CHAPTER I.
PREGNANCY, PARTURITION AND CHILDBED. Labor Among Primitive Peoples | ||
As I have treated fully of the third stage of labor in my last paper, I shall in no way here refer to it, but will at once pass to the consideration of the puerperal stage, and as so
Among the Apaches, it is deemed very essential that, as soon as the placenta is expelled, the woman should be kept on her feet, walking about for half an hour or more, so as to favor a free discharge of all retained blood and prevent its coagulation in the womb. The same custom is observed among the Dakotas, among the Flat-Heads, Pend-d'oreilles, Kootenais, and among other of the Indians of the Pacific coast, and wherever it is not especially mentioned I should suppose that the custom was at least unconsciously observed, because it is rarely the case that the Indian squaw remains abed after her confinement; she certainly moves about sufficiently to accomplish the end desired, even if it is not done with the purpose definitely in view. It will be remembered that upon the banks of a stream was the place usually sought by the laboring woman among primitive people the world over for her solitary confinement; delivered of her child she bathes in the cleansing waters—this is done by most of our Indians, by some of the natives of Africa, the inhabitants of Ceram, the still savage tribe of the Yurakere, by the natives of Bolivia, the Sandwich Islands, the Antilles, and of India. It is everywhere the same; the mother, usually with her babe in her arms, plunges into the stream to cleanse herself; or, if the labor is conducted by a midwife, she leads the patient to the water where she is washed secundem artem, redressed, and then allowed to return to her place of seclusion or to her home, and very frequently to work, according to the varying customs among different tribes.
Among many of the tribes of the Sclavonians, several buckets of warm water are poured over the patient's abdomen; the Klamaths steam themselves—a custom which they continue for several days after delivery. The Pahutes also continue their ablutions frequently for days after confinement, mother and father both indulging in frequent washings in imitation of some original first parents,
The Binder, which is now gradually passing away among civilized people, has its representative among some of the savage races: the squaw belt is used among most of the Sioux tribes, and is applied by them during confinement, either before the expulsion of the child or before the expulsion of the placenta, and is worn until the next day. It is a leather belt about four inches wide with three buckles. The Kiowas, Comanches and Wichitas use a broad bandage of buckskin, ornamented with beads, which they buckle tightly around the abdomen of the mother immediately after the completion of labor, and this bandage is thus worn for about a month. Some of the Sioux tribes use a broader belt, with a compress underneath, which is worn for a length of time. The Klatsops also make use of a squaw belt, retaining it as long as convenient to the wearer. Of some of our Indians, especially the Yumas, I am expressly told that they wear no bandage; and in old Calabar a handkerchief simply is tied around the abdomen and twisted so as to make it more like a cincture than a bandage; it is placed right over the hard contracting womb. In Syria the regular broad bandage is worn.
With regard to the time of the puerperium, or the time of rest which is given the woman in childbed, there is a greater
Similar beliefs existed among many ancient people: in Athens the puerpera was considered unclean, and whoever touched her was forbidden to visit an altar; even the midwife who was present at the confinement was obliged to perform a religious cleansing of her hands at the feast of the Amphidromies, when the new-born child was carried about the family altar. When the Isle of Delos was to be made a sacred island it was forbidden that a confinement should take place within its shores.
It is evident enough why the ancient Israelites considered the puerpera unclean during the first days after childbirth, but it seems difficult to explain why this uncleanliness should have lasted seven days after the birth of a male and fourteen after that of a female child. Kotelman believes that it was because the female sex was considered the weaker, the most despised, and the one which would cause the most uncleanliness. It is remarkable that among the Greeks the same idea was prevalent.
In the second period, during the white flow, the puerpera was obliged to remain at home for thirty-three days for a boy and sixty-six days for a girl baby, but was no longer considered
The Wakamba of Africa put their parturient to work four to six days after confinement. The Wazegua alone permit the woman to rest abed for fourteen days. Most of these tribes also purify by washing with hot water. The Abyssinians and the Somali use slack lime. The women of the Waswaheli sometimes insert the juice of a lemon into the vagina to hasten contraction. The Wakamba ordain a coitus about the third day, and after this the puerpera is considered clean. Among some of the African tribes the women carry an ebony staff for forty days after confinement, for the purpose of keeping off the devil.
The North American Indians seem to be less careful of their women. I am positively informed of the Sioux, the Santees, the Apaches, the Indians of the Neah-Bay Agency, as well as the natives of Ceram and of the Antilles, and the Yuricaria of Bolivia, that they practically observe no period of childbed, but go to work upon the same day or the day after that of their confinement. Other of our Indian tribes observe a certain period of rest; those of the Uinta valley take up their abode in the "wick-e-up'' in which they are confined, and return to the lodge occupied by the family after from two to four weeks, and during this period they are considered to a certain extent unclean. The women of the Laguna Pueblo remain unwashed and in bed for four days; very early on the fifth the puerpera is washed and dressed under the superintendence of a Sheaine or priest, who walks out, followed by the women, to see the sun rise and to render thanks for her safe delivery. As she walks after the Sheaine she throws corn blossoms into the air and blows them around as an offering of thanks. Thirty days after the child is born, the woman is clean and her husband returns to her, but some prefer to wait thirty-six, and others forty days. A good many
Very little or no attention is paid to the food which women receive after childbirth, yet some tribes make a reasonable change in their diet. The Kalmucks feed the puerpera mainly on broth during the first days, giving her but very little mutton, the quantity of meat being gradually increased. Among other of the Russian tribes, as I have already stated, the isolation of the patient is so complete that she is but scantily nourished and glad to get anything she can, and often, together with her offspring, suffers actual want. In Syria, mutton or chicken broth is given on the first and second days, then carminative drinks, cinnamon tea and so on, for six days, after which the quantity of food is gradually increased. In Old Calabar, the patient is allowed a pot full of chop, which her husband has prepared during the labor, to be given her, and she is expected to eat a quantity of it immediately after confinement. In southern India, the natives seem to pay greater attention to the diet of the puerperal woman than in almost any other country. Certain of the native tribes live for three days after delivery on the tender leaf bud or cabbage of a kind of date palm, Phœnix sylvestris, after which rice or other food, to which they are accustomed, is partaken of. The Domber give her plain rice on the first day, and on the second chillie powder and curry-pillay is mixed with the rice. Among the Kanikars the puerpera receives as a tonic for the first day a kari (ragout) seasoned with turmeric pepper and tamarind.
The negroes of Africa, as a rule, make very little change. The Waswaheli and Nyassa give the puerpera food highly seasoned with Cayenne pepper and other spices. The Wakamba, like the natives of the Andaman islands, make
Of the medicines used in the puerperal condition, I can only learn that in Mexico teas from native herbs are given to increase the discharge of the lochia; the same is accomplished in southern India by the use of saffron and neem leaves. In Syria, carminative drinks are given. In Siam, hot water has eased the thirst produced by the parching fire; whilst in Africa it is given to increase the flow of milk. Among the natives of Russia many of the stronger and more aromatic herbs are used in the various diseases, and many methods of treatment are resorted to in mammary affections, which seem to be very common in the puerperal state, as the remedies are so numerous. I will mention but one, on account of its peculiarity. In case of hardening of the breast, the patient places herself in front of the heated stove in order to warm the diseased part as thoroughly as possible. In the mean time some other person heats a woollen sock, which has been moistened with the urine of the patient, places it as hot as it can be borne upon her breast and attempts to keep the breast as well as the sock hot and moistened with urine; then some iron utensil, a knife or horse-shoe, chilled in ice, is placed upon the affected breast. The hotter and more moist the breast is, and the colder the iron, the more certainly will the cure be effected. I will not refer to any of the ceremonies which are here and there observed,
"The treatment resorted to is not alike in all the tribes; some with whom I have come in contact require the woman to keep on her feet the greater part of the day, taking short walks around the camp and resting only when she becomes very weary; as a support she uses a staff, an instrument through the aid of which relief comes, as the body is frequently bent forward which brings the abdominal walls immediately over the uterus against the upper end of the stick, on which she also holds her hand, as a man walks with a cane; for a period of three or four days the woman continues the prescribed walks, with an occasional hour in a reclining posture to rest her feet; then she is considered well. The object of this, as old women of the tribe informed me, is to facilitate the flow of the lochia; they think that should the woman lie in bed the blood would accumulate in the abdominal cavity and she must die.
From all I can learn about the practice of the Indians here before the white men came among them, their procedure in the after-treatment was solely for the purpose of encouraging a
Those tribes of Indians on the Pacific coast who follow a different course of treatment, place the woman on a bed as soon after delivery as possible, securely wrap her in a blanket or some covering, and place her near the fire, where she is kept in a closely wrapped condition to escape taking cold and having fever; here she is kept for four or five days, when she at once takes charge of the babe and resumes all the duties that fall to the lot of an Indian woman.
During two and a half years' life among the Indians I neither saw nor heard of a case of puerperal fever, puerperal eclampsia or any diseases peculiar to lying-in women. Neither did a death in labor come under my observation; few women have any mammary trouble, notwithstanding their being exposed to the same cause that is a prolific source of mammary complication among white women.''
The absence of mammary trouble, as observed by Dr. Field among the Indians of the Pacific coast, is true of most peoples living in a comparatively natural state, as the chest is either exposed or only loosely draped, so that the gland is not irritated by closely fitting garments; on the contrary, it is hardened by exposure, the muscular and glandular system is strengthened, or rather allowed to develop naturally; the shape of the breast is not artificially altered, and no artificial support is given it, but the muscles are allowed to perform their functions, which is the case among civilized women only during the period of nursing, when the weakened, atrophied fibres are at once called upon to perform this service in case of a temporary hypertrophied gland, which was never asked of them under ordinary circumstances.
All parts of the organ remain more fully developed and more hardy, less liable to inflammation than among those races accustomed to the laces, straps and stays of civilization and fashion.
Among some of these people peculiarly situated, such as the Arabs (Corré), fissure of the nipples is said to be frequent, owing to a lack of care of the breasts and exposure to external violence, perhaps to the irritating sands of the desert: the usual consequences follow—inflammation, induration, and
Corré observes a fact, well known in this Mississippi Valley, that the breasts in lactation, just as the uterus in its condition of activity in pregnancy and in the puerperium can, allow a local center for malarial irritation; malaria is as much at home in the vast valleys and deltas of the great rivers of Asia and Africa as it is in our own Mississippi, and milk fevers with malarial types are frequently observed, and yield as readily to quinine among the Negroes, Hindoos or Arabs as among our own people.
As our civilization suffers in comparison with the primitive state in so many of the features of generation, so it does in the nursing of the new-born. One sentence in La Mere et l'Enfant tersely states a very sore point; he truly says: "Among all people except the most civilized the mother's milk is considered the proper nourishment for the children.''
The husband, at all other times the lord and master, is placed in rather a peculiar, sometimes ludicrous position, as we have just related, among certain peoples; if ever, it is during the period of recent maternity, in child-birth and childbed, that a certain amount of regard is involuntarily paid the wife by savage peoples, and I would take issue with Corre,[4] who claims that the exclusion of men from the lying-in-room is not the result of modesty. He says: "Our feeling of shame and modesty is a refinement entirely unknown to many people, and shown by others in the most peculiar ways. Among many a woman in labor can only be attended by one of her own sex; this is because among savages woman is a most inferior being, despised and dare not aspire to the assistance of men. She is worth so little and so easily replaced; she is good for the bearing of children, to look after them, and to give satisfaction to her master, but especially to do the rough work in the fields As soon as she is a nuisance she is left, she is sold, she is killed, and sometimes she is eaten for fear of letting a good piece of meat escape.''
During this trying period at least a better feeling prevails, as is proven by many of the instances related; and Corre himself, in his extremely valuable and interesting work, tells us how the sufferings of the parturient, in Old Calabar, are concealed by the laughter and conversation of surrounding relatives, that not a cry be heard, as it would dishonor her and cause the family to repudiate her; at the same time the husband is clothed like a woman, put to bed and sighs terribly, as if he was enduring great suffering.
A similar custom formerly existed in Greenland and still prevails in Guiana, among certain Canadian tribes and the Caribeans: while the woman who has been delivered attends to her household duties in the interior of the house, her husband goes to bed and receives in her place the visits of condolence from friends and relatives. Among the ancient Corsicans a similar custom existed, and is still observed in our day in some of the regions of the Pyrenees. It is also found among certain African tribes.
This peculiar comedy is doubtless for the purpose of causing the woman to forget her trouble and give her an innocent revenge for the suffering which she alone has supported in the work of reproduction.—(Corre.)
It certainly does appear to be a certain acknowledgement of her fortitude and suffering, and shows a certain amount of respect, however passing it may be.
I have treated more particularly of the puerperium among the red races, and will add some interesting facts from the work above referred to.
In the Antilles and Guiana hemorrhages are severe, prolapses frequently caused by brutal intervention of the negroes. As soon as delivery is effected food is offered, meat or some mixture of milk, palm oil and tamarind, and after a few hours the usual labors in the house are again taken up, without going outside during six or seven days.
In China more pains are taken, but with little more understanding; the patient is put to bed but not permitted to sleep, because this might weaken her and prevent the proper circulation of the blood. She must rest upon a high bed, lie
Many peoples have a superstitious faith in the use of heat immediately after confinement, some instances of which I have already cited: so among the Rouconyennes a steam bath is taken in a hammock under which a large stone heated by the fire is placed; upon this water is thrown. In a few hours the usual occupations are again taken up. When the Anamite is delivered a vessel filled with hot coals is placed under her bed, and the fire kept going night and day; the stomach is rubbed twice a day with a vessel filled with hot coals. Dry food is given, spiced and very dry. At the door of the house, at the end of a long pole, a pot of charcoal is placed as a sign of labor, and that the entry is forbidden to such whose labors have been difficult or followed by death; when the lighted end of the charcoal is turned towards the interior of the house, a boy is born; if turned outwards, a girl is born. It is a custom throughout Annam that the puerpera must take a medicine consisting of a decoction of laxatives and purgatives. During the month of her child-bed her husband abstains from all work, and must give all his care to his wife and child and to make the necessary preparation for this. The mother cannot leave the house before four weeks, and in order to preserve her from the evil influences of the air she is bandaged, head and feet, with saffron. In Siam the woman is placed before the fire after delivery, and if you ask: where is so and so, the answer is given: she is before the fire.
The Hindoo woman suffers likewise; when labor is over she is placed in a small, ill ventilated room, without any other opening except the door, which is usually closed, and smoked by a wooden fire, which is constantly kept up, and condemned to isolation in a terrible atmosphere; she is, moreover, obliged to abstain from food: during the first three days she must take a powder composed of stimulating spices, and during
This frequent resort to fire seems to arise from an instinctive idea to protect the puerpera from cold, but it certainly is beneficial in so far as it allows her a certain period of rest, and may it not hasten uterine contraction and prevent hemorrhage? The amount of heat applied is at least equal to that of hot water, which we now resort to for the purpose of arresting hemorrhage.
However little apparent, good reasons exist for many of these seemingly ludicrous customs, and good results often follow; harmful as they appear to us, they are probably necessitated by the peculiar customs of the people, and greater havoc among them would follow their neglect.
CHAPTER I.
PREGNANCY, PARTURITION AND CHILDBED. Labor Among Primitive Peoples | ||