
HISTORY OF ANIMALS
350 BC
ARISTOTLE
384 BC - 322 BC
Translated by D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson
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by Aristotle
BOOK SEVEN
Part 1
As to Man's growth, first within his mother's
womb and afterward to old age, the course
of nature, in so far as man is specially
concerned, is after the following manner.
And, by the way, the difference of male and
female and of their respective organs has
been dealt with heretofore. When twice seven
years old, in the most of cases, the male
begins to engender seed; and at the same
time hair appears upon the pubes, in like
manner, so Alcmaeon of Croton remarks, as
plants first blossom and then seed. About
the same time, the voice begins to alter,
getting harsher and more uneven, neither
shrill as formerly nor deep as afterward,
nor yet of any even tone, but like an instrument
whose strings are frayed and out of tune;
and it is called, by way of by-word, the
bleat of the billy-goat. Now this breaking
of the voice is the more apparent in those
who are making trial of their sexual powers;
for in those who are prone to lustfulness
the voice turns into the voice of a man,
but not so in the continent. For if a lad
strive diligently to hinder his voice from
breaking, as some do of those who devote
themselves to music, the voice lasts a long
while unbroken and may even persist with
little change. And the breasts swell and
likewise the private parts, altering in size
and shape. (And by the way, at this time
of life those who try by friction to provoke
emission of seed are apt to experience pain
as well as voluptuous sensations.) At the
same age in the female, the breasts swell
and the so-called catamenia commence to flow;
and this fluid resembles fresh blood. There
is another discharge, a white one, by the
way, which occurs in girls even at a very
early age, more especially if their diet
be largely of a fluid nature; and this malady
causes arrest of growth and loss of flesh.
In the majority of cases the catamenia are
noticed by the time the breasts have grown
to the height of two fingers' breadth. In
girls, too, about this time the voice changes
to a deeper note; for while in general the
woman's voice is higher than the man's, so
also the voices of girls are pitched in a
higher key than the elder women's, just as
the boy's are higher than the men's; and
the girls' voices are shriller than the boys',
and a maid's flute is tuned sharper than
a lad's.
Girls of this age have much need of surveillance.
For then in particular they feel a natural
impulse to make usage of the sexual faculties
that are developing in them; so that unless
they guard against any further impulse beyond
that inevitable one which their bodily development
of itself supplies, even in the case of those
who abstain altogether from passionate indulgence,
they contract habits which are apt to continue
into later life. For girls who give way to
wantonness grow more and more wanton; and
the same is true of boys, unless they be
safeguarded from one temptation and another;
for the passages become dilated and set up
a local flux or running, and besides this
the recollection of pleasure associated with
former indulgence creates a longing for its
repetition.
Some men are congenitally impotent owing
to structural defect; and in like manner
women also may suffer from congenital incapacity.
Both men and women are liable to constitutional
change, growing healthier or more sickly,
or altering in the way of leanness, stoutness,
and vigour; thus, after puberty some lads
who were thin before grow stout and healthy,
and the converse also happens; and the same
is equally true of girls. For when in boy
or girl the body is loaded with superfluous
matter, then, when such superfluities are
got rid of in the spermatic or catamenial
discharge, their bodies improve in health
and condition owing to the removal of what
had acted as an impediment to health and
proper nutrition; but in such as are of opposite
habit their bodies become emaciated and out
of health, for then the spermatic discharge
in the one case and the catamenial flow in
the other take place at the cost of natural
healthy conditions.
Furthermore, in the case of maidens the condition
of the breasts is diverse in different individuals,
for they are sometimes quite big and sometimes
little; and as a general rule their size
depends on whether or not the body was burthened
in childhood with superfluous material. For
when the signs of womanhood are nigh but
not come, the more there be of moisture the
more will it cause the breasts to swell,
even to the bursting point; and the result
is that the breasts remain during after-life
of the bulk that they then acquired. And
among men, the breasts grow more conspicuous
and more like to those of women, both in
young men and old, when the individual temperament
is moist and sleek and the reverse of sinewy,
and all the more among the dark-complexioned
than the fair.
At the outset and till the age of one and
twenty the spermatic discharge is devoid
of fecundity; afterwards it becomes fertile,
but young men and women produce undersized
and imperfect progeny, as is the case also
with the common run of animals. Young women
conceive readily, but, having conceived,
their labour in childbed is apt to be difficult.
The frame fails of reaching its full development
and ages quickly in men of intemperate lusts
and in women who become mothers of many children;
for it appears to be the case that growth
ceases when the woman has given birth to
three children. Women of a lascivious disposition
grow more sedate and virtuous after they
have borne several children.
After the age of twenty-one women are fully
ripe for child-bearing, but men go on increasing
in vigour. When the spermatic fluid is of
a thin consistency it is infertile; when
granular it is fertile and likely to produce
male children, but when thin and unclotted
it is apt to produce female offspring. And
it is about this time of life that in men
the beard makes its appearance.
Part 2
The onset of the catamenia in women takes
place towards the end of the month; and on
this account the wiseacres assert that the
moon is feminine, because the discharge in
women and the waning of the moon happen at
one and the same time, and after the wane
and the discharge both one and the other
grow whole again. (In some women the catamenia
occur regularly but sparsely every month,
and more abundantly every third month.) With
those in whom the ailment lasts but a little
while, two days or three, recovery is easy;
but where the duration is longer, the ailment
is more troublesome. For women are ailing
during these days; and sometimes the discharge
is sudden and sometimes gradual, but in all
cases alike there is bodily distress until
the attack be over. In many cases at the
commencement of the attack, when the discharge
is about to appear, there occur spasms and
rumbling noises within the womb until such
time as the discharge manifests itself.
Under natural conditions it is after recovery
from these symptoms that conception takes
place in women, and women in whom the signs
do not manifest themselves for the most part
remain childless. But the rule is not without
exception, for some conceive in spite of
the absence of these symptoms; and these
are cases in which a secretion accumulates,
not in such a way as actually to issue forth,
but in amount equal to the residuum left
in the case of child-bearing women after
the normal discharge has taken place. And
some conceive while the signs are on but
not afterwards, those namely in whom the
womb closes up immediately after the discharge.
In some cases the menses persist during pregnancy
up to the very last; but the result in these
cases is that the offspring are poor, and
either fail to survive or grow up weakly.
In many cases, owing to excessive desire,
arising either from youthful impetuosity
or from lengthened abstinence, prolapsion
of the womb takes place and the catamenia
appear repeatedly, thrice in the month, until
conception occurs; and then the womb withdraws
upwards again to its proper place...
As we have remarked above, the discharge
is wont to be more abundant in women than
in the females of any other animals. In creatures
that do not bring forth their young alive
nothing of the sort manifests itself, this
particular superfluity being converted into
bodily substance; and by the way, in such
animals the females are sometimes larger
than the males; and moreover, the material
is used up sometimes for scutes and sometimes
for scales, and sometimes for the abundant
covering of feathers, whereas in the vivipara
possessed of limbs it is turned into hair
and into bodily substance (for man alone
among them is smooth-skinned), and into urine,
for this excretion is in the majority of
such animals thick and copious. Only in the
case of women is the superfluity turned into
a discharge instead of being utilized in
these other ways.
There is something similar to be remarked
of men: for in proportion to his size man
emits more seminal fluid than any other animal
(for which reason man is the smoothest of
animals), especially such men as are of a
moist habit and not over corpulent, and fair
men in greater degree than dark. It is likewise
with women; for in the stout, great part
of the excretion goes to nourish the body.
In the act of intercourse, women of a fair
complexion discharge a more plentiful secretion
than the dark; and furthermore, a watery
and pungent diet conduces to this phenomenon.
Part 3
It is a sign of conception in women when
the place is dry immediately after intercourse.
If the lips of the orifice be smooth conception
is difficult, for the matter slips off; and
if they be thick it is also difficult. But
if on digital examination the lips feel somewhat
rough and adherent, and if they be likewise
thin, then the chances are in favour of conception.
Accordingly, if conception be desired, we
must bring the parts into such a condition
as we have just described; but if on the
contrary we want to avoid conception then
we must bring about a contrary disposition.
Wherefore, since if the parts be smooth conception
is prevented, some anoint that part of the
womb on which the seed falls with oil of
cedar, or with ointment of lead or with frankincense,
commingled with olive oil. If the seed remain
within for seven days then it is certain
that conception has taken place; for it is
during that period that what is known as
effluxion takes place.
In most cases the menstrual discharge recurs
for some time after conception has taken
place, its duration being mostly thirty days
in the case of a female and about forty days
in the case of a male child. After parturition
also it is common for the discharge to be
withheld for an equal number of days, but
not in all cases with equal exactitude. After
conception, and when the above-mentioned
days are past, the discharge no longer takes
its natural course but finds its way to the
breasts and turns to milk. The first appearance
of milk in the breasts is scant in quantity
and so to speak cobwebby or interspersed
with little threads. And when conception
has taken place, there is apt to be a sort
of feeling in the region of the flanks, which
in some cases quickly swell up a little,
especially in thin persons, and also in the
groin.
In the case of male children the first movement
usually occurs on the right-hand side of
the womb and about the fortieth day, but
if the child be a female then on the left-hand
side and about the ninetieth day. However,
we must by no means assume this to be an
accurate statement of fact, for there are
many exceptions, in which the movement is
manifested on the right-hand side though
a female child be coming, and on the left-hand
side though the infant be a male. And in
short, these and all suchlike phenomena are
usually subject to differences that may be
summed up as differences of degree.
About this period the embryo begins to resolve
into distinct parts, it having hitherto consisted
of a fleshlike substance without distinction
of parts.
What is called effluxion is a destruction
of the embryo within the first week, while
abortion occurs up to the fortieth day; and
the greater number of such embryos as perish
do so within the space of these forty days.
In the case of a male embryo aborted at the
fortieth day, if it be placed in cold water
it holds together in a sort of membrane,
but if it be placed in any other fluid it
dissolves and disappears. If the membrane
be pulled to bits the embryo is revealed,
as big as one of the large kind of ants;
and all the limbs are plain to see, including
the penis, and the eyes also, which as in
other animals are of great size. But the
female embryo, if it suffer abortion during
the first three months, is as a rule found
to be undifferentiated; if however it reach
the fourth month it comes to be subdivided
and quickly attains further differentiation.
In short, while within the womb, the female
infant accomplishes the whole development
of its parts more slowly than the male, and
more frequently than the man-child takes
ten months to come to perfection. But after
birth, the females pass more quickly than
the males through youth and maturity and
age; and this is especially true of those
that bear many children, as indeed I have
already said.
Part 4
When the womb has conceived the seed, straightway
in the majority of cases it closes up until
seven months are fulfilled; but in the eighth
month it opens, and the embryo, if it be
fertile, descends in the eighth month. But
such embryos as are not fertile but are devoid
of breath at eight months old, their mothers
do not bring into the world by parturition
at eight months, neither does the embryo
descend within the womb at that period nor
does the womb open. And it is a sign that
the embryo is not capable of life if it be
formed without the above-named circumstances
taking place.
After conception women are prone to a feeling
of heaviness in all parts of their bodies,
and for instance they experience a sensation
of darkness in front of the eyes and suffer
also from headache. These symptoms appear
sooner or later, sometimes as early as the
tenth day, according as the patient be more
or less burthened with superfluous humours.
Nausea also and sickness affect the most
of women, and especially such as those that
we have just now mentioned, after the menstrual
discharge has ceased and before it is yet
turned in the direction of the breasts.
Moreover, some women suffer most at the beginning
of their pregnancy and some at a later period
when the embryo has had time to grow; and
in some women it is a common occurrence to
suffer from strangury towards the end of
their time. As a general rule women who are
pregnant of a male child escape comparatively
easily and retain a comparatively healthy
look, but it is otherwise with those whose
infant is a female; for these latter look
as a rule paler and suffer more pain, and
in many cases they are subject to swellings
of the legs and eruptions on the body. Nevertheless
the rule is subject to exceptions.
Women in pregnancy are a prey to all sorts
of longings and to rapid changes of mood,
and some folks call this the 'ivy-sickness';
and with the mothers of female infants the
longings are more acute, and they are less
contented when they have got what they desired.
In a certain few cases the patient feels
unusually well during pregnancy. The worst
time of all is just when the child's hair
is beginning to grow.
In pregnant women their own natural hair
is inclined to grow thin and fall out, but
on the other hand hair tends to grow on parts
of the body where it was not wont to be.
As a general rule, a man-child is more prone
to movement within its mother's womb than
a female child, and it is usually born sooner.
And labour in the case of female children
is apt to be protracted and sluggish, while
in the case of male children it is acute
and by a long way more difficult. Women who
have connexion with their husbands shortly
before childbirth are delivered all the more
quickly. Occasionally women seem to be in
the pains of labour though labour has not
in fact commenced, what seemed like the commencement
of labour being really the result of the
foetus turning its head.
Now all other animals bring the time of pregnancy
to an end in a uniform way; in other words,
one single term of pregnancy is defined for
each of them. But in the case of mankind
alone of all animals the times are diverse;
for pregnancy may be of seven months' duration,
or of eight months or of nine, and still
more commonly of ten months, while some few
women go even into the eleventh month.
Children that come into the world before
seven months can under no circumstances survive.
The seven-months' children are the earliest
that are capable of life, and most of them
are weakly-for which reason, by the way,
it is customary to swaddle them in wool,-and
many of them are born with some of the orifices
of the body imperforate, for instance the
ears or the nostrils. But as they get bigger
they become more perfectly developed, and
many of them grow up.
In Egypt, and in some other places where
the women are fruitful and are wont to bear
and bring forth many children without difficulty,
and where the children when born are capable
of living even if they be born subject to
deformity, in these places the eight-months'
children live and are brought up, but in
Greece it is only a few of them that survive
while most perish. And this being the general
experience, when such a child does happen
to survive the mother is apt to think that
it was not an eight months' child after all,
but that she had conceived at an earlier
period without being aware of it.
Women suffer most pain about the fourth and
the eighth months, and if the foetus perishes
in the fourth or in the eighth month the
mother also succumbs as a general rule; so
that not only do the eight-months' children
not live, but when they die their mothers
are in great danger of their own lives. In
like manner children that are apparently
born at a later term than eleven months are
held to be in doubtful case; inasmuch as
with them also the beginning of conception
may have escaped the notice of the mother.
What I mean to say is that often the womb
gets filled with wind, and then when at a
later period connexion and conception take
place, they think that the former circumstance
was the beginning of conception from the
similarity of the symptoms that they experienced.
Such then are the differences between mankind
and other animals in regard to the many various
modes of completion of the term of pregnancy.
Furthermore, some animals produce one and
some produce many at a birth, but the human
species does sometimes the one and sometimes
the other. As a general rule and among most
nations the women bear one child a birth;
but frequently and in many lands they bear
twins, as for instance in Egypt especially.
Sometimes women bring forth three and even
four children, and especially in certain
parts of the world, as has already been stated.
The largest number ever brought forth is
five, and such an occurrence has been witnessed
on several occasions. There was once upon
a time a certain women who had twenty children
at four births; each time she had five, and
most of them grew up.
Now among other animals, if a pair of twins
happen to be male and female they have as
good a chance of surviving as though both
had been males or both females; but among
mankind very few twins survive if one happen
to be a boy and the other a girl.
Of all animals the woman and the mare are
most inclined to receive the commerce of
the male during pregnancy; while all other
animals when they are pregnant avoid the
male, save those in which the phenomenon
of superfoetation occurs, such as the hare.
Unlike that animal, the mare after once conceiving
cannot be rendered pregnant again, but brings
forth one foal only, at least as a general
rule; in the human species cases of superfoetation
are rare, but they do happen now and then.
An embryo conceived some considerable time
after a previous conception does not come
to perfection, but gives rise to pain and
causes the destruction of the earlier embryo;
and, by the way, a case has been known to
occur where owing to this destructive influence
no less than twelve embryos conceived by
superfoetation have been discharged. But
if the second conception take place at a
short interval, then the mother bears that
which was later conceived, and brings forth
the two children like actual twins, as happened,
according to the legend, in the case of Iphicles
and Hercules. The following also is a striking
example: a certain woman, having committed
adultery, brought forth the one child resembling
her husband and the other resembling the
adulterous lover.
The case has also occurred where a woman,
being pregnant of twins, has subsequently
conceived a third child; and in course of
time she brought forth the twins perfect
and at full term, but the third a five-months'
child; and this last died there and then.
And in another case it happened that the
woman was first delivered of a seven-months'
child, and then of two which were of full
term; and of these the first died and the
other two survived.
Some also have been known to conceive while
about to miscarry, and they have lost the
one child and been delivered of the other.
If women while going with child cohabit after
the eighth month the child is in most cases
born covered over with a slimy fluid. Often
also the child is found to be replete with
food of which the mother had partaken.
Part 5
When women have partaken of salt in overabundance
their children are apt to be born destitute
of nails.
Milk that is produced earlier than the seventh
month is unfit for use; but as soon as the
child is fit to live the milk is fit to use.
The first of the milk is saltish, as it is
likewise with sheep. Most women are sensibly
affected by wine during pregnancy, for if
they partake of it they grow relaxed and
debilitated.
The beginning of child-bearing in women and
of the capacity to procreate in men, and
the cessation of these functions in both
cases, coincide in the one case with the
emission of seed and in the other with the
discharge of the catamenia: with this qualification
that there is a lack of fertility at the
commencement of these symptoms, and again
towards their close when the emissions become
scanty and weak. The age at which the sexual
powers begin has been related already. As
for their end, the menstrual discharges ceases
in most women about their fortieth year;
but with those in whom it goes on longer
it lasts even to the fiftieth year, and women
of that age have been known to bear children.
But beyond that age there is no case on record.
Part 6
Men in most cases continue to be sexually
competent until they are sixty years old,
and if that limit be overpassed then until
seventy years; and men have been actually
known to procreate children at seventy years
of age. With many men and many women it so
happens that they are unable to produce children
to one another, while they are able to do
so in union with other individuals. The same
thing happens with regard to the production
of male and female offspring; for sometimes
men and women in union with one another produce
male children or female, as the case may
be, but children of the opposite sex when
otherwise mated. And they are apt to change
in this respect with advancing age: for sometimes
a husband and wife while they are young produce
female children and in later life male children;
and in other cases the very contrary occurs.
And just the same thing is true in regard
to the generative faculty: for some while
young are childless, but have children when
they grow older; and some have children to
begin with, and later on no more.
There are certain women who conceive with
difficulty, but if they do conceive, bring
the child to maturity; while others again
conceive readily, but are unable to bring
the child to birth. Furthermore, some men
and some women produce female offspring and
some male, as for instance in the story of
Hercules, who among all his two and seventy
children is said to have begotten but one
girl. Those women who are unable to conceive,
save with the help of medical treatment or
some other adventitious circumstance, are
as a general rule apt to bear female children
rather than male.
It is a common thing with men to be at first
sexually competent and afterwards impotent,
and then again to revert to their former
powers.
From deformed parents come deformed children,
lame from lame and blind from blind, and,
speaking generally, children often inherit
anything that is peculiar in their parents
and are born with similar marks, such as
pimples or scars. Such things have been known
to be handed down through three generations;
for instance, a certain man had a mark on
his arm which his son did not possess, but
his grandson had it in the same spot though
not very distinct.
Such cases, however, are few; for the children
of cripples are mostly sound, and there is
no hard and fast rule regarding them. While
children mostly resemble their parents or
their ancestors, it sometimes happens that
no such resemblance is to be traced. But
parents may pass on resemblance after several
generations, as in the case of the woman
in Elis, who committed adultery with a negro;
in this case it was not the woman's own daughter
but the daughter's child that was a blackamoor.
As a rule the daughters have a tendency to
take after the mother, and the boys after
the father; but sometimes it is the other
way, the boys taking after the mother and
the girls after the father. And they may
resemble both parents in particular features.
There have been known cases of twins that
had no resemblance to one another, but they
are alike as a general rule. There was once
upon a time a woman who had intercourse with
her husband a week after giving birth to
a child and she conceived and bore a second
child as like the first as any twin. Some
women have a tendency to produce children
that take after themselves, and others children
that take after the husband; and this latter
case is like that of the celebrated mare
in Pharsalus, that got the name of the Honest
Wife.
Part 7
In the emission of sperm there is a preliminary
discharge of air, and the outflow is manifestly
caused by a blast of air; for nothing is
cast to a distance save by pneumatic pressure.
After the seed reaches the womb and remains
there for a while, a membrane forms around
it; for when it happens to escape before
it is distinctly formed, it looks like an
egg enveloped in its membrane after removal
of the eggshell; and the membrane is full
of veins.
All animals whatsoever, whether they fly
or swim or walk upon dry land, whether they
bring forth their young alive or in the egg,
develop in the same way: save only that some
have the navel attached to the womb, namely
the viviparous animals, and some have it
attached to the egg, and some to both parts
alike, as in a certain sort of fishes. And
in some cases membranous envelopes surround
the egg, and in other cases the chorion surrounds
it. And first of all the animal develops
within the innermost envelope, and then another
membrane appears around the former one, which
latter is for the most part attached to the
womb, but is in part separated from it and
contains fluid. In between is a watery or
sanguineous fluid, which the women folk call
the forewaters.
Part 8
All animals, or all such as have a navel,
grow by the navel. And the navel is attached
to the cotyledon in all such as possess cotyledons,
and to the womb itself by a vein in all such
as have the womb smooth. And as regards their
shape within the womb, the four-footed animals
all lie stretched out, and the footless animals
lie on their sides, as for instance fishes;
but two-legged animals lie in a bent position,
as for instance birds; and human embryos
lie bent, with nose between the knees and
eyes upon the knees, and the ears free at
the sides.
All animals alike have the head upwards to
begin with; but as they grow and approach
the term of egress from the womb they turn
downwards, and birth in the natural course
of things takes place in all animals head
foremost; but in abnormal cases it may take
place in a bent position, or feet foremost.
The young of quadrupeds when they are near
their full time contain excrements, both
liquid and in the form of solid lumps, the
latter in the lower part of the bowel and
the urine in the bladder.
In those animals that have cotyledons in
the womb the cotyledons grow less as the
embryo grows bigger, and at length they disappear
altogether. The navel-string is a sheath
wrapped about blood-vessels which have their
origin in the womb, from the cotyledons in
those animals which possess them and from
a blood-vessel in those which do not. In
the larger animals, such as the embryos of
oxen, the vessels are four in number, and
in smaller animals two; in the very little
ones, such as fowls, one vessel only.
Of the four vessels that run into the embryo,
two pass through the liver where the so-called
gates or 'portae' are, running in the direction
of the great vein, and the other two run
in the direction of the aorta towards the
point where it divides and becomes two vessels
instead of one. Around each pair of blood-vessels
are membranes, and surrounding these membranes
is the navel-string itself, after the manner
of a sheath. And as the embryo grows, the
veins themselves tend more and more to dwindle
in size. And also as the embryo matures it
comes down into the hollow of the womb and
is observed to move here, and sometimes rolls
over in the vicinity of the groin.
Part 9
When women are in labour, their pains determine
towards many divers parts of the body, and
in most cases to one or other of the thighs.
Those are the quickest to be delivered who
experience severe pains in the region of
the belly; and parturition is difficult in
those who begin by suffering pain in the
loins, and speedy when the pain is abdominal.
If the child about to be born be a male,
the preliminary flood is watery and pale
in colour, but if a girl it is tinged with
blood, though still watery. In some cases
of labour these latter phenomena do not occur,
either one way or the other.
In other animals parturition is unaccompanied
by pain, and the dam is plainly seen to suffer
but moderate inconvenience. In women, however,
the pains are more severe, and this is especially
the case in persons of sedentary habits,
and in those who are weak-chested and short
of breath. Labour is apt to be especially
difficult if during the process the woman
while exerting force with her breath fails
to hold it in.
First of all, when the embryo starts to move
and the membranes burst, there issues forth
the watery flood; then afterwards comes the
embryo, while the womb everts and the afterbirth
comes out from within.
Part 10
The cutting of the navel-string, which is
the nurse's duty, is a matter calling for
no little care and skill. For not only in
cases of difficult labour must she be able
to render assistance with skilful hand, but
she must also have her wits about her in
all contingencies, and especially in the
operation of tying the cord. For if the afterbirth
have come away, the navel is ligatured off
from the afterbirth with a woollen thread
and is then cut above the ligature; and at
the place where it has been tied it heals
up, and the remaining portion drops off.
(If the ligature come loose the child dies
from loss of blood.) But if the afterbirth
has not yet come away, but remains after
the child itself is extruded, it is cut away
within after the ligaturing of the cord.
It often happens that the child appears to
have been born dead when it is merely weak,
and when before the umbilical cord has been
ligatured, the blood has run out into the
cord and its surroundings. But experienced
midwives have been known to squeeze back
the blood into the child's body from the
cord, and immediately the child that a moment
before was bloodless came back to life again.
It is the natural rule, as we have mentioned
above, for all animals to come into the world
head foremost, and children, moreover, have
their hands stretched out by their sides.
And the child gives a cry and puts its hands
up to its mouth as soon as it issues forth.
Moreover the child voids excrement sometimes
at once, sometimes a little later, but in
all cases during the first day; and this
excrement is unduly copious in comparison
with the size of the child; it is what the
midwives call the meconium or 'poppy-juice'.
In colour it resembles blood, extremely dark
and pitch-like, but later on it becomes milky,
for the child takes at once to the breast.
Before birth the child makes no sound, even
though in difficult labour it put forth its
head while the rest of the body remains within.
In cases where flooding takes place rather
before its time, it is apt to be followed
by difficult parturition. But if discharge
take place after birth in small quantity,
and in cases where it only takes place at
the beginning and does not continue till
the fortieth day, then in such cases women
make a better recovery and are the sooner
ready to conceive again.
Until the child is forty days old it neither
laughs nor weeps during waking hours, but
of nights it sometimes does both; and for
the most part it does not even notice being
tickled, but passes most of its time in sleep.
As it keeps on growing, it gets more and
more wakeful; and moreover it shows signs
of dreaming, though it is long afterwards
before it remembers what it dreams.
In other animals there is no contrasting
difference between one bone and another,
but all are properly formed; but in children
the front part of the head is soft and late
of ossifying. And by the way, some animals
are born with teeth, but children begin to
cut their teeth in the seventh month; and
the front teeth are the first to come through,
sometimes the upper and sometimes the lower
ones. And the warmer the nurses' milk so
much the quicker are the children's teeth
to come.
Part 11
After parturition and the cleasing flood
the milk comes in plenty, and in some women
it flows not only from the nipples but at
divers parts of the breasts, and in some
cases even from the armpits. And for some
time afterwards there continue to be certain
indurated parts of the breast called strangalides,
or 'knots', which occur when it so happens
that the moisture is not concocted, or when
it finds no outlet but accumulates within.
For the whole breast is so spongy that if
a woman in drinking happen to swallow a hair,
she gets a pain in her breast, which ailment
is called 'trichia'; and the pain lasts till
the hair either find its own way out or be
sucked out with the milk. Women continue
to have milk until their next conception;
and then the milk stops coming and goes dry,
alike in the human species and in the quadrupedal
vivipara. So long as there is a flow of milk
the menstrual purgations do not take place,
at least as a general rule, though the discharge
has been known to occur during the period
of suckling. For, speaking generally, a determination
of moisture does not take place at one and
the same time in several directions; as for
instance the menstrual purgations tend to
be scanty in persons suffering from haemorrhoids.
And in some women the like happens owing
to their suffering from varices, when the
fluids issue from the pelvic region before
entering into the womb. And patients who
during suppression of the menses happen to
vomit blood are no whit the worse.
Part 12
Children are very commonly subject to convulsions,
more especially such of them as are more
than ordinarily well-nourished on rich or
unusually plentiful milk from a stout nurse.
Wine is bad for infants, in that it tends
to excite this malady, and red wine is worse
than white, especially when taken undiluted;
and most things that tend to induce flatulency
are also bad, and constipation too is prejudicial.
The majority of deaths in infancy occur before
the child is a week old, hence it is customary
to name the child at that age, from a belief
that it has now a better chance of survival.
This malady is worst at the full of the moon;
and by the way, it is a dangerous symptom
when the spasms begin in the child's back.
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