1747. Passive Exercises
Passive kinds of exercise, on the contrary, are better calculated for
children; old, thin, and emaciated persons of a delicate and
debilitated constitution; and particularly for the asthmatic and
consumptive.
1748. Time
The time at which exercise is most proper depends on such a variety of
concurrent circumstances, that it does not admit of being regulated by
any general rules, and must therefore be collected from the
observations made on the effects of air, food, drink, &c.
1749. Duration
With respect to the duration of exercise, there are other particulars,
relative to a greater or less degree of fatigue attending the
different species, and utility of it in certain states of the mind and
body, which must determine this consideration as well as the preceding.
1750. Accustomed Exercise
That exercise is to be preferred which, with a view to brace and
strengthen the body, we are most accustomed to. Any unusual one may be
attended with a contrary effect.
1751. Gradual Beginning and End
Exercise should be begun and finished gradually, never abruptly.
1752. Open Air Preferable
Exercise in the open air has many advantages over that used within
doors.
1753. Over-Indulgence
To continue exercise until a profuse perspiration or a great degree of
weariness takes place, is far from being wholesome.
1754. Early Exercise
In the forenoon, when the stomach is not too much distended, muscular
motion is both agreeable and healthful; it strengthens digestion, and
heats the body less than with a full stomach; and a good appetite
after it is a proof that it has not been carried to excess.
1755. Care Before Eating
But at the same time it should be understood, that it is not advisable
to take violent exercise immediately before a meal, as digestion might
thereby be retarded.
1756. Time Before Eating
Neither should we sit down to a substantial dinner or supper
immediately on returning from a fatiguing walk, at the time when the
blood is heated, and the body in a state of perspiration from previous
exertion, as the worst consequences may arise, especially when the
meal is commenced with cooling dishes, salad, or a glass of cold drink.
1757. Not After Meals
Exercise is always hurtful after meals, from its impeding digestion,
by propelling those fluids too much towards the surface of the body
which are designed for the solution of the food in the stomach.
1758. Walking
To walk gracefully, the body must be erect, but not stiff, and the
head held up in such a posture that the eyes are directed forward. The
tendency of untaught walkers is to look towards the ground near the
feet; and some persons appear always as if admiring their shoe-ties.
The eyes should not thus be cast downward, neither should the chest
bend forward to throw out the back, making what are termed round
shoulders; on the contrary, the body should be held erect, as if the
person to whom it belongs were not afraid to look the world in the
face, and the chest by all means be allowed to expand. At the same
time, everything like strutting or pomposity must be carefully
avoided. An easy, firm, and erect posture is alone desirable. In
walking, it is necessary to bear in mind that the locomotion is to be
performed entirely by the legs. Awkward persons rock from side to
side, helping forward each leg alternately by advancing the haunches.
This is not only ungraceful but fatiguing. Let the legs alone advance,
bearing up the body.
1759. Utility of Singing
It has been asserted, and we believe with some truth, that singing is
a corrective of the too common tendency to pulmonic complaints. Dr.
Rush, an eminent physician, observes on this subject:
"The Germans are seldom afflicted with consumption; and this, I
believe, is in part occasioned by the strength which their lungs
acquire by exercising them in vocal music, for this constitutes an
essential branch of their education. The music master of an academy
has furnished me with a remark still more in favour of this opinion.
He informed me that he had known several instances of persons who
were strongly disposed to consumption, who were restored to health
by the exercise of their lungs in singing."
1760. The Weather and the Blood
In dry, sultry weather the heat ought to be counteracted by means of a
cooling diet. To this purpose cucumbers, melons, and juicy fruits are
subservient. We ought to give the preference to such alimentary
substances as lead to contract the juices which are too much expanded
by the heat, and this property is possessed by all acid food and
drink. To this class belong all sorts of salad, lemons, oranges,
pomegranates sliced and sprinkled with sugar, for the acid of this
fruit is not so apt to derange the stomach as that of lemons; also
cherries and strawberries, curds turned with lemon acid or cream of
tartar; cream of tartar dissolved in water; lemonade, and Rhenish or
Moselle wine mixed with water.
1761. How to get Sleep
How to get sleep is to many persons a matter of high importance.
Nervous persons who are troubled with wakefulness and excitability,
usually have a strong tendency of blood on the brain, with cold
extremities. The pressure of the blood on the brain keeps it in a
stimulated or wakeful state, and the pulsations in the head are often
painful. Let such rise and chafe the body and extremities with a brush
or towel, or rub smartly with the hands, to promote circulation, and
withdraw the excessive amount of blood from the brain, and they will
fall asleep in a few moments. A cold bath, or a sponge bath and
rubbing, or a good run, or a rapid walk in the open air, or going up
and down stairs a few times just before retiring, will aid in
equalizing circulation and promoting sleep. These rules are simple,
and easy of application in all cases.
1762. Early Rising
Dr. Wilson Philip, in his "Treatise on Indigestion," says:
"Although it is of consequence to the debilitated to go early to
bed, there are few things more hurtful to them than remaining in it
too long. Getting up an hour or two earlier often gives a degree of
vigour which nothing else can procure. For those who are not much
debilitated, and sleep well, the best rule is to get out of bed soon
after waking in the morning. This at first may appear too early, for
the debilitated require more sleep than the healthy; but rising
early will gradually prolong the sleep on the succeeding night, till
the quantity the patient enjoys is equal to his demand for it. Lying
late is not only hurtful, by the relaxation it occasions, but also
by occupying that part of the day at which exercise is most
beneficial."
1763. Appetite
Appetite is frequently lost through excessive use of stimulants, food
taken too hot, sedentary occupation, costiveness, liver disorder and
want of change of air. The first endeavour should be to ascertain and
remove the cause. Change of diet, and change of air will frequently be
found more beneficial than medicines.
1764. Temperance
"If," observes a writer, "men lived uniformly in a healthy climate,
were possessed of strong and vigorous frames, were descended from
healthy parents, were educated in a hardy and active manner, were
possessed of excellent natural dispositions, were placed in
comfortable situations in life, were engaged only in healthy
occupations, were happily connected in marriage, and kept their
passions in due subjection, there would be little occasion for
medical rules."
All this is very excellent and desirable; but, unfortunately for
mankind, unattainable.
1765. More than Man
Man must be something more than Man to be able to connect the
different links of this harmonious chain—to consolidate this
summum
bonum
of earthly felicity into one uninterrupted whole; for,
independent of all regularity or irregularity of diet, passions, and
other sublunary circumstances, contingencies, and connections,
relative or absolute, thousands are visited by diseases and
precipitated into the grave, independent of accident, to whom no
particular vice could attach, and with whom the appetite never
overstepped the boundaries of temperance. Do we not hear almost daily
of instances of men living near to and even upwards of a century? We
cannot account for this either; because of such men we know but few
who have lived otherwise than the world around them; and we have known
many who have lived in habitual intemperance for forty or fifty years,
without interruption and with little apparent inconvenience.
1766. No Link to Background
The assertion has been made by those who have attained a great age
(Parr, and Henry Jenkins, for instance), that they adopted no
particular arts for the preservation of their health; consequently, it
might be inferred that the duration of life has no dependence on
manners or customs, or the qualities of particular food. This,
however, is an error of no common magnitude.
1767. Moderation
Peasants, labourers, and other hard-working people, more especially
those whose occupations require them to be much in the open air, may
be considered as following a regulated system of moderation; and hence
the higher degree of health which prevails among them and their
families. They also observe rules; and those which it is said were
recommended by Old Parr are remarkable for good sense; namely,
"Keep your head cool by temperance, your feet warm by exercise; rise
early, and go soon to bed; and if you are inclined to get fat, keep
your eyes open and your mouth shut,"
in other words, sleep moderately, and be abstemious in
diet;—excellent admonitions, more especially to these inclined to
corpulency.
1768. Corpulence
The late Mr. William Banting, author of a "Letter on Corpulence,"
gives the following excellent advice, with a dietary for use in cases
of obesity (corpulence):
-
Medicine.—None, save a morning cordial, as a corrective.
-
Dietary.
Breakfast.—Four or five ounces of beef, mutton, kidneys,
broiled fish, bacon, or any kind of cold meat except pork, a large
cup (or two) of tea without milk or sugar, a little biscuit or dry
toast.
Dinner.—Five or six ounces of any fish except salmon, any meat
except pork, any vegetables except potatoes; one ounce of dry
toast; fruit out of a pudding; any kind of poultry or game, and
two or three glasses of claret or sherry. Port, champagne, and
beer forbidden.
Tea.—Two or three ounces of fruit; a rusk or two, and a cup or
two of tea, without milk or sugar.
Supper.—Three or four ounces of meat or fish as at dinner, with
a glass or two of claret.
Nightcap (if required).—A glass or two of grog,—whisky, gin,
or brandy,—without sugar; or a glass or two of sherry.
Mr. Banting adds,
"Dietary is the principal point in the treatment of corpulence (also
in rheumatic diseases, and even in incipient paralysis). If properly
regulated, it becomes in a certain sense a medicine. It purifies the
blood, strengthens the muscles and viscera, and sweetens life if it
does not prolong it."
1769. Advantages of a Regular Life
The advantages to be derived from a regular mode of living, with a
view to the preservation of health and life, are nowhere better
exemplified than in the precepts and practice of Plutarch, whose rules
for this purpose are excellent; and by observing them himself, he
maintained his bodily strength and mental faculties unimpaired to a
very advanced age. Galen is a still stronger proof of the advantages
of a regular plan, by means of which he is said to have reached the
great age of 140 years, without having ever experienced disease. His
advice to the readers of his "Treatise on Health" is as follows:
"I beseech all persons who shall read this work not to degrade
themselves to a level with the brutes, or the rabble, by gratifying
their sloth, or by eating and drinking promiscuously whatever
pleases their palates, or by indulging their appetites of every
kind. But whether they understand physic or not, let them consult
their reason, and observe what agrees, and what does not agree with
them, that, like wise men, they may adhere to the use of such things
as conduce to their health, and forbear everything which, by their
own experience, they find to do them hurt; and let them be assured
that, by a diligent observation and practice of this rule, they may
enjoy a good share of health, and seldom stand in need of physic or
physicians."
1770. Health in Youth
Late hours, irregular habits, and want of attention to diet, are
common errors with most young men, and these gradually, but at first
imperceptibly, undermine the health, and lay the foundation for
various forms of disease in after life. It is a very difficult thing
to make young persons comprehend this. They frequently sit up as late
as twelve, one, or two o'clock, without experiencing any ill effects;
they go without a meal to day, and to-morrow eat to repletion, with
only temporary inconvenience. One night they will sleep three or four
hours, and the next nine or ten; or one night, in their eagerness to
get away into some agreeable company, they will take no food at all,
and the next, perhaps, will eat a hearty supper, and go to bed upon
it. These, with various other irregularities, are common to the
majority of young men, and are, as just stated, the cause of much bad
health in mature life. Indeed, nearly all the shattered constitutions
with which too many are cursed, are the result of a disregard to the
plainest precepts of health in early life.
1771. Disinfecting Liquid
In a wine bottle of cold water, dissolve two ounces acetate of lead
(sugar of lead), and then add two (fluid) ounces of strong nitric acid
(aquafortis). Shake the mixture, and it will be ready for use.
A very small quantity of the liquid, in its strongest form, should be
used for cleansing all kinds of chamber utensils. For removing
offensive odours, clean cloths thoroughly moistened with the liquid,
diluted with eight or ten parts of water, should be suspended at
various parts of the room.—In this case the offensive and deleterious
gases are neutralized by chemical action.
Fumigation in the usual way is only the substitution of one odour for
another. In using the above, or any other disinfectant, let it never
be forgotten that
fresh air
, and plenty of it, is cheaper and more
effective than any other material.
1772. Disinfecting Fumigation
Common salt, three ounces; black manganese, oil of vitriol, of each
one ounce; water two ounces; carried in a cup through the apartments
of the sick; or the apartments intended to be fumigated, where
sickness has been, may be shut up for an hour or two, and then opened.
1773. Coffee a Disinfectant
Numerous experiments with roasted coffee prove that it is the most
powerful means, not only of rendering animal and vegetable effluvia
innocuous, but of actually destroying them. A room in which meat in an
advanced degree of decomposition had been kept for some time, was
instantly deprived of all smell on an open coffee-roaster being
carried through it, containing a pound of coffee newly roasted. In
another room, exposed to the effluvium occasioned by the clearing out
of the dung-pit, so that sulphuretted hydrogen and ammonia in great
quantities could be chemically detected, the stench was completely
removed in half a minute, on the employment of three ounces of
fresh-roasted coffee, whilst the other parts of the house were
permanently cleared of the same smell by being simply traversed with
the coffee-roaster, although the cleansing of the dung-pit continued
for several hours after.
The best mode of using the coffee as a disinfectant is to dry the raw
bean, pound it in a mortar, and then roast the powder on a moderately
heated iron plate, until it assumes a dark brown tint, when it is fit
for use. Then sprinkle it in sinks or cess-pools, or lay it on a plate
in the room which you wish to have purified. Coffee acid or coffee oil
acts more readily in minute quantities.
1774. Charcoal as a Disinfectant
The great efficacy of wood and animal charcoal in absorbing effluvia,
and the greater number of gases and vapours, has long been known.
Charcoal powder has also, during many centuries, been advantageously
employed as a filter for putrid water, the object in view being to
deprive the water of numerous organic impurities diffused through it,
which exert injurious effects on the animal economy. Charcoal not only
absorbs effluvia and gaseous bodies, but especially, when in contact
with atmospheric air, oxidize, and destroys many of the easily
alterable ones, by resolving them into the simplest combinations they
are capable of forming, which are chiefly water and carbonic acid. It
is on this oxidizing property of charcoal, as well as on its absorbent
power, that its efficacy as a deodorizing and disinfecting agent
chiefly depends.
1775. Charcoal as an Antiseptic
Charcoal is an antiseptic, that is to say, a substance which arrests
the decay and decomposition of animal substances. Meat, poultry, game
or fish, &c., may be preserved for a longer period in hot weather by
sprinkling it with powdered charcoal, which should be washed off in
clean cold water before the article is cooked.
1776. Charcoal Respirators
It has been proposed to employ charcoal ventilators, consisting of a
thin layer of charcoal enclosed between two thin sheets of wire gauze,
to purify the foul air which is apt to accumulate in water-closets, in
the close wards of hospitals, and in the impure atmospheres of many of
the back courts and mews-lanes of large cities, all the impurities
being absorbed and retained by the charcoal, while a current of pure
air alone is admitted into the neighbouring apartments. In this way
pure air may be obtained from exceedingly impure sources. The proper
amount of air required by houses in such situations might be admitted
through sheets of wire gauze or coarse canvas, containing a thin layer
of coarse charcoal powder.
A tolerably thick charcoal ventilator, as described above, could be
very advantageously applied to the gully-holes of common sewers, and
to the sinks in private dwellings, the foul water in both cases being
carried into the drain by means of tolerably wide syphon pipes,
retaining always about a couple of inches of water. Such an
arrangement would effectually prevent the escape of any effluvia,
would be easy of construction, and not likely to get soon out of
order.
In respirators for the mouth the air is made to pass through a quarter
of an inch of coarsely powdered charcoal, retained in its place by two
sheets of silvered wire gauze, covered over with thin woollen cloth,
by which means its temperature is greatly increased. The charcoal
respirator possesses a decided advantage over respirators of the
ordinary construction, in that all disagreeable effluvia are absorbed
by the charcoal, so that comparatively pure air is alone inhaled.
Adaptations may be made to cover the nostrils as well as the mouth,
for protecting the wearer against fevers and other infectious
diseases, and chiefly for use in chemical works, common sewers, &c.,
to protect the workmen from the noxious effects of the deleterious
gases to which they are frequently exposed.
1777. Charcoal applied to Sores, &c.
Charcoal powder has been most successfully employed at hospitals, to
arrest the progress of gangrene and other putrid sores. The charcoal
does not require to be put immediately in contact with the sores, but
is placed above the dressings, not unfrequently quilted loosely in a
little cotton wool. In many cases patients who were rapidly sinking
have been restored to health.
1778. Disinfection of Rooms
Any room, however offensive it may be, can be perfectively deodorized
by means of a few trays filled with a thin layer of freshly-heated
wood charcoal. From these and other considerations it is evident that
charcoal is one of the cheapest and best disinfectants. Unlike many
other disinfectants, it evolves no disagreeable vapours, and if heated
in close vessels will always act, however long it has been in use,
quite as effectively as at first. The efficiency of the charcoal may
be greatly increased by making it red-hot before using it. This can
easily be done by heating it in an iron saucepan covered with an iron
lid. When the charcoal is to be applied to inflammable substances,
such as wooden floors, &c., of course it must be allowed to cool in
close vessels before being used.
1779. Sir William Burnett's Disinfecting Fluid
Of late years new disinfectants for the removal of disagreeable and
offensive odours, and the preservation of meat, &c., have been brought
into use. Sir William Burnett's disinfecting fluid is too well known
to require description. It is invaluable in a sick room, and is sold
by all chemists and druggists.
1780. Glacialine
This is a new disinfectant and antiseptic, which is highly recommended
and largely used for the preservation of meats, liquids, and all goods
of a perishable character from acidity, as in the case of beer, or
decomposition. It is sold by most chemists, druggists, and oilmen.
1781. Chloride of Lime
This substance, which is well known for its bleaching properties is a
useful disinfectant. It will neutralise the foul smell arising from
drains, closets, &c., when mixed with water and thrown down the pipes
whence the smell proceeds. A little dissolved in a bucket of water,
when used in scrubbing rooms and passages, will purify them and render
them wholesome, and also whiten the boards. It is sold by oilmen &c.,
at 3d. or 4d. per lb.—a much lower rate than that at which it is sold
by chemists.
1782. Carbolic Powder and Fluid
Carbolic acid in a fluid state is a highly concentrated disinfectant,
and a strong irritant poison. Care should be taken in its use and
storage, as many lives have been lost through taking carbolic acid
under the impression that it was some medicine or beverage. It is far
safer when in the form of powder which has been impregnated with the
acid. The powder has a pink colour, is recommended by the Government,
and is sold at the rate of 2d. per pound by oilmen, &c.
1783. Domestic Hints
Why is the flesh of sheep that are fed near the sea more nutritious
than that of others?
Because the saline particles (sea salt) which they find with their
green food give purity to their blood and flesh.
1784. Domestic Hints (Marbled Fat in Meat)
Why does the marbled appearance of fat in meat indicate that it is
young and tender?
Because in young animals fat is dispersed through the muscles, but
in old animals it is laid in masses on the outside of the flesh.
1785. Domestic Hints (White and Red Meat)
Why is some flesh white and other flesh red?
White flesh contains a larger proportion of albumen, (similar to the
white of egg) than that which is red. The amount of blood retained
in the flesh also influences its colour.
1786. Domestic Hints (Raw and Cooked Oysters)
Why are raw oysters more wholesome than those that are cooked?
When cooked they are partly deprived of salt water, which promotes
their digestion; their albumen also becomes hard (like hard boiled
eggs).
1787. Domestic Hints (Green Oysters)
Why have some oysters a green tinge?
This has been erroneously attributed to the effects of copper; but
it arises from the oyster feeding upon small green sea-weeds, which
grow where such oysters are found.
1788. Domestic Hints (Twice-Boiled Cabbage)
Why is cabbage rendered more wholesome by being boiled in two
waters?
Because cabbages contain an oil, which is apt to produce bad
effects, and prevents some persons from eating "green" vegetables.
When boiled in two waters, the first boiling carries off the greater
part of this oil.
1789. Domestic Hints (Just-Scraped Horseradish)
Why should horseradish be scraped for the table only just before it
is required?
Because the peculiar oil of horseradish is very volatile; it quickly
evaporates, and leaves the vegetable substance dry and insipid.
1790. Domestic Hints (Mint with Pea Soup)
Why is mint eaten with pea soup?
The properties of mint are stomachic and antispasmodic. It is
therefore useful to prevent the flatulence that might arise,
especially from soups made of green or dried peas.
1791. Domestic Hints (Apple Sauce with Pork and Goose)