Before modern medicine lay people and some physicians held
the belief that transferring the ailment to another object could cure you of
disease. Since antiquity, and well into
the eighteenth century, people believed that men reflected aspects of the
natural world. It was a dominant strategy that explained the mysteries beyond
the ken of the science of the day.
A man in late seventeenth century Somerset claimed that his brother was cured of a rupture by being passed through a slit cut in a young ash tree, three times on three Monday mornings before dawn. When the tree was later cut down, his brother grew ill again.
To cure jaundice, you took the patient’s urine, mix it with
ashes and make three equal balls. Put these before a fire, and when they dried
out, the disease leaves and he’s cured.
Color as well played a part in how health was viewed. “Yellow”
remedies were used to cure jaundice: saffron, celandine with yellow flowers,
turmeric, and lemon rind. John Wesley, who wrote Primitive Physick, in the mid-eighteenth century, suggested thatsufferers of this illness wear celandine leaves under their feet.
Health was also governed by astrological explanations. Manuals
intended for physicians and apothecaries included this “otherwordly” advice.
Nicholas Culpeper detailed which herbs were presided over by which planets in
his famous health text, Culpeper’s Complete
Herbal. For example, if a headache was caused by the actions of Venus, then
fleabane (an herb of Mars) would cure the malady.
However, the Vox
Stellarum, the most popular almanac in the eighteenth century, took a more
moderate view: “Men may be inclin’d but not compell’d to do good or evil by the
influence of the stars.” Yet this same almanac, in 1740, listed which diseases
were prevalent in certain months—a vestigial form of astrological medicine.
Thank goodness more enlightened physicians, such as brothers
William (a leading anatomist and renown obstetrician) and John Hunter (one of the most distinguished scientists
and surgeons of his day) in the eighteenth century, came along to bring
medical thinking into the modern world. Though superstition among the lay
people remained.
I delved into this research for a character, a young
physician, in my still unpublished novel, Ring
of Stone. Information taken from, Patients, Power, and the Poor in Eighteenth
Century Bristol, by Mary E.
Fissell, 1991.
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