTH, IN 1823. France, Switzerland, Germany, and Belgium. Six individuals, three in health (domestics) and three valetudinarians (one a lady), travelled, in the months of August, September, and October, 1823, about 2500 miles, through France, Switzerland, Ger- many, and Belgium, for the sole purpose of health, and such amusement as was considered most con- tributive to the attainment of that object. The experiment was tried, whether a constant change of scene and air, combined with almost un- interrupted exercise, active and passive, during the day—principally in the open air—might not ensure a greater stock of health than slow journeys and long sojourns on the road. The result will be seen presently. But, in order to give the reader some idea of what may be done in a three months' tour of this kind, I shall enumerate the daily journeys, omitting the excursions from and around those places at which we halted for the night, or for a few days. Our longest sojourn was that of a week, and that- only thrice—at Paris, Geneva, and Brus- sels. In a majority of places, we only stopped a night and part of a day, or one or two days, accord- ing to local interest. But I may remark that, as far as I was concerned, more exercise was taken du- ring the days of sojourn at each place, than during the days occupied in travelling from one point to an- other. The consequence was, that a quarter of a year was spent in one uninterrupted system of ex- ercise, change of air, and change of scene, together with the mental excitement and amusement pro- duced by the perpetual presentation of new objects —many of them the most interesting on the face of this globe. The following were the regular journeys, and the points of nightly repose :—l, Sittingbourn—B, Do- TOUR OF HEALTH. 187 ver—3, Calais—4, Boulogne—5, Abbeville—6, Rou- en—7, Along the banks of the Seine to Mantes—8, Paris, with excursions and perambulations—9, Fon- tainbleau—10, Auxerre—11, Yitteaux—12, Dijon, with excursions —13, Champagnole, in the Jura Mountains—14, Geneva, with various excursions— 15, Salenche—16, Chamouni, with various excur- sions to the Mer de Glace, Jardin, Buet, &c.—17, Across the Col de Baline to Martigny, with excur- sions up the Vallais—18, By the Valley of Entre- ment, &c, to the great St. Bernard, with excursions —19, Back to Martigny—20, Evian, on the Lake of Geneva, with excursions—21, Geneva—22, Lau- sanne, with excursions—23, La Sarna—24, Neuf- Chatel—25, Berne, with excursions and perambula- tions—26, Thoun—27, Valley of Lauterbrunen, with various circuits—28, Grindenwalde, with excursions to the Glaciers, &c.—29, Over the Grand Scheidec to Meyrengen, with excursions to waterfalls, &c.—30, By Brienz, Lake of Brienz, Interlaken, and Lake of Thoun, with various excursions, to the Giesbach and other waterfalls, back to Thoun—31, Berne—32, Zoffengen—33, Lucerne, with various excursions— 34, Zoug and Zurich—35, Chaufhausen and Falls of the Rhine—36, Neustad, in the Black Forest—37, By the Valle d'Enfer to Offenburgh—38, Carlshrue, with excursions—39, Heidelburg—40, Darmstadd— 41, Frankfort on the Maine, with excursions—42, Mayence, with excursions—43, Coblenz, Bingen, Bonn, &c—44, Cologne—45, Aix la Chapelle, with excursions—46, Liege—47, Brussels, with a week's excursions—48, Ghent and Courtray—49, Dunkirk— 50, Calais—51, Dover—52, London. Thus, there were fifty-two regular journeys du- ring the tour, and thirty-two days spent in excur- sions and perambulations. And as there never was so much exercise or fatigue during the journeys as during the days of sojourn and excursions, it follows that the whole of this tour might be made with great 188 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. ease, and the utmost advantage to health, in two months. As far as natural scenery is concerned, it would, perhaps, be difficult to select a tract which could offer such a succession of the most beautiful and sublime views, and such a variety of interesting objects, as the line which the above route presents. It would be better, however, to dedicate three months to the tour, if the time and other circum- stances permitted, than to make it in two months; though, if only two months could be spared, I would recommend the same line of travel, where health was the object. Perhaps it would be better, how- ever, to reverse the order of the route, and to com- mence with the Rhine, by which plan the majesty of the scenery would be gradually and progressively increasing, till the traveller reached the summit of the Great St. Bernard or Mont Blanc. The foregoing circuit was made, as far as the writer is concerned, entirely in the open air; that is to say, in an open carriage—in char-a-bancs—on mules—and on foot. The exercise was always a combination or quick succession of the active and passive kinds, as advantage was always taken of hills and mountains, on the regular journeys, to get down and walk—while a great part of each excur- sion was pedestrian, with the char-a-banc or mule at hand, when fatigue was experienced.* This plan possesses many advantages for the invalid, over the purely active or purely passive modes of travelling. The constant alternation of the two secures the benefits of both, without the inconvenience of either. As the season for travelling in Switzerland is the hottest of the year, and as in the valleys the temperature is excessive, so great danger would be incurred by the invalid's attempting pedestrian ex- * The writer of this has little hesitation in averring, that he walked full half of the whole distance which was traversed in this tour ; that is, that in a quarter of a year he walked twelve or thirteen hundred miles. TOUR OF HEALTH. 189 ercise in the middle of the day. But by travelling passively in the hot valleys, and walking whenever the temperature is moderate or the ground elevated, he derives all the advantage which exercise of both kinds can possibly confer, without any risk to his health. The journeys on this tour varied from 20 to 50 , or 60 miles in the day, and were always concluded by sunset—often much before that period. The usual routine of meals was, some coffee at sunrise, and then exercise, either in perambulations, excur- sions, or on the first stage of the day's journey. At noon, a dejeune ala fourcheite, and then immediately to exercise or to travel; concluding the journey and the exercise of the day by dinner at 8 o'clock at the table d'hote, where a company, of all nations, varying from 10 to 50 or 60 people, were sure to assemble, with appetites of tigers rather than of men. By ten, or half past ten, all were in bed, and there was seldom a waking interval from that time till six in the morning, the punctual hour of rising. In this circuit we experienced great and some- times very abrupt vicissitudes of temperature, as well as other atmospheric changes; but, as will be presently seen, without any bad consequences. Before I give any exposition of the moral and phys- ical effects of this kind of exercise, I may be per- mitted to premise, that I made it one of my principal studies, during the whole course of the tour, not only to investigate its physiological effects on my own person and those of the party (six in number), but to make constant inquiries among the numerous and often intelligent travellers with whom I journeyed or sojourned on the road. Many of these were in- valids—many affected with actual diseases—a con- siderable proportion had had dyspeptic complaints previously—and all were capable of describing the influence of travelling-exercise on their mental and corporeal functions. What I am going to say in 190 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. the sequel on this subject, therefore, is the result of direct personal experience and observation, in Europe and in almost every quarter of the globe, unbiased by any preconceived opinions derived from books or men. I am not without hope that my observations will be of some service to the physician as well as to the invalid, by putting them in possession of facts which cannot be ascertained under any other conditions than those under which they were investigated in the present instance, or under similar circumstances. SECOND TOUR, Through France, Switzerland, and Italy, in September, October, November, and December, 1829. 1, Dover—2, Calais—3, Montreuil—4, Granvilliers —5, Paris, (with excursions)—6, Fontainbleau-r7, Joigny—8, Montarbe—9, Dijon—10, Auxonne—11, St. Laurent—12, Geneva, (with excursions)—13, Vevey, (by Lausanne)—14, Martigny—15, Tourte- magne, in the Vallais—16, Village of the Simplon— 17, Baveno, on the Lago Maggiore, with excursions to the Islands, &c.—18, Sesto Calende,on the Ticino —19, Milan, with excursions and perambulations— 20, To the banks of the Po opposite Piacenza, and back to Milan, the bridge being broken down—21, Pavia, with perambulations—22, Piacenza—23, Bo- logna (through Parma and Modena), with excursions and perambulations—24, Caviliajo on the Apennines —25, Florence, with excursions and perambulations —26, Sienna—27, Radicofani — 28, Viterbo — 29, Rome, with various perambulations and excursions —30, Velletri—31, Mola di Gaeta—32, Naples, with various perambulations, and excursions to Pompeii, Herculaneum, &c, &c—33, Terracina—34, Rome —35, Aquapendente—36, Florence—37, Impoli—38, TOUR OF HEALTH. 191 Pisa, with excursions—39, Sarzana—40, Sistri on the Mediterranean shore—41, Genoa, with peram- bulations—42, Finale—43, St. Remo—44, Nice, with perambulations—45, Antibes—46, 47, 48, 49, to Lyons (day and night by the diligence)—50, by water to Chalons—51,2, 3, 4, to Paris, by diligence —55, 56, Calais—57, Dover—58, London. In this second tour, then, there were fifty-eight days spent in regular journeys, and about forty days in perambulations. The space traversed in this tour amounted to about 3500 miles, and, with the exception of eight or ten days, it was entirely in the open air, and a considerable proportion of it pedestrian, especially in mountainous parts. As compared with the former tour, I would say, that Switzerland and Germany are more conducive to the health of the body—Italy to the pleasures, or at least the excitement of the mind. In other words, I would say that the first tour is more adapted for the Invalid—the second, for a person in a consider- able degree of health. The Italian excursion, in fact, was undertaken rather as a relaxation from the " wear and tear" of modern Babylon, than as a means of restoring lost health. The renovation, however, of physical energies, was not less apparent nor real on this, than on the former tour. I may be permitted to instance a few incidents illustrating the immunity which this kind of exercise confers on travellers when exposed to vicissitudes of climate and malarious impressions. The transition from the valley of the Rhone to the summit of the Simplon is not inconsiderable. We slept one night at Tourtemagne, in the Vallais, and found it very sultry. The next night we slept in the dreary Hotel de la Poste, in the village of the Simplon, among snow and ice, without the least in- convenience, much less detriment. It is in Italy, however, that the transition of temperature and other atmospherical alterations are most severely 192 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. felt, especially by invalids who are incapable of taking strong exercise, or who dare not expose themselves freely to the open air in all weathers. The change of climate from Bologna to the sum- mit of the Apennines, though not so abrupt as that from Sion to the village of the Simplon, is perhaps more, trying to the constitution. It was exceed- ingly hot all the way up the Apennines, and night as well as a storm overtook us before we got to our solitary inn at Caviliajo—" the scene of one of those deep-laid confederacies for plunder and as- sassination, of which Italy has always been a pro- lific theatre."* Notwithstanding the tales of banditti and the pelting of the storm, we slept securely, and started at daylight next morning to pursue our journey down to the romantic Val d'Arno, and that without catching either cold or rheumatism. But although regular exercise fortifies us much against atmospherical transitions or even malaria, yet, if carried to fatigue, it has rather a contrary effect. An instance may not be uninstructive, especially to travellers. I shall transcribe it from my notes on this tour. Having arrived at Sienna, about two hours before night, and having only that time to see the place, I jumped from the carriage, without ta- king any note of the hotel where we stopped, and wandered, as was my custom, through all parts of the city, till long after it was dark. At length fa- tigue, cold, and hunger reminded me of their anti- dotes ; but not knowing the name either of the street or the hotel where we had halted, I was forced to wan- der about full another hour before 1 was able to re- join my companions. I should not have mentioned this trifling incident, were it not on account of what followed, and which often follows fatigue and ex- posure to night air in Italy. We started at daybreak, and, as the sun rose, * Rome in the 19th century. TOUR OF HEALTH. 193 and indeed for two hours afterward, the whole country presented the appearance of a placid lake, studded with small islands, each crowned with a town, village, convent, or castle. This phenomenon is occasioned by a dense fog, which covers the val- leys, and looks like a sheet of water, leaving the lops of the hills free, on which almost the whole of the towns, villages, &c. are built. The air was remarkably raw—and, about half-way between Si- enna and Buono Convento (a road where malaria notoriously prevails), I experienced the premonitory horrors of an ague-fit, and the first, or cold stage of the " foul fiend." The fatigue and exhaustion of the preceding evening had doubtless predis- posed me to this attack; and those who have felt the horrible depression of spirits attendant on an attack of malaria fever, can appreciate the feelings which rushed across my mind under the expect- ancy of being laid up on the dreary mountain of Radicofani, with some serious or fatal malady! Fortunately the day became very hot—I walked up two or three of the steep mountains on this road— passed at once from the stage of shivering to that of perspiration, and balked the malaria of Buono Convento. The ascent to Radicofani is five tedious Italian miles. The evening was setting in, as we dragged our weary way up the mountain—the cold was intense—the scenery was that of desolation and despair. So loudly did the tramontane winds howl through every chink and chamber of the dreary caravansary on this mountain, that I could not help regretting the removal of old Vulcan's smithery from a place where a blast of his forge would be so rich a treat to the shivering traveller. The narrow escape from malaria fever, to which I was predisposed by the fatigue above mentioned, was entirely forgotten the next day, on entering the holy territory of the pope—surveying the romantic see- 194 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. nery about Aquapendente, the Lake of Bolsena, Mon- tefiascone, and Viterbo, which was the next night's place of repose. It is not, perhaps, in the northern, the Alpine, and the Apennine portions of fair Italy that atmo- spherical transitions are so trying, as in the appa- rently more favoured regions of that fairy land—for instance, about Naples. There the tramontanes, al- ternating with the sirocco, produce the most remark- able effects on the human constitution. It might be said without much exaggeration, that in Italy almost every breeze comes over a volcano or an iceberg— and, consequently, we are alternately scorched by the one and frozen by the other! I shall ever re- member the debilitating—almost annihilating, ef- fects of a sirocco at Naples. It was far worse than the hot land-winds at Madras or Vizagapatam in the month of May! On the coast of Coromandel, the land-winds are dry, however hot; but the sirocco, as it sweeps over the Mediterranean from the burn- ing sands of Africa, saturates itself with aqueous va- pour, and is then poured in boiling steam on the shores of Italy. The depressing effects of this si- rocco are indescribable. After dragging my weary limbs through all the streets of Naples during a whole day of this furnace-blast from Libya, I started at daylight next morning for Pompeii, and that under a most piercing blast of the tramontane. Yet no injury was sustained by a day's exposure to the chil- ling blast—on account of the seasoning produced by nine or ten weeks of previous and almost perpetual motion in the open air. The consciousness of security against atmospher- ical transitions and malarious impressions has often led me to do, in travelling, what I should be very sorry to do under other circumstances—and which, indeed, would not be very wise under any circum- stances. Take the following for an example. We started from Terracina a little before sunset, TOUR OF HEALTH. 195 in a carriage very badly calculated for four, but com- pelled by the villanous courier of the pope (for which I hope he has never received absolution) to hold an additional passenger, in the shape (if shape he had) of his own pot-bellied son, besides baggage and luggage enough to load a caravan. Nothing but the philos- ophy of observing the Pontine Marshes at night could have induced me to bear, with any degree of pa- tience, the infernal breath of the father and his ur- chin, between whom I voluntarily placed myself to give some invalid companions all the accommodation which their health and sufferings required. But pa- tience has its bounds, and at the end of the first stage I got on the outside of the coach, rather to breathe the deleterious gases emitted from the fens, than in- hale the mephitic airs generated within this infernal caldron. The atmosphere was still as the grave —the moon shone faintly through a halo of fogs— and a dense vapour rose in all directions around us, emitting the most strange and sickly odour which I ever experienced on any part of the earth's surface. Under other and ordinary circumstances, I should have felt some alarm at thus exposing myself to the full influence of nocturnal emanations from the deadly marshes over which we were passing; but a consciousness of the life which I had led for three months, inspired me with complete contempt for any morbific influence which air or earth could di- rect against me. I crossed the fens in this philo- sophic mood, while the courier of St. Peter kept the windows of the coach closely shut against the dan- gerous malaria of the night. I would not advise others to imitate this rash conduct on my part. Many have paid dearly for their curiosity—and myself among the rest—if not on this, on various Other occasions. " Video meliora proboque Deteriora sequor!" 196 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. The greatest trial for the constitution which I encountered on this tour was on the road between Genoa and Nice, late in the month of November, 1829—a year in which the cold set in unusually early, and with uncommon rigour. After dinner at Savona, 1 rambled down to the harbour; and while I shivered under the chilling tramontane, I was struck with the peculiar aspect of the sky towards the Alps, and the horizon over the sea. The latter was hazy, but the heavens pre- sented a lurid appearance which betokened some- thing unusual. At this moment I cast my eye on a column bearing the statue of the Virgin, and on the pedestal read the following couplet:— " In mare irato, insubita procella, Invoco te, Maria, nostra benigna stella !" While returning to the inn and repealing these lines, my attention was attracted by a huge female chemise hung out at the door of a shop, which appeared to me of very peculiar construction. It was nearly an inch in thickness, and lined with cotton-wool which seemed to defy the coldest tramontane that ever descended from the Alps. By some strange association of ideas, 1 jumbled together in my mind a " subita procella" and this comfortable chemise as a " benigna stella," that might be as useful in a snow- storm on the Alps, as the Virgin herself in a tempest on the ocean. I instantly purchased the chemise— and I am very certain that, to this article of female dress, I owe the preservation of my life. At the inn I amused myself for half an hour in getting into this same chemise, though I had great difficulty in compelling my clothes to button over it. When I summoned the waiter to pay my bill, the man stared at my sudden increase of size, and cast an inquiring glance at a bed that was in the room, ev- idently suspecting that I had made free with the blankets! I soon convinced him that I was pos- TOUR OF HEALTH. 197 sessed of nothing but my own property—and away we trotted for Finale, where we arrived rather late. I could only see that this town lay at the foot of a very steep mountain, over whose bluff promontory, overhanging the waves, we were to pass in the morning before daylight. At the Hotel de Chine I fell in with an old fellow-traveller, a Polytechnic student (travelling en voiturier), and we supped to- gether very comfortably by a blazing fire. I was awaked several times in the night by strange noises, as if all the doors and window-shutters in Finale were in motion; and at four o'clock in the morning, when roused for a long journey to St. Remo, I per- ceived that sleet was falling, and that a high wind prevailed. The cold was severe, and the night, or rather morning, was dark as pitch. I took care to wrap myself in all the warm clothing I possessed, not forgetting the " benigna stella" of the Savona Virgin, with something like a presentiment of impending danger—a depression of spirits not un- frequently felt at the approach of a storm. As we slowly ascended the zig-zag path of the mountain, the wind increased in violence, and the sleet pene- trated every crevice of our clothes. By the time we had got nearly to the summit it blew a hurri- cane ; and, the ground becoming covered with snow, all distinct trace of the road was soon lost! We heard the Mediterranean roaring beneath us on our left, and saw the sheets of white foam sweeping along the shore—while stupendous rocks towered over our heads on the right—and we could perceive that we were winding along the brink of a horrible precipice, on a path not more than eleven or twelve feet in breadth, and apparently without any parapet! The nizzard, who, all along, carefully led the horse, now made a full stop, and, crossing himself, muttered some exclamation, or perhaps a prayer, which I could not distinctly hear or under- 198 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. stand. After a few seconds of painful suspense, he acknowledged that he was afraid of proceeding, and thought we had better try to get back to Finale. But the road was so narrow that two car- riages of any kind could not pass, except in particu- lar places where niches were hollowed out of the rock for this purpose. I then dismounted, and found, to my surprise and dismay, that, my limbs were so benumbed that I could scarcely support myself! He attempted to turn the carricello ; but experienced great difficulty as well as some danger in this operation. And when, at last, he effected it, he soon became convinced that it was utterly im- possible to make head against the storm of wind, sleet, and snow which poured along this defile, in a direction contrary to our retreat! In the whole course of my life 1 never experienced such sensa- tions of cold. The tramontane blast came down from the Alps, so voracious of caloric, that it sucked the vital heat from every pore of my body ! Here we lingered for full an hour, unable to get back, and fearing to proceed forward. We repeatedly heard fragments of rock detached from the precipices above us by the hurricane, crashing from steep to steep, and rolling into the sea beneath—and we ex- pected every instant to be buried under a torrent of stones, or swept down into the roaring waves. Among the agonizing thoughts that rushed across my mind in this perilous situation, the inscription on the pedestal of the Virgin's statue at Savona recurred to my memory; and, as the mental ener- gies are often enfeebled by danger, doubt, and bodily fatigue, the very name of the place we had left— Finale—suggested the superstitious and unmanly presentiment that this mountain pass and this snow- storm were destined to be the last scene of my mortal career! I now regretted, when too late, that curiosity had led me along this road at so ad- vanced a period of the season, and in so hurried a TOUR OF HEALTH. 199 manner; and while shivering on this Alpine prom- ontory, exposed to the freezing blast, and other dangers still more imminent, the thought of "friends and distant home" recalled to mind the picture which Thomson drew of a man perishing in a snow-storm—a recollection which added the misery of reminiscence to the peril and poignancy of present sufferings ! The hour which passed in this situation, before the day glimmered upon us, ap- peared to be an age—and here 1 became convinced that the article of clothing which I purchased at Savona was mainly instrumental in preserving my life. This sudden reflection threw a gleam of hope over the dreary scene, long before the beams of the sun illumined our path; and a superstitious emotion contributed to revive my drooping spirits, as it had previously tended to depress them. When I say that the additional article of dress proved a preservative of life on this trying occa- sion, I am aware that nothing would have been effectual, had I not been inured to atmospherical vicissitudes by three months' travelling in the open air previously. Yet as— " Whatever link we strike, Tenth or ten thousandth, breaks the chain alike—" so I am deeply impressed with the conviction that, to the Virgin of Savona or to her holy chemise, I owe my salvation on the mountain of Finale. On my arrival at Nice, I found a courier laid up with dangerous, if not fatal inflammation of the lungs, from exposure to the same storm on the same mountain. At length the dawn appeared, though the hurri- cane continued with unabated violence, and the Mediterranean was one immense sheet of foam. The poor nizzard, who was almost as lifeless as myself, assisted me into the carricello, and we cau- 200 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. tiously pursued our journey.* The exhaustion and terror of this morning induced such an irresistible propensity to sleep, that it was with the greatest difficulty I could keep myself from falling into a fatal lethargy, till we got to a village beyond the mountain, where coffee and a blazing fire recruited our exhausted frames. But during the whole of that day I felt that I was on the verge of a serious illness—and it was not till after a good night's sleep at St. Remo, that I shook off the effects of the most terrible exposure and imminent danger which I had ever before encountered. The journey through France, from Antibes to Calais, was one continued scene of snow, ice, and sleet—and yet, coming from the warm skies of Italy, I never caught even a common cold between Naples and London.f, THIRD TOUR. Home Circuit, 1832. 1, 2, 3, The steamer to Edinburgh—4, Newhaven to Stirling, by steam—5, Callander1—6, The Tro- sachs—7, Loch Katrine, Loch Lomond, Dumbarton —8, Greenock—9, By the Kyles of Bute to East Tarbet—(excursion by the Crinan Canal, to the Corrivrechan, &c, &c.)—10, Inverary (with excur- sion)—11, Dalmally—12, By Loch Awe to Oban— 13, To Tobemorey—14, Staffa, Iona, Oban—15, Dunstaffhage, Glen-Etive, Ballahulish—16, By the Valley of Glenco, Black Moor, &c. to Tyndrum— 17, Tyndrum to Killin—18, Kenmore, by Loch Tay —19, Dunkeld—20, Killicrankie—21, Inverness, * When the sun rose, we perceived the whole country, in every direction, covered with snow. t See "Change of Air, or the Pursuit of Health," lately published by the author.—3d Edition. TOUR OF HEALTH. 201 with various excursions to Kraig Phaedric, &c.— 22, Caledonian Cknal, Fall of Fyers, &c.—23, Fort William—24, Oban—25, Inverary, across Loch Awe —26, To Loch Lomond—27, Grencroe—28, Glas- gow—29, Ailsa (excursion)—30, Lanark, Falls of the Clyde—-31, Gretna Green—32, Carlisle—33, 34, English Lakes—35, 36, Liverpool—37, Manchester, Railroads—38, Birmingham—39, 40, 41, Leaming- ton, Kennilworth, &c.—42, Cheltenham, with excur- sions, &c.—43, London. ' Thus this highland excursion occupied 43 days of travelling, and about 28 days of sojourn or excur- sions. Two delicate females accompanied me, and were exposed, on various occasions, to great in- clemencies of weather, vicissitudes of temperature, rough fare, sometimes to wet beds, and, during the whole tour, to the epidemic cholera. But the con- stant exercise in the open air set at naught all dis- eases and all the causes of disease. The travellers came back to modern Babylon in prime health, and without ever thinking of bodily disorder.* Exer- cise, and especially travelling exercise in the open air, effects for our constitutions what Mackintosh does for our cloaks—it renders them air-tight and water-proof. And here I would offer a piece of advice to some of my countrymen and country- women, who spend a great deal of time and money in the neighbourhood of Cavendish Square and Dover-street, swallowing large quantities of peptic precepts and blue-pill, under Drs. A. B. C, &c.—a class of people who contrive to imagine real ills, till at length they realize imaginary ones:—the advice is, to go to the Highland mountains, for change of complexion as well as change of air. They will there find water enough to " raze out the written troubles of the brain"—and air enough * Vide the Recess, or Autumnal Relaxation in the High- lands and Lowlands. By James Johnson, M. D. Octavo. Highley, Fleet-street. Price 7s. 6d. 202 ECONOMY OF HEALTH. to disperse the " green and yellow melancholy" that hangs upon their countenances—and exercise sufficient to transform their spermaceti muscles into something like youthful and elastic fibre. Let these victims of morbid sensibility—perhaps of morbid fancy, traverse the Highland mountains for a couple of months, and they will learn to prefer oat-cake to calomel, whiskey to senna draughts, and grouse to gruel. FOURTH TOUR OF HEALTH, 1834. Holland.—Germany.—Switzerland.—Italy, * Si!