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Full text of "The American woman's home, or, Principles of domestic science : being a guide to the formation and maintenance of economical, healthful, beautiful, and Christian homes"

THE LIBRARY 

OF 

THE UNIVERSITY 
OF CALIFORNIA 

GIFT OF 

Martha Green 




NEW YORK 
J.B.FORD&CO. 

1869. 



AGRICULTURE 
Add'1 

GIFT 



I 
THE 



AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME: 

OR, 

PRINCIPLES OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE; 



A GUIDE TO THE FORMATION AND MAINTENANCE OF ECONOMICAL 
HEALTHFUL, BEAUTIFUL, AND CHRISTIAN HOMES. 



BY 

CATHARINE E. BEECHER 

AND 

HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. 




NEW-YORK : 
J. B. FORD AND COMPANY. 

BOSTON : H. A. BROWN & CO. PHILADELPHIA : CHAS. S. GREENE & CO. 

CHICAGO : J A. STODDARD & CO. CINCINNATI : HENRY HOWE. 

SAN FRANCISCO : FRANCIS DEWING & CO. 

1869. 



AGWCULTUSE 



Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1869, by 
J. B. FORD & CO., 

in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District 

of New York. 



UNIVERSITY PRESS: WELCH, BIGELOW, & Co., 
CAMBRIDGE. 



AGRIC. 
LIBRARY 



TO 

TIE WOIEN OF AMEEICA, 

IN WHOSE HANDS REST THE REAL DESTINIES OF THE REPUBLIC, AS 
MOULDED BY THE EARLY TRAINING AND PRESERVED 

AMID THE MATURER INFLUENCES OF HOME, 

THIS VOLUME IS 

AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED. 



363 



TABLE OF CONTENTS. 



INTRODUCTION. 

I'HB chief cause of woman's disabilities and sufferings, that women are 
not trained, as men are, for their peculiar duties Aim of this volume 
to elevate the honor and remuneration of domestic employment Wo- 
man's duties, and her utter lack of training for them Qualifications of 
the writers of this volume to teach the matters proposed Experience 
and study of woman's work Conviction of the dignity and importance 
of it The great social and moral power in her keeping The princi- 
ples and teachings of Jesus Christ the true basis of woman's rights and 
duties. Pages 13-16. 



THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY. 

Object of the Family State Duty of the elder and stronger to raise the 
younger, weaker, and more ignorant to an equality of advantages Dis- 
cipline of the family The example of Christ one of self-sacrifice as 
man's elder brother His assumption of a low estate His manual labor 

His trade Woman the chief minister of the family estate Man the 
out-door laborer and provider Labor and self-denial in the mutual re- 
lations of home-life, honorable, healthful, economical, enjoyable, and 
Christian. Pages 17-22. 

n. 
A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 

True wisdom in building a home Necessity of economizing time, labor, 
and expense, by the close packing of conveniences Plan of a model cot- 
tage Proportions Piazzas Entry Stairs and landings Large room 

Movable Screen Convenient bedsteads A good mattress A cheap 
and convenient ottoman Kitchen and stove-room The stove-room and 
its arrangements Second or attic story Closets, corner dressing-tables, 
windows, balconies, water and earth'dosets, shoe-bag, piece-bag Base- 
ment, closets, refrigerator, washtubs, etc. Laundry General wood- 
work Conservatories Average estimate of cost. Pages 23-43. 



ii CONTENTS. 

m. 
A HEALTHFUL HOME. 

Household murder Poisoning and starvation the inevitable result of bad 
air in public halls and private homes Good air as needful as good 
food Structure and operations of the lungs and their capillaries and 
air-cells How people in a confined room will deprive the air of oxygen 
and overload it with refuse carbonic acid Starvation of the living 
body deprived of oxygen The skin and its twenty-eight miles of per- 
spiratory tubes Reciprocal action of plants and animals Historical 
examples of foul-air poisoning Outward effects of habitual breathing 
of bad air Quotations from scientific authorities. Pages 43-58. 

IV. 

SCIENTIFIC DOMESTIC VENTILATION. 

An open fireplace secures due ventilation Evils of substituting air-tight 
stoves and furnace heating Tendency of .warm air to rise and of cool 
air to sink Ventilation of mines Ignorance of architects Poor venti- 
lation in most houses Mode of ventilating laboratories Creation of a 
current of warm air in a flue open at top and bottom of the room Flue 
to be built into chimney : method of utilizing it. Pages 59-65. 

v. 
STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 

The general properties of heat, conduction, convection, radiation, reflec- 
tion Cooking done by radiation the simplest but most wasteful mode : 
by convection (as in stoves and furnaces) the cheapest The range The 
model cooking-stoveinterior arrangements and principles Contrivan- 
ces for economizing heat, labor, time, fuel, trouble, and expense Its 
durability, simplicity, etc. Chimneys : why they smoke and how to 
cure them Furnaces : the dryness of their heat Necessity of moisture 
in warm air How to obtain and regulate it. Pages 66-83. 

VI. 

HOME DECORATION. 

Significance of beauty in making home attractive and useful in education 
Exemplification of economical and tasteful furniture The carpet, 
lounge, lambrequins, curtains, ottomans, easy-chair, centre-table 
Money left for pictures Chromos Pretty frames Engravings Statu- 
ettes Educatory influence of works of art Natural adornments Mate- 
rials in the woods and fields Parlor-gardens Hanging baskets Fern- 
shields Ivy, its beauty and tractableness Window, with flowers, vines, 



CONTENTS. ill 

and pretty plants Rustic stand for flowers Ward's case How to make 
it economically Bowls and vases of rustic work for growing plants 
Ferns, how and when to gather them General remarks. Pages 
84^103. 

vn. 
THE CARE OF HEALTH. 

Importance of some knowledge of the body and its needs Fearful re- 
sponsibility of entering upon domestic duties in ignorance The funda- 
mental vital principle Cell-life Wonders of the microscope Cell- 
multiplication Constant interplay of decay and growth necessary to 
life The red and white cells of the blood Secreting and converting 
power The nervous system The brain and the nerves Structural 
arrangement and functions The ganglionic system The nervous fluid 
Necessity of properly apportioned exercise to nerves of sensation and 
of motion Evils of excessive or insufficient exercise Equal develop- 
ment of the whole. Pages 104-112. 



vm. 
DOMESTIC EXERCISE. 

Connection of muscles and nerves Microscopic cellular muscular fibre 
Its mode of action Dependence on the nerves of voluntary and involun- 
tary motion How exercise of muscles quickens circulation of the blood 
which maintains all the processes of life Dependence of equilibrium 
upon proper muscular activity Importance of securing exercise that 
will interest the mind. Pages 113-118. 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 

Apportionment of elements in food : carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, calci- 
um, iron, silicon, etc. Large proportion of water in the human body 
Dr. Holmes on the interchange of death and life Constituent parts of a 
kernel of wheat Comparison of different kinds of food General direc- 
tions for diet Hunger the proper guide and guard of appetite Evils 
of over-eating Structure and operations of the stomach Times and 
quantity for eating Stimulating and nourishing food Americans eat 
too much meat Wholesome effects of Lenten fasting- Matter and 
manner of eating Causes of debilitation from misuse of food. Pages 
119-137. 



IV CONTENTS. 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 

Stimulating drinks not necessary Their immediate evil effects upon 
the human body and tendency to grow into habitual desires The ar- 
guments for and against stimulus Microscopic revelations of the ef- 
fects of alcohol on the cellular tissue of the brain Opinions of high 
scientific authorities against its use No need of resorting to stimu- 
lants either for refreshment, nourishment, or pleasure Tea and coffee 
an extensive cause of much nervous debility and suffering Tend to 
wasteful use in the kitchen Are seldom agreeable at first to children 
Are dangerous to sensitive, nervous organizations, and should be at 
least regulated Hot drinks unwholesome, debilitating, and destructive 
to teeth, throat, and stomach Warm drinks agreeable and not un- 
healthful Cold drinks not to be too freely used during meals Drink- 
ing while eating always injurious to digestion. Pages 138-149. 



XI. 

CLEANLINESS. 

Health and comfort depend on cleanliness Scientific treatment of the 
skin, the most complicated organ of the body Structure and arrange- 
ment of the skin, its layers, cells, nerves, capillaries, absorbents, oil- 
tubes, perspiration-tubes, etc. The mucous membrane Phlegm- The 
secreting organs The liver, kidney, pancreas, salivary and lachrymal, 
glands Sympathetic connection of all the bodily organs Intimate con- 
nection of the skin with all the other organs Proper mode of treating 
the skin Experiment showing happy effects of good treatment. 
Pages 150-157. 

xn. 
CLOTHING. 

Fashion attacks the very foundation of the body, the bones Bones com 
posed of animal and mineral elements General construction and ar- 
rangement Health of bones dependent on nourishment and exercise of 
body Spine Distortions produced by tight dressing Pressure of in- 
terior organs upon each other and upon the bones Displacement of 
stomach, diaphragm, heart, intestines, and pelvic or lower organs Wo- 
men liable to peculiar distresses A well-fitted jacket to replace stiff 
corsets, supporting the bust above and the under skirts below Dress 
ing of young children Safe for a healthy child to wear as little cloth- 
ing as will make it thoroughly comfortable Nature the guide The 
very young and the very old need the most clothing. Pages 158-166. 



CONTENTS. V 

xm. 
GOOD COOKING. 

Bad cooking prevalent in America Abundance of excellent material 
General management of food here very wasteful and extravagant 
Five great departments of Cookery Bread What it should be, 
how to spoil and how to make it Different modes of aeration Baking 
Evils of hot bread. Butter Contrast between the butter of America 
and of European countries How to make good butter. Meat General- 
ly used too newly killed Lack of nicety in butcher's work Economy 
of French butchery, carving, and trimming Modes of cooking meats 
The frying-pan True way of using it The French art of making 
delicious soups and stews Vegetables Their number and variety in 
America The potato How to cook it, a simple yet difficult operation 
Roasted, boiled, fried. Tea Warm table drinks generally Coffee 
Tea Chocolate. Confectionery Ornamental cookery Pastry, ices, 
iellies. Pages 167-190. 

xrv. 

EARLY RISING. 

A virtue peculiarly American and democratic In aristocratic countries, 
labor considered degrading The hours of sunlight generally devoted to 
labor by the working classes and to sleep by the indolent and wealthy 
Sunlight necessary to health and growth whether of vegetables or ani- 
mals Particularly needful for the sick Substitution of artificial 
light and heat, by night, a great waste of money Eight hours' 
sleep enough Excessive sleep debilitating Early rising necessary to a 
well-regulated family, to the amount of work to be done, to the commu- 
nity, to schools, and to all classes in American society. Pages 191-196. 

xv. 
DOMESTIC MANNERS. 

Good manners the expression of benevolence in personal intercourse 
Serious defects in manners of the Americans Causes of abrupt manners 
to be found in American life Want of clear discrimination between 
men Necessity for distinctions of superiority: and subordination Im- 
portance that young mothers should seriously endeavor to remedy this 
defect, while educating their children Democratic principle of equal 
rights to be applied, not to our own interests but to those of others 
The same courtesy to be extended to all classes Necessary distinctions 
arising from mutual relations to be observed The strong to defer to 
the weak Precedence yielded by men to women in America Good, 
manners must be cultivated in early life Mutual relations of husband 
and wife Parents and children The rearing of children to courtesy 
De Tocqueville on American manners. Pages 197-211. 



n CONTENTS. 

XVI. 

GOOD TEMPER IN THE HOUSEKEEPER. 

Easier for a household under the guidance of an equable temper in the 
mistress Dissatisfied looks and sharp tones destroy the comfort of 
system, neatness, and economy Considerations to aid the housekeeper 
Importance and dignity of her duties Difficulties to be overcome- 
Good policy to calculate beforehand upon the derangement of well- 
arranged plans Object of housekeeping, the comfort and well-being 
of the family The end should not be sacrificed to secure the means 
Possible to refrain from angry tones Mild speech most effective Ex- 
emplification Allowances to be made for servants and children Power 
of religion to impart dignity and importance to the ordinary and petty 
details of domestic life. Pages 212-219. 

XVII. 

HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. 

Relative importance and difficulty of the duties a woman is called to per- 
form Her duties not trivial A habit of system and order necessary 
Right apportionment of time General principles Christianity to be the 
foundation Intellectual and social interests to be preferred to gratifica- 
tion of taste or appetite Neglect of health a sin in the sight of God 
Regular season of rest appointed by the Creator Divisions of time 
Systematic arrangement of house articles and other conveniences 
Regular employment for each member of a family Children Family 
work Forming habits of system Early rising a very great aid 
Due apportionment of time to the several duties. Pages 220-232. 

XVIII. 

GIVING IN CHARITY. 

No point of duty more difficult to fix by rule than charity First consi- 
deration Object for which we are placed in this world Self-denying 
Benevolence. Second consideration Natural principles not to be ex- 
terminated, but regulated and controlled. Third consideration Super- 
fluities sometimes proper, and sometimes not. Fourth consideration 
No rule of duty right for one and not for all The opposite of this 
principle tested Some use of superfluities necessary Plan for keeping 
an account of necessities and superfluities Untoward results of our 
actions do not always prove that we deserve blame General princi- 
ples to guide in deciding upon objects of charity Who are our neigh- 
borsThe most in need to be first relieved Not much need of charity 
for physical wants in this country Associated charities Indiscrimi- 
nate charity Impropriety of judging the charities of others Pages 
233-246. 



CONTENTS. Til 

XIX. 

ECONOMY OF TIME AND EXPENSES. 

Economy, value, and right apportionment of time Laws appointed 
by God for the Jews Christianity removes the restrictions laid on the 
Jews, but demands all our time to be devoted to our own best interests 
and the good of our fellow-men Enjoyment connected with every 
duty Various modes of economizing time System and order Unit- 
ing several objects in one employment Odd intervals of time Aiding 
others in economizing time Economy in expenses Contradictory no- 
tionsGeneral principles in which all agree Knowledge of income 
and expenses Evils of want of system and forethought Young ladies 
should early learn to be systematic and economical. Pages 247-254 



xx. 

HEALTH OF MIND. 

Intimate connection between the body and mind Brain excited by im; 
proper stimulants taken into the stomach Mental faculties then affect- 
ed Causes of mental disease Want of oxygenized blood Fresh air 
absolutely necessary Excessive exercise of the intellect or feelings 
Such attention to religion as prevents the performance of other duties, 
wrong Unusual precocity in children usually the result of a diseased 
brain Idiocy often the result, or the precocious child sinks below the 
average of mankind This evil yet prevalent in colleges and other semi- 
naries A medical man necessary in every seminary Some pupils 
always needing restraint in regard to study A third cause of mental 
disease, the want of appropriate exercise of the various faculties of the 
mind Extract from Dr. Combe Beneficial results of active intellectual 
employments Indications of a diseased mind. Pages 255-262. 



XXI. 

THE CARE OF INFANTS. 

Herbert Spencer on the treatment of offspring Absurdity of undertak- 
ing to rear children without any knowledge of how to do it Foolish 
management of parents generally the cause of evils ascribed to Provi- 
dence Errors of management during the first two years Food of child 
and of mother Warning as to use of too much medicine Fresh air- 
Care of the skin Dress Sleepr-Bathing Change of air Habits 
Dangers of the teething period Constipation Diarrhea Teething- 
How to relieve its dangers Feverishness Use of water. Pages 263- 
274. 



Vili CONTENTS. 

xxn. 
THE MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 

Physical education of children Animal diet to be avoided for the very 
young Result of treatment at Albany Orphan Asylum Good ventila- 
tion of nurseries and schools Moral training to consist in forming 
Tidbits of submission, self-denial, and benevolence General suggestions 
Extremes of sternness and laxity to be avoided Appreciation of 
childish desires and feelings Sympathy Partaking in games and 
employments Inculcation of principles preferable to multiplication of 
commands Rewards rather than penalties Severe tones of voice 
Children to be kept happy Sensitive children Self-denial Deceit 
and honesty Immodesty and delicacy Dreadful penalties consequent 
upon youthful impurities Religious training. Pages 275-286. 



xxiii. 
DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 

Children need more amusement than older persons Its object, to afford rest 
and recreation to the mind and body Example of Christ No amuse- 
ments to be introduced that will tempt the weak or over-excite the 
young Puritan customs Work followed by play Dramatic exercises, 
dancing, and festivity wholesomely enjoyed The nine o'clock bell The 
drama and the dance Card-playing Novel-reading Taste for solid 
reading Cultivation of fruits and flowers Music Collecting of shells, 
plants, and minerals Games Exercise of mechanical skill for boys 
Sewing, cutting, and fitting General suggestions Social and domestic 
duties Family attachments Hospitality. Pages 287-302. 



XXIV. 

CARE OF THE AGED. 

Preservation of the aged, designed to give opportunity for self-denial and 
loving oare Patience, sympathy, and labor for them to be regarded as 
privileges in a family The young should respect and minister unto 
the aged Treating them as valued members of the family Engaging 
them in domestic games and sports Reading aloud Courteous atten- 
tion to their opinions Assistance in retarding decay of faculties by 
helping them to exercise Keeping up interest of the infirm in domestic 
affairs Great care to preserve animal heat Ingratitude to the aged 
its baseness Chinese regard for old age. Pages 303-306. 



CONTENTS. U 

XXV. 

THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 

Origin of the Yankee term "help" Days of good health and intelli- 
gent house-keeping Growth of wealth tends to multiply hired service 
American young women should be trained in housekeeping for the 
guidance of ignorant and shiftless servants Difficulty of teaching ser- 
vants Reaction of society in favor of women's intellectuality, in 
danger of causing a new reaction American girls should do more 
work Social estimate of domestic service Dearth of intelligent do- 
mestic help Proper mode of treating servants General rules and 
special suggestions Hints from experience Woman's first " right," 
liberty to do what she can Domestic duties not to be neglected for 
operations in other spheres Servants to be treated with respect Er- 
rors of heartless and of too indulgent employers Mistresses of Ameri- 
can families necessarily missionaries and instructors. Pages 307-334 

XXVI. 

CARE OF THE SICK. 

PrDminence given to care and cure of the sick by our Saviour Every 
woman should know what to do in the case of illness Simple remedies 
best Fasting and perspiration Evils of constipation Modes of re- 
lieving it Remedies for colds Unwise to tempt the appetite of the sick 
Suggestion for the sick-room Ventilation Needful articles The 
room, bed, and person of the patient to be kept neat Care to preserve ani- 
mal warmth The sick, the delicate, the aged Food always to be care- 
fully prepared and neatly served Little modes of refreshment Im- 
plicit obedience to the physician Care in purchasing medicines Ex- 
hibition of cheerfulness, gentleness, and sympathy Knowledge and ex- 
perience of mind Lack of competent nurses Failings of nurses 
Sensitiveness of the sick " Sisters of Charity," the reason why they 
are such excellent nurses Illness in the family a providential oppor- 
tunity of training children to love and usefulness. Pages 335-347. 

xxvn. 
ACCIDENTS AND ANTIDOTES. 

Mode of treating cuts, wounds, severed arteries Bad bruises to be bathed 
in hot water Sprains treated with hot fomentation and rest Burns 
cured by creosote, wood-soot, or flour Drowning ; most approved mode 
of treatment Poisons and their antidotes Soda, saleratus, potash, 
sulphuric or oxalic acid, lime or baryta, iodine or iodide of potassium, 
prussic acid, antimony, arsenic, lead, nitrate of silver, phosphorus, alco- 
hol, tobacco, opium, strychnia Bleeding at the lungs, stomach, throat, 
nose Accidents from lightning Stupefaction, from coal-gas or foul 
air Fire Fainting Coolness and presence of mind. Pages 348-353 



I CONTENTS. 

xxviii. 
SEWING, CUTTING, AND MENDING. 

Different kinds of Stitch Overstitch Hems Tucks Fells Gores- 
Buttonholes Whipping Gathering Darning Basting Sewing 
Work-baskets To make a frock Patterns Fitting Lining Thin 
Silks Figured and plain silks Plaids Stripes Linen and Cotton 
How to buy Shirts Chemises Night-gowns Under-skirts Mend- 
ing Silk dresses Broadcloth Hose Shoes, etc. Bedding Mattres- 
ses Sheeting Bed-linen. Pages 353-359. 

XXIX. 

FIRES AND LIGHTS. 

Woodfires Shallow fireplaces Utensils The best wood for fires How 
to measure a load Splitting and piling Ashes Cleaning up Stoves 
and grates Ventilation Moisture Stove-pipe thimbles Anthracite 
coal Bituminous coal Care to be used in erecting stoves and pipes 
Lights Poor economy to use bad light Gas Oil Kerosene Points 
to be considered : Steadiness, Color, Heat Argand burners Dangers of 
kerosene Tests of its safety and light-giving qualities Care of lamps 
Utensils needed Shades Night-lamps How to make candles 
Moulded Dipped Rush-lights. Pages 360-366. 

XXX. 

THE CARE OF ROOMS. 

Parlors Cleansing Furniture Pictures Hearths and jambs Stains in 
marble Carpets Chambers and bedrooms Ventilation How to make 
a bed properly Servants should have single beds and comfortable 
rooms Kitchens Light Air Cleanliness How to make a cheap oil- 
cloth The sink Washing dishes Kitchen furniture Crockery 
Ironware Tinware Basketware Other articles Closets Cellars 
Dryness and cleanliness imperative necessities Store-rooms Modes of 
destroying insects and vermin. Pages 367-378. 

XXXI. 

THE CARE OF YARDS AND GARDENS. 

Preparation of soil for pot-plants For hot-beds For planting flower 
Feeds For garden seeds Transplanting To re-pot house plants The 
laying out of yards and gardens Transplanting trees The care of 
house plants. Pages 379-383. 



CONTENTS. xj 

XXXII. 

THE PROPAGATION OF PLANTS. 

Propagation of bulbous roots Propagation of plants by shoots By lay- 
ersBudding and grafting The outer and inner bark Detailed de- 
scription of operations Seed-fruit Stone-fruit Rose bushes In- 
grafting Stock grafting Pruning Perpendicular shoots to be taken 
out, horizontal or curved shoots retained All fruit-buds coming out 
after midsummer to be rubbed off Suckers Pruning to be done after 
sap is in circulation Thinning Leaves to be removed when they 
shade fruit near maturity Fruit to be removed when too abundant for 
good quality How to judge. Pages 384-388. 

XXXIII. 

THE CULTIVATION OF FRUIT. 

A pleasant, easy, and profitable occupation Soil for a nursery Plant- 
ing of seeds Transplanting Pruning Filberts Figs Currants 
Gooseberries Raspberries Strawberries Grapes Modes of pre- 
serving fruit trees The yellows Moths Caterpillars Brulure 
Curculio Canker-worm. Pages 389-392. 

XXXIV. 

THE CARE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 

Interesting association of animals with man, from childhood to age- 
Domestic animals apt to catch the spirit of their masters Important 
necessities Good feeding Shelter Cleanliness Destruction of par- 
asitic vermin Salt and water Light Exercise Rule for breeding 
Care of Horses : feeding, grooming, special treatment Cows : stab- 
ling, feed, calving, milking, tethering Swine: naturally cleanly, 
breeding, fresh water, charcoal, feeding Sheep: winter treatment 
Diet Sorting Use of sheep in clearing land Pasture Hedges and 
fences Poultry Turkeys Geese Ducks Fowls Dairy work gen- 
erally Bees Care of domestic animals, occupation for women. 
Pages 393-402. 

xxxv. 

EARTH-CLOSETS. 

Deodorization and preservation of excrementitious matter The earth- 
closet Waring's pamphlet The agricultural argument Necessity of 
returning to the soil the elements taken from it Earth-closet based on 
power of clay and inorganic matter to absorb and retain odors and fer- 
tilizing matter Its construction Mode of use The ordinary privy 
The commode or portable house-privy Especial directions : things to 
be observed Repeated use of earth Other advantages Sick-rooms 
House-labor Cleanliness Economy. Pages 403-418. 



1 CONTENTS. 

XXXVI. 

WARMING AND VENTILATION. 

Open fireplace nearest to natural mode by which earth is warmed and 
ventilated Origin of diseases Necessity of pure air to life Statistics 
General principles of ventilation Mode of Lewis Leeds Ventilation 
of buildings planned in this work The pure-air conductor The foul- 
air exhausting-flue Stoves Detailed arrangements Warming Econ- 
omy of time, labor, and expense in the cottage plan After all schemes, 
the open fireplace the best. Pages 419-432. 

XXXVII. 

CARE OF THE HOMELESS, THE HELPLESS, AND fHE 

VICIOUS. 

Eecommendations of the Massachusetts Board of State Charities Pauper 
and criminal classes should be scattered in Christian homes instead of 
gathered into large institutions Facts recently published concerning 
the poor of New-York Sufferings of the poor, deterioration of the rich 
Christian principles of benevolence Plan for a Christian city house 
Suggestions to wealthy and unoccupied women Roman Catholic works 
A Protestant duties The highest mission of woman. Pages 433-452. 

XXXVIII. 

THE CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORHOOD. 

Spirit of Christian Missions Present organizations under church direc- 
tion too mechanical Christian family influence the true instrument of 
Gospel propagation Practical suggestions for gathering a Christian 
family in neglected neighborhoods Plan of church, school-house, and 
family-dwelling in one building Mode of use for various purposes 
Nucleus and gathering of a family Christian work for Christian 
women Children Orphans Servants Neglected ones Household 
training Roman Catholic Nuns The South The West The ne- 
glected interior of older States Power of such examples Rapid 
spread of their influence Anticipation of the glorious consummation to 
be hoped for Prophecy in the Scriptures Cowper's noble vision of the 
millennial glory. Pages 453-461. 

APPEAL TO AMERICAN WOMEN. Pages 463-470. 
GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. Pages 473-489 
ANALYTICAL INDEX. Pages 491-500. 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



INTRODUCTION. 

THE authors of this volume, while they sympathize with 
every honest effort to relieve the disabilities and sufferings 
of their sex, are confident that the chief cause of these 
evils is the fact that the honor and duties of the family 
state are not duly appreciated, that women are -not trained 
for these duties as men are trained for their trades and 
professions, and that, as the consequence, family labor is 
poorly done, poorly paid, and regarded as menial and dis- 
graceful. 

To be the nurse of young children, a cook, or a house- 
maid, is regarded as the lowest and last resort of poverty, 
and one which no woman of culture and position can as- 
sume without loss of caste and respectability. 

It is the ami of this volume to elevate both the honor 
and the remuneration of all the employments that sustain 
the many difficult and sacred duties of the family state, 
and thus to render each department of woman's true pro- 
fession as much desired and respected as are the most 
honored professions of men. 

When the other sex are to be instructed in law, medi- 
cine, or divinity, they are favored with numerous institu- 
tions richly endowed, with teachers of the highest talents 
and acquirements, with extensive libraries, and abundant 
and costly apparatus. With such advantages they devote 



14 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S SOME. 

nearly ten of the best years of life to preparing themselves 
for their profession ; and to secure the public from unquali- 
fied members of these professions, none can enter them 
until examined by a competent body, who certify to their 
due preparation for their duties. 

Woman's profession embraces the care and nursing of 
the body in the critical periods of infancy and sickness, 
the training of the human mind in the most impressible 
period of childhood, the instruction and control of servants, 
and most of the government and economies of the family 
state. These duties of woman are as sacred and important 
as any ordained to man ; and yet no such advantages for 
preparation have been accorded to her, nor is there any 
qualified body to certify the public that a woman is duly 
prepared to give proper instruction in her profession. 

This unfortunate want, and also the questions frequently 
asked concerning the domestic qualifications of both the 
authors of this work, who have formerly written upon such 
topics, make it needful to give some account of the advan- 
tages they have enjoyed in preparation for the important 
office assumed as teachers of woman's domestic duties. 

The sister whose name is subscribed is the eldest of nine 
children by her own mother, and of four by her step-mo- 
ther ; and having a natural love for children, she found it 
a pleasure as well as a duty to aid in the care of infancy 
and childhood. At sixteen, she was deprived of a mother, 
who was remarkable not only for intelligence and culture, 
but for a natural taste and skill in domestic handicraft. 
Her place was awhile filled by an aunt remarkable for her 
habits of neatness and order > and especially for her econo- 
my. She was, in the course of time, replaced by a step- 
mother, who had been accustomed to a superior style of 
housekeeping, and was an expert in all departments of do 
mestic administration. 

Under these successive housekeepers, the writer learned 
not only to perform in the most approved manner all the 



INTRODUCTION. 15 

manual employments of domestic life, but to honor and 
enjoy these duties. 

At twenty-three, she commenced the institution which 
ever since has nourished as " The Hartford Female Semi- 
nary," where, at the age of twelve, the sister now united 
with her in the authorship of this work became her pupil, 
and, after a few years, her associate. The removal of the 
family to the West, and failure of health, ended a connec- 
tion with the Hartford Seminary, and originated a similar 
one in Cincinnati, of which the younger authoress of this 
work was associate principal till her marriage. 

At this time, the work on Domestic Economy, of which 
this volume may be called an enlarged edition, although 
a great portion of it is entirely new, embodying the latest 
results of science, was prepared by the writer as a part of 
the Massachusetts School Lilrary, and has since been ex- 
tensively introduced as a text-book into public schools arid 
higher female seminaries. It was followed by its sequel, 
The Domestic Receipt- Book, widely circulated by the 
Harpers in every State of the Union. 

These two works have been entirely remodeled, former 
topics rewritten, and many new ones introduced, so as 
to include all that is properly embraced in a complete 
Encyclopedia of Domestic Economy. 

In addition to the opportunities mentioned, the elder 
sister, for many years, has been studying the causes and 
the remedies for the decay of constitution and loss of 
health so increasingly prevalent among American women, 
aiming to promote the establishment of endowed institu- 
tions, in which women shall be properly trained for their 
profession, as both housekeepers and health-keepers. What 
advantages have thus been, received and the results thus 
obtained will appear in succeeding pages. 

During the upward progress of the age, arvd the advance 
of a more enlightened Christianity, the writers of this 
volume have gained more elevated views of the true mis- 



16 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* 'S HOME. 

sion of woman of the dignity and importance of her dis- 
tinctive duties, and of the true happiness which will be 
the reward of a right appreciation of this mission, and a 
proper performance of these duties. 

There is at the present time an increasing agitation of the 
public mind, evolving many theories and some crude specu- 
lations as to woman's rights and duties. That there is a 
great social and moral power in her keeping, which is now 
seeking expression by organization, is manifest, and that 
resulting plans and efforts will involve some mistakes, 
some collisions, and some failures, all must expect. 

But to intelligent, reflecting, and benevolent women 
whose faith rests on the character and teachings of Jesus 
Christ there are great principles revealed by Him, which 
in the end will secure the grand result which He taught 
and suffered to achieve. It is hoped that in the following 
pages these principles will be so exhibited and illustrated 

JT O JET * 

as to aid in securing those rights and advantages which 
Christ's religion aims to provide for all, and especially for 
the most weak and defenseless of His children. 

CATHAHINE E. BEECHES. 




THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY. 

IT is the aim of this volume to elevate both the honor 
and the remuneration of all employments that sustain 
the many difficult and varied duties of the family state, 
and thus to render each department of woman's profession 
as much desired and respected as are the most honored 

'ofessions of men. 



18 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

What, then, is the end designed by the family state 
which Jesus Christ came into this world to secure ? 

It is to provide for the training of our race to the highest 
possible intelligence, virtue, and happiness, by means of 
the self-sacrificing labors of the wise and good, and this 
with chief reference to a future immortal existence. 

The distinctive feature of the family is self-sacrificing 
labor of the stronger and wiser members to raise the 
weaker and -more ignorant to equal advantages. The 
father undergoes toil and self-denial to provide a home, 
and then the mother becomes a self-sacrificing laborer to 
train its inmates. The useless, troublesome infant is 
served in the humblest offices ; while both parents iiD^e in 
training it to an equality with themselves In every advan- 
tage. Soon the older children become helpers to raise the 
younger to a level with their own. When any are sick, 
those who are well become self-sacrificing ministers. 
When the parents are old and useless, the children be- 
come their self-sacrificing servants. 

Thus the discipline of the family state is one of daily 
self-devotion of the stronger and wiser to elevate and sup- 
port the weaker members. Nothing could be more con- 
trary to its first principles than for the older and more 
capable children to combine to secure to themselves the 
highest advantages, enforcing the drudgeries on the young- 
er, at the sacrifice of their equal culture. 

Jesus Christ came to teach the fatherhood of God and 
consequent brotherhood of man. He came as the " first- 
born Son " of 'God and the Elder Brother of man, to teach 
by example the self-sacrifice by which, the great family of 
man is to be raised to equality of advantages as children 
of God. For this end, he " humbled himself " from the 
highest to the lowest place. He chose for his birthplace the 
most despised village ; for his parents the lowest in rank ; 
for his trade, to labor with his hands as a carpenter, being 
" subject to his parents " thirty years. And, what is very 



THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY. 19 

significant, his trade was that which prepares the family 
home, as if he would teach that the great duty of man is 
labor to provide for and train weak and ignorant crea- 
tures. Jesus Christ worked with his hands nearly thirty 
years, and preached less than three. And he taught that 
his kingdom is exactly opposite to that of the world, 
where all are striving for the highest positions. " Whoso 
will be great shall be your minister, and whoso will be 
chiefest shall be servant of all." 

The family state then, is the aptest earthly illustration 
of the heavenly kingdom, and in it woman is its chief 
minister. Her great mission is self-denial, in training its 
members to self-sacrificing labors for the ignorant and 
weak : if not her own children, then the neglected chil- 
dren of her Father in heaven. She is to rear all under her 
care to lay up treasures, not on earth, but in heaven. All 
the pleasures of this life end here ; but those who train 
immortal minds are to reap the fruit of their labor through 
eternal ages. 

To man is appointed the out-door labor to till the earth, 
dig the mines, toil in the foundries, traverse the ocean, 
transport merchandise, labor in manufactories, construct 
houses, conduct civil, municipal, and state affairs, and all 
the heavy work, which, most of the day, excludes him from 
the comforts of a home. But the great stimulus to all 
these toils, implanted in the heart of every true man, is 
the desire for a home of his own, and the hopes of pater- 
nity. Every man who truly lives for immortality responds 
to the beatitude, " Children are a heritage from the Lord : 
blessed is the man that hath his quiver full of them!" 
The more a father and mother live under the influence of 
that " immortality which Christ hath brought to light," 
the more is the blessedness of rearing a family understood 
and appreciated. Every child trained aright is to dwell 
forever in exalted bliss with those that gave it life and 
trained it for heaven. 



20 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

The blessed privileges of the family state are not con- 
fined to those who rear children of their own. Any wo- 
man who can earn a livelihood, as every woman should be 
trained to do, can take a properly qualified female asso- 
ciate, and institute a family of her own, receiving to its 
heavenly influences the orphan, the sick, the homeless, 
and the sinful, and by motherly devotion train them to 
follow the self-denying example of Christ, in educating 
his earthly children for true happiness in this life and for 
his eternal home. 

And such is the blessedness of aiding to sustain a truly 
Christian home, that no one comes so near the pattern of 
the All-perfect One as those who might hold what men call 
a higher place, and yet humble themselves to the lowest in 
order to aid in training the young, " not as men-pleasers, 
but as servants to Christ, with good-will doing service as 
to the Lord, and not to men." Such are preparing for 
high places in the kingdom of heaven. " Whosoever will 
be chiefest among you, let him be your servant." 

It is often the case that the true humility of Christ is 
not understood. It was not in having a low opinion of his 
own character and claims, but it was in taking a low place 
in order to raise others to a higher. The worldling seeks 
to raise himself and family to an equality with others, or, 
if possible, a superiority to them. The true follower of 
Christ comes down in order to elevate others. 

The maxims and institutions of this world have ever 
been antagonistic to the teachings and example of Jesus 
Christ. Men toil for wealth, honor, and power, not as 
means for raising others to an equality with themselves, 
but mainly for earthly, selfish advantages. Although the 
experience of this life shows that children brought up to 
labor have the fairest chance for a virtuous and prosperous 
life, and for hope of future eternal blessedness, yet it is the 
aim of most parents who can do so, to lay up wealth that 
their children need not labor with the hands as Christ did. 



THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY. 21 

And although exhorted by our Lord not to lay up treasure 
on earth, but rather the imperishable riches which are 
gained in toiling to train the ignorant and reform the sin- 
ful, as yet a large portion of the professed followers of 
Christ, like his first disciples, are "slow of heart to be- 
lieve." 

JSTot less have the sacred ministries of the family state 
been undervalued and warred upon in other directions; 
for example, the Romish Church has made celibacy a 
prime virtue, and given its highest honors to those who 
forsake the family state as ordained by God! Thus came 
great communities of monks and nuns, shut out from the 
love and labors of a Christian home ; thus, also, came the 
monkish systems of education, collecting the young in 
great establishments away from the watch and care of 
parents, and the healthful and self-sacrificing labors of a 
home. Thus both religion and education have conspired 
to degrade the family state. 

Still more have civil laws and social customs been op- 
posed to the principles of Jesus Christ. It has ever been 
assumed that the learned, the rich, and the powerful are 
not to labor with the hands,' as Christ did, and as Paul 
did when he would " not eat any man's bread for naught, 
but wrought with labor, not because we have not power " 
[to live without hand-work,] " but to make ourselves an 
example." (2 Thess. 3.) 

Instead of this, manual labor has been made dishonora- 
ble and unrefined by being forced on the ignorant and 
poor. Especially has the most important of all hand-la- 
bor, that which sustains the family, been thus disgraced ; 
so that to nurse young children, and provide the food of a 
family by labor, is deemed the lowest of all positions in 
honor and profit, and the last resort of poverty. And so 
our Lord, who himself took the form of a servant, teaches, 
" How hardly shall they that have riches enter the king- 
dom of heaven !" that kingdom in which all are toiling 



22 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

to raise the weak, ignorant, and sinful to such equality 
with themselves as the children of a loving family enjoy. 
One mode in which riches have led' to antagonism with 
the true end of the family state is in the style of living, 
by which the hand-labor, most important to health, com- 
fort, and beauty, is confined to the most ignorant and neg- 
lected members of society, without any effort being made 
to raise them to equal advantages with the wise and cul 
tivated. 

And, the higher civilization has advanced, the mor- 
have children been trained to feel that to labor, as did 
Christ and Paul, is disgraceful, and to be made the por- 
tion of a degraded class. Children of the rich grow up 
with the feeling that servants are to work for them, and 
they themselves are not to work. To the minds of most 
children and servants, "to be a lady," is almost synony- 
mous with "to be waited on, and do no work." It is the 
earnest desire of the authors of this volume to make plain 
the falsity of this growing popular feeling, and to show 
how much happier and more efficient family life will 
become when it is strengthened, sustained, and adorned 
by family work. 







II. 



A CHEISTIAN HOUSE. 

IN the Divine Word it is written, " The wise woman build- 
eth her house." To be "wise," is "to choose the best 
means for accomplishing the best end." It has been shown 
that the best end for a woman to seek is the training of 
God's children for their eternal horne, by guiding them to 
intelligence, virtue, and true happiness. When, therefore, 
the wise woman seeks a home in which to exercise this 






24 

ministry, she will aim to secure a house so planned that it 
will provide in the best manner for health, industry, and 
economy, those cardinal requisites of domestic enjoyment 
and success. To aid in this, is the object of the following 
drawings and descriptions, which will illustrate a style of 
living more conformed to the great design for which the 
family is instituted than that which ordinarily prevails 
among those classes which take the lead in forming the 
customs of society. The aim will be to exhibit modes of 
economizing labor, time, and expenses, so as to secure 
health, thrift, and domestic happiness to persons of limited 
means, in a measure rarely attained even by those who 
possess wealth. 

At the head of this chapter is a sketch of what may be 
properly called a Christian house ; that is, a house con- 
trived for the express purpose of enabling every member 
of a family to labor with the hands for the common good, 
and by modes at once healthful, economical, and tasteful 

Of course, much of the instruction conveyed in the fol 
lowing pages is chiefly applicable to the wants and habits 
of those living either in the country or in such suburban 
vicinities as give space of ground for healthful outdoor 
occupation in the family service, although the general 
principles of house-building and house-keeping are of ne- 
cessity universal in their application as true in the busy 
confines of the city as in the freer and purer quietude of 
the country. So far as circumstances can be made to 
yield the opportunity, it will be assumed that the family 
state demands some outdoor labor for all. The cultiva- 
tion of flowers to ornament the table and house, of fruits 
and vegetables for food, of silk and cotton for clothing, 
and the care of horse, cow, and dairy, can be so divided 
that each and all of the family, some part of the day, 
can take exercise in the pure air, under the magnetic and 
healthful rays of the sun. Every head of a family should 
seek a soil and climate which will afford such opportuni- 






A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 25 

ties. Railroads, enabling men toiling in cities to rear 
families in the country, are on this account a special bless- 
ing. So, also, is the opening of the South to free labor, 
where, in the pure and mild climate of the uplands, open- 
air labor can proceed most of the year, and women and 
children labor out of doors as well as w: thin. 

In the following drawings are presented modes of econ- 
omizing time, labor, and expense by the close packing of 
conveniences. By such methods, small and economical 
houses can be made to secure most of the comforts and 
many of the refinements of large and expensive ones. 
The cottage at the head of this chapter is projected on a 
plan which can be adapted to a warm or cold climate with 
little change. By adding another story, it would serve a 
large family. 

Fig. 1 shows the ground-plan of the first floor. On the 
inside it is forty-three feet long and twenty-five wide, ex- 
cluding conservatories and front and back projections. Its 
inside height from floor to ceiling is ten feet. The piazzas 
each side of the front projection have sliding-windows to 
the floor, and can, by glazed sashes, be made green-houses 
in winter. In a warm climate, piazzas can be made at the 
back side also. 

In the description and arrangement, the leading aim is 
to show h'ow time, labor, and expense are saved, not only 
in the building but in furniture and its arrangement. 
With this aim, the ground-floor and its furniture will first 
be shown, then the second story and its furniture, and 
then the basement and its conveniences. The conserva- 
tories are appendages not necessary to housekeeping, but 
useful in many ways pointed out more at large in other 
chapters. 

The entry has arched recesses behind the front doors, 
(Fig. 2,) furnished with hooks for over-clothes in both a 
box for over-shoes in one, and a stand for umbrellas in the 
other. The roof of the recess is for statuettes, busts, or 



Fig. 1. 



43 X 25 

INSIDE 



10 FEET 
FROM FLO OR TO CEILING 




DRAWING ROOM 
25 X 16 







A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 27 

flowers. The stairs turn twice with broad steps, making 
a recess at the lower landing, where a table is set with a 
Fig. 2. vase o f flowers, (Fig. 3.) On one side 

of the recess is a closet, arched to cor- 
respond with the arch over the stairs. 
A bracket over the first broad stair, 
with flowers or statuettes, is visible 
from the entrance, and pictures can 
be hung as in the illustration. 

The large room on the left cam be 
made to serve the purpose of several 
rooms by means of a movable screen. 
By shifting this rolling screen from one 
part of the room to another, two apart- 
ments are always available, of any de- 
sired size within the limits of the large 
room. One side of the screen fronts 
what may be used as the parlor or sitting-room ; the other 




side is arranged for 
bedroom conveni- 
ences. Of this, Fig. 
4 shows the front 
side ; covered first 
with strong canvas, 
stretched and nailed 
on. Over this is 
pasted panel-paper, 
and the upper part 
is made to resemble 
an ornamental cor- 
nice by fresco-paper. 
Pictures can be 
hung in the panels, 
or be pasted on and 
varnished with 
white varnish. To 



Fig. 3. 




CLOSET RECESS 



STAIR 
LANDING 



28 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN"* S HOME. 



prevent the absorption of the varnish, a wash of gum 
isinglass (fish-glue) must be applied twice. 




fi.CLLLRS 



Fig. 5 shows the back or inside of the movable screen, 
toward the part of the room used as the bedroom. On 
one side, and at the top and bottom, it has shelves with 
shelf -loxes, which are cheaper and better than drawers, 
and much preferred by those using them. Handles are 
cut in the front and back side, as seen in Fig. 6. Half an 
inch space must be between the box and the shelf over it, 
and as much each side, so that it can be taken out and 
put in easily. The central part of the screen's interior is 
a wardrobe. 

This screen must be so high as nearly to reach the 
ceiling, in order to prevent it from overturning. It is to 
fill the width of the room, except two feet on each side. 
A projecting cleat or strip, reaching nearly to the top of 



A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 29 

the screen, three inches wide, is to be screwed to the front 
sides, on which light frame doors are to be hung, covered 




Fig. 6. 



with canvas and panel-paper like the front of the screen. 
The inside of these doors is furnished with hooks for cloth- 
ing, for which the projection makes room. The whole 
screen is to be eighteen inches deep at the top and two 

feet deep at the base, giving a 
solid foundation. It is moved 
on four wooden rollers, one 
foot long and four inches in 
diameter. The pivots of the 
rollers and the parts where 

there is friction must be rubbed with hard soap, and then 
a child can move the whole easily. 

A curtain is to be hung across the whole interior of the 




30 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



screen by rings, on a strong wire. The curtain should be 
in three parts, with lead or large nails in the hems to 
keep it in place. The wood- work must be put together 
with screws, as the screen is too large to pass through a 
door. 

At the end of the room, behind the screen, are two 
couches, to be run one under the other, as in Fig. 7. The 



Fig. 7. 




upper one is made with four posts, each three feet high 

and three inches square, set on casters two inches high. 

The frame is to be fourteen inches from the floor, seven 

feet long, two feet four inches wide, and three inches in 

thickness. At the head, and at the foot, is to be screwed 

a notched two-inch board, three inches wide, as in Fig. 8. 

The mortises are to be one inch 

Flg ' 8 ' wide and deep, and one inch apart, 

to receive slats made of ash, oak, 

or spruce, one inch square, placed 

lengthwise of the couch. The slats being small, and so 
near together, and running lengthwise, make a better 
spring frame than wire coils. If they warp, they can be 
turned. They must not be fastened at the ends, except 
by insertion in the notches. Across the posts, and of equal 
height with them, are to be screwed head and foot-boards. 



A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 



31 



The under conch is like the upper, except these dimen- 
sions: posts, nine inches high, including castors; frame, 
six feet two inches long, two feet four inches wide. The 
frame should be as near the floor as possible, resting on 

the casters. 

The most healthful and comfortable mattress is made 

by a case, open in 

Fig * 9 ' the centre and 

fastened together 
with buttons, as 
in Fig. 9 ; to be 
filled with oat 

straw, which is softer than wheat or rye. This can be 
adjusted to the figure, and often renewed. 

Fig. 10 represents the upper couch when covered, with 
the under couch put beneath it. The coverlid should 
match the curtain of the screen ; and the pillows, by day, 
should have a case of the same. 




Fig. 10. 



Fig. 11. 





Fig. 11 is an ottoman, made as a box, with a lid on 
hinges. A cushion is fastened to this lid by strings at 
each corner, passing through holes in the box lid and tied 
inside. The cushion to be cut square, with side pieces ; 
stuffed with hair, and stitched through like a mattress. 
Side handles are made by cords fastened inside with knots. 
The box must be two inches larger at the bottom than 
at the top, and the lid and cushion the same size as the 
bottom, to give it a tasteful shape. This ottoman is set 
on casters, and is a great convenience for holding articles, 
while serving also as a seat. 



82 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

The expense of the screen, where lumber averages $4 a 
hundred, and carpenter labor $3 a day, would be about 
$30, and the two couches about $6. The material for 
covering might be cheap and yet pretty. A woman w : th 
these directions, and a son or husband who would use plane 
and saw, could thus secure much additional room, and 
also what amounts to two bureaus, two large trunks, one 
large wardrobe, and a wash-stand, for less than $20 the 
mere cost of materials. The screen and couches can be 
so arranged as to have one room serve first as a large and 
airy sleeping-room ; then, in the morning, it may be used 
as sitting-room 'one side of the screen, and breakfast-room 
the other ; and lastly, through the day it can be made a 
large parlor on the front side, and a sewing or retiring- 
room the other side. The needless spaces usually devoted 
to kitchen, entries, halls, back-stairs, pantries, store-rooms, 
and closets, by this method would be used in adding to 
the size of the large room, so variously used by day and 
by night. 

Fig. 12 is an enlarged plan of the kitchen and stove- 
room. The chimney and stove-room are contrived to 
ventilate the whole house, by a mode exhibited in another 
chapter. 

Between the two 'rooms glazed sliding-doors, passing 
each other, serve to shut out heat and smells from the 
kitchen. The sides of the stove-roorn must be lined with 
shelves ; those on the side by the cellar stairs, to be one 
foot wide, and eighteen inches apart ; on the other side, 
shelves may be narrower, eight inches wide and nine 
inches apart. Boxes with lids, to receive stove utensils, 
must be placed near the stove. 

On these shelves, and in the closet and boxes, can be 
placed every material used for cooking, all the table and 
cooking utensils, and all the articles used in house work, 
and yet much spare room will be left. The cook's galley 
in a steamship has every article and utensiJ used in cook- 



Fig. 12. 







(FLOUR) 


COOK 


DRAIN 


SINK I 
"X) 

<o 






Jl- L 



KITCHEN 

9*9 




LANDING 



34 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S HOME. 

ing for two hundred persons, in a space not larger than 
this stove-room, and so arranged that with one or two 
steps the cook can reach all he uses. 

In contrast to this, in most large houses, the table 
furniture, the cooking materials and utensils, the sink, and 
the eating-room, are at such distances apart, that half the 
time and strength is employed in walking back and forth 
to collect and return the articles used. 

Fig. 13. 




Fig. 13 is an enlarged plan of the sink and cooking- 
form. Two windows make a better circulation of air in 
warm weather, by having one open at top and the other 



A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 35 

at the bottom, while the light is better adjusted for work- 
ing, in case of weak eyes. 

The flour-barrel just fills the closet, which has a door 
for admission, and a lid to raise when used. Beside it, is 
the form for cooking, with a moulding-board laid on it ; 
one side used for preparing vegetables and meat, and the 
other for moulding bread. The sink has two pumps, for 
well and for rain-water one having a forcing power to 
throw water into the reservoir in the garret, which sup- 
plies the water-closet and bath-room. On the other side 
of the sink is the dish-drainer, with a ledge on the edge 
next the sink, to hold the dishes, and grooves cut to let 
the water drain into the sink. It has hinges, so that it 
can either rest on the cook-form or be turned over and 
cover the sink. Under the sink are shelf-boxes placed on 
two shelves run into grooves, with other grooves above 
and below, so that one may move the shelves and increase 
or diminish the spaces between. The shelf-boxes can be 
used for scouring-materials, dish-towels, and dish-cloths; 
also to hold bowls for bits of butter, fats, etc. Under 
these two shelves is room for two pails, and a jar for 
soap-grease. 

Under the cook-form are shelves and shelf-boxes for un- 
bolted wheat, corn-meal, rye, etc. Beneath these, for 
white and brown sugar, are wooden can-pails, which are 
the best articles in which to keep these constant neces- 
sities. Beside them is the tin molasses-can with a tight, 
movable cover, and a cork in the spout. This is much 
better than a jug for molasses, and also for vinegar and 
oil, being easier to clean and to handle. Other articles 
and implements for cooking can be arranged on or under 
the shelves at the side and front. 
A small cooking-tray, holding 
pepper, salt, dredging-box, knife 
and spoon, should stand close at 
hand by the stove, (Fig. 14.) 




36 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 15. 




Fig. 16. 




Fig. 18. 



The articles used for setting 
tables are to be placed on the 
shelves at the front and side of 
the sink. Two tumbler-trays, 

made of pasteboard, covered 

with varnished fancy papers and 

divided by wires, (as shown in Fig. 15,) save many steps 

in setting' and clearing table. Similar trays, (Fig. 16,) for 

knives and forks and spoons, serve 

the same purpose. 

The sink should be three feet 

long and three inches deep, its 

width matching the cook-form. 
Fig. 17 is the second or attic story. The main objection 
to attic rooms is their warmth in summer, owing to the 
heated roof. This is prevented by so enlarging the closets 
each side that their walls meet 
the ceiling under the garret 
floor, thus excluding all the 
roof. In the bed-chambers, 
corner dressing-tables, as Fig. 
18, instead of projecting bu- 
reaus, save much space for 
use, and give a handsome 
form and finish to the room. 
In the bath-room must be 
the opening to the garret, and 
a step-ladder to reach it. A 
reservoir in the garret, sup- 
plied by a forcing-pump in 
the cellar or at the sink, must 
be well supported by timbers, and the plumbing must be 
well done, or much annoyance will ensue. 

The large chambers are to be lighted by large windows 
or glazed sliding-doors, opening upon the balcony. A roof 
can be put over the balcony and its sides inclosed by win- 




Fig. 17. 




THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

dows, and the chamber extend into it, and be thus much 

enlarged. 

The water-closets must have the latest improvements 

for safe discharge, and there will be no trouble. They 

cost no more than an out-door building, and save from the 

most disagreeable house-labor. 

A great improvement, called earth-closets, will probably 
take the place of water-closets to some extent ; though at 
present the water is the more convenient. A description of 
the earth-closet will be given in another chapter relating to 
tenement-houses for the poor in large cities. 

The method of ventilating all the chambers, and also 
the cellar, will be described in another chapter. 

Fig. 19 represents a shoe-bag, Fig 19 

that can be fastened to the side 
of a closet or closet-door. 

Fig. 20 represents a piece-bag, 
and is a very great labor and space- 
saving invention. It is made of 
calico, and fastened to the side of 
a closet, or a door, to hold all the 
bundles that are usually stowed 
in trunks and drawers. India- 
rubber or elastic tape drawn into 
hems to hold the contents of the 
bag is better than tape-strings. 
Each bag should be labeled with 
the name of its contents, written 

with indelible ink on white tape sewed on to the bag. 
Such systematic arrangement saves much time and annoy- 
ance. Drawers or trunks to hold these articles can not be 
kept so easily in good order, and moreover, occupy spaces 
saved by this contrivance. 

Fig. 21 is the basement. It has the floor and sides plas- 
tered, and is lighted with glazed doors. A form is raised 
close by the cellar stairs, fgr baskets, pails, and tubs. 




A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 



39 



Here, also, the refrigerator can be placed, or, what is 
better, an ice-closet can be made, as designated in the 
illustration. The floor of the basement must be an in- 
clined plane toward a drain, and be plastered with water- 
lime. The wash-tubs have plugs in the bottom to let off 
water, and cocks and pipes* over them bringing cold water 
from the reservoir in the garret and hot water from the 
laundry stove. This saves much heavy labor of emptying 
tubs and carrying water. 

The laundry closet has a stove for heating irons, and 
also a kettle on top for heating water. Slides or clothes- 



Fig. 20. 



NEW WHITE 
COTTONS 



COLORED 
COTTONS 
CALICO 




Fig. 21. 





IRONING 






TABLE 


til 






Ml 

(0 


LAUNDRY 


o 

Lj 


LAZED DOOR O 


5 


I 


z 
-I 


TUBS C 




1 LAUNDRY i 






SLIDES 




i WOOD FURNACE 

AND 

COAL 



...j 



GLAZED DOOR 



FRUIT& 
STORES 



VEGETABLES 



A CHRISTIAN HOUSE. 41 

frames are made to draw out to receive wet clothes, and 
then run into the closet to dry. This saves health as well 
as time and money, and the clothes are as white as when 
dried outdoors. 

The wood-work of the house, for doors, windows, etc., 
should be oiled chestnut, butternut, whitewood, and pine. 
This is cheaper, handsomer, and more easy to keep clean 
than painted wood. 

In Fig. 1 are planned two conservatories, and few under- 
stand their value in the training of the young. They pro- 
vide soil, in which children, through the winter months, 
can be starting seeds and plants for their gardens and rais- 
ing valuable, tender plants. Every child should cultivate 
flowers and fruits to sell and to give away, and thus be 
taught to learn the value of money and to practice both 
economy and benevolence. 

According to the calculation of a house-carpenter, in a 
place where the average price of lumber is $4: a hundred, 
and carpenter work $3 a day, such a house can be built 
for $1600. For those practicing the closest economy, two 
small families could occupy it, by dividing the kitchen, 
and yet have room enough. Or one large room and the 
chamber over it can be left till increase of family and 
means require enlargement. 

A strong horse and carryall, with a cow, garden, vine- 
yard, and orchard, on a few acres, would secure all the 
substantial comforts found in great establishments, with- 
out the trouble of ill-qualified servants. 

And if the parents and children were united in the 
daily labors of the house, garden, and fruit culture, such 
thrift, health, and happiness would be secured as is but 
rarely found among the rich. 

Let us suppose a colony of cultivated and Christian peo- 
ple, having abundant wealth, who now are living as the 
wealthy usually do, emigrating to some of the beauti- 
ful Southern uplands, where are rocks, hills, valleys, and 



42 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

mountains as picturesque as those of New-England, where 
the thermometer but rarely reaches 90 in summer, and 
in winter as rarely sinks below freezing-point, so that out- 
door labor g6es on all the year, where the fertile soil is 
easily worked, where rich tropical fruits and flowers 
abound, where cotton and silk can be raised by children 
around their home, where the produce of vineyards and 
orchards finds steady markets by railroads ready made ; 
suppose such a colony, with a central church and school- 
room, library, hall for sports, and a common laundry, (tak- 
ing the most trying part of domestic labor from each 
house,) suppose each family to train the children to 
labor with the hands as a healthful and honorable duty ; 
suppose all this, which is perfectly practicable, would not 
the enjoyment of this life be increased, and also abundant 
treasures be laid up in heaven, by using the wealth thus 
economized in diffusing similar enjoyments and culture 
among the poor, ignorant, and neglected ones in desolated 
sections where many now are perishing for want of such 
Christian example and influences ? 



m. 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 

" the wise woman buildeth lier house," the first 
consideration will be the health of the inmates. The 
first and most indispensable requisite for health is pure 
air, both by day and night. 

If the parents of a family should daily withhold from 
their children a large portion of food needful to growth 
and health, and every night should administer to each a 
small dose of poison, it would be called murder of the 
most hideous character. But it is probable that more 
than one half of this nation are doing that very thing. 
The murderous operation is perpetrated daily and nightly, 
in our parlors, our bed-rooms, our kitchens, our school- 
rooms; and even our churches are no asylum from the 
barbarity. 'Nor can we escape by our railroads, for even 
there the same dreadful work is going on. 

The only palliating circumstance is the ignorance of 
those who commit these wholesale murders. As saith the 
Scripture, " The people do perish for lack of knowledge." 
And it is this lack of knowledge which it is woman's 
special business to supply, in first training her household 
to intelligence as the indispensable road to virtue and 
happiness. 

The above statements will be illustrated by some ac- 
count of the manner in which the body is supplied with 
healthful nutriment. There are two modes of nourishing 
the body, one is by food and the other by air. In the 



44 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



stomach, the food is dissolved, and the nutritious portion 
is absorbed by the blood, and then is carried by blood- 
vessels to the lungs, where it receives oxygen from the 
air we breathe. This oxygen is as necessary to the nourish- 
ment of the body as the food for the stomach. In a full- 
grown man weighing one hundred and fifty-four pounds, 
one hundred and eleven pounds consists of oxygen, ob- 
tained chiefly from the air we breathe. Thus the lungs 
feed the body with oxygen, as really as the stomach sup- 
plies the other food required. 

The lungs occupy the upper 
portion of the body from the 
collar-bone to the lower ribs, 
and between their two lobes is 
placed the heart. 

Fig. 22 shows the position of 
the lungs, though not the exact 
shape. On the right hand is 
the exterior of ,one of the lobes, 
and on the left hand are seen 
the branching tubes of the in- 
terior, through which the air 
we breathe passes to the ex- 
ceedingly minute air-cells of 
which the lungs chiefly consist. 
Fig. 23 shows the outside of a 
cluster of these air-cells, and 
Fig. 24 is the in- Fig. &L 

side view. The 
lining membrane 
of each air-cell is 
covered by a net- 
work of minute 
blood-vessels call- 
ed capil laries, 
which, magnified 




Fig. 





A HEALTHFUL HOME. 



45 



Fig. 25. 



Fig. 36. 




several hundred times, appear in the microscope as at Fig. 
25. Every air-cell has a blood-vessel that brings blood 
from the heart, 
which meanders 
through its capil- 
laries till it reach- 
es another blood- 
vessel that carries 
it back to the 
heart, as seen in 
Fig. 26. In this 

passage of the blood through these 
capillaries, the air in the air-cell ini- 
parts its oxygen to the blood, and re- 
ceives in exchange carbonic acid and 
watery vapor. These latter are expir- 
ed at every breath into the atmo- 
sphere. 

By calculating the number of air 
cells in a small portion of the lungs, under a miser oscope, 
it is ascertained that there are no less than eighteen mil- 
lion of these wonderful little purifiers and feeders of the 
body. By their ceaseless ministries, every grown person 
receives, each day, thirty-three hogsheads of air into the 
lungs to nourish and vitalize every part of the body, and 
also to carry off its impurities. 

But the heart has a most important agency in this 
operation. Fig. 27 is a diagram of the heart, which is 
placed between the two lobes of the lungs. The right 
side of the heart receives the dark and impure blood, 
which is loaded with carbonic acid. ' It is brought from 
every point of the body by branching veins that unite in 
the upper and the lower vena cava, which discharge into 
the right side of the heart. This impure blood passes to 
the capillaries of the air-cells in the lungs, where it gives 
off carbonic acid, and, taking oxygen from the air, then 




46 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN^ S HOME. 



returns to the left side of the heart, from whence it is sent 
out through the aorta and its myriad branching arteries 
to every part of the body. 

AORTA. When the up- 

per portion of the 
heart contracts, it 
forces both the 
pure blood from 
the lungs, and 
the impure blood 
from the body, 




through the 
valves marked V, 
Y, into the lower 
part. "When the 
lower portion 
contracts, it closes 
the valves and 

Fig 37 forces the impure 

blood into the 

lungs on one side, and also on the other side forces the 
purified blood through the aorta and arteries to all parts 
of the body. 

As before stated, the lungs consist chiefly of air-cells, 
the walls of which are lined with minute blood-vessels; 
and we know that in every man these air-cells number 
eighteen millions. 

Now every beat of the heart sends two ounces of blood 
into the minute, hair-like blood-vessels, called capillaries, 
that line these air-cells, whef e the air in the air-cells gives 
its oxygen to the blood, an.d in its place receives carbonic 
acid. This gas is then expired by the lungs into the sur- 
rounding atmosphere. 

Thus, by this powerful little organ, the heart, no less 
than twenty-eight pounds of blood, in a common-sized 
man, is sent three times every hour through the lungs, 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 47 

giving out carbonic acid and watery vapor, and receiving 
the life-inspiring oxygen. 

Whether all this blood shall convey the nourishing and 
invigorating oxygen to every part of the body, or return 
unrelieved of carbonic acid, depends entirely on the pure- 
ness of the atmosphere that is breathed. 

Every time we think or feel, this mental action dissolves 
some particles of the brain and nerves, which pass into 
the blood to be thrown out of the body through the lungs 
and skin. In like manner, whenever we move any muscle, 
some of its particles decay and pass away. It is in the 
capillaries, which are all over the body, that this change 
takes place. The blood-vessels that convey the pure blood 
from the heart, divide into myriads of little branches that 
terminate in capillary vessels like those lining the air-cells 
of the lungs. The blood meanders through these minute 
capillaries, depositing the oxygen taken from the lungs 
and the food of the stomach, and receiving in return the 
decayed matter, which is chiefly carbonic acid. 

This carbonic acid is formed by the union of oxygen 
with carbon or charcoal, which forms a large portion of 
the body. Watery vapor is also formed in the capillaries 
by the union of oxygen with the hydrogen contained in 
the food and drink that nourish the body. 

During this process in the capillaries, the bright red 
blood of the arteries changes to the purple blood of the 
veins, which is carried back to the heart, to be sent to the 
lungs as before described. A portion of the oxygen re- 
ceived in the lungs unites with the dissolved food sent 
from the stomach into the blood, and no food can notrish 
the body till it has received a proper supply of oxygen in 
the lungs. At every breath a half-pint of blood receives 
its needed oxygen in the lungs, and at the same time gives 
out an equal amount of carbonic acid and water. 

Now, this carbonic acid, if received into the lungs, 
undiluted by sufficient air, is a fatal poison, causing 



48 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

certain death. "When it is mixed with only a small por- 
tion of air, it is a slow poison, which imperceptibly under- 
mines the constitution. 

"We now can understand how it is that all who live in 
houses where the breathing of inmates has deprived the 
air of oxygen, and loaded it with carbonic acid, may truly 
be said to be poisoned and starved ; poisoned with carbonic 
acid, and starved for want of oxygen. 

Whenever oxygen unites with carbon to form carbonic 
acid, or with hydrogen to form water, heat is generated 
Thus it is that a kind of combustion is constantly going 
on in the capillaries all over the body. It is this burning 
of the decaying portions of the body that causes animal 
heat. It is a process similar to that, which takes place 
when lamps and candles are burning. The oil and tallow } 
which are chiefly carbon and hydrogen, unite with the 
oxygen of the air and form carbonic acid and watery 
vapor, producing heat during the process. So in the ca- 
pillaries all over the body, the carbon and hydrogen sup- 
plied to the blood by the stomach, unite with the oxygen 
gained in the lungs, and cause the heat which is diffused 
all over the body. 

The skin also performs an office, similar to that of the 
lungs. In the skin of every adult there are no less than 
seven million minute perspirating tubes, each one fourth 
of an inch long. If all these were united in one length, 
they would extend twenty-eight miles. These minute 
tubes are lined with capillary blood-vessels, which are* 
constantly sending out not only carbonic acid, but other 
gases and particles of decayed matter. The skin and 
lungs together, in one day and night, throw out three 
quarters of a pound of charcoal as carbonic acid, beside 
other gases and water. 

While the bodies of men and animals are filling the 
air with the poisonous carbonic acid, and using up the 
life-giving oxygen, the trees and plants are performing an 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 49 

exactly contrary process ; for they are absorbing carbonic 
acid and giving out oxygen. Thus, by a wonderful 
arrangement of the beneficent Creator, a constant equi- 
librium is preserved. What animals use is provided by 
vegetables, and what vegetables require is furnished by 
animals ; and all goes on, day and night, without care or 
thought of man. 

The human race in its infancy was placed in a mild 
and genial clime, where each separate family dwelt in 
tents, and breathed, both day and night, the pure air of 
heaven. And when they became scattered abroad to 
colder climes, the open fire-place secured a full supply of 
pure air. Eut civilization has increased economies and 
conveniences far ahead of the knowledge needed by the 
common people for their healthful use. Tight sleeping- 
rooms, and close, air-tight stoves, are now starving and poi- 
soning more than one half of this nation. It seems im- 
possible to make people know their danger. And the 
remedy for this is the light of knowledge and intelligence 
which it is woman's special mission to bestow, as she con- 
trols and regulates the ministries of a home. 

The poisoning process is thus exhibited in Mrs. Stowe's 
" House and Home Papers," and can not be recalled too 
often : 

" ]STo other gift of God, so precious, so inspiring, is treat- 
ed with such utter irreverence and contempt in the calcu- 
lations of us mortals as this same air of heaven. A ser- 
mon on oxygen, if we had a preacher who understood the 
subject, might do more to repress sin than the most ortho- 
dox discourse to show when and how and why sin came. 
A minister gets up in a crowded lecture-room, where the 
mephitic air almost makes the candles burn blue, and be- 
wails the deadness of the church the church the while, 
drugged by the poisoned air, growing sleepier and sleepier, 
though they feel dreadfully wicked for being so. 

" Little Jim, who, fresh from his afternoon's ramble in 



50 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'' S HOME. 

the fields, last evening said his prayers dutifully, and lay 
down to sleep in a most Christian frame, this morning sits 
up in bed with his hair bristling with crossness, strikes at 
his nurse, and declares he won't say his prayers that he 
don't want to be good. The simple difference is, that the 
child, having slept in a close box of a room, his brain all 
night fed by poison, is in a mild state of moral insanity. 
Delicate women remark that it takes them till eleven or 
twelve o'clock to get up their strength in the morning. 
Query, Do they sleep with closed windows and doors, and 
with heavy bed-curtains ? 

" The houses built by our ancestors were better ventila- 
ted in certain respects than modern ones, with all their 
improvements. The great central chimney, with its open 
fire-places in the different rooms, created a constant cur- 
rent which carried off foul and vitiated air. In these 
days, how common is it to provide rooms with only a flue 
for a stove ! This flue is kept shut in summer, and in win- 
ter opened only to admit a close stove, which burns away 
the vital portion of the air quite as fast as the occupants 
breathe it away. The sealing up of fire-places and intro- 
duction of air-tight stoves may, doubtless, be a saving of 
fuel ; it saves, too, more than that ; in thousands and thou- 
sands of cases it has saved people from all further human 
wants, and put an end forever to any needs short of the 
six feet of narrow earth which are man's only inalienable 
property. In other words, since the invention of air-tight 
stoves, thousands have died of slow poison. 

" It is a terrible thing to reflect upon, that our northern 
winters last from November to May, six long months, in 
which many families confine themselves to one room, of 
which every window-crack has been carefully calked to 
make it air-tight, wnere an air-tight stove keeps the atmo- 
sphere at a temperature between eighty and ninety ; and 
the inmates, sitting there with all their winter clothes on, 
become enervated both by the heat and by the poisoned 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 51 

air, for which there is no escape but the occasional open- 
ing of a door. 

" It is no wonder that the first result of all this is such 
a delicacy of skin and lungs that about half the inmates 
are obliged to give up going into the open air during the 
six cold months, because they invariably catch cold if they 
do so. It is no wonder that the cold caught about the first 
of December has by the first of March become a fixed con- 
sumption, and that the opening of the spring, which ought 
to bring life and health, in so many cases brings death. 

" We hear of the lean condition in which the poor bears 
emerge from their six months' wintering, during which 
they subsist on the fat which they have acquired the pre- 
vious summer. Even so, in our long winters, multitudes 
of delicate people subsist on the daily waning strength 
which they acquired in the season when windows and 
doors were open, and fresh air was a constant luxury. No 
wonder we hear of spring fever and spring biliousness, and 
have thousands of nostrums for clearing the blood in the 
spring. All these things are the pantings and palpita 
tions of a system run down under slow poison, unable to 
get a step further. 

" Better, far better, the old houses of the olden time, 
with their great roaring fires, and their bed-rooms where 
the snow came in and the wintry winds whistled. Then, 
to be sure, you froze your back while you burned your 
face, your water froze nightly in your pitcher, your breath 
congealed in ice- wreaths on the blankets, and you could 
write your name on the pretty snow-wreath that had sifted 
in through the window-cracks. But you woke full of life 
and vigor, you looked out into the whirling snow-storms 
without a shiver, and thought nothing of plunging through 
drifts as high as your head on your daily way to school. 
You jingled in sleighs, you snow-balled, you lived in snow 
like a snow-bird, and your blood coursed and tingled, in 
lull tide of good, merry, real life, through your veins 



52 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

none of the slow-creeping, black blood which clogs the 
brain and lies like a weight on the vital wheels !" 

To illustrate the effects of this poison, the horrors of 
"the Black Hole of Calcutta" are often referred to, 
where one hundred and forty-six men were crowded into 
a room only eighteen feet square with but two small win- 
dows, and in a hot climate. After a night .of such horri- 
ble torments as chill the blood to read, the morning 
showed a pile of one hundred and twenty-three dead men 
and twenty- three half dead that were finally recovered 
only to a life of weakness and suffering. 

In another case, a captain of the steamer Londonderry, 
in 1848, from sheer ignorance of the consequences, in a 
storm, shut up his passengers in a tight room without win- 
dows. The agonies, groans, curses, and shrieks that fol- 
lowed were horrible. The struggling mass finally burst 
the door, and the captain fountl seventy-two of the two 
hundred already dead ; while others, with blood starting 
from their eyes and ears, and their bodies in convulsions, 
were restored, many only to a life of sickness and de- 
bility. 

It is ascertained by experiments that breathing bad 
air tends so to reduce all the processes of the body, that 
less oxygen is demanded and less carbonic acid sent out. 
This, of course, lessens the vitality and weakens the con- 
stitution ; and it accounts for the fact that a person of full 
health, accustomed to pure air, suffers from bad air far 
more than those who are accustomed to it. The body of 
strong and healthy persons demands more oxygen, and 
throws off more carbonic acid, and is distressed when the 
supply fails. But the one reduced by bad air feels little 
inconvenience, because all the functions of life are so slow 
that less oxygen is needed, and less carbonic acid thrown 
out. And the sensibilities being deadened, the evil is not 
felt. This provision of nature prolongs many lives, though 
it turns vigorous constitutions into feeble ones. Were it 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 53 

not for this change in the constitution, thousands in badly 
ventilated rooms and houses would come to a speedy death. 

One of the results of un ventilated rooms is scrofula. A 
distinguished French physician, M. Baudeloque, states that : 

" The repeated respiration of the same atmosphere is 
the cause of scrofula. If there be entirely pure air, there 
may be bad food, bad clothing, and want of personal clean- 
liness, but scrofulous disease can not exist. This disease 
never attacks persons who pass their lives in the open air, 
and always manifests itself when they abide in air which 
is unrenewed. Invariably it will be found that a tru.y 
scrofulous disease is caused by vitiated air ; and it is not 
necessary that there should be a prolonged stay in such 
an atmosphere. Often, several hours each day is suffi- 
cient. Thus persons may live in the most healthy coun- 
try, pass most of the day in the open air, and yet become 
scrofulous by sleeping in a close room where the air is not 
renewed. This is the case with many shepherds who pass 
their nights in small huts with no opening but a door 
closed tight at night." 

The same writer illustrates this by the history of a 
French village where the inhabitants all slept in close, un- 
ventilated houses. Nearly all were seized with scrofula, 
and many families became wholly extinct, their last mem- 
bers dying "rotten with scrofula." A fire destroyed a 
large part of this village. Houses were then built to 
secure pure air, and scrofula disappeared from the part 
thus rebuilt. 

We are informed by medical writers that defective ven- 
tilation is one great cause of diseased joints, as well as of 
diseases of the eyes, ears, and skin. 

Foul air is the leading cause of tubercular and scrofu- 
lous consumption, so very common in our country. Dr. 
Guy, in his examination before public health commission- 
ers in Great Britain, says : " Deficient ventilation I believe 
to be more fatal than all other causes put together." He 



54 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S SOME. 

states that consumption is twice as common among trades* 
men as among the gentry, owing to the bad ventilation of 
their stores and dwellings. 

Dr. Griscom, in his work on Uses and Abuses of Air, 
says: 

" Food carried from the stomach to the blood can not be- 
come nutritive till it is properly oxygenated in the lungs ; 
so that a small quantity of food, even if less wholesome, 
may be made nutritive by pure air as it passes through 
the lungs. But the best of food can not be changed into 
nutritive blood till it is vitalized by pure air in the lungs." 

And again : 

" To those who have the care and instruction of the ris- 
ing generation the future fathers and mothers of men 
this subject of ventilation commends itself with an inter- 
est surpassing every other. Nothing can more convincing- 
ly establish the belief in the existence of something vital- 
ly wrong in the habits and circumstances of civilized life 
than the appalling fact that one fourth of all who are born 
die before reaching the fifth year, and one half the deaths 
of mankind occur under the twentieth year. Let those 
who have these things in charge answer to their own con- 
sciences how they discharge their duty in supplying to the 
young a pure atmosphere, which is the ftrst requisite for 
healthy "bodies and sound minds" 

On the subject of infant mortality the experience of sav- 
ages should teach the more civilized. Professor Brewer, 
who traveled extensively among the Indians of our western 
territories, states : " I have rarely seen a sick boy among 
the Indians." Catlin, the painter, who resided and traveled 
BO much among these people, states that infant mortality is 
very small among them, the reason, of course, being abun- 
dant exercise and pure air. 

Dr. Dio Lewis, whose labors in the cause of health are 
well known, in his very useful work, Weak Lungs^ and 
How to Make them Strong -, says : 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 55 

" As a medical man I have visited thousands of sick- 
rooms, and have not found in one in a hu/ndred of them 
a pure atmosphere. I have often returned from church 
doubting whether I had not committed a sin in exposing 
myself so long to its poisonous air. There are in our great 
cities churches costing $50,000, in the construction of which 
not fifty cents were expended in providing means for ven- 
tilation. Ten thousand dollars for ornament, but not ten 
cents for pure air ! 

" Unventilated parlors, with gas-burners, (each consum- 
ing as much oxygen as several men,) made as tight as pos- 
sible, and a party of ladies and gentlemen spending half 
the night in them ! In 1861, 1 visited a legislative hall, 
the legislature being in session. I remained half an hour 
in the most impure air I ever breathed. Our school-houses 
are, some of them, so vile in this respect, that I would pre- 
fer to have my son remain in utter ignorance of books 
rather than to breathe, six hours every day, such a poison- 
ous atmosphere. Theatres and concert-rooms are so foul 
that only reckless people continue to visit them. Twelve 
hours in a railway-car exhausts one, not by the journeying, 
but because of the devitalized air. While crossing the 
ocean in a Cunard steamer, I was amazed that men who 
knew enough to construct such ships did not know enough 
to furnish air to the passengers. The distress of sea-sick- 
ness is greatly intensified by the sickening air of the ship. 
Were carbonic acid only ~black, what a contrast there would 
be between our hotels in their elaborate ornament ! 

" Some time since I visited an establishment where one 
hundred and fifty girls, in a single room, were engaged in 
needle- work. Pale-faced, and with low vitality and feeble 
circulation, they were unconscious that they were breath- 
ing air that at once produced in me dizziness and a sense 
of suffocation. If I had remained a week with them, I 
should, by reduced vitality, have become unconscious of 
the vileness of the air 1" 



56 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

There is a prevailing prejudice against night air as un- 
liealthful to be admitted into sleeping-rooms, which is 
owing wholly to sheer ignorance. In the night every 
body necessarily breathes night air and no other. When 
admitted from without into a sleeping-room it is colder, 
and therefore heavier, than the air within, so it sinks to 
the bottom of the room and forces out an equal quantity 
of the impure air, warmed and vitiated by passing through 
the lungs of inmates. Thus the question is, Shall we shut 
up a chamber and breathe night air vitiated with carbonic 
acid or night air that is pure ? The only real difficulty 
about night air is, that usually it is damper, and therefore 
colder and more likely to chill. This is easily prevented 
by sufficient bed-clothing. 

One other very prevalent mistake is found even in books 
written by learned men. It is often thought that carbonic 
acid, being heavier than common air, sinks to the floor of 
sleeping-rooms, so that the low trundle-beds for children 
should not be used. This is all a mistake ; for, as a fact, in 
close sleeping-rooms the purest air is below and the most im- 
pure above. It is true that carbonic acid is heavier than com- 
mon air, when pure ; but this it rarely is except in chemical 
experiments. It is the property of all gases, as well as of 
the two (oxygen and nitrogen) composing the atmosphere, 
that when brought together they always are entirely mixed, 
each being equally diffused exactly as it would be if alone. 
Thus the carbonic acid from the skin and lungs, being 
warmed in the body, rises as does the common air, with 
which it mixes, toward the top of a room ; so that usually 
there is more carbonic acid at the top than at the bottom of 
a room.* Both common air and carbonic acid expand and 
become lighter in the same proportions ; that is, for every 



* Prof. Brewer, of the Yale Scientific School, says : " As a fact, often 
demonstrated by analysis, there is generally more carbonic acid near the 
ceiling than near the floor." 



A HEALTHFUL HOME. 57 

degree of added heat they expand at the rate of T |- T of 
thei* bulk. 

Here, let it be remembered, that in ill-ventilated rooms 
the carbonic acid is not the only cause of disease. Experi- 
ments seem to prove that other matter thrown out of the 
body, through the lungs and skin, is as truly excrement and 
in a state of decay as that ejected from the bowels, and as 
poisonous to the animal system. Carbonic acid has no 
odor; but we are warned by the disagreeable effluvia of 
close sleeping-rooms of the other poison thus thrown into 
the air from the skin and lungs. There is one provision of 
nature that is little understood, which saves the lives of 
thousands living in unventilated houses; and that is, the 
passage of pure air inward and impure air outward through 
the pores of bricks, wood, stone, and mortar. "Were such 
dwellings changed to tin, which is not thus porous, in less 
than a week thousands and tens of thousands would be in 
danger of perishing by suffocation. 

These statements give some idea of the evils to be reme- 
died. But the most difficult point is how to secure the 
remedy. For often the attempt to secure pure air by one 
class of persons brings chills, colds, and disease on another 
class, from mere ignorance or mismanagement. 

To illustrate this, it must be borne in mind that those 
who live in warm, close, and unventilated rooms are much 
more liable to take cold from exposure to draughts and 
cold air than those of vigorous vitality accustomed to 
breathe pure air. 

Thus the strong and healthy husband, feeling the want 
of pure air in the night, and knowing its importance, keeps 
.windows open and makes such draughts that the wife, who 
lives all day in a close room and thus is low in vitality, can 
not bear the change, has colds, and sometimes perishes a 
victim to wrong modes of ventilation. 

So, even in health-establishments, the patients will pass 
most of their days and nights in badly- ventilated rooms. 



58 

But at times the physician, or some earnest patient, insists 
on a mode of ventilation that brings more evil than -good 
to the delicate inmates. 

The grand art of ventifating houses is by some method 
that will empty rooms of the vitiated air and bring in a 
supply of pure air "by small and imperceptible currents. 

But this important duty of a Christian woman is one 
that demands more science, care, and attention than 
almost any other; and yet, to prepare her for this duty 
has never been any part of female education. Young 
women are taught to draw mathematical diagrams and to 
solve astronomical problems ; but few, if any, of them are 
taught to solve the problem of a house constructed to se- 
cure pure and moist air by day and night for all its inmates. 

The heating and management of the air we breathe is 
one of the most complicated problems of domestic econo- 
my, as will be farther illustrated in the succeeding chap- 
ter; and yet it is one of which most American women 
are profoundly ignorant. 



IV. 

SCIENTIFIC DOMESTIC VENTILATION. 

have seen in the preceding pages the process throngh 
which the air is rendered unhealthful by close rooms and 
want of ventilation. Every person inspires air about twenty 
times each minute, using half a pint each time. At this 
rate, every pair of lungs vititates one hogshead of air every 
hour. The membrane that lines the multitudinous air-cells 
of the lungs in which the capillaries are, should it be united 
in one sheet, would cover the floor of a room twelve 
feet square. Every breath brings a surface of air in contact 
with this extent of capillaries, by which the air inspired 
gives up most of its oxygen and receives carbonic acid in 
its stead. These facts furnish a guide for the proper venti- 
lation of rooms. Just in proportion to the number of per- 
sons in a room or a house, should be the amount of air 
brought in and carried out by arrangements for ventilation. 
But how rarely is this rule regarded in building houses or 
in the care of families by housekeepers ! 

The evils resulting from the substitution of stoves in- 
stead of the open fireplace, have led scientific and benevo- 
lent men to contrive various modes of supplying pure air 
to both public and private houses. But as yet little has 
been accomplished, except for a few of the more intelligent 
and wealthy. The great majority of the American people, 
owing to sheer ignorance, are, for want of pure air, being 
poisoned and starved ; the result being weakened constitu- 
tions, frequent disease, and shortened life. 



60 THE AMERICAN WOMA^S HOME. 

"Whenever a family-room is heated by an open fire, it is 
duly ventilated, as the impure air is constantly passing off 
through the chimney, while, to supply the vacated space, 
the pure air presses in through the cracks of doors, win- 
dows, and floors. No such supply is gained for rooms 
warmed by stoves. And yet, from mistaken motives of 
economy, as well as from ignorance of the resulting evils, 
multitudes of householders are thus destroying health and 
shortening life, especially in regard to women and children 
who spend most of their time within-doors. 

The most successful modes of making " a healthful home " 
by a full supply of pure air to every inmate, will now be 
described and illustrated. 

It is the common property of both air and water to ex- 
pand, become lighter and rise, just in proportion as they 
are heated; and therefore it is the invariable law that cool 
air sinks, thus replacing the warmer air below. Thus, 
whenever cool air enters a warm room, it sinks downward 
and takes the place of an equal amount of the warmer air, 
which is constantly tending upward and outward. This 
principle of all fluids is illustrated by the following experi- 
ment: 

Take a glass jar about a foot high and three inches in 
diameter, and with a wire to aid in placing it aright, sink 
a small bit of lighted candle so as to stand in the centre at 
the bottom. (Fig. 28.) The candle will heat the air of the 
jar, which will rise a little on one side, while the colder air 
without will begin falling on the other side. These two 
currents will so conflict as finally to cease, and then the 
candle, having no supply of oxygen from fresh air, will be- 
gin to go out. Insert a bit of stiff paper so as to divide 
the mouth of the j-ar, and instantly the cold and warm air 
are not in conflict as before, because a current is formed 
each side of the paper ; the cold air descending on one side 
and the warm air ascending the other side, as indicated by 
the arrows. As long as the paper remains, the candle will 



SCIENTIFIC DOMESTIC VENTILATION. 



61 



/'. 



Fig. 29. 



burn, and as soon as it is removed, it will begin to go out, 
and can be restored by again inserting the paper. 

This illustrates the mode by which coal-mines are venti- 
Fig. 28. lated when filled with carbonic 

!/* acid. A shaft divided into two 

passages, (Fig. 29,) is let down 
' ^ into the mine, where the air is 

warmer than the outside air. 
Immediately the colder air outside 
presses down into the mine, through 
the passage which is highest, being 
admitted by the escape of an equal 
quantity of the 
warmer air, 
which rises 
through the low- 
er passage of the 
shaft, this being 
the first availa- 
ble opening for 
it to rise through. 
A current is thus 
created, which 

continues as long as the inside air is 
warmer than that without the mine, 
and no longer. Sometimes a fire is 
kindled in the mine, in order to con- 
tinue or increase the warmth, and 
consequent upward current of its air. 
This illustrates one of the cases 
where a " wise woman that buildeth 
her house" is greatly needed. For, 
owing to the ignorance of architects, 
house-builders, and men in general, 
they have been building school- 
houses, dwelling-houses, churches, 





62 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S HOME. 

and colleges, with the most absurd and senseless contriv- 
ances for ventilation, and all from not applying this simple 
principle of science. On this point, Prof. Brewer, of the 
Scientific School of Yale College, writes thus : 

" I have been in public buildings, (I have one in mind 
now, filled with dormitories,) which cost half a million, 
where they attempted to ventilate every room by a flue, long 
and narrow, built into partition walls, and extending up into 
the capacious garret of the fifth story. Every room in the 
building had one such flue, with an opening into it at the 
floor and at the ceiling. It is needless to say that the 
whole concern was entirely useless. Had these flues been 
of proper proportions, and properly divided, the desired 
ventilation would have been secured." 

And this piece of ignorant folly was perpetrated in the 
midst of learned professors, teaching the laws of fluids and 
the laws of health. 

A learned physician also thus wrote to the author of 
this chapter : " The subject of the ventilation of our dwell- 
ing-houses is one of the most important questions of our 
times. How many thousands are victims to a slow suicide 
and murder, the chief instrument of which is want of ven- 
tilation ! How few are aware of the fact that every person, 
every day, vitiates thirty-three hogsheads of the air, and 
that each inspiration takes one fifth of the oxygen, and 
returns as much carbonic acid, from every pair of lungs in 
a room ! How few understand that after air has received 
ten per cent of this fatal gas, if drawn into the lungs, it 
can no longer take 'carbonic acid from the capillaries ! No 
wonder there is so much impaired nervous and muscular 
energy, so much scrofula, tubercles, catarrhs, dyspepsia, 
and typhoid diseases. I hope you can do r^uch to remedy 
the poisonous air of thousands and thousands of stove- 
heated rooms." 

In a cold climate and wintry weather, the grand im- 
pediment to ventilating rooms by opening doors or wir 



SCIENTIFIC DOMESTIC VENTILATION. 63 

dows is the dangerous currents thus produced, which are 
so injurious to the delicate ones that for their sake it can 
not be done. Then, also, as a matter of economy, the 
poor can not afford to practice a method which carries 
off the heat generated bj their stinted store of fuel. 
Even in a warm season and climate, there are frequent 
periods when the air without is damp and chilly, and yet 
at nearly the same temperature as that in the house. At 
such times, the opening of windows often has little effect 
in emptying a room of vitiated air. The ventilating-flues, 
such as are used in mines, have, in such cases, but little 
influence ; for it is only when outside air is colder that a 
current can be produced within by this method. 

The most successful mode of ventilating a house is by 
creating a current of warm air in a flue, into which an 
opening is made at both the top and the bottom of a room, 
while a similar opening for outside air is made at the op- 
posite side of the room. This is the mode employed in che- 
mical laboratories for removing smells and injurious gases. 

The laboratory-closet is closed with glazed doors, and has 
an opening to receive pure air through a conductor from 
without. The stove or furnace within has a pipe which joins 
a larger cast-iron chimney-pipe, which is warmed by the 
smoke it receives from this and other fires. This cast-iron 
pipe is surrounded by a brick flue, through which air passes 
from below to be warmed by the pipe, and thus an upward 
current of warm air is created. Openings are then made 
at the top and bottom of the laboratory-closet into the warm- 
air flue, and the gases and smells are pressed by the colder 
air into this flue, and are carried off in the current of warm air. 

The same method is employed in the dwelling-house 
shown in a preceding chapter. A cast-iron pipe is made 
in sections, which are to be united, and the whole fastened 
at top and bottom in the centre of the warm-air flue by 
ears extending to the bricks a and fastened when the flue is 
in process of building. Projecting openings to receive the 



64 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 30. 



pipes of the furnace, the laundry stove, and two stoves in 
each story, should be provided, which must be closed when 
not in use. A large opening is to be made into the warm- 
air flue, and through this the kitchen stove-pipe is to pass, 
and be joined to the cast-iron chimney-pipe. Thus the 
smoke of the kitchen stove will warm the iron -chimney- 
pipe, and this will warm the air of the flue, causing a cur- 
rent upward, and this current will draw the heat and smells 

of cooking out of the kitchen 
into the opening of the warin- 
air flue. Every room sur- 
rounding the chimney has an 
opening at the top and bottom 
into the warm-air flue for ven- 
tilation, as also have the bath- 
room and water-closets. 

The writer has examined 
the methods most employed 
at the present time, which are 
all modifications of the two 
modes here described. One 
is that of Robinson, patented 
by a Boston company, which 
is a modification of the min- 
ing mode. It consists of the 
two ventilating tubes, such as 
are employed in mines, united 
in one shaft with a roof to 
keep out rain, and a valve to 
regulate the entrance and exit 
of air, as illustrated in Fig. 
30. This method works well 
in certain circumstances, but 
fails so often as to prove very unreliable. Another mode 
is that of Ruttan, which is effected by heating air. This 
also has certain advantages and disadvantages. But the 




SCIENTIFIC DOMESTIC VENTILATION. 65 

mode adopted for the preceding cottage plan is free from 
the difficulties of both the above methods, while it will 
surely ventilate every room in the house, both by day and 
night, and at all seasons, without, any risk to health, and re- 
quiring no attention or care from the family. 

By means of a very small amount of fuel in the kitchen 
stove, to be described hereafter, the whole house can be 
ventilated, and all the cooking done both in warm and cold 
weather. This stove will also warm the whole house, in the 
Northern States, eight or nine months in the year. Two 
Franklin stoves, in addition^ will warm the whole house 
during the three or four remaining coldest months. 

In a warm climate or season, by means of the non-con- 
ducting castings, the stove will ventilate the house and do 
all the cooking, without imparting heat or smells to any 
part of the house except the stove-closet. 

At the close of this volume, drawings, prepared by Mr. 
Lewis Leeds, are given, more fully to illustrate this mode 
of warming and ventilation, and in so plain and simple a 
form that any intelligent woman who has read this work 
can see that the plan is properly executed, even with work- 
men so entirely ignorant on this important subject ,as are 
most house-builders, especially in the newer territories. In 
the same article, directions are given as to the best modes 
of ventilating houses that are already built without any 
arrangements for ventilation. 



V. 



THE CONSTRUCTION AND CAKE OF STOVES, FURNACES, AND 
CHIMNEYS. 

IF all American housekeepers could be taught how to 
select and manage the most economical and convenient 
apparatus for cooking and for warming a house, many 
millions now wasted by ignorance and neglect would be 
saved. Every woman should be taught the scientific prin- 
ciples in regard to heat, and then their application to prac- 
tical purposes, for her own benefit, and also to enable her 
to train her children and servants in this important duty 
of home life on which health and comfort so much de- 
pend. 

The laws that regulate the generation, diffusion, and pre- 
servation of heat as yet are a sealed mystery to thousands 
of young women who imagine they are completing a suit- 
able education in courses of instruction from which most 
that is practical in future domestic life is wholly excluded. 
We therefore give a brief outline of some of the leading 
scientific principles which every housekeeper should un 
derstand and employ, in order to perform successfully one 
of her most important duties. 

Concerning the essential nature of heat, and its intimate 
relations with the other great natural forces, light, electri- 
city, etc., we shall not attempt to treat, but shall, for prac- 
tical purposes, assume it to be a separate and independent 
force. 

Heat or caloric, then, has certain powers or principles. 
Let us consider them : 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 67 

First, we find Conduction, by winch heat passes from one 
particle to another next to it ; as when one end of a poker 
is warmed by placing the other end in the fire. The bodies 
which allow this power free course are called conductors, 
and those which do not are named non-conductors. Metals 
are good conductors ; feathers, wool, and furs are poor con- 
ductors ; and water, air, and gases are non-conductors. 

Another principle of heat is Convection, by which water, 
air, and gases are warmed. This is, literally, the process 
of conveying heat from one portion of a fluid body to an- 
other by currents resulting from changes of temperature. 
It is secured by bringing one portion of a liquid or gas 
into contact with a heated surface, whereby it becomes 
lighter and expanded in volume. In consequence, the 
cooler and heavier particles above pressing downward, 
the lighter ones rise upward, when the former, being 
heated, rise in their turn, and give place to others again 
descending from above. Thus a constant motion of cur- 
rents and interchange of particles is produced until, as in 
a vessel of water, the whole body comes to an equal tem- 
perature. Air is heated in the same way. In case of a 
hot stove, the air that touches it is heated, becomes lighter, 
and rises, giving place to cooler and heavier particles, 
which, when heated, also ascend. It is owing to this pro- 
cess that the air of a room is warmest at the top and coolest 
at the bottom. 

It is owing to this principle, also, that water and air 
can not be heated by fire from above. For the particles 
of these bodies, being non-conductors, do not impart heat 
to each other ; and when the warmest are at the top, they 
can not take the place of cooler and heavier ones below. 

Another principle of heat (which it shares with light) is 
Radiation, by which all things send out heat to surround- 
ing cooler bodies. Some bodies will absorb radiated heat, 
others will reflect it, and others allow it to pass through 
them without either absorbing or reflecting Thus, black 



68 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



and rough substances absorb heat, (or light,) colored and 
smooth articles reflect it, while air allows it to pass through 
without either absorbing or reflecting. It is owing to this, 
that rough and black vessels boil water sooner than smooth 
and light-colored ones. 

Another principle is Reflection, by which heat radiated 
to a surface is turned back from it when not absorbed or 
allowed to pass through ; just as a ball rebounds from a 
wall; just as sound is thrown back from a hill, making 
echo; just as rays of light are reflected from a mirror. 

And, as with light, the 
rays of heat are always 
reflected from a surface 
in an angle exactly cor- 
responding to the direc- 
tion in which it strikes 
that surface. Thus, if 
__ heated air comes to an 



Fig. 31. 



object perpendicularly 

that is, at right angles, it will be reflected back in the 
same line. If it strikes obliquely, it is reflected obliquely, 
at an angle with the sur- 
face precisely the same Fig> ^ 
as the angle with which 
it first struck. And, of 
course, if it moves to- 
ward the surface and 
comes upon it in a line 
having so small an angle i 
with it as to be almost 
parallel with it, the heated air is spread wide and diffused 

through a larger space 

.,^> ^^^^ than when the angles are 

~~"" ^~~ greater and the width of 

reflection less. 
The simplest mode of wanning a house and cooking food 




STOVES) FURNACES^ AND CHIMNEYS. 69 

is by radiated heat. from fires ; but this is the most wasteful 
method, as respects time, labor, and expense. The mos-t con- 
venient, economical, and labor-saving mode of employing 
heat is by convection, as applied in stoves and furnaces. 
But for want of proper care and scientific knowledge this 
method has proved very destructive to health. When 
warming and cooking were done by open fires, houses were 
well supplied with pure air, as is rarely the case in rooms 
heated by stoves. For such is the prevailing ignorance on 
this subject that, as long as stoves save labor and warm the 
air, the great majority of people, especially among the 
poor, will use them in ways that involve debilitated con- 
stitutions and frequent disease. 

The most common modes of cooking, where open fires 
are relinquished, are by the range and the cooking-stove. 
The range is inferior to the stove in these respects : it is 
less economical, demanding much more fuel ; it endangers 
the dress of the cook while standing near for various ope- 
rations; it requires more stooping than the stove while 
cooking ; it will not keep a fire all night, as do the best 
stoves ; it will not burn wood and coal equally well ; and 
lastly, if it warms the kitchen sufficiently in winter, it is 
too warm for summer. Some prefer it because the fumes 
of cooking can be carried off; but stoves properly arranged 
accomplish this equally well. 

After extensive inquiry and many personal experiments, 
the author has found a cooking-stove constructed on true 
scientific principles, which unites convenience, comfort, and 
economy in a remarkable manner. Of this stove, drawings 
and descriptions will now be given, as the best mode of 
illustrating the practical applications of these principles to 
the art of cooking, and to show how much American wo- 
men have suffered and how much they have been imposed 
upon for want of proper knowledge in this branch of theii 
profession. And every woman can understand what fol- 
lows with much less effort than young girls at high-schools 



70 THE AMERICAN WOMAN' S HOME. 

give to the first problems of Geometry for which they will 
never have any practical use, while attention to this prob- 
lem of home affairs will cultivate the intellect quite as 
much as the abstract reasonings of Algebra and Geometry. 

Pig. 34. 




Fig. 34 represents a portion of the interior of this cook- 
ing-stove. First, notice the fire-box, which has corrugated 
(literally, wrinkled) sides, by which space is economized, 
so that as much heating surface is secured as if they were 
one third larger ; as the heat radiates from every part of 
the undulating surface, which is one third greater in super- 
ficial extent than if it were plane. The shape of the fire- 
box also secures more heat by having oblique sides 
which radiate more effectively into the oven beneath than 
if they were perpendicular, as illustrated below while 
also it is sunk into the oven, so as to radiate from three 
instead of from two sides, as in most other stoves, the 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 71 

front of whose fire-boxes with their grates are built so as 
to be the front of the stove itself. 

The oven is the space under and around the back and 
Fio . gg front sides of the fire-box. Fi g . 35. 

The oven-bottom is not _ /D _ 

rl he. 

BOX 



..... introduced in the dia- 

BOX /--.""-- . . . 

gram, but it is a horizon- 
tal plate between the fire- 
box and what is represen- 



WEN 



OVEN 



Model stove. t ed as the " flue-plate," 
which separates the oven from the bottom of the stove. 
The top of the oven is the horizontal corrugated plate 
passing from the rear edge of the fire-box to the back flues. 
These are three, in number the back centre-flue, which 
is closed to the heat and smoke coming over the oven from 
the fire-box by a damper and the two back corner-flues. 
Down these two corner-flues passes the current of hot air 
and smoke, having first drawn across the corrugated oven- 
top. The arrows show its descent through these flues, 
from which it obliquely strikes and passes over the flue- 
plate, then under it, and then out through the centre back- 
flue, which is open at the bottom, up into the smoke-pipe. 

The flue-plate is placed obliquely, to accumulate heat by 
forcing and compression ; for the back space where the 
smoke enters from the corner-flues is largest, and decreases 
toward the front, so that the hot current is compressed in a 
narrow space, between the oven-bottom and the flue-plate 
at the place where the bent arrows are seen. Here again 
it enters a wider space, under the flue-plate, and proceeds 
to another narrow one, between the flue-plate and the 
bottom of the stove, and thus is compressed and re- 
tained longer than if not impeded by these various con- 
trivances. The heat and smoke also strike the plate 
obliquely, and thus, by reflection from its surface, impart 
more heat than if the passage was a horizontal one. 

The external radiation is regulated by the use of non- 



72 THE AMERICAN WGMAN* S HOME. 

conducting plaster applied to the flue-plate and to the sides 
of the corner-flues, so that the heat is prevented from radi- 
ating in any direction except toward the oven. The doors, 
sides, and bottom of the stove are lined with tin casings, 
which hold a stratum of air, also a non-conductor. These are 
so arranged as to be removed whenever the weather becomes 
cold, so that the heat may then radiate into the kitchen. 
The outer edges of the oven are also similarly protected from 
loss of heat by tin casings and air-spaces, and the oven-doors 
opening at the front of the store are provided with the same 
economical savers of heat. High tin covers placed on the 
top prevent the heat from radiating above the stove. 
These are exceedingly useful, as the space under them is 
well heated and arranged for baking, for heating irons, 
and many other incidental necessities. Cake and pies can 
be baked on the top, while the oven is used for bread or 
for meats. When all the casings and covers are on, almost 
all the heat is confined within the stove, and whenever 
heat for the room is wanted, opening the front oven-doors 
turns it out into the kitchen. 

Another contrivance is that of ventilating-holes in the 
front doors, through which fresh air is brought into the 
oven. This secures several purposes : it carries off the 
fumes of cooking meats, and prevents the mixing of flavors 
when different articles are cooked in the oven ; it drives 
the heat that accumulates between the fire-box and front 
doors down around the oven, and equalizes its heat, so that 
articles need not be moved while baking ; and lastly, as 
the air passes through the holes of the fire-box, it causes 
the burning of gases in the smoke, and thus increases heat. 
When wood or bituminous coal is used, perforated metal 
linings are put in the fire-box, and the result is the burn- 
ing of smoke and gases that otherwise would pass into the 
chimney. This is a great discovery in the economy of 
fuel, which can be applied in many ways. > 

Heretofore, most cooking-stoves have had dumping-grates, 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 73 

wliicli are inconvenient from the dust produced, are uneco- 
nomical in the use of fuel, and disadvantageous from too 
many or too loose joints. But recently this stove has been 
provided with a dumping-grate which also will sift ashes, 
and can be cleaned without dust and the other objection- 
able features of dumping-grates. A further account of this 
stove, and the mode of purchasing and using it, will be 
given at the close of the book. 

Those who are taught to manage the stove properly 
keep the fire going all night, and equally well with wood 
or coal, thus saving the expense of kindling and the trouble 
of starting a new fire. When the fuel is of good quality, 
all that is needed in the morning is to draw the back- 
damper, shake the grate, and add more fuel. 

Another remarkable feature of this stove is the extension- 
top, on which is placed a water reservoir, constantly heated 
by the smoke as it passes from the stove, through one or two 
uniting passages, to the smoke-pipe. Under this is placed 
a closet for warming and keeping hot the dishes, vegetables, 
meats, etc., while preparing for dinner. It is also very 
useful in drying fruit ; and when large baking is required, 
a small appended pot for charcoal turns it into a fine large 
oven, that bakes as nicely as a brick oven. 

Another useful appendage is a common tin oven, in 
which roasting can be done in front of the stove, the oven- 
doors being removed for the purpose. The roast will be 
done as perfectly as by an open fire. 

This stove is furnished with pipes for heating water, like 
the water-back of ranges, and these can be taken or left 
out at pleasure. So also the top covers, the baking-stool 
and pot, and the summer-back, bottom, and side-casings 
can be used or omitted as preferred. 

Fig. 37 exhibits the stove completed, with all its appen- 
dages, as they might be employed in cooking for a large 
number 

Its capacity, convenience, and economy as a stove may 



74 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

be estimated by the following fact : With proper manage- 
ment of dampers, one ordinary-sized coal-hod of anthracite 
coal will, for twenty-four hours, keep the stove running, 
keep seventeen gallons of water hot at all hours, bake pies 

Fig. 37. 




'-DOOR DAMPER 



and puddings in the warm closet, heat flat-irons under the 
back cover, boil tea-kettle and one pot under the front 
cover, bake bread in the oven, and cook a turkey in the 
tin roaster in front. The author has numerous friends, 
who, after trying the best ranges, have dismissed them for 
this stove, and in two or three years cleared the whole ex- 
pense by the saving of fuel. 

The remarkable durability of this stove is another eco- 
nomic feature. For in addition to its fine castings and 



STOVES) FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 75 

nice-fitting workmanship, all the parts liable to burn out 
are so protected by linings, and other contrivances easily- 
renewed, that the stove itself may pass from one genera- 
tion to another, as do ordinary chimneys. The writer has 
visited in families where this stove had been in constant 
use for eighteen and twenty years, and was still as good as 
new. In most other families the stoves are broken, burnt- 
out, or thrown aside for improved patterns every four, 
five, or six years, and sometimes, to the knowledge of the 
writer, still oftener. 

Another excellent point is that, although it is so com- 
plicated in its various contrivances as to demand intelli- 
gent management in order to secure all its advantages, it 
also can be used satisfactorily even when the mistress and 
maid are equally careless and ignorant of its distinctive 
merits. To such it offers all the advantages of ordinary 
good stoves, and is extensively used by those who take no 
pains to understand and apply its peculiar advantages. 

But the writer has managed the stove herself in all the 
details of cooking, and is confident that any housekeeper 
of common sense, who is instructed properly, and who also 
aims to have her kitchen affairs managed with strict eco- 
nomy, can easily train any servant who is willing to learn, 
BO as to gain the full advantages offered. And even with- 
out any instructions at all, except the printed directions 
sent with the stove, an intelligent woman can, by due 
attention, though not without, both manage it, and teach 
her children and servants to do likewise. And whenever 
this stove has failed to give the highest satisfaction, it has 
been, either because the housekeeper was not apprized of 
its peculiarities, or because she did not give sufficient 
attention to the matter, or was not able or willing to super- 
intend and direct its management. 

The consequence has been that, in families where this 
stove has been understood and managed aright, it has 
saved nearly one half of the fuel that would be used in ordi- 



76 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

nary stoves, constructed with the usual disregard of scien- 
tific and economic laws. And it is because we know this 
particular stove to be convenient, reliable, and economi- 
cally efficient beyond ordinary experience, in the important 
housekeeping element of kitchen labor, that we devote to 
it so much space and pains to describe its advantageous 
points. 

CHIMNEYS. 

One of the most serious evils in domestic life is often 
found in chimneys that will not properly draw the smoke 
of a fire or stove. Although chimneys have been building 
for a thousand years, the artisans of the present day seem 
strangely ignorant of the true method of constructing them 
so as always to carry smoke upward instead of downward. 
It is rarely the case that a large house is built in which 
there is not some flue or chimney which " will not draw." 
One of the reasons why the stove described as excelling all 
others is sometimes cast aside for a poorer one is, that it 
requires a properly constructed chimney, and multitudes 
of women do not know how to secure it. The writer in 
early life shed many a bitter tear, drawn forth by smoke 
from an ill-constructed kitchen-chimney, and thousands 
all over the land can report the same experience. 

The following are some of the causes and the remedies 
for this evil. 

The most common cause of poor chimney draughts is too 
large an opening for the fireplace, either too wide or too 
high in front, or having too large a throat for the smoke. 
In a lower story, the fireplace should not be larger than 
thfrty inches wide, twenty-five inches high, and fifteen deep. 
In the story above, it should be eighteen inches square and 
fifteen inches deep. 

Another cause is too short a flue, and the remedy is to 
lengthen it. As a general rule, the longer the flue the 
stronger the draught. But in calculating the length of a 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 77 

flue, reference .mist be had to side-flues, if any open into it. 
Where this is the case, the length of the main flue is to be 
considered as extending only from the bottom to the point 
where the upper flue joins it, and where the lower will 
receive air from the upper flue. If a smoky flue can not 
be increased in ^ength, either by closing an upper flue or 
lengthening the chimney, the fireplace must be contracted 
so that all the air near the fire will be heated and thus 
pressed upward. 

If a flue has more than one opening, in some cases it is 
impossible to secure a good draught. Sometimes it will 
work well and sometimes it will not. The only safe rule is 
to have a separate flue to each fire. 

Another cause of poor draughts is too tight a room, so 
that the cold air from without can not enter to press the 
warm air up the chimney. The remedy is to admit a small 
current of air from without. 

Another cause is two chimneys in one room, or in rooms 
opening together, in which the draught in one is much 
stronger than in the other. In this case, the stronger 
draught will draw away from the weaker. The remedy is, 
for each room to have a proper supply of outside air ; or, 
in a single room, to stop one of the chimneys. 

Another cause is the too close vicinity of a hill or build- 
ings higher than the top of the chimney, and the remedy 
for this is to raise the chimney. 

Another cause is the descent, into unused fireplaces, of 
smoke from other chimneys near. The remedy is to close 
the throat of the unused chimney. 

Another cause is a door opening toward the fireplace, 
on the same side of the room, so that its draught passes 
along the wall and makes a Current that draws out the 
smoke. The remedy is to change the hanging of the door 
so as to open another way. 

Another cause is strong winds. The remedy is a turn- 
cap on top of the chimney. 



78 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Another cause is the roughness of the inside of a chim- 
ney, or projections which impede the passage of the smoke. 
Every chimney should be built of equal dimensions from 
bottom to top, with no projections into it, with as few bends 
as possible, and with the surface of the inside as smooth 
as possible. 

Another cause of poor draughts is openings into the 
chimney of chambers for stove-pipes. The remedy is to 
close them, or insert stove-pipes that are in use. 

Another cause is the falling out of brick in some part of 
the chimney so that outer air is admitted. The remedy is 
to close the opening. 

The draught of a stove may be affected by most of these 
causes. It also demands that the fireplace have a tight 
fire-board, or that the throat be carefully filled. For neg- 
lecting this, many a good stove has been thrown aside and 
a poor one taken in its place. 

If all young women had committed to memory these 
causes of evil and their remedies, many a badly-built chim- 
ney might have been cured, and many smoke-drawn tears, 
sighs, ill-tempers, and irritating words avoided. 

But there are dangers in this direction wliieh demand 
special attention. Where one flue has two stoves or fire- 
places, in rooms one above the other, in certain states of the 
atmosphere, the lower room, being the warmer, the colder 
air and carbonic acid in the room above will pass down into 
the lower room through the opening for the stove or the 
fireplace. 

This occurred not long since in a boarding-school, when 
the gas in a room above flowed into a lower one, and suffo- 
cated several to death. This room had no mode of venti- 
lation, and several persons slept in it, and were thus sti- 
fled. Professor Brewer states a similar case in the family 
of a relative. An anthracite stove was used in the upper 
room ; and qn one still, close night, the gas from this stove 
descended through the flue and the opening into a room below, 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 79 

and stifled two persons to insensibility, though, by proper 
efforts, their lives were saved. Many such cases have oc- 
rirred where rooms have been thus filled with poisonous 
gases, and servants and children destroyed, or their consti- 
tutions injured, simply because housekeepers are not pro- 
perly instructed in this important branch of their profession. 

FUKNACES. 

There is no improved mechanism in the economy of 
domestic life requiring more intelligent management than 
furnaces. Let us then consider some of the principles in- 
volved. 

The earth is heated by radiation from the sun. The air 
is not warmed by the passage of the sun's heat through it, 
but by convection from the earth, in the same way that it 
is warmed by the surfaces of stoves. The lower stratum 
of air is warmed by the earth and by objects which have 
been warmed by radiated heat from the sun. The par- 
ticles of air thus heated expand, become lighter, and rise, 
being replaced by the descent of the cooler and heavier 
particles from above, which, on being warmed also rise, 
and give place to others. Owing to this process, the air 
is warmest nearest the earth, and grows cooler as height 
increases. 

The air has a strong attraction for water, and always 
holds a certain quantity as invisible vapor. The warmer 
the air, the more moisture it demands, and it will draw it 
from all objects within reach. The air holds water accord- 
ing to its temperature. Thus, at fifty-two legrees, Fah- 
renheit's thermometer, it holds half the moisture it can 
sustain ; but at thirty-six degrees, it will hold only one 
eighty-sixth part. The earth and all plants and trees are 
constantly sending out moisture ; and when the air has re- 
ceived all it can hold, without depositing it as dew, it is 
said to be saturated, and the point of temperature at which 



80 THE AMERICAN WOMArfS HOME. 

dew begins to form, by condensation, upon the surface 
of the earth and its vegetation, is called the dew-point. 
When air, at a given temperature, has only forty per cent 
of the moisture it requires for saturation, it is said to be 
dry. In a hot summer day, the air will hold far more 
moisture than in cool days. In summer, out-door air 
rarely holds less than half its volume of water. In 1838, 
at Cambridge, Massachusetts, and New-Haven, Connecti- 
cut, at seventy degrees, Fahrenheit, the air held eighty per 
cent of moisture. 

In New-Orleans, the air often retains ninety per cent of 
the moisture it is capable of holding ; and in cool days at 
the North, in foggy weather, the air is sometimes wholly 
saturated. 

When air holds all the moisture it can, without deposit- 
ing dew, its moisture is called 100. When it holds three 
fourths of this, it is said to be at seventy-five per cent. 
When it holds only one half, it is at fifty per cent. When 
it holds only one fourth, it is at twenty-five per 
cent, etc. 

Sanitary observers teach that the proper amount of mois- 
ture in the air ranges from forty to seventy per cent of 
saturation. 

Now, furnaces, which are of course used only in winter, 
receive outside air at a low temperature, holding little 
moisture ; and heating it greatly increases its demand for 
moisture. This it sucks up, like a sponge, from the walls 
and furniture of a house. If it is taken into the human 
lungs, it draws much of its required moisture from the body, 
often causing dryness of lips and throat, and painfully af- 
fecting the lungs. Prof. Brewer, of the Scientific School 
of New-Haven, who has experimented extensively on this 
subject, states that, while forty per cent of moisture is 
needed in air to make it healthful, most stoves and furnaces 
do not, by any contrivances, supply one half of this, or 
not twenty per cent. He says most furnace-heated air is 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 81 

dryer than is ever breathed in the hottest deserts of Sa- 
hara. 

Thus, for want of proper instruction, most American 
housekeepers not only poison their families with carbonic 
acid and starve them for want of oxygen, but also diminish 
health and comfort for want of a due supply of moisture 
in the air. And often when a remedy is sought, by evapo- 
rating water in the furnace, it is without knowing that the 
amount evaporated depends, not on the quantity of water 
in the vessel, but on the extent of evaporating surface 
exposed to the air. A quart of water in a wide shallow 
pan will give more moisture than two gallons with a small 
surface exposed to heat. 

There is also no little wise economy in expense attained 
by keeping a proper supply of moisture in the air. For 
it is found that the body radiates its heat less in moist 
than in dry air, so tljat a person feels as warm at a lower 
temperature when the air has a proper supply of moisture, 
as in a much higher temperature of dry air. Of course, 
less fuel is needed to warm a house when water is evapo- 
rated in stove and furnace-heated rooms. It is said by those 
who have experimented, that the saving in fuel is twenty 
per cenA when the air is duly supplied with moisture. 

There is a very ingenious instrument, called the hygro- 
deik, which indicates the exact amount of moisture in the 
air. It consists of two thermometers side by side, one of 
which has its bulb surrounded by floss-silk wrapping, which 
is kept constantly wet by communication with a cup of 
water near it. The water around the bulb evaporates just 
in proportion to the heat of the air around it. The chang- 
ing of water to vapor draws heat from the nearest object, 
and this being the bulb of the thermometer, the mercury 
is cooled and sinks. Then the difference between the two 
thermometers shows the amount of moisture in the air by 
a pointer on a dial-plate constructed by simple mechanism 
for this purpose. 



82 

There is one very important matter in regard to the use 
of furnaces, which is thus stated by Professor Brewer : 

" I think it is a well-established fact that carbonic oxide 
will pass through iron. It is always formed in great abun- 
dance in any anthracite fire, but especially in anthracite 
stoves and furnaces. Moreover, furnaces always leak, more 
or less; how much they leak depending on the care and 
skill with which they are managed. Carbonic oxide is 
much more poisonous than carbonic acid. Doubtless some 
carbonic oxide finds its way into all furnace-heated houses, 
especially where anthracite is used; the amount varying 
with the kind of furnace and its management. As to how 
much escapes into a room, and its specific effect upon the 
health of its occupants, we have no accurate data, no analy- 
sis to show the quantity, and no observati ns to show the 
relation between the quantity inhaled and the health of 
those exposed ; all is mere conjectureupon this point ; but 
the inference is very strong that it has a very injurious 
effect, producing headaches, weariness, and other similar 
symptoms. 

"Kecent pamphlets lay the blame of all the bad effects 
of anthracite furnaces and stoves to the carbonic oxide min- 
gled in the air. I think these pamphlets have a bad influ- 
ence. Excessive dryness also has bad effects. So also the 
excessive heat in the evenings and coolness in the mornings 
has a share in these evils. But how much in addition is 
owing to carbonic oxide, we can not know, until we know 
something of the actual amount of this gas in rooms, and 
as yet we know absolutely nothing definite. In fact, it will 
be a difficult thing to prove" 

There are other difficulties connected with furnaces w r hich 
should be considered. It is necessary to perfect health that 
an equal circulation of the blood be preserved. The great- 
est impediment to this is keeping the head warmer than the 
feet. This is especially to be avoided in a nation where the 
brain is by constant activity drawing the blood from tho 



STOVES, FURNACES, AND CHIMNEYS. 83 

extremities. And nowhere is this more important than 
in schools, churches, colleges, lecture and recitation-rooms, 
where the brain is called into active exercise. And yet, 
furnace-heated rooms always keep the feet in the coldest 
air, on cool floors, while the head is in the warmest air. 

Another difficulty is the fact that all bodies tend to radi- 
ate their heat to each other, till an equal temperature exists. 
Thus, the human body is constantly radiating its heat to 
the walls, floors, and cooler bodies around. At the same 
time, a thermometer is affected in the same way, radiating 
its heat to cooler bodies around, so that it always marks a 
lower degree of heat than actually exists in the warm air 
around it. Owing to these facts, the injected air of a fur- 
nace is always warmer than is good for the lungs, and much 
warmer than is ever needed in rooms warmed by radiation 
from fires or heated surfaces. The cooler the air we inspire, 
the more oxygen is received, the faster the blood circulates, 
and the greater is the vigor imparted to brain, nerves, and 
muscles. 

Scientific men have been contriving various modes of 
meeting these difficulties, and at the close of this volume 
some results will be given to aid a woman in selecting and 
managing the most healthful and economical furnace, or in 
providing some better method of warming a house. Some 
account will also be given of the danger involved in gas- 
stoves, and some other recent inventions for cooking and 
heating. 



VI. 



HOME DECORATION. 

HAVING duly arranged for the physical necessities of a 
healthful and comfortable home, we next approach the 
important subject of beauty in reference to the deco- 
ration of houses. For while the aesthetic element must be 
subordinate to the requirements of physical existence, and, 
as a matter of expense, should be held of inferior con- 
sequence to means of higher moral growth ; it yet holds 
a place of great significance among the influences which 
make home happy and attractive, which give it a constant 
and wholesome power over the young, and contributes 
much to the education of the entire household in refine- 
ment, intellectual development, and moral sensibility. 

Here we are met by those who tell us that of course 
they want their houses handsome, and that, when they 
get money enough, they intend to have them so, but at 
present they are too poor, and because they are poor 
they dismiss the subject altogether, and live without any 
regard to it. 

We have often seen people who said that they could not 
afford to make their houses beautiful, who had spent upon 
them, outside or in, an amount of money which did not 
produce either beauty or comfort, and which, if judiciously 
applied, might have made the house quite charming. 

For example, a man, in building his house, takes a plan 
of an architect. This plan includes, on the outside, a 
number of what Andrew Fairservice called " curlywur- 



HOME DECORATION. 85 

lies" and " whigmaliries," which make the house neither 
prettier nor more comfortable, and which take up a good 
deal of money. We would venture to say that we could 
buy the chromo of Bierstadt's " Sunset in the Yo Semite 
Valley," and four others like it, for half the sum that 
we have sometimes seen laid out on a very ugly, nar- 
row, awkward porch on the outside of a house. The 
only use of this porch was to cost money, and to cause 
every body who looked at it to exclaim as they went by, 
"What ever induced that man to put a thing like that 
on the outside of his house ?" 

Then, again, in the inside of houses, we have seen a 
dwelling looking very bald and bare, when a sufficient 
sum of money had been expended on one article to have 
made the whole very pretty : and it has come about in this 
way. 

We will suppose the couple who own the house to be in 
the condition in which people generally are after they 
have built a house having spent more than they could 
afford on the building itself, and yet feeling themselves 
under the necessity of getting some furniture. 

" Now," says the housewife, " I must at least have a 
parlor-carpet. We must get that to begin with, and other 
things as we go on." She goes to a store to look at carpets. 
The clerks are smiling and obliging, and sweetly compla- 
cent. The storekeeper, perhaps, is a neighbor or a friend, 
and after exhibiting various patterns, he tells her of a 
Brussels carpet he is selling wonderfully cheap actually a 
dollar and a quarter less a yard than the usual price 01 
Brussels, and the reason is that it is an unfashionable pat- 
tern, and he has a good deal of it, and wishes to close it off. 

She looks at it and thinks it is not at all the kind of car- 
pet she meant to buy, but then it is Brussels, and so cheap ' 
And as she hesitates, her friend tells her that she will find 
it " cheapest in the end that one Brussels carpet will out- 
last three or four ingrains," etc., etc. 



86 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

I 

The result of all this is, that she buys the Brussels carpet, 
which, with all its reduction in price, is one third dearer 
than the ingrain would have been, and not half so pretty. 
When she comes home, she will find that she has spent, we 
will say eighty dollars, for a very- homely carpet whose 
greatest merit it is an affliction to remember namely, that 
it will outlast three ordinary carpets. And because she 
has bought this carpet she can not afford to paper the walls 
or put up any window-curtains, and cannot even begin to 
think of buying any pictures. 

Now let us see what eighty dollars could have done for 
that room. "We will suppose, in the first place, she invests 
in thirteen rolls of wall-paper of a lovely shade of buff, 
which will make the room look sunshiny in the day-time, 
and light up brilliantly in the evening. Thirteen rolls of 
good satin paper, at thirty-seven cents a roll, expends four 
dollars and eighty-one cents. A maroon bordering, made 
in imitation of the choicest French style, which can not at 
a distance be told from it, can be bought for six cents a 
yard. This will bring the paper to about five dollars and 
a half; and our friends will give a day of their time to 
putting it on. The room already begins to look furnished. 

Then, let us cover the floor with, say, thirty yards of 
good matting, at fifty cents a yard. This gives us a carpet 
for fifteen dollars. We are here stopped by the prejudice 
that matting is not good economy, because it wears out so 
soon. We humbly submit that it is precisely the thing for 
a parlor, which is reserved for the reception-room of 
friends, and for our own dressed leisure hours. Matting is 
not good economy in a dining-room or a hard-worn sitting- 
room ; but such a parlor as we are describing is precisely 
the place where it answers to the very best advantage. 

We have in mind one very attractive parlor which has 
been, both for summer and winter, the daily sitting-room 
for the leisure hours of a husband and wife, and family 
of children, where a plain straw matting has done ser- 



HOME DECORATION. 87 

vice for seven years. That parlor is in a city, and these 
friends are in the habit of receiving visits from people who 
live upon velvet and Brusssls ; but they prefer to spend the 
money which such carpets would cost on other modes of 
embellishment ; and this parlor has often been cited to us 
as a very attractive room. 

And now our friends, having got thus far, are requested 
to select some one tint or color which shall be the prevail- 
ing one in the furniture of the room. Shall it be green ? 
Shall it be blue ? Shall it be crimson ? To carry on our 
illustration, we will choose green, and we proceed with it 
to create furniture for our room. Let us imagine that on 
one side of the fireplace there be, as there is often, a recess 
about six feet long and three feet deep. Fill this recess 
with a rough frame with four stout legs, one foot high, and 
upon the top of the frame have an elastic rack of slats. 
Make a mattress for this, or, if you wish to avoid that trou- 
ble, you can get a nice mattress for the sum of two dollars, 
made of cane-shavings or husks. Cover this with a green 
English furniture print. The glazed English comes at 
about twenty-five cents a yard, the glazed French at 
seventy-five cents a yard, and a nice article of yard-wide 
French twill (very strong) is from seventy-five to eighty 
cents a yard. 

With any of these cover your lounge. Make two large, 
square pillows of the same substance as the mattress, and 
set up at the back. If you happen to have one or two 
feather pillows that you can spare for the purpose, shake 
them down into a square shape and cover them with the 
same print, and you will then have four pillows for your 
lounge one at each end, and two at the back, and you 
will find it answers for all the purposes of a sofa. 

It will be a very pretty thing, now, to cut out of the 
same material as your lounge, sets of lambrequins (or, as 
they are called, lamberkins,) a kind of pendent curtain-top, 
as shown in the illustration, to put over the windows, 



88 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



which are to be embellished with white muslin curtains. 
The cornices to your windows can be simply strips of 
wood covered with paper to match the bordering of your 

room, and the 
lambrequins, 
made of chintz 
like the lounge, 
can be trimmed 
with fringe or 
gimp of the same 
color. The pat- 
terns of these can 
be varied accord- 
ing to fancy, but 
simple designs 
are" usually the 
prettiest. A tas- 
sel at the lowest 
point improves 
the appearance. 

The curtains 
can be made of 

plain white muslin, or some of the many styles that come for 
this purpose. If plain muslin is used, you can ornament 
them with hems an inch in width, in which insert a strip of 
gingham or chambray of the same color as your chintz. 
This will wash with the curtains without losing its color, or 
should it fade, it can easily be drawn out and replaced. 

The influence of white-muslin curtains in giving an air 
of grace and elegance to a room is astonishing. White 
curtains really create a room out of nothing. 'No matter 
how coarse the muslin, so it be white and hang in graceful 
folds, there is a charm in it that supplies the want of mul- 
titudes of other things. 

Yery pretty curtain-muslin can be bought at thirty- 
seven cents a yard. It requires six yards for a window. 




HOME DECORATION. 



89 



Let your men-folk knock up for you, out of rough, un- 
planed boards, some ottoman frames, as described in Chap- 
ter II. ; stuff the tops with just the same material as the 
lounge, and cover them with the self-same chintz. 

Now you 
have, sup- 
pose your 
selected 
color to 
be green, 
a green 
lounge in 
the corner 
and two 
green otto- 
mans; you 
have white 
muslin cur- 
tains, with 
green lam- 
brequins 

and borders, and your room already looks furnished. 
If you have in the house any broken-down arm-chair, re- 
posing in the oblivion of the garret, draw it out drive a 
nail here and there to hold it firm stuff and pad, and 
stitch the padding through with a long upholsterer's nee- 
dle, and cover it with the chintz like your other furni- 
ture. Presto you create an easy-chair. 

Thus can broken and disgraced furniture reappear, and, 
being put into uniform with the general suit of your 
room, takeva new lease of life. 

If you want a centre-table, consider this that any kind 
of table, well concealed beneath the folds of handsome 
drapery , of a color corresponding to the general hue of the room, 
will look well. Instead of going to the cabinet-maker and 
paying from thirty to forty dollars upon a little, narrow, 




90 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

cold, marble-topped stand, that gives just room enough tc 
hold a lamp and a book or two, reflect within yourself 
what a centre-table is made for. If you have in your 
house a good, broad, generous-topped table, take it, cover 
it with an ample cloth of green broadcloth. Such a cover, 
two and a half yards square, of fine green broadcloth, 
figured with black and with a pattern-border of grape- 
leaves, has been bought for ten dollars. In a room we wot 
of, it covers a cheap pine table, such as you may buy for 
four or five dollars any day ; but you will be astonished 
to see how handsome an object this table makes under its 
green drapery. Probably you could make the cover more 
cheaply by getting the cloth and trimming its edge with a 
handsome border, selected for the purpose ; but either way, 
it will be an economical and useful ornament. We set 
down our centre-table, therefore, as consisting mainly of a 
nice broadcloth cover, matching our curtains and lounge. 

We are sure that any one with " a heart that is hum- 
ble" may command such a centre-table and cloth for fif- 
teen dollars or less, and a family of five or six may all sit 
and work, or read, or write around it, and it is capable of 
entertaining a generous allowance of books and knick- 
knacks. 

You have now for your parlor the following figures : 

Wall-paper and border, $5 50 

Thirty yards matting, 15 00 

Centre-table and cloth, . , 15 00 

Muslin for three windows, 6 75 

Thirty yards green English chintz, at 25 cents, 7 50 

Six chairs, at $2 each, 12 00 

Total, $61 75 

Subtracted from eighty dollars, which we set down as 
the price of the cheap, ugly Brussels carpet, we have our 
whole room papered, carpeted, curtained, and furnished, 
and we have nearly twenty dollars remaining for pictures. 



HOME DECORATION. 



91 



Fig. 40. 



As a little suggestion in regard to the selection, you can 
get Miss Oakley's charming little cabinet picture of 

"The Little Scrap-Book Maker" for $V 50 

Eastman Johnson's " Barefoot Boy," (Prang) 5 00 

Newman's " Blue-fringed Gentians," (Prang) 6 00 

Bierstadt's " Sunset in the Yo Semite Valley," (Prang) 12 00 

Here are thirty dollars' worth of really admirable 
pictures of some of our best American artists, from 
which you can choose at your leisure. By sending to any 
leading picture-dealer, lists of pictures and prices will be 
forwarded to you. These chromos, being all varnished, 
can wait for frames until you can aiford them. Or, what 
is better, because it is at once cheaper and a means of edu- 
cating the ingenuity and the taste, you can make for your- 
selves pretty rustic frames in various modes. Take a very 

thin board, of the right size and 
shape, for the foundation or 
" mat ;" saw out the inner oval 
or rectangular form to suit the 
picture.' Nail on the edge a rustic 
frame made of branches of hard, 
seasoned wood, and garnish the 
corners with some pretty device ; 
such, for instance, as a cluster of 
acorns ; or, in place of the branch- 
es of trees, fasten on with glue 

small pine cones, with larger ones for corner ornaments. 
Or use the mosses of the wood or Fi s- 41 - 

ocean shells for this purpose. It 
may be more convenient to get the 
mat or inner moulding from a 
framer, or have it made by your 
carpenter, with a groove behind to 
hold a glass. Here are also picture- 
frames of pretty effect, and very 
simply made. The one in Fig. 42 





92 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 43. 



is made of either light or dark wood, neat, thin, and not 

very wide, with the ends simply broken off, or cut so as to 

resemble a rough 
break. The other 
is white pine, sawn 
into simple form, 
well smoothed, and 
marked with a deli- 
cate black tracery, 
as suggested in Fig. 
43. This should 
also be varnished, 
then it will take a 
rich, yellow tinge, 
which harmonizes 
admirably with 
chromos, and light- 
ens up engravings 
to singular advan- 
tage. Besides the 

American and the higher range of German and Eng- 
lish chromos, there are very many pretty little French 

chromos, which can be had at 

prices from $1 to $5, including 

black walnut frames. 

We have been through this 

calculation merely to show our 

readers how much beautiful 

effect may be produced by a 

wise disposition of color and 

skill in arrangement. If any 

of our friends should ever carry 

it out, they will find that the 

buff paper, with its dark, narrow border ; the green chintz 

repeated in the lounge, the ottomans, and lambrequins; 

the flowing, white curtains; the broad, generous centre- 




Fig. 43. 




HOME DECORATION. 93 

table, draped with its ample green cloth, will, when ar- 
ranged together, produce an effect of grace and beauty 
far beyond what any one piece or even half a dozen pieces 
of expensive cabinet furniture could. The great, simple 
principle of beauty illustrated in this room is harmony of 
color. 

You can, in the same way, make a red" room by using 
Turkey red for your draperies ; or a blue room by using 
blue chintz. Let your chintz be of a small pattern, and 
one that is decided in color. 

We have given the plan of a room with matting on the 
floor because that is absolutely the cheapest cover. The 
price of thirty yards plain, good ingrain carpet, at $1.50 
per yard, would be forty-five dollars; the difference be- 
tween forty-five and fifteen dollars would furnish a room 
with pictures such as we have instanced. However, the 
same programme can be even better carried out with a 
green ingrain carpet as the foundation of the color of the 
room. 

Our friends, who lived seven years upon matting, con- 
trived to give their parlor in winter an effect of warmth 
and color by laying down, in front of the fire, a large 
square of carpeting, say three breadths, four yards long. 
This covered the gathering-place around the fire where the 
winter circle generally sits, and gave an appearance of 
warmth to the room. 

If we add this piece of carpeting to the estimates for 
our room, we still leave a margin for a picture, and make 
the programme equally adapted to summer and winter. 

Besides the chromos, which, when well selected and of the 
best class, give the charm of color which belongs to expen- 
sive paintings, there are engravings which finely reproduce 
much of the real spirit and beauty of the celebrated pic- 
tures of the world. And even this does not exhaust the 
resources of economical art ; for there are few of the 
renowned statues, whether of antiquity or of modern times, 



04 THE AMERICAN WOMAtfS HOME. 

that have not been accurately copied in plaster casts ; and 
a few statuettes, costing perhaps five or six dollars each, 
will give a really elegant finish to your rooms providing 
always that they are selected with discrimination and 
taste. 

The educating influence of these works of art can hardly 
be over-estimate^. Surrounded by such suggestions of the 
beautiful, and such reminders of history and art, children 
are constantly trained to correctness of taste and refine- 
ment of thought, and stimulated s'ometimes to efforts at 
artistic imitation, always to the eager and intelligent in- 
quiry about the scenes, the places, the incidents represented. 

Just here, perhaps, we are met by some who grant all 
that we say on the subject of decoration by works of art, 
and who yet impatiently exclaim, " But I have no money 
to spare for any thing of this sort. I am condemned to an 
absolute bareness, and beauty in my case is not to be 
thought of." 

Are you sure, my friend ? If you live in the country, or 
can get into the country, and have your eyes opened and 
your wits about you, your house need not be condemned 
to an absolute bareness. Not so long as the woods are 
full of beautiful ferns and mosses, while every swamp 
shakes and nods with tremulous grasses, need you feel 
yourself an utterly disinherited child of nature, and de- 
prived of its artistic use. 

For example : Take an old tin pan condemned to the 
retired list by reason of holes in the bottom, get twenty-five 
cents' worth of green paint for this and other purposes, and 
paint it. The holes in the bottom are a recommendation 
for its new service. If there are no holes, you must drill 
two or three, as .drainage is essential. Now put a layer 
one inch deep of broken charcoal and potsherds over the 
bottom, and then soil, in the following proportions : 

Two fourths wood-soil, such as you find in forests, under 
trees. 



HOME DECORATION. 



95 



One fourth clean sand. 

One fourth meadow-soil, taken from under fresh turf. 
Mix with this some charcoal dust. 

In this soil plant all sorts of ferns, together with some 
few swamp-grasses ; and around the edge put a border of 
money-plant or periwinkle to hang over. This will need 
to be watered once or twice a week, and it will grow and 
thrive all summer long in a corner of your room. Should 
you prefer, you can suspend it by wires and make a hang- 
ing-basket. Ferns and wood-grasses need not have sun- 
shine they grow well in shadowy places. 

On this same principle you can convert a salt-box or an 
old drum of figs into a hanging-basket. Tack bark and 
pine-cones and moss upon the outside? of it, drill holes and 
pass wires through it, and you have a woodland hanging- 
basket, which will hang and grow in any corner of your 
house. 

We have been into rooms which, by the simple disposi- 
tion of articles of this kind, have been made to have an air 

so poetical and attractive 

pu *j 

that they seemed more 
like a nymph's cave than 
any thing in the real 
world. 

Another mode of dispo- 
sing of ferns is this : Take 
a flat piece of board sawed 
out something like a 
shield, with a hole at the 
top for hanging it up. 

Upon the board nail a 
wire pocket made of an 
ox-muzzle flattened on 
one side; or make some- 
thing of the kind with stiff wire. Line this with a 
sheet of close moss, which appears green behind the wire 




96 THE AMERICAN WOMAN"* S HOME. 



net- work. Theii you fill it with loose, spongy moss, such 
as you find in swamps, and plant therein great plumes 
of fern and various swamp-grasses ; they will continue to 
grow there, and hang gracefully over. When watering, 
set a pail under for it to drip into. It needs only to keep 
this moss always damp, and to sprinkle these ferns occa- 
sionally with a whisk-broom, to have a most lovely orna- 
ment for your room or hall. 

The use of ivy in decorating a room is beginning to be 
generally acknowledged. It needs to be planted in the 
kind of soil we have described, in a well-drained pot or 
box, and to have its leaves thoroughly washed once or 
twice a year in strong suds made with soft-soap, to free it 
from dust and scale-bug; and an ivy will live and thrive 
and wind about in a room, year in arid year out, will grow 
around pictures, and do almost any thing to oblige you that 
you can suggest to it. For instance, in a March number of 
Hearth and Home* there is a picture of the most delightful 
library-window imaginable, whose chief charm consists in 
the running vines that start from a longitudinal box at the 
bottom of the window, and thence clamber up and about 
the casing and across the rustic frame-work erected for its 
convenience. On the opposite page we present another 
plain kind of window, ornamented with a variety of these 
rural economical adornings. 

In the centre is a Ward's case. On one side is a pot of 
Fuchsia. On the other side is a Calla Lily. In the hang- 
ing-baskets and on the brackets are the ferns and flowers 
that flourish in the deep woods, and around the window is 
the ivy, running from two boxes ; and, in case the window 
has some sun, a Nasturtion may spread its bright blossoms 
among the leaves. - Then, in the winter, when there is less 
sun, the Striped Spider-wort, the Smilax and the Saxifraga 



* A beautifully illustrated agricultural and family weekly paper, edited 
by Donald G. Mitchell (Ik Marvel) and Mrs. H. B. Stowe. 



Fig. 45. 




98 , THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S HOME. 

Samentosa (or Wandering Jew) may be substituted. Pretty 
brackets can be made of common pine, ornamented with 
odd-growing twigs or mosses or roots, scraped and varnished, 
or in their native state. 

A beautiful ornament for a room with pictures is Ger- 
man ivy. Slips of this will start without roots in bottles of 
water. Slide the bottle behind the picture, and the ivy will 
seem to come from fairyland, and hang its verdure in all 
manner of" pretty curves around the picture. It may then 
be trained to travel toward other ivy, and thus aid in form- 
ing green cornice along the ceiling. We have seen some 
rooms that had an ivy cornice around the whole, giving 
the air of a leafy bower. 

There are some other odd devices to ornament a room. 
For example, a sponge, kept wet by daily immersion, can be 
filled with flax-seed and suspended by a cord, when it will ere 
long be covered with verdure and afterward with flowers. 

A sweet potato, laid in a bowl of water on a bracket, or 
still better, suspended by a knitting-needle, run through or 
laid across the bowl half in the water, will, in due time, make 
a beautiful verdant ornament. A large carrot, with the 
smallest half cut off, scooped out to hold water and then 
suspended with cords, will send out graceful shoots in rich 
profusion. 

Half a cocoa-nut shell, suspended, will hold earth or water 
for plants and make a pretty hanging-garden. 

It may be a very proper thing to direct the ingenuity 
and activity of children into the making of hanging-baskets 
and vases of rustic work. The best foundations are the 
cheap wooden bowls, which are quite easy to get, and the 
walks of children in the woods can be made interesting by 
their bringing home material for this rustic work. Different 
colored twigs and sprays of trees, such as the bright scarlet 
of the dog-wood, the yellow of the willow, the black of the 
birch, and the silvery gray of the poplar, may be combined 
in fanciful net- work. For this sort of work, no other in- 



HOME DECORATION. 



99 



Fig. 46. 



vestment is needed than a hammer and an assortment of 
different-sized tacks, and beautiful results will be produced. 

Fig. 46 is a stand for 
flowers, made of roots, 
scraped and varnished. 
But the greatest and 
cheapest and most de- 
lightful fountain of 
beauty is a " Ward 
case." 

Now, immediately all 
our economical friends 
give up in despair. 
Ward's cases sell all 
the way along from 
eighteen to fifty dol- 
lars, and are, like every 
thing else in this lower 
world, regarded as the 
sole perquisites of the 
rich. 

Let us not be too sure. Plate-glass, and hot-house plants, 
and rare patterns, are the especial inheritance of the rich ; 
but any family may command all the requisites of a Ward 
case for a very small sum. Such a case is a small glass 
closet over a well-drained box of soil. You make a Ward 
case on a small scale when you turn a tumbler over a plant. 
The glass keeps the temperature moist and equable, and 
preserves the plants from dust, and the soil being well 
drained, they live and thrive accordingly. The requisites 
of these are the glass top and the bed of well-drained soil. 
Suppose you have -a common cheap table, four feet long 
and two wide. Take off the top boards of your table, and 
with them board the bottom across tight and firm ; then 
line it with zinc, and you will have a sort of box or sink on 
legs. Now make a top* of common window-glass such as 




100 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



you would get for a cucumber-frame ; let it be two and a 
half feet high, with a ridge-pole like a house, and a slant- 
ing roof of glass 

47> resting on this 

ridge-pole ; on 
one end let there 
be a door two feet 
square. 

"We have seen 
a Ward case made 
in this way, in 
which the capa- 
bilities for pro- 
ducing ornamen- 
tal effect were 
greatly beyond 
many of the most 
elaborate ones of 
the shops. It was 
large, and roomy, 
and cheap. Com- 
mon window-sash and glass are not dear, and any man with 
moderate ingenuity could fashion such a glass closet for 
his wife ; or a woman, not having such a husband, can do 
it herself. 

The sink or box part must have in the middle of it a hole 
of good size for drainage. In preparing for the reception 
of plants, first turn a plant-saucer over this hole, which may 
otherwise become stopped. Then, as directed for the other 
basket, proceed with a layer of broken charcoal and pot- 
sherds for drainage, two inches deep, and prepare the soil as 
directed above, and add to it some pounded charcoal, or 
the scrapings of the charcoal-bin. In short, more or less 
charcoal and charcoal-dust is always in order in the treat- 
ment of these moist subjects, as it keeps them from fer- 
menting and growing sour. 




HOME DECORATION. 101 

Now for filling the case. 

Our own native forest-ferns have a period in the winter 
months when they cease to grow. They are very particu- 
lar in asserting their right to this yearly nap, and will not, 
on any consideration, grow for you out of their appointed 
season. 

Nevertheless, we shall tell you what we have tried our- 
selves, because greenhouse ferns are expensive, and often 
great cheats when you have bought them, and die on your 
hands in the most reckless and shameless manner. If you 
make a Ward case in the spring, your ferns will grow 
beautifully in it all summer ; and in the autumn, though they 
stop growing, and cease to throw out leaves, yet the old 
leaves will remain fresh and green till the time for starting 
the new ones in the spring. 

But, supposing you wish to start your case in the fall, 
out of such things as you can find in the forest ; by search- 
ing carefully the rocks and clefts and recesses of the forest, 
you can find a quantity of beautiful ferns whose leaves the 
frost has not yet assailed. Gather them carefully, remem- 
bering that the time of the plant's sleep has come, and that 
you must make the most of the leaves it now has, as you 
will not have a leaf more from it till its waking-up time 
in February or March. But we have succeeded, and you 
will succeed, in making a very charming and picturesque 
collection. You can make in your Ward case lovely lit- 
tle grottoes with any bits of shells, and minerals, and rocks 
you may have ; you can lay down, here and there, frag- 
ments of broken looking-glass for the floor of your grottoes, 
and the effect of them will be magical. A square of look- 
ing-glass introduced into the back side of your case will 
produce charming effects. 

The trailing arbutus or May-flower, if cut up carefully 
in sods, and put into this Ward case, will come into bloom 
there a month sooner than it otherwise would, and gladden 
your eyes and heart. 



102 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

In the fall, if you can find the tufts of eye-bright or 
houstonia cerulia, and mingle them in with your mosses, 
you will find them blooming before winter is well over. 

But among the most beautiful things for such a case is 
the partridge-berry, with its red plums. The berries swell 
and increase in the moist atmosphere, and become intense 
in color, forming an admirable ornament. 

Then the ground pine, the princess pine, and various 
nameless pretty things of the woods, all flourish in these 
little conservatories. In getting your sod of trailing arbu- 
tus, remember that this plant forms its buds in the fall. You 
must, therefore, examine your sod carefully, and see if the 
buds are there ; otherwise you will find no blossoms in the 
spring. 

There are one or two species of violets, also, that form 
their buds in the fall, and these too, will blossom early for 
you. 

We have never tried the wild anemones, the crowfoot, etc. ; 
but as they all do well in moist, shady places, we recom 
mend hopefully the experiment of putting some of them 
in. 

A Ward case has this recommendation over common 
house-plants, that it takes so little time and care. If well 
made in the outset, and thoroughly drenched with water 
when the plants are first put in, it will after that need 
only to be watered about once a month, and to be ventilated 
by occasionally leaving open the door for a half-hour or 
hour when the moisture obscures the glass and seems in 
excess. 

To women embarrassed with the care of little children, 
yet longing for the refreshment of something growing and 
beautiful, this indoor garden will be an untold treasure. 
The glass defends the plant from the inexpedient intermed- 
dling of little fingers ; while the little eyes, just on a level 
with the panes of glass, can look through and learn to enjoy 
the beautiful, silent miracles of nature. 



HOME DECORATION. 103 

t 

For an invalid's chamber, such a case would be an inde- 
scribable comfort. It is, in fact, a fragment of the green 
woods brought in and silently growing; it will refresh 
many a weary hour to watch it. 



VII. 

THE CAKE OF HEALTH. 

THERE is no point where a woman is more liable to 
suffer from a want of knowledge and experience than in 
reference to the health of a family committed to her care. 
Many a young lady who never had any charge of the sick ; 
who never took any care of an infant ; who never obtained 
information on these subjects from books, or from the ex- 
perience of others ; in short, with little or no preparation, 
has found herself the principal attendant in dangerous sick- 
ness, the chief nurse of a feeble infant, and the responsible 
guardian of the health of a whole family. 

The care, the fear, the perplexity of a woman suddenly 
called to these unwonted duties, none can realize till they 
themselves feel it, or till they see some young and anxious 
novice first attempting to meet such responsibilities. To 
a woman of age and experience these duties often involve 
a measure of trial and difficulty at times deemed almost in- 
Supportable ; how hard, then, must they press on the heart 
of the young and inexperienced ! 

There is no really efficacious mode of preparing a 
woman to take a rational care of the health of a family, 
except by communicating that knowledge in regard to the 
construction of the body and the laws of health which is 
the basis of the medical profession. Not that a woman 
should undertake the minute and extensive investigation 
requisite for a physician ; but she should gain a general 
knowledge of first principles, as a guide to her judgment 
in emergencies when she can rely on no other aid. 



THE CARE OF HEALTH. 105 

With this end in view, in the preceding chapters some 
portions of the organs and functions of the human body 
have been presented, and others will now follow in connec- 
tion with the practical duties which result from them. 

On the general subject of health, one recent discovery 
of science may here be introduced as having an important 
relation to every organ and function of the body, and as 
being one to which frequent reference will be made ; and 
that is, the nature and operation of cell-life. 

By the aid of the microscope, we can examine the minute 
construction of plants and animals, in which we discover 
contrivances and operations, if not so sublime, yet more 
wonderful and interesting, than the vast systems of worlds 
revealed by the telescope. 

By this instrument it is now seen that the first forma- 
tion, as well as future changes and actions, of all plants and 
animals are accomplished by means of small cells or bags 
containing various kinds of liquids. These cells are so 
minute that, of the smallest, some hundreds would not 
cover the dot of a printed i on this page. They are of di- 
verse shapes and contents, and perform various different 
operations. 

The first formation of every animal is accomplished by 
the agency of cells, and may be il- 
Fig- * 8 ' lustrated by the egg of any bird or 

fowl. The exterior consists of a 
hard shell for protection, and this 
is lined with a tough skin, to which 
is fastened the yelk, (which means 
the yellow?) by fibrous strings, as 
seen at , a, in the diagram. In 

the yelk floats the germ-cell, &, which is the point where the 
formation of the future animal commences. The yelk, 
being lighter than the white,' rises upward, and the germ 
being still lighter, rises in the yelk. This is to bring both 
nearer to the vitalizing warmth of the brooding mother. 




106 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

New cells are gradually formed from the nourishing 
yelk around the germ, each being at first roundish in 
shape, and having a spot near the centre, called the 
nucleus. The reason why cells increase must remain a^ 
mystery, until we can penetrate the secrets of vital force 
probably forever. But the mode in which they mul- 
tiply is as follows : The first change noticed in a cell, 
when warmed into vital activity, is the appearance of a 
second nucleus within it, while the cell gradually becomes 
oval in form, and then is drawn inward at the middle, like 
an hour-glass, till the two sides meet. The two portions 
then divide, and two cells appear, each containing its own 
germinal nucleus. These both divide again in the same 
manner, proceeding in the ratio of 2, 4, 8, 16, and so on, 
until most of the yelk becomes a mass of cells. 

The central point of this mass, where the animal itself 
commences to appear, shows, first, a round-shaped figure, 
which soon assumes form like a pear, and then like a 
violin. Gradually the busy little cells arrange themselves 
to build up heart, lungs, brain, stomach, and limbs, for 
which the yelk and white furnish nutriment. There is a 
small bag of air fastened to one end inside of the shell ; 
and when the animal is complete, this air is taken into its 
lungs, life begins, and out walks little chick, all its powers 
prepared, and ready to run, eat, and enjoy existence. Then, 
as soon as the animal uses its brain to think and feel, and 
its muscles to move, the cells which have been made up 
into these parts begin to decay, while new cells are formed 
from the blood to take their place. Thus with life com- 
mences the constant process of decay and renewal all over 
the body. 

The liquid portion of the blood consists of material 
formed from food, air, and water. From this material the 
cells of the blood are formed : first, the white cells, which 
are incomplete in formation ; and then the red cells, which 
are completed by the addition of the oxygen received from 



THE CARE OF HEALTH. 



107 



Fig. 49. 




air in the lungs. Fig. 49 represents part of a magnified 
blood-vessel, #, a, in which the round cells are the white, 

and the oblong the red cells, 
floating in the blood. Sur- 
rounding the blood-vessels 
are the cells forming the ad- 
jacent membrane, 5 &, each 
having a nucleus in its centre. 
Cells have different powers 
of selecting and secreting 
diverse materials from the 
blood. Thus, some secrete 
bile to carry to the liver, 
others secrete saliva for the 
mouth, others take up the 
tears, and still others take 
material for the brain, mus- 
cles, and all other organs. Cells also have a converting 
power, of taking one kind of matter from the blood, and 
changing it to another kind. They are minute chemical 
laboratories all over the body, changing materials of one 
kind to another form in which they can be made useful. 

Both animal and vegetable substances are formed of 
cells. But the vegetable cells take up and use unorgan- 
ized or simple, natural matter* whereas the animal cell 
only takes substances already organized into vegetable or 
animal life, and then changes one compound into another 
of different proportions and nature. 

These curious facts in regard to cell-life have important 
relations to the general subject of the care of health, and 
also to the cure of disease, as will be noticed in following 
chapters. 

THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. 

There is another portion of the body, which is so inti- 
mately connected with every other that it is placed in this 



108 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 60. 



chapter as also having reference to every department in 
the general subject of the care of health. 

The body has no power to move itself, but is a collection 
of instruments to be used by the mind in securing various 
kinds of knowledge and enjoyment. The organs through 
which the mind thus operates are the brain and nerves. 
The drawing (Fig. 50) represents them. 

The brain lies in the skull, 
and is divided into the large 
or upper brain, marked 1, 
and the small or lower brain, 
marked 2. From the brain 
runs .the spinal marrow 
through the spine or back- 
bone. From each side of the 
spine the large nerves run 
out into innumerable smallei 
branches to every portion of 
the body. The drawing 
shows only some of the larg- 
er branches. Those marked 
3 run to the neck and organs 
of the chest ; those marked 4 
go to the arms ; those below 
the arms, marked 3, go to 
the trunk ; and those marked 
5 go to the legs. 

The brain and nerves con- 
sist of two kinds of nervous 

matter the gray, which is supposed to be the portion 
that originates and controls a nervous fluid which imparts 
power of action ; and the white, which seems to conduct 
this fluid to every part of the body. 

The brain and nervous system are divided into distinct 
portions, each having different offices to perform, and each 
acting independently of the others ; as, for example, one 




THE CARE OF HEALTH. 109 

portion is employed by the mind in thinking, and in feeling 
pleasurable or painful mental emotions ; another in moving 
the muscles ; while the nerves that run to the nose, ears, 
eyes, tongue, hands, and surface generally, are employed in 
seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, and feeling all physical 
sensations. 

The lack portion of the spinal marrow and the nerves 
that run from it are employed in sensation, or the sense of 
feeling. These nerves extend over the whole body, but are 
largely developed in the network of nerves in the skin. 
The front portion of the spinal marrow and its branches 
are employed in moving those muscles in all parts of the 
body which are controlled by the ivill or choice of the mind. 
These are called the nerves of motion. 

The nerves of sensation and nerves of motion, although 
they start from different portions of the spine, are united 
in the same sheath or cover, till they terminate in the 
muscles. Thus, every muscle is moved by nerves of motion ; 
while alongside of this nerve, in the same sheath, is a nerve 
of sensation. All the nerves of motion and sensation are 
connected with those portions of the brain used when we 
think, feel, and choose. By this arrangement the mind 
knows what is wanted in all parts of the body by means of 
the nerves of sensation, and then it acts by means of the 
nerves of motion. 

For example, when we feel the cold air on the skin, the 
nerves of sensation report to the brain, and thus to the 
mind, that the body is growing cold. The mind thus 
knows that more clothing is needed, and wills to have the 
eyes look for it, and the hands and feet move to get it. 
This is done by the nerves of sight and of motion. 

Next are the nerves of involuntary motion, which move 
all those parts of the head, face, and body that are used in 
breathing, and in other operations connected with it. By 
these we continue to breathe when asleep, and whether we 
will to do so or not. There are also some of the nerves of 



110 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

voluntary motion that are mixed with these, which enable 
the mind to stop respiration, or to regulate it to a certain 
extent. But the mind has no power to stop it for any 
great length of time. 

There is another large and important system of nerves 
called the sympathetic or ganglionic system. It consists of 
small masses of gray and white nervous matter, that seem 
to be small brains with nerves running from them. These 
are called ganglia, and are arranged on each side of the 
spine, while small nerves from the spinal marrow run into 
them, thus uniting the sympathetic system with the nerves 
of the spine. These ganglia are also distributed around in 
various parts of the interior of the body, especially in the 
intestines, and all the different ganglia are connected with 
each other by nerves, thus making one system. It is the 
ganglionic system that carries on the circulation of the 
blood, the action of the capillaries, lymphatics, arteries, and 
veins, together with the work of secretion, absorption, and 
most of the internal working of the body, which goes for- 
ward without any knowledge or control of the mind. 

Every portion of the body has nerves of sensation com- 
ing from the spine, and also branches of the sympathetic 
or ganglionic system. The object of this is to form a sym- 
pathetic communication between the several parts of the 
body, and also to enable the mind to receive, through the 
brain, some general knowledge of the state of the whole 
system. It is owing to this that, when one portion of the 
body is affected, other portions sympathize. For example, 
if one part of the body is diseased, the stomach may so sym- 
pathize as to lose all appetite until the disease is removed. 

All the operations of the nervous system are performed 
by the influence of the nervous fluid, which is generated 
in the gray portions of the brain and ganglia. Whenever 
a nerve is cut off from its connection with these nervous 
centres, its power is gone, and the part to which it minis 
tered becomes lifeless and incapable of motion. 



THE CARE OF HEALTH. Ill 

The brain and nerves can be overworked, and can also 
suffer for want of exercise, just as the muscles do. It is 
necessary for the perfect health of the brain and nerves 
that the several portions be exercised sufficiently, and that 
no part be exhausted by over-action. For example, the 
nerves of sensation may be very much exercised, and the 
nerves of motion have but little exercise. In this case, one 
will be weakened by excess of work, and the other by 
the want of it. 

It is found by experience that the proper exercise of the 
nerves of motion tends to reduce any extreme suscepti- 
bility of the nerves of sensation. On the contrary, the 
neglect of such exercise tends to produce an excessive 
sensibility in the nerves of sensation. 

Whenever that part of the brain which is employed in 
thinking, feeling, and willing, is greatly exercised by hard 
study, or by excessive care or emotion, the blood tends to 
the brain to supply it with increased nourishment, just as 
it flows to the muscles when they are exercised. Over-ex- 
ercise of this portion of the brain causes engorgement of 
the blood-vessels. This is sometimes indicated by pain, or 
by a sense of fullness in the head ; but oftener the result 
is a debilitating drain on the nervous system, which de- 
pends for its supply on the healthful state of the brain. 

The brain has, as it were, a fountain of supply for the 
nervous fluid, which flows to all the nerves, and stimulates 
them to action. Some brains have a larger, and some a 
smaller fountain ; so that a degree of mental activity that 
would entirely exhaust one, would make only a small and 
healthful drain upon another. 

The excessive use of certain portions of the brain tends 
to withdraw the nervous energy from other portions; so 
that when one part is debilitated by excess, another fails by 
neglect. For example, a person may so exhaust the brain 
power in the excessive use of the nerves of motion by 
hard work, as to leave little for any other faculty. On the 



112 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

other hand, the nerves of feeling and thinking may be so 
used as to withdraw the nervous fluid from the nerves of 
motion, and thus debilitate the muscles. 

Some animal propensities may be indulged to such ex- 
cess as to produce a constant tendency of the blood to a 
certain portion of the brain, and to the organs connected 
with it, and thus cause a constant and excessive excite- 
ment, which finally becomes a disease. Sometimes a para- 
lysis of this portion of the brain results from such an 
entire exhaustion of the nervous fountain and of the over- 
worked nerves. 

Thus, also, the thinking portion of the brain may be so 
overworked as to drain the nervous fluid from other por- 
tions, which become debilitated by the loss. And in this 
way, also, the overworked portion may be diseased or 
paralyzed by the excess. 

The necessity for the equal development of all portions of 
the brain by an appropriate exercise of all the faculties of 
mind and body, and the influence of this upon happiness, 
is the most important portion of this subject, and will be 
more directly exhibited in another chapter. 



YIII. 

/ 

DOMESTIC EXERCISE. 

IN a work which aims to influence women to train the 
young to honor domestic labor and to seek healthful exer- 
cise in home pursuits, there is special reason for explaining 
the construction of the muscles and their connection with 
the nerves, these being the chief organs of motion. 

The muscles, as seen by the naked eye, consist of very 
fine fibres or strings, bound up in smooth, silky casings of 
thin membrane. But each of these visible fibres or strings 
the microscope shows to be made up of still finer strings, 
numbering from five to eight hundaed in each fibre. And 
each of these microscopic fibres is a series or chain of 
elastic cells, which are so minute that one hundred thou- 
sand would scarcely cover a capital O on this page. 

The peculiar property of the cells which compose the 
muscles is their elasticity, no other cells of the body having 

this property. At Fig. 51 is a 
diagram representing a micro- 

/"y y V V""W "S sc pi c muscular fibre, in which 
V A A A A A A y . the cells are relaxed, as in the 

natural state of rest. But when 

the muscle contracts, each of its numberless cells in all its 

small fibres becomes widened, making 

Fig , 62 - each fibre of the muscle shorter and 

/YYYY YY\ tm ' cker > as at Fi g- 52 - Tnis explains 
[ I 1 the cause of the swelling out of muscles 

\J\ A A TWV A / 

when they act. 
Every motion in every part of the body has a special 



114 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 53c 




muscle to produce it, and many have other muscles to re- 
store the part moved to its natural state. The muscles that 
move or bend any part are called flexors, and those that re- 
store the natural position are called extensors. 

Fig. 53 represents the muscles of the arm after the skin 
and flesh are removed. They are all in 
smooth silky cases, laid over each other, 
and separated both by the smooth mem- 
branes that encase them and by layers of 
fat, so as to move easily without interfer- 
ing with each other. They are fastened 
to the bones by strong tendons and carti- 
lages ; and around the wrist, in the draw- 
ing, is shown a band of cartilage to con- 
fine them in place. The muscle marked 
8 is the extensor that straightens the fin- 
gers after they have been closed by a 
flexor the other side of the arm. In like 
manner, each motion of the arm and fin- 
gers nas one muscle to produce it and 
another to restore to the natural position. 
The muscles are dependent on the 
brain and nerves for power to move. It 
has been shown that the gray matter of 
the brain and spinal marrow furnishes 
the stimulating power that moves the 
muscles, and causes sensations of touch 
on the skin, and the other sensations of 
the several senses. The white part of the brain and spinal 
marrow consists solely of conducting tubes to transmit this 
influence. Each of the minute fibrils of the muscles has a 
small conducting -nerve connecting it with the brain or 
spinal marrow, and in this respect each muscular fibril is 
separate from every other. 

When, therefore, the mind wills to move a flexor muscle 
of the arm, the gray matter sends out the stimulus through 




DOMESTIC EXERCISE. % 115 

the nerves to the cells of each individual fibre of that 
muscle, and they contract. When this is done, the nerve 
of sensation reports it to the brain and mind. If the mind 
desires to return the arm to its former position, then fol- 
lows the willing, and consequent stimulus sent through the 
nerves to the corresponding muscle ; its cells contract, and 
the limb is restored. 

When the motion is a compound one, involving the 
action of several muscles at the same time, a multitude of 
impressions are sent back and forth to and from the brain 
through the nerves. But the person acting thus is uncon- 
scious of all this delicate and wonderful mechanism. He 
wills the movement, and* instantly the requisite nervous 
power is sent to the required cells and fibres, and they 
perform the motions required* Many of the muscles are 
moved by the sympathetic system, over which the mind 
has but little control. 

Among the muscles and nerves so intimately connected, 
run the minute capillaries of the blood, which furnish 
nourishment to all. 

Fig, 54 represents an artery at <z, which brings pure 
blood to a muscle from the heart. After 
meandering through the capillaries at c, 
to distribute oxygen and food from the 
stomach, the blood enters the vein, 5, 
loaded with carbonic acid and water 
taken up in the capillaries, to be carried 
to the lungs or skin, and thrown out into 
the air. 

The manner in which the exercise 
of the muscles quickens the circula- 
tion of the blood will now be explained. 
The veins abound in every part of every 
muscle, and the large veins have valves which prevent the 
blood from flowing backward. If the wrist is grasped 
tightly, the veins of the hand are immediately swollen. 




116 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 1 S HOME. 

This is owing to the fact that the blood is prevented from 
flowing toward the heart by this pressure, and by the vein- 
valves from returning into the arteries ; while the arteries 
themselves, being placed deeper down, are not so compressed, 
and continue to send the blood into the hand, and thus it ac- 
cumulates. As soon as this pressure is removed, the blood 
springs onward from the restraint with accelerated motion. 
This same process takes place when any of the muscles 
are exercised. The contraction of any muscle presses some 
of the veins, so that the blood can not flow the natural way, 
while the valves in the veins prevent its flowing backward: 
Meantime the arteries continue to press the blood along 
until the veins become swollen. Then, as soon as the 
muscle ceases its contraction, the blood flows faster from 
the previous accumulation. 

If, then, we use a number of muscles, and use them 
strongly and quickly, there are so many veins affected in 
this way as to quicken the whole circulation. The heart 
receives blood faster, and sends it to the lungs faster. 
Then the lungs work quicker, to furnish the oxygen re- 
quired by the greater amount of blood. The blood re- 
turns with greater speed to the heart, and the heart sends 
it out with quicker action through the arteries to the capil- 
laries. In the capillaries, too, the decayed matter is car- 
ried off faster, and then the stomach calls for more food 
to furnish new and pure blood. Thus it is that exercise 
gives new life and nourishment to every part of the body. 

It is the universal law of the human frame that exercise 
is indispensable to the health of the several parts. Thus, 
if a blood-vessel be tied up, so as not to be used, it shrinks, 
and becomes a useless string ; if a muscle be condemned 
to inaction, it shrinks in size and diminishes in power ; and 
thus it is also with the bones. Inactivity produces soft- 
ness, debility, and unfitness for the functions they are de- 
signed to perform. 

Now, the nerves, like all other parts of the body, gain 



DOMESTIC EXERCISE. 117 

and lose strength according as they are exercised. If they 
have too much or too little exercise, they lose strength ; 
if they are exercised to a proper degree, they gain strength. 
When the mind is continuously excited, by business, study, 
or the imagination, the nerves of emotion and sensation are 
kept in constant action, while the nerves of motion are un- 
employed. If this is continued for a long time, the nerves 
of sensation lose their strength from over-action, and the 
nerves of motion lose their power from inactivity. In 
consequence, there is a morbid excitability of the nervous, 
and a debility of the muscular system, which make all 
exertion irksome and wearisome. 

The only mode of preserving the health of these systems 
is to keep up in them an equilibrium of action. For this 
purpose, occupations must be sought which exercise the 
muscles and interest the mind ; and thus the equal action 
of both kinds of nerves is secured. This shows why exercise 
is so much more healthful and invigorating when the mind 
is interested, than when it is not. As an illustration, let a 
person go shopping with a friend, and have nothing to do 
but look on. How soon do the continuous walking and stand- 
ing weary ! But, suppose one, thus wearied, hears of the 
arrival of a very dear friend : she can instantly walk off a 
mile or two to meet her, without the least feeling of fatigue. 
By this is shown the importance of furnishing, for young 
persons, exercise in which they will take an interest. Long 
and formal walks, merely for exercise, though they do some 
good, in securing fresh air, and some exercise of the mus- 
cles, would be of triple benefit if changed to amusing 
sports, or to the cultivation of fruits and flowers, in which 
it is impossible to engage without acquiring a great inte- 
rest. 

It shows, also, why it is far better to trust to useful do- 
mestic exercise at home than to send a young person out to 
walk for the mere purpose of exercise. Young girls can 
seldom be made to realize the value of health, and the 



118 . THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

need of exercise to secure it, so as to feel much interest in 
walking abroad, when they have no other object. But, if 
they are brought up to minister to the comfort and enjoy- 
ment of themselves and others, by performing domestic 
duties, they will constantly be interested and cheered in 
their exercise by the feeling of usefulness and the con- 
sciousness of having performed their duty. 

There are few young persons, it is hoped, who are brought 
up with such miserable habits of selfishness and indolence 
that they can not be made to feel happier by the conscious- 
ness of being usefully employed. And those who have 
never been accustomed to think or care for any one but 
themselves, and who seem to feel little pleasure in making 
themselves useful, by wise and proper influences can often 
be gradually awakened to the new pleasure of benevolent 
exertion to promote the comfort and enjoyment of others. 
And the more this sacred and elevating kind of enjoyment 
is tasted, the greater is the relish induced. Other enjoy- 
ments often cloy; but the heavenly pleasure secured by 
virtuous industry and benevolence, while it satisfies at the 
time, awakens fresh desires for the continuance of so enno- 
bling a good. 



IX. 

HEALTHFUL FOOD. 

THE person who decides what shall be the food and 
drink of a family, and the modes of its preparation, is the 
one who decides, to a greater or less extent, what shall be 
the health of that family. It is the opinion of most me- 
dical men, that intemperance in eating is one of the most 
fruitful of all causes of disease and death. If this be so, the 
woman who wisely adapts the food and cooking of her fa- 
mily to the laws of health removes one of the greatest 
risks which threatens the lives of those under her care. 
But, unfortunately, there is no other duty that has been 
involved in more doubt and perplexity. Were one to 
believe all that is said and written on this subject, the con- 
clusion probably would be, that there is not one solitary 
article of food on God's earth which it is healthful to eat. 
Happily, however, there are general principles on this 
subject which, if understood and applied, will prove a safe 
guide to any woman of common sense ; and it is the object 
of the following chapter to set forth these principles. 

All material things on earth, whether solid, liquid, or 
gaseous, can be resolved into sixty-two simple substances, 
only fourteen of which are in the human body ; and these, 
in certain proportions, in all mankind. 

Thus, in a man weighing 154 Ibs. are found, 111 Ibs. 
oxygen gas, and 14 Ibs. hydrogen gas, which, united, form 
water; 21 Ibs. carbon; 3 Ibs. 8 oz. nitrogen gas; 1 Ib. 12 
oz. 190 grs. phosphorus ; 2 Ibs. calcium, the chief ingre- 
<lient of bones ; 2 oz. fluorine ; 2 oz. 219 grs. sulphur ; 2 oz 



120 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

47 grs. chlorine ; 2 oz. 116 grs. sodium ; 100 grs. iron ; 290 
grs. potassium ; 12 grs. magnesium ; and 2 grs. silicon. 

These simple substances are constantly passing out of 
the body through the lungs, skin, and other excreting 
organs. 

It is found that certain of these simple elements are used 
for jone part of the body, and others for other parts, and 
this in certain regular proportions. Thus, carbon is the 
chief element of fat, and also supplies the fuel that com- 
bines with oxygen in the capillaries to produce animal 
heat. The nitrogen which we gain from our food and the 
air is the chief element of muscle ; phosphorus is the chief 
element of brain and nerves ; and calcium or lime is the 
hard portion of the bones. Iron is an important element 
of blood, and silicon supplies the hardest parts of the teeth, 
nails, and hair. 

Water, which is composed of the two gases, oxygen and 
hydrogen, is the largest portion of the body, forming its 
fluids ; there is four times as much of carbon as there is of 
nitrogen in the body ; while there is only two per cent as 
much phosphorus as carbon. A man weighing one hundred 
and fifty-four pounds, who leads an active life, takes into 
his stomach daily from two to three pounds of solid food, 
and from five to six pounds of liquid. At the same time he 
takes into his lungs, daily, four or five thousand gallons of 
air. This amounts to three thousand pounds of nutriment 
received through stomach and lungs, and then expelled from 
the body, in one year ; or about twenty times the man's own 
weight. 

The change goes on in every minute point of the body, 
though in some parts much faster than in others; as set 
forth in the piquant and sprightly language of Dr. O. W 
Holmes,* who, giving a vivid picture of the constant decay 
and renewal of the body, says : 

* Atlantic Almanac, 1869, p. 40. 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 121 

" Every organized leing always lives immersed in a 
strong solution of its own elements" 

" Sometimes, as in the case of the air-plant, the solution 
contains all its elements ; but in higher plants, and in ani- 
mals generally, some of the principal ones only. Take our 
own bodies, and we find the atmosphere contains the oxygen 
and the nitrogen, of which we are so largely made up, as its 
chief constituents ; the hydrogen, also, in its watery vapor ; 
the carbon, in its carbonic acid. What our air-bath does not 
furnish us, we must take in the form of nourishment, sup- 
plied through the digestive organs. But the first food we 
take, after we have set up for ourselves, is air, and the last 
food we take is air also. We are all chameleons in our diet, 
as we are all salamanders in our habitats, inasmuch as we live 
always in the fire of our own smouldering combustion ; a 
gentle but constant flame, fanned every day by the same 
forty hogsheads of air which furnish us not with our daily 
bread, which we can live more than a day without touching, 
but with our momentary, and oftener than momentary, ali- 
ment, without which we can not live five minutes." 

" We are perishing and being born again at every instant. 
We do literally enter over and over again into the womb of 
that great mother, from whom we get our bones, and flesh, 
and blood, and marrow. ' I die daily ' is true of all that 
live. If we cease to die, particle by particle, and to be born 
anew in the same proportion, the whole movement of life 
comes to an end, and swift, universal, irreparable decay re- 
solves our frames into the parent elements." 

" The products of the internal fire which consumes us over 
and over again every year, pass off mainly in smoke and 
steam from the lungs and the skin. The smoke is only in- 
visible, because the combustion is so perfect. The steam is 
plain enough in our breaths on a frosty morning ; and an 
over-driven horse will show us, on a larger scale, the cloud 
that is always arising from own bodies." 

" Man walks, then, not only in a vain show, but wra ,>ped 



122 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^ S HOME. 

in an uncelestial aureole of his own material exhalations. 
A great mist of gases and of vapor rises day and night from 
the whole realm of living nature. The water and the car- 
bonic acid which animals exhale become the food of plants, 
whose leaves are at once lungs and mouths. The vegetable 
world reverses the breathing process of the animal creation, 
restoring the elements which that has combined and rendered 
effete for its own purposes, to their original condition. The 
salt-water ocean is a great aquarium. The air ocean in 
which we liye is a c Wardian case,' of larger dimensions." 

It is found that the simple elements will not 'nourish 
the body in their natural state, but only when organized, 
either as vegetable or animal food ; and, to the dismay of 
the Grahamite or vegetarian school, it is now established 
by chemists that animal and vegetable food contain the 
same elements, and in nearly the same proportions. 

Thus, in animal food, carbon predominates in fats, while 
in vegetable food it shows itself in sugar, starch, and vege- 
table oils. Nitrogen is found in animal food in the albu- 
men, fibrin, and caseine ; while in vegetables it is in 
gluten, albumen, and caseine. 

It is also a curious fact that, in all articles of food, the 
elements that nourish diverse parts of the body are divided 
into separable portions, and also that the pro- 
Fig. 55. portions correspond in a great degree to the 
wants of the body. For example, a kernel of 
wheat contains all the articles demanded for 
every part of the body. Fig. 55 represents, 
upon an enlarged scale, the position and pro- 
portions of the chief elements required. The 
white central part is the largest in quantity, 
and is chiefly carbon in the form of starch, 
which supplies fat and fuel for the capillaries. The 
shaded outer portion is chiefly nitrogen, which nourishes 
the muscles, and the dark spot at the bottom is prin- 
cipally phosphorus, which nourishes the brain and 




HEALTHFUL FOOD. 128 

nerves. And these elements are in due proportion to the 
demands of the body. A portion of the outer covering of 
a wheat-kernel holds lime, silica, and iron, which are 
needed by the body, and which are found in no other part 
of the grain. The woody fibre is not digested, but serves 
by its bulk and stimulating action to facilitate digestion. 
It is therefore evident that bread made of unbolted flour 
is more healthful than that made of superfine flour. The 
process of bolting removes all the woody fibre ; the lime 
needed for the bones ; the silica for hair, nails, and teeth ; 
the iron for the blood ; and most of the nitrogen and 
phosphorus needed for muscles, brain, and nerves. 

Experiments on animals prove that fine flour alone, 
which is chiefly carbon, will not sustain life more than a 
month, while unbolted flour furnishes all that is needed 
for every part of the body. There are cases where persons 
can not use such coarse bread, on account of its irritating 
action on inflamed coats of the stomach. For such, a 
kind of wheaten grit is provided, containing all the kernel 
of the wheat, except the outside woody fibre. 

When the body requires a given kind of diet, specially de- 
manded by brain, lungs, or muscles, the appetite will crave 
food for it until the necessary amount of this article is secured. 
If, then, the food in which the needed aliment abounds 
is not supplied, other food will be taken in larger quanti- 
ties than needed until that amount is gained. For all kinds 
of food have supplies for every want of the body, though 
in different proportions. Thus, for example, if the muscles 
are worked a great deal, food in which nitrogen abounds is 
required, and the appetite will continue until the requisite 
amount of nitrogen is secured. If, then, food is taken 
which has not the requisite quantity, the consequence 
is, that more is taken than the system can use, while 
the vital powers are needlessly taxed to throw off the 
excess. 

These facts were ascertained by Liebig, a celebrated Ger- 



124 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 1 S HOME. 

man chemist and physicist, who, assisted by his govern- 
ment, conducted experiments on a large scale in prisons, in 
armies, and in hospitals. Among other results, he states 
that those who use potatoes for their principal food eat them 
in very much larger quantities than their bodies would de- 
mand if they used also other food. The reason is, that the 
potato has a very large proportion of starch that supplies 
only fuel for the capillaries and very little nitrogen to feed 
the muscles. For this reason lean meat is needed with 
potatoes. 

In comparing wheat and potatoes we find that in one 
hundred parts wheat there are fourteen parts nitrogen for 
muscle, and two parts phosphorus for brain and nerves. 
But in the potato there is only one part in one hundred 
for muscle, and nine tenths of one part of phosphorus for 
brain and nerves. 

The articles containing most of the three articles needed 
generally in the body are as follows : for fat and heat-mak- 
ing butter, lard, sugar, and molasses ; for muscle-making 
-lean meat, cheese, peas, beans, and lean fishes ; for brain 
and nerves shell-fish, lean meats, peas, beans, and very 
active birds and fishes who live chiefly on food in which 
phosphorus abounds. In a meat diet, the fat supplies car- 
bon for the capillaries and the lean furnishes nutriment for 
muscle, brain, and nerves. Green vegetables, fruits, and 
berries furnish the acid and water needed. 

In grains used for food, the proportions of useful ele- 
ments are varied ; there is in some more of carbon and in 
others more of nitrogen and phosphorus. For example, 
in oats there is more of nitrogen for the muscles, and less 
carbon for the lungs, than can be found in wheat. In 
the corn of the North, where cold weather demands fuel 
for lungs and capillaries, there is much more carbon to 
supply it than is found in the Southern corn. 

From these statements it may be seen that one of the 
chief mistakes in providing food for families has been in 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 125 

changing the proportions of the elements nature has fitted 
for our food. Thus, fine wheat is deprived by bolting of 
some of the most important of its nourishing elements, 
leaving carbon chiefly, which, after supplying fuel for the 
capillaries, must, if in excess, be sent out of the body ; thus 
needlessly taxing all the excreting organs. So milk, which 
contains all the elements needed by the body, has the cream 
taken out and used for butter, which again is chiefly carbon. 
Then, sugar and molasses, cakes and candies, are chiefly 
carbon, and supply but very little of other nourishing ele- 
ments, while to make them safe much exercise in cold and 
pure air is necessary. And yet it is the children of the 
rich, housed in chambers and school-rooms most of their 
time, who are fed with these dangerous dainties, thus 
weakening their constitutions, and inducing fevers, colds, 
and many other diseases. 

The proper digestion of food depends on the wants of 
the body, and on its power of appropriating the aliment 
supplied. The best of food can not be properly digested 
when it is not needed. All that the system requires will 
be used, and the rest will be thrown out by the several ex- 
creting organs, which thus are frequently over-taxed, and 
vital forces are wasted. Even food of poor quality may 
digest well if the demands of the system are urgent. The 
way to increase digestive power is to increase the demand 
for food by pure air and exercise of the muscles, quickening 
the blood, and arousing the whole system to a more rapid 
and vigorous rate of life. 

Rules for persons in full health, who enjoy pure air and 
exercise, are not suitable for those whose digestive powers 
are feeble, or who are diseased. On the other hand, many 
rules for invalids are not needed by the healthful, while 
rules for one class of invalids will not avail for other classes. 
Every weak stomach has its peculiar wants, and can not 
furnish guidance for others. 

We are now ready to consider intelligently the following 



126 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

general principles in regard to the proper selection ol 
food: 

Vegetable and animal food are equally healthful if 
apportioned to the given circumstances. 

In cold weather, carbonaceous food, such as butter, 
fats, sugar, molasses, etc., can be used more safely than in 
warm weather. And they can be used more safely by 
those who exercise in the open air than by those of confined 
and sedentary habits. 

Students who need food with little carbon, and women 
who live in the house, should always seek coarse bread, 
fruits, and lean meats, and avoid butter, oils, sugar, and 
molasses, and articles containing them. 

Many students and women using little exercise in the 
open air, grow thin and weak, because the vital powers are 
exhausted in throwing off excess of food, especially of the 
carbonaceous. The liver is especially taxed in such cases, 
being unable to remove all the excess of carbonaceous mat- 
ter from the blood, and thus "biliousness" ensues, par- 
ticularly on the approach of warm weather, when the air 
brings less oxygen than in cold. 

It is found, by experiment, that the supply of gastric 
juice, furnished from the blood by the arteries of the 
stomach, is proportioned, not to the amount of food put 
into the stomach, but to the wants of the body ; so that it 
is possible to put much more into the stomach than 
can be digested. To guide and regulate in this matter, the 
sensation called hunger is provided. In a healthy state ol 
the body, as soon as the blood has lost its nutritive supplies, 
the craving of hunger is felt, and then, if the food is suit- 
able, and is taken in the proper manner, this sensation 
ceases as soon as the stomach has received enough to supply 
the wants of the system. But our benevolent Creator, in 
this, as in our other duties, has connected enjoyment with 
the operation needful to sustain our bodies. In addition 
to the allaying of hunger, the gratification of the palate is 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 127 

secured by the immense variety of food, some articles of 
which are far more agreeable than others. 

This arrangement of Providence, designed for our happi- 
ness, has become, either through ignorance, or want of 
self-control, the chief cause of the many diseases and suffer- 
ings which afflict those classes who have the means of seek- 
ing a variety to gratify the palate. If mankind had only 
one article of food, and only water to drink, though they 
would have less enjoyment in eating, they would never be 
tempted to put any more into the stomach than the calls of 
hunger require. But the customs of society, which present 
an incessant change, and a great variety of food, with those 
various condiments which stimulate appetite, lead almost 
every person very frequently to eat merely to gratify the 
palate, after the stomach has been abundantly supplied, 
so that hunger has ceased. 

When too great a supply of food is put into the stomach, 
the gastric juice dissolves only that portion which the wants 
of the system demand. Most of the remainder is ejected, 
in an unprepared state ; the absorbents take portions of it 
into the system ; and all the various functions of the body, 
which depend on the ministries of the blood, are thus 
gradually and imperceptibly injured. Yery often, intem- 
perance in eating produces immediate results, such as colic, 
headaches, pains of indigestion, and vertigo. 

But the more general result is a gradual undermining of 
all parts of the human frame ; thus imperceptibly shorten- 
ing life, by so weakening the constitution, that it is ready 
to yield, at every point, to any uncommon risk or exposure. 
Thousands and thousands are passing out of the world, 
from diseases occasioned by exposures which a healthy con- 
stitution could meet without any danger. It is owing to these 
considerations, that it becomes the duty of every woman, 
who has the responsibility of providing food for a family, 
to avoid a variety of tempting dishes. It is a much safer 
rule, to have only one kind of healthy food, for each meal. 



128 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'' S HOME. 



Fig. 56. 



than the too abundant variety which is often met at the 
tables of almost all classes in this country. When there is 
to be any variety of dishes, they ought not to be successive, 
but so arranged as to give the opportunity of selection. 
How often is it the case, that persons, by the appearance 
of a favorite article, are tempted to eat merely to gratify 
the palate, when the stomach is already adequately supplied. 
All such intemperance wears on the constitution, and 
shortens life. It not unfrequently happens that excess in 
eating produces a morbid appetite, which must constantly 
be denied. 

But the organization of the digestive organs demands, 
not only that food should be taken in proper quantities, 
but that it be taken at proper times. 

Fig. 56 shows one 
important feature of 
the digestive organs 
relating to this point. 
The part marked L M 
shows the muscles of 
the inner coat of the 
stomach, which run 
in one direction, and 
C M shows the mus- 
cles of the outer coat, 
running in another 
direction. 

As soon as the food enters the stomach, the muscles are 
excited by the nerves, and the peristaltic motion commences. 
This is a powerful and constant exercise of the muscles of 
the stomach, which continues until the process of digestion 
is complete: During this time the blood is withdrawn from 
other parts of the system, to supply the demands of' the 
stomach, which is laboring hard with all its muscles. 
"When this motion ceases, and the digested food has gradu- 
ally passed out, nature requires that the stomach should 




HEALTHFUL FOOD. 129 

have a period of repose. And if another meal be eaten 
immediately after one is digested, the stomach is set to 
work again before it has had time to rest, and before a suffi- 
cient supply of gastric juice is provided. 

The general rule, then, is, that three hours be given to 
the stomach for labor, and two for rest ; and in obedience 
to this, five hours, at least, ought to elapse between every 
two regular meals. In cases where exercise produces a flow 
of perspiration, more food is needed to supply the loss; 
and strong laboring men may safely eat as often as they 
feel the want of food. So, young and healthy children, who 
gambol and exercise much and whose bodies grow fast, may 
have a more frequent supply of food. But, as a general 
rule, meals should be five hours apart, and eating between 
meals avoided. There is nothing more unsafe, and wearing 
to the constitution, than a habit of eating at any time 
merely to gratify the palate. When a tempting article is 
presented, every person should exercise sufficient self-denial 
to wait till the proper time for eating arrives. Children, 
as well as grown persons, are often injured by eating be- 
tween their regular meals, thus weakening the stomach by 
not affording it any time for rest. 

In deciding as to quantity of food, there is one great diffi- 
culty to be met by a large portion of the community. The 
exercise of every part of the body is necessary to its health 
and perfection. The bones, the muscles, the nerves, the 
organs of digestion and respiration, and the skin, all de- 
mand exercise, in order 'properly to perform their functions. 
When the muscles of the body are called into action, all the 
blood-vessels entwined among them are frequently com- 
pressed. As the veins ha,ve valves so contrived that the 
blood can not run back, this compression hastens it for- 
ward toward the heart; which is immediately put in 
quicker motion, to send it into the lungs ; and they, also, 
are thus stimulated to more rapid action, which is the cause 
of that panting which active exercise always occasions. The 



130 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME, 

blood thus courses with greater celerity through the body, 
and sooner loses its nourishing properties. Then the sto- 
mach issues its mandate of hunger, and a new supply of 
food must be furnished. 

Thus it appears, as a general rule, that the quantity of 
food actually needed by the body depends on the amount 
of muscular exercise taken. A laboring man, in the open 
fields, probably throws off from his skin and lungs a much 
larger amount than a person of sedentary pursuits. In 
consequence of this, he demands a greater amount of food 
and drink. 

Those persons who keep their bodies in a state of health 
by sufficient exercise can always be guided by the calls of 
hunger. They can eat when they feel hungry, and stop 
when hunger ceases ; and thus they will calculate exactly 
right. But the difficulty is, that a large part of the com- 
munity, especially women, are so inactive in their habits 
that they seldom feel the calls of hunger. They habitually 
eat, merely to gratify the palate. This produces such a 
state of the system that they lose the guide which Nature 
has provided. They are not called tu eat by hunger, nor 
admonished, by its cessation, when to stop. In consequence 
of this, such persons eat what pleases the palate, till they 
feel no more inclination for the article. It is probable that 
three fourths of the women in the wealthier circles sit 
down to each meal without any feeling of hunger, and eat 
merely on .account of the gratification thus afforded them. 
Such persons find their appetite to depend almost solely 
upon the kind of food on the table. This is not the case 
with those who take the exercise which Nature demands. 
They approach their meals in such a state that almost any 
kind of food is acceptable. 

The question then arises, How are persons, who have lost 
the guide which Nature has provided, to determine as to the 
proper amount of food they shall take ? 

The best method is for several days to take their 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 131 

ordinary exercise and eat only one or two articles of 
simple food, such as bread and milk, or bread a-nd butter 
with cooked fruit, or lean meat with bread and vegetables, 
and at the same time eat less than the appetite demands. 
Then on the following two days, take just enough to 
satisfy the appetite, and on the third day notice the quan- 
tity which satisfies. After this, decide before eating that 
only this amount of simple food shall be taken. 

Persons who have a strong constitution, and take much 
exercise, may eat almost any thing with apparent impunity ; 
but young children who are forming their constitutions, and 
persons who are delicate, and who take but little exercise, 
are very dependent for health on a proper selection of food. 

It is found that there are some kinds of food which afford 
nutriment to the blood, and do not produce any other effect 
on the system. There are other kinds, which are not only 
nourishing, but stimulating, so that they quicken the func- 
tions of the organs on which they operate. The condiments 
used in cookery, such as pepper, mustard, and spices, are of 
this nature. There are certain states of the system when 
these stimulants may be beneficial ; such cases can only be 
pointed out by medical men. 

Persons in perfect health, and especially young children, 
never receive any benefit from such kind of food ; and just 
in proportion as condiments operate to quicken the labors 
of the internal organs, they tend to wear down their powers. 
A person who thus keeps the body working under an un- 
natural excitement, live faster than Nature designed, and 
the constitution is worn out just so much the sooner. A 
woman, therefore, should provide dishes for her family which 
are free from' these stimulating condiments. 

It is also found, by experience, that the lean part of ani- 
mal food is more stimulating than vegetable. This is the 
reason why, in cases of fevers or inflammations, medical 
men forbid the use of meat. A person who lives chiefly on 
animal food is under a higher degree of stimulus than if hia 



132 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

food was chiefly composed of vegetable substances. His blood 
will flow faster, and all the functions of his body will be 
quickened. This makes it important to secure a proper pro- 
portion of animal and vegetable diet. Some medical men 
suppose that an exclusively vegetable diet is proved, by the 
experience of many individuals, to be fully sufficient to nou- 
rish the body ; and bring, as evidence, the fact that some of 
the strongest and most robust men in the world are those 
who are trained, from infancy, exclusively on vegetable food. 
From this they infer that life will be shortened just in pro- 
portion as the diet is changed to more stimulating articles ; 
and that, all other things being equal, children will have a 
better chance of health and long life if they are brought 
up solely on vegetable food. 

But, though this is not the common opinion of medical 
men, they all agree that, in America, far too large a por- 
tion of the diet consists of animal food. As a nation, the 
Americans are proverbial for the gross and luxurious diet 
with which they load their tables; and there can be no 
doubt that the general health of the nation would be in- 
creased by a change in our customs in this respect. To take 
meat but once a day, and this in small quantities, compared 
with the common practice, is a rule, the observance of which 
would probably greatly reduce the amount of fevers, erup- 
tions, headaches, bilious attacks, and the many other ail- 
ments which are produced or aggravated by too gross a diet. 

The celebrated Roman physician, Baglivi, (who, from 
practicing extensively among Roman Catholics, had ample 
opportunities to observe,) mentions that, in Italy, an un- 
usual number of people recover their health in the forty days 
of Lent, in consequence of the lower diet which is required 
as a religious duty. An American physician remarks, " For 
every reeling drunkard that disgraces our country, it con- 
tains one hundred gluttons persons, I mean, who eat to 
excess, and suffer in consequence." Another distinguished 
physician says, " I believe that every stomach, not actually 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 133 

impaired bj organic disease, will perform its functions, if 
it receives reasonable attention ; and when we perceive the 
manner in which diet is generally conducted, both in regard 
to quantity and variety of articles of food and drink, which 
are mixed up in one heterogeneous mass instead of being 
astonished at the prevalence of indigestion, our wonder must 
rather be that, in such circumstances, any stomach is capa- 
ble of digesting at all." 

In regard to articles which are the most easily digested, 
only general rules can be given. Tender meats are digest- 
ed more readily than those which are tough, or than many 
kinds of vegetable food. The farinaceous articles, such as 
rice, flour, corn, potatoes, and the like, are the most nutri- 
tious, and most easily digested. The popular notion, that 
meat is more nourishing than bread, is a great mistake. 
Good bread contains more nourishment than butcher's meat. 
The meat is more stimulating, and for this reason is more 
readily digested. 

A perfectly healthy stomach can digest almost any health- 
ful food ; but when the digestive powers are weak, every 
stomach has its peculiarities, and what is good for one is 
hurtful to another. In such cases, experiment alone can 
decide which are the most digestible articles of food. A 
person whose food troubles him must deduct one article 
after another, till he learns, by experience, which is the best 
for digestion. Much evil has been done, by assuming that 
the powers of one stomach are to be made the rule in regu- 
lating every other. 

The most unhealthful kinds of food are those which are 
made so by bad cooking ; such as sour and heavy bread, 
cakes, pie-crust, and other dishes consisting of fat mixed 
and cooked with flour. Eancid butter and high-seasoned 
food are equally unwholesome. The fewer mixtures there 
are in cooking, the more healthful is the food likely to be. 

There is one caution as to the mode of eating which seems 
peculiarly needful to Americans. It is indispensable to good 



134 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

digestion, that food be well chewed and taken slowly. It 
needs to be thoroughly chewed and mixed with saliva, in 
order to prepare it for the action of the gastric juice, which, 
by the peristaltic motion, will be thus brought into contact 
with every one of the minute portions. It has been found 
that a solid lump of food requires much more time and la- 
bor of the stomach for digestion than divided substances. 

It has also been found, that as each bolus, or mouthful, 
enters the stomach, the latter closes, until the portion receiv- 
ed has had some time to move around and combine with the 
gastric juice, and that the orifice of the stomach resists the 
entrance of any more till this is accomplished. But, if the 
eater persists in swallowing fast, the stomach yields ; the food 
is then poured in more rapidly than the organ can perform 
its duty of preparative digestion ; and evil results are sooner 
or later developed. This exhibits the folly of those hasty 
meals, so common to travelers and to men of business, and 
shows why children should be taught to eat slowly. 

After taking a full meal, it is very important to health 
that no great bodily or mental exertion be made till the 
labor of the stomach is over. Intense mental effort draws 
the blood to the head, and muscular exertions draw it to 
the muscles ; and in consequence of this, the stomach loses 
the supply which it requires when performing its office. 
When the blood with its stimulating effects is thus with- 
drawn from the stomach, the adequate supply of gastric 
juice is not afforded, and indigestion is the result. The 
heaviness which follows a full meal is the indication which 
Nature gives of the need of quiet. When the meal is mod- 
erate, a sufficient quantity of gastric juice is exuded in an 
hour, or an hour and a half ; after which, labor of body and 
mind may safely be resumed. 

WTien undigested food remains in the stomach, and is at 
last thrown out into the bowels, it proves an irritating sub- 
stance, producing an inflamed state in the lining of the sto- 
mach and other organs. 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 135 

It is found that the stomach has the power of gradually 
accommodating its digestive powers to the food it habitually 
receives. Thus, animals which live on vegetables can gra- 
dually become accustomed to animal food ; and the reverse 
is equally true. Thus, too, the human stomach can even- 
tually accomplish the digestion of some kinds of food, which, 
at first, were indigestible. 

But any changes of this sort should be gradual ; as those 
which are sudden are trying to the powers of the stomach, 
by furnishing matter for which its gastric juice is not pre- 
pared. 

Extremes of heat or cold are injurious to the process of 
digestion. Taking hot food or drink, habitually, tends to 
debilitate all the organs thus needlessly excited. In using 
cold substances, it is found that a certain degree of warmth 
in the stomach is indispensable to their digestion ; so that, 
when the gastric juice is cooled below this temperature, it 
ceases to act. Indulging in large quantities of cold drinks, 
or eating ice-creams, after a meal, tends to reduce the tem- 
perature of the stomach, and thus to stop digestion. This 
shows the folly of those refreshments, in convivial meetings, 
where the guests are tempted to load the stomach with a 
variety such as would require the stomach of a stout farmer 
to digest; and then to wind up with ice-creams, thus 
lessening whatever ability might otherwise have existed to 
digest the heavy load. The fittest temperature for drinks, 
if taken when the food is in the digesting process, is blood 
heat. Cool drinks, and even ice, can be safely taken at 
other times, if not in excessive quantity. When the thirst 
is excessive, or the body weakened by fatigue, or when in a 
state of perspiration, large quantities of cold drinks are in- 
jurious. 

Fluids taken into the stomach are not subject to the slow 
process of digestion, but are immediately absorbed and car- 
ried into the blood. This is the reason why liquid nourish- 
ment, more speedily than solid food, restores from exhaustion. 



136 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

The minute vessels of the stomach absorb its fluids, which 
are carried into the blood, just as the minute extremities of 
the arteries open upon the inner surface of the stomach, and 
there exude the gastric juice from the blood. 

When food is chiefly liquid, (soup, for example,) the fluid 
part is rapidly absorbed. The solid parts remain, to be act- 
ed on by the gastric juice. In the case of St. Martin,* in 
fifty minutes after taking soup, the fluids were absorbed, 
and the remainder was even thicker than is usual after eat- 
ing solid food. This is the reason why soups are deemed 
bad for weak stomachs ; as this residuum is more difficult of 
digestion than ordinary food. 

Highly-concentrated food, having much nourishment in 
a small bulk, is not favorable to digestion, because it can not 
' be properly acted on by the muscular contractions of the 
stomach, and is not so minutely divided as to enable the 
gastric juice to act properly. This is the reason why a cer- 
tain bulk of food is needful to good digestion; and why 
those people who live on whale-oil and other highly nou- 
rishing food, in cold climates, mix vegetables and even saw- 
dust with it to make it more acceptable and digestible. So 
in civilized lands, fruits and vegetables are mixed with more 
highly concentrated nourishment. For this reason also, 
soups, jellies, and arrow-root should have bread or crackers 
mixed with them. This affords another reason why coarse 
bread, of unbolted wheat, so often proves beneficial. Where, 
from inactive habits or other causes, the bowels become con- 



* The individual here referred to Alexis St. Martin was a young 
Canadian, eighteen years of age, of a good constitution and robust health, 
who, in 1822, was accidentally wounded by the discharge of a musket which 
carried away a part of the ribs, lacerated one of the lobes of the lungs, 
and perforated the stomach, making a large aperture, which never closed ; 
and which enabled Dr. Beaumont (a surgeon of the American army, sta- 
tioned at Michilimackinac, under whose care the patient was placed) to 
witness all the processes of digestion and other functions of the body for 
several years. ^ 



HEALTHFUL FOOD. 137 

stipated and sluggish, this kind of food proves the appro- 
priate remedy. 

One fact on this subject is worthy of notice. In Eng- 
land, under the administration of William Pitt, for two 
years or more there was such a scarcity of wheat that, to 
make it hold out longer, Parliament passed a law that 
the army should have all their bread made of unbolted 
flour. The result was, that the health of the soldiers im- 
proved so much as to be a subject of surprise to themselves, 
the Officers, and the physicians. These last came out pub- 
licly and declared that the soldiers never before were so ro- 
bust and healthy ; and that disease had nearly disappeared 
from the army. The civic physicians joined and pronounced 
it the healthiest bread ; and for a time schools, families, and 
public institutions used it almost exclusively. Even the 
nobility, convinced by these facts, adopted it for their com- 
mon diet, and the fashion continued a long time after 
the scarcity ceased, until more luxurious habits resumed 
their sway. 

"We thus see why children should not have cakes and can- 
dies allowed them between meals. Besides being largely 
carbonaceous, these are highly concentrated nourishments, 
and should be eaten with more bulky and less nourishing 
substances. The most indigestible of all kinds of food are 
fatty and oily substances, if heated. It is on this account 
that pie-crust and articles boiled and fried in fat or butter 
are deemed not so healthful as other food. 

The following, then, may be put down as the causes of a 
debilitated constitution from the misuse of food. Eating 
too much, eating too often, eating too fast, eating food and 
condiments that are too stimulating, eating food that is too 
warm or too cold, eating food that is highly concentrated, 
without a proper admixture of less nourishing matter, and 
eating hot food that is difficult of digestion. 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 

THERE is no direction in which a woman more needs both 
scientific knowledge and moral force than in using her 
influence to control her family in regard to stimulating 
beverages. 

It is a point fully established by experience that the full 
development of the human body and the vigorous exercise 
of all its functions can be secured without the use of stimu- 
lating drinks. It is, therefore, perfectly safe to bring up 
children never to use them, no hazard being incurred by 
such a course. 

It is also found by experience that there are two evils in- 
curred by the use of stimulating drinks. The first is, their 
positive effect on the human system. Their peculiarity con- 
sists in so exciting the nervous system that all the functions 
of the body are accelerated, and the fluids are caused to 
move quicker than at their natural speed. This increased 
motion of the animal fluids always produces an agreeable 
effect on the mind. The intellect is invigorated, the im- 
agination is excited, the spirits are enlivened ; and these 
effects are so agreeable that all mankind, after having once 
experienced them, feel a great desire for their repetition. 

But this temporary invigoration of the system is always 
followed by a diminution of the powers of the stimulated 
organs ; so that, though in all cases this reaction may not be 
perceptible, it is invariably the result. It may be set down 
as the unchangeable rule of physiology, that stimulating 
drinks deduct from the powers of the constitution in exact- 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 139 

ly the proportion in which they operate to produce tempo- 
rary invigoration. 

The second evil is the temptation which always attends 
the use of stimulants. Their effect on the system is so agree- 
able, and the evils resulting are so imperceptible and distant, 
that there is a constant tendency to increase such excitement 
both in frequency and power. And the more the system is 
thus reduced in strength, the more craving is the desire for 
that which imparts a temporary invigoration. This process 
of increasing debility and increasing craving for the stimu- 
lus that removes it, often goes to such an extreme that the 
passion is perfectly uncontrollable, and mind and body perish 
under this baleful habit. 

In this country there are three forms in^which the use of 
such stimulants is common ; namely, alcoholic drinks, opi- 
um mixtures, and tobacco. These are all alike in the main 
peculiarity of imparting that extra stimulus to the system 
which tends to exhaust its powers. 

Multitudes in this nation are in the habitual use of some 
one of these stimulants ; and each person defends the indul- 
gence by certain arguments : 

First, that the desire for stimulants is a natural propensity 
implanted in man's nature, as is manifest from the universal 
tendency to such indulgences in every nation. From this, 
it is inferred that it is an innocent desire, which ought to be 
gratified to some extent, and that the aim should be to keep 
it within the limits of temperance, instead of attempting to 
exterminate a natural propensity. 

This is an argument which, if true, makes it equally pro- 
per for not only men, but women and children, to use opium, 
brandy, or tobacco as stimulating principles, provided they 
are used temperately. But if it be granted that perfect 
health and strength can be gained and secured without these 
stimulants, and that their peculiar effect is to diminish the 
power of the system in exactly the same proportion as they 
stimulate it, then there is no such thing as a temperate use, 



140 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

unless they are so diluted as to destroy any stimulating power ; 
and in this form they are seldom desired. 

The other argument for their use is, that they are among 
the good things provided by the Creator for our gratifica- 
tion ; that, like all other blessings, they are exposed to abuse 
and excess ; and that we should rather seek to regulate their 
use than to banish them entirely. 

This argument is based on the assumption that they are, 
like healthful foods and drinks, necessary to life and health, 
and injurious only by excess. But this is not true ; for when- 
ever they are used in any such strength as to be a gratifica- 
tion, they operate to a greater or less extent as stimulants ; 
and to just such extent they wear out the powers of the 
constitution ; and it is abundantly proved that they are not, 
like food and drink, necessary to health. Such articles are 
designed for medicine and not for common use. There can 
be no argument framed to defend the use of one of them 
which will not justify women and children in most danger- 
ous indulgences. 

There are some facts recently revealed by the microscope 
in regard to alcoholic drinks, which every woman should 
understand and regard. It has been shown in a previous 
chapter that every act of mind, either by thought, feeling, 
or choice, causes the destruction of certain cells in the brain 
and nerves. It now is proved by microscopic science* that 
the kind of nutrition furnished to the brain by the blood to 
a certain extent decides future feelings, thoughts, and voli- 
tions. The cells of the brain not only abstract from the 
blood the healthful nutrition, but also are affected in shape, 
size, color, and action by unsuitable elements in the blood. 
This is especially the case when alcohol is taken into the 
stomach, from whence it is always carried to the brain. The 
consequence is, that it affects the nature and action of the 

* For these statements the writer is indebted to Maudsley, a recent 
writer on Microscopic Physiology. 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 141 

brain-cells, until a habit is formed which is automatic; that 
is, the mind loses the power of controlling the brain in its 
development of thoughts, feelings, and choices as it would 
in the natural state, and is itself controlled by the brain. 
In this condition a real disease of the brain is created, called 
oino-mariia, (see Glossary}) and the only remedy is total 
abstinence, and that for a long period, from the alcoholic 
poison. And what makes the danger more fearful is, that the 
brain-cells never are so renewed but that this pernicious 
stimulus will bring back the disease in full force, so that a 
man once subject to it is never safe except by maintaining 
perpetual and total abstinence from every kind of alcoholic 
drink. Dr. Day, who for many years has had charge of an 
inebriate asylum, states that he witnessed the dissection of the 
brain of a man once an inebriate, but for many years in 
practice of total abstinence, and found its cells still in 
the weak and unnatural state produced by earlier indul- 
gences. 

There has unfortunately been a difference of opinion 
among medical men as to the use of alcohol. Liebig, the 
celebrated writer on animal chemistry, having found that 
both sugar and alcohol were heat-producing articles of food, 
framed a theory that alcohol is burnt in the lungs, giving 
off carbonic acid and water, and thus serving to warm the 
body. But modern science has proved that it is in the cap- 
illaries that animal heat is generated, and it is believed that 
alcohol lessens instead of increasing the power of the body to 
bear the cold. Sir John Ross, in his Arctic voyage, proved 
by his own experience and that of his men that cold-water 
drinkers could bear cold longer and were stronger than any 
who used alcohol. 

Carpenter, a standard writer on physiology, says the ob- 
jection to a habitual use of even small quantities of alcoholic 
drinks is, that " they are universally admitted to possess a 
poisonous character," and " tend to produce a morbid condi- 
tion of body ;" while " the capacity for enduring extremes 



142 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

of heat and cold, or of mental or bodily labor, is diminished 
rather than increased by their habitual employment." 

Prof. J. Bigelow, of Harvard University, says, "Alcohol 
is highly stimulating, heating, and intoxicating, and its effects 
are so fascinating that when once experienced there is dan- 
ger that the desire for them may be perpetuated." 

Dr. Bell and Dr. Churchill, both high medical authori- 
ties, especially in lung disease, for which whisky is often 
recommended, come to the conclusion that " the opinion that 
alcoholic liquors have influence in preventing the deposition 
of tubercle is destitute of any foundation ; on the contrary, 
their use predisposes to tubercular deposition." And " where 
tubercle exists, alcohol has no effect in modifying the usual 
course, neither does it modify the morbid effects on the 
system." 

Prof. Youmans, of New-York, says : " It has been demon- 
strated that alcoholic drinks prevent the natural changes 
in the blood, and obstruct the nutritive and reparative func- 
tions." He adds, " Chemical experiments have demonstrated 
that the action of alcohol on the digestive fluid is to destroy 
its active principle, the pepsin, thus confirming the observa- 
tions of physiologists, that its use gives rise to serious disor- 
ders of the stomach and malignant aberration of the whole 
economy." 

"We are now prepared to consider the great principles of 
science, common sense, and religion, which should guide 
every woman who has any kind of influence or responsibil- 
ity on this subject. 

It is allowed by all medical men that pure water is per- 
fectly healthful and supplies all the liquid needed by the 
body ; and also that by proper means, which ordinarily are 
in the reach of all, water can be made sufficiently pure. 

It is allowed by all that milk, and the juices of fruits, when 
taken into the stomach, furnish water that is always pure, 
and that our bread and vegetable food also supply it 
in large quantities. There are besides a great variety of 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 143 

agreeable and healthful beverages, made from the juices of 
fruit, containing no alcohol, and agreeable drinks, such as 
milk, cocoa, and chocolate, that contain no stimulating prin- 
ciples, and which are nourishing and healthful. 

As one course, then, is perfectly safe and another in- 
volves great danger, it is wrong and sinful to choose the 
path of danger. There is no peril in drinking pure water, 
milk, the juices of fruits, and infusions that are nourishing 
and harmless. But there is great danger to the young, and 
to the commonwealth, in patronizing the sale and use of 
alcoholic drinks. The religion of Christ, in its distinctive 
feature, involves generous self -denial for the good of others, 
especially for the weaker members of society. It is on this 
principle that St. Paul sets forth his own example, " If meat 
make n _y brother to offend, I will eat no flesh while the 
world standeth, lest I make my brother to offend." And 
again he teaches, ""We, then, that are strong ought to 
bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please our- 
selves." 

This Christian principle also applies to the common drinks 
of the family, tea and coffee. 

It has been shown that the great end for which Jesus 
Christ came, and for which he instituted the family state, 
is the training of our whole race to virtue and happiness, 
with chief reference to an immortal existence. In this mis- 
sion, of which woman is chief minister, as before stated, the 
distinctive feature is self-sacrifice of the wiser and stronger 
members to save and to elevate the weaker ones. The chil- 
dren and the servants are these weaker members, who by 
ignorance and want of habits of self-control are in most 
danger. It is in this aspect that we are to consider the ex- 
pediency of using tea and coffee in a family. 

These drinks are a most extensive cause of much of the 
nervous debility and suffering endured by American women ; 
and relinquishing them would save an immense amount of 
such suffering. Moreover, all housekeepers will allow that 



144 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

they can not regulate these drinks in their kitchens, where 
the ignorant use them to excess. There is little probability 
that the present generation will make so decided a change 
in their habits as to give up these beverages ; but the sub- 
ject is presented rather in reference to forming the habits 
of children. 

It is a fact that tea and coffee are at first seldom or never 
agreeable to children. It is the mixture of milk, sugar, and 
water, that reconciles them to a taste, which in this manner 
gradually becomes agreeable. Now suppose that those who 
provide for a family conclude that it is not their duty to 
give up entirely the use of stimulating drinks, may not the 
case appear different in regard to teaching their children to 
love such drinks ? Let the matter be regarded thus : The 
experiments of physiologists all prove that stimulants are 
not needful to health, and that, as the general rule, they tend 
to debilitate the constitution. Is it right, then, for a parent 
to tempt a child to drink what is not needful, when there 
is a probability that it will prove, to some extent, an under- 
mining drain on the constitution 1 Some constitutions can 
bear much less excitement than others ; and in every family 
of children, there is usually one or more of delicate organi- 
zation, and consequently peculiarly exposed to dangers from 
this source. It is this child who ordinarily becomes the vic- 
tim to stimulating drinks. The tea and coffee which the 
parents and the healthier children can use without immedi- 
ate injury, gradually sap the energies of the feebler child, 
who proves either an early victim or a living martyr to all 
the sufferings that debilitated nerves inflict. Can it be right 
to lead children where all allow that there is some danger, 
and where in many cases disease and death are met, when 
another path is known to be perfectly safe ? 

The impression common in this country, that warm drinks, 
especially in winter, are more healthful than cold, is not 
warranted by any experience, nor by the laws of the physical 
system. At dinner, cold drinks are universal, and no one 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 145 

deems them injurious. It is only at the other two meals 
that they are supposed to be hurtful. 

There is no doubt that warm drinks are healthful, and 
more agreeable than cold, at certain times and seasons ; but 
it is equally true that drinks above blood-heat are not health- 
ful. If a person should bathe in warm water every day, 
debility would inevitably follow ; for the frequent applica- 
tion of the stimulus of heat, like all other stimulants, even- 
tually causes relaxation and weakness. If, therefore, a person 
is in the habit of drinking hot drinks twice a day, the teeth, 
throat, and stomach are gradually debilitated. This, most 
probably, is one of the causes of an early decay of the teeth, 
which is observed to be much more common among Ameri- 
can ladies, than among those in European countries. 

It has been stated to the writer, by an intelligent traveler 
who had visited Mexico, that it was rare to meet an indi- 
vidual with even a tolerable set of teeth, and that almost 
every grown person he met in the street had merely rem- 
nants of teeth. On inquiry into the customs of the country, 
it was found that it was the universal practice to take their 
usual beverage at almost the boiling-point ; and this doubt- 
less was the chief cause of the almost entire want of teeth 
in that country. In the United States, it can not be doubted 
that much evil is done in this way by hot drinks. Most tea- 
drinkers consider tea as ruined if it stands until it reaches 
the healthful temperature for drink. 

The following extract, from Dr. Andrew Combe, presents 
the opinion of most intelligent medical men on this sub- 
ject.* 

" Water is a safe drink for all constitutions, provided it 
be resorted to in obedience to the dictates of natural thirst 



* The writer would here remark, in reference to extracts made from va- 
rious authors, that, for the sake of abridging, she has often left out parts 
of a paragraph, but never so as to modify the meaning of the author. 
Some ideas, not connected with the subject in hand, are omitted, but none 
are altered. 



146 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S H ME. 

only, and not of habit. Unless the desire for it is felt, there 
is no occasion for its use during a ineal." 

" The primary effect of all distilled and fermented liquors 
is to stimulate the nervous system and quicken the circula- 
tion. In infancy and childhood, the circulation is rapid and 
easily excited ; and the nervous system is strongly acted 
upon even by the slightest external impressions. Hence, slight 
causes of irritation readily excite febrile and convulsive dis- 
orders. In youth, the natural tendency of the constitution 
is still to excitement, and consequently, as a general rule, the 
stimulus of fermented liquors is injurious." 

These remarks-show that parents, who find that stimulating 
drinks are not injurious to themselves, may mistake in in- 
ferring from this that they will not be injurious to their 
children. 

Dr. Combe continues thus : " In mature age, when diges- 
tion is good, and the system in full vigor, if the mode of life 
be not too exhausting, the nervous functions and general 
circulation are in their best condition, and require no stim- 
ulus for their support. The bodily energy is then easily 
sustained by nutritious food and a regular regimen, and 
consequently artificial excitement only increases the wasting 
of the natural strength." 

It may be asked, in this connection, why the stimulus of 
animal food is not to be regarded in the same light as that 
of stimulating drinks. In reply, a very essential difference 
may be pointed out. Animal food furnishes nutriment to 
the organs which it stimulates, but stimulating drinks excite 
the organs to quickened action without affording any nou- 
rishment. 

It has been supposed by some that tea and coffee have, at 
least, a degree of nourishing power. But it is proved that 
it is the milk and sugar, and not the main portion of the 
drink, which imparts the nourishment. Tea has not one 
particle of nourishing properties ; and what little exists in 
the coffee-berry is lost by roasting it in the usual mode. All 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 147 

that these articles do, is simply to stimulate without nou- 
rishing. 

Although there is little hope of banishing these drinks, 
there is still a chance that something may be gained in at- 
tempts to regulate their use by the rules of temperance. 
If, then, a housekeeper can not banish tea and coffee en- 
tirely, she may use her influence to prevent excess, both by 
her instructions, and by the power of control committed 
more or less to her hands. 

It is important for every housekeeper to know that the 
health of a family very much depends on \hs purity of wa- 
ter used for cooking and drinking. There are three causes 
of impure and unhealthf ul water. One is, the existence in 
it of vegetable or animal matter, which can be remedied by 
filtering through sand and charcoal. Another cause is, the 
existence of mineral matter, especially in limestone coun- 
tries, producing diseases of the bladder. This is remedied 
in a measure by boiling, which secures a deposit of the lime 
on the vessel used. The third cause is, the corroding of zinc 
and lead used in pipes and reservoirs, producing oxides that 
are slow poisons. The only remedy is prevention, by having 
supply-pipes made of iron, like gas-pipe, instead of zinc and 
lead ; or the lately invented lead pipe lined with tin, which 
metal is not corrosive. The obstacle to this is, that the trade 
of the plumbers would be greatly diminished by the use of 
reliable pipes. When water must be used from supply-pipes 
of lead or zinc, it is well to let the water run some time be- 
fore drinking it and to use as little as possible, taking milk 
instead ; and being further satisfied for inner necessities by 
the water supplied by fruits and vegetables. The water in 
these is always pure. But in using milk as a drink, it must 
be remembered that it is also rich food, and that less of 
other food must be taken when milk is thus used, or bilious 
troubles will result from excess of food. 

The use of opium, especially by women, is usually caused 
at first by medical prescriptions containing it. All thatf has 



148 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

been stated as to the ,effect of alcohol in the brain is true of 
opium ; while, to break a habit thus induced is almost hopeless. 
Every woman who takes or who administers this drug, is deal- 
ing as with poisoned arrows, whose wounds are without cure. 

The use of tobacco in this country, and especially among 
young boys, is increasing at a fearful rate. On this subject, 
we have the unanimous opinion of all medical men ; the fol- 
lowing being specimens. 

A distinguished medical writer thus states the case : " Every 
physician knows that the agreeable sensations that tempt 
to the use of tobacco are caused by nicotine, which is a rank 
poison, as much so as prussic acid or arsenic. When smoked, 
the poison is absorbed by the blood of the mouth, and car- 
ried to the brain. When chewed, the nicotine passes to the 
blood through the mouth and stomach. In both cases, the 
whole nervous system is thrown into abnormal excitement to 
expel the poison, and it is this excitement that causes agree- 
able sensations. The excitement thus caused is invariably 
followed by a diminution of nervous power, in exact pro- 
portion to the preceding excitement to expel the evil from the 



Few will dispute the general truth and effect of the 
above statement, so that the question is one to be settled on 
the same principle as applies to the use of alcoholic drinks. 
Is it, then, according to the generous principles of Christ's 
religion, for those who are strong and able to bear this poison, 
to tempt the young, the ignorant, and the weak to a prac- 
tice not needful to any healthful enjoyment, and which leads 
multitudes to disease, and often to vice? For the use of 
tobacco tends always to lessen nerve-power, and probably 
every one out of five that indulges in its use awakens a mor- 
bid craving for increased stimulus, lessens the power of 
self-control, diminishes the strength of the constitution, and 
sets an example that influences the weak to the path of 
danger and of frequent ruin. 

The great danger of this age is an increasing, intense 



HEALTHFUL DRINKS. 149 

worldliness, and disbelief in the foundation principle of the 
religion of Christ, that we are to reap through everlasting 
ages the consequences of habits formed in this life. In the 
light of his word, they only who are truly wise " shall shine 
as the firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness, 
as the stars, forever and ever." 

It is increased faith or belief in the teachings of Christ's 
religion, as to the influence of this life upon the life to come, 
which alone can save our country and the world from that 
inrushing tide of sensualism and worldliness, now seeming 
to threaten the best hopes and prospects of our race. 

And woman, as the chief educator of our race, and the 
prime minister of the family state, is bound in the use of 
meats and drinks to employ the powerful and distinctive 
motives of the religion of Christ in forming habits of tem- 
perance and benevolent self-sacrifice for the good of others. 



XI. 



CLEANLINESS. 

BOTH the health and comfort of a family depend, to a 
great extent, on cleanliness of the person and the family 
surroundings. True cleanliness of person involves the sci- 
entific treatment of the skin. This is the most complicated 
organ of the body, and one through which the health is af- 
fected more than through any other ; and no persons can or 
will be so likely to take proper care of it as those by whom 
its construction and functions are understood. 

Fig. 57 is a very highly 
magnified portion of the 
skin. The layer marked 
1 is the outside, very thin 
skin, called the cuticle or 
scarf skin. This consists 
of transparent layers of 



Fig. 57. 




minute cells, which are 
constantly decaying and 
being renewed, and the 
white scurf that passes 
from the skin to the cloth- 
ing is a decayed portion of 

these cells. This part of the skin has neither nerves nor 
blood-vessels. 

The dark layer, marked 2, 7, 8, is that portion of the true 
skin which gives the external color marking diverse races. 
In the portion of the dark layer marked 3, 4, is seen a net- 
work of nerves which run from two branches of the nervous 



CLEANLINESS. 




trunks coming from the spinal marrow. These are nerves 
of sensation, by which the sense of touch or feeling is per- 
formed. Fig. 58 represents the 
blood-vessels, (intermingled with 
the nerves of the skin,) which 
divide into minute capillaries, 
that act like the capillaries of 
the lungs, taking oxygen from 
the air, and giving out carbonic 
acid. At a and b are seen the 
roots of two hairs, which abound 
in certain parts of the skin, and 
are nourished by the blood of 
the capillaries. 

At Fig. 59 is a magnified view 
of another set of vessels, called the lymphatics or absorb- 
ents. These are extremely minute vessels that interlace 
with the nerves and blood-vessels of the skin. Their office 
is to aid in collecting the use- 
less, injurious, or decayed mat- 
ter, and carry it to certain re- 
servoirs, from which it passes 
in to some of the large veins, to 
be thrown out through the 
lungs, bowels, kidneys, or skin. 
These absorbent or lymphatic 
vessels have mouths opening 
on the surface of the true skin, 
and, though covered by the 

cuticle, they can absorb both liquids and solids that are 
placed in close -contact with the skin. In proof of this, one 
of the main trunks oi the lymphatics in the hand can be 
cut off from all communication with other portions, and tied 
up : and if the hand is immersed in milk a given time, it 
will be found that the milk has been absorbed through the 
cuticle and fills the lymphatics. In this way, long-con- 



Fig. 59. 




152 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 60. 



tinued blisters on the skin will introduce the blistering mat- 
ter into the blood through the absorbents, and then the kid- 
neys will take it up from the blood passing through them to 
carry it out of the body, and thus become irritated and in- 
flamed by it. 

There are also oil-tubes, imbedded in the skin, that draw 
off oil from the blood. This issues on the surface and spreads 
over the cuticle to keep it soft and moist. 

But the most curious part of the skin 
is the system of innumerable minute 
perspiration-tubes. Fig. 60 is a draw- 
ing of one very greatly magnified. 
These tubes open on the cuticle, and 
the openings are called pores of the 
skin. They descend into the true skin, 
and there form a coil, as is seen in the 
drawing. These tubes are hollow, Hke 
a pipe-stem, and their inner surface 
consists of wonderfully minute capilla- 
ries filled with the impure venous 
blood. And in these small tubes the 
same process is going on as takes place 
when the carbonic acid and water of 
the blood are exhaled from the lungs. 
The capillaries of these tubes through 
the whole skin of the body are thus 
constantly exhaling the noxious and decayed particles of 
the body, just as the lungs pour them out through the 
mouth and nose. 

It has been shown that the perspiration-tubes are coiled 
up into a ball at their base. The number and extent of 
these tubes are astonishing. In a square inch on the palm 
of the hand have been counted, through a microscope, thir- 
ty-five hundred of these tubes. Each one of them is about 
a quarter of an inch in length, including its coils. This 
makes the united lengths of these little tubes to be seventy- 




CLEANLINESS. 153 

three feet to a square inch. Their united length over the 
whole body is thus calculated to be equal to twenty-eight 
miles. What a wonderful apparatus this ! And what mis- 
chiefs must ensue when the drainage from the body of such 
an extent as this becomes obstructed ! 

But the inside of the body also has a skin, as have all its 
organs. The interior of the head, the throat, the gullet, the 
lungs, the stomach, and all the intestines, are lined with a 
skin. This is called the mucous membrane, because it is 
constantly secreting from the blood a slimy substance called 
mucus. When it accumulates in the lungs, it is called^AZ^m. 
This inner skin also has nerves, blood-vessels, and lymphatics. 
The outer skin joins to the inner at the mouth, the nose, and 
other openings of the body, and there is a constant sympathy 
between the two skins, and thus between the inner organs 
and the surface of the body. 

SECRETING ORGANS. 

Those vessels of the body which draw off certain portions 
of the blood and change it into a new form, to be employed 
for service or to be thrown out of the body, are called se- 
creting organs. The skin in this sense is a secreting organ, 
as its perspiration-tubes secrete or separate the bad portions 
of the blood, and send them off. 

Of the internal secreting organs, the liver is the largest. 
Its chief office is to secrete from the blood all matter not 
properly supplied with oxygen. For this purpose, a set of 
veins carries the blood of all the lower intestines to the liver, 
where the imperfectly oxidized matter is drawn off in the 
form of Hie, and accumulated in a reservoir called the 
gall-bladder. Thence it passes to the place where the 
smaller intestines receive the food from the stomach, and 
there it mixes with this food. Then it passes through the 
long intestines, and is thrown out of the body through the 
rectum. This shows how it is, that want of pure and cool 



154 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

air and exercise causes excess of bile, from lack of oxygen. 
The liver also has arterial blood sent to nourish it, and cor- 
responding veins to return this blood to the heart. So there 
are two sets of blood-vessels for the liver one to secrete the 
bile, and the other to nourish the organ itself. 

The kidneys secrete from the arteries that pass through 
them all excess of water in the blood, and certain injurious 
substances. These are carried through small tubes to the 
bladder, and thence thrown out of the body. 

The pancreas, a whitish gland, situated in the abdomen 
below the stomach, secretes from the arteries that pass 
through it the pancreatic juice, which unites with the bile 
from the liver, in preparing the food for nourishing the 
body. 

There are certain little glands near the eyes that secrete 
the tears, and others near the mouth that secrete the saliva, 
or spittle. 

These organs all have arteries sent to them to nourish 
them, and also veins to carry away the impure blood. At 
the same time, they secrete from the arterial blood the pe- 
culiar fluid which it is their office to supply. 

All the food that passes through the lower intestines 
which is not drawn off by the lacteals or by some of these 
secreting organs, passes from the body through a passage 
called the rectum. 

Learned men have made very curious experiments to as- 
certain how much the several organs throw out of the body, 
It is found that the skin throws off five out of eight pounds 
of the food and drink, or probably about three or four 
pounds a day. The lungs throw off one quarter as much 
as the skin, or about a pound a day. The remainder is 
carried off by the kidneys and lower intestines. 

There is such a sympathy and connection between all the 
organs of the body, that when one of them is unable to 
work, the others perform the office of the feeble one. 
Thus, if the skin has its perspiration-tubes closed up by a 



CLEANLINESS. 155 

chill, then all the poisonous matter that would have been 
thrown out through them must be emptied out either by 
the lungs, kidneys, or bowels. 

When all these organs are strong and healthy, they can 
bear this increased labor without injury. But if the lungs 
are weak, the blood sent from the skin by the chill engor- 
ges the weak blood-vessels, and produces an inflammation 
of the lungs. Or it increases the discharge of a slimy mu- 
cous substance, that exudes from the skin of the lungs. 
This fills up the air-vessels, and would very soon end life, 
were it not for the spasms of the lungs, called coughing, 
which throw off this substance. 

If, on the other hand, the bowels are weak, a chill of the 
skin sends the blood into all the blood-vessels of the intes- 
tines, and produces inflammation there, or else an excessive 
secretion of the mucous substance, which is called a diar- 
rhea. Or if the kidneys are weak, there is an increased se- 
cretion and discharge from them, to an unhealthy and in- 
jurious extent. 

This connection between the skin and internal organs is 
shown, not only by the internal effects of a chill on the skin ; 
but by the sympathetic effect on the skin when these internal 
organs suffer. For example, there are some kinds of food 
that will irritate and influence the stomach or the bowels ; 
and this, by sympathy, will produce an immediate eruption on 
the skin. Some persons, on eating strawberries, will imme- 
diately be affected with a nettle-rash. Others can not eat 
certain shell-fish without being affected in this way. Many 
humors on the face are caused by a diseased state of the 
internal organs with which the skin sympathizes. 

This short account of the construction of the skin, and 
of its intimate connection with the internal organs, shows 
the philosophy of those modes of medical treatment that are 
addressed to this portion of the body. 

It is on this powerful agency that the steam-doctors rely, 
when, by moisture and heat, they stimulate all the innu 



156 

merable perspiration -tubes and lymphatics to force out 
from the body a flood of unnaturally excited secretions; 
while it is " kill or cure," just as the chance may meet or 
oppose the demands of the case. It is the skin also that is 
the chief basis of medical treatment in the Water Cure, 
whose slow processes are as much safer as they are slower. 

At the same time it is the ill-treatment or neglect of the 
skin which, probably, is the cause of disease and decay 
to an incredible extent. The various particulars in which 
this may be seen will now be pointed out. In the man- 
agement and care of this wonderful and complex part of 
the body, many mistakes have been made. 

The most common one is the misuse of the bath, especially 
since cold water cures have come into use. This mode of 
medical treatment originated with an ignorant peasant, amid 
a population where outdoor labor had strengthened nerves 
and muscles and imparted rugged powers to every part of the 
body. It was then introduced into England and America 
without due consideration or knowledge of the diseases, 
habits, or real condition of patients, especially of women. 
The consequence was a mode of treatment too severe and 
exhausting ; and many practices were spread abroad not 
warranted by true medical science. 

But in spite of these mistakes and abuses, the treatment 
of the skin for disease by the use of cold water has become 
an accepted doctrine of the most learned medical practi- 
tioners. It is now held by all such that fevers can be de- 
tected in their distinctive features by the thermometer, and 
that all fevers can be reduced by cold baths and packing in 
the wet sheet, in the mode employed in all water-cures. Di- 
rections for using this method will be given in another place. 

It has been supposed that large bath-tubs for immersing 
the whole person are indispensable to the proper cleaning of 
the skin. This is not so. A wet towel, applied every morn- 
ing to the skin, followed by friction in pure air, is all that 
is absolutely needed ; although a full bath is a great luxury. 



CLEANLINESS. 157 

Access of air to every part of the skin when its perspiratory 
tubes are cleared and i,ts blood-vessels are filled by friction 
is the best ordinary bath. 

In early life, children should be washed all over, every 
night or morning, to remove impurities from the skin. But 
in this process, careful regard should be paid to the peculiar 
constitution of a child. Very nervous children sometimes 
revolt from cold water, and like a tepid bath. Others pre- 
fer a cold bath ; and nature should be the guide. It must be 
remembered that the skin is the great organ of sensation, and 
in close connection with brain, spine, and nerve-centres : so 
that what a strong nervous system can bear with advantage 
is too powerful and exhausting for another. As age advances, 
or as disease debilitates the body, great care should be taken 
not to overtax the nervous system by sudden shocks, or to 
diminish its powers by withdrawing animal heat to excess. 
Persons lacking robustness should bathe or use friction in 
a warm room ; and if very delicate, should expose only a 
portion of the body at once to cold air. 

Johnson, a celebrated writer on agricultural chemistry, 
tells of an experiment by friction on the skin of pigs, whose 
skins are like that of the human race. He treated six of 
these animals with a curry-comb seven weeks, and left three 
other pigs untouched. The result was a gain of thirty-three 
pounds more of weight, with the use of five bushels less of 
food for those curried, than for the neglected ones. This 
result was owing to the fact that all the functions of the 
body were more perfectly performed when, by friction, the 
skin was kept free from filth and the blood in it exposed to 
the air. The same will be true of the human skin. A cal 
dilation has been made on this fact, by which it is estima- 
ted that a man, by proper care of his skin, would save over 
thirty-one dollars in food yearly, which is the interest on 
over five hundred dollars. If men will give as much care 
to their own skin as they give to currying a horse, they will 
gain both health and wealth. 



XII. 

I 

CLOTHING. 

THERE is no duty of those person^ having control of a 
family where principle and practice are more at variance 
than in regulating the dress of young girls, especially at 
the most important and critical period of life. It is a dif- 
ficult duty for parents and teachers to contend with the 
power of fashion, which at this time of a young girl's life is 
frequently the ruling thought, and when to be out of the 
fashion, to be odd and not dress as all her companions do, 
is a mortification and grief that no argument or instructions 
can relieve. The mother is often so overborne that, in spite 
of her better wishes, the daughter adopts modes of dress 
alike ruinous to health and to beauty. 

The greatest protection against such an emergency is to 
train a child to understand the construction of her own 
body and to impress upon her, in early days, her obliga- 
tions to the invisible Friend and Guardian of her life, the 
" Former of her body and the Father of her spirit," who has 
committed to her care so precious and beautiful a casket. 
And the more she can "be made to realize the skill and 
beauty of construction shown in her earthly frame, the 
more will she feel the obligation to protect it from injury 
and abuse. 

It is a singular fact that the war of fashion has attacked 
most fatally what seems to be the strongest foundation and 
defense of the body, the bones. For this reason, the con- 
struction and functions of this part of the body will now 
receive attention. 

The bones are composed of two substances, one animal. 



CLOTHING. 159 

aud the other mineral. The animal part is a very fine 
network, called cellular membrane. In this are deposited 
the harder mineral substances, which are composed princi- 
pally of carbonate and phosphate of lime. In very early 
life, the bones consist chiefly of the animal part, and are 
then soft and pliant. As the child advances in age, the 
bones grow harder, by the gradual deposition of the phos- 
phate of lime, which is supplied by the food, and carried to 
the bones by the blood. In old age, the hardest material 
preponderates ; making the bones more brittle than in ear- 
lier life. 

The bones are covered with a thin skin or membrane, 
filled with small blood-vessels which convey nourishment 
to them. 

Where the bones unite with others to form joints, they 
are covered with cartilage, which is a smooth, white, elas- 
tic substance. This enables the joints to move smoothly, 
while its elasticity prevents injuries from sudden jars. 

The joints are bound together by strong, elastic bands 
called ligaments, which hold them firmly and prevent dis- 
location. 

Between the ends of the bones that unite to form joints 
are small sacks or bags, that contain a soft lubricating fluid. 
This answers the same purpose for the joints as oil in mak- 
ing machinery work smoothly, while the supply is constant 
and always in exact proportion to the demand. 

If you will examine the leg of some fowl, you can see the 
cartilage that covers the ends of the bones at the joints, 
and the strong white ligaments that bind the joints toge- 
ther. 

The health of the bones depends on the proper nourish- 
ment and exercise of the body as much as that of any other 
part. When a child is feeble and unhealthy, or when it 
grows up without exercise, the bones do not become firm 
and hard as they are when the body is healthfully devel- 
oped by exercise. The size as well as the strength of the 




160 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

bones, to a certain extent, also depend upon exercise and 
good health. 

The chief supporter of the body is the spine, which con- 
sists of twenty-four small bones, interlocked or hooked into 
each other, while between them are elastic cushions of car- 
tilage which aid in preserving the 
upright, natural position. Fig. 61 
shows three of the spinal bones, 
hooked into each other, the dark 
spaces showing the disks or flat cir- 
cular plates of cartilage between 
them. 

The spine is held in its proper 
position, partly by the ribs, partly by 
muscles, partly by aid of the elastic 
disks, and partly by the close pack- 
ing of the intestines in front of it. 

The upper part of the spine is often thrown out of its 
proper position by constant stooping of the head over books 
or work. This affects the elastic disks so that they grow 
thick at the back side and thinner at the front side by such 
constant pressure. The result is the awkward projection 
of the head forward which is often seen in schools and col- 
leges. 

Another distortion of the spine is produced by tight dress 
around the waist. The liver occupies the right side of the 
bo^dy and is a solid mass, while on the other side is the larger 
part of the stomach, which is often empty. The conse- 
quence of tight dress around the waist is a constant pres- 
sure of the spine toward the unsupported part where the 
stomach lies. Thus the elastic disks again are compressed ; 
till they become .thinner on one side than the other, and 
harden into that condition. This produces what is called 
the lateral curvature of the spine, making one shoulder 
higher than the other. 

The compression of the lower part of the waist is especial- 



CLOTHING, 161 

ly dangerous at the time young girls first enter society and 
are tempted to dress according to the fashion. Many a 
school-girl, whose waist was originally of a proper and 
healthful size, has gradually pressed the soft bones of 
youth until the lower ribs that should rise and fall with 
every breath, become entirely unused. Then the abdomi- 
nal breathing, performed by the lower part of the lungs, 
ceases ; the whole system becomes reduced in strength ; 
the abdominal muscles that hold up the interior organs be- 
come weak, and the upper ones gradually sink upon the lower. 

This pressure of the upper interior organs upon the lower 
ones, by tight dress, is increased by the weight of clothing 
resting on the hips and abdomen. Corsets, as usually worn, 
have no support from the shoulders, and consequently all 
the weight of dress resting upon or above them presses 
upon the hips and abdomen, and this in such a way as to 
throw out of use and thus weaken the most important sup- 
porting muscles of the abdomen, and impede abdominal 
breathing. 

The diaphragm is a kind of muscular floor, extending 
across the centre of the body, on which the heart and lungs 
rest. Beneath it are the liver, stomach, and the abdomi- 
nal viscera, or intestines, which are supported by the abdo- 
minal muscles, running upward, downward, and crosswise. 
When these muscles are thrown out of use, they lose their 
power, the whole system of organs mainly resting on them 
for support can not continue in their naturally snug, compact, 
and rounded form, but become separated, elongated, and un- 
supported. The stomach begins to draw from above instead 
of resting on the viscera beneath. This in some cases causes 
dull and wandering pains, a sense of pulling at the centre 
of the chest, and a drawing downward at the pit of the 
stomach. Then as the support beneath is really gone, there 
is what is often called " a feeling of goneness" This is 
sometimes relieved by food, which, so long as it remains in 
a solid form, helps to hold up the falling superstructure. 



162 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

This displacement of the stomach, liver, and spleen inter- 
rupts their healthful functions, and dyspepsia and biliary 
difficulties not unfrequently are the result. 

As the stomach and its appendages fall downward, the 
diaphragm, which holds up the heart and lungs, must des- 
cend also. In this state of things, the inflation of the lungs is 
less and less aided by the abdominal muscles, and is con- 
fined chiefly to their upper portion. Breathing sometimes 
thus becomes quicker and shorter on account of the elon- 
gated or debilitated condition of the assisting organs. Con- 
sumption not unfrequently results from this cause. 

The heart also feels the evil. " Palpitations," " flutter- 
ings," " sinking feelings," all show that, in the language of 
Scripture, "the heart trembleth, and is moved out of its 
place." 

But the lower intestines are the greatest sufferers from 
this dreadful abuse of nature. Having the weight of all 
the unsupported organs above pressing them into unnatural 
and distorted positions, the passage of the food is inter- 
rupted, and inflammations, indurations, and constipation 
are the frequent result. Dreadful ulcers and cancers may 
be traced in some instances to this cause. 

Although these internal displacements are most common 
among women, some foolish members of the other sex are 
adopting customs of dress, in girding the central portion of 
the body, that tend to similar results. 

But this distortion brings upon woman peculiar distresses. 
The pressure of the whole superincumbent mass on the 
pelvic or lower organs induces sufferings proportioned in 
acuteness to the extreme delicacy and sensitiveness of the 
parts thus crushed. And the intimate connection of these 
organs with the brain and whole nervous system renders in- 
juries thus inflicted" the causes of the most extreme anguish, 
both of body and mind. This evil is becoming so com- 
mon, not only among married women, but among young 
girls, as to be a just cause for universal alarm. 



CLOTHING. 163 

How very common these sufferings are, few but the medi- 
cal profession can realize, because they are troubles that 
must be concealed. Many a woman is moving about in un- 
complaining agony who, with any other trouble involving 
equal suffering, would be on her bed surrounded by sym- 
pathizing friends. 

The terrible sufferings that are sometimes thus induced 
can never be conceived of, or at all appreciated from, any 
use of language. Nothing that the public can be made to 
believe on this subject will ever equal the reality. Not 
only mature persons and mothers, but fair young girls some- 
times, are shut up for months and years as helpless and 
suffering invalids. from this cause. This may be found all 
over the land. And there frequently is a horrible extremity 
of suffering in certain forms of this evil, which no woman 
of feeble constitution can ever be certain may not be her 
doom. Not that in all cases this extremity is involved, but 
none can say who will escape it. 

In regard to this, if one must choose for a friend or a 
child, on the one hand, the horrible torments inflicted by 
savage Indians or cruel inquisitors on their victims, or, on 
the other, the protracted agonies that result from such de- 
formities and displacements, sometimes the former would 
be a merciful exchange. 

And yet this is the fate that is coming to meet the young 
as well as the mature in every direction. And tender 
parents are unconsciously leading their lovely and hapless 
daughters to this awful doom. 

There is no excitement of the imagination in what is here 
indicated. If the facts and details could be presented, they 
would send a groan of terror all over the land. For it is 
not one class, or one section, that is endangered. In every 
part of our country the evil is progressing. 

And, as if these dreadful ills were not enough, there have 
been added methods of medical treatment at once useless, tor- 
turing to the mind* and involving great liability to immorali- 
ties. 



iGi 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN* S HOME. 



Fig. 62. 




In hope of abating these evils, drawings are given (Fig. 

62 and Fig. 63) of the front and back of a jacket that will 

preserve the advantages of 
the corset without its evils. 
This jacket may at first be 
fitted to the figure with cor- 
sets underneath it, just like 
the waist of a dress. Then, 
delicate whalebones can be 
used to stiffen the jacket, so 
that it will take the proper 
shape, when the corset may 
be dispensed with. The but- 
tons below are to hold all 

articles of dress below the waist by button-holes. By this 

method, the bust is supported as well as by corsets, while 

the shoulders support from above, as they should do, the 

weight of the dress below. ~No stiff bone should be allowed 

to press in front, and the jacket should be so loose that a 

full breath can be inspired with ease, while in a sitting 

position. 

The proper way to dress a young girl is to have a cotton 

or flannel close-fitting jacket 

next the body, to which the 

drawers should be buttoned. 

Over this, place the chemise; 

and over that, such a jacket 

as the one here drawn, to 

which should be buttoned the 

hoops and other skirts. Thus 

every article of dress will be 

supported by the , shoulders. 

The sleeves of the jacket can 

be omitted, and in that case a 

strong lining, and also a tape binding, must surround the 

arm-hole, which should be loose. 



63. 




CLOTHING. 165 

Tt is hoped that increase of intelligence and moral power 
among mothers, and a combination among them to regulate 
fashions, may banish the pernicious practices that have pre- 
vailed. If a school-girl dress without corsets and without 
tigl4 belts could be established as a fashion, it would be 
one step gained in the right direction. Then if mothers 
could secure daily domestic exercise in chambers, eating- 
rooms and parlors in loose dresses, a still farther advance 
would be secured. 

A friend of the writer inforfns her that her daughter had 
her wedding outfit made up by a fashionable milliner in 
Paris, and every dress was beautifully fitted to the form, 
and yet was not compressing to any part. This was done 
too without the use of corsets, the stiffening being delicate 
and yielding whalebones. 

Not only parents but all having the care of young girls, 
especially those at boarding-schools, have a fearful responsi- 
bility resting upon them in regard to this important duty. 

In regard to the dressing of young children, much discre- 
tion is needed to adapt dress to circumstances and peculiar 
constitutions. The leading fact must be borne in mind that 
the skin is made strong and healthful by exposure to light and 
pure air, while cold air, if not excessive, has a tonic influence. 
If the skill of infants is rubbed with the hand till red with 
blood, and then exposed naked to sun and air in a well-ven- 
tilated room, it will be favorable to health. 

There is a constitutional difference in the skin of different 
children in regard to retaining the animal heat manufactur- 
ed within, so that some need more clothing than others for 
comfort. Nature is a safe guide to a careful nurse and 
mother, and will indicate by the looks and actions of a child 
when more clothing is needful. As a general rule, it is 
safe for a healthful child to wear as little clothing as suffi- 
ces to keep it from complaining of cold. Fifty years ago, 
it was not common for children to wear as much under-cloth- 
ing as they now do. The writer well remembers how even 



166 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

girls, though not of strong constitutions, used to play for hours 
in the snow-drifts without the protection of drawers, kept 
warm by exercise and occasional runs to an open fire. Arid 
multitudes of children grew to vigorous maturity through 
similar exposures to cold air-baths, and without the frequent 
colds and sicknesses so common among children of the 
present day, who are more carefully housed and warmly 
dressed. But are was taken that the feet should be kept 
dry and warmly clad, Because, circulation being feebler in 
the extremities, this precaution was important. 

It must also be considered that age brings with it decrease 
in vigor of circulation, and the consequent generation of 
heat, so that more warmth of air and clothing is needed at 
an advanced period of life than is suitable for the young. 

These are the general principles which must be applied 
with modification to each individual case. A child of deli- 
cate constitution must have more careful protection from 
cold air than is desirable for one more vigorous, while the 
leading general principle is retained that cold air is a health- 
ful tonic for the skin whenever it does not produce an un- 
comfortable chilliness. 



GOOD COOKING. 

THERE are but a few things on which health and 'happi- 
ness depend more than on the manner in which food is 
cooked. You may make houses enchantingly beautiful, 
hang them with pictures, have them clean and airy and con- 
venient; but if the stomach is fed with sour bread and 
burnt meats, it will raise such rebellions that the eyes will 
see no beauty anywhere. The abundance of splendid ma- 
terial we have in America is in great contrast with the 
style of cooking most prevalent in our country. How often, 
in journeys, do we sit down to tables loaded with material, 
originally of the very best kind, which has been so spoiled 
in the treatment that there is really nothing to eat ! Green 
biscuits with acrid spots of alkali ; sour yeast-bread ; meat 
slowly simmered in fat till it seemed like grease itself, and 
slowly congealing in cold grease ; and above all, that un- 
pardonable enormity, strong butter! How one longs to 
show people what might have been done with the raw ma- 
terial out of which all these monstrosities were concocted ! 

There is no country where an ample, well-furnished table 
is more easily spread, and for that reason, perhaps, none 
where the bounties of Providence are more generally ne- 
glected. Considering that our resources are greater than 
those of any other civilized people, our results are compara- 
tively poorer. 

It is said that a list of the summer vegetables which are 
exhibited on New- York hotel-tables being shown to a French 
artiste, he declared that to serve such a dinner properly 



168 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

would take till midnight. A traveler can not but be struck 
with OTir national plenteousness, on returning from a Con- 
tinental tour, and going directly from the ship to a New- 
York hotel, in the bounteous season of autumn. For 
months habituated to neat little bits of chop or poultry, 
garnished with the inevitable cauliflower or potato, w r hich 
seemed to be the sole possibility after the reign of green 
peas was over ; to sit down all at once to such a carnival ! to 
such ripe, juicy tomatoes, raw or cooked ; cucumbers in brittle 
slices ; .rich, yellow sweet-potatoes ; broad lima-beans, and 
beans of other and various names ; tempting ears of Indian- 
corn steaming in enormous piles ; great smoking tureens of 
the savory succotash, an Indian gift to the table for which 
civilization need not blush ; sliced egg-plant in delicate frit- 
ters ; and marrow-squashes, of creamy pulp and sweetness ; 
a rich variety, embarrassing to the appetite, and perplexing 
to the choice. 

Verily, the thought must often occur that the vegetarian 
doctrine preached in America leaves a man quite as much 
as he has capacity to eat or enjoy, and that in the midst of 
such tantalizing abundance he has really lost the apology, 
which elsewhere bears him out in preying upon his less gifted 
and accomplished animal neighbors. 

But with all this, the American table, taken as a whole, 
is inferior to that of England or France. It presents a fine 
abundance of material, carelessly and poorly treated. The 
management of food is nowhere in the world, perhaps, 
more slovenly and wasteful. Every thing betokens that want 
of care that waits on abundance ; there are great capabili- 
ties and poor execution. A tourist through England can 
seldom fail, at the quietest country-inn, of finding himself 
served with the essentials of English table-comfort his 
mutton-chop done to a turn, his steaming little private appa- 
ratus for concocting his own tea, his choice po't jf marmalade 
or slice of cold ham, and his delicate rolls and creamy but- 
ter, all served with care and neatness. In France, one never 



GOOD COOKING. 169 

asks in vain for delicious cafi-au-lait, good bread and but- 
ter, a nice omelet, or some savory little portion of meat with 
a French name. But to a tourist taking like chance in 
American country-fare, what is the prospect ? What is the 
coffee? what the tea? and the meat? and above all, the 
butter ? 

In writing on cooking, the main topics should be first, 
bread ; second, butter ; third, meat ; fourth, vegetables ; 
and fifth, tea by which last is meant, generically, all sorts 
of warm, comfortable drinks served out in tea-cups, whether 
they be called tea, coffee, chocolate, broma, or what not. 

If these five departments are all perfect, the great ends 
of domestic cookery are answered, so far as the comfort 
and well-being of life are concerned. There exists another 
department, which is often regarded by culinary amateurs 
and young aspirants as the higher branch and very collegi- 
ate course of practical cookery ; to wit, confectionery, by 
which is designated all pleasing and complicated compounds 
of sweets and spices, devised not for health and nourish- 
ment, and strongly suspected of interfering with both- 
mere tolerated gratifications of the palate, which we eat, 
not with the expectation of being benefited, but only with 
the hope of not being injured by them. In this large de- 
partment rank all sorts of cakes, pies, preserves, etc., whose 
excellence is often attained by treading under foot and dis- 
regarding the five grand essentials. 

There is many a table garnished with three or four 
kinds of well-made cake, compounded with citron and 
spices and all imaginable good things, where the meat 
was tough and greasy, the bread some hot preparation 
of flour, lard, saleratus, and acid, and the butter un- 
utterably detestable, where, if the mistress of the feast 
had given the care, time, and labor to preparing the 
simple items of bread, butter, and meat, that she evi- 
dently had given to the preparation of these extras, the lot 
of her guests and family might be much more comfortable. 



170 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* 'S HOME. 

But she does not think of these common articles as const! 
tuting a good table. So long as she has puff pastry, rich 
black cake, clear jelly and preserves, she considers that 
such unimportant matters as bread, butter, and meat may 
take care of themselves. It is the same inattention to com- 
mon things as that which leads people to build houses with 
stone fronts, and window-caps and expensive front-door 
trimmings, without bathing-rooms or fireplaces, or venti- 
lators. 

Those who go into the country looking for summer board 
in farm-houses know perfectly well that a table where the 
butter is always fresh, the tea and coffee of the best kinds and 
well made, and the meats properly kept, dressed, and served, 
is the one table of a hundred, the fabulous enchanted island. 
It seems impossible to get the idea into the minds of many 
people that what is called common food, carefully prepared, 
becomes, in virtue of that very care and attention, a delicacy, 
superseding the necessity of artificially compounded dainties. 

To begin, then, with the very foundation of a good table 
Bread : What ought it to be ? 

It should be light, sweet, and tender. This matter 
of lightness is the distinctive line between savage and 
civilized bread. The savage mixes simple Hour and wa- 
ter into balls of paste, which he throws into boiling 
water, and which come out solid, glutinous masses, of which 
his common saying is, " Man eat dis, he no die," which a. 
facetious traveler who was obliged to subsist on it inter- 
preted to mean, " Dis no kill you, nothing will." In short, 
it requires the stomach of a wild animal or of a savage to 
digest this primitive form of bread, and of course more or 
less attention in all civilized modes of bread-making is giv- 
en to producing lightness. By lightness ib meant simply 
that in order to facilitate digestion the particles are to be 
separated from each other by little holes or air-cells ; and 
all the different methods of making light bread are neither 
more nor less than the formation of bread with these an 
cells. 



GOOD COOKING. 171 

So far as we know, there are four practicable methods of 
aerating bread ; namely, by fermentation ; by effervescence 
of an acid and an alkali; by aerated egg, or egg which has 
been filled with air by the process of beating ; and lastly, 
by pressure of some gaseous substance into the paste, by a 
process much resembling the impregnation of water in a 
soda-fountain. All these have one and the same object 
to give us the cooked particles of our flour separated by 
such permanent air-cells as will enable the stomach more 
readily to digest them. 

A very common mode of aerating bread in America is 
by the effervescence of an acid and an alkali in the flour. 
The carbonic acid gas thus formed produces minute air- 
cells in the bread, or, as the cook says, makes it light. 
When this process is performed with exact attention to 
chemical laws, so that the acid and alkali completely neu- 
tralize each other, leaving no overplus of either, the result 
is often very palatable. The difficulty is, that this is a hap- 
py conjunction of circumstances which seldom occurs. The 
acid most commonly employed is that of sour milk, and, as 
milk has many degrees of sourness, the rule of a certain 
quantity of alkali to the pint must necessarily produce 
very different results at different times. As an actual fact 
where this mode of making bread prevails, as we lament to 
say it does to a great extent in this country, one finds five 
cases of failure to one of success. 

It is a woeful thing that the daughters of our land have 
abandoned the old respectable mode of yeast-brewing and 
bread-raising for this specious substitute, so easily made, 
and so seldom well made. The green, clainmy, acrid sub- 
stance, called biscuit, which many of our worthy republi- 
cans are obliged to eat in these days, is wholly unworthy of 
the men and wSmen of the republic. Good patriots ought 
not to be put off in that way they deserve better fare. 

As an occasional variety, as a household convenience for 
obtaining bread or biscuit at a moment's notice, the process 



172 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'' S HOME. 

of effervescence may be retained ; but we earnestly entreat 
American housekeepers, in scriptural language, to stand in 
the way and ask for the old pa.ths, and return to the good 
yeast-bread of their sainted grandmothers. 

If acid and alkali must be used, by all means let them 
be mixed in due proportions. !No cook should be left to 
guess and judge for herself about this matter. There are 
articles made by chemical rule which produce very perfect 
results, and the use of them obviates the worst dangers in 
making bread by effervescence. 

Of all processes of aeration in bread-making, the oldest 
and most time-honored mode is by fermentation. That 
this was known in the days of our Saviour is evident from 
the forcible simile in which he compares the silent perme- 
ating force of truth in human society to the very familiar 
household process of raising bread by a little yeast. 

There is, however, one species of yeast, much used in 
some parts of the country, against which protest should be 
made. It is called salt-risings, or milk-risings, and is made 
by mixing flour, milk, and a little salt together, and leaving 
them to ferment. The bread thus produced is often very 
attractive, when new and made with great care. It is white 
and delicate, with fine, even air-cells. It has, however, 
when kept, some characteristics which remind us of the 
terms in which our old English Bible describes the effect 
of keeping the manna of the ancient Israelites, which we 
are informed, in words more explicit than agreeable, " stank, 
and bred worms." If salt-rising bread does not fulfill the 
whole of this unpleasant description, it Certainly does em- 
phatically a part of it. The smell which it has in baking, 
and when more than a day old, suggests the inquiry, 
whether it is the saccharine or the putrid fermentation with 
which it is raised. Whoever breaks a pi'ece of it after a 
day or two, will often see minute filaments or clammy strings 
drawing out from the fragments, which, with the unmis- 
takable smell, will cause him to pause before consummat- 
ing a nearer acquaintance. 



GOOD COOKING. 173 

The fermentation of flour by means of brewer's or dis- 
tiller's yeast produces, if rightly managed, results far more 
palatable and wholesome. The only requisites for success 
in it are, first, good materials, and, second, great care in 
rimall things. There are certain low-priced or damaged 
kinds of flour which can never by any kind of domestic 
chemistry be made into good bread ; and to those persons 
whose stomachs forbid them to eat gummy, glutinous paste, 
under the name of bread, there is no economy in buying 
these poor brands, even at half the price of good flour. 

But good flour and good yeast being supposed, with a 
temperature favorable to the development of fermentation, 
the whole success of the process depends on the thorough 
diffusion of the proper proportion of yeast through the 
whole mass, and on stopping the subsequent fermentation 
at the precise and fortunate point. The true housewife 
makes her bread the sovereign of her kitchen its behests 
must be attended to in all critical points and moments, no 
matter what else be postponed. 

She who attends to her bread only when she has done this, 
and arranged that, and performed the other, very often 
finds that the forces of nature will not wait for her. The 
snowy mass, perfectly mixed, kneaded with care and 
strength, rises in its beautiful perfection till the moment 
comes for filling the air-cells by baking. A few minutes now, 
and the acetous fermentation will begin, and the whole result 
be spoiled. Many bread-makers pass in utter carelessness 
over this sacred and mysterious boundary. Their oven has 
cake in it, or they are skimming jelly, or attending to pome 
other of the so-called higher branches of cookery, whi>e the 
bread is quickly passing into the acetous stage. At last, 
when they are ready to attend to it, they find that it has 
been going its own way, it is so sour that the pungent 
smell is plainly perceptible. Il^ow the saleratus-bottle is 
handed down, and a quantity of the dissolved alkali mixed 
with the paste an expedient sometimes making itself too 



174 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 1 S HOME. 

manifest by greenish streaks or small acrid spots in the 
bread. As the result, we have a beautiful article spoiled 
bread without sweetness, if not absolutely sour. 

In the view of many, lightness is the only property re- 
quired in this article. The delicate refined sweetness which 
exists in carefully kneaded bread, baked just before it 
passes to the extreme point of fermentation, is something 
of which they have no conception ; and thus they will even 
regard this process of spoiling the paste by the acetous fer- 
mentation, and then rectifying that acid by effervescence 
with an alkali, as something positively meritorious. How 
else can they value and relish bakers' loaves, such as some 
are, drugged with ammonia and other disagreeable things ; 
light indeed, so light that they seem to have neither weight 
nor substance, but with no more sweetness or taste than so 
much cotton wool ? 

Some persons prepare bread for the oven by simply mix- 
ing it in the mass, without kneading, pouring it into pans, 
and suffering it to rise there. The air-cells in bread thus 
prepared are coarse and uneven ; the bread is as inferior in 
delicacy and nicety to that which is well kneaded as a raw 
servant to a perfectly educated and refined lady. The pro- 
cess of kneading seems to impart an evenness to the minute 
air-cells, a fineness of texture, and a tenderness and plia- 
bility to the whole substance, that can be gained in no other 
way. 

The divine principle of beauty has its' reign over bread 
as well as over all other things ; it has its laws of aesthetics ; 
and that bread which is so prepared that it can be formed 
into separate and well-proportioned loaves, each one care- 
fully worked and moulded, will develop the most beautiful 
results. After being moulded, the loaves should stand usually 
not over ten minutes, just long enough to allow the fermenta- 
tion going on in them to expand each little air-cell to the 
point at which it stood before it was worked down, and then 
they should be immediately put into the oven. 



GOOD COOKING. 175 

Many a good thing, however, is spoiled in the oven. We 
can not but regret, for the sake of bread, that our old 
steady brick ovens have been almost universally superseded 
by those of ranges and cooking-stoves, which are infinite in 
their caprices, and forbid all general rules. One thing, 
however, may be borne in mind as a principle that the 
excellence of bread in all its varieties, plain or sweetened, 
depends on the perfection of its air-cells, whether produced 
by yeast, egg, or effervescence ; that one of the objects of 
baking is to fix these air-cells, and that the quicker this can 
be done through the whole mass, the better will the result 
be. When cake or bread is made heavy by baking too 
quickly, it is because the immediate formation of the top 
crust hinders the exhaling of the moisture in the centre, 
and prevents the air-cells from cooking. The weight also 
of the crust pressing down on the doughy air-cells below de- 
stroys them, producing that horror of good cooks, a heavy 
streak. The problem in baking, then, is the quick applica- 
tion of heat rather below than above the loaf, and its steady 
continuance till all the air-cells are thoroughly dried into 
permanent consistency. Every housewife must watch her 
own oven to know how this can be best accomplished. 

Bread-making can be cultivated to any extent as a fine 
art and the various kinds of biscuit, tea-rusks, twists, 
rolls, into which bread may be made, are much better worth 
a housekeeper's ambition than the getting-up of rich and 
expensive cake or confections. There are also varieties of 
material which are rich in good effects. Unbolted flour, 
altogether more wholesome than the fine wheat, and when 
properly prepared more palatable rye-flour and corn-meal, 
each affording a thousand attractive possibilities all of 
these come under the general laws of bread-stuffs, and are 
worth a careful attention. 

A peculiarity of our American table, particularly in the 
Southern and Western States, is the constant exhibition of 
various preparations of hot bread. In many families of the 



176 THE AMERICAN WOMArf S HOME. 

South and "West, bread in loaves to be eaten cold is an ar- 
ticle quite unknown. The effect of this kind of diet upon 
the health has formed a frequent subject of remark among 
travelers ; but only those know the full mischiefs of it who 
have been compelled to sojourn for a length of time in 
families where it is maintained. The unknown horrors of 
dyspepsia from bad bread are a topic over which we will- 
ingly draw a vail. 

Next to Bread comes Butter on which we have to say, 
that, when we remember what butter is in civilized Europe, 
and compare it with what it is in America, we wonder at 
the forbearance and lenity of travelers in their strictures on 
our national commissariat. 

Butter, in England, France, and Italy, is simply solidified 
cream, with all the sweetness of the cream in its taste, fresh- 
ly churned each day, and unadulterated by salt. At the 
present moment, when salt is five cents a pound and butter 
fifty, we Americans are paying, at high prices, for about one 
pound of salt to every ten of butter, and those of us who 
have eaten the butter of France and England do this with 
rueful recollections. 

There is, it is true, an article of butter made in the 
American style with salt, which, in its own kind and way, 
has a merit not inferior to that of England and France. 
Many prefer it, and it certainly takes a rank equally respect- 
able with the other. It is yellow, hard, and worked so 
perfectly free from every particle of buttermilk that it 
might make the voyage of the world without spoiling. It 
is salted, but salted with care and delicacy, so that it may 
be a question whether even a fastidious Englishman might 
not prefer its golden solidity to the white, creamy freshness 
of his own. But it is to be regretted that this article is the 
exception, and not the rule, on our tables. 

America must have the credit of manufacturing and put- 
ting into market more bad butter than all that is made in 
all the rest of the world together. The varieties of bad 



GOOD COOKING. 177 

tastes and smells which prevail in it are quite a study. 
This has a cheesy taste, that a mouldy, this is flavored with 
cabbage, and that again with turnip, and another has the 
strong, sharp savor of rancid animal fat. These varieties 
probably come from the practice of churning only at long 
intervals, and keeping the cream meanwhile in unventilated 
cellars or dairies, the air of which is loaded with the efflu- 
via of vegetable substances. No domestic articles are so 
sympathetic as those of the milk tribe : they readily take 
on the smell and taste of any neighboring substance, and 
hence the infinite variety of flavors on which one mournful- 
ly muses who has late in autumn to taste twenty firkins of 
butter in hopes of finding one which will simply not be in 
tolerable on his winter table. 

A matter for despair as regards bad butter is, that at the 
tables where it is used it stands sentinel at the door to bar 
your way to every other kind of food. You turn from your 
dreadful half -slice of bread, which fills your mouth with 
bitterness, to your beef-steak, which proves virulent with 
the same poison ; you think to take refuge in vegetable diet, 
and find the butter in the string-beans, and polluting the in- 
nocence of early peas ; it is in the corn, in the succotash, in 
the squash ; the beets swim in it, the onions have it poured 
over them. Hungry and miserable, you think to solace 
yourself at the dessert ; but the pastry is cursed, the cake is 
acrid with the same plague. You are ready to howl with 
despair, and your misery is great upon you especially if 
this is a table where you have taken board for three months 
with your delicate w T ife and four small children. Your case 
is dreadful, and it is hopeless, because long usage and habit 
have rendered your host perfectly incapable of discovering 
what is the matter. " Don't like the butter, sir ? I assure 
you I paid an extra price for it, and it's the very best in the 
market. I looked over as many as a hundred tubs, and 
picked out this one." You are dumb, but not less despair- 
ing. 



178 

Yet the process of making good butter is a very simple 
one. To keep the cream in a perfectly pure, cool atmo- 
sphere, to churn while it is yet sweet, to work out the but- 
termilk thoroughly, and to add salt with such discretion as 
not to ruin the fine, delicate flavor of the fresh cream all 
this is quite simple, so simple that one wonders at thousands 
and millions of pounds of butter yearly manufactured 
which are merely a hobgoblin bewitchment of cream .into 
foul and loathsome poisons. 

The third head of my discourse is that of Meat, of which 
America furnishes, in the gross material, enough to spread 
our tables royally, were it well cared for and served. 

The faults in the meat generally furnished to us are, first, 
that it is too new. A beef steak, which three or four days 
of keeping might render palatable, is served up to us palpi- 
tating with freshness, with all the toughness of animal mus- 
cle yet warm. 

In the next place, there is a woeful lack of nicety in the 
butcher's work of cutting and preparing meat. Who that 
remembers the neatly trimmed mutton-chop of an English 
inn, or the artistic little circle of lamb-chop fried in bread- 
crumbs coiled around a tempting centre of spinach which 
may always be found in France, can recognize any family 
resemblance to, those dapper, civilized preparations, in these 
coarse, roughly -hacked strips of bone, gristle, and meat 
^fhich are commonly called mutton-chop in America? 
There seems to be a large dish of something resembling 
meat, in which each fragment has about two or three edible 
morsels, the rest being composed of dry and burnt skin, fat, 
and ragged bone. 

Is it not time that civilization should learn to demand 
somewhat more care and nicety in the modes of preparing 
what is to be cooked and eaten ? Might not some of the re- 
finement and trimness which characterize the preparations 
of the European market be with advantage introduced into 
our own ? The housekeeper who wishes to garnish her ta 



GOOD COOKING. 179 

ble with some of those nice things is stopped in the outset 
by the butcher. Except in our large cities, where some for- 
eign travel may have created the demand, it seems impossi- 
ble to get much in this line that is properly prepared. 

If this is urged on the score of aesthetics, the ready reply 
will be, " Oh ! we can't give time here in America to go into 
niceties and French whim-whams !" But the French mode 
of doing almost all practical things is based on that true 
philosophy and utilitarian good sense which characterize 
that seemingly thoughtless people. Nowhere is economy a 
more careful study, and their market is artistically arranged 
to this end. The rule is so to cut their meats that no por- 
tion designed to be cooked in a certain manner shall have 
wasteful appendages which that mode of cooking will spoil. 
The French soup-kettle stands ever ready to receive the 
bones, the thin fibrous flaps, the sinewy and gristly portions, 
which are so often included in our roasts or broilings, which 
fill our plates with unsightly debris, and finally make an 
amount of blank waste for which we pay our butcher the 
same price that we pay for what we have eaten. 

The dead waste of our clumsy, coarse way of cutting 
meats is immense. For example, at the beginning of the 
season, the part of a lamb denominated leg and loin, or 
hind-quarter, may sell for thirty cents a pound., Now this 
includes, besides the thick, fleshy portions, a quantity of 
bone, sinew, and thin fibrous substance, constituting full 
one third of the whole weight. If we put it into the oven 
entire, in the usual manner, we have the thin parts over- 
done, and the skinny and fibrous parts utterly dried up, by 
the application of the amount of heat necessary to cook 
the thick portion. Supposing the joint to weigh six pounds, 
at thirty cents, and that one third of the weight is so treat- 
ed as to become perfectly useless, we throw away sixty 
cents. Of a piece of beef at twenty-five cents a pound, 
fifty cents' worth is often lost in bone, fat, and burnt skin. 

The fact is, this way of selling and cooking meat in 



180 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

large, gross portions is of English origin, and belongs to a 
country where all the customs of society spring from a class 
who have no particular occasion for economy. The prac- 
tice of minute and delicate division comes from a nation 
which acknowledges the need of economy, and has made it 
a study. A quarter of lamb in this mode of division would 
be sold in three nicely prepared portions. The thick part 
would be sold by itself, for a neat, compact little roast ; 
the rib-bones would be artistically separated, and all the 
edible matter would form those delicate dishes of lamb- 
chop, which, fried in bread-crumbs to a golden brown, 
are so ornamental and palatable a side-dish ; the trimmings 
which remain after this division would be destined to the 
soup-kettle or stew-pan. 

In a French market is a little portion for every purse, 
and the far-famed and delicately flavored soups and stews 
which have arisen out of French economy are a study worth 
a housekeeper's attention. ]STot one atom of food is wasted 
in the French modes of preparation ; even tough animal 
cartilages and sinews, instead of appearing burned and 
blackened in company with the roast meat to which they 
happen to be related, are treated according to their own 
laws, and come out either in savory soups, or those fine, 
clear meat-jellies which form a garnish no less agreeable to 
the eye than palatable to the taste. 

Whether this careful, economical, practical style of meat- 
cooking can ever to any great extent be introduced into our 
kitchens now is a question. Our butchers are against it ; 
our servants are wedded to the old wholesale wasteful ways, 
which seem to them easier because they are accustomed to 
them. A cook who will keep and properly tend a soup- 
kettle which shall receive and utilize all that the coarse 
preparations of the butcher would require her to trim away, 
who understands the art of making the most of all these 
remains is a treasure scarcely to be hoped for. If such 
things ai3 to be done, it must be primarily through the 



GOOD COOKING. 181 

educated brain of cultivated women who do not scorn to 
turn their culture and refinement upon domestic problems. 

When meats have been properly divided, so that each 
portion can receive its own appropriate style of treatment, 
next comes the consideration of the modes of cooking. 
These may be divided into two great general classes : those 
where it is desired to keep the juices within the meat, as in 
baking, broiling, and frying and those whose object is to 
extract the juice and dissolve the fibre, as in the making 
of soups and stews. In the first class of operations, the 
process must be as rapid as may consist with the thorough 
cooking of all the particles. In this branch of cookery, 
doing quickly is doing well. The fire must be brisk, the 
attention alert. The introduction of cooking-stoves offers 
to careless domestics facilities for gradually drying-up 
meats, and despoiling them of all flavor and nutriment 
facilities which appear to be very generally accepted. 
They have almost banished the genuine, old-fashioned 
roast-meat from our tables, and left in its stead dried meats 
with their most precious and nutritive juices evaporated. 
How few cooks, unassisted, are competent to the simple 
process of broiling a beefsteak or mutton-chop ! how very 
generally one has to choose between these meats gradually 
dried away, or burned on the outside and raw within ! 
Yet in England these articles never come on the table done 
amiss ; their perfect cooking is as absolute a certainty as the 
rising of the sun. 

No one of these rapid processes of cooking, however, is 
BO generally abused as frying. The frying-pan has awful 
sins to answer for. What untold horrors of dyspepsia have 
arisen from its smoky depths, like the ghost from witches' 
caldrons ! The fizzle of frying meat is a warning knell on 
many an ear, saying, " Touch not, taste not, if you would 
not burn and writhe 1" 

Yet those who have traveled abroad remember that 
some of the lightest, most palatable, and most digestible 



182 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

+ 

preparations of meat have come from this dangerous 
source. But we fancy quite other rites and ceremonies 
inaugurated the process, and quite other hands performed 
its offices, than those known to our kitchens. Probably the 
delicate cdtelettes of France are not flopped down into half- 
melted grease, there gradually to warm and soak and fizzle, 
while Biddy goes in and out on her other ministrations, till 
finally, when they are thoroughly saturated, and dinner -hour 
impends, she bethinks herself, and crowds the fire below to 
a roaring heat, and finishes the process by a smart burn, in- 
volving the kitchen and surrounding precincts in volumes 
of Stygian gloom. From such preparations has arisen the 
very current medical opinion that fried meats are indigesti- 
ble. They are indigestible, if they are greasy ; but French 
cooks have taught us that a thing has no more need to 
be greasy because emerging from grea'se than Venus had 
to be salt because she rose from the sea. 

There are two ways of frying employed by the French 
cook. One is, to immerse the article to be cooked in boil- 
ing fat, with an emphasis on the present participle and 
the philosophical principle is, so immediately to crisp every 
pore, at the first moment or two of immersion, as effectually 
to seal the interior against the intrusion of greasy particles ; 
it can then remain as long as may be necessary thoroughly 
to cook it, without imbibing any more of the boiling fluid 
than if it were inclosed in an egg-shell. The other method 
is to rub a perfectly smooth iron surface with just enough 
of some oily substance to prevent the meat from adhering, 
and cook it with a quick heat, as cakes are baked on a 
griddle. In both these cases there must be the most rapid 
application of heat that can be made without burning, and 
by the adroitness shown in working out this problem the 
skill of the cook -is tested. Any one whose cook attains 
this important secret will find fried things quite as digestible, 
and often more palatable, than any other. 

In the second department of meat-cookery, to wit, the 



GOOD COOKING. 183 

slow and gradual application of heat for the softening and 
dissolution of its fibre and the extraction of its juices, 
common cooks are equally untrained. Where is the so- 
called cook who understands how to prepare soups and 
etews? These are precisely the articles in which a 
French kitchen excels. The soup-kettle, made with a 
double bottom, to prevent burning, is a permanent, ever- 
present institution, and the coarsest and most impracticable 
meats distilled through that alembic come out again in 
soups, jellies, or savory stewst The toughest cartilage, even 
the bones, being first cracked, are here made to give forth 
their hidden virtues, and to rise in delicate and appetizing 
forms. 

One great law governs all these preparations : the appli- 
cation of heat must be gradual, steady, long protracted, 
never reaching the point of active boiling. Hours of quiet 
simmering dissolve all dissoluble parts, soften the sternest 
fibre, and unlock every minute cell in which Nature has 
stored away her treasures of nourishment. This careful 
and protracted application of heat and the skillful use of 
flavors constitute the two main points in all those nice 
preparations of meat for which the French have so many 
names processes by which a delicacy can be imparted to 
the coarsest and cheapest food superior -to that of the finest 
articles under less philosophic treatment. 

French soups and stews are a study, and they would 
not be an unprofitable one to any person who wishes to 
live with comfort and even elegance on small means. 

There is no animal fibre that will not yield itself up to long- 
continued, steady heat. But the difficulty with almost any 
of the common servants who call themselves cooks is, that 
they have not the smallest notion of the philosophy of the 
application of heat. Such a one will complacently tell you 
concerning certain meats, that the harder you boil them the 
harder they grow an obvious fact which, under her mode 
of treatment by an indiscriminate galloping boil, has fre 



184 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* S HOME. 

quently come under her personal observation. If you tell 
her that such meat must stand for six hours in a heat just 
below the boiling point, she will probably answer, " Yes, 
ma'am," and go on her own way. Or she will let it stand 
till it burns to the bottom of the kettle a most common 
termination of the experiment. 

The only way to make sure of the matter is, either to ob- 
tain a French kettle, or to fit into an ordinary kettle a false 
bottom, such as any tinman may make, that shall leave a 
space of an inch or two between the meat and the fire. 
This kettle may be maintained in a constant position on 
the range, and into it the cook may be instructed to throw 
all the fibrous trimmings of meat, all the gristle, tendons, 
and bones, having previously broken up these last with a 
mallet. Such a kettle, the regular occupant of a French 
cooking-stove, which they call the pot au feu^ will furnish 
the basis for clear, rich soups, or other palatable dishes. This 
is ordinarily called " stock." 

Clear soup consists of the dissolved juices of the meat 
and gelatine of the bones, cleared from the fat and fibrous 
portions by straining. The grease, which rises to the top of 
the fluid, may be easily removed when cold. 

English and American soups are often heavy and hot 
with spices. There are appreciable tastes in them. They 
burn your mouth with cayenne, or clove, or allspice. You 
can tell at once what is in them, oftentimes to your sorrow. 
But a French soup has a flavor which one recognizes at 
once as delicious, yet not to be characterized as due to any 
single condiment ; it is the just blending of many things. 
The same remark applies to all their stews, ragouts, and 
other delicate preparations. No cook will ever study these 
flavors ; but perhaps many cooks' mistresses may, and thus 
be able to impart delicacy and comfort to economy. 

As to those things called hashes, commonly manufac- 
tured by uri watched, untaught cooks out of the remains of 
yesterday's meal, let us not dwell too closely on their mem- 



GOOD COOKING. 185 

ory compounds of meat, gristle, skin, fat, and burnt fibre, 
with a handful of pepper and salt flung at them, dredged 
with lumpy flour, watered from the spout of the tea-kettle, 
and left to simmer at the cook's convenience while she is 
otherwise occupied. Such are the best performances a 
housekeeper can hope for from an untrained cook. 

But the cunningly devised minces, the artful preparations 
choicely flavored, which may be made of yesterday's repast 
by these is the true domestic artist known. No cook un- 
taught by an educated brain ever makes these, and yet 
economy is a great gainer by them. 

As regards the department of Vegetables, their number 
and variety in America are so great that a table might al- 
most be furnished by these alone. Generally speaking, 
their cooking is a more simple art, and therefore more like- 
ly to be found satisfactorily performed, than that of meats. 
If only they are not drenched with rancid butter, their own 
native excellence makes itself known in most of the ordi- 
nary modes of preparation. 

There is, however, one exception. Our staunch old 
friend, the potato, is to other vegetables what bread is on 
the table. Like bread, it is held as a sort of sine-qua-non ; 
like that, it may be made invariably palatable by a little 
care in a few plain particulars, through neglect of which 
it often becomes intolerable. The soggy, waxy, indigesti- 
ble viand that often appears in the potato-dish is a down- 
right sacrifice of the better nature of this vegetable. 

The potato, nutritive and harmless as it appears, belongs 
to a family suspected of very dangerous traits. It is a 
family connection of the deadly-nightshade and other ill-re- 
puted gentry, and sometimes shows strange proclivities to 
evil now breaking out uproariously, as in the noted pota- 
to-rot, and now more covertly, in various evil affections. 
For this reason scientific directors bid us beware of the wa- 
ter in which potatoes are boiled into which, it appears, the 
evil principle is drawn off; and they caution us not to shred 



186 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S HOME. 

them into stews without previously suffering the slices to lie 
for an hour or so in salt and water. These cautions are 
worth attention. 

The most usual modes of preparing the potato for the ta- 
ble are by roasting or boiling. These processes are so sim- 
ple that it is commonly supposed every cook understands 
them without special directions ; and yet there is scarcely 
an uninstructed cook who can boil or roast a potato. 

A good roasted potato is a delicacy worth a dozen coin- 
positrons of the cook-book ; yet when we ask for it, what 
burnt, shriveled abortions are presented to us ! Biddy 
rushes to her potato-basket and pours out two dozen of dif- 
ferent sizes, some having in them three times the amount of 
matter of others. These being washed, she tumbles them 
into her oven at a leisure interval, and there lets them lie till 
it is time to serve breakfast, whenever that may be. As a 
result, if the largest are cooked, the smallest are presented 
in cinders, and the intermediate sizes are withered and wa- 
tery. Nothing is so utterly ruined by a few moments of 
overdoing. That which at the right moment was plump 
with mealy richness, a quarter of an hour later shrivels 
and becomes watery and it is in this state that roast pota- 
toes are most frequently served. 

In the same manner we have seen boiled potatoes from 
an untaught cook coming upon the table like lumps of fel- 
low wax and the same article, under the directions of a 
skillful mistress, appearing in snowy balls of powdery white- 
ness. In the one case, they were thrown in their skins into 
water, and suffered to soak or boil, as the case might be, at 
the cook's leisure, and after they were boiled to stand in 
the water till she was ready to peel them. In the other 
case, the potatoes being first peeled were boiled as quickly 
as possible in salted water, which the moment they were 
done was drained off, and then they were gently shaken 
for a moment or two over the fire to dry them still more 
thoroughly. We have never yet seen the potato so de- 



GOOD COOKING. 1ft/ 

praved and given over to evil that it could not be reclaimed 
by this mode of treatment. 

As to fried potatoes, who that remembers the crisp, gold- 
en slices of the French restaurant, thin as wafers and light 
as snow-flakes, does not speak respectfully of them ? What 
cousinship with these have those coarse, greasy masses of 
sliced potato, wholly soggy and partly burnt, to which we 
are treated under the name of fried potatoes in America ? 
In our cities the restaurants are introducing the French 
article to great acceptance, and to the vindication of the 
fair fame of this queen of vegetables. 

Finally, we arrive at the last great head of our subject, 
to wit Tea meaning thereby, as before observed, what 
our Hibernian friend did in the inquiry, " Will y'r honor 
take c tay tay ' or coffee tay ?" 

We are not about to enter into the merits of the great 
tea-and-coffee controversy, further than in our general cau- 
tion concerning them in the chapter on Healthful Drinks ; 
but we now proceed to treat of them as actual existences, 
and speak only of the modes of making the best of them. 

The French coffee is reputed the best in the world ; and 
a thousand voices have asked, What is it about the French 
coffee ? 

In the first place, then, the French coffee is coffee, and 
not chickory, or rye, or beans, or peas. In the second 
place, it is freshly roasted, whenever made roasted with 
great care and evenness in a little revolving cylinder which 
makes part of the furniture of every kitchen, and which 
keeps in the aroma of the berry. It is never overdone, so 
as to destroy the coffee-flavor, which is in nine cases out of 
ten the fault of the coffee we meet with. Then it is ground, 
and placed in a coffee-pot with a filter through which, when 
it has yielded up its life to the boiling water poured upon 
it, the delicious extract percolates in clear drops, the coffee- 
pot standing on a heated stove to maintain the temperature. 
The nose of the coffee-pot is stopped up to prevent the es- 



188 

cape of the aroma during this process. The extract thug 
obtained is a perfectly clear, dark fluid, known as cafenoir, 
or black coffee. It is black only because of its strength, 
being in fact almost the very essential oil of coffee. A ta- 
ble-spoonful of this in boiled milk would make what is or- 
dinarily called a strong cup of coffee. The boiled milk is 
prepared with no less care. It must be fresh and new, not 
merely warmed or even brought to the boiling-point, but 
slowly simmered till it attains a thick, creamy richness. The 
coffee mixed with this, and sweetened with that sparkling 
beet-root sugar which ornaments a French table, is the cele- 
brated cafe-au-lait, the name of which has gone round the 
world. \ 

As we look to France for the best coffee, so we must look 
to England for the perfection of tea. The tea-kettle is as 
much an English institution as aristocracy or the Prayer- 
Book ; and when one wants to know exactly how tea should 
be made, one has only to ask how a fine old English house- 
keeper makes it. 

The first article of her faith is, that the water must not 
merely be hot, not merely have ~boikd a few moments since, 
but be actually boiling at the moment it touches the tea. 
Hence, though servants in England are vastly better trained 
than with us, this delicate mystery is seldom left to their 
hands. Tea-making belongs to the drawing-room, and high- 
born ladies preside at " the bubbling and loud hissing urn," 
and see that all due rites and solemnities are properly per- 
formed that the cups are hot, and that the infused tea 
waits the exact time before the libations commence. 

Of late, the introduction of English breakfast-tea has 
raised a new sect among the tea-drinkers, reversing some of 
the old canons. Breakfast- tea must be boiled ! Unlike 
the delicate article of olden time, which required only a 
momentary infusion to develop its richness, this requires a 
longer and severer treatment to bring out its strength 
thus confusing all the established usages, and throwing the 



/ GOOD COOKING. 189 

work into the hands of the cook in the kitchen. The 
faults of tea, as too commonly found at our hotels and 
boarding-houses, are, that it is made in every way the 
reverse of what it should be. The water is hot, perhaps, 
but not boiling; the tea has a general flat, stale, smoky 
taste, devoid of life or spirit ; and it is served usually with 
thin milk, instead of cream. Cream is as essential to the 
richness of tea as of coffee. Lacking cream, boiled milk is 
better than cold. 

Chocolate is a French and Spanish article, and one sel- 
dom served on American tables. "We in America, however, 
make an article every way equal to any which can be im- 
ported from Paris, and he who buys the best vanilla-choco- 
late may rest assured that no foreign land can furnish any 
thing better. A very rich and delicious beverage may be 
made by dissolving this in milk, slowly boiled down after 
the French fashion, 

A word now under the head of Confectionery, meaning 
by this the whole range of ornamental cookery or pastry, 
ices, jellies, preserves, etc. The art of making all these 
very perfectly is far better understood in America than the 
art of common .cooking. There are more women who 
know how to make good cake than good bread more who 
can furnish you with a good ice-cream than a well-cooked 
mutton-chop ; a fair charlotte-russe is easier to gain than 
a perfect cup of coffee ; and you shall find a sparkling 
jelly to your dessert where you sighed in vain for so sim- 
ple a luxury as a well-cooked potato. 

Our fair countrywomen might rest upon their laurels in 
these higher fields, and turn their great energy and ingenu- 
ity to the study of essentials. To do common things per- 
fectly is far better worth our endeavor than to do uncom- 
mon things respectably. We Americans in many things as 
yet have been a little inclined to begin making our shirt at 
the ruffle ; but, nevertheless, when we set about it, we can 
make the shirt as nicely as any body ; it needs only that we 



190 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME, 

turn our attention to it, resolved that, ruffle or no ruffle, 
the shirt we will have. 

A few words as to the prevalent ideas in respect to 
French cookery. Having heard much of it, with no very 
distinct idea of what it is, our people have somehow fallen 
into the notion that its forte lies in high spicing and so 
when our cooks put a great abundance of clove, mace, nut- 
meg, and cinnamon into their preparations, they fancy 
that they are growing up to be French cooks. But the 
fact is, that the Americans and English are far more given 
to spicing than the French. Spices in our made dishes 
are abundant, and their taste is strongly pronounced. Liv- 
ing a year in France one forgets the taste of nutmeg, clove, 
and allspice, which abounds in so many dishes in Ameri- 
ca. The English and Americans deal in spices, the French 
in flavors flavors many and fine, imitating often in 
their delicacy those subtle blendings which nature pro- 
duces in high-flavored fruits. The recipes of our cookery- 
books are most of them of English origin, coming down 
from the times of our phlegmatic ancestors, when the solid, 
burly, beefy growth of the foggy island required the heat 
of fiery condiments, and could digest heavy sweets. Wit- 
ness the national recipe for plum-pudding : which may be 
rendered : Take a pound of every indigestible substance 
you can think of, boil into a cannon-ball, and serve in 
flaming brandy. So of the Christmas mince-pie, and 
many other national dishes. But in America, owing to 
our brighter skies and more fervid climate, we have devel- 
oped an acute, nervous delicacy of temperament far more 
akin to that of France than of England. 

Half of the recipes in our cook-books are mere murder 
to such constitutions and stomachs as we grow here. We 
require to ponder these things, and think how we, in our 
climate and under our circumstances, ought to live ; and in 
doing so, we may, without accusation of foreign foppery, 
take some leaves from many foreign books. 



XIV. 

EAELY EISING. 

THERE is no practice which has been more extensively 
eulogized in all ages than early rising ; and this universal 
impression is an indication that it is founded on true philo- 
sophy. For it is rarely the case that the common sense of 
mankind fastens on a practice as really beneficial, especially 
one that demands self-denial, without some substantial 
reason. 

This practice, which may justly be called a domestic vir- 
tue, is one which has a peculiar claim to be styled American 
and democratic. The distinctive mark of aristocratic nations 
is a disregard of the great mass, and a disproportionate re- 
gard for the interests of certain privileged orders. All the 
customs and habits of such a nation are, to a greater or less 
extent, regulated by this principle. E"ow the mass of any 
nation must always consist of persons who labor at occupa- 
tions which demand the light of day. But in aristocratic 
countries, especially in England, labor is regarded as the 
mark of the lower classes, and indolence is considered as 
one mark of a gentleman. This impression has gradually 
and imperceptibly, to a great extent, regulated their cus- 
toms, so that, even in their hours of meals and repose, the 
higher orders aim at being different and distinct from those 
who, by laborious pursuits, are placed below them. From 
this circumstance, while the lower orders labor by day and 
sleep at night, the rich, the noble, and the honored sleep by 
day, and follow their pursuits and pleasures by night. 

It will be found that the aristocracy of London breakfast 



192 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S HOME. 

near midday, dine after dark, visit and go to Parliament be 
tween ten and twelve at night, and retire to sleep toward 
morning. In consequence of this, the subordinate classes 
who aim at gentility gradually fall into the same practice. 
The influence of this custom extends across the ocean, and 
here, in this democratic land, we find many who measure 
their grade of gentility by the late hour at which they arrive 
at a party. And this aristocratic folly is growing upon us, 
so that, throughout the nation, the hours for visiting and 
retiring are constantly becoming later, while the hours for 
rising correspond in lateness. 

The question, then, is one which appeals to American 
women, as a matter of patriotism and as having a bearing on 
those great principles of democracy which we conceive to 
be equally the principles of Christianity. Shall we form 
our customs on the assumption that labor is degrading and 
indolence genteel ? Shall we assume, by our practice, that 
the interests of the great mass are to be sacrificed for the 
pleasures and honors of a privileged few ? Shall we ape the 
customs of aristocratic lands, in those very practices which 
result from principles and institutions that we condemn? 
Shall we not rather take the place to which we are entitled, 
as the leaders, rather than the followers, in the customs of 
society, turnback the tide of aristocratic inroads, and carry 
through the whole, not only of civil and political but of 
social and domestic life, the true principles of democratic 
freedom and equality ? The following considerations may 
serve to strengthen an affirmative decision. 

The first relates to the health of a family. It is a uni- 
versal law of physiology, that all living things flourish best 
in the light. Vegetables, in .a dark cellar, grow pale and 
spindling. Children brought up in mines are always wan 
and stunted, while men become pale and cadaverous who 
live under ground. This indicates the folly of losing the 
genial influence which the light of day produces on all 
animated creation. 



EARLY RISING. 193 

Sir James Wylie, of the Bussian imperfal service, states 
that in the soldiers' barracks, three times as many were 
taken sick on the shaded side as on the sunny side ; though 
both sides communicated, and discipline, diet, and treatment 
were the same. The eminent French surgeon, Dupuytren, 
cured a lady whose complicated diseases baffled for years 
his own and all other medical skill, by taking her from a 
dark room to an abundance of daylight. 

Florence Nightingale writes : " Second only to fresh air 
in importance for the sick is light. Not only daylight but 
direct sunlight is necessary to speedy recovery, except in a 
small number of cases. Instances, almost endless, could be 
given where, in dark wards, or wards with only northern 
exposure, or wards with borrowed light, even when proper- 
ly ventilated, the sick could not be, by any means, made 
speedily to recover." 

In the prevalence of cholera, it was invariably the case 
that deaths were more numerous in shaded streets or in 
houses having only northern exposures than in those having 
sunlight. Several physicians have stated to the writer that, 
in sunny exposures, women after childbirth gained strength 
much faster than those excluded from sunlight. In the 
writer's experience, great nervous debility has been always 
immediately lessened by sitting in the sun, and still more by 
lying on the earth and in open air, a blanket beneath, and 
head and eyes protected, under the direct rays of the sun. 

Some facts in physiology and natural philosophy have a 
bearing on this subject. It seems to be settled that the red 
color of blood is owing to iron contained in the red blood- 
cells, while it is established as a fact that the sun's rays are 
metallic, having " vapor of iron " as one element. It is also 
true that want of light causes a diminution of the red and 
an increase of the imperfect white blood-cells, and that this 
sometimes results in a disease called .leucoemia, while all 
who live in the dark have pale and waxy skins, and flabby, 
weak muscles. Thus it would seem that it is the sun that 



194 

imparts the iron" and color to the blood. These things be- 
ing so, the customs of society that bring sleeping hours into 
daylight, and working and study hours into the night, are 
direct violations of the laws of health. The laws of health 
are the laws of God, and " sin is the transgression of law." 

To this we must add the great neglect of economy as 
well as health in substituting unhealthful gaslight, poison- 
ous, anthracite warmth, for the life-giving light and warmth 
of the sun. Millions and millions would be saved to this 
nation in fuel and light, as well as in health, by returning 
to the good old ways of our forefathers, to rise with the 
sun, and retire to rest "when the bell rings for nine 
o'clock." 

The observations of medical men, whose inquiries have 
been directed to this point, have decided that from six to 
eight hours is the amount of sleep demanded by persons in 
health. Some constitutions require as much as eight, and 
others no more than six hours of repose. But eight hours 
is the maximum for all persons in ordinary health, with or- 
dinary occupations. In cases of extra physical exertions, 
or the debility of disease, or a decayed constitution, more 
than this is required. Let eight hours, then, be regarded 
as the ordinary period required for sleep by an indus- 
trious people like the Americans. 

It thus appears that the laws of our political condition, 
the laws of the natural world, and the constitution of our 
bodies, alike demand that we rise with the light of day to 
prosecute our employments, and that we retire in time for 
the requisite amount of sleep. 

In regard to the effects of protracting the time spent in 
repose, many extensive and satisfactory investigations have 
been made. It has been shown that, during sleep, the body 
perspires most freely, while yet neither food nor exercise 
are ministering to ita wants. Of course, if we continue our 
slumbers beyond the time required to restore the body to 
its usual vigor, there is an unperceived undermining of the 



EARLY RISING. 195 

constitution, by this protracted and debilitating exhalation. 
This process, in a course of years, renders the body deli- 
cate and less able to withstand disease, and in the result 
shortens life. Sir John Sinclair, who has written a large 
work on the Causes of Longevity, states, as one result of 
his extensive investigations, that he has never yet heard 
or read of a single case of great longevity where the indi- 
vidual was not an early riser. He says that he has found 
cases in which the individual has violated some one of all 
the other laws of health, and yet lived to great age ; but 
never a single instance in which any constitution has with- 
stood that undermining consequent on protracting the 
hours of repose beyond the demands of the system. 

Anbther reason for early rising is, that it is indispensa- 
ble to a systematic and well-regulated family. At what- 
ever hour the parents retire, children and domestics, weari- 
ed by play or labor, must retire early. Children usually 
awake with the dawn of light, and commence their play, 
while domestics usually prefer the freshness of morning for 
their labors. If, then, the parents rise at a late hour, they 
either induce a habit of protracting sleep in their children 
and domestics, or else the family are up, and at their pur- 
suits, while their supervisors are in bed. 

Any woman who asserts that her children and domestics, in 
the first hours of day, when their spirits are freshest, will 
be as well regulated without her presence as with it, con- 
fesses that which surely is little for her credit. It is be- 
lieved that any candid woman, whatever may be her ex- 
cuse for late rising, will concede that if she could rise early 
it would be for the advantage of her family. A late break- 
fast puts back the work, through the whole day, for every 
member of a family ; and if the parents thus occasion the 
loss of an hour or two to each individual who, but for 
their delay in the morning, would be usefully employed, 
they alone are responsible for all this waste of time. 

But the practice of early rising has a relation to the gene- 



196 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

ral interests of the social community, as well as to that of 
each distinct family. All that great portion of the com- 
munity who are employed in business and labor find it 
needful to rise early ; and all their hours of meals, and 
their appointments for business or pleasure, must be accom- 
modated to these arrangements. Now, if a small portion 
of the community establish very different hours, it makes 
a kind of jostling in all the concerns and interests of so- 
ciety. The various appointments for the public, such as 
meetings, schools, and business hours, must be accommodated 
to the mass, and not to individuals. The few, then, who 
establish domestic habits at variance with the majority, are 
either constantly interrupted in their own arrangements, or 
else are interfering with the rights and interests of others. 
This is exemplified in the case of schools. In families 
where late rising is practiced, either hurry, irregularity, 
and neglect are engendered in the family, or else the inte- 
rests of the school, and thus of the community, are sacri- 
ficed. In this, and many other matters, it can be shown 
that the well-being of the bulk of the people is-, to a great- 
er or less extent, impaired by this self-indulgent practice. 
Let any teacher select the unpunctual scholars a class who 
most seriously interfere with the interests of the school 
and let men of business select those who cause them most 
waste of time and vexation, by unpunctuality ; and it will 
be found that they are generally among the late risers, 
and rarely among those who rise early. Thus, late rising 
not only injures the person and family which indulge in 
it, but interferes with the rights and convenience of the 
community ; while early rising imparts corresponding ben- 
efits of health, promptitude, vigor of action, economy of 
time, and general effectiveness both to the individuals who 
practice it and to the families and community of which 
they are a part. 



XY. 

DOMESTIC MANNERS. 

GOOD MANNERS are the expressions of benevolence in 
personal intercourse, by which we endeavor to promote the 
comfort and enjoyment of others, and to avoid all that gives 
needless uneasiness. It is the exterior exhibition of the di 
vine precept, which requires us to do to others as we would 
that they should do to us. It is saying, by our deportment, 
to all around, that we consider their feelings, tastes, and 
conveniences, as equal in value to our own. 

Good manners lead us to avoid all practices which offend 
the taste of others ; all unnecessary violations of the con- 
ventional rules of propriety; all rude and disrespectfu] 
language and deportment ; and all remarks which would 
tend to wound the feelings of others. 

There is a serious defect in the manners of the American 
people, especially among the descendants of the Puritan 
settlers of New-England, which can never be efficiently 
remedied, except in the domestic circle, and during early 
life. It is a deficiency in the free expression of kindly 
feelings and sympathetic emotions, and a want of courtesy 
in deportment. The causes which have led to this result 
may easily be traced. 

The forefathers of this nation, to a wide extent, were 
men who were driven from their native land by laws and 
customs which they believed to be opposed both to civil and 
religious freedom. The sufferings they were called to en- 
dure, the subduing of those gentler feelings which bind us 
to country, kindred, and home ; and the constant subordina- 



198 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

tion of the passions to stern principle, induced characters of 
great firmness and self-control. They gave up the comforts 
and refinements of a civilized country, and came as pilgrims 
to a h#rd soil, a cold clime, and a heathen shore. They 
were continually forced to encounter danger, privations, 
sickness, loneliness, and death ; and all these their religion 
taught them to meet with calmness, fortitude, and submis- 
sion. And thus it became the custom and habit of the 
whole mass, to repress rather than to encourage the expres- 
sion of f eeling. 

Persons who are called to constant and protracted suffer- 
ing and privation are forced to subdue and conceal emotion ;. 
for the free expression of it would double their own suffer- 
ing, and increase the sufferings of others. Those, only, who 
are free from care and anxiety, and whose minds are mainly 
occupied by cheerful emotions, are at full liberty to unvail 
their feelings. 

It was under such stern and rigorous discipline that the 
first children in New-England were reared ; and the man- 
ners and habits of parents are usually, to a great extent, 
transmitted to children. Thus it comes to pass, that the . 
descendants of the Puritans, now scattered over every part 
of the nation, are predisposed to conceal the gentler emo- 
tions, while their manners are calm, decided, and cold, 
rather than free and impulsive. Of course, there are very 
many exceptions to these predominating characteristics. 

Other causes to which we may attribute a general want 
of courtesy in manners are certain incidental results of our 
domestic institutions. Our ancestors and their descendants 
have constantly been combating the aristocratic principle 
which would exalt one class of men at the expense of an- 
other. They have had to contend with this principle, not 
only in civil but in social life. Almost every American, in 
his own person as well as in behalf of his class, has had to 
assume and defend the main principle of democracy that 
every man's feelings and interests are equal in value to 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 199 

those of every other man. But, in doing this, there has 
been some want of clear discrimination. Because claims 
based on distinctions of mere birth, fortune, or position, 
were found to be injurious, many have gone to the extreme 
of inferring that all distinctions, involving subordinations, 
are useless. Such would wrongfully regard children as 
equals to parents, pupils to teachers, domestics to their em- 
ployers, and subjects to magistrates and that, too, in all 
respects. 

The fact that certain grades of superiority and subordi- 
nation are needful, both for individual and public benefit, 
has not been clearly discerned ; and there has been a gradual 
tendency to an extreme of the opposite view which has 
sensibly affected our manners. All the proprieties and 
courtesies which depend on the recognition of the relative 
duties of superior and subordinate have been warred upon ; 
and thus we see, to an increasing extent, disrespectful treat- 
ment of parents, by children ; of teachers, by pupils ; of 
employers, by domestics ; and of the aged, by the young. 
In all classes and circles, there is a gradual decay in courtesy 
of address. 

In cases, too, where kindness is rendered, it is often ac- 
companied with a cold, unsympathizing manner, which 
greatly lessens its value ; while kindness or politeness is re- 
ceived in a similar style of coolness, as if it were but the 
payment of a just due. 

It is owing to these causes that the American people, 
especially the descendants of the Puritans, do not do them- 
selves justice. For, while those who are near enough to 
learn their real character and feelings can discern the most 
generous impulses, and the most kindly sympathies, they 
are often so vailed behind a composed and indifferent de- 
'meanor, as to be almost entirely concealed from strangers. 

These defects in our national manners it especially falls 
to the care of mothers, and all who have charge of the 
young, to rectify ; and if they seriously undertake the mat- 



200 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

ter, and wisely adapt means to ends, these defects will be 
remedied. With reference to this object, the following 
ideas are suggested. 

The law of Christianity and of democracy, which teaches 
that all men are born equal in rights, and that their interests 
and feelings should be regarded as of equal value, seems to 
be adopted in aristocratic circles, with exclusive reference 
to the class in which the individual moves. The courtly 
gentleman addresses all of his own class with politeness and 
respect ; and in all his actions, seems to allow that the feel- 
ings and convenience of these others are to be regarded the 
same as his own. But his demeanor to those of inferior 
station is not based on the same rule. 

Among those who make up aristocratic circles, such as 
are above them are deemed of superior, and such as are be- 
low of inferior, value. Thus, if a young, ignorant, and 
vicious coxcomb happens to have been born a lord, the aged, 
the virtuous, the learned, and the well-bred of another class 
must give his convenience the precedence, and must address 
him in terms of respect. So sometimes, when a man of 
"noble birth" is thrown among the lower classes, he de- 
means himself in a style which, to persons of his own class, 
would be deemed the height of assumption and rudeness. 

Now, the principles of democracy require that the same 
courtesy which we accord to our own circle shall be extend- 
ed to every class and condition ; and that distinctions of su- 
periority and subordination shall depend, not on accidents 
of birth, fortune, or occupation, but solely on those mutual 
relations which the good of all classes equally require. 
The distinctions demanded in a democratic state are sim- 
ply those which result from relations thaj are common to 
every class, and are for the benefit of all. 

It is for the benefit of every class that children be subor- 
dinate to parents, pupils to teachers, the employed to their 
employers, and subjects to magistrates. In addition to this, 
it is for the general well-being that the comfort or conven- 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 201 

ience of the delicate and feeble should be preferred to that 
of the strong and healthy, who would suffer less by any de- 
privation ; that precedence should be given to their elders 
by the young ; and that reverence should be given to the 
hoary head. 

The rules of good-breeding, in a democratic state, must 
be founded on these principles. It is indeed assumed that 
the value of the happiness of each individual is the same 
as that of every other; but as there must be occasions 
where there are advantages which all can not enjoy, there 
must be general rules for regulating a selection. Otherwise, 
there would be constant scrambling among those of equal 
claims, and brute force must be the final resort ; in which 
case, the strongest would have the best ol every thing. The 
democratic rule, then, is, that superiors in age, station, or 
office have precedence of subordinates ; age and feebleness, 
of youth and strength ; and the feebler sex, of more vigor- 
ous man.* 

There is, also, a style of deportment and address which 
is appropriate to these different relations. It is suitable for 
a superior to secure compliance with his wishes from those 
subordinate to him by commands ; but a subordinate must 
secure compliance with his wishes from a superior by re- 
quests. (Although the kind and considerate manner to sub- 
ordinates will always be found the most effective as well as 
the pleasantest, by those in superior station.) It is suitable 
for a parent, teacher, or employer to admonish for neglect 
of duty ; but not for an inferior to adopt such a course to- 
ward a superior. It is suitable for a superior to take pre- 
cedence of a subordinate, without any remark ; but not 
for an inferior, without previously asking leave, or offering 

* The universal practice of this nation, in thus giving precedence to 
woman has been severely commented on by foreigners, and by some who 
would transfer all the business of the other sex to women, and then have 
them treated like men. But we hope this evidence of our superior civiliza- 
tion and Christianity may increase rather than diminish 



202 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'' S HOME. 

an apology. It is proper for a superior to use language 
and manners of freedom and familiarity, which would be 
improper from a subordinate to a superior. 

The want of due regard to these proprieties occasions a 
great defect in American manners. It is very common to 
hear children talk to their parents in a style proper only 
between companions and equals; so, also, the young ad- 
dress their elders; those employed, their employers; and 
domestics, the members of the family and their visitors, 
in a style which is inappropriate to their relative positions. 
But courteous address is required not merely toward supe- 
riors ; every person desires to be thus treated, and therefore 
the law of benevolence demands such demeanor toward all 
whom we meet in the social intercourse of life. " Be ye 
courteous," is the direction of the apostle in reference to 
our treatment of all. 

Good manners can be successfully cultivated only in 
early life and in the domestic circle. There is nothing 
which depends so much upon habit as the constantly recur- 
ring proprieties of good breeding ; and if a child grows up 
without forming such habits, it is very rarely the case that 
they can be formed at a later period. The feeling that it is 
of little consequence how we behave at home if we con- 
duct ourselves properly abroad, is a very fallacious one. 
Persons who are careless and ill-bred at home may ima- 
gine that they can assume good manners abroad ; but they 
mistake. Fixed habits of tone, manner, language, and 
movements can not be suddenly altered ; and those who 
are ill-bred at home, even when they try to hide their bad 
habits, are sure to violate many of the obvious rules of pro. 
priety, and yet be unconscious of it. 

And there is nothing which would so effectually remove 
prejudice against our democratic institutions as the gene- 
ral cultivation of good-breeding in the domestic circle. 
Good manners are the exterior of benevolence, the minute 
and constant exhibitions of " peace and good-will ;" and the 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 203 

nation, as well as the individual, which most excels in the 
external demonstration, as well as the internal principle, 
will be most respected and beloved. . 

It is only the training of the family state according to 
its true end and aim that is to secure to woman her true 
position and rights. When the family is instituted by mar- 
riage, it is man who is the head and chief magistrate by 
the force of his physical power and requirement of the 
chief responsibility ; not less is he so according to the Chris- 
tian law, by which, when differences arise, the husband 
has the deciding control, and the wife is to obey. " "Where 
love is, there is no law ;" but where lovt is not, the only 
dignified and peaceful course is for the wife, however much 
his superior, to " submit, as to God and not to man." 

But this power of nature and of religion, given to man 
as the controlling head, involves fhe distinctive duty of the 
family state, self-sacrificing love. The husband is to " hon- 
or " the wife, to love her as himself, and thus account her 
wishes and happiness as of equal value with his own. But 
more than this, he is to love her " as Christ loved the 
Church ;" that is, he is to " suffer" for her, if need be, in 
order to support and elevate and ennoble her. 

The father then is to set the example of self-sacrifi- 
cing love and devotion ; and the mother, of Christian obe- 
dience when it is required. Every boy is to be trained for 
his future domestic position by labor and sacrifices for his 
mother and sisters. It is the brother who is to do the hard- 
est and most disagreeable work, to face the storms and per- 
form the most laborious drudgeries. In the family circle, 
too, he is to give his mother and sister precedence in . all 
the conveniences and comforts of home life. 

It is only those nations where the teachings and example 
of Christ have had most influence that man has ever as- 
sumed his obligations of self-sacrificing benevolence in the 
family. And even in Christian communities, the duty of 
wives to obey their husbands has been more strenuously 



204 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

urged than the obligations of the husband to love his wife 
" as Christ loved the Church." 

Here it is needful to notice that the distinctive duty of 
obedience to man does not rest on women who do not enter 
the relations of married life. A woman who inherits pro- 
perty, or who earns her own livelihood, can institute the 
family state, adopt orphan children and employ suitable 
helpers in training them ; and then to her will appertain the 
authority and rights that belong to man as the head of a 
family. And when every woman is trained to some self-sup- 
porting business, she will not be tempted to enter the fami- 
ly state as a subordinate, except by that love for which there 
is no need of law. 

These general principles being stated, some details in re- 
gard to domestic manners will be enumerated. 

In the first place, therer should be required in the family 
a strict attention to the rules of precedence, and those 
modes of address appropriate to the various relations to be 
sustained. Children should always be required to offer 
their superiors, in age or station, the precedence in all com- 
forts and conveniences, and always address them in a re- 
spectful tone and manner. The custom of adding, " Sir," or 
"Ma'am," to "Yes," or "No," is valuable, as a perpetual 
indication of a respectful recognition of superiority. It is 
now going out of fashion, even among the most well bred 
people ; probably from a want of consideration of its im- 
portance. Every remnant of courtesy of address, in our 
customs, should be carefully cherished, by all who feel a 
value for the proprieties of good breeding. 

If parents allow their children to talk to them, and to 
the grown persons in the family, in the same style in which 
they address each other, it will be in vain to hope for the 
courtesy of manner and tone which good breeding demands 
in the general intercourse of society. In a large family, 
where the elder children are grown up, and the younger 
are small, it is important to require the latter to treat the 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 205 

elder in some sense as superiors. There are none so ready 
as young children to assume airs of equality ; and if they 
are allowed to treat one class of superiors in age and cha- 
racter disrespectfully, they will soon use the privilege uni- 
versally. This is the reason why the youngest children of 
a family are most apt to be pert, forward, and unmannerly. 

Another point to be aimed at is, to require children al- 
ways to acknowledge every act of kindness and attention, 
either by words or manner. If they are so trained as al- 
ways to make grateful acknowledgments, when receiving 
favors, one of the objectionable features in American man- 
ners will be avoided. 

Again, children should be required to ask leave, when- 
ever they wish to gratify curiosity, or use an article which 
belongs to another. And if cases occur, when they can not 
comply with the rules of good-breeding, as, for instance, 
when they must step between a person and the fire, or take 
the chair of an older person, they should be taught either 
to ask leave, or to offer an apology. 

There is another point of good-breeding, which can not, 
in all cases, be understood and applied by children in its 
widest extent. It is that which requires us to avoid all re- 
marks which tend to embarrass, vex, mortify, or in any 
way wound the feelings of another. To notice personal 
defects ; to allude to others' faults, or the faults of their 
friends; to speak disparagingly of the sect or party to 
which a person belongs ; to be inattentive when addressed 
in conversation ; to contradict flatly ; to speak in contemp- 
tuous tones of opinions expressed by another; all these 
are violations of the rules of good-breeding, which children 
should be taught to regard. Under this head comes the 
practice of whispering and staring about, when a teacher, 
or lecturer, or clergyman is addressing a class or audience. 
Such inattention is practically saying that what the person 
is uttering is not worth attending to ; and persons of real 
good-breeding always avoid it. Loud talking and laughing 



206 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

in a large assembly, even when no exercises are going on ; 
yawning and gaping in company ; and not looking in the 
face a person who is addressing you, are deemed marks of 
ill-breeding. 

Another branch of good manners relates to the duties 
of hospitality. Politeness requires us to welcome visitors 
with cordiality ; to offer them the best accommodations ; to 
address conversation to them ; and to express, by tone and 
manner, kindness and respect. Offering the hand to all 
visitors at one's own house is a courteous and hospitable 
custom ; and a cordial shake of the hand, when friends 
meet, would abate much of the coldness of manner ascrib- 
ed to Americans. 

Another point of good breeding refers to the conven- 
tional rules of propriety and good taste. Of these, the 
first class relates to the avoidance of all disgusting or 
offensive personal habits: such as fingering the hair; ob- 
trusively using a toothpick, or carrying one in the mouth 
after the needful use of it ; cleaning the nails in presence of 
others ; picking the nose ; spitting on carpets ; snuffing in- 
stead of using a handkerchief, or using the article in an of- 
fensive manner ; lifting up the boots or shoes, as some men 
do, to tend them on the knee, or to finger them : all these 
tricks, either at home or in society, children should be taught 
to avoid. 

Another topic, under this head, may be called table 
manners. To persons of good-breeding, nothing is more 
annoying than violations of the conventional proprieties of 
the table. Reaching over another person's plate; standing up, 
to reach distant articles, instead of asking to have them 
passed ; using one's own knife and spoon for butter, salt, 
or sugar, when it is the custom of the family to provide 
separate utensils for the purpose ; setting cups with the tea 
dripping from them, on the table-cloth, instead of the mats 
or small plates furnished ; using the table-cloth instead of 
the napkins ; eating fast, and in a noisy manner ; putting 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 207 

large pieces in the mouth ; looking and eating as if very 
hungry, or as if anxious to get at certain dishes ; sitting at 
too great a distance from the table, and dropping food; 
laying the knife and fork on the table-cloth, instead of on 
v the edge of the plate ; picking the teeth at table : all these 
particulars children should be taught to avoid. 

It is always desirable, too, to train children, when at ta- 
ble with grown persons, to be silent, except when addressed 
by others ; or else their chattering will interrupt the con- 
versation and comfort of their elders. They should always 
be required, too, to wait in silence, till all the older persons 
are helped. 

When children are alone with their parents, it is desirable 
to lead them to converse and to take this as an opportunity 
to form proper conversational habits. But it should be a 
fixed rule that, when strangers are present, the children are 
to listen in silence and only reply when addressed. Unless 
this is secured, visitors will often be condemned to listen to 
puerile chattering, with small chance of the proper atten- 
tion due to guests and superiors in age and station. 

Children should be trained, in preparing themselves for 
the table or for appearance among the family, not only to 
put their hair, face, and hands in neat order, but also their 
nails, and to habitually attend to this latter whenever they 
wash their hands. 

There are some very disagreeable tricks which many 
children practice even in families counted well-bred. Such, 
for example, are drumming with the fingers on some piece 
of furniture, or humming a tune while others are talking, 
or interrupting conversation by pertinacious questions, or 
whistling in the house instead of out-doors, or speaking 
several at once and in loud voices to gain attention. All 
these are violations of good-breeding, which children shoulfl. 
be trained to avoid, lest they should not only annoy as chil- 
dren, but practice the same kind of ill manners when ma 
ture. In all assemblies for public debate, a chairman or 



208 THE AMERICAN WOMAtflS HOME. 

moderator is appointed whose business it is to see that only 
one person speaks at a time, that no one interrupts a person 
when speaking, that no needless noises are made, and that 
all indecorums are avoided. Such an officer is sometimes 
greatly needed in family circles. 

Children should be encouraged freely to use lungs and 
limbs out-doors, or in hours for sport in the house. But at 
other times, in the domestic circle, gentle tones and man- 
ners should be cultivated. The words gentleman and gentle- 
woman came originally from the fact that the uncultivated 
and ignorant classes used coarse and loud tones, and rough 
words and movements ; while only the refined circles habit- 
ually used gentle tones and gentle manners. For the same 
reason, those born in the higher circles were called " of gen- 
tle blood." Thus it came thaf a coarse and loud voice, and 
rough, ungentle manners, are regarded as vulgar and ple- 
beian. 

All these things should be taught to children, gradually, 
and with great patience and gentleness. Some parents, 
with whom good manners are a great object, are in danger of 
making their children perpetually uncomfortable, by sud- 
denly surrounding them with so many rules that they must 
inevitably violate some one or other a great part of the 
time. It is much better to begin with a few rules, and be 
steady and persevering with these, till a habit is formed, 
and then take a few more, thus making the process easy 
and gradual. Otherwise, the tfimper of children will be in- 
jured-; or, hopeless of fulfilling so many requisitions, they 
will become reckless and indifferent to all. 

If a few brief, well-considered, and sensible rules of good 
manners could be suspended in every school-room, and the 
children all required to commit them to memory, it proba- 
bly would do more to remedy the defects of American 
manners and to advance universal good-breeding than any 
other mode that could be so easily adopted. 

But, in reference to those who have enjoyed advantages 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 209 

for the cultivation of good manners, and who duly estimate 
its importance, one caution is necessary. Those who never 
have had such habits formed in youth are under disadvan- 
tages which no benevolence of temper can altogether remedy. 
They may often violate the tastes and feelings of others, not 
from a want of proper regard for them, but from ignorance 
of custom, or want of habit, or abstraction of mind, or 
from other causes which demand forbearance and sympathy, 
rather than displeasure. An ability to bear patiently with 
defects in manners, and to make candid and considerate 
allowance for a want of advantages, or for peculiarities in 
mental habits, is one mark of the benevolence of real good- 
breeding. 

The advocates of monarchical and aristocratic institutions 
have always had great plausibility given to their views, by 
the seeming tendencies of our institutions to insubordination 
and bad manners. And it has been too indiscriminately 
conceded, by the defenders of the latter, that such are these 
tendencies, and that the offensive points in American man- 
ners are the necessary result of democratic principles. 

But it is believed that both facts and reasoning are in op- 
position to this opinion. ' The following extract from the 
work of De Tocqueville, the great political philosopher of 
France, exhibits the opinion of an impartial observer, w^hen 
comparing American manners with those of the English, 
who are confessedly the most aristocratic of all people. 

He previously remarks on the tendency of aristocracy to 
make men more sympathizing with persons of their own 
peculiar class, and less so toward those of lower degree ; 
and he then contrasts American manners with the English, 
claiming that thp, Americans are much the more affable, 
mild, and social. "In America, where the privileges of 
birth never existed and where riches confer no peculiar 
rights on their possessors, men acquainted with each other are 
very ready to frequent the same places, and find neither peril 
nor disadvantage in the free interchange of their thoughts. 



210 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

[f they meet by accident, they neither seek nor avoid inter- 
course ; their manner is "therefore natural, frank, and open." 
"If their demeanor is often cold and serious, it is never 
haughty or constrained." But an " aristocratic pride is 
still extremely great among the English ; and as the limits 
of aristocracy are still ill-defined, every body lives in con- 
stant dread, lest advantage should be taken of his famili- 
arity. Unable to judge, at once, of the social position of 
those he meets, an Englishman prudently avoids all contact 
with him. Men are afraid, lest some slight service render- 
ed should draw them into an unsuitable acquaintance; 
they dread civilities, and they avoid the obtrusive gratitude 
of a stranger, as much as his hatred." 

Thus, /*<?& seem to show that when the most aristocratic 
nation in the world is compared, as to manners, with the 
most democratic, the judgment of strangers is in favor of 
the latter. And if good manners are the outward exhibi- 
tion of the democratic principle of impartial benevolence 
and equal rights, surely the nation which adopts this rule, 
both in social and civil life, is the most likely to secure 
the desirable exterior. The aristocrat, by his principles, ex- 
tends the exterior of impartial benevolence to his own class 
only ; the democratic principle requires it to be extended 
to all. 

There is reason, therefore, to hope and expect more re- 
fined and polished manners in America than in any other 
land ; while all the developments of taste and refinement, 
such as poetry, music, painting, sculpture, and architecture, 
it may be expected, will come to as high a state of perfec- 
tion here as in any other nation. 

If this country increases in virtue and intelligence, as it 
may, there is no end to the wealth which will pour in as the 
result of our resources of climate, soil, and navigation, and 
the skill, industry, energy, and enterprise of our country- 
men. This wealth, if used as intelligence and virtue die 
tate, will furnish the means for a superior education to all 



DOMESTIC MANNERS. 211 

classes, and every facility for the refinement of taste, intel- 
lect, and feeling. 

Moreover, in this country, labor is ceasing to be the 
badge of a lower class ; so that already it is disreputable 
for a man to be " a lazy gentleman." And this feeling 
must increase, till there is such an equalization of labor" as 
will afford all the time needful for every class to improve 
the many advantages offered to them. Already through 
the munificence of some of our citizens, there are literary 
and scientific advantages offered to all classes, rarely en- 
joyed elsewhere. In most of our large cities and towns, the 
advantages of education, now offered to the poorest classes, 
often without charge, surpass what, some years ago, most 
wealthy men could purchase for any price. And it is be- 
lieved that a time will come when the poorest boy in 
America can secure advantages, which will equal what the 
heir of the proudest peerage can now command. 

The records of the courts of France and Germany, (as 
detailed by the Duchess of Orleans,) in and succeeding the 
brilliant reign of Louis the Fourteenth a period which 
was deemed the acme of elegance and refinement exhibit 
a grossness, a vulgarity, and a coarseness, not to be found 
among he very lowest of our respectable poor. And the 
biography of the English Beau Nash, who attempted to re- 
form the manners of the gentry, in the times of Queen 
Anne, exhibits violations of the rules of decency among 
the aristocracy, which the commonest yeoman of this land 
would feel disgraced in perpetrating. 

This shows that our lowest classes, at this period, are 
more refined than were the highest in aristocratic lands, a 
hundred years ago; and another century may show the 
lowest classes, in wealth, in this country, attaining as high 
a polish as adorns those who now are leaders of good man- 
ners in the courts of kings. 



XVI. 

THE PRESERVATION OF GOOD TEMPER IN THE HOUSEKEEPER, 

THERE is nothing which has a more abiding influence on 
the happiness of a family than the preservation of equable 
and cheerful temper and tones in the housekeeper. A wo- 
man who is habitually gentle, sympathizing, forbearing, and 
cheerful, carries an atmosphere about her which imparts a 
soothing and sustaining influence, and renders it easier for 
all to do right, under her administration, than in any other 
situation. 

The writer has known families where the mother's pre- 
sence seemed the sunshine of the circle around her ; impart- 
ing a cheering and vivifying power, scarcely realized till it 
was withdrawn. Every one, without thinking of it, or 
knowing why it was so, experienced a peaceful and invigo- 
rating influence as soon as he entered the sphere illumined 
by her smile, and sustained by her cheering kindness and 
sympathy. On the contrary, many a good housekeeper, 
(good in every respect but this,) by wearing a countenance 
of anxiety and dissatisfaction, and by indulging in the fre- 
quent use of sharp and reprehensive tones, more than de- 
stroys all the comfort which otherwise would result from 
her system, neatness, and economy. 

There is a secret, social sympathy which every mind, to 
a greater or less degree, experiences with the feelings of 
those around, as they are manifested by the countenance 
and voice. A sorrowful, a discontented, or an angry coun- 
tenance produces a silent, sympathetic influence, imparting 
a sombre shade to the mind, while tones of anger or com- 
plaint still more effectually jar the spirits. 



GOOD TEMPER IN THE HOUSEKEEPER. 213 

No person can maintain a quiet and cheerful frame of 
mind while tones of discontent and displeasure are sounding 
on the ear. We may gradually accustom ourselves to the 
evil till it is partially diminished ; but it always is an evil 
which greatly interferes with the enjoyment of the family 
state. There are sometimes cases where the entrance of 
the mistress of a family seems to awaken a slight appre- 
hension in every mind around, as if each felt in danger of 
a reproof, for something either perpetrated or neglected. A 
woman who should go around her house with a small sting- 
ing snapper, which she habitually applied to those whom 
she met, would be encountered with feelings very much 
like those which are experienced by the inmates of a 
family where the mistress often uses her countenance and 
voice to inflict similar penalties for duties neglected. 

Yet there are many allowances to be made for house- 
keepers, who sometimes imperceptibly and unconsciously 
fall into such habits. A woman who attempts to carry out 
any plans of system, order, and economy, and who has her 
feelings and habits conf ormed to certain rules, is constantly 
liable to have her plans crossed, and her taste violated, by 
the inexperience or inattention of those about her. And no 
housekeeper, whatever may be her habits, can escape the 
frequent recurrence of negligence or mistake, which inter- 
feres with her plans. 

It is probable that there is no class of persons in the 
world who have such incessant trials of temper, and temp- 
tations to be fretful, as American housekeepers. For 
a housekeeper's business is not, like that of the other 
Bex, limited to a particular department, for which pre- 
vious preparation is made. It consists of ten thousand 
little disconnected items, which can never be so systemati- 
cally arranged that there is no daily jostling somewhere. 
And in the best-regulated families, it is not unfrequently 
the case that some act of forgetfulness or carelessness, from 
some member, will disarrange the business of the whole 



214 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

day, so that every hour will bring renewed occasion for an- 
noyance. And the more strongly a ^oman realizes the 
value of time, and the importance of system and order, the 
more will she be tempted to irritability and complaint. 

The following considerations may aid in preparing a. wo- 
man to meet such daily crosses with even a cheerful tem- 
per and tones. 

In the first place, a woman who has charge of a large 
household should regard her duties as dignified, important, 
and difficult. The mind is so made as to be elevated and 
cheered by a sense of far-reaching influence and usefulness. 
A woman who feols that she is a cipher, and that it makes 
little difference. how she performs her duties, has far less to 
sustain and invigorate her, than one who truly estimates 
the importance of her station. A man who feels that the 
destinies of a nation are turning on the judgment and skill 
with which he plans and executes, has a pressure of motive 
and an elevation of feeling which are great safeguards 
against all that is low, trivial, and degrading. 

So, an American mother and housekeeper who rightly 
estimates the long train of influence which will pass down 
to thousands, whose destinies, from generation to gene- 
ration, will be modified by those decisions of her will 
which regulate the temper, principles, and habits of her 
family, must be elevated above petty temptations which 
would otherwise assail her. 

Again, a housekeeper should feel that she really has great 
difficulties to meet and overcome. A person who wrongly 
thinks there is little danger, can never maintain so faithful 
a guard as one who rightly estimates the temptations which 
beset her. Nor can one who thinks that they are trifling 
difficulties which she has to encounter, and trivial tempta- 
tions to which she must yield, so much enjoy the just re- 
ward of conscious virtue and self-control as one who takes 
an opposite view of the subject. 

A third method is, for a woman deliberately to calculate 



GOOD TEMPER IN THE HOUSEKEEPER. 215 

on having her best-arranged plans interfered with very 
often; and to be in such a state of preparation that the 
evil will not come unawares. So complicated are the pur- 
suits and so diverse the habits of the various members of a 
family, that it is almost impossible for every one to avoid 
interfering with the plans and taste of a housekeeper, in 
some one point or another. It is, therefore, most wise for 
a woman to keep the loins of her mind ever girt, to meet 
such collisions with a cheerful and quiet spirit. 

Another important rule is, to form all plans and arrange- 
ments in consistency with the means at command, and the 
character of those around. A woman who has a heedless 
husband, and young children, and incompetent domestics, 
ought not to make such plans as one may properly form 
who will not, in so many directions, meet embarrassment. 
She must aim at just as much as she can probably attain, 
and no more ; and thus she will usually escape much temp- 
tation, and much of the irritation of disappointment. 

The fifth, and a very important consideration, is, that 
system, economy, and neatness are valuable, only so far as 
they tend to promote the comfort and well-being of those 
affected. Some women seem to act under the impression 
that these advantages must be secured, at all events, even 
if the comfort of the family be the sacrifice. True, it is 
very important that children grow up in habits of system, 
neatness, and order ; and it is very desirable that the mo- 
ther give them every incentive, both by precept and example ; 
but it is still more important that they grow up with ami- 
able tempers, that they learn to meet the crosses of life 
with patience and cheerfulness ; and nothing has a greater 
influence to secure this than a mother's example. When- 
ever, therefore, a woman can not accomplish her plans of 
neatness and order without injury to her own temper or 
to the temper of others, she ought to modify and reduce 
them until she can. 

The sixth method relates to the government of the tones 



216 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

of voice. In many cases, when a woman's domestic ar- 
rangements are suddenly and seriously crossed, it is impos- 
sible not to feel some irritation. But it is always possible 
to refrain from angry tones. A woman can resolve that, 
whatever happens, she will not speak till she can do it in a 
calm and gentle manner. Perfect silence is a safe resort, 
when such control can not be attained as enables a person 
to speak calmly ; and this determination, persevered in, will 
eventually be crowned with success. 

Many persons seem to imagine that tones of anger are 
needful, in order to secure prompt obedience. But observa- 
tion has convinced the writer that they are never necessary ; 
that in all cases, reproof, administered in calm tones, would 
be better. A case will be given in illustration. 

A young girl had been repeatedly charged to avoid a 
certain arrangement in cooking. On one day, when com- 
pany was invited to dine, the direction was forgotten, and 
the consequence was an accident, which disarranged every 
thing, seriously injured the principal dish, and delayed din- 
ner for an hour. The mistress of the family entered the 
kitchen just as it occurred, and at a glance, saw the extent 
of the mischief. For a moment, her eyes flashed, and her 
cheeks glowed ; but she held her peace. After a minute or 
so, she gave directions in a calm voice, as to the best mode 
of retrieving the evil, and then left, without a word said to 
the offender. 

After the company left, she sent for the girl, alone, and 
in a calm and kind manner pointed out the aggravations of 
the case, and described the trouble which had been caused 
to her husband, her visitors, and herself. She then por- 
trayed the future evils which would result from such habits 
of neglect and inattention, and the modes of attempting to 
overcome them ; and then offered a reward for the future, 
if, in a given tune, she succeeded in improving in this re- 
spect. Not a tone of anger was uttered; and yet the 
severest scolding of a practiced Xantippe could not have 



GOOD TEMPER IN THE HOUSEKEEPER. 217 

secured such contrition, and determination to reform, as 
were gained by this method. 

But similar negligence is often visited by a continuous 
stream of complaint and reproof, which, in most cases, is 
met either by sullen silence or impertinent retort, while 
anger prevents any contrition or any resolution of future 
amendment. 

It is very certain, that some ladies do carry forward a 
most efficient government, both of children and domestics, 
without employing tones of anger ; and therefore they are 
not indispensable, nor on any account desirable. 

Though some ladies of intelligence and refinement do 
fall unconsciously into such a practice, it is certainly very 
unlady-like, and in very bad taste, to scold ; and the fur- 
ther a woman departs from all approach to it, the more per- 
fectly she sustains her character as a lady. 

Another method of securing equanimity, amid the trials 
of domestic life is, to cultivate a habit of making allowances 
for the difficulties, ignorance, or temptations of those who 
violate rule or neglect duty. It is vain, and most unreason- 
able, to expect the consideration and care of a mature mind 
in childhood and youth ; or that persons of such limited ad- 
vantages as most domestics have enjoyed should practice 
proper self-control and possess proper habits and princi- 
ples. 

Every parent and every employer needs daily to culti- 
vate the spirit expressed in the divine prayer, " Forgive us 
our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." 
The same allowances and forbearance which we supplicate 
from our Heavenly Father, and desire from our fellow-men 
in reference to our own deficiencies, we should constantly 
aim to extend to all who cross our feelings and interfere 
with our plans. 

The last and most important mode of securing a placid 
and cheerful temper and tones is, by a constant belief in 
the influence of a superintending Providence. All persons 



218 . THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

are too much in the habit of regarding the more important 
events of life exclusively as under the control of Perfect 
Wisdom. But the fall of a sparrow, or the loss of a hair, 
they do not feel to be equally the result of his directing 
agency. In consequence of this, Christian persons who aim 
at perfect and cheerful submission to heavy afflictions, and 
who succeed to the edification of all about them, are 
sometimes sadly deficient under petty crosses. If a beloved 
child be laid in the grave, even if its death resulted from the 
carelessness of a domestic or of a physician, the eye is turned 
from the subordinate agent to the Supreme Guardian of all ; 
and to him they bow, without murmur or complaint. But 
if a pudding be burnt, or a room badly swept, or an errand 
forgotten, then vexation and complaint are allowed, just as 
if these events were not appointed by Perfect Wisdom as 
much as the sorer chastisement. 

A woman, therefore, needs to cultivate the habitual feel- 
ing that all the events of her nursery and kitchen are 
brought about by the permission of our Heavenly Father, 
and that fretfulness or complaint in regard to these is, in 
fact, complaining at the appointments of God, and is really 
as sinful as unsubmissive murmurs amid the sorer chastise- 
ments of his hand. And a woman who cultivates this 
habit of referring all the minor trials of life to the wise and 
benevolent agency of a heavenly Parent, and daily seeks 
his sympathy and aid to enable her to meet them with a 
quiet and cheerful spirit, will soon find it the perennial 
spring of abiding peace and content. 

The power of religion to impart dignity and importance to 
the ordinary and seemingly petty details of domestic life, 
greatly depends upon the degree of faith in the reality of a 
life to come, and -o its eternal results. A woman who is 
training a family simply with reference to this life may 
find exalted motives as she looks forward to unborn genera- 
tions whose temporal prosperity and happiness are depend- 
ing upon her fidelity and skill. But one wh ) truly and 



GOOD TEMPER IN THE HOUSEKEEPER. 219 

firmly believes that this life is but the beginning of an eter- 
nal career to every immortal inmate of her home, and that 
the formation of tastes, habits, and character, under her 
care, will bring forth fruits of good or ill, not only through 
earthly generations, but through everlasting ages ; such a 
woman secures a calm and exalted principle of actfon, 
which no earthly motives can impart. 



xvn. 

HABITS OF SYSTEM AND OEDEE 

ANT discussion of the equality of the sexes, as to intellec- 
tual capacity, seems frivolous and useless, both because it 
can never be decided, and because there would be no pos- 
sible advantage in the decision. But one topic, which is 
often drawn into this discussion, is of far more consequence ; 
and that is, the relative importance and difficulty of the 
duties a woman is called to perform. 

It is generally assumed, and almost as generally conceded, 
that a housekeeper's business and cares are contracted and 
trivial ; and that the proper discharge of her duties de- 
mands far less expansion of mind and vigor of intellect 
than the pursuits of the other sex. This idea has prevailed 
because women, as a mass, have never been educated with 
reference to their most important duties ; while that por- 
tion of their employments which is of least value has been 
regarded as the chief, if not the sole, concern of a woman. 
The covering of the body, the convenience of residences, 
and the gratification of the appetite, have been too much 
regarded as the chief objects on which her intellectual 
powers are to be exercised. 

But as society gradually shakes off the remnants of bar- 
barism and the intellectual and moral interests of mail rise, 
in estimation, above the merely sensual, a truer estimate is 
formed of woman's duties, and of the measure of intellect 
requisite for the proper discharge of them. Let any man 
of sense and discernment become the member of a large 



HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. 221 

household, in which a well-educated and pious woman is en- 
deavoring systematically to discharge her multiform duties ; 
let him fully comprehend all her cares, difficulties, and per- 
plexities ; and it is probable he would coincide in the opin- 
ion that no statesman, at the head of a nation's affairs, had 
more frequent calls for wisdom, firmness, tact, discrimina- 
tion, prudence, and versatility of talent, than such a woman. 
She has a husband, to whose peculiar tastes and habits 
she must accommodate herself; she has children whose 
health she must guard, whose physical constitutions she must 
study and develop, whose temper and habits she must 
regulate, whose principles she must form, whose pursuits 
she must guide. She has constantly changing domestics, 
with all varieties of temper and habits, whom she must 
govern, instruct, and direct ; she is required to regulate the 
finances of the domestic state, and constantly to adapt ex- 
penditures to the means and to the relative claims of each 
department. She has the direction of the kitchen, where 
ignorance, forgetfulness, and awkwardness are to be so re- 
gulated that the various operations shall each start at the 
right time, and all be in completeness at the same given 
hour. She has the claims of society to meet, visits to receive 
and return, and the duties of hospitality to sustain. She 
has the poor to relieve ; benevolent societies to aid ; the 
schools of her children to inquire and decide about ; the care 
of the sick and the aged ; the nursing of infancy ; and the 
endless miscellany of odd items, constantly recurring in a 
large family. 

Surely, it is a pernicious and mistaken idea, that the 
duties which tax a woman's mind are petty, trivial, or un- 
worthy of the highest grade of intellect and moral worth. 
Instead of allowing this feeling, every woman should im- 
bibe, from early youth, the impression that she is in train- 
ing for the discharge of the most important, the most dif- 
ficult, and the most sacred and interesting duties that can 
possibly employ the highest intellect. She ought to feel 



222 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

that her station and responsibilities in the great drama of 
life are second to none, either as viewed by her Maker, or 
in the estimation of all minds whose judgment is most 
worthy of respect. 

She who is the mother and housekeeper in a large family 
is the sovereign of an empire, demanding more varied 
cares, and involving more difficult duties, than are really 
exacted of her who wears a crown and professedly regu- 
lates the interests of the greatest nation on earth. 

There is no one thing more necessary to a housekeeper 
in performing her varied duties, than a habit of system 
and order ; and yet, the peculiarly desultory nature of 
women's pursuits, and the embarrassments resulting from 
the state of domestic service in this country, render it very 
difficult to form such a habit. But it is sometimes the 
case that women who could and would carry forward a 
systematic plan of domestic economy do not attempt it, 
simply from a want of knowledge of the various modes of 
introducing it. It is with reference to such, that various 
modes of securing system and order, which the writer has 
seen adopted, will be pointed out. 

A wise economy is nowhere more conspicuous, than in 
a systematic apportionment of time to different pursuits. 
There are duties of a religious, intellectual, social, and do- 
mestic nature, each having different relative claims on at- 
tention. Unless a person has some general plan of appor- 
tioning these claims, some will intrench on others, and 
some, it is probable, will be entirely excluded. Thus, some 
find religious, social, and domestic duties so numerous, that 
no time is given to intellectual improvement. Others find 
either social, or benevolent, or religious interests excluded 
by the extent and variety of other engagements. 

It is wise, therefore, for all persons to devise a systematic 
plan, which they will at least keep in view, and aim to 
accomplish ; 'and by which a proper proportion of time 
shall be secured for all the duties of life. 



HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. 

In forming such a plan, every woman must accommo- 
date herself to the peculiarities of her situation. If she 
has a large family and a small income, she must devote far 
more time to the simple duty of providing food and rai- 
ment than would be right were she in affluence, and with- 
a small family. It is impossible, therefore, to draw out 
any general plan, which all can adopt. But there are 
some general principles, which ought to be the guiding 
rules, when a woman arranges her domestic employments. 
These principles are to be based on Christianity, which 
teaches us to "seek first the kingdom of God," and to 
deem food, raiment, and the conveniences of life, as of 
secondary account. Every woman, then, ought to start 
with the assumption, that the moral and religious interests 
of her family are of more consequence than any worldly 
concern, and that, whatever else may be sacrificed, these 
shall be the leading object, in all her arrangements, in re- 
spect to time, money, and attention. 

It is also one of the plainest requisitions of Christianity, 
that we devote some of our time and efforts to the com- 
fort and improvement of others. There is no duty so con- 
stantly enforced, both in the Old and New Testament, as 
that of charity, in dispensing to those who are desti- 
tute of the blessings we enjoy. In selecting objects of 
charity, the same rule applies to others as to our- 
selves; their moral and religious interests are of the 
highest moment, and for them, as well as for ourselves, 
we are to " seek first the kingdom of God." 

Another general principle is, that our intellectual and 
social interests are to be preferred to the mere gratifica- 
tion of taste or appetite. A portion of time, therefore, 
must be devoted to the cultivation of the intellect and the 
social affections. 

Another is, that the mere gratification of appetite is 
to be placed last in our estimate ; so that, when a question 
arises as to which shall be sacrificed, some intellectual, 



224 

moral, or social advantage, or some gratification of sense, 
we should invariably sacrifice the last. 

As health is indispensable to the discharge of every 
duty, nothing which sacrifices that blessing is to be al- 
lowed in order to gain any other advantage or enjoyment. 
There are emergencies, when it is right to risk health and 
life, to save ourselves and others from greater evils ; but 
these are exceptions, which do not militate against the 
general rule. Many persons imagine that, if they violate 
the laws of health, in order to attend to religious or do- 
mestic duties, they are guiltless before God. But such 
greatly mistake. We directly violate the law, " Thou 
shalt not kill," when we do what tends to risk or shorten 
our own life. The life and happiness of all his creatures 
are dear to our Creator ; and he is as much displeased 
when we injure our own interests, as when we injure 
those of others. The idea, therefore, that we are excusa- 
ble if we harm no one but ourselves, is false and perni- 
cious. These, then, are some general principles, to guide 
a woman in systematizing her duties and pursuits. 

The Creator of all things is a Being of perfect system 
and order ; and, to aid us in our duty in this respect, he 
has divided our time, by a regularly returning day of rest 
from worldly business. In following this example, the in- 
tervening six days may be subdivided to secure similar bene- 
fits. In doing this, a certain portion of time must be given 
to procure the means of livelihood, and for preparing food, 
raiment, and dwellings. To these objects, some must de- 
vote more, and others less, attention. The remainder of 
time not necessarily thus employed, might be divided 
somewhat in this manner : The leisure of two afternoons 
and evenings could be devoted to religious and benevolent 
objects, such as religious meetings, charitable associations, 
school visiting, and attention to the sick and poor. The 
leisure of two other days might be devoted to intellectual 
improvement, and the pursuits of taste. The leisure of 



HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. 225 

another day might be devoted to social enjoyments, ii 
making or receiving visits ; and that of another, to mis 
cellaneous domestic pursuits, not included in the othei 
particulars. 

It is probable that few persons could carry out such ai 
arrangement very strictly ; but every one can make a sys 
tematic apportionment of time, and at least aim at accom 
plishing it ; and they can also compare with such a gen 
eral outline, the time which they actually devote to these 
different objects, for the purpose of modifying any mis- 
taken proportions. 

Without attempting any such systematic employment 
of time, and carrying it out, so far as they can control cir- 
cumstances, most women are rather driven along by the 
daily occurrences of life ; so that, instead of being the in- 
telligent regulators of their own time, they are the mere 
sport of circumstances. There is nothing which so dis- 
tinctly marks the difference between weak and strong 
minds as the question, whether they control circumstan- 
ces or circumstances control them. 

It is very much to be feared, that the apportionment of 
time actually made by most women exactly inverts the 
order required by reason and Christianity. Thus, the 
furnishing a needless variety of food, the conveniences of 
dwellings, and the adornments of dress, often take a larger 
portion of time than is given to any other object. Next 
after this, comes intellectual improvement ; and, last of all, 
benevolence and religion. 

It may be urged, that it is indispensable for most per- 
sons to give more time to earn a livelihood, and to prepare 
food, raiment, and dwellings, than to any other object. 
But it may be asked, how much of the time, devoted to 
these objects, is employed in preparing varieties of food 
not necessary, but rather injurious, and how much is spent 
for those parts of dress and furniture not indispensable, and 
merely ornamental ? Let a woman subtract from her do- 



226 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

mestic employments all the time given to pursuits which 
are of no use, except as they gratify a taste for ornament, 
or minister increased varieties to tempt the appetite, and 
she will find that much which she calls " domestic duty," 
and which prevents her attention to intellectual, benevo- 
lent, and religious objects, should be called by a very differ- 
ent name. 

No woman has a right to give up attention to the higher 
interests of herself and others, for the ornaments of person or 
the gratification of the palate. To a certain extent, these 
lower objects are lawful and desirable ; but when they in- 
trude on nobler interests, they become selfish and degrad- 
ing. Every woman, then, when employing her hands in 
ornamenting her person, her children, or her house, ought 
to calculate whether she has devoted as much time to the 
really more important wants of herself and others. If 
she has not, she may know that she is doing wrong, and 
that her system for apportioning her time and pursuits 
should be altered. 

Some persons endeavor to systematize their pursuits by 
apportioning them to particular hours of each day. For 
example, a certain period before breakfast, is given to de- 
votional duties ; after breakfast, certain hours are devoted 
to exercise and domestic employments; other hours, to 
sewing, or reading, or visiting ; and others, to benevolent 
duties. But in most cases, it is more difficult to system- 
atize the hours of each day, than it is to secure some reg- 
ular division of the week. 

In regard to the minutiae of family work, the writer has 
known the following methods to be adopted. Monday, 
with some of the best housekeepers, is devoted to prepar- 
ing for the labors of the week. Any extra cooking, the 
purchasing of articles to be used during the week, the as- 
sorting of clothes for the wash, and mending such as would 
otherwise be injured these, and similar items, belong to 
this day. Tuesday is devoted to washing, and Wednesday 



HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. 227 

to ironing. On Thursday, the ironing is finished off, the 
clothes are folded and put away, and all articles which 
need mending are put in the mending-basket, and attended 
to. Friday is devoted to sweeping and house-cleaning. 
On Saturday, and especially the last Saturday of every 
month, every department is put in order ; the casters and 
table furniture are regulated, the pantry and cellar in- 
spected, the trunks, drawers, and closets arranged, and 
every thing about the house put in order for Sunday. By 
this regular recurrence of a particular time for inspecting 
every thing, nothing is forgotten till ruined by neglect. 

Another mode of systematizing relates to providing 
proper supplies of conveniences, and proper places in 
which to keep them. Thus, some ladies keep a large closet, 
in which are placed the tubs, pails, dippers, soap-dishes, 
starch, blueing, clothes-lines, clothes-pins, and every other 
article used in washing ; and in the same, or another 
place, is kept every convenience for ironing. In the 
sewing department, a trunk, with suitable partitions, is 
provided, in which are placed, each in its proper place, 
white thread of all sizes, colored thread, yarns for mend- 
ing, colored and black sewing-silks and twist, tapes and 
bobbins of all sizes, white and colored welting-cords, silk 
braids and cords, needles of all sizes, papers of pins, rem- 
nants of linen and colored cambric, a supply of all kinds 
of buttons used in the family, black and white hooks and 
eyes, a yard measure, and all the patterns used in cutting 
and fitting. These are done up in separate parcels, and 
labeled. In another trunk, or in a piece-bag, such as has 
been previously described, are kept all pieces used in mend- 
ing, arranged in order. A trunk, like the first mentioned, 
will save many steps, and often much time and perplexity ; 
while by purchasing articles thus by the quantity, they come 
much cheaper than if bought in little portions as they are 
wanted. Such a trunk should be kept locked, and a 
smaller supply for current use retained in a work-basket. 



228 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

A full supply of all conveniences in the kitchen and cel- 
lar, and a place appointed for each article, very much fa- 
cilitate domestic labor. For want of this, much vexation 
and loss of time is occasioned while seeking vessels in use, 
or in cleansing those employed by different persons for 
various purposes. It would be far better for a lady to give 
up some expensive article in the parlor, and apply the mo- 
ney thus saved for kitchen conveniences, than to have a 
stinted supply where the most labor is to be performed. 
If our countrywomen would devote more to comfort and 
convenience, and less to show, it would be a great improve- 
ment. Expensive mirrors and pier-tables in the parlor, and 
an unpainted, gloomy, ill-furnished kitchen, not unfrequent- 
ly are found under the same roof. 

Another important item in systematic economy is, the ap- 
portioning of regular employment to the various members 
of a family. If a housekeeper can secure the cooperation 
of all her family, she will find that " many hands make 
light work." There is no greater mistake than in bring- 
ing up children to feel that they must be taken care of, 
and waited on by others, without any corresponding obli- 
gations on their part. The extent to which young chil- 
dren can be made useful in a family would seem surpris- 
ing to those who have never seen a systematic and regular 
plan for utilizing their services. The writer has been in a 
family where a little girl, of eight or nine years of age, 
washed and dressed herself and young brother,. and made 
their small beds, before breakfast ; set and cleared all the 
tables for meals, with a little help from a grown person in 
moving tables and spreading cloths ; while all the dusting 
of parlors and chambers was also neatly performed by her. 
A brother of ten years old brought in and piled all the 
wood used in the kitchen and parlor, brushed the boots 
and shoes, went on errands, and took all the care of the 
poultry. They were children whose parents could afford 
to hire servants to do this, but who chose to have their 



HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. * 229 



children grow up healthy and industrious, while proper in- 
struction, system, and encouragement made these services 
rather a pleasure than otherwise, to the children. 

Some parents pay their children for such services ; but 
this is hazardous, as tending to make them feel that they 
are not bound to be helpful without pay, and also as tend- 
ing to produce a hoarding, money-making spirit. But 
where children have no hoarding propensities, and need to ac- 
quire a sense of the value of property, it may be well to let 
them earn money for some extra services rather as a favor. 
When this is done, they should be taught to spend it for 
others, as well as for themselves ; and in this way, a gen- 
erous and liberal spirit will be cultivated. 

There are some mothers who take pains to teach their 
boys most of the domestic arts which their sisters learn. The 
writer has seen boys mending their own garments and 
aiding their mother or sisters in the kitchen, with great skill 
and adroitness ; and, at an early age, they usually very much 
relish joining in such occupations. The sons of such mothers, 
in their college life, or in roaming about the world, or in 
nursing a sick wife or infant, find occasion to bless the fore- 
thought and kindness which prepared them for such emergen- 
cies. Few things are in worse taste than for a man needless- 
ly to busy himself in women's work ; and yet a man never 
appears in a more interesting attitude than when, by skill 
in such matters, he can save a mother or wife from care 
and suffering. The more a boy is taught to use his hands, 
in every variety of domestic employment, the more his facul- 
ties, both of mind and body, are developed ; for mechanical 
pursuits exercise the intellect as well as the hands. The 
early training of New-England boys, in which they turn 
their hand to almost every thing, is one great reason of the 
quick perceptions, versatility of mind, and mechanical skill, 
for which that portion of our countrymen is distinguished. 

It is equally important that young girls should be taught 
to do some species of handicraft that generally is done by 



230 

men, and especially with reference to the frequent emi- 
gration to new territories where well-trained mechanics are 
scarce. To hang wall-paper, repair locks, glaze windows, 
and mend various household articles, requires a skill in the 
use of tools which every young girl should acquire. If she 
never has any occasion to apply this knowledge and skill 
by her own hands, she will often find it needful in direct- 
ing and superintending incompetent workmen. 

The writer has known one mode of systematizing the aid 
of the older children in a family, which, in some cases of 
very large families, it may be well to imitate. In the case 
referred to, when the oldest daughter was eight or nine 
years old, an infant sister was given to her, as her special 
charge. She tended it, made and mended its clothes, taught 
it to read, and was its nurse and guardian, through all its 
childhood. Another infant was given to the next daugh- 
ter, and thus the children were all paired in this interest- 
ing relation. In addition to the relief thus afforded to the 
mother, the elder children were in this way qualified for 
their future domestic relations, and both older and younger 
bound to each other by peculiar ties of tenderness and grati- 
tude. 

In offering these examples of various modes of systema- 
tizing, one suggestion may be worthy of attention. It is 
not unfrequently the case, that ladies, who find themselves 
cumbered with oppressive cares, after reading remarks on 
the benefits of system, immediately commence the task of 
arranging their pursuits, with great vigor and hope. They 
divide the day into regular periods, and give each hour its 
du ty ; they systematize their work, and endeavor to bring 
every thing into a regular routine. But, in a short time, 
they find themselves bained, discouraged, and disheartened, 
and finally relapse into their former desultory ways, in a 
sort of resigned despair. 

The difficulty, in such cases, is, that they attempt too 
much at a time. There is nothing which so much depends 



HABITS OF SYSTEM AND ORDER. 231 

upon habit, as a systematic mode of performing duty ; and 
where no such habit has been formed, it is impossible for a 
novice to start, at once, into a universal mode of system- 
atizing, which none but an adept could carry through. 
The only way for such persons is to begin with a little 
at a time. Let them select some three or four things, 
and resolutely attempt to conquer at these points. In 
time, a habit will be formed, of doing a few things at re- 
gular periods, and in a systematic way. Then it will be 
easy to add a few more ; and thus, by a gradual process, 
the object can be secured, which it would be vain to at- 
tempt by a more summary course. 

Early rising is almost an indispensable condition to suc- 
cess, in such an effort ; but where a woman lacks either the 
health or the energy to secure a period for devotional du- 
ties before breakfast, let her select that hour of the day in 
which she will be least liable to interruption, and let her then 
seek strength and wisdom from the only true Source. At 
this time, let her take a pen, and make a list of all the 
things which she considers as duties. Then, let a calcula- 
tion be made, whether there be time enough, in the day or 
the week, for all these duties. If there be not, let the least 
important be stricken from the list, as not being duties, and 
therefore to be omitted. In doing this, let a woman remem- 
ber that, though " what we shall eat, and what we shall 
drink, and wherewithal we shall be clothed," are matters 
requiring due attention, they are very apt to obtain a 
wrong relative importance, while intellectual, social, and 
moral interests receive too little regard. 

In this country, eating, dressing, and household furni- 
ture and ornaments, take far too large a place in the esti- 
mate of relative importance ; and it is probable that most 
women could modify their views and practice, so as to come 
nearer to the Saviour's requirements. No woman has a 
right to put a stitch of ornament on any article of dress or 
furniture, or to provide one superfluity in food, until she 



232 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

is sure she can secure time for all her social, intellectual, 
benevolent, and religious duties. If a woman will take the 
trouble to make such a calculation as this, she will usually 
find that she has time enough to perform all her duties 
easily and well. 

It is impossible for a conscientious woman to secure that 
peaceful mind and cheerful enjoyment of life which all 
should seek, who is constantly finding her duties jarring 
with each other, and much remaining undone, which she 
feels that she ought to do. In consequence of this, there 
will be a secret uneasiness, which will throw a shade over 
the whole current of life, never to be removed, till she so 
efficiently defines and regulates her duties that she can 
fulfill them all. 

And here the writer would urge upon young ladies the 
importance of forming habits of system, while unembar- 
rassed with those multiplied cares which will make the 
task so much more difficult and hopeless. Every young 
lady can systematize her pursuits, to a certain extent. She 
can have a particular day for mending her wardrobe, and 
for arranging her trunks, closets, and drawers. She can 
keep her work-basket, her desk at school, and all her other 
conveniences, in their proper places, and in regular order. 
She can have regular periods for reading, walking, visiting, 
study, and domestic pursuits. And by following this 
method in youth, she will form a taste for regularity and a 
habit of system, which will prove a blessing to her through 
life. 



XYIII: 

GIVING W CHARITY. 

IT is probable that there is no point of duty whereon 
conscientious persons differ more in opinion, or where they 
find it more difficult to form discriminating and decided 
views, than on the matter of charity. That we are bound 
to give some of our time, money, and efforts, to relieve the 
destitute, all allow. But, as to how much we are to give, 
and on whom our charities shall be bestowed, many a re- 
flecting mind has been at a loss. Yet it seems very desir- 
able that, in reference to a duty so constantly and so stren- 
uously urged by the Supreme Ruler, we should be able so 
to fix metes and bounds, as to keep a conscience void of 
offense, and to free the mind from disquieting fears of de- 
ficiency. 

The writer has found no other topic of investigation so 
beset with difficulty, and so absolutely without the range of 
definite rules which can apply to all, in all circumstances. 
But on this, as on previous topics, there seem to be general 
principles, by the aid of which any candid mind, sincerely 
desirous of obeying the commands of Christ, however much 
self-denial may be involved, can arrive at definite conclu- 
sions as to its own individual obligations: so that when 
these are fulfilled, the mind may be at peace. 

But for a mind that is worldly, living mainly to seek its 
own pleasures instead of living to please God. no principles 
can be so fixed as not to leave a ready escape from all obli- 
gation. Such minds, either by indolence (and consequent 
ignorance) or by sophistry, will convince themselves that a 



234 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

life of engrossing self-indulgence, with perhaps the gift of 
a few dollars and a few hours of time, may suffice to fulfill 
the requisitions of the Eternal Judge. 

For such minds, no reasonings will avail, till the heart is 
so changed that to learn the will and follow the example 
of Jesus Christ become the leading objects of interest and 
effort. It is to aid those who profess to possess this temper 
of mind that the following suggestions are offered. 

The first consideration which gives definiteness to this 
subject is a correct view of the object for which we are 
placed in this world. A great many, even of professed Chris- 
tians, seem to be acting on the supposition that the object 
of life is to secure as much as possible of all the various en- 
joyments placed within reach. Not so teaches reason or 
revelation. From these we learn that, though the happi- 
ness of his creatures is the end for which God created and 
sustains them, yet this happiness depends not on the vari- 
ous modes of gratification put within our reach, but mainly 
on character. A man may possess all the resources for en- 

/ S. 

joyment which this world can afford, and yet feel that " all 
is vanity and vexation of spirit," and that he is supremely 
wretched. Another may be in want of all things, and yet 
possess that living spring of benevolence, faith, and hope, 
which will make an Eden of the darkest prison. 

In order to be perfectly happy, man must attain that 
character which Christ exhibited ; and the nearer he ap- 
proaches it, the more will happiness reign in his breast. 

But what was the grand peculiarity of the character of 
Christ ? It was self-denying benevolence. He came not to 
" seek his own ;" He " went about doing good," and this 
was his "meat and drink ;" that is, it was this which sus- 
tained the health and life of his mind, as food and drink 
sustain the health and life of the body. Now, the mind ol 
man is so made that it can gradually be transformed into 
the same likeness. A selfish being, who, for a whole life, 
has been nourishing habits of indolent self-indulgence, can 



GIVING IN CHARITY. 235 

by taking Christ as his example, by communion with him, 
and by daily striving to imitate his character and conduct, 
form such a temper of mind that " doing good " will be- 
come the chief and highest source of enjoyment. And this 
heavenly principle will grow stronger and stronger, until 
self-denial loses the more painful part of its character ; and 
then, living to make happiness will be so delightful and 
absorbing a pursuit, that all exertions, regarded as the 
means to this end, will be like the joyous efforts of men 
when they strive for a prize or a crown, with the full hope 
of success. 

In this view of the subject, efforts and sell-denial for the 
good of others are to be regarded not merely as duties en- 
joined for the benefit of others, but as the moral training 
indispensable to the formation of that character on which 
depends our own happiness. This view exhibits the full 
meaning of the Saviour's declaration, " How hardly shall 
they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God !" 
He had before taught that the kingdom of heaven consist- 
ed not in such enjoyments as the worldly seek, but in 
the temper of self-denying benevolence, like his own ; and 
as the rich have far greater temptations to indolent self-in- 
dulgence, they are far less likely to acquire this temper than 
those who, by limited means, are inured to some degree of 
self-denial. 

But on this point, one important distinction needs to be 
made ; and that is, between the self-denial which has no 
other aim than mere self-mortification, and that which is 
exercised to secure greater good to ourselves and others. 
The first is the foundation of monasticism, penances, and 
all other forms of asceticism ; the latter, only, is that which 
Christianity requires. 

A second consideration, which may give definiteness to 
this subject, is, that the formation of a perfect character in- 
volves, not the extermination of any principles of our na- 
ture, but rather the regulating of them, according to the 



236 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME, 

rules of reason and religion ; so that the lower propensities 
shall always be kept subordinate to nobler principles. Thus 
we are not to aim at destroying our appetites, or at need- 
lessly denying them, but rather so to regulate them that 
they shall best secure the objects for which they were im- 
planted. We are not to annihilate the love of praise and 
admiration ; but so to control it that the favor of God shall 
be regarded more than the estimation of men. "We are not 
to extirpate the principle of curiosity, which leads us to 
acquire knowledge ; but so to direct it, that all our acqui- 
sitions shall be useful and not frivolous or injurious. And 
thus with all the principles of the mind : God has implant- 
ed no desires in our constitution which are evil and per- 
nicious. On the contrary, all our constitutional propensi- 
ties, either of mind or body, he designed we should grat- 
ify, whenever no evils would thence result, either to our- 
selves or others. Such passions as envy, selfish ambition, 
contemptuous pride, revenge, and hatred, are to be exter- 
minated ; for they are either excesses or excrescences, not 
created by God, but rather the result of our own neglect 
to form habits of benevolence and self-control. 

In deciding the rules of our conduct, therefore, we are 
ever to bear in mind that the development of the nobler 
principles, and the subjugation of inferior propensities to 
them, is to be the main object of effort both for ourselves 
and for others. And in conformity with this, in all our 
plans we are to place religious and moral interests as first 
in estimation, our social and intellectual interests next, and 
our physical gratifications as subordinate to all. 

A third consideration is that, though the means for sus- 
taining life and health are to be regarded as necessaries, 
without which no other duties can be performed, yet a very 
large portion of the time spent by most persons in easy 
circumstances for food, raiment, and dwellings, is for 
mere superfluities which are right when they do not in- 
volve the sacrifice of highe** interests, and wrong when 



GIVING IN CHARITY. 237 

they do. Life and health can be sustained in the humblest 
dwellings, with the plainest dress, and the simplest food ; 
and, after taking from our means what is necessary for life 
and health, the remainder is to be so divided, that the 
larger portion shall be given 4o supply the moral and in- 
tellectual wants of ourselves and others, together with the 
physical requirements of the destitute, and the smaller 
share .to procure those additional gratifications of taste 
and appetite which are desirable but not indispensable. 
Mankind, thus far, have never made this apportionment 
of their means ; although, just as fast as they have risen 
from a savage state, mere physical wants have been made, 
to an increasing extent, subordinate to higher objects. 

Another very important consideration is that, in urging 
the duty of charity and the prior claims of moral and re- 
ligious objects, no rule of duty should be maintained 
which it would not be right and wise for all to follow. 
And we are to test the wisdom of any general rule by in- 
quiring what would be the result if all mankind should 
practice according to it. In view of this, we are enabled 
to judge of the correctness of those who maintain that, to 
be consistent, men believing in the perils of all those of our 
race who are not brought under the influence of the Chris- 
tian system should give up not merely the elegancies 
but all the superfluities of life, and devote the whole of 
their means not indispensable to life and health to the 
propagation of Christianity. 

But if this is the duty of any, it is the duty of all ; and 
we are to inquire what would be the result, if all con- 
scientious persons gave up the use of all superfluities. 
Suppose that two millions of the people of the United 
States were conscientious person^, and relinquished the use 
of every thing not absolutely necessary to life and health. 
Besides reducing the education of the people in all the 
higher walks of intellectual, social, and even moral deve- 
lopment, to very narrow limits, it would instantly throw 



238 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

out of employment one half of the whole community. The 
writers, book-makers, manufacturers, mechanics, merchants, 
agriculturists, and all the agencies they employ, would be 
beggared, and one half of those not reduced to poverty 
would be obliged to spend all their extra means in simply 
supplying necessaries to the other half. The use of super- 
fluities, therefore, to a certain extent, is as indispensable 
to promote industry, virtue, and religion, as any direct 
giving of money or time ; and it is owing entirely to a 
want of reflection and of comprehensive views, that any 
men ever make so great a mistake as is here exhibited. 

Instead, then, of urging a rule of duty which is at once 
irrational and impracticable, there is another course, which 
commends itself to the understandings of all. For what- 
ever may be the practice of intelligent men, they univer- 
sally concede the principle, that our physical gratifications 
should always be made subordinate to social, intellectual, 
and moral advantages. And all that is required for the 
advancement of our whole race to the most perfect state 
of society is, simply, that men should act in agreement 
with this- principle. And if only a very small portion of 
the most intelligent of our race should act according to 
this rule, under the control of Christian benevolence, the 
immense supplies furnished for the general good would be 
far beyond what any would imagine who had never made 
any calculations on the subject. In this nation alone, 
suppose the one million and more of professed followers 
of Christ should give a larger portion of their means for 
the social, intellectual, and moral wants of mankind, 
than for the superfluities that minister to their own taste, 
convenience, and appetite ; it would be enough to furnish 
all the schools, colleges, Bibles, ministers, and missionaries, 
that the whole world could demand ; or, at least, it would 
be far more than properly qualified agents to administer 
it could employ. 

But it may be objected that, though this view in the 



GIVING IN CHARITY. 039 

abstract looks plausible and rational, not one in a thousand 
can practically adopt it. How few keep any account, at 
all, of th'eir current expenses ! How impossible it is to de- 
termine, exactly, what are necessaries and what are super- 
fluities ! And in regard to women, how few have the con- 
trol of an income, so as not to be bound by the wishes of 
a parent or a husband ! 

In reference to these difficulties, the first remark is, that 
we are never under obligations to do what is entirely out 
of our power; so that those persons who can not regu- 
late their expenses or their charities are under no sort of 
obligation to attempt it. The second remark is that, when 
a rule of duty is discovered, if we can not fully attain to it, 
we are bound to aim at it, and to fulfill it just so far as we 
can. We have no right to throw it aside because we shall 
find some difficult cases when we come to apply it. The 
.third remark is, that no person can tell how much can be 
done, till a faithful trial has been made. If a woman has 
never kept any accounts, nor attempted to regulate her 
expenditures by the right rule, nor used her influence with 
those that control her plans, to secure this object, she has 
no right to say how much she can or can not do, till after 
a fair trial has been made. 

In attempting such a trial, the following method can be 
taken. Let a woman keep an account of all she spends, for 
herself and her family, for a year, arranging the items un- 
der three general heads. Under the first, put all articles 
of food, raiment, rent, wages, and all conveniences. Under 
the second, place all sums paid in securing an education, 
and books, and other intellectual advantages. Under the 
third head, place all that is spent for benevolence anc re- 
ligion. At the end of the year, the first and largest ac- 
count will show the mixed items of necessaries and super- 
fluities, which can be arranged so as to gain some sort of 
idea how much has been spent for superfluities and how 
much for necessaries. Then, by comparing what is spent 



240 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

for superfluities, with what is spent for intellectual and 
moral advantages, data will be gained for judging of the 
past and regulating the future. 

Does a woman say she can not do this ? let her think 
whether the offer of a thousand dollars, as a reward for at- 
tempting it one year, would not make her undertake to do 
it ; and if so, let her decide, in her own mind, which is 
most valuable, a clear conscience, and the approbation of 
God, in this effort to do his will, or one thousand dollars. 
And let her do it, with this warning of the Saviour before 
her eyes " No man can serve two masters." " Ye can 
not serve God and Mammon." 

Is it objected, How can we decide between superfluities 
and necessities, in this list ? It is replied, that we are not 
required to judge exactly, in all cases. Our duty is, to use 
the means in our power to assist us in forming a correct 
judgment ; to seek the divine aid in freeing our minds 
from indolence and selfishness ; and then to judge, as well 
as we can, in our endeavors rightly to apportion and regu- 
late our expenses. Many persons seem to feel that they 
are bound to do better than they know how. But God is 
not so hard a master ; and after we have used all proper 
means to learn the right way, if we then follow it accord- 
ing to our ability, we do wrong to feel misgivings, or to 
blame ourselves, if results come out differently from what 
seems desirable. 

The results of our actions, alone, can never prove us de- 
serving of blame. For men are often so placed that, owing 
to lack of intellect or means, it is impossible for them to 
decide correctly. -To use all the means of knowledge with- 
in our reach, and then to judge, with a candid and con- 
scientious spirit, is all that God requires ; and when we 
have done this, and the event seems to come out wrong, 
we should never wish that we had decided otherwise. For 
this would be the same as wishing that we had not fol- 
lowed the dictates of judgment and conscience. As this 



GIVING IN CHARITY. 241 

is a world designed for discipline and trial, untoward 
events are never to be construed as indications of the obli- 
quity of our past decisions. 

But it is probable that a great portion of the women of 
this nation can not secure any such systematic mode of re- 
gulating their expenses. To such, the writer would pro- 
pose one inquiry : Can not you calculate how much time 
and money you spend for what is merely ornamental, and 
not necessary, for yourself, your children, and your house ? 
Can not you compare this with the time and money you 
spend for intellectual and benevolent purposes ? and will 
not this show the need of some change ? In making this 
examination, is not this brief rule, deducible from the 
principles before laid down, the one which should regulate 
you ? Every person does right in spending some portion 
of time and means in securing the conveniences and adorn- 
ments of taste ; but the amount should never exceed what 
is spent in securing our own moral and intellectual im- 
provement, nor what-is spent in benevolent efforts to sup- 
ply the physical and moral wants of our fellow-men. 

In making an examination on this subject, it is some- 
times the case that a woman will count among the neces- 
saries of life all the various modes of adorning the person 
or house, practiced in the circle in which she moves ; and, 
after enumerating the many duties which demand atten- 
tion, counting these as a part, she will come to the conclu- 
sion that she has no time, and but little money, to devote 
to personal improvement or to benevolent enterprises. 
This surely is not in agreement with the requirements of 
the Saviour, who calls on us to seek for others, as well as 
ourselves, first of all, " the kingdom of God, and his right- 
eousness." 

In order to act in accordance with the rule here pre- 
sented, it is true that many would be obliged to give up 
the idea of conforming to the notions and customs of those 
with whom they associate, and compelled to adopt the 



242 THE AMERICAN WOMAN" 1 S HOME. 

maxim, " Be not conformed to this world." In many cases, 
it would involve an entire change in the style of living. 
And the writer has the happiness of knowing more cases 
than one, where persons who have come to similar views 
on this subject, have given up large and expensive estab- 
lishments, disposed of their carriages, dismissed a portion 
of their domestics, and modified all their expenditures, 
that they might keep a pure conscience, and regulate their 
charities more according to the requirements of Christian- 
ity. And there are persons, weir known in the religious 
world, who save themselves all labor of minute calculation, 
by devoting so large a portion of their time and means to 
benevolent objects, that they find no difficulty in knowing 
that they give more for religious, benevolent, and intellec- 
tual purposes than for superfluities. 

In deciding what particular objects shall receive our 
benefactions, there are also general principles to guide us. 
The first is that , presented by our Saviour, when, after 
urging the great law of benevolence, he was asked, " And 
who is my neighbor ?" His reply, in the parable of " the 
Good Samaritan," teaches us that any human being whose 
wants are brought to our knowledge is our neighbor. The 
wounded man in that parable was not only a stranger, but 
he belonged to a foreign nation, peculiarly hated ; and he 
had no claim, except that his wants were brought to the 
knowledge of the wayfaring man. From this we learn 
that the destitute of all nations become our neighbors, as 
soon as their wants are brought to our knowledge. 

Another general principle is this, that those who are most 
in need must be relieved in preference to those who are 
less destitute. On this principle it is, that we think the 
followers of Christ should give more to supply those who 
are suffering for want of the bread of eternal life, than for 
those who are deprived of physical enjoyments. And an- 
other reason for this preference is the fact that many who 
give in charity have made such imperfect advances in civil- 



GIVING IN CHARITY. 243 

ization and Christianity that the intellectual and moral 
wants of our race make but a feeble impression on the mind. 
Relate a pitiful tale of a family reduced to live for weeks 
on potatoes only, and many a mind would awake to deep 
sympathy and stretch forth the hand of charity. But de- 
scribe cases where the immortal mind is pining in stupidity 
and ignorance, or racked with the fever of baleful passions, 
and how small the number so elevated in sentiment and 
so enlarged in their views as to appreciate and sympathize 
in these far greater misfortunes ! The intellectual and 
moral wants of our fellow-men, therefore, should claim the 
first place in general Christian attention, both because they 
are most important, and because they are most neglected ; 
while it should not be forgotten, in giving personal atten- 
tion to the wants of the poor, that the relief of immediate 
physical distress, is often the easiest way of touching the 
moral sensibilities of the destitute. 

Another consideration to be borne in mind is that, in 
this country, there is much less real need of charity in 
supplying physical necessities than is generally supposed 
by those who have not learned the more excellent way. 
This land is so abundant in supplies, and labor is in such 
demand, that every healthy person can earn a comfortable 
support. And if all the poor were instantly made virtuous, 
it is probable that there would be few physical wants 
which could not readily be supplied by the immediate 
friends of each sufferer. The sick, the aged, and the orphan 
would be the only objects of charity. In this view of the 
case, the primary effort in relieving the poor should be to 
furnish them the means of earning their own support, and 
to supply them with those moral influences which are most 
effectual in securing virtue and industry. 

Another point to be attended to is the importance of 
maintaining a system of associated charities. There is no 
point in which the economy of charity has more improved 
than in the present mode of combining many small contri- 



244 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

butions, for sustaining enlarged and systematic plans of 
charity.- If all the lialf-dollars which are now contributed 
to aid in organized systems of charity were returned to the 
donors, to be applied by the agency and discretion of each, 
thousands and thousands of the treasures, now employed to 
promote the moral and intellectual wants of mankind, 
would become entirely useless. In a democracy like ours, 
where few are very rich and the majority are in comfort- 
able circumstances, this collecting and dispensing of drops 
and rills is the mode by which, in imitation of nature, 
the dews and showers are to distill on parched and desert 
lands. And every person, while earning a pittance to unite 
with many more, may be cheered with the consciousness of 
sustaining a grand system of operations which must have 
the most decided influence in raising all mankind to that 
perfect state of society which Christianity is designed to 
bring about. 

Another consideration relates to the indiscriminate be- 
stowal of charity. Persons who have taken pains to inform 
themselves, and who devote their whole time to dispensing 
charities, unite in declaring that this is one of the most fruit- 
ful sources of indolence, vice, and poverty. From several 
of these the writer has learned that, by their own personal 
investigations, they have ascertained that there are large 
establishments of idle and wicked persons in most of our 
cities, who associate together to support themselves by 
every species of imposition. They hire large houses, and 
live in constant rioting on the means thus obtained. Among 
them are women who have or who hire the use of infant 
children ; others, who ar-e blind, or maimed, or deformed, or 
who can adroitly " feign such infirmities ; and, by these 
means of exciting pity, and by artful tales of woe', they col- 
lect alms, both in city and country, to spend in all manner 
of gross and guilty indulgences. Meantime many persons, 
finding themselves often duped by impostors, refuse to give 
at all ; and thus many benefactions are withdrawn, which 



GIVING IN CHARITY. 245 

a wise economy in charity would have secured. For this 
and other reasons, it is wise and merciful to adopt the gen- 
eral rule, never to give alms till we have had some oppor- 
tunity of knowing how they will be spent. There are ex- 
ceptions to this, as to every general rule, which a person 
of discretion can determine. But the practice so common 
among benevolent persons, t of giving at least a trifle to all 
who ask, lest perchance they may turn away some who are 
really sufferers, is one which causes more sin and misery 
than it cures. 

The writer has never known any system for dispensing 
charity so successful as the one by which a town or city is 
divided into districts ; and each district is committed to the 
care of two ladies, whose duty it is, to call on each family 
and leave a book for a child, or do some other deed of neigh- 
borly kindness, and make that the occasion for entering into 
conversation, and learning the situation of all residents in 
the district. By this method, the ignorant, the vicious, and 
the poor are discovered, and their physical, intellectual, and 
moral wants are investigated. In some places where the 
writer has known this mode pursued, each person retained 
the same district, year after year, so that every poor family in 
the place was under the watch and care of some intelligent 
and benevolent lady, who used all her influence to secure a 
proper education for the children, to furnish them with suit- 
able reading, to encourage habits of industry and economy, 
and to secure regular attendance on public religious in- 
struction. Thus, the rich and the poor were brought in 
contact, in a way advantageous to both parties ; and if such 
a system could be universally adopted, more would be done 
for the prevention of poverty and vice than all the wealth 
of the nation could avail for their relief. But this plan can 
not be successfully carried out, in this manner, unless there 
is a large proportion of intelligent, benevolent, and self- 
denying persons, who unite in a systematic plan. 

But there is one species of " charity " which needs espe- 



246 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

cial consideration. It is that spirit of kindly love which 
induces us to refrain from judging of the means and the rela- 
tive charities of other persons. There have been such in- 
distinct notions, and so many different standards of duty, 
on this subject, that it is rare for two persons to think ex- 
actly alike, in regard to the rule of' duty. Each person is 
bound to inquire and judge forjiimself, as to his own duty 
or deficiencies ; but as both the resources and the amount of 
the actual charities of others are beyond our ken, it is as 
indecorous as it is uncharitable to sit in judgment on their 
decisions. 



XIX. 

ECONOMY OF TIME AND EXPENSES. 

THE value of time, and our obligation to spend every hour 
for some useful end, are what few minds properly realize. 
And those who have the highest sense of their obligations 
in this respect, sometimes greatly misjudge in their estimate 
of what are useful and proper modes of employing time. 
This arises from limited views of the importance of some 
pursuits, which they would deem frivolous and useless, but 
which are in reality necessary to preserve the health of body 
and mind and those social affections which it is very im- 
portant to cherish. 

Christianity teaches that, for all the time afforded us, we 
must give account to God ; and that we have no right to 
waste a single hour. But time which is spent in rest or 
amusement is often as usefully employed as if it were de- 
voted to labor or devotion. In employing our time, we are 
to make suitable allowance for sleep, for preparing and tak- 
ing food, for securing the means of a livelihood, for intel- 
lectual improvement, for exercise and amusement, for social 
enjoyments, and for benevolent and religious duties. And 
it is the right apportionment of time, to these various duties, 
which constitutes its true economy. 

In deciding respecting the rectitude of our pursuits, we are 
bound to aim at some practical good, as the ultimate object. 
"With every duty of this life, our benevolent Creator has 
connected some species of enjoyment, to draw us to perform 
it. Thus, the palate is gratified, by performing the duty of 



248 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

nourishing our bodies ; the principle of curiosity is gratified 
in pursuing useful knowledge ; the desire of approbation is 
gratified, when we perform general social duties ; and every 
other duty has an alluring enjoyment connected with it. 
But the great mistake of mankind has consisted in seeking 
the pleasures connected with these duties, as the sole aim, 
without reference to the main end that should be held in 
view, and to which the enjoyment should be made subser- 
vient. Thus, men gratify the palate, without reference to 
the question whether the body is properly nourished : and 
follow after knowledge, without inquiring whether it min- 
isters to good or evil ; and seek amusement without refer- 
ence to results. 

In gratifying the implanted desires of our nature, we are 
bound so to restrain ourselves, by reason and conscience, as 
always to seek the main objects of existence the highest 
good of ourselves and others ; and never to sacrifice this for 
the mere gratification of our desires. We are to gratify appe- 
tite, just so far as is consistent with health and usefulness ; 
and the desire for knowledge, just so far as wil] enable us 
to do most good by our influence and efforts ; and no farther. 
We are to seek social intercourse, to that extent which will 
best promote domestic enjoyment and kindly feelings among 
neighbors and friends ; and we are to pursue exercise and 
amusement, only so far as will best sustain the vigor of body 
and mind. 

The laws of the Supreme Ruler, when he became the 
civil as well as the religious Head of the Jewish theocracy, 
furnish an example which it would be well for all atten- 
tively to consider, when forming plans for the apportion- 
ment of time and property. To properly estimate this ex- 
ample, it must be borne in mind, that the main object of 
God was, to set an example of the temporal rewards that 
follow obedience to the laws of the Creator, and at the 
same time to prepare religious teachers to extend the true 
religion to the whole race of man. 



ECONOMY OF TIME AND EXPENSES. 249 

Before .Christ came, the Jews were not required to go 
forth to other nations as teachers of religion, nor were the 
Jewish nation led to obedience by motives of a life to 
come. To them God was revealed, both as a father and a 
civil ruler, and obedience to laws relating solely to this 
life was all that was required. So low were they in' the 
scale of civilization and mental development, that a sys- 
tem which confined them to one spot, as an agricultural 
people, and prevented their growing very rich, or having 
extensive commerce with other nations, was indispensable 
to prevent their relapsing into the low idolatries and vices 
of the nations around them, while temporal rewards and 
penalties were more effective than those of a life to 
come. 

The proportion of time and property, which every Jew 
was required to devote to intellectual, benevolent, and re- 
ligious purposes, was as follows : 

In regard to property, they were required to give one 
tenth of all their yearly income to support the Levites, the 
priests, and the religious service. Next, they were required 
to give the first-fruits of all their corn, wine, oil, and fruits, 
and the first-born of all their cattle, for the Lord's treasury, 
to be employed for the priests, the widow, the fatherless, 
and the stranger. The first-born, also, of their children, 
were the Lord's, and were to be redeemed by a specified 
sum, pajd into the sacred treasury: Besides this, they were 
required to bring a free-will offering to God, every time they 
went up to the three great yearly festivals. In addition to this, 
regular yearly sacrifices of cattle and fowls were required 
of each family, and occasional sacrifices for certain sins or 
ceremonial impurities. In reaping their fields, they were 
required to leave unreaped, for the poor, the corners ; not 
to glean their fields, oliveyards, or vineyards ; and, if a 
sheaf was left by mistake, they were not to return for it 
but leave it for the poor. 

One twelfth of the people were set apart, having no land 



250 

ed property, to be priests and teachers; and the other 
tribes were required to support them liberally. 

In regard to the time taken from secular pursuits, fbr the 
support of education and religion, an equally liberal 
amount was demanded. In the first place, one seventh 
part of their time was taken for the weekly sabbath, when 
no kind of work was to be done. Then the whole nation 
were required to meet at the appointed place three times 
a year, which, including their journeys and stay there, oc- 
cupied eight weeks, or another seventh part of their time. 
Then the sabbatical year, when no agricultural labor was 
to be done, took another seventh of their time from their 
regular pursuits, as they were an agricultural people. This 
was the amount of time and property demanded by God, 
simply to sustain education, religion, and morality within 
the bounds of one nation. 

It was promised to this nation and fulfilled by constant 
miraculous interpositions, that in this life, obedience 
to God's laws should secure health, peace, prosperity, 
and long life ; while for disobedience was threatened war, 
pestilence, famine, and all temporal evils. These promises 
were constantly verified, and in the day of Solomon, when 
this nation was most obedient, the whole world was moved 
with wonder at its wealth and prosperity. But up to this 
time, no attempt was made by God to govern the Israelites 
by the rewards and penalties of the world to come.. 

But " when the fullness of time had come," and the race 
of man was prepared to receive higher responsibilities, 
Jesus Christ came and " brought life and immortality to 
light " with a clearness never before revealed. At the 
same time was revealed the fatherhood of God, not to the Jews 
alone, but to the whole human race, and the consequent 
brotherhood of man ; and these revelations in many respects 
changed the whole standard of duty and obligation. 

Christ came as " God manifest in the flesh," to set an 
example of self-sacrificing love, in rescuing the whole 



ECONOMY OF TIME AND EXPENSES. 251 

family of man from the dangers of the unseen world, and 
also to teach and train his disciples through all time to fol- 
low his example. And those who conform the most consis- 
tently to his teachings and example will aim at a standard 
of labor and self-denial far beyond that demanded of the 
Jews. 

It is not always that men understand the economy of 
Providence, in that unequal distribution of property which, 
even under the most perfect form of government, will always 
exist. Many, looking at the present state of things, ima- 
gine that the rich, if they acted in strict conformity to the 
law of benevolence, would share all their property with their 
suffering fellow-men. But such do not take into account the 
inspired declaration that " a man's life consisteth not in the 
abundance of the things which he possesseth," or, in other 
words, life is made valuable, not by great possessions, but 
by such a character as prepares a man to enjoy what he 
holds. God perceives that human character can be most 
improved by that kind of discipline which exists when there 
is something valuable to be gained by industrious efforts. 
This stimulus to industry could never exist in a communi- 
ty where all are just alike, as it does in a state of society 
where every man sees possessed by others enjoyments 
which he desires and may secure by effort and industry. 
So, in a community where all are alike as to property, 
there would be no chance to gain that noblest of all attain- 
ments, a habit of self-denying benevolence which toils for the 
good of others, and takes from one's own store to increase 
the enjoyments of another. 

Instead, then, of the stagnation, both of industry and of 
benevolence, which would follow the universal and equable 
distribution of property, some men, by superior ad- 
vantages of birth, or intellect, or patronage, come into pos- 
session of a great amount of capital. "With these means 
they are enabled, by study, reading, and travel, to secure 
expansion of mind and just views of the relative advantages 



252 THE AMERICAN WOMAN"* S HOME. 

of moral, intellectual, and physical enjoyments. At the 
same time, Christianity imposes obligations corresponding 
with the increase of advantages and means. The rich are 
not at liberty to spend their treasures chiefly for themselves. 
Their wealth is given, by God, to be employed for the best 
good of mankind ; and their intellectual advantages are de- 
signed, primarily, to enable them to judge correctly in em- 
ploying their means most wisely for the general good. 

Now, suppose a man of wealth inherits ten thousand 
acres of real estate ; it is not his duty to divide it among 
his poor neighbors and tenants. If he took this course, 
it is probable that most of them would spend all in thrift- 
less waste and indolence, or in mere physical enjoyments. 
Instead, then, of thus putting his capital out of his hands, 
he is bound to retain and so to employ it as to raise his 
family and his neighbors to such a state of virtue and in- 
telligence that they can secure far more, by their own ef- 
forts and industry, than he, by dividing his capital, could 
bestow upon them. 

In this view of the subject, it is manifest that the unequal 
distribution of property is no evil. The great difficulty is, 
that so large a portion of those who hold much capital, in- 
stead of using their various advantages for the greatest 
good of those around them, employ them for mere selfish 
indulgences ; thus inflicting as much mischief on themselves 
as results to others from their culpable neglect. A great 
portion of the rich seem to be acting on the principle 
that the more God bestows on them the less are they under 
obligation to practice any self-denial in fulfilling his benevo- 
lent plan of raising our race to intelligence and virtue. 

But there are cheering examples of the contrary spirit 
and prejudice, some of which will be here recorded to in- 
fluence and encourage others. 

A lady of great wealth, high position, and elegant 
culture, in one of our large cities, hired and furnished a 
house adjacent to her own, and, securing the aid of another 



ECONOMY OF TIME AND EXPENSES. 253 

benevolent and cultivated woman, took twelve orphan girls, 
of different ages, and educated them under their joint care. 
Not only time and money were given, but love and labor, 
just as if these were their own children ; and as fast as one 
was provided for, another was taken. 

In another city, a young lady with property of her own 
hired a house and made it a home for homeless and unpro- 
tected women, who paid board when they could earn it, and 
found a refuge when out of employment. 

In another city, the wife of one of its richest merchants, 
living in princely style, took two young girls from the cer- 
tain road to ruin among the vicious poor. She boarded 
them with a respectable farmer, and sent them to school, 
and every week went out, not only to supervise them, but 
to aid in training them to habits of neatness, industry, and 
obedience, just as if they were her own children. Next, 
she hired a large house near the most degraded part of 
the city, furnished it neatly and with all suitable conveni- 
ences to* work, and then rented to those among the most 
degraded whom she could bring to conform to a few simple 
rules of decency, industry, and benevolence one of these 
rules being that they should pay her the rent every Satur- 
day night. To this motley gathering she became chief 
counselor and friend, quieted their brawls, taught them to 
aid each other in trouble or sickness, and strove to introduce 
among them that law of patient love and kindness, illustra- 
ted by her own example. The young girls in this tenement 
she assembled every Saturday at her own house taught 
them to sing, heard them recite their Sunday-school lessons, 
to be sure these were properly learned ; taught them to make 
and mend their own clothing, trimmed their bonnets, and 
took charge of their Sunday dress, that it might always 
be in order. Of course, such benevolence drew a stream of 
ignorance and misery to her door ; and so successful wai 
her labor that she hired a second house, and managed it on 
the same plan. One hot day in August, a friend found hei 



254 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

combing the head of a poor, ungainly, foreign girl. She had 
persuaded a friend to take her from compassion, and she 
was returned because her head was in such in a state. 
Finding no one else to do it, the lady herself bravely met 
the difficulty, and persevered in this daily ministry till the 
evil w-as remedied, and the poor girl thus secured a comfor- 
table home and wages. 

A young lady of wealth and position, with great musical 
culture and taste, found among the poor two young girls 
with fine voices and great musical talent. Gaining her pa- 
rents' consent, the young lady took one of them home, trained 
her in music, and saw that her school education was secured, 
so that when expensive masters and instruments were need- 
ed the girl herself earned the money required, as a gover- 
ness in a family of wealthy friends. Then she aided the 
sister ; and, as the result, one of them is married happily 
to a man of great wealth, and the other is receiving a large 
income as a popular musical artist. 

Another young girl, educated as a fine musician by her 
wealthy parents, at the age of sixteen was afflicted with 
weak eyes and a heart complaint. She strove to solace her- 
self by benevolent ministries. By teaching music to chil- 
dren of wealthy friends she earned the means to relieve and 
instruct the suffering, ignorant, and poor. 

These examples may suffice to show that, even among the 
most wealthy, abundant modes of self-denying benevolence 
may be found where there is a heart to seek them. 

There is no direction in which a true Christian economy 
of time and money is more conspicuous than in the style 
of living adopted- in the family state. 

Those who build stately mansions, and lay out extensive 
grounds, and multiply the elegancies of life, to be enjoyed 
by themselves and a select few, " have their reward" in the 
enjoyments that end in this life. But those who with 
equal means adopt a style that enables them largely to devote 
time and wealth to the elevation and improvement of their 
fellow-men, are laying up never-failing treasures in heaven. 



XX. 

HEALTH OF MIND. 

THEKE is such an intimate connection between the body 
and mind that the health of one can not be preserved with- 
out a proper care of the other. And it is from a neglect of 
this principle, that some of the most exemplary and con- 
scientious persons in the world suffer a thousand mental 
agonies from a diseased state of body, while others ruin the 
health of the body by neglecting the proper care of the 
mind. 

When the mind is excited by earnest intellectual effort, or 
by strong passions, the blood rushes to the head and the 
brain is excited. Sir Astley Cooper records that, in exam- 
ining the brain of a young man who had lost a portion of 
his skull, whenever " he was agitated by some opposition 
to his wishes," " the blood was sent with increased force to 
his brain," and the pulsations " became frequent and vio- 
lent." The same effect was produced by any intellectual ef- 
fort ; and the flushed countenance which attends earnest 
study or strong emotions of interest of any kind, is an ex- 
ternal indication of the suffused state of the brain from 
such causes. 

In exhibiting the causes which injure the health of the 
mind, we shall find them to be partly physical, partly intel- 
lectual, and partly moral. 

The first cause of mental disease and suffering is not un- 
frequently in the want of a proper supply of duly oxygen- 
ized blood. It has been shown that the blood, in passing 
through the lungs, is purified by the oxygen of the air com- 



256 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

bining with the superabundant hydrogen and carbon of the 
venous blood, thus forming carbonic acid and water, which 
are expired into the atmosphere. Every pair of lungs is 
constantly withdrawing from the surrounding atmosphere 
its heathful principle, and returning one which is injurious 
to human life. 

When, by confinement and this process, the air is depriv- 
ed of its appropriate supply of oxygen, the purification of the 
blood is interrupted, and it passes without being properly 
prepared into the brain, producing languor, restlessness, and 
inability to exercise the intellect and feelings. Whenever, 
therefore, persons sleep in a close apartment, or remain for 
a length of time in a crowded or ill-ventilated room, a most 
pernicious influence is exerted on the brain, and, through 
this, on the mind. A person who is often exposed to such 
influences can never enjoy that elasticity and vigor of mind 
which is one of the chief indications of its health. This is 
the reason why all rooms for religious meetings, and all 
school-rooms and sleeping apartments should be so contrived 
as to secure a constant supply of fresh air from without. 
The minister who preaches in a crowded and ill-ventilated 
apartment loses much of his power to feel and to speak, 
while the audience are equally reduced in their capability of 
attending. The teacher who confines children in a close 
apartment diminishes their ability to study, or to attend to 
instructions. And the person who habitually sleeps in a 
close room impairs mental energy in a similar degree. It is 
not unf requently the case that depression of spirits and 
stupor of intellect are occasioned solely by inattention to 
this subject. 

Another cause of mental disease is the excessive exer- 
cise of the intellect or feelings. If the eye is taxed beyond 
its strength by protracted use, its blood-vessels become 
gorged, and the bloodshot appearance warns of the excess 
and the need of rest. The brain is affected in a similar 
manner by excessive use, though the suffering and inflamed 



HEALTH OF MIND. 257 

organ can not make its appeal to the eye. But there are 
some indications which ought never to be misunderstood 
or disregarded. In cases of pupils at school or at college, 
a diseased state, from over-action, is often manifested by 
increased clearness of mind, and temporary ease and vigor 
of mental action. In one instance, known to the writer, a 
most exemplary and industrious pupil, anxious to improve 
every hour and ignorant or unmindful of the laws of 
health, first manifested the diseased state of her brain and 
mind by demands for more studies, and a sudden and earn- 
est activity in planning modes of improvement for herself 
and others. When warned of her danger, she protested 
that she never was better in her life ; that she took re- 
gular exercise in the open air, went to bed in season, slept 
soundly, and felt perfectly well ; that her mind was never 
before so bright and clear, and study never so easy and 
delightful. And at this time, she was on the verge of 
derangement, from which she was saved only by an en- 
tire cessation of all intellectual efforts. 

A similar case occurred, under the eye of the writer, 
from over-excited feelings. It was during a time of un- 
usual religious interest in the community, and the mental 
disease was first manifested by the pupil bringing her 
hymn-book or Bible to the class-room, and making it her 
constant resort, in every interval of school duty. It finally 
became impossible to convince her that it was her duty to 
attend to any thing else ; her conscience became morbidly 
sensitive, her perceptions indistinct, her deductions un- 
reasonable ; and nothing but entire change of scene and 
exercise, and occupation of her mind by amusement, saved 
her. When the health of the brain was restored, she 
found that she could attend to the "one thing needful," 
not only without interruption of duty or injury to health, 
but rather so as to promote both. Clergymen and teachers 
need most carefully to notice and guard against the dan- 
gers here alluded to. 



258 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Any such attention to religion as prevents the perform- 
ance of daily duties and needful relaxation is dangerous, 
and tends to produce such a state of the brain as makes 
it impossible to feel or judge correctly. And when any 
morbid and unreasonable pertinacity appears, much exer- 
cise and engagement in other interesting pursuits should 
be urged, as the only mode of securing the religious bene- 
fits aimed at. And whenever any mind is oppressed with 
care, anxiety, or sorrow, the amount of active exercise in 
the fresh air should be greatly increased, that the action 
of the muscles may withdraw the blood which, in such 
seasons, is constantly tending too much to the brain. 

There has been a most appalling amount of suffering, 
derangement, disease, and death, occasioned by a want of 
attention to this subject, in teachers and parents. Un- 
common precocity in children is usually the result of an 
unhealthy state of the brain ; and in such cases medical 
men would now direct that the wonderful child should be 
deprived of all books and study, and turned to" play out in 
the fresh air. Instead of this, parents frequently add fuel 
to the fever of the brain, by supplying constant mental 
stimulus, until the victim finds refuge in idiocy or an early 
grave. Where such fatal results do not occur, the brain 
in many cases is so weakened that the prodigy of infancy 
sinks below the medium of intellectual powers in after- 
life. 

In our colleges, too, many of .the most promising minds 
sink to an early grave, or drag out a miserable existence, 
from this same cause. And it is an evil as yet little alle- 
viated by the increase of physiological knowledge. Every 
college and professional school, and every seminary for 
young ladies, needs a medical man or woman, not only to 
lecture on physiology and the laws of health, but empow- 
ered by official capacity to investigate the case of every 
pupil, and, by authority, to enforce such a course of 
study, exercise and repose, as the physical system requires. 



HEALTH OF MIND. 259 

The writer has found by experience that in a large institu- 
tion there is one class of pupils who need to be restrained 
by penalties from late hours and excessive study, as much 
as another class need stimulus to industry. 

Under the head of excessive mental action, must be 
placed the indulgence of the imagination in novel-reading 
and " castle-building." This kind of stimulus, unless coun- 
terbalanced by physical exercise, not only wastes time and 
energies, but undermines the vigor of the nervous system. 
The imagination was designed by our wise Creator as a 
charm and stimulus to animate to benevolent activity; 
and its perverted exercise seldom fails to bring a penalty. 

Another cause of mental disease is the want of the ap- 
propriate exercise of the various faculties of the mind. On 
this point, Dr. Combe remarks : " We have seen that, by 
disuse, muscles become emaciated, bone softens, blood-ves- 
sels are obliterated, and nerves lose their characteristic 
structure. The brain is no exception to this general rule. 
The tone of it. is also impaired by permanent inactivity, 
and it becomes less fit to manifest the mental powers with 
readiness and energy." It is " the withdrawal of the 
stimulus necessary for its healthy exercise which renders 
solitary confinement so severe a punishment, even to the 
most daring minds. It is a lower degree of the same cause 
which renders continuous seclusion from society so inju- 
rious to both mental and bodily health." 

" Inactivity of intellect and of feeling is a very frequent 
predisposing cause of every form of nervous disease. For 
demonstrative evidence of this position, we have only to 
look at the numerous victims to be found among persons 
who have no call to exertion in gaining the means of sub- 
sistence, and no objects of interest on which to exercise 
their mental faculties, and who consequently sink into 
a state of mental sloth and nervous weakness." " If we 
look abroad upon society, we shall find innumerable exam- 
ples of mental and nervous debility from this cause. When 



260 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

a person of some mental capacity is confined for a long 
time to an unvarying round of employment which affords 
neither scope nor stimulus for one half of the faculties, and, 
from want of education or society, has no external re- 
sources ; the mental powers, for want of exercise, become 
blunted, and the perceptions slow and dull." " The intel- 
lect and feelings, not being provided with interests external 
to themselves, must either become inactive and weak, or 
work upon themselves and become diseased." 

" The most frequent victims of this kind of predisposi- 
tion are females of the middle and higher ranks, especially 
those of a nervous constitution and good natural abilities ; 
but who, from an ill-directed education, possess nothing 
more solid than mere accomplishments, and have no ma- 
terials for thought," and no " occupation to excite interest 
or demand attention." " The liability of such persons to 
melancholy, hysteria, hypochondriasis, and other varieties 
of mental distress, really depends on a state of irritability 
of the brain, induced by imperfect exercise." 

These remarks of a medical man illustrate the principles 
before indicated ; namely, that the demand of Christianity, 
that we live to promote the general happiness, and not 
merely for selfish indulgence, has for its aim not only the 
general good, but the highest happiness of the individual 
of whom it is required in offering abundant exercise for 
all the noblest faculties. 

A person possessed of wealth, who has nothing more 
noble to engage attention than seeking personal enjoy- 
ment, subjects the mental powers^and moral feelings to a 
degree of inactivity utterly at war with health and mind. 
And the greater the capacities, the greater are the suffer- 
ings which result from this cause. Any one who has read 
the misanthropic wailings of Lord Byron has seen the ne- 
cessary result of great and noble powers bereft of their ap- 
propriate exercise, and, in consequence, becoming sources 
of the keenest suffering. 



HEALTH OF MIND. 261 

It is this view of the subject which has often awakened 
feelings of sorrow and anxiety in the mind of the writer, 
while aiding in the development and education of superior 
feminine minds, in the wealthier circles. Not because there 
are not noble objects for interest and effort, abundant, and 
within reach of such minds ; but because long-established 
custom has made it seem so quixotic to the majority, even 
of the professed followers of Christ, for a woman of wealth 
to practice any great self-denial, that few have independence 
of mind and Christian principle sufficient to overcome such 
an influence. The more a mind has its powers developed, 
the more does it aspire and pine after some object worthy 
of its energies and affections ; and they are commonplace 
and phlegmatic characters who are most free from such 
deep-seated wants. Many a young woman, of fine genius 
and elevated sentiment, finds a charm in Lord Byron's 
writings, because they present a glowing picture of what, 
to a certain extent, must be felt by every well-developed 
mind which has no nobler object in life than the pursuit 
of self-gratification.' 

If young ladies of wealth could pursue their education 
under the full conviction that the increase of their powers 
and advantages increased , their obligations to use all for 
the good of society, and with some plan of benevolent en- 
terprise in view, what new motives of interest would be 
added to their daily pursuits ! And what blessed results 
would follow to our beloved country, if all well-educated 
women carried out the principles of Christianity, in the 
exercise of their developed powers ! 

The benevolent activities called forth in our late dread- 
ful war illustrate the blessed influence on character and 
happiness in having a noble object for which to labor and 
suffer. In illustration of this, may be mentioned the ex- 
perience of one of the noble women who, in a sickly cli- 
mate and fervid season, devoted herself to the ministries 
of a military hospital. Separated from an adored hus- 



262 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

band, deprived of wonted comforts and luxuries, and toil- 
ing in humble and unwonted labors, she yet recalls this as 
one of the happiest periods of her life. And it was not the 
mere exercise of benevolence and piety in ministering 
comfort and relieving suffering. It was, still more, the ele- 
vated enjoyment which only an enlarged and cultivated 
mind can attain, in the inspirations of grand and far-reach- 
ing results purchased by such sacrifice and suffering. It 
was in aiding to save her well-loved country from impend- 
ing ruin, and to preserve to coming generations the bless- 
ings of true liberty and self-government, that toils and 
suffering became triumphant joys. 

Every Christian woman who " walks by faith and not by 
sight," who looks forward to the results of self-sacrificing 
labor for the ignorant and sinful as they will enlarge and 
expand through everlasting ages, may rise to the same ele- 
vated sphere of experience and happiness. 

On the contrary, the more highly cultivated the mind 
devoted to mere selfish enjoyment, the more are the sources 
of true happiness closed and the soul left to helpless empti- 
ness and unrest. 

The indications of a diseased mind, owing to the want 
of the proper exercise of its powers, are apathy, discon- 
tent, a restless longing for excitement, a craving for unat- 
tainable good, a diseased and morbid action of the imagi- 
nation, dissatisfaction with the world, and factitious inter- 
est in trifles which the mind feels to be unworthy of its 
powers. Such minds sometimes seek alleviation in excit- 
ing amusements ; others resort to the grosser enjoyments 
of sense. Oppressed with the extremes of languor, or 
over-excitement, or apathy, the body fails under the wear- 
ing process, and adds new causes of suffering to the mind. 
Such, the compassionate Saviour calls to his servbo, in 
the appropriate terms, " Come unto me, all ye that labor 
and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my 
yoke upon you, and learn of me," " and ye shall find rest 
unto your souls." 



XXI. 

THE CAKE OF INFANTS. 

THE topic of this chapter may well be prefaced by an 
extract from Herbert Spencer on the treatment of offspring. 
He first supposes that some future philosophic speculator, 
examining the course of education of the present period, 
should find nothing relating to the training of children, 
and that his natural inference would be that our 
schools were all for monastic orders, who have no charge 
of infancy and childhood. He then remarks, " Is it not an 
astonishing fact that, though on the treatment of offspring 
depend their lives or deaths and their moral welfare or 
ruin, yet not one word of instruction on the treatment of 
offspring is ever given to those who will hereafter be 
parents ? Is it not monstrous that the fate of a new gene- 
ration should be left to the chances of unreasoning custom, 
or impulse, or fancy, joined with the suggestions of igno- 
rant nurses and the prejudiced counsel of grandmothers ? 

" If a merchant should commence business without any 
knowledge of arithmetic or book-keeping, we should ex- 
claim at his folly and look for disastrous consequences. 
Or if, without studying anatomy, a man set up as a sur- 
geon, we should wonder at his audacity and pity his pa- 
tients. But that parents should commence the difficult 
work of rearing children without giving any attention to 
the principles, physical, moral, or intellectual, which ought 
to guide them, excites neither surprise at the actors nor 
pity for the victims." 

" To tens of thousands that are killed add hundreds of 



264 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

thousands that survive with feeble constitutions, and millions 
not so strong as they should be ; and you will have some idea 
of the curse inflicted on their offspring, by parents ignorant 
of the laws of life. Do but consider for a moment that 
the regimen to which children are subject is hourly telling 
upon them to their life-long injury or benefit, and that 
there are twenty ways of going wrong to one way of go- 
ing right, and you will get some idea of the enormous 
mischief that is almost everywhere inflicted by the thought- 
less, hap-hazard system in common use." 

" When sons and daughters grow up sickly and feeble, 
parents commonly regard the event as a visitation of 
Providence. They assume that these evils come without 
cause, or that the cause is supernatural. Nothing of the 
kind. In some cases causes are inherited, but in most 
cases foolish management is the cause. Yery generally 
parents themselves are responsible for this pain, this de- 
bility, this depression, this misery. They have under- 
taken to control the lives of their offspring, and with cruel 
carelessness have neglected to learn those vital processes 
which they are daily affecting by their commands and 
prohibitions. In utter ignorance of the simplest physiolo- 
gical laws, they have been, year by year, undermining the 
constitutions of their children, and so have inflicted dis- 
ease and premature death, not only on them but also on 
their descendants. 

" Equally great are the ignorance and consequent injury, 
when we turn from the physical to the moral training. 
Consider the young, untaught mother and her nursery le- 
gislation. A short time ago she was at school, where her 
memory was crammed with words and names and dates, 
and her reflective faculties scarcely in the slightest degree 
exercised where not one idea was given her respecting 
the methods of dealing with the opening mind of child- 
hood, and where her discipline did not in the least fit her 
for thinking out methods of her own. The intervening 



THE CARE OF INFANTS. 265 

years have been spent in practicing music, fancy work, 
novel-reading and party-going, no thought having been 
given to the grave responsibilities of maternity, and 
scarcely any of that solid intellectual culture obtained 
which would fit her for such responsibilities ; and now see 
her with an unfolding human character committed to her 
charge, see her profoundly ignorant of the phenomena 
with which she has to deal, undertaking to do that which 
can be done but imperfectly even with the aid of the pro- 
foundest knowledge !" 

In view of such considerations, every young lady ought 
to learn how to take proper care of an infant ; for, even if 
she is never to become the responsible guardian of a 
nursery, she will often be in situations where she can ren- 
der benevolent aid to others, in this most fatiguing and 
anxious duty. 

The writer has known instances in which young ladies, 
who had been trained by their mothers properly to 
perform this duty, were in some cases the means of saving 
the lives of infants, and in others, of relieving sick moth- 
ers from intolerable care and anguish by their benevolent 
aid. 

On this point, Dr. Combe remarks, " All women are 
not destined, in the course of nature, to become mothers ; 
but how very small is the number of those who are un- 
connected, by family ties, friendship, or sympathy, with the 
children of others ! How very few are there, who, at some 
time or other of their lives, would not find their useful- 
ness and happiness increased, by the possession of a kind 
of knowledge intimately allied to their best feelings and 
affections ! And how important is it, to the mother her- 
self, that her efforts should be seconded by intelligent, in- 
stead of ignorant assistants !" 

In order to be prepared for such benevolent ministries, 
every young lady should improve the opportunity, when- 
ever it is afforded her, for learning how to wash, dress, 



266 - v THE AMERICAN WOMArfS HOME. 

and tend a young infant ; and whenever she meets with 
such a work as Dr. Combe's, on the management of in- 
fants, she ought to read it, and remember its contents. 

It was the design of the author to fill this chapter 
chiefly with extracts from various medical writers, giving 
some of the most important directions on this subject; 
but finding these extracts too prolix for a work of this 
kind, she has condensed them into a shorter compass. Some 
are quoted verbatim, and some are abridged, from the 
most approved writers on this subject. 

" Nearly one half of the deaths, occurring during the 
first two years of existence, are ascribable to mismanage- 
ment, and to errors in diet. At birth, the stomach is fee- 
ble, and as yet unaccustomed to food ; its cravings are 
consequently easily satisfied, and frequently renewed." 
" At that early age, there ought to be no fixed time for 
giving nourishment. The stomach can not be thus satis- 
fied." " The active call of the infant is a sign, which 
needs never be mistaken." 

" But care must be taken to determine between the crying 
of pain or uneasiness, and the call for food ; and the practice 
of giving an infant food, to stop its cries, is often the means 
of increasing its sufferings. After a child has satisfied its 
hunger, from two to four hours should intervene before 
another supply is given." 

" At birth, the stomach and bowels, never having been 
used, contain a quantity of mucous secretion, which re- 
quires to be removed. To effect this, Nature has rendered 
the first portions of the mother's milk purposely watery and 
laxative. Nurses, however, distrusting Nature, often has- 
ten to administer some active purgative; and the conse- 
quence often is, irritation in the stomach and bowels, not 
easily subdued." It is only where the child is deprived of its 
mother's milk, as the first food, that some gentle laxative 
should be given. 

" It is a common mistake, to suppose that because a wo- 



THE CARE OF INFANTS. 267 

man is nursing, she ought to live very fully, and to add an 
allowance of wine, porter, or other fermented liquor, to her 
usual diet. The onjy result of this plan is, to cause an 
unnatural fullness in the system, which places the nurse on 
the brink of disease, and retards rather than increases the 
food of the infant. More will be gained by the observance 
of the ordinary laws of health, than by any foolish devia- 
tion, founded on ignorance." 

There is no point on which medical men so emphatically 
lift the voice of warning as in reference to administering 
medicines to infants. It is so difficult to discover what is the 
matter with an infant, its frame is so delicate and so sus- 
ceptible, and slight causes have such a powerful influence, 
that it requires the utmost skill and judgment to ascertain 
what would be proper medicines, and the proper quantity 
to be given. 

Says Dr. Combe, " That there are cases in which active 
means must be promptly used to save the child, is perfectly 
true. But it is not less certain that these are cases of 
which no mother or nurse ought to attempt the treatment. 
As a general rule, where the child is well managed, medi- 
cine, of any kind, is very rarely required ; and if disease 
were more generally regarded in its true light, not as some- 
thing thrust into the system, which requires to be expelled 
by force, but as an aberration from a natural mode of action, 
produced by some external cause, we should be in less 
haste to attack it by medicine, and more watchful in its 
prevention. Accordingly, where a constant demand for 
medicine exists in a nursery, the mother may rest assured 
'thaf there is something essentially wrong in the treatment 
of her children." 

" Much havoc is made among infants, by the abuse of 
calomel and other medicines, which procure momentary 
relief but end by producing incurable disease ; and it has 
often excited my astonishment, to see how recklessly reme- 
dies of this kind are had recourse to, on the most trifling 



268 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 9 S HOME. 

occasions, by mothers and nurses, who would be horrified 
if they knew the nature of the power they are wielding, 
and the extent of injury they are inflicting." 

Instead, then, of depending on medicine for the preserva- 
tion of the health and life of an infant, the following pre- 
cautions and preventives should be adopted. 

" Take particular care of the food of an infant. If it is 
nourished by the mother, her own diet should be simple, 
nourishing, and temperate. If the child be brought up 
1 by hand,' the milk of a new-milch cow, mixed with one 
third water, and sweetened a little with white sugar, should 
be the only food given, until the teeth come. This is more 
suitable than any preparations of flour or arrowroot, the 
nourishment of which is too highly concentrated. Never 
give a child bread, cake, or meat, before the teeth appear. 
If the food appear to distress the child after eating, first 
ascertain if the milk be really from a new-milch cow, as it 
may otherwise be too old. Learn, also, whether the cow 
lives on proper food. Cows that are fed on still-slops, as is 
often the case in cities, furnish milk which is very un- 
healthful." 

Be sure and keep a good supply of pure and fresh air in 
the nursery. On this point, Dr. Bell remarks, respecting 
rooms constructed without fireplaces and without doors or 
windows to let in pure air from without, "The sufferings 
of children of feeble constitutions are increased beyond 
measure, by such lodgings as these. An action, brought 
by the commonwealth, ought to lie against those persons 
who build houses for sale or rent, in which rooms are so 
constructed as not to allow of free ventilation ; and awri1; 
of lunacy taken out against those who, with the common- 
Bense experience which all have on this head, should spend 
any portion of their time, still more, should sleep, in rooms 
thus nearly air-tight." 

After it is a month or two old, take an infant out to 
walk, or ride, in a little wagon, every fair and warm day ; 



THE CARE OF INFANTS. 269 

but be very careful that its feet, and every part of its body, 
are kept warm ; and be sure that its eyes are well protected 
from the light. Weak eyes, and sometimes blindness, are 
caused by neglecting this precaution. Keep the head of an 
infant cool, never allowing too warm bonnets, nor permit- 
ting it to sink into soft pillows when asleep. Keeping an 
infant's head too warm very much increases nervous irrita- 
bility ; and this is the reason why medical men forbid the 
use of caps for infants. But the head of an infant should, 
especially while sleeping, be protected from draughts of air, 
and from getting cold. 

Be very careful of the skin of an infant, as nothing tends 
so effectually to prevent disease. For this end, it should 
be washed all over every morning, and then gentle friction 
should be applied with the hand, to the back, stomach, 
bowels, and limbs. The head should be thoroughly washed 
every day, and then brushed with a soft hair-brush, or 
combed with a fine comb. If, by neglect, dirt accumulates 
under the hair, apply with the finger the yolk of an egg, 
and then the fine comb will remove it all, without any 
trouble. 

Dress the infant so that it will be always warm, but not 
so as to cause perspiration. Be sure and keep its feet 
always warm; and for this often warm them at a fire, 
and use long dresses. Keep the neck and arms covered. 
For this purpose, wrappers, open in front, made high in the 
neck, with long sleeves, to put on over the frock, are now 
very fashionable. 

It is better for both mother and child, that it should not 
sleep on the mother's arm at night, unless the weather be 
extremely cold. This practice keeps the child too warm, 
and leads it to seek food too frequently. A child should 
ordinarily take nourishment but twice in the night. A 
crib beside the mother, with plenty of warm and light 
covering, is best for the child ; but the mother must be sure 
that it is always kept warm. 



2-70 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Never cover a child's head, so that it will inhale the air 
of its own lungs. In very warm weather, especially in cities, 
great pains should be taken to find fresh and cool air by 
rides and sailing. Walks in a public square in the cool of 
the morning, and frequent excursions in ferry or steam- 
boats, would often save a long bill for medical attendance. 
In hot nights, the windows should be kept open, and the 
infant laid on a mattress, or on folded blankets. A bit of 
straw matting, laid over a feather bed and covered with the 
under sheet, makes a very cool bed for an infant. 

Cool bathing, in hot weather, is very useful; but the 
water should be very little cooler than the skin of the child. 
When the constitution is delicate, the water should be 
slightly warmed. Simply sponging the body freely in a 
tub, answers the same purpose as a regular bath. In very 
warm weather, this should be done two or three times a day, 
always waiting two or three hours after food has been given. 

" When the stomach is peculiarity irritable, (from teeth- 
ing,) it is of paramount necessity to withhold all the nos- 
trums which have been so falsly lauded as i sovereign cures 
for cholera infantum? The true restoratives for a child 
threatened with disease are cool air, cool bathing, and cool 
drinks of simple water, in addition to proper food, at stated 
intervals." 

In many cases, change of air from sea to mountain, 
or the reverse, has an immediate healthful influence and is 
superior to every other treatment. Do not take the advice 
of mothers who tell of this, that, and the other thing, 
which have prgved excellent remedies in their experience. 
Children have different constitutions, and there are multi- 
tudes of different causes for their sickness ; and what might 
cure one child, might kill another, which appeared to have 
the same complaint. A mother should go on the general 
rule of giving an infant very little medicine, and then only 
by the direction of a discreet and experienced physician. 
And there are cases, when, according to the views of the 



THE CARE OF INFANTS. 271 

most distinguished and competent practitioners, physicians 
themselves are much too free in using medicines, instead 
of adopting preventive measures. 

Do not allow a child to form such habits that it will 
not be quiet unless tended and amused. A healthy child 
should be accustomed to lie or sit in its cradle much of the 
time ; but it should occasionally be taken up and tossed, 
or carried about for exercise and amusement. An infant 
should be encouraged to creep, as an exercise very strength- 
ening and useful. If the mother fears the soiling of its 
nice dresses, she can keep a long slip or apron which will 
entirely cover the dress, and can be removed when the 
child is taken in the arms. A child should not be allowed, 
when quite young, to bear its weight on its feet very long 
at a time, as this tends to weaken and distort the limbs. 

Many mothers, with a little painstaking, succeed in put- 
ting their infants into their cradle while awake, at regular 
hours for sleep ; and induce regularity in other habits, 
which saves much trouble. During this training process a 
child may cry, at first, a great deal ; but for a healthy child, 
this use of the Jungs does no harm and tends rather to 
strengthen than to injure them, unless it becomes exceed- 
ingly violent. A child who is trained to lie or sit and 
amuse itself, is happier than one who is carried and tended 
a great deal, and thus rendered restless and uneasy when 
not so indulged. 

The most critical period in the life of an infant is that 
of dentition or teething, especially at the early stages. An 
adult has thirty-two teeth, but young children have only 
twenty, which gradually loosen and are followed by the 
permanent teeth. When the child has ten teeth on each 
jaw, all that are added are the permanent set, which should 
be carefully preserved ; this caution is needful, as sometimes 
decay in the first double teeth of the second set are sup- 
posed to be of the transient set, and are so neglected, 
or are removed instead of being preserved by plug- 



272 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

ging. When the first teeth rise so as to press against 
the gums, there is always more or less inflammation, caus- 
ing nervous fretf ulness, and the impulse to put every thing 
into the mouth. Usually there is disturbed sleep, a slight 
fever, and greater flow of saliva ; this is often relieved by 
letting the child have ice to bite, tied in a rag. 

Sometimes the disorder of the mouth extends to the whole 
system. In difficult teething, one symptom is the jerking 
back of the head when taking the breath, as if in pain, owing 
to the extreme soreness of the gums. This is, in extreme 
cases, attended with increased saliva and a gummy secretion in 
the corners of the eyes, itching of the nose, redness of cheeks, 
rash, convulsive twitching of lips and the muscles generally, 
fever, constipation, and sometimes by a diarrhea, which 
last is favorable if slight ; difficulty of breathing, dilation 
of the pupils of the eyes, restless motion and moaning ; and 
finally, if not relieved, convulsions and death. The most 
effective relief is gained by lancing the gums. Every wo- 
man, and especially every mother, should know the time 
and order in which the infant teeth come, and, when.any of 
the above symptoms appear, should examine the mouth, 
and if a gum is swollen and inflamed, should either have a 
physician lance it, or if this can not be done, should per- 
form the operation herself. A sharp pen-knife and steady 
hand making incision to touch the rising tooth will cause 
no more pain than a simple scratch of the gum, and usu- 
ally will give speedy relief. 

.The temporary teeth should not be removed until the 
new ones appear, as it injures the jaw and coming teeth ; 
but as soon as a new tooth is seen pressing upward, the tem- 
porary tooth should be removed, or the new tooth will 
come out of its proper place. If there is not room where 
the new tooth appears, the next temporary tooth must be 
taken out. Great mischief has been done by removing the 
first teeth before the second appear, thus making a con- 
traction of the jaw. 



THE CARE OF INFANTS. 273 

Most trouble with the teeth of young children comes 
from neglect to use the brush to remove the tartar that ac- 
cumulates near the gum, causing disease and decay: This 
disease is sometimes called scurvy, and is shown by an accu- 
mulation around the teeth and by inflamed gums that 
bleed easily. .Removal of the tartar by a dentist and clean- 
ing the teeth after every meal with a brush will usually cure 
this evil, which causes loosening of the teeth and a bad 
breath. 

Much injury is often done to teeth by using improper 
tooth-powder. Powdered chalk sifted through muslin is 
approved by all dentists, and should be used once every 
day. The tooth-brush should be used after every meal, and 
floss silk pressed between the teeth to remove food lodged 
there. This method will usually save the teeth from de- 
cay till old age. 

When an infant seems ill during the period of dentition, 
the following directions from an experienced physician 
may be of service. It is now an accepted principle of all 
the medical world that fevers are to be reduced by cold 
applications ; but an infant demands careful and judicious 
treatment in this direction ; some have extremely sensitive 
nerves, and cold is painful. For such, tepid sponging 
should be used near a fire, and the coldness increased grad- 
ually. The sensations of the child should be the guide. 
Usually, but not always, children that are healthy will 
learn by degrees to prefer cold water, and then it may safe- 
ly be used. 

When an infant becomes feverish, wrapping its body in 
a towel wrung out in warm or tepid water, and then keep- 
ing it warm in a woolen blanket, is a very safe and sooth- 
ing remedy. 

In case of constipation this preparation of food is useful : 

One table-spoonful of unbolted flour wet with cold water. 
Add one pint of hot water, and boil twenty minutes. Add 
when taken up, one pint of milk. If the stomach seems 



274 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* 8 HOME. 

delicate and irritable, strain out the bran, bnt in most cases 
retain it. 

In case of diarrhea, walk with the child in arms a great 
deal in the open air, and give it rice-water to drink. 

The warmth and vital influences of the nurse are very 
important, and make this mode of exercise both more 
soothing and more efficacious, especially in the open air, 
the infant being warmly clad. 

In case of feverishness from teething or from any other 
cause, wrap the infant in a towel wrung out in tepid wa- 
ter and then wrap it in a woolen blanket. The water may 
be cooler according as the child is older and stronger. 
The evaporation of the water, draws off the heat, while 
the moisture soothes the nerves, and usually the child will 
fall into a quiet sleep. As spon as it becomes restless, 
change the wet towel and proceed as before. 

The leading physicians of Europe and of this country, 
in all cases of fevers, use water to reduce them, by this 
and other modes of application. This method is more 
soothing than any other, and is as effective for adults as 
for infants. 

Some of the most distinguished physicians of New- 
York who have examined this chapter give their full ap- 
proval of the advice given. If there is still distrust as to 
this mode of using water to reduce fevers, it will be ad- 
vantageous to read an address on the use of cold applica- 
tions in fevers, delivered by Dr. William Neftel, before 
the New- York Academy of Medicine, published in the 
New-York Medical Record for November, 1868 : this 
can be obtained by inclosing twenty cents to the editor, 
with the post-office address of the applicant. 



XXII. 

MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 

IN regard to the physical education of children, Dr. 
Clarke, Physician in Ordinary to the Queen of England, 
expresses views on one point, in whicji most physicians 
would coincide. He says, " There is no greater error in the 
management of children, than that of giving them animal 
diet very early. By persevering in the use of an over-stimula- 
ting diet the digestive organs become irritated, and the vari- 
ous secretions immediately connected with digestion, and 
necessary to it, are diminished, especially the biliary secre- 
tion. Children so fed become very liable to attacks of 
fever, and inflammation, affecting particularly the mucous 
membranes; and measles and other diseases incident to 
childhood, are generally severe in their attacks." 

The result of the treatment of the inmates of the Orphan 
Asylum, at Albany, is one which all who have the care of 
young children should deeply ponder. During the first six 
years of the existence of this institution, its average number 
of children was eighty. For the first three years, their diet 
was meat once a day, fine bread, rice, Indian puddings, 
vegetables, fruit, and milk. Considerable attention was 
given to clothing, fresh air, and exercise ; and they were 
bathed once in three weeks. During these three years, from 
four to six children, and sometimes more, were continually 
on the sick-list ; one or two assistant nurses were necessary ; 
a physician was called two or three times a week ; and, in 
this time, there were between thirty and forty deaths. At 
the end of this period, the management was changed, in 



276 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

these respects : daily ablutions of the whole body were 
practiced ; bread of unbolted flour was substituted for that 
of fine wheat ; and all animal food was banished. More 
attention also was paid to clothing, bedding, fresh air, and 
exercise. 

The result was, that the nursery was vacated; the 
nurse and physician were no longer needed ; and, for 
two years, not a single case of sickness or death occurred. 
The third year also, there were no deaths, except those of 
two idiots and one other child, all of whom were new in- 
mates, who had not been subjected to this treatment. The 
teachers of the children also testified there was a manifest 
increase of intellectual vigor and activity, while there was 
much less irritability of temper. 

Let parents, nurses, and teachers reflect on the above 
statement, and bear in mind that stupidity of intellect, and 
irritability of temper, as well as ill -health, are often caused 
by the mismanagement of the nursery in regard to the 
physical training of children. 

There is probably no. practice more deleterious, than 
that of allowing children to eat at short intervals, through 
the day. As the stomach is thus kept constantly at work, 
with no time for repose, its functions are deranged, and a 
weak or disordered stomach is the frequent result. Chil- 
dren should be required to keep cakes, nuts, and other 
good things, which should be sparingly given, till just be- 
fore a meal, and then they will form a part of their regular 
supply. This is better than to wait till after their hunger 
is satisfied by food, when they will eat the niceties merely 
to gratify the palate, and thus overload the stomach and 
interrupt digestion. 

In regard to the intellectual training of young children, 
some modification in the common practice is necessary, 
with reference to their physical well-being. More care is 
needful, in providing well-ventilated school-rooms, and in 
securing more time for sports in the open air, during school 



THE MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 277 

hours. It is very important to most mothers that their 
young children should be removed from their care during 
certain school hours ; and it is very useful for quite young 
children, to be subjected to the discipline of a school, and 
to intercourse with other children of their own age. And, 
with a suitable teacher, it is no matter how early children 
are sent to school, provided their health is not endangered by 
impure air, too much confinement, and too great mental 
stimulus, which is the chief danger of the present age. 

In regard to the formation of the moral character, it has 
been too much the case that the discipline of the nursery 
has consisted of disconnected efforts to make children either 
do, or refrain from doing, certain particular acts. Do this, 
and be rewarded ; do that, and be punished ; is the ordi- 
nary routine of family government. 

But children can be very early taught that their happy 
ness, both now #nd hereafter, depends on the formation of 
habits of submission, self-denial, anA benevolence. And 
all the discipline of the nursery can be conducted by 
parents, not only with this general aim in their own minds, 
but also with the same object daily set before the minds of 
the children. Whenever their wishes are crossed, or their 
wills subdued, they can be taught that all this is done, not 
merely to please the parent, or to secure some good to 
themselves or to others ; but as a part of that merciful 
training which is designed to form such a character, and 
such habits, that they can hereafter find their chief happi- 
ness in giving up their will to God, and in living to do good 
to others, instead of living merely to please themselves. 

It can be pointed out to them, that they must always 
submit their w r ill to the will of God, or else be continually 
miserable. It can be shown how, in the nursery, and in 
the school, and through all future days, a child must 
practice the giving up of his will and wishes, when they 
interfere with the rights and comfort of others ; and how 
important it is, early k> learn to do this, so that it will, by 



278 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

habit, become easy and agreeable. It can be shown how 
children who are indulged in all their wishes, and who are 
never accustomed to any self-denial, always find it hard to 
refrain from what injures themselves and others. It can be 
shown, also, how important it is for every person to form 
such habits of benevolence toward others that self-denial 
in doing good will become easy. 

Parents have learned, by experience, that children can 
be constrained by authority and penalties to exercise self- 
denial, for their own good, till a habit is formed which 
makes the duty comparatively easy. For example, well 
trained children can be accustomed to deny themselves 
tempting articles of food, which are injurious, until the 
practice ceases to be painful and difficult. Whereas, an 
indulged child would be thrown into fits of anger or 
discontent, when its wishes were crossed by restraints of 
this kind. ^ 

But it has not beqp. so readily, discerned, that the same 
method is needful in order to form a habit of self-denial in 
doing good to others. It has been supposed that while 
children must be forced, by authority, to be self-denying 
and prudent in regard to their own happiness, it may 
properly be left to their own discretion, whether they will 
practice any self-denial in doing good to others. But the 
more difficult a duty is, the greater is the need of parental 
authority in forming a habit which will make that duty easy. 

In order to secure this, some parents turn their earliest 
efforts to this object. They require the young child 
always to offer to others a part of every thing which it 
receives ; always to comply with all reasonable requests of 
others for service ; and often to practice little acts of self- 
denial, in order to secure some enjoyment for others. If 
one child receives a present of some nicety, he is required 
to share it with all his brothers and sisters. If one asks 
his brother to help him in some study or sport, and is met 
with a denial, the parent requires the unwilling child to act 



THE MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 279 

benevolently, and give up some of his time to increase his 
brother's enjoyment. Of course, in such an effort as this, 
discretion must be used as to the frequency and extent of 
the exercise of authority, to induce a habit of benevolence. 
But where parents deliberately aim at such an object, and 
wisely conduct their instructions and discipline to secure 
it, very much will be accomplished. 

In regard to forming habits of obedience, there have 
been two extremes, both of which need to be shunned. 
One is, a stern and unsympathizing maintenance of parental 
authority, demanding perfect and constant obedience, 
without any attempt to convince a child of the propriety 
and benevolence of the requisitions, and without any 
manifestation of sympathy and tenderness for the pain and 
difficulties which are to be met. Under such discipline, 
children grow up to fear their parents, rather than to love 
and trust them ; while some of the most valuable principles 
of character are chilled, or forever blasted. 

In shunning this danger, other parents pass to the oppo- 
site extreme. They put themselves too much on the 
footing of equals with their children, as if little were due to 
superiority of relation, age, and experience. Nothing is 
exacted, without the implied concession that the child is to 
be a judge of the propriety of the requisition ; and reason 
and persuasion are employed, where simple command and 
obedience would be far better. This system produces a 
most pernicious influence. Children soon perceive the 
position thus allowed them, and take every advantage of it. 
They soon learn to dispute parental requirements, acquire 
habits of forwardness and conceit, assume disrespectful 
manners and address, maintain their views with pertinacity, 
and yield to authority with ill-humor and resentment, as if 
their rights were infringed upon. 

The medium course is for the parent to take the attitude 
of a superior in age, knowledge, and relation, who has a 
perfect right to control every action of 'the child, and that, 



280 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. i 

too, without giving any reason for the requisitions. " Obey 
because you? 1 parent commands" is always a proper and suffi- 
cient reason : though not always the best to give. 

But care should be taken to convince the child that the 
parent is conducting a course of discipline, designed to 
make him happy ; and in forming habits of implicit obedi- 
ence, self-denial, and benevolence, the child should have the 
reasons for most requisitions kindly stated ; never, however, 
on the demand of it from the child, as a right, but as an act 
of kindness from the parent. 

It is impossible to govern children properly, especially 
those of strong and sensitive feelings, without a constant 
effort to appreciate the value which they attach to their 
enjoyments and pursuits. A lady of great strength of mind 
and sensibility once told the writer that one of the most 
acute periods of suffering in her whole life was occasioned 
by the burning up of some milkweed-silk, by her mother. 
The child had found, for the first time, some of this shining 
and beautiful substance; was filled with delight at her 
discovery ; was arranging it in parcels ; planning its future 
use, and her pleasure in showing it to her companions 
when her mother, finding it strewed over the carpet, hastily 
swept it into the fire, and that, too, with so indifferent an 
air, that the child fled away, almost distracted with grief 
and disappointment. The mother little realized the pain 
she had inflicted, but the child felt the unkindness so se- 
verely that for several days her mother was an object 
almost of aversion. "While, therefore, the parent needs 
to carry on a steady course, which will oblige the child al- 
ways to give up its will, whenever its own good or the 
greater claims of others require it, this should be constantly 
connected with the expression of a tender sympathy for 
the trials and disappointments thus inflicted. 

Those, again, who will join with children and help them 
in their sports, will learn by this mode to understand the 
feelings and interests of childhood ; while at the same time, 



THE MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 281 

they secure a degree of confidence and affection which can 
not be gained so easily in any other way. And it is to be 
regretted tnat parents so often relinquish this most power- 
ful mode of influence to domestics and playmates, who often 
use it in the most pernicious manner. In joining in such 
sports, older persons should never yield entirely the attitude 
of superiors, or allow disrespectful manners or address. 
And respectful deportment is never more cheerfully ac- 
corded, than in seasons when young hearts are pleased and 
made grateful by having their tastes and enjoyments so ef- 
ficiently promoted. 

y -xt to the want of all government, the two most fruit- 
ful sources of evil to children are, unsteadiness in govern- 
ment and over-government. Most of the cases in which the 
children of sensible and conscientious parents turn out 
badly, result from one or the other of these causes. In 
cases of unsteady government, either one parent is very 
strict, severe and unbending, and the other excessively in- 
dulgent, or else the parents are sometimes very strict and 
decided, and at other times allow disobedience to go un- 
punished. In such cases, children, never knowing exactly 
when they can escape with impunity, are constantly tempted 
to make the trial. 

The bad effects of this can be better appreciated by ref- 
erence to one important principle of the mind. It is found 
to be universally true, that, when any object of desire is 
put entirely beyond the reach of hope or expectation, the 
mind very, soon ceases to long for it, and turns to other ob- 
jects of pursuit. But so long as the mind is hoping for 
some good, and making efforts to obtain it, any opposition ex- 
cites irritable feelings. Let the object be put entirely beyond 
all hope, and this irritation soon ceases. 

In consequence of this principle, those children who are un- 
der the care of persons of steady and decided government 
know that whenever a thing is forbidden or denied, it is out 
of the reach of hope ; the desire, therefore, soon ceases, and 



282 

they turn to other objects. But the children of undecided, or 
of over-indulgent parents, never enjoy this preserving aid, 
When a thing is denied, they never know but either coaxing 
may win it, or disobedience secure it without any penalty, 
and so they are kept in that state of hope and anxiety which 
produces irritation and tempts to insubordination. The chil- 
dren ol very indulgent parents, and of those who are un- 
'decided and unsteady in government, are very apt to be- 
come fretful, irritable, and fractious. 

Another class of persons, in shunning this evil, go to the 
other extreme, and are very strict and pertinacious in re- 
gard to every requisition. With them, fault-finding and 
penalties abound, until the children are either hardened 
into indifference of feeling, and obtuseness of conscience, 
or else become excessively irritable or misanthropic. 

It demands great wisdom, patience, and self-control, to 
escape these two extremes. In aiming at this, there are 
parents who have found the following maxims of very great 
value : 

First : Avoid, as much as possible, the multiplication of 
rules and absolute commands. Instead of this, take the 
attitude of advisers. " My child, this is improper, I wish 
you would remember not to do it." This mode of address 
answers for all the little acts of heedlessness, awkwardness, 
or ill-manners so frequently occurring with children. There 
are cases, when direct and distinct commands are needful ; 
and in such cases, a penalty for disobedience should be as 
steady and sure as the laws of nature. Where such stead- 
iness and certainty of penalty attend disobedience, children 
no more think of disobeying than they do of putting their 
fingers into a burning candle. 

The next maxim is, Govern by rewards more than by 
penalties. Such faults as willful disobedience, lying, dis- 
honesty, and indecent or profane language, should be pun- 
ished with severe penalties, after a child has been fully in- 
structed in the evil of such practices. But all the constant 



THE MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 283 

ly recurring faults of the nursery, such as ill-humor, quar- 
reling, carelessness, and ill-manners, may, in a great many 
cases, be regulated by gentle and kind remonstrances, and 
by the offer of some reward for persevering efforts to form 
a good habit. It is very injurious and degrading to any 
mind to be kept under the constant fear of penalties. Love 
and hope are the principles that should be mainly relied on, 
in forming the habits of childhood. 

Another maxim, and perhaps the most difficult, is, Do 
not govern by the aid of severe and angry tones. A single 
example will be given to illustrate this maxim. A child is 
disposed to talk and amuse itself at table. The mother re- 
quests it to be silent, except when needing to ask for food, 
or when spoken to by its older friends. It constantly for- 
gets. The mother, instead of rebuking in an impatient 
tone, says, " My child, you must remember not to talk. I 
will remind you of it four times more, and after that, when- 
ever you forget, you must leave the table and wait till we 
are done." If the mother is steady in her government, it is 
not probable that she will have to apply this slight penalty 
more than once or twice. This method is far more effectual 
than the use of sharp and severe tones, to secure attention 
and recollection, and often answers the purpose as well as 
offering some reward. 

The writer has been in some families where the most ef- 
ficient and steady government has been sustained without 
the use of a cross or angry tone ; and in others, where a far 
less efficient discipline was kept up, by frequent severe re- 
bukes and angry remonstrances. In the first case, the chil- 
dren followed the example set them, and seldom used severe 
tones to each other ; in the latter, the method employed by 
the parents was imitated by the children, and cross words 
and angry tones resounded from morning till night, in every 
portion of the household. 

Another important maxim is, Try to keep children in a 
happy state of mind. Every one knows, by experience, 



284 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

that it is easier to do right and submit to rule when cheer- 
ful and happy, than when irritated. This is peculiarly true 
of children ; and a wise mother^ when she finds her cliild 
fretful and impatient, and thus constantly doing wrong, 
will often remedy the whole difficulty, by telling some 
amusing story, or by getting the child engaged in some 
amusing sport, f This strongly shows the importance of 
learning to govern children without the employment of an- 
gry tones, which always produce irritation. 

Children of active, heedless temperament, or those who 
are odd, awkward, or unsuitable in their remarks and de- 
portment, are often essentially injured by a want of pa- 
tience and self-control in those who govern them. .Such 
children often possess a morbid sensibility which they 
strive to conceal, or a desire of love and approbation, which 
preys like a famine on the soul. And yet, they become ob- 
jects of ridicule and rebuke to almost every member of the 
family, until their sensibilities are tortured into obtuseness 
or misanthropy. Such children, above all others^ need 
tenderness and sympathy. A thousand instances of mis- 
take or forgetfulness should be passed over in silence, 
while opportunities for commendation and encouragement 
should be diligently sought. 

In regard to the formation of habits of self-denial in 
childhood, it is astonishing to see how parents who are very 
sensible often seem to regard this matter. Instead of in- 
uring their children to this duty in early life, so that by 
habit it may be made easy in after-days, they seem to be 
studiously seeking to cut them off from every chance to se- 
cure such a preparation. Every wish of the child is studi- 
ously gratified ; and, where a necessity exists of crossing its 
wishes, some compensating pleasure is offered, in return. 
Such parents often maintain that nothing shall be put on 
their table, which their children may not join them in eat- 
ing. But where, so easily and surely as at the daily meal, 
can that habit of self-denial be formed, which is so needful 



THE MANAGEMENT OF YOUNG CHILDREN. 285 

in governing the appetites, and which children must ac- 
quire, or be ruined ? The food which is proper for grown 
persons, is often unsuitable for children ; and this is a suf- 
ficient reason for accustoming them to see others partake 
of delicacies, which they must not share. Requiring chil- 
dren to wait till others are helped, and to refrain from con- 
versation at table, except when addressed by their elders, 
is another mode of forming habits of self-denial and self- 
control. Requiring them to help others first, and to offer 
the best to others, has a similar influence. 

In forming the moral habits of children, it is wise to take 
into account the peculiar temptations to which they are to 
be exposed. The people of this nation are eminently a 
trafficking people ; and the present standard of honesty, as 
to trade and debts, is very low, and every year seems sink- 
ing still lower. It is, therefore, preeminently important, 
that children should be trained to strict honesty, both in 
word and deed. It is not merely teaching children to avoid 
absolute lying, which is needed : all kinds of deceit should 
be guarded against ; and all kinds of little dishonest prac- 
tices be strenuously opposed. A child should be brought 
up with the determined principle, never to run in debt, but 
to be content to live in a humbler way, in order to se- 
cure that true independence, which should be the noblest 
distinction of an American citizen. 

There is no more important duty devolving upon a 
mother, than the cultivation of habits of modesty and pro- 
priety in young children. " All indecorous words or deport- 
ment should be carefully restrained ; and delicacy and re- 
serve studiously cherished. It is a common notion, that it 
is important to secure these virtues to one sex, more than 
to the other ; and, by a strange inconsistency, the sex most 
exposed to danger is the one selected as least needing care. 
Yet a wise mother will be especially careful that her sons 
are trained to modesty and purity of mind. 

Yet few mothers are sufficiently aware of the dreadful 



286 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'' S HOME. 

penalties which often result from indulged impurity of 
thought. If children, in future life, can be preserved from 
licentious associates, it is supposed that their safety is se- 
cured. But the records of our insane retreats, and the 
pages of medical writers, teach that even in solitude, and 
without being aware of the sin or the danger, children may 
inflict evils on themselves, which not unfrequently termi- 
nate in disease, delirium, and death. 

There is no necessity for explanations on this point any 
farther than this ; that certain parts of the body are not to 
be touched except for purposes of cleanliness, and that the 
most dreadful suffering comes from disobeying these com- 
mands. So in regard to practices and sins of which a young 
child will sometimes inquire, the wise parent will say, that 
this is what children can not understand, and about which 
they must not talk or ask questions. And they should be 
told that it is always a bad sign, when children talk on 
matters which parents call vulgar and indecent, and that 
the company of such children should be avoided. Disclos- 
ing details of wrong-doing to young and curious children, 
often leads to the very evils feared. But parents and teach- 
ers, in this age of danger, should be well informed and 
watchful ; for it is not unfrequently the case, that servants 
and school-mates will teach young children practices, which 
exhaust the nervous system and bring on paralysis, mania, 
and death. 

And finally, in regard to the early religious training of 
children, the examples of the Creator in the early training 
of our race may safely be imitated. That " He is, and is 
a rewarder" that he is everywhere present that he is a 
tender Father in heaven, who is grieved when any of his 
children do wrong, yet ever ready to forgive those who are 
striving to please him by well-doing, these are the most 
effective motives to save the young from the paths of dan- 
ger and sin. The rewards and penalties of the life to come 
are better adapted to maturer age, than to the imperfect 
and often false and fearful conceptions of the childish mind. 



XXIII. 

DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 

WHENEVER the laws of body and mind are properly 
understood, it will be allowed that every person needs 
some kind of recreation ; and that, by seeking it, the body 
is strengthened, the mind is invigorated, and all our duties 
are more cheerfully and successfully performed. 

Children, whose bodies are rapidly growing and whose 
nervous system is tender and excitable, need much more 
amusement than persons of mature age. Persons, also, who 
are oppressed with great responsibilities and duties, or who 
are taxed by great intellectual or moral excitement, need 
recreations which physically exercise and draw off the mind 
from absorbing interests. Unfortunately, such persons are 
those who least resort to amusements, while the idle, gay, 
and thoughtless seek those which are not needed, and for 
which useful occupation would be a most beneficial 
substitute. 

As the only legitimate object of amusement is to prepare 
mind and body for the proper discharge of duty, the pro- 
tracting of such as interfere with regular employments, or 
induce excessive fatigue, or weary the mind, or invade the 
proper hours for repose, must be sinful. 

In deciding what should be selected, and what avoided, 
the following are guiding principles. In the first place, no 
amusements which inflict needless pain should ever be 
allowed. All tricks which cause fright or vexation, and all 
sports which involve suffering to animals, should be utterly 
forbidden. Hunting and fishing, for mere sport, can never 



288 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

be justified. If a man can convince his children that he 
follows these pursuits to gain food or health, and not for 
amusement, his example may not be very injurious. But 
when children see grown persons kill and frighten animals, 
for sport, habits of cruelty, rather than feelings of tender- 
ness and benevolence, are cultivated. 

In the next place, we should seek no recreations which 
endanger life, or interfere with important duties. As the 
legitimate object of amusements is to promote health and 
prepare for some serious duties, selecting those which have a 
directly opposite tendency, can not be justified. Of course, 
if a person feels that the previous day's diversion has 
shortened the hours of needful repose, or induced a lassitude 
of mind or body, instead of invigorating them, it is certain 
that an evil has been done which should never be repeated. 

Another rule which has been extensively adopted in the 
religious world is, to avoid those amusements which experi- 
ence has shown to be so exciting, and connected with so 
many temptations, as to be pernicious in tendency, both to 
the individual and to the community. It is on this ground, 
that horse-racing and circus-riding have been excluded. 
Not because there is any thing positively wrong in having 
men and horses run and perform feats of agility, or in per- 
sons looking on for the diversion : but because experience 
has shown so many evils connected with these recreations, 
that they should be relinquished. So with theatres. The 
enacting of characters and the amusement thus afforded in 
themselves may be harmless ; and possibly, in certain 
cases, might be useful : but experience has shown so many 
evils to result from this source, that it has been deemed 
wrong to patronize it. So, also, with those exciting games 
of chance which are employed in gambling. 

Under the same head comes dancing, in the estimation of 
the great majority of the religious world. Still, there are 
many intelligent, excellent, and conscientious persons who 
hold a contrary opinion. Such maintain that it is an inno- 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 289 

cent and healthful amusement, tending to promote ease of 
manners, cheerfulness, social affection, and health of mind 
and body ; that evils are involved only in its excess ; that like 
food, study, or religious excitement, it is only wrong when 
not properly regulated; and that, if serious and intelli- 
gent people would strive to regulate, rather than banish, 
this amusement, much more good would be secured. 

On the other side, it is objected, not that dancing is 
a sin, in itself considered, for it was once a part of sacred 
worship ; not that it would be objectionable, if it were 
properly regulated ; not that it does not tend, when used 
in a proper manner, to health of body and mind, to grace 
of manners, and to social enjoyment : all these things are 
conceded. But it is objected to, on the same ground as 
horse-racing and theatrical entertainments ; that we are to 
look at amusements as they are, and not as they might be. 
Horse-races might be so managed as not to involve cruelty, 
gambling, drunkenness, and other vices. And so might 
theatres. And if serious and intelligent persons undertook 
to patronize these, in order to regulate them, perhaps they 
would be somewhat raised from the depths to which they 
have sunk. But such persons believe that, with the weak 
sense of moral obligation existing in the mass of society, and 
the imperfect ideas mankind have of the proper use of amuse- 
ments, and the little self-control which men or women or 
children practice, these will not, in fact, be thus regulated. 

And they believe dancing to be liable to the same objec- 
tions. As this recreation is actually conducted, it does not 
tend to produce health of body or mind, but directly the 
contrary. If young and old went out to dance together 
in open air, as the French peasants do, it would be a very 
different sort of amusement from that which often is 
witnessed in a room furnished with many lights and filled 
with guests, both expending the healthful part of the 
atmosphere, where the young collect, in their tightest 
dresses, to protract for several hours a kind of physical ex- 



200 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

ertion which is not habitual to them. During this process, 
the blood is made to circulate more swiftly than usual, in 
circumstances where it is less perfectly oxygenized than 
health requires ; the pores of the skin are excited by heat 
and exercise ; the stomach is loaded with indigestible arti- 
cles, and the quiet, needful to digestion, withheld ; the di- 
version is protracted beyond the usual hour for repose ; and 
then, when the skin is made the most highly susceptible 
to damps and miasms, the company pass from a warm room 
to the cold night-air. It is probable that no single amuse- 
ment can be pointed out combining so many injurious 
particulars as this, which is so often defended as a health- 
ful one. Even if parents, who train their children to dance, 
can keep them from public balls, (which is seldom the case,) 
dancing, as ordinarily conducted in private parlors, in most 
cases is subject to nearly all the same mischievous 
influences. 

The spirit of Christ is that of self-denying benevolence ; 
and his great aim, by his teachings and example, was to 
train his followers to avoid all that should lead to sin, es- 
pecially in regard to the weaker ones of his family. Yet 
he made wine at a wedding, attended a social feast on the 
Sabbath,* reproved excess of strictness in Sabbath-keep- 
ing generally, and forbade no safe and innocent enjoyment. 
In following his example, the rulers of the family, then, will 
introduce the most highly exciting amusements only in cir- 
cumstances where there are such strong principles and hab- 
its of self-control that the enjoyment will not involve sin 
in the actor or needless temptation to the weak. 

The course pursued by our Puritan ancestors, in the period 
succeeding their first perils amid sickness and savages, is an ex- 
ample that may safely be practiced at the present day. The 
young of both sexes were educated in the higher branches, 
in country academies, and very often the closing exercises 

* Luke xiv. In reading this passage, please notice what kind of guests 
are to be invited to the feast that Jesus Christ recommends. 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 291 

were theatricals, in which the pupils were performers and 
their pastors, elders, and parents, the audience. So, at so- 
cial gatherings, the dance was introduced before minister 
and wife, with smiling approval. The roaring fires and 
broad chimneys provided pure air, and the nine o'clock bell 
ended the festivities that gave new vigor and zest to life, 
while the dawn of the next day's light saw all at their posts 
of duty, with heartier strength and blither spirits. 

No indecent or unhealthful costumes offended the eye, 
no half -naked dancers of dubious morality were sustained 
in a life of dangerous excitement, by the money of Chris- 
tian people, for the mere amusement of their night hours. 
No shivering drivers were deprived of comfort and sleep, 
to carry ho,me the midnight followers of fashion ; nor was 
the quiet and comfort of servants in hundreds of dwellings 
invaded for the mere amusement of their superiors in educa- 
tion and advantages. The command "we that are strong, ought 
to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please our- 
selves," was in those days not reversed. Had the drama and 
the dance continued to be regulated by the rules of tempe- 
rance, health, and Christian benevolence, as in the days of 
our forefathers, they would not have been so generally 
banished from the religious world. And the question is 
now being discussed, whether they can be so regulated at 
the present time as not to violate the laws, either of health 
or benevolence.* 

In regard to home amusements, card-playing is now 
indulged in, in many conscientious families from which it 
formerly was excluded, and for these reasons : it is claimed 
that this is a quiet home amusement, which unites pleas- 

* Fanny Kemble Butler remarked to the present writer that she re- 
garded theatres wrong, chiefly because of the injury involved to the 
actors. Can a Christian mother contribute money to support young wo- 
men in a profession from which she would protect her own daughter, 
as from degradation, and that, too, simply for the amusement of herself 
and family ? Would this be following the self-sacrificing benevolence 
of Christ and his apostles ? 



292 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

antly the aged with the young ; that it is not now employed 
in respectable society for gambling, as it formerly was ; that 
to some young minds it is a peculiarly fascinating game, and 
should be first practiced under the parental care, till the ex- 
citement of novelty is past, thus rendering the danger to 
children less, when going into the world ; and; finally, that 
habits of self-control in exciting circumstances may and 
should be thus cultivated in the safety of home. Many 
parents who have taken this course with their sons in early 
life, believe that it has proved rather a course of safety 
than of danger. Still, as there is great diversity of opinion, 
among persons of equal worth and intelligence, a mutual 
spirit of candor and courtesy should be practiced. The 
sneer at bigotry and narrowness of views, on on side, and 
the uncharitable implication of want of piety, or sense, on 
the other, are equally ill-bred and unchristian. Truth on 
this subject is best promoted, not by ill-natured crimination 
and rebuke, but by calm reason, generous candor, forbear- 
ance, and kindness. 

There is another species of amusement, which a large 
portion of the religious world formerly put under the same 
condemnation as the preceding. This is novel-reading. 
The confusion and difference of opinion on this subject 
have arisen from a want of clear and definite distinctions. 
Now, as it is impossible to define what are novels and what 
are not, so as to include one class of fictitious writings and 
exclude every other, it is impossible to lay down any rule 
respecting them. The discussion, in fact, turns on the use 
of those works of imagination which belong to the class of 
fictitious narratives. That this species of reading is not 
only lawful but necessary and useful, is settled by divine 
examples, in the parables and allegories of Scripture. Of 
course, the question must be, what kind of fabulous writ- 
ings must be avoided, and what allowed. 

In deciding this, no specific rules can be given ; but it 
must be a matter to be regulated by the nature and circum- 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 293 

stances of each case. No works of fiction which tend to 
throw the allurements of taste and genius around vice and 
crime should ever be tolerated ; and all that tend to give 
false views of life and duty should also be banished. Of 
those which are written for mere amusement, presenting 
scenes and events that are interesting and exciting and hav- 
ing no bad moral influence, much must depend on the char- 
acter and circumstances of the reader. Some minds are 
torpid and phlegmatic, and need to have the imagination 
stimulated : such would be benefited by this kind of 
reading. Others have quick and active imaginations, and 
would be as much injured by excess. Some persons are 
often so engaged in absorbing interests, that any thing in 
nocent, which will for a short time draw off the mind, is of 
the nature of a medicine ; and, in such cases, this kind of 
reading is useful. 

There is need, also, that some men should keep a super- 
vision of the current literature of the day, as guardians, to 
warn others of danger. For this purpose, it is more suitable 
for editors, clergymen, and teachers to read indiscrimi- 
nately, than for any other class of persons ; for they are the 
guardians of the public weal in matters of literature, and 
should be prepared to advise parents and young persons of 
the evils in one direction and the good in another. In do- 
ing this, however, they are bound to go on the same princi- 
ples which regulate physicians, when they visit infected dis- 
tricts using every precaution to prevent injury to them- 
selves ; having as little to do with pernicious exposures, as 
a benevolent regard to others will allow; and faithfully 
employing all the knowledge and opportunities thus gained 
for warning and preserving others. There is much danger, 
in taking this course, that men will seek the excitement of 
the imagination for the mere pleasure it affords, under the 
plea of preparing .to serve the public, when this is neither 
the aim nor the result. 

In regard to the use of such works by the young, as a 



294 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

general rule, they ought not to be allowed to any 'except 
those of a dull and phlegmatic temperament, until the solid 
parts of education are secured and a taste for more elevated 
reading is acquired. If these stimulating condiments in 
literature be freely used in youth, all relish for more solid 
reading will in. a majority of cases be destroyed. If parents 
succeed in securing habits of cheerful and implicit obedi- 
ence, it will be very easy to regulate this matter, by prohib- 
iting the reading of any story-book, until the consent of the 
parent is obtained. 

The most successful mode of forming a taste for suitable 
reading, is for parents to select interesting works of history 
and travels, with maps and pictures suited to the age and 
attainments of the young, and spend an hour or two each 
day or evening, in aiming to make truth as interesting as 
fiction. Whoever has once tried this method will find that 
the uninjured mind of childhood is better satisfied with 
what they know is true, when wisely presented, than with 
the most exciting novels, which they know are false. 

Perhaps there has been some just ground of objection to 
the course often pursued by parents in neglecting to pro- 
vide suitable and agreeable substitutes for the amusements 
denied. But there is a great abundance of safe, healthful, 
and delightful recreations, which all parents may secure for 
their children. Some of these will here be pointed out. 

One of the most useful and important, is the cultivation 
of flowers and fruits. This, especially for the daughters 
of a family, is greatly promotive of health and amusement. 
It is with the hope that many young ladies, whose habits 
are now BO formed that they can never be induced to a 
course of active domestic exercise so long as their parents 
are able to hire domestic service, may yet be led to an em- 
ployment which will tend to secure health and vigor of 
constitution, that much space will be given in the second 
volume of this work, to directions for the cultivation of 
fruits and flowers. 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 295 

It would be a most desirable improvement, if all schools 
for young women could be furnished with suitable grounds 
and instruments for the cultivation of fruits and flowers, 
and every inducement offered to engage the pupils in this 
pursuit. No father, who wishes to have his daughters 
grow up to be healthful women, can take a surer method to 
secure this end. Let him set apart a portion of his ground 
for fruits and flowers, and see that the soil is well prepared 
and dug over, and all the rest may be committed to the care 
of the children. These would need to be provided with a 
light hoe and rake, a dibble or garden trowel, a watering- 
pot, and means and opportunities for securing seeds, roots, 
bulbs, buds, and grafts, all which might be done at a trifling 
expense. Then, with proper encouragement and by the 
aid of a few intelligible and practical directions, every 
man who has even half an acre could secure a small Eden 
around his premises. 

In pursuing this amusement children can also be led to 
acquire many useful habits. Early rising would, in many 
cases, be thus secured ; and if they were required to keep 
their walks and borders free from weeds and rubbish, habits 
of order and neatness would be induced. Benevolent and 
social feelings could also be cultivated, by influencing 
children to share their fruits and flowers with friends and 
neighbors, as well as to distribute roots and seeds to those 
who have not the means of procuring them. A woman or 
a child, by giving seeds or slips or roots to a washerwoman, 
or a farmer's boy, thus inciting them to love and cultivate 
fruits and flowers, awakens a new and refining source of 
enjoyment in minds which have few resources more elevat- 
ed than mere physical enjoyments. Our Saviour directs 
us in making feasts, to call, not the rich who can recom- 
pense again, but the poor who can make no returns. So 
children should be taught to dispense their little treasures 
not alone to companions and friends, who will probably 
return similar favors ; but to those who have no means of 



296 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

making any return. If the rich, who acquire a love for 
the enjoyments of taste and have the means to gratify it, 
would aim to extend among the poor the cheap and simple 
enjoyment of fruits and flowers, our country would soon 
literally " blossom as the rose." 

If the ladies of a neighborhood would unite small con- 
tributions, and send a list of flower-seeds and roots to some 
respectable and honest florist, who would not be likely to 
turn them off with trash, they could divide these among 
themselves and their poor neighbors, so as to secure an 
abundant variety at a very small expense. A bag of 
flower-seeds, which can be obtained at wholesale for four 
cents, would abundantly supply a whole neighborhood; 
and by the gathering of seeds in the autumn, could be 
perpetuated. 

Another very elevating and delightful recreation for the 
young is found in music. Here the writer would protest 
against the practice common in many families, of having 
the daughters learn to play on the piano whether they 
have a taste and an ear for music, or not. A young lady 
who does not sing well, and has no great fondness for music, 
does nothing but waste time, money, and patience in 
learning to play on the piano. But all children can be 
taught to sing in early childhood, if the scientific mode of 
teaching^ music in schools could be more widely intro- 
duced, as it is in Prussia, Germany, and Switzerland. 
Then young children could read and sing music as easily 
as they can read language ; and might take any tune, 
dividing themselves into bands, and sing off at sight the 
endless variety of music which is prepared. And if 
parents of wealth would take pains to have teachers quali- 
fied for the purpose, who should teach all the young .chil- 
dren in the community, much would be done for the happi- 
ness and elevation of the rising generation. This is an 
element of education which we are glad to know is, year by 
year, more extensively and carefully cultivated ; and it is 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 297 

not only a means of culture, but also an amusement, which 
children relish in the highest degree ; and which they can 
enjoy at home, in the fields, and in visits abroad. 

Another domestic amusement is the collecting of shells, 
plants, and specimens in geology and mineralogy, for the 
formation of cabinets. If intelligent parents would pro- 
cure the simpler works which have been prepared for the 
young, and study them with their children, a taste for such 
recreations would soon be developed. The writer has seen 
young boys, of eight and ten years of age, gathering and 
cleaning shells from rivers, and collecting plants and 
mineralogical specimens, with a delight bordering on ecsta- 
sy ; and there are few, if any, who by proper influences 
would not find this a source of ceaseless delight and 
improvement. 

Another resource for family diversion is to be found in 
the various games played by children, and in which the 
joining of older members of the family is always a great 
advantage to both parties, especially those in the open air. 

All medical men unite in declaring that nothing is more 
beneficial to health than hearty laughter ; and surely our 
benevolent Creator would not have provided risibles, and 
made it a source of health and enjoyment to use them, if 
it were a sin so to do. There has been a tendency to 
asceticism, on this subject, which needs to be removed. 
Such commands as forbid foolish laughing and jesting, 
"which are not convenient" and which forbid all idle 
words and vain conversation, can not apply to any thing ex- 
cept what is foolish, vain, and useless. But jokes, laughter, 
and sports, when used in such a degree as tends only to pro- 
mote health and happiness, are neither vain, foolish, nor 
" not convenient." It is the excess of these things, and not 
the moderate use of them, which Scripture forbids. The 
prevailing temper of the mind should be serious, yet 
cheerful ; and there are times when relaxation and laughter 
are not only proper but necessary and right for all. There 



298 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

is nothing better for this end than that parents and older 
persons should join in the sports of childhood. Mature 
minds can always make such diversions more entertaining 
to children, and can exert a healthful moral influence over 
their minds ; and at the same time can gain exercise and 
amusement for themselves. How lamentable that so many 
fathers, who could be thus useful and happy with their 
children, throw away such opportunities, and wear out 
soul and body in the pursuit of gain or fame ! 

Another resource for children is the exercise of mechan- 
ical skill. Fathers, by providing tools for their boys, and 
showing them how to make wheelbarrows, carts, sleds, and 
various other articles, contribute both to the physical, moral, 
and social improvement of their children. And in regard 
to little daughters, much more can be done in this way than 
many would imagine. The writer, blessed with the exam- 
ple of a most ingenious and industrious mother, had not only 
learned before the age of twelve to make dolls, of various 
sorts and sizes, but to cut and fit and sew every article that 
belongs to a doll's wardrobe. This, which was done by the 
child for mere amusement, secured such a facility in me- 
chanical pursuits, that, ever afterward, the cutting and 
fitting of any article of dress, for either sex, was accom- 
plished with entire ease. 

When a little girl begins to sew, her mother can promise 
her a small bed and pillow, as soon as she has sewed a 
patch quilt for them ; and then a bedstead, as soon as she 
has sewed the sheets and cases for pillows; and then a 
large doll to dress, as soon as she has made the under-gar. 
ments ; and thus go on till the whole contents of the baby- 
house are earned by the needle and skill of its little owner. 
Thus the task of learning to sew will become a pleasure ; and 
every new toy will be earned by useful exertion. A little 
girl can be taught, by the aid of patterns prepared for the 
purpose, to cut and fit all articles necessary for her doll. 
She can also be provided with a little wash-tub and irons, 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 299 

and thus keep in proper order a complete miniature domes- 
tic establishment. 

Besides these recreations, there are the enjoyments 
secured in walking, riding, visiting, and many other em- 
ployments which need not be recounted. Children, if 
trained to be healthful and industrious, will never fail to 
discover resources of amusement ; while their guardians 
should lend their aid to guide and restrain them from excess. 

There is need of a very great change of opinion and 
practice in this nation in regard to the subject of social and 
domestic duties. Many sensible and conscientious men 
spend all their time abroad in business ; except perhaps an 
hour or so at night, when they are so fatigued as to be 
unfitted for any social or intellectual enjoyment. And some 
of the most conscientious men in the country will add to their 
professional business public or benevolent enterprises, which 
demand time, effort, and money ; and then excuse them- 
selves for neglecting all care of their children, and efforts 
for their own intellectual improvement, or for the improve- 
ment of their families, by the plea that they have no time 
for it. 

All this arises from the want of correct notions of the 
binding obligation of our social and domestic duties. The 
main object of life is not to secure the various gratifications 
of appetite or taste, but to form such a character, for our- 
selves and others, as will secure the greatest amount of 
present and future happiness. It is of far more conse- 
quence, then, that parents should be intelligent, social, 
affectionate, and agreeable at home and to their friends, 
than that they should earn money enough to live in a large 
house and have handsome furniture. It is far more need- 
ful for children that a father should attend to the formation 
of their character and habits, and aid in developing their 
social, intellectual, and moral nature, than it is that he 
should earn money to furnish them with handsome clothes 
and a variety of tempting food. I 



300 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

It will be wise for those parents who find little time to 
attend to their children, or to seek amusement and enjoy- 
ment in the domestic and social circle, because their time 
is so much occupied with public cares or benevolent objects, 
to in cp.iire whether their first duty is not to train up their 
own families to be useful members of society. A man who 
neglects the mind and morals of his children, to take care 
of the public, is in great danger of coming under a similar 
condemnation to that of him who, neglecting to provide 
for his own household, has " denied the faith, and is worse 
than an infidel." 

There are husbands and fathers who conscientiously 
subtract time from their business to spend at home, in 
reading with their wives and children, and in domestic amuse- 
ments which at once refresh and improve. The children 
of such parents will grow up with a love of home and 
kindred which will be the greatest safeguard against future 
temptations, as well as the purest source of earthly 
enjoyment. 

There are families, also, who make it a definite object to 
keep up family attachments, after the children are scattered 
abroad ; and, in some cases, secure the means for doing this 
by saving money which would otherwise have been spent 
for superfluities of food or dress. Some families have 
adopted, for this end, a practice which, if widely imitated, 
would be productive of much enjoyment. The method is 
this : On the first day of each month, some member of the 
family, at each 'extreme point of dispersion, takes a folio 
sheet, and fills a part of a page. This is sealed and mailed 
to the next family," who read it, add another contribution, 
and then mail it to the next. Thus the family circular, 
once a month, goes from each extreme to all the members 
of a widely-dispersed family, and each member becomes a 
sharer in the joys, sorrows, plans, and pursuits of all the 
rest. At the same time, frequent family meetings are 
sought ; and the expense thus incurred is cheerfully met by 



DOMESTIC AMUSEMENTS AND SOCIAL DUTIES. 301 

retrenchments in other directions. The sacrifice of some 
unnecessary physical indulgence will often purchase many 
social and domestic enjoyments, a thousand times more 
elevating and delightful than the retrenched luxury. 

There is no social duty which the Supreme Law-giver 
more strenuously urges than hospitality and kindness to 
strangers, who are classed with the widow and the fatherless 
as the special objects of Divine tenderness. There are some 
reasons why this duty peculiarly demands attention from 
the American people. 

Reverses of fortune, in this land, are so frequent and un- 
expected, and the habits of the people are so migratory, that 
there are very many in every part of the country who, hav- 
ing seen all their temporal plans and hopes crushed, are now 
pining among strangers, bereft of wonted comforts, without 
friends, and without the sympathy and society so needful to 
wounded spirits. Such, too frequently, sojourn long and 
lonely, with no comforter but Him who "knoweth the 
heart of a stranger." 

Whenever, therefore, new-comers enter a community, 
inquiry should immediately be made as to whether they have 
friends or associates, to render sympathy and kind atterv- 
tions ; and, when there is any need for it, the ministries of 
kind neighborliness should immediately be offered. And it 
should be remembered that the first days of a stranger's 
sojourn are the most dreary, and that civility and kindness 
are doubled in value by being offered at an early period* 

In social gatherings the claims of the stranger are too 
apt to be forgotten ; especially in cases where there are no 
peculiar attractions of personal appearance, or talents, or 
high standing. Such a one should be treated with attention, 
because he is a stranger ; and when communities learn to 
act more from principle, and less from selfish impulse, on 
this subject, the sacred claims of the stranger w r ill be less 
frequently forgotten. 

The most agreeable hospitality to visitors who become 



802 

inmates of a family, is that which puts them entirely at 
ease. This can never be the case where the guest per- 
ceives that the order of family arrangement is essentially 
altered, and that time, comfort, and convenience are sacri- 
ficed for his accommodation. 

Offering the best to visitors, showing a polite regard to 
every wish expressed, and giving precedence to them, in all 
matters of comfort and convenience, can be easily combined 
with the easy freedom which makes the stranger feel at 
home; and this is the perfection of hospitable entertain- 
ment. 



XXIV. 

CARE OF THE AGED. 

ONE of the most interesting and instructive illustrations 
of the design of our Creator, in the institution of the family 
state, is the preservation of the aged after their faculties 
decay and usefulness in ordinary modes seems to be ended. 
By most persons tin's period of infirmities and uselessness is 
anticipated with apprehension, especially in the case of 
those who have lived an active, useful life, giving largely of 
service to others, and dependent for most resources of en- 
joyment on their own energies. 

To lose the resources of sight or hearing, to become fee- 
ble in body, so as to depend on the ministries of others, and 
finally to gradually decay in mental force and intelligence, 
to many seems far worse than death. Multitudes have 
prayed to be taken from this life when their usefulness is 
thus ended. 

But a true view of the design of the family state, and of 
the ministry of the aged and helpless in carrying out this 
design, would greatly lessen such apprehensions, and might 
be made a source of pure and elevated enjoyment. 

The Christian virtues of patience with the unreasonable, 
of self-denying labor for the weak, and of sympathy with 
the afflicted, are dependent, to a great degree, on cultivation 
and habit, and these can be gained only in circumstances 
demanding the daily exercise of these graces. In this as- 
pect, continued life in the aged and infirm should be re- 
garded as a blessing and privilege to a family, especially to 
the young, and the cultivation of the graces that are de- 



304 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

manded by that relation should be made a definite and in- 
teresting part of their education. A few of the methods to 
be attempted for this end will be suggested. 

In the first place, the object for which the aged are pre- 
served in life, when in many cases they would rejoice to de- 
part, should be definitely kept in recollection, and a sense 
of gratitude and obligation be cultivated. They should be 
looked up to and treated as ministers sustained by our 
Heavenly Father in a painful experience, expressly for the 
good of those around them. This appreciation of their 
ministry and usefulness will greatly lessen their trials and 
impart consolation. If in hours of weariness and infirmity 
they wonder why they are kept in a useless and helpless 
state to burden others around, they should be assured that 
they are not useless ; and this not only by word, but, better 
still, by the manifestation of those virtues which such op- 
portunities alone can secure. 

Another mode of cheering the aged is to engage them in 
the domestic games and sports which unite the old and 
the young in amusement. Many a weary hour may thus 
be enlivened for the benefit of all concerned. And here 
will often occur opportunities of self-denying benevolence 
in relinquishing personal pursuits and gratification thus to 
promote the enjoyment of the infirm and dependent. Read- 
ing aloud is often a great source of enjoyment to those who 
by age are deprived of reading for themselves. So the effort 
to gather news of the neighborhood and impart it, is an- 
other mode of relieving those deprived of social gatherings. 

There is no period in life when those courtesies of good 
breeding which recognize the relations of superior and in- 
ferior should be more carefully cherished than when there 
is need of showing them toward those of advancing age. 
To those who have controlled a household, and still more to 
those who in public life have been honored and admired, 
the decay of mental powers is peculiarly trying, and every 
effort should be made to lessen the trial by courteous atten- 



CARE OF THE AGED. 305 

tion to their opinions, and by avoiding all attempts to con- 
trovert them, or to make evident any weakness or fallacy in 
their conversation. 

In regard to the decay of bodily or mental faculties, much 
more can be done to prevent or retard them than is gen- 
rally supposed, and some methods for this end which 
have been gained by observation or experience will be pre- 
sented. 

As the exercise of all our faculties tends to increase their 
power, unless it be carried to excess, it is very important 
that the aged should be provided with useful employment, 
suited to their strength and capacity. Nothing hastens de- 
cay so fast as to remove the stimulus of useful activity. It 
should become a study with those who have the care of the 
aged to interest them in some useful pursuit, and to con- 
vince them that they are in some measure actively con- 
tributing to the general welfare. In the country and in 
families where the larger part of the domestic labor is done 
without servants, it is very easy to keep up an interest in 
domestic industrial employments. The tending of a small 
garden in summer the preparation of fuel and food, the 
mending of household utensils these and many other occu- 
pations of the hands will keep alive activity and interest, in a 
man ; while for women there are still more varied resources. 
There is nothing that so soon hastens decay and lends 
acerbity to age as giving up all business and responsibility, 
and every mode possible should be devised to prevent this 
result. 

As age advances, all the bodily functions move more 
slowly, and consequently the generation of animal heat, 
by the union of oxygen and carbon in the capillaries, is in 
smaller proportion than in the midday of life. For this 
reason some practices, safe for the vigorous, must be relin- 
quished by the aged ; and one of these is the use of the 
cold bath. It has often been the case that rheumatism has 
been caused by neglect of this caution. More than or- 



306 

dinary care should be taken to preserve animal heat in 
the aged, especially in the hands and the feet. 

In many families will be found an aged brother, or sis- 
ter, or other relative who has no home, and no claim to a 
refuge in the family circle but that of kindred. Some- 
times they are poor and homeless, for want of a faculty for 
self-supporting business ; and sometimes they have peculi- 
arities of person or disposition which render their society 
undesirable. These are cases where the pitying tenderness 
of the Saviour should be remembered, and for his sake 
patient kindness and tender care be given, and he will 
graciously accept it as an offering of love and duty to him- 
self. " Inasmuch as ye have done it to the least of these 
my brethren, ye have done ,it to me." 

It is sometimes the case that even parents in old age 
have had occasion to say with the forsaken King Lear, 
" How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thank- 
less child !" It is right training in early life alone that 
will save from this. 

In the opening of China and the probable influx of its 
people, there is one cause for congratulation to a nation 
that is failing in the virtue of reverence. The Chinese are 
distinguished above all other nations for their respect for 
the aged, and especially for their reverence for aged pa- 
rents and conformity to their authority, even to the last. 
This virtue is cultivated to a degree that is remarkable, 
and has produced singular and favorable results on the 
national character, which it is hoped may be imparted to 
the land to which they are flocking in such m altitudes. 
For with all their "peculiarities of pagan philosophy and 
their oriental eccentricities of custom and practical life, 
they are everywhere renowned for their uniform and ele- 
gant courtesy a most commendable virtue, and one ari- 
sing from habitual deference to the aged more than from 
any other source. 



XXY. 

THE CABE OF SERVANTS. 

ALTHOUGH in earlier ages the highest born, wealthiest, 
and proudest ladies were skilled in the simple labors of the 
household, the advance of society toward luxury has 
changed all that in lands of aristocracy and classes, and at 
the present time America is the only country where there 
is a class of women who may be described as ladies who do 
their own work. By a lady we mean a woman of educa- 
tion, cultivation, and refinement, of liberal tastes and ideas, 
who, without any very material additions or changes, would 
be recognized as a lady in any circle of the Old World or 
the New. 

The existence of such a class is a fact peculiar to Ameri- 
can society, a plain result of the new principles involved in 
the doctrine of universal equality. 

When *he colonists first came to this country, of however 
mixed ingredients their ranks might have been composed, 
and however imbued with the spirit of feudal and aristo- 
cratic ideas, the discipline of the wilderness soon brought 
them to a democratic level ; the gentleman felled the wood 
for his log-cabin side by side with the plowman, and 
thews and sinews rose in the market. " A man was deemed 
honorable in proportion as he lifted his hand upon the high 
trees of the forest." So in the interior domestic circle. 
Mistress and maid, living in a log-cabin together, became 
companions, and sometimes the maid, as the one well- trained 
in domestic labor, took precedence of the mistress. It also 



303 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

became natural and unavoidable that children should begin 
to work as early as they were capable of it. 

The result was a generation of intelligent people brought 
up to labor from necessity, but devoting to the problem of la- 
bor the acuteness of a disciplined brain. The mistress, out- 
done in sinews and muscles by her maid, kept her superior- 
ity by skill and contrivance. If she could not lift a pail of 
water, she could invent methods which made lifting the 
pail unnecessary, if she could not take a hundred steps 
without weariness, she could make twenty answer the pur- 
pose of a hundred. 

Slavery, it is true, was to some extent introduced into 
New-England, but it never suited the genius of the people, 
never struck deep root or spread so as to choke the good 
seed of self -helpfulness. Many were opposed to it from 
conscientious principle many from far-sighted thrift, 
and from a love of thoroughness and well-doing which de- 
spised the rude, unskilled work of barbarians. People, hav- 
ing once felt the thorough neatness and beauty of execution 
which came of free, educated, and thoughtful labor, could 
not tolerate the clumsiness of slavery. 

Thus it came to pass that for many years the rural popu- 
lation of New-England, as a general rule, did their own 
work, both out-doors and in. If there were a black man 
or black woman or bound girl, they were emphatically only 
the helps, following humbly the steps of master and mis- 
tress, and used by them as instruments of lightening cer- 
tain portions of their toil. The master and mistress, with 
their children, were the head workers. 

Great merriment" has been excited in the old country 
because, years ago, the first English travelers found that 
the class of persons by them denominated servants, were in 
America denominated help, or helpers. But the term was 
the very best exponent of the state of society. There 
were few servants, in the European sense of the 
word y there was a society of educated workers, where all 



THE CARE OF SEE VANTS. . 309 

were practically equal, and where, if there was a deficiency 
in one family and an excess in another, a helper, not a ser- 
vant in the European sense, was hired. Mrs. Brown, who 
has several sons and no daughters, enters into agreement 
with Mrs. Jones, who has several daughters and no sons. 
She borrows a daughter, and pays her good wages to help 
in her domestic toil, and sends a son to help the labors of 
Mr. Jones. These two young people go into the families 
in which they are to be employed in all respects as equals 
and companions, and so the work of the community is 
equalized. Hence arose, and for many years continued, a 
state of society more nearly solving than any other ever 
did the problem of combining the highest culture of the 
mind with th highest culture of the muscles and the phy- 
sical faculties. 

Then were to be seen families of daughters, handsome, 
strong women, rising eacn day to their in-door work with 
cheerful alertness one to sweep the room, another to make 
the fire, while a third prepared the breakfast for the father 
and brothers who were going out to manly labor : and they 
chatted meanwhile of books, studies, embroidery ; discussed 
the last new poem, or some historical topic started by graver 
reading, or perhaps a rural ball that was to come off next 
week. They spun with the book tied to the distaff; they 
wove ; they did all manner of fine needle- work ; they made 
lace, painted flowers, and, in short, in the boundless con- 
sciousness of activity, invention, and perfect health, set 
themselves to any work they had ever read or thought of. 
A bride in those days was married with sheets and table- 
cloths of her own weaving, with counterpanes and toilet- 
covers wrought in divers embroidery by her own and her sis- 
ters' hands. The amount of fancy-work done in our days 
by girls who have nothing else to do, will not equal what 
was done by these who performed, besides, among them, 
the whole work of the .family. 

In those former days most women were in good health, 



310 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

debility and disease being the exception. Then, too, was 
seen the economy of daylight and its pleasures. They 
were used to early rising, and would not lie in bed, if they 
could. Long years of practice made them familiar with 
the shortest, neatest, most expeditious method of doing 
every household office, so that really for the greater part 
of the time in the house there seemed, to a looker-on, to 
be nothing to do. They rose in the morning and dis- 
patched husband, father, and brothers to the farm or wood- 
lot ; went sociably about, chatting with each other, skimmed 
the milk, made the butter, and turned the cheeses. The 
forenoon was long ; ten to one, all the so-called morning 
work over, they had leisure for an hour's sewing or reading 
before it was time to start the dinner preparations. By two 
o'clock the house-work was done, and they had the long 
afternoon for books, needle-work, or drawing for perhaps 
there was one with a gift at her pencil. Perhaps one read 
aloud while others sewed, and managed in that way to 
keep up a great deal of reading. 

It is said that women who have been accustomed to do- 
ing their own work become hard mistresses. They are 
certainly more sure of the ground they stand on they are 
less open to imposition they can speak and act in their own 
houses more as those " having authority," and therefore are 
less afraid to exact what is justly their due, and less willing 
to endure impertinence and unfaithfulness. Their general 
error lies in expecting that any servant ever will do as well 
for them as they will do for themselves, and that an un- 
trained, undisciplined human being ever can do house-work, 
or any other work, with the neatness and perfection that a 
person of trained intelligence can. 

It has been remarked in our armies that the men of cul- 
tivation, though bred in delicate and refined spheres, can bear 
up under the hardships of camp-life better and longer than 
rough laborers. The reason is, that an educated mind 
knows how to use and save its body, to work it and spare 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 311 

it, as an uneducated mind can not ; and so the college-bred 
youth brings himself safely through fatigues which kill the 
unreflective laborer. 

Cultivated, intelligent women , who are brought up to do 
the work of their own families, are labor-saving institutions. 
They make the head save the wear of the muscles. By 
forethought, contrivance, system, and arrangement they 
lessen the amount to be done, and do it with less expense 
of time and strength than others. The old New-England 
motto, Get your work done up in the forenoon, applied to an 
amount of work which would keep a common Irish servant 
toiling from daylight to sunset. 

A lady living in one of our obscure New-England towns, 
where there were no servants to be hired, at last, by sending 
to a distant city, succeeded in procuring a raw Irish maid-of- 
all-work, a creature of immense bone and muscle, but of 
heavy, unawakened brain. In one fortnight she established 
such a reign of Chaos and old Night in the kitchen and 
through the house that her mistress, a delicate woman, en- 
cumbered with the care of young children, began seriously 
to think that she made more work each day than she per- 
formed, and dismissed her. What was now to be done? 
Fortunately, the daughter of a neighboring farmer was go- 
ing to be married in six months, and wanted a little ready 
money for her trousseau. The lady was informed that 
Miss So-and-so would come to her, not as a servant, but 
as hired " help." She was fain to accept any help with 
gladness. 

Forthwith came into the family-circle a tall, well-dressed 
young person, grave, unobtrusive, self-respecting, yet not in 
the least presuming, who sat at the family table and ob- 
served all its decorums with the modest self-possession of a 
lady. The new-comer took a survey of the labors of a 
family of ten members, including four or five young chil- 
dren, and, looking, seemed at once to throw them into sys- 
tem; matured her plans, arranged her hours of washing, 



312 THE AMERICAN WOMAN S HOME. 

ironing, baking, and cleaning; rose early, moved deftly; 
and in a single day the slatternly and littered kitchen 
assumed that neat, orderly appearance that so often strikes 
one in New-England farmhouses. The work seemed to be 
all gone. Every thing was nicely washed, brightened, put 
in place, and staid in place ; the floors, when cleaned, re- 
mained clean ; the work was always done, and not doing ; 
and every afternoon the young lady sat neatly dressed in 
her own apartment, either quietly writing letters to her be- 
trothed, or sewing on her bridal outfit. Such is the result 
of employing those who have been brought up to do their 
own work. That tall, fine-looking girl, for aught we know, 
may yet be mistress of a fine house on Fifth Avenue ; and 
if she is, she will, we fear, prove rather an exacting mis- 
tress to Irish Bridget ; but she will never be threatened by 
her cook and chambermaid, after the first one or two have 
tried the experiment. 

Those remarkable women of old were made by circum- 
stances. There were, comparatively speaking, no servants 
to be had, and so children were trained to habits of indus- 
try and mechanical adroitness from the cradle, and every 
household process was reduced to the very minimum of labor. 
Every step required in a process was counted, every move- 
ment calculated ; and she who took ten steps, when ore 
would do, lost her reputation for " faculty." Certainly su^h 
an early drill was of use in developing the health and the 
bodily powers, as well as in giving precision to the practi- 
cal mental faculties. All household economies were ar- 
ranged with equal niceness in those thoughtful minds. A 
trained housekeeper knew just how many sticks of hickory 
of a certain size were required to heat her oven, and how 
many of each different kind of wood. She knew by a sort 
of intuition just what kinds of food would yield the most 
palatable nutriment with the least outlay of accessories in 
cooking. She knew to a minute the time when each arti- 
cle must go into and be withdrawn from her oven ; and if 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 313 

she could only lie in her chamber and direct, she could 
guide an intelligent child through the processes with 
mathematical certainty. 

It is impossible, however, that any thing but early train- 
ing and long experience can produce these results, and it 
is earnestly to be wished that the grandmothers of New- 
England had written down their experiences for our chil- 
dren ; they would have been a mine of maxims and tradi- 
tions better than any other ." traditions of the elders " which 
we know of. 

In this country, our democratic institutions have removed 
the superincumbent pressure which in the Old World con- 
fines the servants to a regular orbit. They come here feel- 
ing that this is somehow a land of liberty, and with very 
dim and confused notions of what liberty is. They are 
very extensively the raw, untrained Irish peasantry, and the 
wonder is, that, with all the unreasoning heats and preju- 
dices of the Celtic blood, all the necessary ignorance and 
rawness, there should be the measure of comfort and suc- 
cess there is in our domestic arrangements. 

But, as long as things are so, there will be constant 
changes and interruptions in every domestic establishment, 
and constantly recurring interregnums when the mistress 
must put her own hand to the work, whether the hand be 
a trained or an untrained one. As matters now are, the 
young housekeeper takes life at the hardest. She has very 
little strength, no experience to teach her how to save her 
strength. She knows nothing experimentally of the sim- 
plest processes necessary to keep her family comfortably 
fed and clothed ; and she has a way of looking at all these 
things which makes them particularly hard and distasteful 
to her. She does not escape being obliged to do house- work 
at intervals, but she does it in a weak, blundering, confused 
way, that makes it twice as hard and disagreeable as it 
need be. 

Now, if every young woman learned to do house-work, 



314 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

and cultivated lier practical faculties in early life, she 
would, in the first place, be much more likely to keep her 
servants, and, in the second place, if she lost them tempo- 
rarily, would avoid all that wear and tear of the nervous 
system which comes from constant ill-success in those de- 
partments on which family health and temper mainly 
depend. This is one of the peculiarities of our American 
life, which require a peculiar training. Why not face it 
sensibly ? 

Our land is now full of motorpathic institutions to which 
women are sent at a great expense to have hired operators 
stretch and exercise their inactive muscles. They lie for 
hours to have their feet twigged, their arms flexed, and all 
the different muscles of the body worked for them, because 
they are so flaccid and torpid that the powers of life do not 
go on. Would it not be quite as cheerful, and a less expen- 
sive process, if young girls from early life developed the 
muscles in sweeping, dusting, starching, ironing, and all 
the multiplied domestic processes which our grandmothers 
knew of ? A woman who did all these, and diversified the 
intervals with spinning on the great and little wheel, did 
not need the gymnastics of Dio Lewis or of the Swedish 
Movement Cure, which really are a necessity now. Does it 
not seem poor economy to pay servants for -letting our 
muscles grow feeble, and then to pay operators to exercise 
them for us ? I will venture to say that our grandmothers 
in a week went -over every movement that any gymnast 
has invented, and went over them to some productive 
purpose too. 

The first business of a housekeeper in America is that of 
a teacher. She can have a good table only by having prac- 
tical knowledge, and tact in imparting it. If she under- 
stands her business practically and experimentally, her eye 
detects at once the weak spot ; it requires only a little tact, 
some patience, some clearness in giving directions, and all 
comes right. 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 335 

If we carry a watch to a watchmaker, and undertake to 
show him how to regulate the machinery, he laughs and 
goes on his own way ; but if a brother-machinist makes 
suggestions, he listens respectfully. So, when a woman 
who knows nothing of woman's work undertakes to instruct 
one who knows more than she does, she makes no impres- 
sion ; but a woman who has been trained experimentally, 
and shows she understands the matter thoroughly, is listened 
to with respect. 

Let a woman make her own bread for one month, and, 
simple as the process seems, it will take as long as that to 
get a thorough knowledge of all the possibilities in the 
case; but after that, she will be able to command good 
bread by the aid of all sorts of servants ; in other words, will 
be a thoroughly prepared teacher. 

Although bread-making seems a simple process, it yet re- 
quires delicate care and watchfulness. There are fifty ways 
to spoil good bread ; there are a hundred little things to be 
considered and allowed for, that require accurate observa- 
tion and experience. The same process that will raise good 
bread in cold weather will make sour bread in the heat of 
summer; different qualities of flour require variations in 
treatment, as also different sorts and conditions of yeast ; 
and when all is done, the baking presents another series of 
possibilities which require exact attention. 

A well-trained mind, accustomed to reflect, analyze, and 
generalize, has an advantage over uncultured minds even of 
double experience. Poor as your cook is, she now knows 
more of her business than you do. After a very brief period 
of attention and experiment, you will not only know more 
than she does, but you will convince her that you do, which 
is quite as much to the purpose. 

In the same manner, lessons must be given on the 
washing of silver and the making of beds. Good servants 
do not often come to us ; they must be made by patience 
and training ; and if a girl has a good disposition and a 



316 THE AZTERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

reasonable degree of handiness, and the housekeeper under- 
stands her profession, a good servant may be made out of 
an indifferent one. Some of the best girls have been those 
who came directly from the ship, with no preparation but 
docility and some natural quickness. The hardest cases to 
be managed are not of those who have been taught nothing, 
but of those who have been taught wrongly who come 
self-opinionated, with ways which are distasteful, and con- 
trary to the genius of one's housekeeping. Such require 
that their mistress shall understand at least so much of the 
actual conduct of affairs as to prove to the servant that 
there are better ways than those in which she has been 
trained. 

So much has been said of the higher sphere of woman, 
and so much has been done to find some better work for 
her that, insensibly, almost every body begins to feel that it 
is rather degrading for a woman in good society to be much 
tied down to family affairs ; especially since in these Wo- 
man's Hights Conventions there is so much dissatisfaction 
expressed at those who would confine her ideas to the 
kitchen and nursery. 

Yet these Woman's Eights Conventions are a protest 
against many former absurd, unreasonable ideas the mere 
physical and culinary idea of womanhood as connected only 
with puddings and shirt-buttons, the unjust and unequal 
burdens which the laws of harsher ages had cast upon the 
sex. Many of the women connected with these movements 
are as superior in every thing properly womanly as they 
are in exceptional talent and culture. There is no manner 
of doubt that the sphere of woman is properly to be 
enlarged. Every woman has rights as a human being 
which belong to no sex, and ought to be as freely conceded 
to her as if she were a man, and first and foremost, the 
great right of doing any thing which God and nature evi- 
dently have fitted her to excel in. If she be made a natural 
orator, like Miss Dickinson, or an astronomer, like Mrs. 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 317 

Somerville, or a singer, like Grisi, let not the technical rules 
of womanhood be thrown in the way of her free use of her 
powers. 

Still, per contra, there has been a great deal of crude, dis- 
agreeable talk in these conventions, and too great tendency 
of the age to make the education of woman anti-domestic. 
It seems as if the world never could advance, except like 
ships under a head- wind, tacking and going too far, now in 
this direction, and now in the opposite. Our common- 
school system now rejects sewing from the education of 
girls, which very properly used to occupy many hours daily 
in school a generation ago. The daughters of laborers and 
artisans are put through algebra, geometry, trigonometry, 
and the higher mathematics, to the entire neglect of that 
learning which belongs distinctively to woman. A girl of- 
ten can not keep pace with her class, if she gives any time 
to domestic matters ; and accordingly she is excused from 
them all during the whole term of her education. The boy 
of a family, at an early age, is put to a trade, or the labors of 
a farm; the father becomes impatient of his support, and 
requires of him to take care for himself. Hence an in- 
terrupted education learning coming by snatches in the 
winter months or in the intervals of work. 

As the result, the young women in some of our country 
towns are, in mental culture, much in advance of the males 
of the same household ; but with this comes a physical deli- 
cacy, the result of an exclusive use of the brain and a 
neglect of the muscular system, with great inefficiency in 
practical domestic duties. The race of strong, hardy, cheer- 
ful girls, that used to grow up in country places, and made 
the bright, neat, New-England kitchens of old times the 
girls that could wash, iron, brew, bake, harness a horse and 
drive him, no less than braid straw, embroider, draw, paint, 
and read innumerable books this race of women, pride of 
olden time, is daily lessening ; and in their stead come the 
fragile, easily-fatigued, languid girls of a modern age, 



318 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

drilled in book-learning, ignorant of common things. Tho 
great danger of all this, and of the evils that come from it, 
is, that society, by and by, will turn as blindly against female 
intellectual culture as it now advocates it, and having 
worked disproportionately one way, will work dispropor- 
tionately in the opposite direction. 

Domestic service is the great problem of life here in Amer- 
ica ; the happiness of families, their thrift, well-being, and 
comfort, are more affected by this than by any one thing else. 
The modern girls, as they have been brought up, can not 
perform the labor of their own families as in those simpler, 
old-fashioned days ; and what is worse, they have no practical 
skill with which to instruct servants, who come to us, as a 
class, raw and untrained. In the present state of prices, 
the board of a domestic costs double her wages, and the 
waste she makes is a more serious matter still. 

Many of the domestic evils in America originate in the 
fact that, while society here is professedly based on new 
principles which ought to make social life in every respect 
different from the life of the Old World, yet these prin- 
ciples have never been so thought out and applied as 
to give consistency and harmony to our daily relations. 
America starts with a political organization based on a 
declaration of the primitive freedom and equality of 
all men. Every human being, according to this principle, 
stands on the same natural level with every other, and has 
the same chance to rise according to the degree of power or 
capacity given by the Creator. All our civil institutions 
are designed to preserve this equality, as far as possible, 
from generation to generation : there is no entailed prop- 
erty, there are no hereditary titles, no monopolies, no privi- 
leged classes all are to be as free to rise and fall as the 
waves of the sea. . 

The condition of domestic service, however, still retains 
about it something of the influences from feudal times, and 
from the near presence of slavery in neighboring States. 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 310 

All English literature of the world describes domestic 
service in the old feudal spirit and with the old feudal 
language, which regarded the master as belonging to a 
privileged class and the servant to an inferior one. There 
is not a play, not a poem, not a novel, not a history, that 
does not present this view. The master's rights, like the 
rights of kings, were supposed to rest in his being born in a 
superior rank. The good servant was one who, from child- 
hood, had learned " to order himself lowly and reverently 
to all his betters." When New-England brought to these 
shores the theory of democracy, she brought, in the persons 
of the first pilgrims, the habits of thought and of action 
formed in aristocratic communities. Winthrop's Journal, 
and all the old records of the earlier colonists, show house- 
holds where masters and mistresses stood on the " right di- 
vine" of the privileged classes, howsoever they might have 
risen up against authorities themselves. 

The first consequence of this state of things was a uni- 
versal rejection of domestic service in all classes of Ameri- 
can-born society. For a generation or two there was, in- 
deed, a sort of interchange of family strength, sons and 
daughters engaging in the service of neighboring families, 
in default of a sufficient working-force of their own, but 
always on conditions of strict equality. The assistant was 
to share the table, the family sitting-room, and every honor 
and attention that might be claimed by son or daughter. 
When families increased in refinement and education so as 
to make these conditions of close intimacy with more un- 
culture.d neighbors disagreeable, they had to choose between 
such intimacies and the performance of their own domestic 
toil. No wages could induce a son or daughter of Ne\* 
England to take the condition of a servant on terms which 
they thought applicable to that of a slave. The slightest 
hint of a separate table was resented as an insult ; not to 
enter the front door, and not to sit in the front parlor on 
state occasions, was bitterly commented on as a personal 
indignity. 



320 

The well-taught, self-respecting daughters of farmers, 
the class most valuable in domestic service, gradually re- 
tired from it. They preferred any other employment, how- 
ever laborious. Beyond all doubt, the labors of a well-regu- 
lated family are more healthy, more cheerful, more inter- 
esting, because less monotonous, than the mechanical toils 
of a factory ; yet the girls of New-England, with one con- 
sent, preferred the factory, and left the whole business of 
domestic service to a foreign population ; and they did it 
mainly because they would not take positions in families 
as an inferior laboring-class by the side of others of their 
own age who assumed as their prerogative to live without 
labor. 

" I can't let you have one of my daughters," said an 
energetic matron to her neighbor from the city, who was 
seeking for a servant in her summer vacation; "if you 
hadn't daughters of your own, may be I would ; but my 
girls are not going to work so that your girls may live in 
. idleness." 

It was vain to offer money. " We don't need your money, 
ma'am ; we can support ourselves in other ways ; my girls 
can braid straw, and bind shoes, but they are not going to 
be slaves to any body." 

In the Irish and German servants who took the place of 
Americans in families, there was, to begin with, the tradi- 
tion of education in favor of a higher class ; but even the 
foreign population became more or less infected with the 
spirit of democracy. They came to this country with 
vague notions of freedom and equality, and in ignorant and 
uncultivated people such ideas are often more unreasonable 
for being vague. They did not, indeed, claim a seat at the 
table and in the parlor, but they repudiated many of those 
habits of respect and courtesy which belonged to their 
former condition, and asserted their own will and way in 
the round, unvarnished phrase which they supposed to be 
their right as republican citizens. Life became a sort of 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 82] 

domestic wrangle and struggle between the employers, 
who secretly confessed their weakness, but endeavored 
openly to assume the air and bearing of authority, and 
the employed, who knew their power and insisted on their 
privileges. 

From this cause domestic service in America has had less 
of mutual kindliness than in old countries. Its terms have 
been so ill-understood and defined that both parties have as- 
sumed the defensive ; and a common topic of conversation 
in American female society has often been the general ser- 
vile war which in one form or another was going on in 
their different families a war as interminable as would be 
a struggle between aristocracy and common people, unde- 
fined by any bill of rights or constitution, and therefore 
opening fields for endless disputes. 

In England, the class who go to service are. a class, and 
service is a profession ; the distance between them and their 
employers is so marked and defined, and all the customs 
and requirements of the position are so perfectly under- 
stood, that the master or mistress has no fear of being com- 
promised by condescension, and no need of the external voice 
or air of authority. The higher up in the social scale one 
goes, the more courteous seems to become the intercourse 
of master and servant; the more perfect and real the 
power, the more is it veiled in outward expression com- 
mands are phrased as requests, and gentleness of voice and 
manner covers an authority which no one would think of 
offending without trembling. 

But in America all is undefined. In the first place, 
there is no class who mean to make domestic service a pro- 
fession to live and die in. It is universally an expedient, a 
stepping-stone to something higher ; your best servants al- 
ways have some thing else in view as soon as they have laid 
by a little money ; some form of independence which shall 
give them a home of their own is constantly in mind. 
Families look forward to the buying of landed homesteads, 



o22 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

and the scattered brothers and sisters work awhile in do- 
mestic service to gain the common fund for the purpose ; 
your seamstress intends to become a dressmaker, and take 
in work at her own house ; your cook is pondering a mar- 
riage with the baker, which shall transfer her toils from 
your cooking-stove to her own. 

Young women are eagerly rushing into every other em- 
ployment, till feminine trades and callings are all over- 
stocked. We are continually harrowed with tales of the 
sufferings of distressed needle-women, of the exactions and 
extortions practiced on the frail sex in the many branches 
of labor and trade at which they try their hands ; and yet 
women will encounter all these chances of ruin and starva- 
tion rather than make up their minds to permanent domes- 
tic service. 

Now, what is the matter with domestic service ? One 
would think, on the face of it, that a calling which gives a 
settled home, a comfortable room, rent-free, with fire and 
lights, good board and lodging, and steady, well-paid wages, 
would certainly offer more attractions than the making of 
shirts for tenpence, with all the risks of providing one's 
own sustenance and shelter. 

Is it not mainly from the want of a definite idea of the 
true position of a servant under our democratic institu- 
tions that domestic service is so shunned and avoided in 
America, and that it is the very last thing which an intelli- 
gent young woman will look to for a living ? It is more 
the want of personal respect toward those in that position 
than the labor incident to it which repels our people from 
it. Many would be willing to perform these labors, but 
they are not willing to place themselves in a situation 
where their self-respect is hourly wounded by the implica- 
tion of a degree of inferiority, which does not follow any kind 
of labor or service in this country but that of the family. 

There exists in the minds of employers an unsuspected 
spirit of superiority, which is stimulated into an active 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 323 

form by the resistance which democracy inspires in the 
working-class. Many families think of servants only as a 
necessary evil, their wages as exactions, and all that is al- 
lowed them as so much taken from the family ; and they 
seek in every way to get from them as much and to give 
them as little as possible. Their rooms are the neglected, 
ill-furnished, incommodious ones and the kitchen is the 
most cheerless and comfortless place in the house. 

Other families, more good-natured and liberal, provide 
their domestics with more suitable accommodations, and 
are more indulgent; but there is still a latent spirit of 
something like contempt for the position. That they treat 
their servants with so much consideration seems to them a 
merit entitling them to the most prostrate gratitude ; and 
they are constantly disappointed and shocked at that want 
of sense of inferiority on the part of these people which 
leads them to appropriate pleasant rooms, good furniture, 
and good living as mere matters of common justice. 

It seems to be .a constant surprise to some employers that 
servants should insist on having the same human wants as 
themselves. Ladies who yawn in their elegantly furnished 
parlors, among books and pictures, if they have not com- 
pany, parties, or opera to diversify the evening, seem as- 
tonished and half indignant that cook and chambermaid 
are more disposed to go out for an evening gossip than to 
sit on hard chairs in the kitchen where 'they have been toil- 
ing all day. The pretty chambermaid's anxieties about her 
dress, the minutes she spends at her small and not very 
clear mirror, are sneeringly noticed by those whose toilet- 
cares take up serious hours ; and the question has never ap- 
parently occurred to them why a serving-maid should not 
want to look pretty as well as her mistress. She is a wo- 
man as well as they, with all a woman's wants and weak- 
nesses ; and her dress is as much to her as theirs to them. 

A vast deal of trouble among servants arises from im- 
pertinent interferences and petty tyrannical exactions on the 



324 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* S HOME. 

part of employers. Now, the authority of the master and 
mistress of a house in regard to their domestics extends 
simply to the things they have contracted to do and the 
hours during which they have contracted to serve ; other- 
wise than this, they have no more right to interfere with 
them in the disposal of their time than with any mechanic 
whom they employ. They have, indeed, a right to regulate 
the hours of their own household, and servants can choose 
between conformity to these hours and the loss of their 
situation ; but, within reasonable limits, their right to come 
and go at their own discretion, in their own time, should be 
unquestioned. 

If employers are troubled by the fondness of their ser- 
vants for dancing, evening company, and late hours, the 
proper mode of proceeding is to make these matters a sub- 
ject of distinct contract in hiring. The more strictly and 
perfectly the business matters of the first engagement of 
domestics are conducted, the more likelihood there is of 
mutual quiet and satisfaction in the relation. It is quite 
competent to every housekeeper to say what practices are 
or are not consistent with the rules of her family, and what 
will be inconsistent with the service for which she agrees 
to pay. It is much better to regulate such affairs by cool 
contract in the outset than by warm altercations and pro- 
tracted domestic battles. 

As to the terms of social intercourse, it seems somehow 
to be settled in the minds of many employers .that their 
servants owe them and their family more respect than they 
and the family owe to the servants. But do they ? What 
is the relation of servant to employer in a democratic 
country ? Precisely that of a person who for money per- 
forms any kind of service for you. The carpenter comes 
into your house to put up a set o shelves the cook comes 
into your kitchen to cook your dinner. You never think 
that the carpenter owes you any more respect than you owe 
to him because he is in your house doing your behests ; he 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 325 

is your fellow-citizen, you treat him with respect, you ex- 
pect to be treated with respect by him. You have a claim 
on him that he shall do your work according to your direc- 
tions no more. 

Now, I apprehend that there is a very common notion as 
to the position and rights of servants which is quite differ- 
ent from this. Is it not a common feeling that a servant- 
is one who may be treated with a degree of freedom by 
every member of the family which he or she may not re- 
turn ? Do not people feel at liberty to question servants 
about their private affairs, to comment on their dress and 
appearance, in a manner which they would feel to be an 
impertinence, if reciprocated ? Do they not feel at liberty 
to express dissatisfaction with their performances in rude 
and unceremonious terms, to reprove them in the presence 
of company, while yet they require that the dissatisfaction 
of servants shall be expressed only in terms of respect ? A 
woman would not feel herself at liberty to talk to her mil- 
liner or her dress-maker in language as devoid of considera- 
tion as she will employ toward her cook or chambermaid. 
And yet both are rendering her a service which she pays 
for in money, and one is no more made her inferior thereby 
than the other. Both have an equal right to be treated 
with courtesy. The master and mistress of a house have a 
right to require courteous treatment from all whom their 
roof shelters; but they have no more right to exact it 
of servants than of every guest and every child, and they 
themselves owe it as much to servants as to guests. 

In order that servants may be treated with respect and 
courtesy, it is not 'necessary, as in simpler patriarchal days, 
that they sit at the family-table. Your carpenter or plumb- 
er does not feel hurt that you do not ask him to dine with 
you, nor your milliner and mantua-maker that you do not 
exchange ceremonious calls and invite them to your parties. 
It is well understood that your relations with them are of a 
mere business character. They never take it as an assump- 
tion of superiority on your part that you do not admit them 



326 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

to relations of private intimacy. There may be the most 
perfect respect and esteem and even friendship between 
them and you, notwithstanding. So it may be in the case 
of servants. It is easy to make any person understand that 
there are quite other reasons than the assumption of person- 
al superiority for not wishing to admit servants to the family 
privacy. It was not, in fact, to sit in the parlor or at the 
table, in themselves considered, that was the thing aimed at 
by New-England girls ; these were valued only as signs that 
they were deemed worthy of respect and consideration, and, 
where freely conceded, were often in point of fact declined. 

Let servants feel, in their treatment by their employers 
and in the atmosphere of the family, that their position is 
held to be a respectable one ; let them feel, in the mistress 
of the family, the charm of unvarying consideration and 
good manners; let their work-rooms be made convenient 
and comfortable, and their private apartments bear some 
reasonable comparison in point of agreeableness to those of 
other members of the family, and domestic service will be 
more frequently sought by a superior and self-respecting 
class. There are families in which such a state of things 
prevails; and such families, amid the many causes which 
unite to make the tenure of service uncertain, have gene- 
rally been able to keep good permanent servants. 

There is an extreme into which kindly disposed people 
often run with regard to servants which may be men- 
tioned here. They make pets of them. They give extrava- 
gant wages and indiscreet indulgences, and, through indo- 
lence and easiness of temper, tolerate neglect of duty. 
Many of the complaints of the ingratitude of servants 
come from those who have spoiled them in this way ; while 
many of the longest and most harmonious domestic unions 
have sprung from a simple, quiet course of Christian justice 
and benevolence, a recognition ot servants as fellow-beings 
and fellow-Christians, and a doing to them as we would in 
like circumstances that they should do to us. 

The mistresses of American families, whether they like 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 327 

it or not, have the duties of missionaries imposed upon them 
by that class from which our supply of domestic servants is 
drawn. They may as well accept the position cheerfully, 
and, as one raw, untrained hand after another passes 
through their family, and is instructed by them in the mys- 
teries of good house-keeping, comfort themselves with the 
reflection that they are doing something to form good wives 
and mothers for the republic. 

The complaints made of Irish girls are numerous and 
loud ; the failings of green Erin, alas ! are but too open 
and manifest ; yet, in arrest of judgment, let us move this 
consideration : let us imagine our own daughters between 
the ages of sixteen and twenty-four, untaught and inexperi- 
enced in domestic affairs as they commonly are, shipped to 
a foreign shore to seek service in families. It may be ques- 
tioned whether, as a whole, they would do much better. 
The girls that fill our families and do our house-work are 
often of the age of our own daughters, standing for them- 
selves, without mothers to guide them, in a foreign country, 
not only bravely supporting themselves, but sending home 
in every ship remittances to impoverished friends left' be- 
hind. If our daughters did as much for us, should we not 
be proud of their energy and heroism ? 

When we go into the houses of our country, we find a 
majority of well-kept, well-ordered, and even elegant estab- 
lishments, where the only hands employed are those of the 
daughters of Erin. True, American women have been 
their instructors, and many a weary hour of care have they 
had in the discharge of this office ; but the result on the 
whole is beautiful and good, and the end of it, doubtless*, 
will be peace. 

Instead, then, of complaining that we can not have our 
own peculiar advantages and those of other nations too, or 
imagining how much better off we should be if things were 
different from what they are, it is much wiser and more 
Christianlike to strive cheerfully to conform to actual cir- 



823 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

cumstances ; and, after remedying all that we can control, 
patiently to submit to what is beyond our power. If do- 
mestics are found to be incompetent, unstable, and uncon- 
formed to their station, it is Perfect Wisdom which ap- 
points these trials to teach us patience, fortitude, and self- 
control ; and if the discipline is met in a proper spirit, it 
will prove a blessing rather than an evil. 

But to judge correctly in regard to some of the evils in- 
volved in the state of domestic service in this country, we 
should endeavor to conceive ourselves placed in the situation 
of those of whom complaint is made, that we may not ex- 
pect from them any more than it would seem right should 
be exacted from us in similar circumstances. 

It is sometimes urged against domestics that they exact 
exorbitant wages. But what is the rule of rectitude on 
this subject ? Is it not the universal law of labor and of 
trade that an article is to be valued according to its scarcity 
and the demand ? When wheat is scarce, the farmer raises 
his price ; and when a mechanic offers services difficult to 
be obtained, he makes a corresponding increase of price. 
And why is it not right for domestics to act according to a 
rule allowed to be correct in reference to all other trades and 
professions ? It is a fact, that really good domestic service 
must continue to increase in value just in proportion as this 
country waxes rich and prosperous ; thus making the propor- 
tion of those who wish to hire labor relatively greater, and 
the number of those willing to go to service less. 

Money enables the rich to gain many advantages which 
those of more limited circumstances can not secure. One 
of these is, securing good servants by offering high 
wages ; and this, as the scarcity of this class increases, will 
serve constantly to raise the price of service. It is right 
for domestics to charge the market value, and this value is 
always decided by the scarcity of the article and the 
amount of demand. Right views of this subject will some- 
times serve to diminish hard feelings toward those who 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. 329 

would otherwise be wrongfully regarded as unreasonable 
and exacting. 

Another complaint against servants is that of instability 
and discontent, leading to perpetual change. -But in refer- 
ence to this, let a mother or daughter conceive of their own 
circumstances as so changed that the daughter must go out 
to service. Suppose a place is engaged, and it is then found 
that she must sleep in a comfortless garret ; and that, when 
a new domestic comes, perhaps a coarse and dirty foreigner, 
she must share her bed with her. Another place is offered, 
where she can have a comfortable room and an agreeable 
room-mate; in such a case, would not both mother and 
daughter think it right to change ? 

Or suppose, on trial, it was found that the lady of the 
house was fretful or exacting and hard to please, or that her 
children were so ungoverned as to be perpetual vexations ; 
or that the work was so heavy that no time was allowed for 
relaxation and the care of a wardrobe ; and another place 
offers where these evils can be escaped ; would not mother 
and daughter here think it right to change ? And is it not 
right for domestics, as well as their employers, to seek 
places where they can be most comfortable ? 

In some cases, this instability and love of change would 
be remedied, if employers would take more pains to make 
a residence with them agreeable, and to attach servants to 
the family by feelings of gratitude and affection. There 
are ladies, even where well-qualified domestics are most 
rare, who seldom find any trouble in keeping good and 
steady ones. And the reason is, that their servants know 
they can not better their condition by any change within 
reach. It is not -merely by giving them comfortable rooms, 
and good food, and presents, and privileges, that the attach- 
ment of domestic servants is secured ; it is by the manifesta- 
tion of a friendly and benevolent interest in their comfort 
and improvement. This is exhibited in bearing patiently 
with their faults ; in kindly teaching them how to improve ; 
in showing them how to make and take proper care of their 



330 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* S HOME. 

clothes ; in guarding their health ; in teaching them to read 
if necessary, and supplying them with proper books ; and 
in short, by endeavoring, so far as may be, to supply the 
place of parents. It is seldom that such a course would 
fail to secure steady service, and such affection and grati- 
tude that even higher wages would be ineffectual to tempt 
them away. There would probably be some cases ot un- 
grateful returns ; but there is no doubt that the course in- 
dicated, if generally pursued, would very much lessen the 
evil in question. 

When servants are forward and bold in manners and dis- 
respectful in address, they may be considerately taught that 
those who are among the best-bred and genteel have cour- 
teous and respectful manners and language to all they meet : 
while many who have wealth, are regarded as vulgar, be- 
cause they exhibit rude and disrespectful manners. The 
very term gentle man indicates the refinement and delicacy 
of address which distinguishes the high-bred from the coarse 
and vulgar. 

In regard to appropriate dress, in most cases it is difficult 
for an employer to interfere, directly ', with comments or ad- 
vice. The most successful mode is to offer some service in 
mending or making a wardrobe, and when a confidence in 
the kindness of feeling is thus gained, remarks and sugges- 
tions will generally be properly received, and new views of 
propriety and economy can be imparted. In some cases it 
may be well for an employer who, from appearances, antici- 
pates difficulty of this kind, in making the preliminary con- 
tract or agreement to state that she wishes to have the 
room, person, and dress of her servants kept neat and in 
order, and that she expects to remind them of their duty, 
in this particular, if it is neglected. Domestic servants are 
very apt to neglect the care of their own chambers and 
clothing; and such habits have a most pernicious influence 
on their well-being and on that of their children in future 
domestic life. An employer, then, is bound to exercise a 
parental care over them, in these respects. 



THE CARE OF SERVANTS. SCI 

There is one great mistake, not un frequently made, in the 
management both of domestics and of children, and that is, 
in supposing that the way to cure defects is by finding fault 
as each failing occurs. But instead of this being true, in 
many cases the directly opposite course is the best ; while, in 
all instances, much good judgment is required in order to de- 
cide when to notice faults and when to let them pass unno- 
ticed. There are some minds very sensitive, easily discour- 
aged, and infirm of purpose. Such persons, when they have 
formed habits of negligence, haste, and awkwardness, often 
need expressions of sympathy and encouragement rather 
than reproof. They have usually been found fault with so 
much that they have become either hardened or despond- 
ing ; and it is often the case, that a few words of commend- 
ation will awaken fresh efforts and renewed hope/' In al 
most every case, words of kindness, confidence, and encour- 
agement should be mingled with the needful admonitions 
or reproof. 

It is a good rule, in reference to this point, to forewarn 
instead of finding fault. Thus, when a thing has been done 
wrong, let it pass unnoticed, till it is to be done again ; and 
then, a simple request to have it done in the right way will 
secure quite as much, and probably more, willing effort, 
than a reproof administered for neglect. Some persons 
seem to take it for granted that young and inexperienced 
minds are bound to have all the forethought and discretion 
of mature persons ; and freely express wonder and disgust 
when mishaps occur for want of these traits. But it would 
be far better to save from mistake or forgetfulness by pre- 
vious caution and care on the part of those who have 
gained experience and forethought ; and thus many occa- 
sions of complaint and ill-humor will be avoided. 

Those who fill the places of heads of families are not 
very apt to think how painful it is to be chided for neglect 
of duty or for faults of character. If they. would some- 
times imagine themselves in the place of those whom they 



332 

control, with some person daily administering reproof 
to them, in the same tone and style as they employ to 
those who are under them, it might serve as a useful check 
to their chidings. It is often the case, that persons who are 
most strict and exacting and least able to make allowances 
and receive palliations, are themselves peculiarly sensitive 
to any thing which implies that they are in fault. By such, 
the spirit implied in the Divine petition, " Forgive us our 
trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us," 
needs especially to be cherished. 

One other consideration is very important. There is no 
duty more binding on Christians than that of patience and 
meekness under provocations and disappointment. Now, 
the tendency of every sensitive mind, when thwarted in its 
wishes, is to complain and find fault, and that often in tones 
of fretfulness or anger. But there are few servants who 
have not heard enough of the Bible to know that angry or 
fretful fault-finding from the mistress of a family, when 
her work is not done to suit her, is not in agreement with 
the precepts of Christ. They notice and feel the inconsist- 
ency ; and every woman, when she gives way to feelings of 
anger and impatience at the faults of those around her, 
lowers herself in their respect, while her own conscience, 
unless very much blinded, can not but suffer a wound. 

In speaking of the office of the American mistress as 
being a missionary one, we are far from recommending any 
controversial interference with the religious faith of our 
servants. It is far better to incite them to be good Chris- 
tians in their own way than to run the risk of shaking their 
faith in all religion by pointing out to them what seem to 
us the errors of that in which they have been educated. 
The general purity of life and propriety of demeanor of so 
many thousands of undefended young girls cast yearly upon 
our shores, with no home but their church, and no shield 
but their religion, are a sufficient proof that this religion 
exerts an influence over them not to be lightly trifled with. 



THE CAEE OF SERVANTS. 333 

But there is a real unity even in opposite Christian forms ; 
and the Roman Catholic servant and the Protestant mis- 
tress, if alike possessed by the spirit of Christ, and striving 
to conform to the Golden Rule, can not help being one in 
heart, though one go to mass and the other to meeting. 

Finally, the bitter baptism through which we have passed, 
the life-blood dearer than our own which has drenched dis- 
tant fields, should remind us of the preciousness of distinc- 
tive American ideas. They who would seek in their foolish 
pride to establish the pomp of liveried servants in America 
are doing that which is simply absurd. A servant can never 
in our country be the mere appendage to another man, to be 
marked like a sheep with the color of his owner ; he must 
be a fellow-citizen, with an established position of his own, 
free to make contracts, free to come and go, and having in 
his sphere titles to consideration and respect just as definite 
as those of any trade or profession whatever. 

Moreover, we can not in , this country maintain to any 
great extent large retinues of servants. Even with ample 
fortunes, they are forbidden by the general character of so- 
ciety here, which makes them cumbrous and difficult to 
manage. Every mistress of a family knows that her cares 
increase with every additional servant. Two keep the 
peace with each other and their employer ; three begin a 
possible discord, which possibility increases with four, and 
becomes certain with five or six. Trained housekeepers, 
such as regulate the complicated establishments of the old 
world, form a class that are not, and from the nature 
of the case never will be, found in any great numbers in this 
country. All such women, as a general thing, are keeping, 
and prefer to keep, houses of their own. 

A moderate style of housekeeping, small, compact, and 
simple domestic establishments, must necessarily be the gen- 
eral order of life in America. So many openings of profit 
are to be found in this country, that domestic service neces- 
sarily wants the permanence which forms so agreeable a 
feature of it in the old world. 



334 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

This being the case, it should be an object in America to 
exclude from the labors of the family all that can, with 
greater advantage, be executed out of it by combined labor. 

Formerly, in New-England, soap and candles were to be 
made in each separate family ; now, comparatively few take 
this toil upon them. We buy soap of the soap-maker, and 
candles of the candle-factor. This principle might be ex- 
tended much further. In France, no family makes its own 
bread, and better bread can not be eaten than can be 
bought at the appropriate shops. No family does its own 
washing ; the family's linen is all sent to women who, mak- 
ing this their sole profession, get it up with a care and nice- 
ty which can seldom be equaled in any family. 

How would it simplify the burdens of the American 
housekeeper to have washing and ironing day expunged from 
her calendar! How much more neatly and compactly 
could the whole domestic system be arranged ! If all the 
money that each separate family spends on the outfit and 
accommodations for washing and ironing, on fuel, soap, 
starch, and the other requirements, were united in a fund to 
create a laundry for every dozen families, one or two good 
women could do in first rate style what now' is very indif- 
ferently done by the disturbance and disarrangement of all 
other domestic processes in these families. Whoever sets 
neighborhood-laundries on foot will do much to solve the 
American housekeeper's hardest problem. 

Again, American women must not try with three servants 
to carry on life in the style which in the old world requires 
sixteen ; they must thoroughly understand, and be prepared 
to teach, every branch of housekeeping ; they must study 
to make domestic service desirable, by treating their servants 
in a way to lead them to respect themselves and to feel 
themselves respected ; and there will gradually be evolved 
from the present confusion a solution of the domestic pro- 
blem which shall be adapted to the life of a new and grow- 
ing world. 



XXYI. 

CARE OF THE 8IOK. 

IT is interesting to notice in the histories of our Lord 
the prominent place given to the care of the sick. When 
he first sent out the apostles, it was to heal the sick as 
well as to preach. Again, when he sent out the seventy, 
their first command was to " heal the sick," and next to 
say, " the kingdom of God has come nigh unto you." The 
body was to be healed first, in order to attend to the king- 
dom of God, even when it was " brought nigh." 

Jesus Christ spent more time and labor in the cure of 
men's bodies than in preaching, even if we subtract those 
labors with his earthly father by which family homes 
were provided. When he ascended to the heavens, his last 
recorded words to his followers, as given by Mark, were, 
that his disciples should " lay hands on the sick," that they 
might recover. Still more directly is the duty of care for 
the sick exhibited in the solemn allegorical description of 
the last day. It was those who visited the sick that were 
the blessed ; it was those who did not visit the sick who 
were told to "depart." Thus are we abundantly taught 
that one of the most sacred duties of the Christian family 
is the training of its inmates to care and kind attention to 
the sick. 

Every woman who has the care of young children, or of 
a large family, is frequently called upon to advise what 
shall be done for some one who is indisposed ; aud often, 
in circumstances where she must trust solely to her - own 



336 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

judgment. In such cases, some err by neglecting to do 
any thing at all, till the patient is quite sick ; but a still 
greater number err from excessive and injurious dosing. 

The two great causes of the ordinary slight attacks of 
illness in a family, are, sudden chills, which close the 
pores of the skin, and thus affect the throat, lungs, or bow- 
els ; and the excessive or improper use of food. In most 
cases of illness from the first cause, bathing the feet, and 
some aperient drink to induce perspiration, are suitable 
i emedies. 

In case of illness from improper food, or excess in eat- 
ing, fasting for one or two meals, to give the system time 
and chance to relieve itself, is the safest remedy. Some- 
times, a gentle cathartic of castor-oil may be needful ; but 
it is best first to try fasting. A safe relief from injurious 
articles in the stomach is an emetic of warm water ; but 
to be effective, several tumblerfuls must be given in quick 
succession, and till the stomach can receive no more. 

The following extract from a discourse of Dr. Burne, be- 
fore the London Medical Society, contains important infor- 
mation : " In civilized life, the causes which are most gene- 
rally and continually operating in the production of dis- 
eases are, affections of the mind, improper diet, and re- 
tention of the intestinal excretions. The undue retention 
of excrementitious matter allows of the absorption of its 
more liquid parts, which is a cause of great impurity to 
the blood, and the excretions, thus rendered hard and 
knotty, act more or less as extraneous substances, and, by 
their irritation, produce a determination of blood to the 
intestines and to the neighboring viscera, which ultimately 
ends in inflammation. It also has a great effect on the 
whole system ; causes a determination of blood to the head, 
which oppresses the brain and dejects the mind; deranges 
the functions of the stomach ; causes flatulency ; and pro- 
duces a general state of discomfort." 

Dr. Combe remarks on this subject : " In the natural 



CARE OF THE SICK. 337 

and healthy state, under a proper system of diet, and with 
sufficient exercise, the bowels are relieved regularly, once 
every day." Habit " is powerful in modifying the result, 
and in sustaining healthy action when once fairly establish 
ed. Hence the obvious advantage of observing as much 
regularity in relieving the system, as in taking our meals." 
It is often the case that soliciting nature at a regular pe- 
riod, once a day, will remedy constipation without medi- 
cine, and induce a regular and healthy state of the bowels. 
" When, however, as most frequently happens, the consti- 
pation arises from the absence of all assistance from the 
abdominal and respiratory muscles, the first step to be 
taken is, again to solicit their aid ; first, by removing all 
impediments to free respiration, such as stays, waistbands, 
and belts ; secondly, by resorting to such active exercise 
as shall call the muscles into full and regular action ; * and 
lastly, by proportioning the quantity of food to the wanta 
of the system, and the condition of the digestive organs. 

" If we employ these means, systematically and perseve- 
ringly, we shall rarely fail in at last restoring the healthy 
action of the bowels, with little aid from medicine. But 
if we neglect these modes, we may go on for years, adding 
pill to pill, and dose to dose, without ever attaining the 
end at which we aim." 

" There is no point in which a woman needs more know- 

* The most effective mode of exercising the abdominal and respiratory 
muscles, in order to remedy constipation, is by a continuous alternate con- 
traction of the muscles of the abdomen and diaphragm. By contracting 
the muscles of the abdomen, the intestines are pressed inward and up- 
ward, and then the muscles of the diaphragm above contract and press 
them downward and outward. Thus the blood is drawn to the torpid 
parts to stimulate to the healthful action, while the agitation moves their 
contents downward. An invalid can thus exercise the abdominal ^nuscles 
in bed. The proper time is just after a meal. This exercise, continued ten 
minutes a day, including short intervals of rest, and persevered in for a 
week or two, will cure most ordinary cases of constipation, provided 
proper food is taken. Coarse bread and fruit are needed for this purpose 
in most cases. 



338 

ledge and discretion than in administering remedies for 
what seem slight attacks, which are not supposed to re 
quire the attention of a physician. It is little realized that 
purgative drugs are unnatural modes of stimulating the 
internal organs, tending to exhaust them of their secre- 
tions, and to debilitate and disturb the animal economy. 
For this reason, they should be used as little as possible ; 
and fasting, and perspiration, and the other methods 
pointed out, should always be first resorted to." 

When medicine must be given, it should be borne in mind 
that there are various classes of purgatives, which pro- 
duce very diverse effects. Some, like salts, operate to thin 
the blood, and reduce the system ; others are stimulating ; 
and others have a peculiar operation on certain organs. 
Of course, great discrimination and knowledge are needed, 
in order to select the kind which is suitable to the particu- 
lar disease, or to the particular constitution of the invalid. 
This shows the folly of using the many kinds of pills, and 
other quack medicines, where no knowledge can be had of 
their composition. Pills which are good for one kind of 
disease, might operate as poison in another state of the 
system. 

It is very common in cases of colds, which affect the 
lungs or throat, to continue to try one dose after another 
for relief. It will be well to bear in mind at such times, 
that all which goes into the stomach must be first absorbed 
into the blood before it can reach the diseased part ; and that 
there is some danger of injuring the stomach, or other 
parts of the system, by such a variety of doses, many of 
which, it is probable, will be directly contradictory in 
their nature, and thus neutralize any supposed benefit 
they niight separately impart. 

When a cold affects the head and eyes, and also impedes 
breathing through the nose, great relief is gained by a 
wet napkin spread over the upper part of the face, cover- 
ing the nose except an opening for breath. This is to be 



CARE OF THE SICK. 339 

covered by folds of flannel fastened over the napkin with 
a handkerchief. . So also a wet towel over the throat and 
whole chest, covered with folds of flannel, often relieves 
oppressed lungs. 

Ordinarily, a cold can be arrested on its first symptoms 
by coverings in bed and a bottle of hot water, securing 
free perspiration. Often, at its first appearance, it can be 
stopped by a spoonful or two of whisky, or any alcoholic 
liquor, in hot water, taken on going to bed. Warm cover- 
ering to induce perspiration will assist the process. These 
simple remedies are safest. Perspiration should always be 
followed by a towel-bath. 

It is very unwise to tempt the appetite of a person who 
is indisposed. The cessation of appetite is the warning of 
nature that the system is in such a state that food can not 
be digested. When food is to be given to one who has no 
desire for it, beef-tea is the best in most cases. 

The following suggestions may be found useful in regard 
to nursing the sick. As nothing contributes more to the 
restoration of health than pure air, it should be a primary 
object to keep a sick-room well ventilated. At least twice 
in the twenty-four hours, the patient should be well cov- 
ered, and fresh air freely admitted from out of doors. 
After this, if need be, the room should be restored to a 
proper temperature, by the aid of an open fire. Bedding 
and clothing should also be well aired, and frequently 
changed ; as the exhalations from the body, in sickness, 
are peculiarly deleterious. Frequent ablutions of the 
whole body, if possible, are very useful ; and for these, warm 
water may be employed, when cold water is disagreeable. 

A sick-room should always be kept very neat and in 
perfect order ; and all haste, noise, and bustle should be 
avoided. In order to secure neatness, order, and quiet, in 
case of long illness, the following arrangement should be 
made. Keep a large box for fuel, which will need to be 
filled only twice in twenty-four hours. Provide also and 



340 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

keep in the room or an adjacent closet, a small tea-kettle, 
a saucepan, a pail of water for drinks and ablutions, a 
pitcher, a covered porringer, two pint bowls, two tumblers, 
two cups and saucers, two wine-glasses, two large and two 
small spoons ; also a dish in which to wash these articles ; 
a good supply of towels and a broom. Keep a slop-bucket 
near by to receive the wash of the room. Procuring all 
these articles at once, will save much noise and confusion. 

Whenever medicine or food is given, spread a clean tow- 
el over the person or bed-clothing, and get a clean hand- 
kerchief, as nothing is more annoying to a weak stomach 
than the stickiness and soiling produced by medicine and 
food. 

Keep the fire-place neat, and always wash all arti- 
cles and put them in order as soon as they are out of use. 
A sick person has nothing to do but look about the 
room ; and when every thing is neat and in order, a feeling 
of comfort is induced, while disorder, filth, and neglect are 
constant objects of annoyance which, if not complained 
of, are yet felt. 

One very important particular in the case of those who 
are delicate in constitution, as well as in the case of the 
sick, is the preservation of warmth, especially in the hands 
and the feet. The equal circulation of the blood is an im- 
portant element for good health, and this is impossible 
when the extremities are habitually or frequently cold. It 
is owing to this fact that the coldness caused by wetting 
the feet is so injurious. In cases where disease or a weak 
constitution causes a feeble or imperfect circulation, great 
pains should be taken to dress the feet and hands warmly, 
especially around the wrists and ankles, where the blood- 
vessels are nearest to the surface and thus most exposed to 
cold. "Warm elastic wristlets and anklets would save 
many a feeble person from increasing decay or disease. 

When the circulation is feeble from debility or disease, 
the union of carbon and oxygen in the capillaries is slow- 



CARE OF THE SICK. 341 

er than in health, and therefore care should be taken to 
preserve the heat thus generated by warm clothing and 
protection from cold draughts. In nervous debility, it is 
peculiarly important to preserve the animal heat, for its 
excessive loss especially affects weak nerves. Many an in- 
valid is carelessly and habitually suffering cold feet, who 
would recover health by proper care to preserve animal 
heat, especially in the extremities. 

The following are useful directions for dressing a blister. 
Spread thinly, on a linen cloth, an ointment composed of 
one third of beeswax to two thirds of tallow; lay this 
upon a linen cloth folded many times. With a sharp 
pair of scissors make an aperture in the lower part of the 
blister-bag, with a little hole above to give it vent. 
Break the raised skin as little as possible. Lay on the 
cloth spread as directed. The blister at first should be 
dressed as often as three times in a day, and the dressing 
renewed each time. Hot fomentations in most cases will 
be as good as a blister, less painful, and safer. 

Always prepare food for the sick in the neatest and 
most careful manner. It is in sickness that the senses of 
smell and taste are most susceptible of annoyance; and 
often, little mistakes or negligences in preparing food will 
take away all appetite. 

Food for the sick should be cooked on coals, that no 
smoke may have access to it ; and great care must be taken 
to prevent, by stirring, any adherence to the bottom of the 
cooking vessel, as this always gives a disagreeable taste. 

Keeping clean handkerchiefs and towels at hand, cool- 
ing the pillows, sponging the hands with water, (with care 
to dry them thoroughly,) swabbing the mouth with a 
clean linen rag on the end of a stick, are modes of increas- 
ing the comfort of the sick. Always throw a shawl over 
a sick person when raised up. 

Be careful to understand a physician's directions, and to 
obey them implicitly. If it be supposed that any other 



342 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

person knows better about the case than the physician, 
dismiss the physician, and employ that person in his stead. 

It is always best to consult the physician as to where 
medicines shall be purchased, and to show the articles to 
him before using them, as great impositions are practiced 
in selling old, useless, and adulterated drugs. Always put 
labels on vials of medicine, and keep them out of the 
reach of children. 

Be careful to label all powders, and particularly all 
white powders, as many poisonous medicines in this form 
are easily mistaken for others which are harmless. 

In nursing the sick, always speak gently and cheering- 
ly ; and, while you express sympathy for their pain and 
trials, stimulate them to bear all with fortitude, and with 
resignation to the Heavenly Father who " doth not will- 
ingly afflict," and " who causeth all things to work togeth- 
er for good to them that love him." Offer to read the 
Bible or other devotional books, whenever it is suitable, 
and will not be deemed obtrusive. 

Miss Ann Preston, one of the most refined as well as 
talented and learned female physicians, in a published ar- 
ticle, gives valuable instruction as to the training of nurses. 
She claims that every woman should be trained for this 
office, and that some who have special traits that fit them 
for it should make it their daily professional business. She 
remarks that the indispensable qualities in a good nurse 
are common sense, conscientiousness, and sympathetic 
benevolence : and thus continues : 

" God himself made and commissioned one set of 
nurses ; and in doing this and adapting them to utter 
helplessness and weakness, what did he do ? He made? 
them to love the dependence and to see something to ad- 
mire in the very perversities of their charge. He made 
them to humor the caprices and regard both reasonable 
and unreasonable complainings. He made them to bend 
tenderly over the disturbed and irritated, and fold them to 



CARE OF THE SICK. 343 

quiet assurance in arms made soft with love ; in a word, he 
made mothers ! And, other things being equal, whoever 
has most maternal tenderness and warm sympathy with the 
sufferer is the best nurse." And it is those most nearly 
endowed by nature with these traits who should be select- 
ed to be trained for - the sacred office of nurse to the sick, 
while, in all the moral training of womanhood, this ideal 
should be the aim. 

Again, Miss Preston wisely suggests that " persons may 
be conscientious and benevolent and possess good judg- 
ment in many respects, and yet be miserable nurses of the 
sick for want of training and right knowledge. 

" Knowledge, the assurance that one knows what to do, 
always gives presence of mind and presence of mind is 
important not only in a sick-room but in every home. 
Who has not known consternation in a family when some 
one has fainted, or been burned, or cut, while none were 
present who knew how to stop the flowing blood, or revive 
the fainting, or apply the saving application to the burn ? 
Arid yet knowledge and efficiency in such cases would save 
many a life, and be a most fitting and desirable accom- 
plishment in every woman." 

" We are slow to learn the mighty influence of common 
agencies, and the greatness of little things, in their bear- 
ing upon life and health. The woman who believes it 
takes no strength to bear a little noise or some disagreea- 
b .e announcements, and loses patience with the weak, ner- 
vous invalid who is agonized with creaking doors or shoes, 
or loud, shrill voices, or rustling papers, or sharp, fidgety 
motions, or the whispering so common in sick-rooins and 
often so acutely distressing to the sufferer, will soon cor- 
rect such misapprehensions by herself experiencing a ner- 
vous fever." 

Here the writer would put in a plea for the increasing 
multitudes of nervous sufferers not confined to a sick- 
room, and yet exposed to all the varied sources of pain in- 



344 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

cident to an exhausted nervous system, which often cause 
more intolerable and also more wearing pain than other 
kinds of suffering. 

" An exceeding acuteness of the senses is the result of 
many forms of nervous disease. A heavy breath, an 
ur washed hand, a noise that would not have been noticed 
ir. health, a crooked table-cover or bed-spread may disturb 
or oppress ; and more than one invalid has spoken in my 
hearing of the sickening effect produced by the nurse 
tasting her food, or blowing in her drinks to make them 
cool. One woman, and a sensible woman too, told me her 
nurse had turned a large cushion upon her bureau with the 
back part in front. She determined not to be disturbed 
nor to speak of such a trifle, but after struggling three hours 
in vain to banish the annoyance, she was forced to ask to 
have the cushion placed right." 

In this place should be mentioned the suffering caused 
to persons of reduced nervous power not only by the smoke 
of tobacco, but by the fetid effluvium of it from the breath 
and clothing of persons who smoke. Many such are sick- 
ened in society and in car-traveling, and to a degree little 
imagined by those who gain a dangerous pleasure at the 
frequent expense of the feeble and suffering. 

Miss Preston again remarks, " It is often exceedingly 
important to the very weak, who can take but very little 
nutriment, to have that little whenever they want it. I 
have known invalids sustain great injury and suffering ; 
when exhausted for want of food, they have had to wait 
and wait, feeling as if every minute was an hour, while 
some well-fed nurse delayed its coming. Said a lady, ' It 
makes me hungry now to think of the meals she brought 
me upon that little waiter when I was sick, such brown 
thin toast, such good broiled beef, such fragrant tea, and 
every thing looking so exquisitely nice ! If at any time I 
did not think of any thing I wanted, nor ask for food, she 
did not annoy me with questions, but brought some little 



CARE OF THE SICK. 345 

delicacy at the proper time, and when it came, I could 
take it.' 

" If there is one purpose of a personal kind for which it 
is especially desirable to lay up means, it is for being well 
nursed in sickness ; yet in the present state of society, this 
is absolutely impossible, even to the wealthy, because of the 
scarcity of competent nurses. Families worn down with 
the long and extreme illness of a member require relief 
from one whose feelings will be less taxed, and who can 
better endure the labor. 

" But alas ! how often is it impossible, for love or money, 
to obtain one capable of taking the burden from the ex- 
hausted sister or mother or daughter, and how often in 
consequence they have died prematurely or struggled 
through weary years with a broken constitution. Appeal 
to those who have made the trial, and you will find that 
very seldom have they been able to have those who by na- 
ture or by training were competent for their duties. Ig- 
norant, unscrupulous, inattentive how often they disturb 
and injure the patient ! A physician told me that one of his 
patients had died because the nurse, contrary to orders, had 
at a critical period washed her with cold water. I have 
known one who, by stealth, quieted a fretful child with 
laudanum, and of others who exhausted the sick by inces- 
sant talking. One lady said that when, to escape this dis- 
tressing garrulity, she closed her eyes, the nurse exclaimed 
aloud, ' Why, she is going to sleep while I am talking to 
her.' 

" A few only of the sensible, quiet, and loving women, 
whose presence everywhere is a blessing, have qualified 
themselves and followed nursing as a business. Heaven 
bless that few ! What a sense of relief have I seen pervade 
a family when such a one has been procured ; and what a 
treasure seemed found ! 

" There is very commonly an extreme susceptibility in the 
sick to the moral atmosphere about them. They feel the 



346 THE AMERICAN WOMAN" 1 S HOME. 

I 

healthful influence of the presence of a true-hearted at- 
tendant and repose in it, though they may not be able to 
define the cause; while dissimulation, falsehood, reckless- 
ness, coarseness, jar terribly and injuriously on their height- 
ened sensibilities. ' Are the Sisters of Charity really bet- 
ter nurses than most other women?' I asked an intelligent 
lady who had seen much of our military hospitals. c Yes, 
they are,' was her reply. * Why should it be so ?' ' I think 
it is because with them it is a work of self-abnegation, and 
of duty to God, and they are so quiet and self -forgetful in 
its exercise that they do it better, while many other women 
show such self-consciousness and are so fussy !" 

Is there any reason why every Protestant woman should 
not be trained -for this self-denying office as a duty owed to 
God? 

"We can not better close' this chapter than by one more 
quotation from the same intelligent and attractive writer : 
"The good nurse is an artist. O the pillowy, soothing 
softness of her touch, the neatness of her simple, unrustling 
dress, the music of her assured yet gentle voice and tread, 
the sense of security and rest inspired by her kind and hope- 
ful face, the promptness and attention to every want, the 
repose that like an atmosphere encircles her, the evidence 
of heavenly goodness, and love that she diffuses !" Is not 
such an art as this worth much to attain ? 

In training children to the Christian life, one very im- 
por ant opportunity occurs whenever sickness appears in 
the family or neighborhood. The repression of disturbing 
noisQS, the speaking -in tones of gentleness and sympathy, 
the small offices of service or nursing in which children 
can aid, should be inculcated as ministering to the Lord 
and Elder Brother of man, who has said, " Inasmuch as ye 
have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, 
ye have done it to me." 

One of the blessed opportunities for such ministries is 
given to children in the cultivation of flowers. The en- 



CARE OF THE SICK. 34} 

trance into a sick-room of a smiling, healthful child, bring- 
ing an offering of flowers raised by its own labor, is like an 
angel of comfort and love, " and alike it blesseth him who 
gives and him who takes." 

A time is coming when the visitation of the sick, as a 
part of the Christian life, will hold a higher consideration 
than is now generally accorded, especially in the cases of 
uninteresting sufferers who have nothing to attract kind at- 
tentions, except that they are suffering children of our 
Father in heaven, and " one of the least" of the brethren 
of Jesus Christ. 



XXYII. 

ACCIDENTS AND ANTIDOTES. 

CHILDREN should be taught the following modes of sa- 
ving life, health and limbs in cases of sudden emergency, be- 
fore a medical adviser can be summoned. 

In case of a common cut, bind th'e lips of the wo and 
together with a rag, and put on nothing else. If it is large, 
lay narrow strips of sticking-plaster obliquely across the 
wound. In some cases it is needful to draw a needle and 
thread through the lips of the wound, and tie the two sides 
together. 

If an artery be cut, it must be tied as quickly as possible, 
or the person will soon bleed to death. The blood from an 
artery is a brighter red than that from the veins, and spirts 
out in jets at each beat of the heart. Take hold of the end 
of the artery and tie it or hold it tight till a surgeon comes. 
In this case, and in all cases of bad wounds that bleed 
much, tie a tight bandage near and above the wound, insert- 
ing a stick into the bandage and twisting as tight as can 
be borne, to stop the immediate effusion of blood. 

Bathe bad bruises in hot water. Arnica water hastens a 
cure, but is injurious and weakening to the parts when used 
too long and too freely. 

A sprain is relieved from the first pains by hot fomenta- 
tions, or the application of very hot bandages, but entire 
rest is the chief permanent remedy. The more the limb 
is used, especially at first, the longer the time required for 
the small broken fibres to knit together. Tke sprained 
leg should be kept in a horizontal position. When a leg is 



ACCIDENTS AND ANTIDOTES. 349 

broken, tie it to the other leg, to keep it still till a surgeon 
comes. Tie a broken arm to a piece of thin wood, to keep 
it still till set. 

In the case of bad burns that take off the skin, creosote 
water is the best remedy. If this is not at hand, wood-soot 
(not coal) pounded, sifted, and mixed with lard is nearly as 
good, as such soot contains creosote. When a dressing is 
put on, do not remove it till a skin is formed under it. If 
nothing else is at hand for a bad burn, sprinkle flour over 
the place where the skin is off and then let it remain, pro- 
tected by a bandage. The chief aim is to keep the part 
without skin from the air. 

In case of drowning, the aim should be to clear the 
throat, mouth and nostrils, and then produce the natural 
action of the lungs in breathing as soon as possible, at the 
same time removing wet clothes and applying warmth and 
friction to the skin, especially the hands and feet, to start 
the circulation. The best mode of cleansing the throat and 
mouth of choking water is to lay the person on the face, and 
raise the head a little, clearing the mouth and nostrils with 
the finger, and then apply hartshorn or camphor to the 
nose. This is safer and surer than a common mode of lift- 
ing the body by the feet, or rolling on a barrel to empty 
out the water. 

To start the action of the lungs, first lay the person on 
the face and press the back along the spine to expel all air 
from the lungs. Then turn the body nearly, but not quite 
over on to the back, thus opening the chest so that the air 
will rush in if the mouth is kept open. Then turn the body 
to the face again and expel the air, and then again nearly 
over on to the back ; and so continue for a long time. 
Friction, dry and warm clothing, and warm applications 
should be used in connection with this process. This is a 
much better mode than using bellows, which some- 
times will close the opening to the windpipe. The above 
is the mode recommended by Dr. Marshall Hall, and is ap- 
proved by the best medical authorities. 



350 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Certain articles are often kept in the house for cooking 
or medical purposes, and sometimes by mistake are taken 
in quantities that are poisonous. 

Soda, saleratus, potash, or any other alkali can be ren- 
dered harmless in the stomach by vinegar, tomato-juice, or 
any other acid. If sulphuric or oxalic acid are taken, 
pounded chalk in water is the best antidote. If those 
are not at hand, strong soapsuds have been found effect- 
ive. Large quantities of tepid water should be drank after 
these antidotes are taken, so as to prodifbe vomiting. 

Lime or baryta and its compounds demand a solution 
of glauber salts or of sulphuric acid. 

Iodine or Iodide of Potassium demands large draughts of 
wheat flour or starch in water, and then vinegar and water. 
The stomach should then be emptied by vomiting with as 
much tepid water as the stomach can hold. 

Prussic acid, a violent poison, is sometimes taken by 
children in eating the pits of stone fruits or bitter almonds 
which contain it. The antidote is to empty the stomach 
by an emetic, and give water of ammonia or chloric water. 
Affusions of cold water all over the body, followed by 
warm hand friction, is often a remedy alone, but the above 
should be added if at command. Antimony and its com- 
pounds demand drinks of oak bark, or gall nuts, or very 
strong green tea. 

Arsenic demands oil or melted fat, with magnesia or 
lime water in large quantities, till vomiting occurs. 

Corrosive Sublimate, (often used to kill vermin,) and any 
other form of mercury, requires milk or whites of eggs 
in large quantities. The whites of twelve eggs in two 
quarts of water, given in the largest possible draughts 
every three minutes till free vomiting occurs, is a good 
remedy. Flour and water will answer, though not so sure- 
ly as the above. Warm water will help, if nothing else is 
in reach. The same remedy answers when any form of 
copper, or tin, or zinc poison is taken, and also for creosote. 



ACCIDENTS AND ANTIDOTES. 351 

Lead and its compounds require a dilution of Epsom 
or Glauber salts, or some strong, acid drink, as lemon or 
tomatoes. 

Nitrate of Silver demands salt water drank till vomiting 
occurs. 

Phosphorus (sometimes taken by children from matches) 
needs magnesia and copious drinks of gum Arabic, or gum 
water of any sort. 

Alcohol, in dangerous quantities, demands vomiting 
with warm water. 

When one is violently sick from excessive use of tobac- 
co, vomiting is a relief, if it arise spontaneously. After 
that, or in case it does not occur, the juice of a lemon and 
perfect rest, in a horizontal position on the back, will re- 
lieve the nausea and faintness, generally soothing the fool- 
ish and over- wrought patient into a sleep. 

Opium demands a quick emetic. The best is a heaping 
table-spoonful of powdered mustard, in a tumblerful of 
warm water ; or powdered alum in half-ounce doses and 
strong coffee alternately in warm water. Give acid drinks 
after vomiting. If vomiting is not elicited thus, a stom- 
ach pump is demanded. Dash cold water on the head, ap- 
ply friction, and use all means to keep the person awake 
and in motion. 

Strychnia demands also quick emetics. 

The stomach should be emptied always after taking any 
of these antidotes, by a warm water emetic. 

In case of bleeding at the lungs, or stomach, or throat, 
give a tea-spoonful of dry salt, and repeat it often. For 
bleeding at the nose, put ice, or pour cold water on the 
back of the neck, keeping the head elevated. 

If a person be struck with lightning, throw pailfuls of 
cold water on the head and body, and apply mustard poul- 
tices on the stomach, with friction of the whole body and 
inflation of the lungs, as in the case of drowning. The 



352 

same mode is to be used when persons are stupified by 
fumes of coal, or bad air. 

In thunderstorms, shut the doors and windows. The 
safest part of a room is its centre ; and where there is a 
feather-bed in the apartment, that will be found the most 
secure resting-place. 

A lightning-rod if it be well pointed, and run deep into 
the earth, is a certain protection to a circle around it, 
whose diameter equals the height of the rod above the 
highest chimney. But it protects no farther than this ex- 
tent. 

In case of fire, wrap about you a blanket, a shawl, a 
piece of carpet, or any other woolen cloth, to serve as pro- 
tection. Never read in bed, lest you fall asleep, and the 
bed be set on fire. If your clothes get on fire, never run, 
but lie down, and roll about till you can reach a bed or 
carpet to wrap yourself in, and thus put out the fire. Keep 
young children in woolen dresses, to save them from the 
risk of fire. 



XXVIIL 



EVERT young girl should be taught to do the following 
kinds of stitch with propriety : Over-stitch, hemming, 
running, felling, stitching, back-stitch and run, buttonhole- 
stitch, chain-stitch, whipping, darning, gathering, and 
cross-stitch. 

In doing over-stitch, the edges should always be first 
fitted, either with pins or basting, to prevent puckering. 
In turning wide hems, a paper measure should be used, to 
make them even. Tucks, also, should be regulated by a 
paper measure. A fell should be turned, before the edges 
are put together, and the seam should be over-sewed be- 
fore felling. All biased or goring seams should be felled. 
For stitching, draw a thread, and take up two or three 
threads at a stitch. 

In cutting buttonholes, it is best to have a pair of scis- 
sors, made for the purpose, which cut very neatly. For 
broadcloth, a chisel and board are better. The best stitch 
is made by putting in the needle, and then turning the 
thread round it near the eye. This is better than to draw 
the needle through, and then take up a loop. A stay 
thread should first be put across each side of the button- 
hole, and also a bar at each end before working it. In 
working the buttonhole, keep the stay thread as far from 
the edge as possible. A small bar should be worked at 
each end. 

Whipping is done better by sewing over, and not under. 
The roll should be as fine as possible, the stitches short, 



354 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

the thread strong, and in sewing, every gather should be 
taken up. 

The rule for gathering in shirts is, to draw a thread, 
and then take up two threads and skip four. In darning, 
after the perpendicular threads are run, the crossing 
threads should interlace exactly, taking one thread and 
leaving one, like woven threads. It is better to run a fine 
thread around a hole and draw it together, and then darn 
across it. 

The neatest sewers always fit and baste their work be- 
fore sewing ; and they sey they always save time in the 
end by so doing, as they never have to pick out work on 
account of mistakes. ' 

It is wise to sew closely and tightly all new garments 
which will never be altered in shape ; but some are 
more nice than wise, in sewing frocks and old garments in 
the same style. However, this is the least common ex- 
treme. It is much more frequently the case that articles 
which ought to be strongly and neatly made are sewed so 
that a nice sewer would rather pick out the threads and 
sew over again than to be annoyed with the sight of grin- 
ning stitches, and vexed with constant rips. 

If the thread kinks in sewing, break it off and begin at 
the other end. In using spool-cotton, thread the needle 
with the end which comes off first, and not the end vhere 
you break it off. This often prevents kinks. 

Work-baskets. It is very important to neatness, comfort, 
and success in sewing, that a lady's work-basket should 
be properly fitted up. The following articles are needful 
to the mistress of a family : a large basket to hold work ; 
having in it fastened a smaller basket or box, containing a 
needle-book in which are needles of every size, both blunts 
and sharps, with a larger number of those sizes most used ; 
also small and large darning-needles, for woolen, cotton, 
and silk ; two tape needles, large and small ; nice scissors 
for fine work, button-hole scissors ; an emery bag ; two balls 



SEWING, CUTTING, AND MENDING. 355 

of white and yellow wax ; and two thimbles, in case one 
should be mislaid. When a person is troubled with damp 
lingers, a lump of soft chalk in a paper is useful to rub on 
the ends of the fingers. 

Besides this box, keep in the basket common scissors ; 
small shears ; a bag containing tapes of all colors and sizes, 
done up in rolls ; bags, one containing spools of white and an- 
other of colored cotton thread, and another for silks wound 
on spools or papers ; a box or bag for nice buttons, and 
another for more common ones ; a bag containing silk braid, 
welting cords, and galloon binding. Small rolls of pieces 
of white and brown linen and cotton are also often need- 
ed. A brick pin-cushion is a great convenience in sewing, 
and better than screw cushions. It is made by covering 
half a brick with cloth, putting a cushion on the top, and 
covering it tastefully. It is very useful to hold pins and 
needles while sewing, and to fasten long seams when bas- 
ting and sewing. 

To make a frock. The best way for a novice is to get a 
dress fitted (not sewed) at the best mantua-maker's. Then 
take out a sleeve, rip it to pieces, and cut out a paper pattern. 
Then take out half of the waist, (it must have a seam in 
front,) and cut out a pattern of the back and fore-body, both 
lining and outer part. In cutting the patterns, iron 
the pieces smooth, let the paper be stiff, and with a pin 
prick holes in the paper, to show the gore in front and the 
depths of the seams. With a pen and ink, draw lines 
from each pin-hole to preserve this mark. Then baste the 
parts together again, in doing which the unbasted half will 
serve as a pattern. When this is done, a lady of common 
ingenuity can cut and fit a dress by these patterns. If the 
waist of a dress be too tight, the seam under the arm must 
be let out ; and in cutting a dress an allowance should be 
made for letting it out if needful, at this seam. 

The linings for the waists of dresses should be stiffened 
with cotton or linen. In cutting bias-pieces for trimming, 



356 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

they will not set well unless they are exact. In cutting them, 
use a long rule, and a lead pencil or piece of chalk. Welt- 
ing-cords should be covered with bias-pieces ; and it saves 
time, in many cases, to baste on the welting-cord at the 
same time that you cover it. The best way to put on 
hooks and eyes is to sew them on double broad tape, and 
sew this on the frock lining. They can be moved easily,- 
and do not show where they are sewed on. 

In putting on linings of skirts at the bottom, be careful 
to have it a very little fuller than the dress, or it will shrink 
and look badly. All thin silks look much better with 
lining, and last much longer, as do aprons also. In putting 
a lining to a dress, baste it on each separate breadth, and 
sew it at the seams, and it looks much better than to have 
it fastened only at the bottom. Make notches in selvedge, 
to prevent it from drawing up the breadth. ^ Dresses 
which are to be washed should not be lined. 

Figured silks do not generally wear well if the figure be 
large and satin-like. Black and plain-colored silks can be 
tested by procuring samples, and making creases in them ; 
fold the creases in a bunch, and rub them against a rough 
surface of moreen or carpeting. Those which are poor 
will soon wear off at the creases. 

Plaids look becoming for tall women, as they shorten 
the appearance of the figure. Stripes look becoming on a 
large person, as they reduce the apparent size. Pale per- 
sons should not wear blue or green, and brunettes should 
not wear light delicate colors, except shades of buff, fawn, 
or straw color. Pearl white is not good for any complex- 
ion. Dead white and black look becoming on almost all 
persons. It is best to try colors by candle-light for evening 
dresses, as some colors which look very handsome in the 
daylight are very homely when seen by candle-light. 
Never be in haste to be first in a fashion, and never go to 
the extremes. 

Linen and Cotton. In buying linen, seek for that which 



SEWING, CUTTING^ AND MENDING. 357 

has a round close thread and is perfectly white ; for if it 
be not white at first, it will never afterward become so. 
Much that is called linen at the shops is half cotton, and 
does not wear so well as cotton alone. Cheap linens are 
usually of this kind. It is difficult to discover which are 
all linen ; but the best way is to find a lot presumed to be 
good, take a sample, wash it, and ravel it. If this be good, 
the rest of the same lot will probably be so. If you can 
not do this, draw a thread each way, and if both appear 
equally strong it is probably all linen. Linen and cotton 
must be put in clean water, and boiled, to get out the 
starch, and then ironed. 

A " long piece " of linen, a yard wide, will, with care and 
calculation, make eight shirts. In cutting it, take a shirt 
of the right size as a guide in fitting and basting. Bosom- 
pieces and false collars must be cut and fitted by patterns 
which suit the person for whom the articles are designed. 
Gentlemen's night-shirts are made like other shirts, except 
that they are longer, and do not have bosoms and cuffs 
for starching. 

In cutting chemises, if the cotton or linen is a yard 
wide, cut off small half-gores at the top of the breadths 
and set them on the bottom. Use a long rule and 
a pencil in cutting gores. In cutting cotton which is 
quite wide, a seam can be saved by cutting out two at once, 
in this manner : put off three breadths, and with a long 
rule and a pencil, mark and cut off the gores ; thus from 
one breadth cut off two gores the whole length, each gore 
one fourth of the breadth at the bottom, and tapering off 
to a point at the top. The other two breadths are to 
have a gore cut off from each, which is one fourth wide at 
the top and two fourths at bottom. Arrange these pieces 
right and they will make two chemises, one having four 
seams and the other three. This is a much easier way of 
cutting than sewing the three breadths together in bag 
fashion, as is often done. The biased or goring seams 



358 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

must always be felled. The sleeves and neck can be cut 
according to the taste of the wearer, by another chemise 
for a pattern. There should be a lining around the arm- 
holes and stays at all corners. Six yards of yard width 
will make two chemises. 

Long night-gowns are best cut a little goring. It re- 
quires five yards for a long night-gown, and two and a 
half for a short one. Linen night caps wear longer than 
cotton ones, and do not like them turn yellow. They 
should be ruffled with linen, as cotton borders will not 
last so long as the cap. A double-quilted wrapper is a 
great comfort, in case of sickness. It may be made of 
two old dresses. It should not be cut full, but rather like 
a gentleman's study-gown, having no gathers or plaits, but 
large enough to slip off and on with ease. A double-gown 
of calico is also very useful. Most articles of dress, for 
grown persons or children, require patterns. 

Old silk dresses quilted for skirts are very serviceable. 
White flannel is soiled so easily and shrinks so much in wash- 
ing that it is a good plan to color it. Cotton flannel is also 
good for common skirts. In making up flannel, back-stitch 
and run the seams and then cross-stitch them open. Nice 
flannel for infants can be ornamented with very little 
expense of time, by turning up the hem on the right side, 
and making a little vine at the edge with saddler's silk. 
The stitch of the vine is a modification of button-hole stitch. 

Mending. Silk dresses will last much longer, by ripping 
out the sleeves when thin, and changing the arms and also 
the breadths of the. skirt. Tumbled black silk, which is 
old and rusty, should be dipped in water, then be drained 
for a few minutes, without squeezing or pressing, and then 
ironed. Coffee or cold tea is better than water. Sheets 
when worn thin in the middle should be ripped, and the 
other edges sewed together. Window-curtains last much 
longer if lined, as the sun fades and rots them. 

Broadcloth should be cut with reference to the way the 



SEWING) CUTTING^ AND MENDING. 359 

nap runs. "WTien pantaloons are thin, it is best to newly 
seat' them, cutting the piece inserted in a curve, as corners 
are difficult to fit. Hose can be cut down when the feet 
are worn. Take an old stocking and cut it up for a pat- 
tern. Make the heel short. In sewing, turn each edge 
and run it down, and then sew over the edges. This is 
better than to stitch and then cross-stitch. " Kun " thin 
places in stockings, and it will save darning a hole. If 
shoes are worn through on the sides, in the upper-leather, 
slip pieces of broadcloth under, and sew them around the 
holes. 

Bedding. The best beds are thick hair mattresses, 
which for persons in health are good for winter as well as 
summer use. Mattresses may also be made of husks, dried 
and drawn into shreds ; also of alternate layers of cotton 
and moss. The most profitable sheeting is the Russian, 
which will last three times as long as any other. It is 
never perfectly white. Unbleached cotton is good for win- 
ter. It is poor economy to make narrow and short sheets, 
as children and domestics will always slip them off, and 
soil the bed-tick and bolster. They should be three yards 
long, and two and a half wide, so that they can be tucked 
in all around. All bed-linen should be marked and num- 
bered, so that a bed can always be made properly, and all 
missing articles be known. 



XXIX. 

FIRES AND LIGHTS. 

A SHALLOW fireplace saves wood and gives out more heat 
than a deeper one. A false back of brick may be put up 
in a deep fireplace. Hooks for holding up the shovel and 
tongs, a hearth-brush and bellows, and brass knobs to hang 
them on, should be furnished to every fireplace. An iron 
bar across the andirons aids in keeping the fire safe and in 
good order. Steel furniture is neater, .handsomer, and 
more ^easily kept in order than that made of brass. 

Use green wood for logs, and mix green and dry wood 
for the fire ; and then the wood-pile will last much longer. 
Walnut, maple, hickory, and oak wood are best ; chestnut 
or hemlock is bad, because it snaps. Do not buy a load in 
which there are many crooked sticks. Learn how to mea- 
sure and calculate the solid contents of a load, so as not to 
be cheated. A cord of wood should be equivalent to a pile 
eight feet long, four feet wide and four feet high ; that is, 
it contains (8x4x4=128) one hundred and twenty-eight 
cubic or solid feet. A city " load " is usually one third of 
a cord. Have all your wood split and piled under 
cover for winter. Have the green wood logs in one pile, 
dry wood in another, oven wood in another, kindlings and 
chips in another, and a supply of charcoal to use for broil- 
ing and ironing in another place. Have a brick bin for 
ashes, and never allow them to be put in wood. When 
quitting fires at night, never leave a burning stick across 
the andirons, nor on its end, without quenching it. See 
that no fire adheres to the broom or brush, remove all arti- 



FIRES AND LIGHTS. 361 

cles from the fire, and have two pails filled with water in 
the kitchen where they will not freeze. 



STOYES AND GRATES. 



Rooms heated by stoves should always have- some open- 
ing for the admission of fresh air, or they will be injurious 
to health. The dryness of the air, which they occasion, 
should be remedied by placing a vessel filled with water 
on the stove, otherwise, the lungs or eyes will be injured. 
A large number of plants in a room prevents this dryness 
of the air. Where stove-pipes pass through fire-boards, the 
hole in the wood should be much larger than the pipe, so 
that there may be no danger of the wood taking fire. The 
unsightly opening thus occasioned should be covered with 
tin. When pipes are carried through floors or partitions, 
they should always pass either through earthen crocks, 
or what are known as tin stove-pipe thimbles, which may 
be found in any stove store or tinsmith's. Lengthening a 
pipe will increase its draught. 

For those who use anthracite coal, that which is broken 
or screened is best for grates, and the nut-coal for small 
stoves. Three tons are sufficient in the Middle States, and 
four tons in the Northern, to keep one fire through the 
winter. That which is bright, hard, and clean is best ; 
and that which is soft, porous, and covered with damp dust 
is poor. It will be well to provide two barrels of charcoal 
for kindling to every ton of anthracite coal. Grates for 
bituminous coal should, have a flue nearly as deep as the 
grate ; and the bars should be round and not close togeth- 
er. The better draught there is, the less coal-dust is made. 
Every grate should be furnished with a poker, shovel, 
tongs, blower, coal-scuttle, and holder for the blower. The 
latter may be made of woolen, covered with old silk, and 
hung near the fire. 

Coal-stoves should be carefully put up, as cracks in the 
pipe, especially in sleeping rooms, are dangerous. 



362 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



LIGHTS. 



Professor Phin, of the Manufacturer and Builder, has 
kindly given us some late information on this important 
topic, which will be found valuable. 

In choosing the source of our light, the great points to be 
considered are, first, the influence on the eyes, and second- 
ly, economy. It is poor economy to use a bad light. 
Modern houses in cities, and even in large villages, are 
furnished with gas ; where gas is not used, sperm-oil, kero- 
sene or coal-oil, and candles are employed. Gas is the 
cheapest, (or ought to be ;) and if properly used, is as good 
as any. Good sperm-oil burned in an Argand lamp that is, 
a lamp with a circular wick, like the astral lamp and 
others is perhaps the best ; but it is expensive and attend- 
ed with many inconveniences. Good kerosene oil gives a 
light which leaves little to be desired. Candles are used 
only on rare occasions, though many families prefer to 
manufacture into candles the waste grease that accumu- 
lates in the household. The economy of any source of 
light will depend so much upon local circumstances that 
no absolute directions can be given. 

The effect produced by light on the eyes depends upon 
the following points : First, Steadiness. Nothing is 
more injurious to the eyes than a flickering, unsteady 
flame. Hence, all flames used for light-giving purposes 
ought to be surrounded with glass chimneys or small 
shades. No naked flame can ever be steady. Second, 
Color. This depends greatly upon the temperature of the 
flame. A hot flame gives a bright, white light ; a flame 
which has not a high temperature gives a dull, yellow 
light, which is very injurious to the eyes. In the naked 
gas-jet a large portion of the flame burns at a low tempe- 
rature, and the same is the case with the flame of the kero- 
sene lamp when the height of the chimney is not properly 
proportioned to the amount of oil consumed ; a high wick 
needs a high chimney. In the case of a well-trimmed Ar 



FUf,ES AND LIGHTS. 363 

gand oil-lamp, or an Argand burner for gas, the flame is 
in general most intensely hot, and the light is of a clear 
white character. 

The third point which demands attention is the amoimt 
of heat transmitted from the flame to the eyes. It often 
happens that people, in order to economize light, bring the 
lamp quite close to the face. This is a very bad habit. 
The heat is more injurious than the light. Better burn a 
larger flame, and keep it at a greater distance. 

It is also well that various sized lamps should be pro- 
vided to serve the varying necessities of the household in 
regard to quantity of light. One of the very best forms 
of lamp is that known as the " student's reading-lamp," 
which is, in the burner, an Argand. Provide small lamps 
with handles for carrying about, and broad-bottomed lamps 
for the kitchen, as these are not easily upset. Hand and 
kitchen lamps are best made of metal, unless they are to 
be used by very careful persons. 

Sperm-oil, lard, tallow, etc., have been superseded to 
such an extent by kerosene that it is scarcely worth while 
to give any special directions in regard to them. In the 
choice of kerosene, attention should be paid to two points : 
its safety and its light-giving qualities. Kerosene is not a 
simple fluid, like water ; but is a mixture of several 
liquids, all of which boil at different temperatures. Good 
kerosene oil should be purified from all that portion which 
boils or evaporates at a low temperature ; for it is the 
production of this vapor, and its mixture with atmospheric 
air, that gives rise to those terrible explosions which some- 
times occur when a light is brought near a can of poor oil. 
To test the oil in* this respect, pour a little into an iron 
spoon, and heat it over a lamp until it is moderately warm 
to the touch. If the oil produces vapor which can be set 
on fire, by means of a flame held a short distance above the 
surface of the liquid, it is bad. Good oil poured into a 
teacup or on the floor does not easily take fire when a 



364 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

light is brought in contact with it. Poor oil will instantly 
ignite under the same circumstances, and hence, the 
breaking of a lamp filled with poor oil is always attended 
by great peril of a conflagration. Not only the safety but 
also the light-giving qualities of kerosene are greatly en- 
hanced by the removal of these volatile and dangerous oils. 
Hence, while good kerosene should be clear in color and 
free from all matters which can gum up the wick and thus 
interfere with free circulation and combustion, it should 
also be perfectly safe. It ought to be kept in a cool, dark 
place, and carefully excluded from the air. 

The care of lamps requires so much attention and discre- 
tion, that many ladies choose to do this work themselves, 
rather than trust it with domestics. To do it properly, 
provide the following things : an old waiter to hold all the 
articles used ; a lamp-filler, with a spout, small at the end, 
and turned up to prevent oil from dripping ; proper wicks, 
and a basket or box to hold them ; a lamp-trimmer made 
for the purpose, or a pair of sharp scissors ; a small soap- 
cup and soap ; some washing soda in a broad-mouthed 
bottle; and several soft cloths to wash the articles and 
towels to wipe them. If every thing, after being used, is 
cleansed from oil and then kept neatly, it will not be so 
unpleasant a task as it usually is, to take care of lamps. 

The inside of lamps and oil-cans should be cleansed with* 
soda dissolved in water. Be careful to drain them well, 
and not to let any gilding or bronze be injured by the 
soda coming in contact with it. Put one table-spoonful 
of soda to one quart of water. Take the lamp to pieces 
and clean it as often as necessary. Wipe the chimney at 
least once a day, and wash it whenever mere wiping fails to 
cleanse it. Some persons, owing to the dirty state of their 
chimneys, lose half the light which is produced. Keep dry 
fingers in trimming lamps. Eenew the wicks before they 
get too short. They should never be allowed to burn 
shorter than an inch and a half. 



FIRES AND LIGHTS. 365 

In regard to shades, which are always well to use, on 
lamps or gas, those made of glass or porcelain are now so 
cheap that we can recommend them as the best without 
any reservation, Plain shades, making the light soft and 
even, do not injure the eyes. Lamps should be lighted 
with a strip of folded or rolled paper, of which a quantity 
should be kept on the mantelpiece. Weak eyes should 
always be especially shaded from the lights. Small 
screens, made for the purpose, should be kept at hand. A 
person with weak eyes can use them safely much longer 
when they are protected from the glare of the light. Fill 
the entry-lamp every day, and cleanse and fill night-lan- 
terns twice a week, if used often. A good night-lamp is 
made with a small one- wicked lamp and a roll of tin to 
set over it. Have some holes made in the bottom of this 
cover, and it can then be used to heat articles. Yery 
cheap floating tapers can be bought to burn in a teacup 
of oil through the night. 

TO MAKE CANDLES. 

The nicest candles are those run in moulds. For this 
purpose, melt together one quarter of a pound of white 
wax, one quarter of an ounce of camphor, two ounces of 
alum, and ten ounces of suet or mutton-tallow. Soak the 
wicks in lime-water and saltpetre, and when dry, fix them 
in the moulds and pour in the melted tallow. Let them 
remain one night to cool ; then warm them a little to loos- 
en them, draw them out, and when they are hard, put them 
in a box in a dry and cool place. 

To make dipped candles, cut the wicks of the right 
length, double them over rods, and twist them. They 
should first be dipped in lime-water or vinegar, and dried. 
Melt the tallow in a large kettle, filling it to the top with 
hot water, when the tallow is melted. Put in wax and 
powdered alum, to harden them. Keep the tallow hot 



i<66 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

over a portable furnace, and fill the kettle with hot watei 
as fast as the tallow is used up. Lay two long strips of 
narrow board on which to hang the rods ; and set flat pans 
under, on the floor, to catch the grease. "Lake several rods 
at once, and wet the wicks in the tallow ; straighten and 
smooth them when cool. Then dip them as fast as they 
cool, until they become ,of the proper size. Plunge them 
obliquely and not perpendicularly ; and when the bottoms 
are too large, hold them in the hot grease till a part melts 
oft Let them remain one night to cool ; then cut off the 
bottoms, and keep them in a dry, cool place. Cheap lights 
are made, by dipping rushes in tallow ; the rushes being 
first stripped of nearly the whole of the hard outer cover- 
ing and the pith alone being retained with just enough of 
the tough bark to keep it stiff. 



JOJL 

THE CARE OF KOOM8. 

IT would be impossible in a work dealing, as this does, 
with general principles of house-keeping, to elaborate in 
full the" multitudinous details which arise for attention and 
intelligent care. These will be more largely treated of in 
the book soon to be published for the present writer, (the 
senior authoress of this volume.) Yet, in the different 
departments of family labor, there are certain leading 
matters 'concerning which a few hints may be found useful 
in aiding the reader to carry into operation the instruc- 
tions and ideas of the earlier chapters of this book, and in 
promoting the general comfort and convenience of fami- 
lies. 

And first, asking the reader to bear in mind that these 
suggestions are chiefly applicable to country homes, not 
within easy reach of all the conveniences which go under 
the name of " modern improvements," we will say a few 
words on the care of Parlors. 

In hanging pictures, put them so that the lower part 
shall be opposite the eye. Cleanse the glass of pictures 
with whiting, as water endangers the pictures. Gilt 
frames can be much better preserved by putting on a coat 
of copal varnish, which with proper brushes, can be bought 
of carriage or cabinet-makers. When dry, it can be 
washed with fair water. Wash the brush in spirits of tur- 
pentine. 

Curtains, ottomans, and sofas covered with worsted, can be 
cleansed with wheat bran, rubbed on with flannel. Shades 



o68 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

of linen or cotton, on rollers and pulleys, are always useful 
to shut out the sun from curtains and carpets. Paper cur- 
tains, pasted on old cotton, are good for chambers. Put 
them on rollers, having cords nailed to them, so that when 
the curtain falls, the cord will be wound up. Then, by 
pulling the cord, the curtain Vll be rolled up. 

Varnished furniture should be rubbed only with silk, ex- 
cept occasionally, when a little sweet-oil should be rubbed 
over, and wiped off carefully. For unvarnished furniture, 
use bees-wax, a little softened with sweet-oil ; rub it in with 
a hard brush, and polish with woolen and silk rags. Some 
persons rub in linseed- oil ; others mix bees- wax with a little 
spirits of turpentine and rosin, making it so that it can be 
put on with a sponge, and wiped off with a soft rag. Oth- 
ers keep in a bottle the following mixture : two ounces of 
spirits of turpentine, four table-spoonfuls of sweet-oil, and 
one quart of milk. This is applied with a sponge, and 
wiped off with a linen rag. 

Hearths and jambs, of brick, look best painted over with 
black lead, mixedwith soft-soap. Wash the bricks which 
are nearest the fire wifh Tedding and milk, using a painter's 
brush. A sheet of zinc, covering the whole hearth, is 
cheap, saves work, and looks very well. A tinman can fit 
it properly. 

Stone hearths should be rubbed with a paste of powdered 
stone, (to be procured of the stone-cutters,) and then brushed 
with a stiff brush. Kitchen hearths, of stone, are improved 
by rubbing in lamp-oil. 

Stains can be removed from marble, by oxalic acid and 
water, or oil of vitriol and water, left on a few minutes, 
and then rubbed dry. Gray marble is improved by lin- 
seed-oil. Grease can be taken from marble, by ox-gall and 
potter's clay wet with soapsuds, (a gill of each.) It is bet- 
ter to add, also, a gill of spirits of turpentine. It improves 
the looks of marble, to cover it with this mixture, leaving 
it two days, and then rubbing it off. 



THE CARE OF ROOMS. 369 

Unless a parlor is in constant use, it is best to sweep it 
only once a week, and at other times use a whisk-broom 
and dust-pan. When a parlor with handsome furniture 
is to be swept, cover the sofas, centre table, piano, books, 
and mantelpiece with old cottons kept for the purpose. 
Remove the rugs and shake them, and clean the jambs, 
hearth, and fire-furniture. Then sweep the room, moving 
every article. Dust the furniture with a dust-brush and a 
piece of old silk. A painter's brush should be kept, to re- 
move dust from ledges and crevices. The dust-cloths 
should be often shaken and washed, or else they will soil 
the walls and furniture when they are used. Dust orna- 
ments and fine books with feather brushes, used for no 
other purpose. 

Chambers and Bedrooms are of course a portion of the 
house to be sedulously and scrupulously attended to, if 
either health or comfort are aimed at in the family. And 
first, every mistress of a family should see, not only that 
all sleeping-rooms in her house can be well ventilated at 
night, but that they actually are so. Where there is no 
provision made for the introduction of pure air, in the con- 
struction of the house, and in the bedroom itself no open 
fire-place to allow the easy exit of foul air, a door should 
be left open into an entry or room where fresh air is 
admitted; or else a small opening should be made in a 
window, taking care not to allow a draught of air to cros? 
the bed. The debility of childhood, the lassitude of domes- 
tics, and the ill-health of families, are often caused by ne- 
glecting to provide a supply of pure air. 

It is not deemed necessary to add much to the earlier 
chapters treating of bedroom conveniences ; but one sub- 
ject is of marked importance, as being characteristic of 
good or poor housekeeping that is, the making of beds. 

Few servants will make a bed properly, without much 
attention from the mistress of the family ; and every young 
woman who expects to have a household of her own to 



370 THE AMERICAS WOMAN'S HOME. 

manage should be able to do it well herself, and to instruct 
others in doing it. The following directions should be 
given to those who do this work : 

Open the windows, and lay off the bed-covering on two 
chairs, at the foot of the bed. If it be a feather.-bed, after 
it is well aired, shake the feathers from each corner to the 
middle ; then take up the middle, shake it well, and turn 
the bed over. Then push the feathers in place, making 
the head higher than the foot, and the sides even, and as 
high as the middle part. A mattress, whether used on top 
of a feather- bed or by itself, should in like manner be well 
aired and turned. Then put on the bolster and the under 
sheet, so that the wrong side of the sheet shall go next the 
bed, and the marking always come at the head, tucking in 
all around. Then put on the pillows, evenly, so that the 
open ends shall come to the sides of the bed, and spread 
on the upper sheet so that the wrong side shall be next 
the blankets, and the marked end always at the head. 
This arrangement of sheets is to prevent the part where 
the feet lie from being reversed, so as to come to the face ; 
and also to prevent the parts soiled by the body from coin- 
ing to the bedtick and blankets. Put on the other cover- 
ing, except the outer one, tucking in all around, and then 
turn over the upper sheet at the head, so as to show a part 
of the pillows. When the pillow-cases are clean and 
smooth, they look best outside of the cover, but not other- 
wise. Then draw the hand along the side of the pillows, 
to make an even indentation, and then smooth and shape 
the whole outside. A nice housekeeper always notices the 
manner in which a bed is made ; and in some parts of the 
country, it is rare to see this work properly performed. 

The writer would here urge every mistress of a family, 
who keeps more than one domestic servant, to provide 
them with single beds, that they might not be obliged to 
sleep with all the changing domestics, who come and go 
so often. Where the room is too small for two beds, a nar- 



THE CARE OF ROOMS. 371 

row truckle-bed kept under another during the day will 
answer. Domestics should be furnished with washing 
conveniences in their chambers, and be encouraged to keep 
their persons and rooms neat and in order. 

The care of the Kitchen, Cellar, and Store-room is necessa- 
r'ty the foundation of all proper housekeeping. 

If parents wish their daughters to grow up with good 
domestic habits, they should have, as one means of secur- 
ing this result, a neat and cheerful kitchen. A kitchen 
should always, if possible, be entirely above-ground, and 
well lighted. It should have a large sink, with a drain 
running under-ground, so that all the premises may be 
kept sweet and clean. If flowers and shrubs be cultivated 
around the doors and windows, and the yard near them 
be kept well turfed, it will add very much to their agreeable 
appearance. The walls should often be cleaned and white- 
washed, to promote a neat look and pure air. The floor 
of a kitchen should be painted, or, what is better, covered 
with an oilcloth. To procure a kitchen oilcloth as cheaply 
as possible, buy cheap tow cloth, and fit it to the size and 
shape of the kitchen. Then have it stretched, and nailed 
to the south side of the barn, and, with a brush, cover it 
with a coat of thin rye paste. When this is dry, put on a 
coat of yellow paint, and let it dry for a fortnight. It is 
safest to first try the paint, and see if it dries well, as some 
paint never will dry. Then put on a second coat, and at 
the end of another fortnight, a third coat. Then let it 
hang two months, and it will last, uninjured, for many 
years. The longer the paint is left to dry, the better. If 
varnished, it will last much longer. 

A sink should be scalded out every day, and occasionally 
with hot lye. On nails, over the sink, should be hung 
three good dish-cloths, hemmed, and furnished with loops ; 
one for dishes not greasy, one for greasy dishes, and one 
for washing greasy pots and kettles. These should be put 
in the wash every week. The lady who insists upon this 



372 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

will not be annoyed by having her dishes washed with 
dark, musty and greasy rags, as is too frequently the case. 
Under the sink should be kept a slop-pail ; and, on a 
shelf by it, a soap-dish and two water-pails. A large boiler 
of warm soft water should always be kept over the fire, 
well covered, and a hearth-broom and bellows be hung 
near the fire. A clock is a very important article in the 
kitchen, in order to secure regularity at meals. 



WASHING DISHES. 



No item of domestic labor is so frequently done in a 
negligent manner, by domestics, as this. A full supply of 
conveniences will do much toward the remedy of this evil. 
A swab, made of strips of linen tied to a stick, is useful 
to wash nice dishes, especially small, deep articles. Two 
or three towels, and three dish-cloths should be used. Two 
large tin tubs, painted on the outside, should be provided ; 
one for washing, and one for rinsing ; also, a large old 
waiter, on which to drain the dishes. A soap-disa, with 
hard soap, and a fork, with which to use it, a slop-pail, and 
two pails for water, should also be furnished. The follow- 
ing rules for washing dishes will aid in promoting the de- 
sired care and neatness : 

1. Scrape the dishes, putting away any food which may 
remain on them, and which it may be proper to save for 
future use. Put grease into the grease-pot, and whatever 
else may be on the plates into the slop-pail. Save tea- 
leaves for sweeping. Set all the dishes, when scraped, in 
regular piles, the smallest at the top. 

2. Put the nicest articles in the wash-dish, and wash 
them in hot suds with the swab or nicest dish-cloth. 
Wipe all metal articles as soon as they are washed. Put 
all the rest into the rinsing-dish, which should be filled with 
hot water. When they are taken out, lay them to drain 
on the waiter. Then rinse the dish-cloth, and hang it up 
wipe the articles washed, and put them in their placets. 



THE CARE OF ROOMS. 373 

3. Pour in more hot water, wash the greasy dishes with 
the dish-cloth made for them, rinse them, and set them to 
drain. Wipe them, and set them away/ Wash the knives 
and forks, being careful that the handles are never put in wa- 
ter; wipe them, and then lay them in a knife-dish, to be 
Bconred. 

4. Take a fresh supply of clean suds, in which wash 
the milk-pans, buckets, and tins. Then rinse and hang up 
this dish-cloth, and take the other, with which, wash the 
roaster, gridiron, pots, and kettles. Then wash' and rinse 
the dish-cloth, and hang it up. Empty the slop-bucket, 
and scald it. Dry metal teapots and tins before the fire. 
Then put the fire-place in order, and sweep and dust the 
kitchen. 

Some persons keep a deep and narrow vessel, in which 
to wash knives with a swab, so that a careless servant can 
not lay them in the water while washing them. This arti- 
cle can be carried into the eating-room, to receive the 
knives and forks when they are taken from the table. 



KITCHEN FURNITURE. 



Croclcery. Brown earthen pans are said to be best for 
milk and for cooking. Tin pans are lighter, and more con- 
venient, but are too cold for many purposes. Tall earthen 
jars, with covers, are good to hold butter, salt, lard, etc. 
Acids should never be put into the red earthen ware, as 
there is a poisonous ingredient in the glazing which the 
acid takes off. Stone ware is better and stronger, and 
safer every way than any other kind. 

Iron Ware. Many kitchens are very imperfectly supplied 
with the requisite conveniences for cooking. When a per- 
son has sufficient means, the following articles are all de- 
sirable : A nest of iron pots, of different sizes, (they should 
be slowly heated when new,) a long iron fork, to take out 
articles from boiling water ; an iron hook, with a handle, to 
lift pots from the crane ; a large and small gridiron, with 



3,'4 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'* S HOME. 

grooved bars, and a trench to catch the grease ; a Dutch 
oven, called also a bake-pan ; two skillets, of different sizes, 
and a spider, or flat skillet, for frying ; a griddle, a waffle- 
iron, tin and iron bake and bread pans ; two ladles, of dif- 
ferent sizes ; a skimmer ; iron skewers ; a toasting-iron ; 
two teakettles, one small and one large one ; two brass ket- 
tles, of different sizes, for soap-boiling, etc. Iron kettles, 
lined with porcelain, are better for preserves. The German 
are the best. Too hot a fire will crack them, but with 
care in this respect, they will last for many years. 

portable charcoal furnaces, of iron or clay, are very 
useful in summer, in washing, ironing, and stewing, or 
making preserves. If used in the house, a strong draught 
must be made, to prevent the deleterious effects of the 
charcoal. A box and mill, for spice, pepper, and coffee, 
are needful to those who use these articles. Strong knives 
and forks, a sharp carving-knife, an iron cleaver and board, 
a fine saw, steelyards, chopping-tray and knife, an apple- 
parer, steel for sharpening knives, sugar-nippers, a dozen 
iron spoons, also a large iron one with a long handle, six 
or eight flat-irons, one of them very small, two iron-stands, 
a ruffle-iron, a crimping-iron, are also desirable. 

Tin Ware. Bread-pans ; large and small patty-pans ; 
cake-pans, with a centre tube to insure their baking well ; 
pie-dishes, (of block-tin ;) a covered butter-kettle ; covered 
kettles to hold berries ; two sauce-pans ; a large oil-can ; 
(with a cock ;) a lamp-filler ; a lantern ; broad bottomed 
candlesticks for the kitchen ; a candle-box ; a funnel ; a 
reflector for baking warm cakes ; an oven or tin-kitchen ; 
an apple-corer ; an apple-roaster ; an egg-boiler ; two su- 
gar-scoops, and flour and meal-scoop ; a set of mugs ; 
three dippers ; a pint, quart, and gallon measure ; a set of 
scales and weights ; three or four pails, painted on the out- 
side ; a slop-bucket with a tight cover, painted on the out- 
side ; a milk-strainer ; a gravy-strainer ; a colander ; a dredg- 
ing-box ; a pepper-box ; a large and small grater ; a cheese- 



THE CARE OF ROOMS. 375 

box ; also a large box for cake, and a still larger one for 
bread, with tight covers. Bread, cake, and cheese, shut 
up in this way, will not grow dry as in the open air. 

Wood&n Ware. A nest of tubs; a set of pails and 
bowls; a large and small sieve; a beetle for mashing po- 
tatoes ; a spade or stick for stirring butter and sugar ; a 
bread-board, for moulding bread and making pie-crust ; a 
coffee-stick ; a clothes- stick ; a mush-stick ; a meat-beetle, 
to pound tough meat ; an egg-beater ; a ladle, for working 
butter ; a bread-trough, (for a large family ;) flour-buckets, 
with lids, to hold sifted flour and Indian meal ; salt-boxes ; 
sugar-boxes ; starch and indigo-boxes ; spice-boxes ; a bo- 
som-board ; a skirt-board ; a large ironing-board ; two or 
three clothes-frames ; and six dozen clothes-pins. 

Basket Ware. Baskets of all sizes, for eggs, fruit, mar- 
keting, clothes, etc. ; also chip-baskets. When often used, 
they should be washed in hot suds. 

Other Articles. Every kitchen needs a box containing 
balls of brown thread and twine, a large and small darn- 
ing needle, rolls of waste paper and old linen and cotton, 
and a supply of common holders. There should also be 
another box, containing a hammer, carpet-tacks, and nails 
of all sizes, a carpet claw, screws and a screw-driver, pin- 
cers, gimlets of several sizes, a bed-screw, a small saw, two 
chisels, (one to use for button-holes in broadcloth,) two 
awls and two files. 

In a drawer or cupboard should be placed cotton table- 
cloths for kitchen use; nice crash towels for tumblers, 
marked T T ; coarser towels for dishes marked T ; six 
large roller-towels ; a dozen hand-towels, marked H T ; 
and a dozen hemmed dish-cloths with loops. Also two 
thick linen pudding or dumpling-cloths, a jelly-bag made 
of white flannel, to strain jelly, a starch-strainer, and a bag 
for boiling clothes. 

In a closet should be kept, arranged in order, the follow- 
ing articles : the dust-pan, dust-brush, and dusting-cloths, 



376 THE AMERICAN WOMAN* S HOME. 

old flannel and cotton for scouring and rubbing, large 
sponges for washing windows and looking-glasses, a long 
brush for cobwebs, and another for washing the outside 
of windows, whisk-brooms, common brooms, a co'at- broom 
or brush, a whitewash-brush, a stove-brush, shoe-brushes 
and blacking, articles for cleaning tin and silver, leather 
for cleaning metals, bottles containing stain-mixtures and 
other articles used in cleansing. 

CARE OP THE CELLAR. 

A cellar should often be whitewashed, to keep it sweet. 
It should have a drain to keep it perfectly dry, as standing 
water in a cellar is a sure cause of disease in a family. It 
is very dangerous to leave decayed vegetables in a cellar. 
Many a fever has been caused by the poisonous miasm thus 
generated. The following articles are desirable in a cel- 
lar : a safe, or movable closet, with sides of wire or perfo- 
rated tin, in which cold meats, cream, and other articles 
should be kept ; (if ants be troublesome, set the legs in tin 
cups of water ;) a refrigerator, or a large wooden-box, on 
feet, with a lining of tin or zinc, and a space between the 
tin and wood filled with powdered charcoal, having at the 
bottom a place for ice, a drain to carry off the water, and 
also movable shelves and partitions. In this, articles are 
kept cool. It should be cleaned once a week. Filtering 
jars to purify water should also be kept in the cellar. 
Fish and cabbages in a cellar are apt to scent a house, and 
give a bad taste to other articles. 

STOREROOM. 

Every house needs a storeroom, in which to keep tea, 
coffee, sugar, rice, candles, etc. It should be furnished 
witli jars, having labels, a large spoon, a fork, sugar and 
flour-scoops, a towel, and a dish-cloth. 



THE CARE OF ROOMS. 377 

MODES OF DESTROYING INSECTS AND VEBMIN. 

ed-lugs should be kept away, by filling every chink in 
the bedstead with putty, and if it be old, painting it over. 
Of all the mixtures for killing them, corrosive sublimate 
and alcohol is the surest. This is a strong poison. 

Cockroaches may be destroyed by pouring boiling water 
into their haunts, or setting a mixture of arsenic mixed 
with Indian meal and molasses where they are found. 
Chloride of lime and sweetened water will also poison 
them. 

Fleas. If a dog be infested with these insects, put him 
in a tub of warm soapsuds, and they will rise to 4he sur- 
face. Take them off, and burn them. Strong perfumes 
about the person diminish their attacks. When caught 
between the fingers, plunge them in water, or they will 
escape. 

Crickets. Scalding, and sprinkling Scotch snuff about 
the haunts of these insects, are remedies for the annoyance 
caused by them. 

Flies can be killed in great quantities, by placing about 
the house vessels filled with sweetened water and cobalt. 
Six cents' worth of cobalt is enough for a pint of water. 
It is very poisonous. 

Mosquitoes. Close nets around a bed are the only sure 
protection at night against these insects. Spirits of harts- 
horn is the best antidote for their bite. Salt and water is 
good. 

Red or Black Ants may be driven away by scalding 
their haunts, and putting Scotch snuff wherever they go 
for food. Set the legs of closets and safes in pans of water j 
and they can not get at them. 

Moths. Airing clothes does not destroy moths, but lay- 
ing them in a hot sun does. If articles be tightly sewed 
up in linen when laid away, and fine tobacco put about 
them, it is a sure protection. This should be done in 
April. 



378 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Eats and Mice. A good cat is the best remedy for these 
annoyances. Equal quantities of hemlock (or cicuta) and 
old cheese will poison them ; but this renders the house lia- 
ble to the inconvenience of a bad smell. This evil, however, 
may be lessened, by placing a dish containing oil of vitriol 
poured on saltpetre where the smell is most annoying. 
Chloride of lime and water is also good. 

In using any of the above-mentioned poisons, great care 
should be taken to guard against their getting into any 
article of food or any utensil or vessel used for cooking or 
keeping food, or where children can get at them. 



THE CAKE OF YAKDS AND GARDENS. 

FIRST, let us say a few words on the Preparation of Soil. 
If the garden soil be clayey and adhesive, put on a covering 
of sand, three inches thick, and the same depth of well-rot- 
ted manure. Spade it in as deep as possible, and mix it well. 
If the soil be sandy and loose, spade in clay and ashes. 
Ashes are good for all kinds of soil, as they loosen those 
whicli are close, hold moisture in those which are sandy, 
and destroy insects. The best kind of soil is that which 
will hold water the longest without becoming hard when 
dry. 

To prepare Soil for Pot plants^ take one fourth part of 
common soil, one fourth part of well-decayed manure, and 
one half of vegetable mould, from the woods or from a 
chip-yard. Break up the manure fine, and sift it through 
a lime-screen, (or coarse wire sieve.) These materials must 
be thoroughly mixed. When the common soil which is 
used is adhesive, and indeed in most other cases, it is ne- 
cessary to add sand, the proportion of which must depend 
on the nature of the soil. 

To Prepare a Hot-Bed, dig a pit six feet long, five feet 
wide, and thirty inches deep. Make a frame of the same size, 
with the back two feet high, the front fifteen inches, and the 
sides sloped from the back to the front. Make two sashes, 
each three feet by five, with the panes of glass lapping 
like shingles instead of having cross-bars. Set the frame 
over the pit, whicli should then be filled with fresh horse- 
dung, which has not lain long nor been sodden by water 



380 

Tread it down hard ; then put into the frame light and 
very rich soil, six or eight inches deep, and cover it with 
the sashes for two or three days. Then stir the soil, and 
sow the seeds in shallow drills, placing sticks by them, 
to mark the different kinds. Keep the frame covered with 
the glass whenever it is cold enough to chill the plants ; 
but at all other times admit fresh air, which is indispensa- 
ble to their health. When the sun is quite warm, raise 
the glasses enough to admit air, and cover them with mat- 
ting or blankets, or else the sun may kill the young plants. 
Water the bed at evening with water which has stood all 
day, or, if it be fresh drawn, add a little warm water. If 
there be too much heat in the bed, so as to scorch or wither 
the plants, lift the sashes, water freely, shade by day ; make 
deep holes with stakes, and fill them up when the heat 
is re'duced. In very cold nights, cover the sashes and 
frame with straw-mats. 

For Planting Flower Seeds. Break up the soil, till it is 
very soft, and free from lumps. Rub that nearest the sur- 
face between the hands, to make it fine. Make a circular 
drill a foot in diameter. Seeds are to be planted either 
deeper or nearer the surface, according to their size. For 
seeds as large as sweet peas, the drill should be half an inch 
deep. The smallest seeds must be planted very near the sur- 
face, and a very little fine earth be sifted over them. After 
covering them with soil, beat them down with a trowel, so as 
to make the earth as compact as it is after a heavy shower. 
Set up a stick in the middle of the circle, with the 
name of the plant heavily written upon it with a clark lead 
pencil. This remains more permanent if white-lead be first 
rubbed over the surface. Never plant when the soil is very 
wet. In very dry times, water the seeds at night. Never use 
very cold water. When the seeds are small, many should be 
planted together, that they may assist each other in break- 
ing the soil. When the plants are an inch high, thin them 
out, leaving only one or two, if the plant be a large one, 



CARE OF YARDS AND GARDENS. 381 

like the balsam ; five or six, when it is of a medium size ; 
and eighteen or twenty of the smaller size. Transplant- 
ing, unless the plant be lifted with a ball of earth, retards 
the growth about a fortnight. It is best to plant at two 
different times, lest the first planting should fail, owing to 
wet or cold weather. 

To plant Garden-Seeds, make the beds from one to 
three yards wide ; lay across them a board a foot wide, 
and with a stick, make a furrow on each side of it, one 
inch deep. Scatter the seeds in this furrow, and cover 
them. Then lay the board over them, and step on it, to 
press down the earth. When the plants are an inch high, 
thin them out, leaving spaces proportioned to their sizes. 
Seeds of similar species, such as melons and squashes, 
should not be planted very near to each other, as this causes 
them to degenerate. The same kinds of vegetables should 
not be planted in the same place for two years in succes- 
sion. The longer the rows are, the easier is the after cul- 
ture. 

Transplanting should be done at evening, or which is 
better, just before a shower. Take a round stick sharpened 
at the point, and make openings to receive the plants. Set 
them a very little deeper than they were before, and press 
the soil firmly round them. Then water them, and cover 
them for three or four days, taking care that sufficient air be 
admitted. If the plant can be removed without disturbing 
the soil around the root, it will not be at all retarded by 
transplanting. Never remove leaves and branches, unless 
a part of the roots be lost. 

To Re-pot House-Plants, renew the soil every year, soon 
after the time of blossoming. Prepare soil as previously 
directed. Loosen the earth from the pot by passing a 
knife around the sides. Turn the plant upside down, and 
remove the pot. Then remove all the matted fibres at the 
bottom, and all the earth, except that which adheres to the 
roots. From woody plants, like roses, shake off all the 



382 TEE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

earth. Take the new pot, and put a piece of broken 
earthen- ware over the hole at the bottom, and then, hold- 
ing the plant in the proper position, shake in the earth 
around it. Then pour in water to settle the earth, and 
heap on fresh soil, till the pot is even full. Small pots are 
considered better than large ones, as the roots are not so 
likely to rot, from excess of moisture. 

In the Laying out of Yards and Gardens, there is room 
for much judgment and taste. In planting trees in u yard, 
they should be arranged in groups, and never planted in 
straight lines, nor sprinkled about as solitary trees. The 
object of this arrangement is to imitate Nature, and secure 
some spots of dense shade and some of clear turf. In 
yards which are covered with turf, beds can be cut out of 
it, and raised for flowers. A trench should be made around, 
to prevent the grass from running on them. These beds 
can be made in the shape of crescents, ovals, or other fan- 
ciful forms. 

In laying out beds in gardens and yards, a very pretty 
bordering can be made, by planting them with common 
flax-seed, in a line about three inches from the edge. This 
can be trimmed with shears, when it grows too high. 

For Transplanting Trees, the autumn is the best time. 
Take as much of the root as possible, especially the little 
fibres, which should never become dry. If kept long be- 
fore they are set out, put wet moss around them and water 
them. Dig holes larger than the extent of the roots ; let 
one person hold the tree in its former position, and another 
place the roots carefully as they were before, cutting off 
any broken or wounded root. Be careful not to let the tree 
oe more than an inch deeper than it was before. Let the soil 
be soft and well manured ; shake the tree as the soil is 
shaken in, that it may mix well among the small fibres. Do 
not tread the earth down, while filling the hole ; but, 
when it is full, raise a slight mound of say four inches 
deep around the stem to hold water, and fill it. Never 



\ 
CARE OF YARDS AND GARDENS. 383 

cut off leaves nor branches, unless some of the roots are 
lost. Tie the trees to a stake, and they will be more likely 
to Irve. Water them often. 

The Care of House-Plants is a matter of daily atten- 
tion, and well repays all labor expended upon it. The soil 
of house-plants should be renewed every year as previous- 
ly directed. In winter, they should be kept as dry as they 
can be without wilting. Many house-plants are injured 
by giving them too much water, when they have little light 
and fresh air. This makes them grow spindling. The 
more fresh air, warmth and light they have, the more wa- 
ter is needed. They ought not to be kept very warm in 
winter, nor exposed to great change's of atmosphere. For- 
ty degrees is a proper temperature for plants in winter, 
when they have little sun and air. When plants have be- 
come spindling, cut off their heads entirely, and cover the 
pot in the earth, where it has the morning sun only. A 
new and flourishing head will spring out. Few house- 
plants can bear the sun at noon. When insects infest 
plants, set them in a closet or under a barrel, and burn to- 
bacco under them. The smoke kills any insect enveloped 
in it. When plants are frozen, cold water and a gradual 
restoration of warmth are the best remedies. Never use 
very cold water for plants at any season. 



xxxn. 

THE PROPAGATION OF PLANTS. 

THIS is an occupation requiring much attention and con- 
stant care. Bulbous roots are propagated by offsets ; some 
growing on the top, others around the sides. Many plants 
are propagated by cutting off twigs, and setting them in 
earth, so that two or three eyes are covered. To do this, 
select a side shoot, ten inches long, two inches of it being 
of the preceding year's growth, and the rest the growth 
of the season when it is set. Do this when the sap is 
running, and put a piece of crockery at the bottom of the 
shoot, when it is buried. One eye, at least, must be under 
the soil. Water it and shade it in hot weather. 

Plants are also propagated by layers. To do this, take 
a shoot which comes up near the root, bend it down so as 
to bring several eyes under the soil, leaving the top above- 
ground. If the shoot be cut half through, in a slanting 
direction, at one of these eyes, before burying it, the re- 
sult is more certain. Roses, honeysuckles, and many other 
shrubs are readily propagated thus. They will generally 
take root by being simply buried ; but cutting them as 
here directed is the best method. Layers are more certain 
than cuttings. 

Budding and Grafting, for all woody plants, are favo- 
rite methods of propagation. In all such plants, there is 
an outer and inner bark, the latter containing the sap ves- 
sels, in which the nourishment of the tree ascends. The suc- 
cess of grafting or inoculating consists in so placing the 
bud or graft that the sap vessels of the inner bark shall 



THE PROPAGATION OF PLANTS. 



385 



Fig. 64. 



exactly join those of the plant into which they are grafted, 
so that the sap may pass from one into the other. 
, The following are directions for budding ', which may be 
performed at any time from July to September : 

Select a smooth place on the stock into which you are to 
insert the bud. Make a horizontal cut across the rind 
through to the firm wood ; and from the middle of this, 
make a slit downward perpendicularly, an inch or more 
long, through to the wood. Raise the bark of the stock on 

each side of 
the perpen- 
dicular cut, 
for the ad- 
mission of 
the bud, as 
is shown in 
the annexed 
engraving, 
(Fig. 64.) 
Then take a 
shoot of 
this year's 
growth, and 
slice from it 
a bud, tak- 
ing an inch 
below and 
an inch 
above it, 

and some portion of the wood under it. Then, carefully 
slip off the woody part under the bud. Examine whether 
the eye or germ of the bud be perfect. If a little hole ap- 
pear in that part, the bud has lost its root, and another 
must be selected. Insert the bud, so that a, of the bud, 
shall pass to a, of the stock ; then J, of the bud, must be 
cut off, to match the cut b, in the stock, and fitted exactly 




$86 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 65. 



to it, as it is this alone which insures success. Bind the 
parts with fresh bass or woolen yarn, beginning a little 
below the bottom of the perpendicular slit, and winding it 
closely around every part, except just over the eye of the 
bud, until you arrive above the horizontal cut. Do not 
bind it too tightly, but just sufficient to exclude air, sun, 
and wet. This is to be removed after the bud is firmly 
fixed, and begins to grow. 

Seed-fruit can be budded into any other seed-fruit, and 
stone-fruit into any other stone-fruit ; but stone and seed- 
fruits can not be thus mingled. 

Rose-bushes can have a variety of kinds budded into the 
same stock. Hardy roots are the best stocks. The branch 
above the bud must be cut off the next March or April af- 
ter the bud is put in. Apples and pears are more easily 
propagated by ingrafting than by budding. 

Ingrafting is a similar process to budding, 
with this advantage, that it can be per- 
formed on large trees, whereas budding can 
be applied only on small ones. The two com- 
mon kinds of ingrafting are whip-grafting and 
split-grafting. The first kind is for young 
trees, and the other for large ones. 

The time for ingrafting is from May to 
October. The cuttings must be taken from 
horizontal* shoots, between Christmas and 
March, and kept in a damp cellar. In per- 
forming the operation, cut off in a sloping 
direction (as seen in Fig. 65) the tree or 
limb to be grafted. . Then cut off in a cor- 
responding slant the slip to be grafted on. 
Then put them together, so that the inner 
bark of each shall match exactly on one 
side, and tie them firmly together with yel- 
low yarn. It is not essential that both be 
of equal size; if the bark of each meet together exactly 




THE PROPAGATION OF PLANTS. 



387 



Fig. 66 



on one side, it answers the purpose. But the two must 
not differ much in size. The slope should be an inch and 
a half, or more, in length. After they are tied together, 
the place should be covered with a salve or composition of 
bees-wax and rosin. A mixture of clay and cow-dung will 
answer the same purpose. This last must be tied on with 
a cloth. Grafting is more convenient than budding, as 
grafts can be sent from a great distance ; whereas buds 
must be taken in July or August, from a shoot of the 
present year's growth, and can not be sent to any great dis- 
tance. 

This engraving (Fig. 66) exhibits the 
mode called stock-grafting ; a being the 
limb of a large tree, which is sawed off 
and split, and is to be held open by a 
small wedge till the grafts are put in. 
A graft inserted in the limb is shown 
at &, and at c is one not inserted, but de- 
signed to be put in at d, as two grafts 
can be put into a large stock. In in- 
serting the graft, be careful to make the 
edge of the inner bark of the graft meet 
exactly the edge of the inner bark of the 
stock ; for on this success depends. Af- 
ter the grafts are put in, the wedge must 
be withdrawn, and the whole of the stock be covered with 
the thick salve or composition before mentioned, reaching 
from where the grafts are inserted to the bottom of the 
slit. Be careful not to knock or move the grafts after they 
are put in. 

Pruning is an operation of constant exercise, for keep- 
ing plants and trees in good condition. The following 
rules are from a distinguished, horticulturist : Prune off 
all dead wood, and all the little twigs on the main limbs. 
Retrench branches, so as to give light and ventilation to the 
interior of the tree. Cut out the straight and perpendi- 




388 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

cular shoots, which give little or no fruit; while those 
which are most nearly horizontal, and somewhat curving, 
give fruit abundantly and of good quality, and should 
be sustained. Superfluous and ill-placed buds may be 
rubbed off at any time ; and no buds pushing out after 
midsummer should be spared. In choosing between shoots 
to be retained, preserve the lowest placed, and on lateral 
shoots, those which are nearest the origin. When branches 
cross each other so as to rub, remove one or the other. 
Remove all suckers from the roots of trees or shrubs. 
Prune after the sap is in full circulation, (except in the 
case of grapes,) as the wounds then heal best. Some think 
it best to prune before the sap begins to run. Pruning- 
shears, and a pruning-pole, with a chisel at the end, can 
be procured of those who deal in agricultural utensils. 

Thinning is also an important but very delicate opera- 
tion. As it is the office of the leaves to absorb nourishment 
from the atmosphere, they should never be removed, except 
to mature the wood or fruit. In doing this, remove such 
leaves as shade the fruit, as soon as it is ready to ripen. 
To do it earlier impairs the growth. Do it gradually at two 
different times. Thinning the fruit is important, as tend- 
ing to increase its size and flavor, and also to promote 
the longevity of the tree. If the fruit be thickly set, take 
off one half at the time of setting. Revise in June, and- 
then in July, taking off all that may be spared. One very 
large apple to every square foot is a rule that may be a 
sort of guide in other cases. According to this, two hun- 
dred large apples would be allowed to a tree whose extent 
is fifteen feet by twelve. If any person think this thinning 
excessive, let him try two similar trees, and thin one as di- 
rected and leave the other unthinned. It will be found 
that the thinned tree will produce an equal weight, and 
fruit of much finer flavor. 



xxxni. 

THE CULTIVATION OF FKUTT. 

BY a little attention to this matter, a lady with the help 
of her children can obtain a rich abundance of all kinds 
of fruit. The writer has resided in famines where little 
boys of eight, ten, and twelve years old amused themselves, 
under the direction of their mother, in planting walnuts, 
chestnuts, and hazelnuts, for future time ; as well as in 
planting and inoculating young fruit-trees of all descrip- 
tions. A mother who will take pains to inspire a love for 
such pursuits in her children, and who will aid and super- 
intend them, will save them from many temptations, and 
at a trifling expense secure to them and herself a rich re- 
ward in the choicest fruits. The information given in this 
work on this subject may be relied on as sanctioned by 
the most experienced nursery-men. 

The soil for a nursery should be rich, well dug, dressed 
with well-decayed manure, free from weeds, and protected 
from cold winds. Fruit-seeds should be planted in the au- 
tumn, an inch and a half or two inches deep, in ridges four 
or five feet apart, pressing the earth firmly over the seeds. 
While growing, they should be thinned out, leaving the 
best ones a foot and a half apart. The soil should be kept 
loose, soft, and free from weeds. They should be inoculat- 
ed or ingrafted when of the size of a pipe stem ; and in a 
year after this may be transplanted to their permanent 
stand. Peach-trees sometimes bear in two years from bud- 
ding, and in four years from planting if well kept. 

In a year after transplanting, take pains to train the head 
aright. Straight upright branches produce gourmands, or 



390 

twigs bearing only leaves. The side branches which are 
angular or curved yield the most fruit. For this reason, 
the limbs should be trained in curves, and perpendicular 
twigs should be cut off if there be need of pruning. The 
last of June is the time for this Grass should never be al- 
lowed to grow within four feet of a large tree, and the 
soil should be kept loose to admit air to the roots. Trees 
in orchards should be twenty-five feet apart. The soil 
under the top soil has much to do with the health of 
the trees. If it be what is called hard-pan, the trees will 
deteriorate. Trees need to be manured and to have the 
soil kept open and free from weeds. 

Filberts can be raised in any part of this country. 

Figs can be raised in the Middle, Western, and Southern 
States. For this purpose, in the autumn loosen the roots on 
one side, and bend the tree down to the earth on the other ;. 
then cover it with a mound of straw, earth, and boards, 
and early in the spring raise it up and cover the roots. 

Currants grow well in any but a wet soil. They are 
propagated by cuttings. The old wood should be thinned 
in the fall and manure be put on. They can be trained 
into small trees. 

Gooseberries are propagated by layers and cuttings. 
They are best when kept from suckers and trained like 
trees. One third of the old wood should be removed 
every autumn. 

Raspberries do best when shaded during a part of the 
day. They are propagated by layers, slips, and suckers. 
There is one kind which bears monthly ; but the varieties 
of this and all other fruits are now so numerous that we 
can easily find those which are adapted to the special cir- 
cumstances of the case. 

Strawberries require a light soil and vegetable manure. 
They should be transplanted in April or September, and 
be set eight inches apart, in rows nine inches asunder, and 
in beds which are two feet wide, with narrow alleys be- 



THE CULTIVATION OF FRUIT. 391 

tween them. A part of these plants are non-bearers. These 
have large flowers with showy stamens and high black 
anthers. The bearers have short stamens, a great number 
of pistils, and the flowers are every way less showy. In 
blossom-time, pull out all the non-bearers. Some think it 
best to leave one non-bearer to every twelve bearers, and 
others pull them all out. Many beds never produce any 
fruit, because all the plants in them are non-bearers. 
Weeds should be kept from the vines. When the vines 
are matted with young plants, the best way is to dig over 
the beds in cross lines, so as to leave some of the plants 
standing in little squares, while the rest are turned under 
the soil. This should be done over a second time in the 
same year. . 

To Raise Grapes, manure the soil, and keep it soft and 
free from weeds. A gravelly or sandy soil, and a south ex- 
posure are best. Transplant the vines in the early spring, 
or better in the fall. Prune them the first year so as to 
have only two main branches, taking off all other shoots as 
fast as they come. In November, cut off all of these two 
branches except four eyes. The second year, in the spring, 
loosen the earth around the roots, and allow only two 
branches to grow, and every month take off all side shoots. 
When they are very strong, preserve only a part, and cut 
off the rest in the fall. In November, cut off all the two 
main stems except eight eyes. After the second year, no 
more pruning is needed, except to reduce the side shoots, 
for the purpose of increasing the fruit. Al\ the pruning of 
grapes (except nipping side shoots) must be done when 
the sap is not running, or they will bleed to death. Train 
them on poles, or lattices, to expose them to the air and 
sun. Cover tender vines in the autumn. Grapes are 
propagated by cuttings, layers, and seeds. For cuttings, 
select in the autumn well-ripened wood of the former year, 
and take five joints for each. Bury them till April ; then' 
soak them for some hours, and set them out aslant, so that 
all the eyes but one shall be covered. 



392 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Apples, grapes, and such like fruit can be preserved in 
their natural state by packing them when dry and solid in 
dry sand or saw-dust, putting alternate layers of fruit and 
cotton, saw-dust or sand. Some saw-dust gives a bad flavor 
to the fruit. 

Modes of Preserving Fruit- Trees. Heaps of ashes or tan- 
ner's bark around peach-trees prevent the attack of the 
worm. The yellows is a disease of peach-trees, which is 
spread by the pollen of the blossom. When a tree begins 
to turn yellow, take it away with all its roots, before it 
blossoms again, or it will infect other trees. Planting tan- 
sy around the roots of fruit-trees is a sure protection 
against worms, as it prevents the moth from depositing 
her egg. Equal quantities of salt and saltpetre, put 
around the trunk of a peach-tree, half a pound to a tree, 
improve the size and flavor of the fruit. Apply this about 
the first of April ; and if any trees have worms already in 
them, put on half the quantity in addition in June. To 
young trees just set out, apply one ounce in April, and 
another in June, close to the stem. Sandy soil is best for 
peaches. 

Apple-trees are preserved from insects by a wash of 
strong lye to the body and limbs, which, if old, should be 
first scraped. Caterpillars should be removed by cutting 
down their nests in a damp day. Boring a hole in a tree 
infested with worms, and filling it with sulphur, will often 
drive, them off immediately. 

^ The fire-~blight or brulure in pear-trees can be stopped by 
cutting off all the blighted branches. It is supposed by 
some to be owing to an excess of sap, which is remedied by 
diminishing the roots. 

The curculioj which destroys plums and other stone- 
fruit, can be checked only by gathering up all the fruit 
that falls, (which contains their eggs,) and destroying it. 
The canker-worm can be checked by applying a bandage 
around the body of the tree, and every evening smearing 
it with fresh tar. 



XXXIY. 

THE CAKE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 

ONE of the most interesting illustrations of the design 
of our benevolent Creator in establishing the family 
state is the nature of the domestic animals connected with 
it. At the very dawn of life, the infant watches with de- 
light the graceful gambols of the kitten, and soon makes it 
a playmate. Meantime, its out-cries when hurt appeal 
to kindly sympathy, and its sharp claws to fear; while 
the child's mother has a constant opportunity to incul- 
cate kindness and care for weak and ignorant creatures. 
Then the dog becomes the out-door playmate and guardian 
of early childhood, and he also guards himself by cries of 
pain, and protects himself by his teeth. At the same time, 
his faithful loving nature and caresses awaken correspond- 
ing tenderness and care ; while the parent again has a 
daily opportunity to inculcate these virtues toward the 
helpless and dependent. As the child increases in know- 
ledge and reason, the horse, cows, poultry, and other do- 
mestic animals come under his notice. These do not ordi- 
narily express their hunger or other sufferings by cries of 
distress, but depend more on the developed reason and 
humanity of man. And here the parent is called upon to 
instruct a child in the nature and wants of each, that he 
may intelligently provide for their sustenance and for their 
protection from injury and disease. 

To assist in this important duty of home life, which so 
often falls to the supervision of woman, the following 
information is prepared through the kindness of one of 



394 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

the editors of a prominent, widely known agricultural 
paper. 

Domestic animals are very apt to catch the spirit and 
temper of their masters. A surly man will be very likely 
to have a cross dog and a biting horse. A passionate man 
will keep all his animals ir. -n'/ral fear of him, making 
them snappish, and liable to hurt those of whom they are 
not afraid. 

It is, therefore, most important that all animals should 
be treated uniformly with kindness. They are all capable 
of returning affection, and will show it very pleasantly if 
we manifest affection for them. They also have intuitive 
perceptions of our emotions which we can not conceal. A 
sharp, ugly dog will rarely bite a person who has no fear oi 
him. A horse knows the moment a man mounts or takes 
the reins whether he is afraid or not ; and so it is with 
other animals. 

If live stock can not be well fed, they ought not to be 
kept. One well wintered horse is worth as much as two 
that drag through on straw, and by browsing the hedge- 
rows. The same is true of oxen, and emphatically so of 
cows. The owner of a half-starved dog loses the use of 
him almost altogether ; for, at the very time the night 
when he is most needed as a guard, he must be off scou- 
ring the country for food. 

Shelter in winter is most important for cows. They 
should have good tight stables or byres, well ventilated, 
and so warm that water in a pail will only freeze a little 
on the top the severest nights. Oxen should have the 
same stabling, though they bear cold better. Horses in 
stables will bear almost any degree of cold, if they have 
all they can eat/ Sheep, except young lambs, are well 
enough sheltered in dry sheds, with one end open. Cattle, 
sheep, and dogs do not sweat as horses do, they " loll ;" 
that is, water or slabber runs from their tongues ; hence, 
they are not liable to take cold as the horse is. Hogs bea* 



THE CARE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 395 

cold pretty well ; but they eat enough to convince any one 
that true economy lies in giving them warm sties in win- 
ter, for the colder they are the more they eat. Fowls will 
not lay in cold weather unless they have light and warm 
quarters. 

Cleanliness is indispensable, if one would keep his ani- 
mals healthy. In their wild state all our domestic animals 
are very clean, and, at the same time, very healthy. The 
hog is not naturally a dirty animal, but quite the reverse. 
He enjoys currying as much as a horse or a cow, and 
would be as careful of his litter as a cat if he had a fair 
chance. 

Horses ought to be groomed daily ; cows and oxen as of- 
ten as twice a week ; dogs should be washed with soapsuds 
frequently. Stables should be cleaned out daily. Absorb- 
ents of liquid in stables should be removed as often as they 
become wet. Dry earth is one of the best absorbents, and 
is especially useful in the fowl-house. Hogs in pens should 
have straw for their rests or lairs, and it should be often 
renewed. 

Parasitic Vermin. These are lice, fleas, ticks, the scale 
insects, and other pests which afflict our live stock. There 
are many ways of destroying them ; the best and safest is a 
free use of carbolic acid soap. The larger animals, as well as 
hogs, dogs, and sheep may be washed in strong suds of this 
soap, without fear, and the application repeated after a week. 
This generally destroys both the creatures and their eggs. 
Hen lice are best destroyed by greasing the fowls, and dust- 
ing them with flowers of sulphur. Sitting hens must 
never be greased, but the sulphur may be dusted freely in 
their nests, and it is well to put it in all hens' nests. 

Salt and Water. All animals except poultry require 
salt, and all, free supplies of fresh water. 

Light. Stables, or places where any kind of animals are 
confined, should have plenty of light. Windows are not 
more important in a house than in a barn. The sun 



396 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

should come in freely ; and if it shines directly upon the 
stock, all the better. When beeves and sheep are fat- 
tening very rapidly, the exclusion of the light makes them 
more quiet, and fatten faster ; but their state is an un- 
natural and hardly a healthy one. 

Exercise in the open air is important for breeding ani- 
mals. It is especially necessary for horses of all kinds. 
Cows need very little and swine none, unless kept for 
breeding. 

Breeding. Always use thorough-bred males, and im- 
provement is certain. 

Horses. The care which horses require varies with the 
circumstances in which the owner is placed, and the usos 
to which they are put. In general, if kept stabled, they 
should be fed with good upland hay, almost as much as 
they will eat ; and if absent from the stable, and at work 
most of the day, they should have all they will eat of hay, 
together with four to eight quarts of oats or an equal 
weight of other grain or meal. Earley is good for horses, 
and so is dry corn. Corn-meal put upon cut hay, wet and 
well-mixed, is good, steady feed, if not in too large quanti- 
ties. Four quarts a day may be fed unmixed with other 
grain ; but if the horse be hard worked and needs more, 
mix the meal with wheat bran, or linseed oil- cake meal, 
or use corn and oats ground together ; carrots are especially 
wholesome. A quart of linseed oil-cake meal, daily, is an 
excellent occasional addition to a horse's feed, when car- 
rots can not be had. It gives a lustre to his coat, and 
brings the new coat of hair out in the spring. A stabled 
horse needs daily exercise, as much as to trot three miles. 
Where a horse is traveling, jt is well to give him six quarts 
of oats in the morning, four at nooii, and six at night. 

Thorough grooming is indispensable to the health of 
horses. Especial care should be taken of the legs and fet- 
locks, that no dirt remain to cause that distressing disease, 
grease or scratches, which results from filthy fetlocks and 



THE CARE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 39; 

standing in dirty stables. When a horse comes in from 
work on muddy roads with dirty legs, they should be im- 
mediately cleaned, the dirt brushed off, then rubbed with 
straw ; then, if very dirty, washed clean and rubbed dry 
with a piece of sacking. A horse should never stand in a 
draught of cold air, if he can not turn and put his back to it. 
If sweaty or warm from work, he should be blanketed, if 
he is to stand a minute in the winter air. If put at once 
into the stable, he should be stripped and rubbed down 
with straw actively for five minutes or more, and then 
blanketed. The blanket must be removed in an hour, and 
the horse given water and feed, if it is the usual time. It 
will not hurt him to eat hay when hot, unless he be tho- 
roughly exhausted, when all food should be withheld for a 
while. 

It is very comforting to a tired horse, when he is too 
hot to drink, to sponge out his mouth with cool water. A 
horse should never drink when very hot, nor be turned 
into a yard to " cool off," even in summer, neither should 
he be turned out to pasture before he is quite cool. 

Cows. Gentle but firm treatment will make a cow easy 
to milk and to handle in every way. If stabled or yarded, 
cows should have access to water at all times, or have it 
frequently offered to them. Clover hay is probably the 
best steady food for milch cows. Cornstalks cut up, tho- 
roughly soaked with water for half a day, and then sprin- 
kled with corn or oil-cake meal is perhaps unsurpassed 
as good winter food for milch cows. The amount of meal 
may vary. With plenty of oil-meal, there is little danger 
of feeding too much, as that is loosening to the bowels and 
a safe nutritious article. Corn-meal alone, in large quan- 
tities, is too heating. t Eoots should, if possible, form part 
of the diet of a milch cow, especially before and soon after 
calving ; feed well before this period, yet not to make the 
cow very fat ; but it is better to err in that way than to 
have her " come in " thin. Take the calf away from the 



398 THE AMERICAN WOMAN" 1 S HOME. 

mother as soon as it stands up, and the separation 
worry neither dam nor young. This is always best, unless 
the calf is to be kept with the cow. The calf will soon 
learn to drink its food, if two fingers be held in its mouth. 
Let it have all the first drawn milk for three days as soon 
as milked ; after this, skimmed milk warmed to blood 
heat. Soon a little fine scalded meal may be mixed with 
the milk ; and it will, at three to five weeks old, nibble 
hay and grass. It is well also to keep a box containing 
some dry wheat- bran and fine corn-meal mixed in the calf- 
pen, so that calves may take as much as they like. 

In milking, put the fingers around the teat close to the 
bag ; then firmly close the forefingers of each hand alter- 
nately, immediately squeezing with the other fingers. 
The forefingers prevent the milk flowing back into the 
bag, while the others press it out. Sit with the left knee 
close to the right hind leg of the cow, the head pressed 
against her flank, the left hand always ready to ward off a 
blow from her feet, which the gentlest cow may give al- 
most without knowing it, if her tender teats be cut by long 
nails, or if a wart be hurt, or her bag be tender. She 
must be stripped dry every time she is milked, or she will 
dry up ; and if she gives much milk, it pays to milk three 
tunes a day, as nearly eight hours apart as possible. Never 
stop while milking till done, as this will cause the cow to 
stop giving milk. 

To tether a cow, tie her by one hind leg, making the rope 
fast above the fetlock joint, and protecting the limb with 
a piece of an old bootleg or similar thing. The knot must 
be one that will not slip ; regular fetters of iron bound 
with leather are much better. 

A cow should go unmilked two months before calving, 
and her milk should not be used by the family till four 
days after that time. 

Swine. The filthy state of hog-pens is allowed on account 
of ,the amount of manure they will make by working ove r 



THE CARE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 399 

all sorts of vegetable matter, spoiled hay, weeds, etc., etc. 
This is unhealthy for the family near and also for the ani- 
mal. The hog is, naturally, a cleanly animal, and if given 
a chance he will keep himself very neat and clean. 
Breeding sows should have the range of a small pasture, 
and be regularly fed. They need fresh water constantly, 
and often suffer for lack of it when they have liquid swill, 
which they do not like to drink. All hogs should have a 
warm, dry, well-littered pen to lie in, away from flies and 
disturbance of any kind. They are fond of charcoal, and 
it is worth while frequently to throw a few handf uls where 
they can get at it. It has a very beneficial effect on the 
appetite, regulates the tone of the stonfach and digestive 
organs, and can not do any harm. Pigs ought always to be 
well fed and kept growing fast; and when being fattened, 
they should be penned always, the herd being sorted so 
that all may have an equal chance. It is well to feed 
soft corn in the ear; but hard corn should always be 
ground and cooked for pigs. 

Sheep. In the winter, sheep need deep, well-littered, 
dry sheds, dry yards, and hay, wheat, or oat straw, as much 
as they will eat. They should be kept gaining by grain reg- 
ularly fed to them, and so distributed that each gets its 
share. Corn, either whole or ground, or oil-cake meal, or 
both, are used for fattening sheep. They will easily surfeit 
themselves on any grain except oil-meal, which is very safe 
feed for them, and usually economical. Strong sheep will 
often drive the weaker ones away, and so get more than 
their share of food and make themselves sick. This must 
be guarded against, and the flock sorted, keeping the weak- 
er and stronger apart. 

Sheep are very useful in clearing land of brush and cer- 
tain weeds, which they gnaw down and kill. To accom- 
plish this, the land must be overstocked, and it is best not to 
keep sheep on short pasturage more than a few weeks at a 
time ; but if they are returned after a few days, it will serve 



400 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

as good a purpose as if they were to be kept on all the time. 
Sheep at pasture must be restrained by good fences, or they 
will be a great nuisance. Dog-proof hedge fences of Osage 
orange are to be highly recommended, wherever this plant 
will grow. Mutton sheep 'will generally pay better to 
raise than merinos, but they need more care. 

Poultry. Few objects of labor are more remunerative 
than poultry, raised on a moderate scale. Turkeys, when 
young, need great care ; some animal food, dry, warm quar- 
ters, and must be kept out of the wet grass, and kept in 
when it rains. As soon as fledged, they become very 
hardy, and, with free range, will almost take care of 
themselves. Geese need water and good grass pasture. 
Ducks do very well without water to swim in, if they have 
all they need to drink. They will lay a great many eggs 
if kept shut in a pen until say eight o'clock in the morning. 
If let out earlier, they wander away, and will hide their 
nests, and lay only about as many eggs as they can cover. 
It is best to set duck's eggs under hens, and to keep young 
ducks shut up in a dry roomy pen for four weeks, at least. 
Fowls need light, warm, dry quarters in winter, plenty of 
feed, but not too much. They relish animal food, and 
ought to have some frequently to make them lay. Pork 
or beef scrap-cake can be bought for two to three cents a 
pound, and is very good for them. Any kind of grain is 
good for poultry. Nothing is better than wheat screenings. 
Early hatched chickens must be kept in a warm, dry, sunny 
room, with plenty of gravel, and the hen should have no 
more than eight or nine chickens to brood ; though in sum- 
mer, one hen will take good care of fifteen. Little chickens, 
turkeys, and ducks need frequent feeding, and must have 
their water changed often. It is well to grease the body 
of the hen and the heads of the chicks with lard, in order 
to prevent their becoming lousy. 

Hens set about twenty days, and should be well fed and 
watered. Cold or damp weather is bad for young fowls, 



THE CARE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 401 

and when they have been chilled, pepper-corns are a good 
remedy, in addition to the warmth of an inclosed dry 
place. 

The most absorbing part of the " Woman's question " of 
the present time is the remedy for the varied sufferings of 
women who are widows or unmarried, and without means 
of support. As yet, few are aware how many sources of 
lucrative enterprise and industry lie open to woman in the 
employments directly connected with the family state. A 
woman can invest capital in the dairy and qualify 'herself 
to superintend a dairy farm as well as a man. And if she 
has no capital of her own, if well trained for this business, 
she can find those who have capital ready to furnish an 
investment that well managed will become profitable. And, 
too, the raising of poultry, of hogs, and of sheep are all within 
the reach of a woman with proper abilities and training 
for this business. So that if a woman chooses, she can find 
employment both interesting and profitable in studying the 
care of domestic animals. 

Bees. But one of the most profitable as well as interest- 
Ing kinds of business for a woman is the care of bees. In 
a recent agricultural report, it is stated that one lady bought 
four hives for ten dollars, and in five years she was offered 
one thousand five hundred dollars for her stock, and re- 
fused it as not enough. In addition to this increase of her 
capital, in one of these five years she sold twenty-two 
hives and four hundred and twenty pounds of honey. It 
is also stated that in five years one man, from six colonies 
of bees to start with, cleared eight thousand pounds of 
honey and one hundred and fifty-four colonies of bees. 

The raising of bees and their management is so cu- 
rious and as yet unknown an art in most parts of our 
country, that any directions or advice will be omitted in 
this volume, as requiring too much space, and largely set 
forth and illustrated in the second part. When properly 



402 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

instructed, almost any woman in the city, as easily as in 
the country, can manage bees, and make more profit than 
in any other method demanding so little time and labor. 
But in the modes ordinarily practiced, few can make any 
great prplit in this employment. 

It is hoped a time is at hand when every woman will be 
trained to some employment by which she can secure to 
herself an independent home and means to support a fami- 
ly, in case she does not marry, or is left a widow, with her- 
self and a family to support. 



XXXV. 

EABTH-CLOSETS. 

IN some particulars, the Chinese are in advance of our 
own nation in neatness, economy, and healthful domestic 
arrangements. In China, not a particle of manure is 
wasted, and all that with us is sent off in drains and sewers 
from water-closets and privies, is collected in a neat manner 
and used for manure. This is one reason that the compact 
and close packing of inhabitants in their cities is practica 
ble, and it also accounts for the enormous yields of some of 
their crops. 

The earth-closet is an invention which relieves the most 
disagreeable item in domestic labor, and prevents the disa- 
greeable and unhealthful effluvium which is almost inevita- 
ble in all family residences. The general principle of 
construction is somewhat like that of a water-closet, except 
that in place of water is used dried earth. The resulting 
compost is without disagreeable odor, and is the richest spe- 
cies of manure. The expense of its construction and use is 
no greater than that of the common water-closet ; indeed, 
when the outlays for plumber's work, the almost inevitable 
troubles and disorders of water-pipes in a house, and the 
constant stream of petty repairs consequent upon careless 
construction or use of water- works are considered, the earth- 
closet is in itself much cheaper, besides being an accumu- 
lator of valuable matter. 

To give a clear idea of its principles, mode of fabrication, 
and use, we can not do better than to take advantage of 
the permission given by Mr. George E. Waring, Jr., of 



404 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Newport, R. L, author of an admirable pamphlet on the 
subject, published in 1868 by " The Tribune Association" 
of New- York. Mr. Waring was formerly Agricultural En- 
gineer of the New- York Central Park, and has given much 
attention to sanitary and agricultural engineering, having 
published several valuable *vorks bearing in the same general 
direction. He is now consulting director of " The Earth- 
Closet Company," Hartford, Ct., which manufactures the 
apparatus and all things appertaining to it any part which 
might be needed to complete a home-built structure. But 
with generous and no less judicious freedom, they are en- 
deavoring to extend the knowledge of this wholesome and 
economical process of domestic sanitary engineering as 
widely as possible, and so allow us to present the following 
instructions for those who may desire to construct their own 
apparatus. 

In the brief introduction to his pamphlet, Mr. Waring 
says : 

" It is sufficiently understood, by all who have given the 
least thought to the subject, that the waste of the most vital 
elements of the soil's fertility, through our present practice 
of treating human excrement as a thing that is to be hurried 
into the sea, or buried in underground vaults, or in some 
other way put out of sight and out of reach, is full of dan- 
ger to our future prosperity. 

" Our bodies have come out of our fertile fields ; our 
prosperity is based on the production and the exchange of 
the earth's fruits ; and all our industry has its foundation 
in arts and interests connected with, or dependent on, a suc- 
cessful agriculture. 

" Liebig asserts that the greatness of the Roman empire 
was sapped by the Cloaca Maxima, through which the 
entire sewage of Rome was washed intot the Tiber. The 
yearly decrease of productive power in the older grain re- 
gions of the West, and the increasing demand for manures 
in the Atlantic States, sufficiently prove that our own coun- 



EARTH-CLOSETS. 405 

try is no exception to the rule that has established its sway 
over Europe. 

" The large class who will fail to feel the force of the 
agricultural reasons in favor of the reform which this pam- 
phlet is written to uphold, will realize, more clearly than 
farmers will, the importance of protecting dwellings against 
the gravest annoyance, the most fertile source of disease, 
and the most certain vehicle of contagion." 

Nevertheless, Mr. Waring thinks that the agricultural 
argument is no mean or unimportant one, and says : 

" The importance of any plan by which the excrement of 
our bodies may be returned to our fields is in a measure 
shown in the following extract from an article that I fur- 
nished for the American Agricultural Annual for 1868. 

" The average population of New- York City including 
its temporary visitors is probably not less than 1,000,000. 
This population consumes food equivalent to at least 30,- 
000,000 bushels of corn in a year. Excepting the small pro- 
portion that is stored up in the bodies of the growing 
young, which is fully ofiset by that contained in the bodies 
of the dead, the constituents of the food are returned to the 
air by the lungs and skin, or are voided as excrement. 
That which goes to the air was originally taken from the 
air by vegetation, and will be so taken again : here is no 
waste. The excrement contains all that was furnished by 
the mineral elements of the soil on which the food was pro- 
duced. 

" This all passes into the sewers, and is washed into tne 
sea. Its loss to the present generation is complete. 

. . . " 30,000,000 bushels of corn contain, among 
other minerals, nearly 7000 tons of phosphoric acid, and 
this amount is annually lost in the wasted night-soil of New- 
York City.* 

* Other mineral constituents of food important ones, too are wasted 
away in even greater quantities through the same channels ; but this ele- 
ment is the best for illustration because its effect in manure is the most 



406 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

" Practically the human excrement of the whole country- 
is nearly all so disposed of as to be lost to the soil. The 
present population of the United States is not far from 
35,000,000. On the basis of the above calculation, their 
annual food contains 200,000 tons of phosphoric acid, be- 
ing the amount contained in about 900,000 tons of bones, 
which, at the price of the best flour of bone, (for manure,) 
would be worth over $50,000,000. It would be a moderate 
estimate to say that the other constituents of food are of at 
least equal value with the other constituents of the bone, 
and to assume $50,000,000 as the money value of the wast- 
ed night-soil of the United States every year. 

" In another view, the importance of this waste can not 
be estimated in money. Money values apply, rather, to the 
products of labor and to the exchange of these products. 
The waste of fertilizing matter reaches farther than the de- 
struction or exchange of products : it lessens the ability to 
produce. 

" If mill-streams were failing year by year, and steam 
were yearly losing force, and the ability of men to labor 
were yearly growing less, the doom of our prosperity would 
not be more plainly written, than if this slow but certain 
impoverishment of our soil were sure to continue. 

. . . . " But the good time is coming, when (as 
now in China and Japan) men must accept the fact that 
the soil is not a warehouse to be plundered only a factory 
to be worked. Then they will save their raw material, in- 
stead of wasting it, and, aided by nature's wonderful laws, 
will weave over and over again the fabric by which we live 
and prosper. Men" will build up as fast as men destroy ; 
old matters will be reproduced in new forms, and, as the 

striking, even so small a dressing as twenty pounds per acre, producing 
a marked effect on all cereal crops. Ammonia, too, which is so important 
thai; it is usual in England to estimate the value of manure in exact pro. 
portion to its supply of this element, is largely yielded by human excre- 
ment. 



EARTH- CLOSETS. 407 

decaying forests feed the growing wood, so will all consumed 
food yield food again." 

With the above brief extract, we shall cease using marks 
of quotation, as the following information and statements 
are appropriated bodily, either directly or with mere modi- 
fications for brevity, from the little pamphlet of Mr. Waring. 

The earth-closet is the invention of the Rev. Henry 
Moule, of Fordington Yicarage, Dorsetshire, England. 

It is based on the power of clay, and the decomposed 
organic matter found in the soil, to absorb and retain all 
offensive odors and all fertilizing matters ; and it consists, 
essentially, of a mechanical contrivance (attached to the 
ordinary seat) for measuring out and discharging into the 
vault or pan below a sufficient quantity of sifted dry earth 
to entirely cover the solid ordure and to absorb the urine. 

The discharge of earth is effected by an ordinary pull-up 
similar to that used in the water-closet, or (in the self-act- 
ing apparatus) by the rising of the seat when the weight 
of the person is removed. 

The vault or pan under the seat is so arranged that the 
accumulation may be removed at pleasure. 

From the moment when the earth is discharged, and 
the evacuation is covered, all offensive exhalation entirely 
ceases. Under certain circumstances, there may be, at 
tim.es, a slight odor as of guano mixed with earth ; but this 
is so trifling and so local, that a commode arranged on this 
plan may, without the least annoyance, be kept in use in 
any room. 

This statement is made as the result of personal experi- 
ence. Mr. Waring says : 

" I have 4n constant use in a room in my house an 
earth-closet commode ; and even when the pan is entirely 
full, with the accumulation of a week's use, visitors exam- 
ining it invariably say, with some surprise, 'You don't 
mean that this particular one has been used P ' : 



408 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



HOW TO MAKE AN EARTH-CLOSET. 



The principle on which the earth-closet is based is as free 
to all as is the earth itself, and any person may adopt his 
own method of applying it. All that is necessary is to have 
a supply of coarsely sifted sun-dried earth with which to 
cover the bottom of the vessel to be used, and after use to 
cover the deposit. A small box of earth, and a tin scoop 
are sufficient to prevent the gravest annoyance of the sick- 
room. But, of course, for constant use, it is desirable to 
have a more convenient apparatus something which re- 
quires less care, and is less troublesome in many ways. 

To this end, the patent invention of Mr. Moule is appli- 
cable. This comprises a tight receptacle under the seat, a 
reservoir for storing dry earth, and an apparatus to measure 
out the requisite quantity, and throw it upon the deposit. 

Fig. 67. 




EARTH- CLOSETS. 



409 



The arrangement of the mechanism is shown in Fig. 67. 
A hopper-shaped reservoir, made of galvanized iron, is 
supported by a framework at the back of the seat, which 
rests on the framework a, a. Connected with the handle at 
the right-hand side, there is an iron lever, which operates a 
movable box at the bottom of the reservoir, and causes it to 
discharge its contents directly under the seat. When the 
handle is dropped, the box returns to its position, and is 
immediately filled preparatory to another use. 

The hopper-shaped reservoir is supported by two pivots, 
and has a slight rocking or vibrating motion imparted to it 
by each lifting of the lever. This prevents the earth from 
becoming clogged, and insures its regular delivery 



THE "PULL-UP" APPABATUS. 




pig. ea 



410 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

, The construction is more clearly shown in Fig. 68. 

In this figure, A is the vibrating hopper for holding the 
earth. Its capacity may be increased to any desired extent 
by building above it a straight-sized box of any height. It is 
not unusual, in fixed privies, to make this reservoir large 
enough to hold a supply for several months. As the earth 
is dry, there is no occasion for the use of any thing better 
than common pine boards in making this addition to the 
reservoir. 

B is one side of the wooden frame by which the hop- 
.per is supported, and it may be made of one inch pine or 
spruce. 

C is a box of lacquered or galvanized iron, without either 
top or bottom. It moves on two pivots, one of which is 
shown on its exposed side. In its present positio^ its upper 
end opens into the hopper, anti its lower end is closed by 
the stationary board over which it stands. When the han- 
dle is pulled up, the lever, which is connected with the box, 
jerks it rapidly up, so that its back side closes the opening 
of the reservoir, and its bottom opens to the front. In its 
movement it discharges its contents of earth forward under 
the seat. When the handle is dropped, the box returns to 
its natural position, and is charged again. 

D is one of the pivots a corresponding one being on 
the other side by which the hopper is supported, and on 
which it vibrates. 

&, a, a, a, a, a, are the parts of the framework, the di- 
mensions of which in feet and inches are given. 

The only essential part not shown is an earthen-ware pan 
without a bottom, similar to the pan of a water-closet, only 
not so deep and with a larger opening, which is attached to 
the under side of the seat, and which in a measure prevents 
the rising of dust, and conducts the urine to the point at 
which the most earth falls. This is the least important 
part of the invention, but it has a certain advantage. 

The self-acting apparatus is more complicated, and per- 



EARTH-CLOSETS. 



411 



sons wishing it would do best to apply directly to the Com- 
pany. 

THE ORDINARY PRIVY. 

In the circular published by the Earth-Closet Company, 
the following directions are given : 

" An ordinary fixed closet requires the apparatus to be 
placed at the back of, and in connection with, the usual seat ; 
the reservoir for containing the earth being placed above it. 
Under it there should be a chamber or vault about four feet 
by three wide, and of any convenient depth, with a paved 
or asphalted bottom, and the sides lined with cement. 



COMMODES. 




Fig. 69. Commode, 3 ft. 3 in. high. 1 ft. 11 in. wide, 2 ft. 2 In. deep. 



412 

Should there be an existing cesspool, it may be altered to 
the above dimensions. Into this the deposit and earth fall, 
and may "remain there three, six, or twelve months, and 
continue perfectly inodorous and innoxious, merely requir- 
ing to be occasionally leveled by a rake or hoe. If, how- 
ever, it should be found impossible or inconvenient to have 
a vault underneath, a movable trough, of iron or tarred 
wood, on wheels, may be substituted. In this case, it will be 
advisable to raise the seat somewhat above the floor, to al- 
low the trough to be of sufficient size. 

" By one form of construction, (the ' pull-up,') the pull- 
ing up of a handle releases a sufficient quantity of the dry 
earth, which is thrown into the pit or vault, covering the 
deposit and completely preventing all smell. By another, 
(the ' self-acting,') the same effect is produced by the 
action of the seat. The apparatus may be placed in, and 
adapted to, almost any existing closet or privy, and so ar- 
ranged that the supply and removal of earth may be carried 
on inside or outside as desired." 

The following is taken from the company's circular : 
" In the commode, the apparatus and earth-reservoir are 
self-contained, and a movable pail takes the place of the 
chamber or vault above described. This must be emptied 
as often as necessary, and the contents may be applied to 
the garden or field, or be allowed to accumulate in a heap 
under cover until wanted for use. This accumulation is 
inodorous, and rapidly becomes dry. The commode can 
stand in any convenient place in or out of doors. For use 
in bedrooms, hospital wards, infirmaries, etc., the commode 
is invaluable. It is entirely free from those faint, depress- 
ing odors common to portable water-closets and night-stools, 
and through its admission one of the greatest miseries of 
human life, the foul smells of the sick-room, and one of 
the most frequent means of communicating infection, may 
be entirely prevented. It is invariably found that, if any 
failure takes place, it arises from the earth not being proper- 



EARTH-CLOSETS. 413 

ly dry. Too much importance can not be attached to this 
requirement. The earth-commode will no more act pro- 
perly without dry earth, than will a water-closet without 
water. 

" These commodes are made in a variety of patterns, 
from the cottage commode to the more expensive ones in 
mahogany or oak, and vary in price accordingly. They 
are made to act either by a handle, as in the ordinary 
\yater-closet, or self-acting on rising from the seat. The 
earth-reservoir is calculated to hold enough for * about 
twenty-five times ; and where earth is scarce, or the manure 
required of extraordinary strength, the product may be 
dried as many as seven times, and without losing any of its 
deodorizing properties. 

" If care be taken to cast one service of earth into the 
pail when first placed in the commode, and to have the 
commonest regard to cleanliness, not the least offensive 
smell will be perceptible, though the receptacle remain un- 
emptied for weeks. Care must also be taken that no liquid, 
but that which they are intended to receive, be thrown into 
the pails." 

The pail used in the commode is made of galvanized 
iron, and is shaped very much like an ordinary coal-hod. 
It has a cover of the same material, and it may be carried 
from an upper floor with no more offensiveness than a hod- 
ful of common earth. 

Fig. 70 represents a cross-section of the commode, and 
will enable the reader more clearly to understand the con- 
struction and operation of the apparatus. 

a is the opening in the seat ; >, the ;c pan ;" c, the pail 
for receiving the deposit ; c?, the hopper for containing the 
earth supply ; e, the box by which the earth is measured, 
and by wliich it is thrown into the pail when moved to the 
position e' by the operation of the " pull-up ;" /, a door by 
which the pail is shut in ; #, the cover of the seat ; A, the 
cover of the hopper ; i, a platform which prevents the es- 
cape of earth from e. 



414 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 
Fig. 70. 




HOW TO USE THE EARTH-CLOSET. 

Under this head, the circular issued by the original Lon- 
don company contains the following : 

" The first requirement for the proper working of the 
earth-closet is earth perfectly dry and sifted. 

" Earth alone is proved to be the best deodorizer, and 
far superior to any disinfectants ; but where it is difficult to 
obtain earth abundantly, sifted ashes, as before stated, may 
be mixed with it in proportion of two of earth to one of 
ashes. 

" As the first requirement is dry earth sifted, and as this 



EARTH- CLOSETS. 415 

is usually thought to be a great difficulty in the way of the 
adoption of the dry earth system, the following remarks 
will at once remove such an impression. 

" The earth-commode and closet, if used by six persons 
daily, will require, on an average, about one hundred weight 
of earth per week. This may be dried for family use in a 
drawer made to fit under the kitchen range, and which may 
be filled with earth one morning and left until the next. 
The drawer should reach to within two inches of the bottom 
bar of the grate. A frame with a handle, covered with 
fine wire-netting, forming a kind of shovel, should be 
placed on this drawer ; the finer ashes will fall through, 
mixing with the earth, whilst the cinders will remain on 
the top, to be, from time to time, thrown on the fire. 

"Of course, the most economical method is to provide 
in the summer-time a winter store of dry earth, which may 
be kept in an out-house, shed, or other convenient place, 
just as we lay in a winter store of coals. 

" THINGS TO BE OBSERVED. 

" Let one fall of earth be in the pail before using. 
" The earth must be dry and sifted. 
" Sand must not be used. 
" No * slops ' must be thrown down. 
" The handle must be pulled up with a jerk, and let fall 
sharply." 

REPEATED USE OP EAJRTH. 

Concerning the value and use of the product of the earth- 
closet, the following is copied from the London company's 
circular. (It will be noticed that reference is made to the 
repeated use of the same earth. When the ordure is com- 
pletely dried and decomposed, it has not only lost its odor, 
but it has become, like all decomposed organic matter, an 
excellent disinfectant, and the fifth or sixth time that the 
same earth is passed through the closet it is fully as efiective 
in destroying odors as it was when used for the first time, 



41C> 

and of course each use adds to its value as manure, until it 
becomes as strong as Peruvian guano, which is now worth 
seventy-five dollars per ton. In fact, it may be made so 
rich that one hundred pounds will be a good dressing for an 
acre of land.) 

" If the closet is over a water-tight cesspool or pit, it will 
require emptying at the end of three or six months. The 
produce, which will be quite inodorous, should be thrown 
together in a heap, sheltered from wet, and occasionally 
turned over. At the end of a few weeks, it will be dry and 
fit for use. 

" If the receptacle be an iron trough or pail, the contents 
should be thrown together, re-dried, and used over again, 
four or five times. In a few weeks they will be dry and fit 
for use ; the value being increased by repeated action. The 
condition of the manure should be much the same as that 
of guano, and fit for drilling. 

The inventor of the earth-closet, Rev. Mr. Moule, says : 

" It was to this point (the power of earth or clay to ab- 
sorb the products of the decomposition of manure) but par- 
ticularly to the repeated action, and consequently the re- 
peated use of the same earth, that I first directed the 
attention of the public. I then pointed out : First. That 
a very small portion of dry and sifted earth (one and a 
half pints) is sufficient by covering the deposit, to prevent 
fermentation, (which so soon sets in whenever water is used,) 
and the consequent generation and emission of noxious 
gases. Second. That if within a few hours, or even a few 
days, the mass that would be formed by the repeated layers 
of deposit, be intimately mixed by a coarse rake or spade, 
or by a mixer made for the purpose, then, in five or ten 
minutes, neither to the eye or sense of smell is an;y thing 
perceptible but so much earth. . . . When about three 
cart-loads of sifted earth had thus been used for my family, 
(which averaged fifteen persons,) and left under a shed, I 
found -that the material first employed was sufficiently dried 



EARTH- CLOSETS. 417 

to be used again. This process of alternate mixing and 
drying was renewed five times, the earth still retaining its 
absorbent powers apparently unimpaired. Of the visitors 
taken to the spot, none could guess the nature of the com- 
post, though in some cases the heap which they visited in 
the afternoon had been turned over that same morning. . . 

" It is only in towns, where the delivery, stowage, and 
removal of earth is attended with cost and difficulty, that 
any artificial aid for drying the compost would be desirable. 
On premises not cramped for space, the atmosphere, 
especially with a glass roof to the shed, will act sufficiently 
fast. 

" You may by means of it (the earth system) have a privy 
close to the house and a closet up-stairs, from neither of 
which shall proceed any offensive smell or any noxious gas. 
A projection from the back of the cottage, eight feet long 
and six feet wide, would be amply sufficient for this purpose. 
The nearer three or four feet down-stairs, would be occupied 
by the privy, in which, by the seat, would be a receptacle 
for dry earth. The 'soil' and earth would fall into the 
further five or four feet, which would form the covered and 
closed shed for mixing and drying. Up-stairs, the arrange- 
ment would be much the same, the deposit being made to 
fall clear of every wall. Through this closet the removal 
of noxious and offensive matters in time of sickness, and of 
slop-buckets, would be immediate and easy ; and if the shed 
below be kept well supplied with earth, all effluvium would 
be almost immediately checked. As to the trouble which 
this will cause, a very little experience will convince the 
cottager that it is less instead of greater, than the women 
generally go through at present, while the value of the 
manure will afford an inducement to exertion. 

" The truth is, that the machinery is more simple, much 
less expensive, and far less liable to injury than that of the 
water-closet. The supply of earth to the house is as easy 



418 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

as that of coals. To the closet it may be supplied more 
easily than water is supplied by a forcing-pump, and to the 
commode it can be conveyed just as coal is carried to the 
chamber. After use, it can be removed in either case by 
the bucket or box placed under the seat, or from the fixed 
reservoir, with less offense than that of the ordinary slop- 
bucket indeed, (I speak after four years' experience,) with 
as little offense as is found in the removal of coal-ashes. 
So that, while servants and others will shrink from novelty 
and at first imagine difficulties, yet many, to my knowledge, 
would now vastly prefer the daily removal of the bucket or 
the soil to either the daily working of a forcing-pump or to 
being called upon once a year, or once in three years, to 
assist in emptying a vault or cesspool." 

To the above complete and convincingly apt arguments 
and statements of fact, we do not care to add any thing. 
All that we desire is to direct public attention to the ad- 
mirable qualities of this Earth System, and to suggest that, 
at least for those living in the country away from the many 
conveniences of city life, great water power, and mechanical 
assistance, the use of it will conduce largely to the economy 
of families, the health of neighborhoods, and the increasing 
fertility and prosperity of the country round about. 



XXXYI. 

WABMING AND VENTILATION. 

THERE is no department of science, as applied to practical 
matters, which has so often baffled experimenters as the 
healthful mode of warming and ventilating houses. The 
British nation spent over a million on the House of Parlia- 
ment for this end, and failed. Our own government has 
spent half a million on the Capitol, with worse failure ; and 
now it is proposed to spend a million more. The reason is, 
that the old open fireplace has been supplanted by less ex- 
pensive modes of heating, destructive to health ; and science 
has but just begun experiments to secure a remedy for the 
evil. 

The open fire warms the person, the walls, the floors and 
the furniture by radiation, and these, together with the fire, 
warm the air by convection. For the air resting on the 
heated surfaces is warmed by convection, rises and gives 
place to cooler particles, causing a constant heating of its 
particles by movement. Thus in a room with an open fire, 
the person is warmed in part by radiation from the fire 
and the surrounding walls and furniture, and in part by 
the warm air surrounding the body. 

In regard to the warmth of air, the thermometer is not 
an exact index of its temperature. For all bodies are con- 
stantly radiating their heat to cooler adjacent surfaces until 
all come to the same temperature. This being so, the 
thermometer is radiating its heat to walls and surrounding 
objects, in addition to what is subtracted by the air that 
surrounds it, and thus the air is really several degrees 
warmer than the thermometer indicates. A room at 70 



420 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

by the thermometer is usually filled with air five or more 
degrees warmer than this. 

Now, the cold air is denser than warm, and therefore 
contains more oxygen. Consequently, the cooler the air in- 
spired, the larger the supply of oxygen and of the vitality 
and vigor which it imparts. Thus, the great problem for 
economy of health is to warm the person as much as pos- 
sible by radiated heat, and supply the lungs with cool air. 
For when we breathe air at from 16 to 20, we take double 
the amount of oxygen that we do when we inhale it at 80 
to 90, arid consequently can do double the amount of muscle 
and brain work. 

Warming by an open fire is nearest to the natural mode 
of the Creator, who heats the earth and its furniture by the 
great central fire of heaven, and sends cool breezes for our 
lungs. But open fires involve great destruction of fuel 
and expenditure of money, and in consequence economic 
methods have been introduced to the great destruction of 
health and life. 

Of these methods, the most popular is that by which ra- 
diated heat is banished, and all warmth is gained by intro- 
ducing heated air. This is the method employed in our 
national Capitol, where both warming and ventilation are 
attempted by means of fans worked by steam, which force 
in the heated air. This is an expensive mode, used only 
for large establishments, and its entire failure at our capi- 
tol will probably prevent in future any very extensive use 
of it. 

But the most common mode of warming is by heated air 
introduced from a furnace. The chief objection to this is 
the loss of all radiated heat, and the consequent necessity 
of breathing air which is debilitating both from its heat and 
also from being usually deprived of the requisite moisture 
provided by the Creator in all out-door air. Another ob- 
jection is the fact that it is important to health to preserve 
an equal circulation of the blood, and the greatest impedi- 



WARMING AND VENTILATION. 421 

ment to this is a mode of heating which keeps the head in 
warmer air than the feet. This is especially deleterious in an 
age and country where active brains are constantly drawing 
blood from the extremities to the head. All furnace- 
heated rooms have coldest air at the feet, and warmest 
around the head. It is also rarely the case that furnace- 
heated houses have proper arrangements for carrying off 
the vitiated air. 

There are some recent scientific discoveries that relate to 
impure air which may properly be introduced here. It is 
shown by the microscope that fermentation is a process 
which generates extremely minute plants, that gradually 
increase till the whole mass is pervaded by this vegetation. 
The microscope also has revealed the fact that, in certain 
diseases, these microscopic plants are generated in the 
blood and other fluids of the body, in a mode similar to 
the ordinary process of fermentation. 

And, what is very curious, each of these peculiar dis- 
eases generates diverse kinds of plants. Thus in the ty- 
phoid fever, the microscope reveals in the fluids of the 
patient a plant that resembles in form some kinds of sea- 
weed. In chills and fever, the microscopic plant has an- 
other form, and in small-pox still another. A work has 
recently been published in Europe, in which representa- 
tions of these various microscopic plants generated in the 
fluids of the diseased persons are exhibited, enlarged seve- 
ral hundred times by the microscope. All diseases that 
exhibit these microscopic plants are classed together, and 
are called Zymotic, from a Greek word signifying to fer- 
ment. 

These zymotic diseases sometimes have a local origin, as 
in the case of ague caused by miasma of swamps; and 
then they are named endemic. In other cases, they are 
caused by persona^ contact with the diseased body or its 
clothing, as the itch or small-pox ; or else by effluvia from 
the sick, as in measles. Such are called contagious or infec* 



422 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

tious. In other cases, diseases result from some unknown 
cause in the atmosphere, and affect numbers of people at 
the same time, as in influenza or scarlet fever, and these 
are called epidemics. 

It is now regarded as probable that most of these dis- 
eases are generated by the microscopic plants which float 
in an impure or miasmatic atmosphere, and are taken into 
the *blood by breathing. 

Recent scientific investigations in Great Britain and 
other countries prove that the power of resisting these dis- 
eases depends upon the purity of the air which has been 
habitually inspired. The human body gradually accom- 
modates itself to unhealthful circumstances, so that people 
can live a long time in bad air. But the " reserve power''* 
of the body, that is, the power of resisting disease, is under 
such circumstances gradually destroyed, and then an epi- 
demic easily sweeps away those thus enfeebled. The 
plague of London, that destroyed thousands every day, 
came immediately after a long period of damp, warm days, 
when there was no wind to carry off the miasma thus 
generated ; while the people, by long breathing of bad air, 
were all prepared, from having sunk into a low vitality, to 
fall before the pestilence. 

Multitudes of public documents show that the fatality 
of epidemics is always proportioned to the degree in which 
impure air has previously been respired. Sickness and 
death are therefore regulated by the degree in which air is 
kept pure, especially in case of diseases in which medical 
treatment is most uncertain, as in cholera and malignant 
fevers. 

Investigations made by governmental authority, and by 
boards of health in this country and in Great Britain, prove 
that zymotic diseases ordinarily result from impure air 
generated by vegetab e or animal decay, and that in almost 
all cases they can be prevented by keeping the air pure. 
The decayed animal matter sent off from the skin and 



WAEMINO AND VENTILATION. 423 

lungs in a close, unventilated bedroom is one thing that 
generates these zymotic diseases. The decay of animal and 
vegetable matter in cellars, sinks, drains, and marshy dis- 
tricts is another cause ; and the decayed vegetable matter 
thrown up by plowing up of decayed vegetable matter in 
the rich soil in new countries is another. 

In the investigations made in certain parts of Great 
Britain, it appeared that in districts where the air is 
pure the deaths average 11 in 1000 each year; while in 
localities most exposed to impure miasma, the mortality 
was 45 in every thousand. At this rate, thirty-four per- 
sons in every thousand died from poisoned air, who would 
have preserved health and life by well-ventilated homes in 
a pure atmosphere. And, out of all who died, the propor- 
tion who owed their deaths to foul air was more than three 
fourths. Similar facts have been obtained by boards of 
health in our own country. 

Mr. Leeds gives statistics showing, that in Philadelphia, 
by improved modes of ventilation and other sanitary me- 
thods, there was a saving of 3237 lives in two years ; and 
a saving of three fourths of a million of dollars, which 
would pay the whole expense of the public schools. Phi- 
ladelphia being previously an unusually cleanly and well- 
ventilated city, what would be the saving of life, health, 
and wealth were such a city as New- York perfectly 
cleansed and ventilated ? 

Here it is proper to state again that conflicting opinions 
are found in many writers on ventilation in regard to the 
position of ventilating registers to carry off vitiated air. 
Most writers state that the impure air is heavier, and falls 
to the bottom of a room. After consulting scientific men 
extensively on this point, the writer finds the true result 
to be as follows : Carbonic acid is heavier than common 
air, and, unmixed, falls to the floor. But by the principle 
of diffusion of gases, the air thrown from the lungs, though 
at first it sinks a little, is gradually diffused, and in a heated 



424 

room, in the majority of cases, it is found more abundant- 
ly at the top than at the bottom of the room, though in 
certain circumstances it is more at the bottom. For this 
reason, registers to carry off impure air should be placed at 
both the top and bottom of a room. 

In arranging for pure air in dwellings, it is needful to 
proportion the air admitted and discharged to the number 
of persons. As a guide to this, we have the following cal- 
culetion : On an average, every adult vitiates about half a 
pint of air at each inspiration, and inspires twenty times a 
minute. This would amount to one hogshead of air vitiated 
every hour by every grown person. To keep the air pure, 
tjiis amount should enter and be carried out every hour 
for each person. If, then, ten persons assemble in a dining- 
room, ten hogsheads of air should enter and ten be dis- 
charged each hour. By the same rule, a gathering of five 
hundred persons demands the entrance and discharge of 
five hundred hogsheads of air every hour, and a thousand 
persons require a thousand hogsheads of air every hour. 

In calculating the size of registers and conductors, then, 
we must have reference to the number of persons who are 
to abide in a dwelling ; while for rooms or halls intended 
for large gatherings, a far greater allowance must be 
made. 

The most successful mode before the public, both for 
warming and ventilation, is that of Lewis Leeds, who was 
employed by government to ventilate the military hospi- 
tals and also the treasury building at Washington. This 
method has been adopted in various school-houses, and also 
by A. T. Stewart in his hotel for women in New -York 
City. The 1 eeds plan embraces the mode of heating both 
by radiation and convection, very much resembling the 
open fireplace in operation, and yet securing great econo- 
my. It is modeled strbtly after the mode adopted by the 
Creator in warming and ventilating the earth, the home of 
his great earthly familv. It aims to have a passage of pure 



WARMING AND VENTILATION. 425 

air through every room, as the breezes pass over the hills, 
and to have a method of warming chiefly by radiation, as 
the earth is warmed by the sun. In addition to this, the 
air is to be provided with moisture, as it is supplied out- 
doors by exhalations from the earth and its trees and 
plants. 

The mode of accomplishing this is by placing coils of 
steam, or hot water pipes, under windows, which warm the 
parlor walls and furniture, partly by radiation, and partly 
by the air warmed on the heated surfaces of the coils. At 
the same time, by regulating registers, or by simply opening 
the lower part of the window, the pure air, guarded from 
immediate entrance into the room, is admitted directly 
upon the coils, so that it is partially warmed before it 
reaches the person: and thus cold drafts are prevented. 
Then the vitiated air is drawn off through registers both 
at the top and bottom of the room, opening into a heated 
exhausting flue, through which the constantly ascending 
current of warm air carries it off. These heated coils are 
often used for warming houses without any arrangement 
for carrying off the vitiated air, when, of course, their pecu- 
liar usefulness is gone. 

The moisture may be supplied by a broad vessel placed 
on or close to the heated coils, giving a large surface for 
evaporation. When rooms are warmed chiefly by radiated 
heat, the air can be borne much cooler than in rooms warmed 
by hot-air furnaces, just as a person in the radiating sun can 
bear much cooler air than in. the shade. A time will come 
when walls and floors will be contrived to radiate heat in 
stead of absorbing it from the occupants of houses, as is 
generally the case at the present time, and then all can 
breathe pure and cool air. 

We are now prepared to examine more in detail the 
modes of warming and ventilation employed in the dwell- 
ings planned for this work. 

In doing tLis, it should be remembered that the aim is not 



426 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'' S HOME. 

to give plans of Louses to suit the architectural taste or the 
domestic convenience of persons who intend to keep several 
servants, and care little whether they breathe pure or bad 
air, nor of persons who do not wish to educate their children 
to manual industry or to habits of close economy. 

On the contrary, the aim is, first, to secure a house in 
which every room shall be perfectly ventilated both day and 
night, and that too without the watchful care and constant 
attention and intelligence needful in houses not provided 
with a proper and successful mode of ventilation. 

The next aim is, to arrange the conveniences of domestic 
labor so as to save time, and also to render such work less 
repulsive than it is made by common methods, so that chil- 
dren can be trained to love house- work. And lastly, econo- 
my of expense in house-building is sought. These things 
should be borne in mind in examining the plans of this 
work. 

In the Cottage plan, (Chap II. Fig. 1,) the pure air for 
rooms on the ground floor is to be introduced by a wooden 
conductor one foot square, running under the floor from 
the front door to the stove-room ; with cross branches to 
the two large rooms. The pure air passes through this, 
protected outside by wire netting, and delivered inside 
through registers in each room, as indicated in Fig. 1. 

In case open Franklin stoves are used in the large rooms, 
the pure air from the conductor should enter behind them, 
and thus be partially warmed. The vitiated air is carried 
off at the bottom of the room through the open stoves, and 
also at the top by a- register opening into a conductor to the 
exhausting warm-air shaft, which, it will be remembered, 
is the square chimney, containing the iron pipe which re- 
ceives the kitchen stove-pipe. The stove-room receives pure 
air from the conductor, and sends off impure air and the 
smells of cooking by a register opening directly into the 
exhausting shaft; while its hot air and smoke, passing 
through the iron pipe, heat the air of the shaft, and produce 



WARMING AND VENTILATION. 427 

the exhausting current. The construction of the exhausting 
or warm-air shaft is described on page 63. 

The large chambers on the second floor (Fig. 12) have 
pure air conducted from the stove-room through registers 
that can be closed if the heat or smells of cooking are un- 
pleasant. The air in the stove-room will always be moist 
from the water of the stove boiler. 

The small chambers have pure air admitted from windows 
sunk at top half an inch ; and the warm, vitiated air is con- 
ducted by a register in the ceiling which opens into a con- 
ductor to the exhausting warm- air shaft 'at the centre of the 
house, as shown in Fig. 17. 

The basement or cellar is ventilated by an opening into 
the exhausting air shaft, to remove impure air, and a small 
opening over each glazed door to admit pure air. The doors 
open out into a " well," or recess, excavated in the earth 
before the cellar, for the admission of light and air, neatly 
bricked up and whitewashed. The doors are to be made 
entirely of strong, thick glass sashes, and this will give light 
enough for laundry work ; the tubs and ironing-table being: 
placed close to the glazed door. The floor must be plas- 
tered with water-lime, and the walls and ceiling be white- 
washed, which will add reflected light to the room. There 
will thus be no need of other windows, and the house 
need not be raised above the ground. Several cottages have 
been built thus, so that the ground floors and conservatories 
are nearly on the same level ; and all agree that they are 
pleasanter than when raised higher. 

When a window in any room is sunk at the top, it should 
have a narrow shelf in front inclined to the opening, so as 
to keep out the rain. In small chambers for one person, an 
inch opening is sufficient, and in larger rooms for two per- 
sons, a two-inch opening is needed. The openings into the 
exhausting air flue should vary from eight inches to twelve 
inches square, or more, according to the number of persons 
who are to sleep in the room. 



428 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

The time when ventilation is most difficult is the medium 
weather in spring and fall, when the air, though damp, is 
similar in temperature outside and in. Then the warm-air 
flue is indispensable to proper ventilation. This is especially 
needed in a room used for school or church purposes. 

Every room used for large numbers should have its air 
regulated not only as to its warmth and purity, but also as 
to its supply of moisture ; and for this purpose will be found 
very convenient the instrument called the Hygrodeik,* 
which shows at once the temperature and the moisture. A 
work by Dr. Derby on Anthracite Coal, scientific men say 
has done much mischief by an unproved theory that the dis- 
comfort of furnace heat is caused by the passage of car- 
bonic oxide through the iron of the furnace heaters, and not 
by want of moisture. God made the air right, and taking 
out its moisture must be wrong. 

The preceding remarks illustrate the advantages of the 
cottage plan in respect to ventilation. The economy of 
the mode of warming next demands attention. In the first 
place, it should be noted that the chimney being at the 
centre of the house, no heat is lost by its radiation through 
outside walls into open air, as is the case with all fireplaces 
and grates that have their backs and flues joined to an out- 
side wall. 

In this plan, all the radiated heat from the stove serves 
to warm the walls of adjacent rooms in cold weather ; while 
in the warm season, the non-conducting summer casings of 
the stove send all the heat not used in cooking either into 
the exhausting warm-air shaft or into the central cast-iron 
pipe. In addition to this, the sliding doors of the stove-room 
(which should be only six feet high, meeting the partition 
coming from the ceiling) can be opened in cool days, and 
then the heat from the stove would temper the rooms each 
side of the kitchen. In hot weather, they could be kept 

* It is manufactured by N. M. Lowe, Boston, and sold by him and J. 
Queen & Co., Philadelphia, 



WARNING AND VENTILATION. 429 

closed except when the stove is used, and then opened only 
for a short time. The Franklin stoves in the large ro6m 
would give the radiating warmth and cheerful blaze of an 
open fire, while radiating heat also from all their surfaces. 
In cold weather, the air of the larger chambers could be 
tempered by registers admitting warm air from the stove- 
room, which would always be sufficiently moistened by 
evaporation from the stationary boiler. The conservato- 
ries in winter, protected from frost by double sashes, would 
contribute agreeable moisture to the larger rooms. In case 
the size of a family required more rooms, another story 
could be ventilated and warmed by the same mode, with 
little additional expense. 

We will next notice the economy of time, labor, and 
expense secured by this cottage plan. The laundry work 
being done in the basement, all the cooking, dish-washing, 
etc., can be done in the kitchen and stove-room on the 
ground floor. But in case a larger kitchen is needed, the 
lounges can be put in the front part of the large room, and 
the movable screen placed so as to give a work-room adja- 
cent to the kitchen, and the front side of the same be used 
for the eating-room. Where the movable screen is used, 
the floor should be oiled wood. A square piece of carpet can 
be put in the centre of the front part of the room, to keep 
the feet warm when sitting around the table, and small 
rugs can be placed before the lounges or other sitting-places, 
for the same purpose. 

Most cottages are so divided by entries, stairs, closets, 
etc., that there can be no large rooms. But in this plan, 
by the use of the movable screen, two fine large rooms can 
be secured whenever the family work is over, while the 
conveniences for work will very much lessen the time 
required. 

In certain cases, where the closest economy is needful, 
two small families can occupy the cottage, by having a 
movable screen in both rooms, and using the kitchen in 



430 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

common, or divide it and have two smaller stoves. Each 
kftchen will then have a window and as much room as is 
given to the kitchen in great steamers that provide for 
several hundred. 

Whoever plans a house with a view to economy must 
arrange rooms around a central chimney, and avoid all pro- 
jecting appendages. Dormer windows are far more ex- 
pensive than common ones, and are less pleasant. Every 
addition projecting from a main building greatly increases 
expense of building, and still more of warming and venti- 
lating. 

It should be introduced, as one school exercise in every 
female seminary, to plan houses with reference to economy 
of time, labor, and expense, and also with reference to good 
architectural taste ; and the teacher should be qualified to 
point out faults and give the instruction needed to prevent 
such mistakes in practical life. Every girl should be 
trained to be "a wise woman" that "buildeth her house" 
aright. 

There is but one mode of ventilation yet tried, that will, 
at all seasons of the year and all hours of the day and 
night, secure pure air without dangerous draughts, and that 
is by an exhausting warm-air flue. This is always secured 
by an open fireplace, so long as its chimney is kept warm 
by any fire. And in many cases, a fireplace with a flue of 
a certain dimension and height will secure good ventilation 
except when the air without and within are at the same 
temperature. 

When no exhausting warm-air flue can be used, the 
opening of doors and windows is the only resort. Every 
sleeping-room without a fireplace that draws smoke well 
should have a window raised at the bottom or sunk at the 
top at least an inch, with an inclined shelf outside or in, to 
keep out rain, and then it is properly ventilated. Or a 
door should be kept opened into a hall with an open win- 
dow. Let the bed-clothing be increased, so as to keep warm 



WARMING AND VENTILATION. 431 

in bed, and protect the head also, and then the more air 
comes into a sleeping-room the better for health. 

In reference to the warming of rooms and houses already 
built, there is no doubt that stoves are the most economi- 
cal mode, as they radiate heat and also warm by convec- 
tion. The grand objection to their use is the difficulty of 
securing proper ventilation. If a room is well warmed by 
a stove and then a suitable opening made for the entrance 
of a good supply of out-door air, and by a mode that will 
prevent dangerous draughts, all is right as to pure air. 
But in this case, the feet are always on cold floors, sur- 
rounded by the coldest air, while the head is in air of 
much higher temperature. 

There is a great difference as to healthfulness and econo- 
my in the great variety of stoves with which the market is 
filled. The competition in this manufacture is so strin- 
gent, and so many devices are employed by agents, that 
there is constant and enormous imposition on the public 
and an incredible outlay on poor stoves, that soon burn 
out or break, while they devour fuel beyond calculation. 
If some benevolent and scientific organization could be 
formed that would, from disinterested motives, afford some 
reliable guidance to the public, it probably would save 
both millions of money and much domestic discomfort. 

The stove described in Chapter Y. is protected by pa- 
tents in its chief advantages, but this has not restrained 
many of the trade from incorporating some of its leading 
excellencies and claiming to have added superior elements. 
Others will inform any who inquire for it, that it is out of 
market, because later stoves have proved superior. Should 
any who read this work wish to be sure of securing this 
stove, and also of gaining minute directions for its use, they 
may apply to the writer, Miss C. E. Beecher, 69 West 38th 
Street, New- York, inclosing 25 cents. 

She will then forward the manufacturers' printed descrip- 
tive circulars, and her own advice as to the best selection 



432 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

from the different sizes, and directions for its use, based on 
her own personal experience and that of many friends. 
Should any purchases be made through this medium, the 
manufacturers have agreed to pay a certain percentage 
into the treasury of the Benevolent Association mentioned 
at the close of this volume. 

There is no more dangerous mode of heating a room 
than by a gas-stove. There is inevitably more or less 
leakage of the gas which it is unhealthful to breathe. 
And proper ventilation is scarcely ever secured by those 
who use such stoves. The same fatal elements of imper- 
fect ventilation with its attendant horrors of disease, ex- 
travagant wastefulness of material, of fuel, of labor, of 
time, and of destruction to the apparatus itself, seem con- 
comitants of all ordinary stoves and cooking arrangements 
of the present day, unless those who use them are constant 
and unremitting in the exercise of intelligent watchfulness, 
guarding against these evils. And in view of the almost 
inevitable stupidity and carelessness of servants, who gen- 
erally have charge of such things, and the frequent 
thoughtlessness even of intelligent women who manage 
their own kitchens, the writer believes she is doing a pub- 
lic service by offering her own experience as a guide to 
simpler, cheaper, and more wholesome means of living and 
preparing the family food. 



XXXYIL 

CARE OF THE HOMELESS, THE HELPLESS, AND THE VK3IOU8. 

IN considering the duties of the Christian family in re- 
gard to the helpless and vicious classes, some recently de- 
veloped facts need to be considered. We have stated that 
the great end for which the family was instituted is the 
training to virtue and happiness of our whole race, as the 
children of our Heavenly Father, and this with chief re- 
ference to their eternal existence after death. In the 
teachings of our Lord we find that it is for sinners 
for the lost and wandering sheep, that he is most tenderly 
concerned. It is not those who by careful training and 
happy temperaments have escaped the dangers of life that 
God and good angels most anxiousiy watch. " For there is 
more joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth than over 
ninety and nine that went not astray." 

The hardest work of all is to restore a guilty, selfish, har- 
dened spirit to honor, truth, and purity; and this is the 
divine labor to which the pitying Saviour calls all his true 
followers ; to lift up the fallen, to sustain the weak,* to pro- 
tect the tempted, to bind up the broken-hearted, and espe- 
cially to rescue the sinful. This is the peculiar privilege of 
woman in the sacred retreat of a " Christian home." And 
it is for such self-denying ministries that she is to train all . 
who are under her care and influence, both by her teaching 
and by her example. 

In connection with these distinctive principles of Christ 
for which the family state was instituted, let the following 
facts be considered. The Massachusetts Board of State 



434 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Charities, consisting of some of the most benevolent and 
intelligent gentlemen of that State, in pursuance of their 
official duty visited all the State institutions, and held twenty- 
five meetings during the year 1867-8. By these visits and 
consequent discussions they arrived at certain conclusions, 
which may be briefly condensed as follows. 

No state or nation excels Massachusetts in a wise and 
generous care of the helpless, poor, and vicious. The agents 
employed for this end are frugal, industrious, intelligent, 
and benevolent men and women, with high moral principles. 
The pauper and criminal classes requiring to be cared for by 
Massachusetts are less in proportion to the whole number 
of inhabitants than in any other state or nation. Yet, 
admirable as are these comparative results, there is room 
for improvement in a most important particular. The 
report of the Board urges that the present mode of collect- 
ing special classes in great establishments, though it may 
be the best in a choice of evils, is not the best method for 
the physical, social, and moral improvement of those classes ; 
as it involves many unfortunate influences (which are stated 
at large :) and the report suggests that a better way would 
be to scatter these unfortunates from temporary receiving 
asylums into families of Christian people all over the State. 

It is suggested in view of the above, that collecting fallen 
women into one large community is not the best way to create 
a pure moral atmosphere ; and that gathering one or two 
hundred children in one establishment is not so good for 
them as to give each child a home in some loving Christian 
family. So of the- aged and the sick, the blessings of a 
quiet home, and the tender, patient nursing of true Christian 
love, must be sought in a Christian family, not in a great 
asylum. 

In view of these important facts and suggestions, it may 
be inquired, if the great end and aim of the family state is 
to train the inmates to self-denying love and labor for the 
weak, the suffering, and the sinful, how can it be done 



HOMELESS) HELPLESS^ AND VICIOUS. 435 

where there are no young children, no aged persons, no 
invalids, and no sinful ones for whom &uch sacrifices are to 
be made ? 

"Why are orphan children thrown upon the world, why 
are the aged held in a useless, suffering life, except that 
they may aid in cultivating tender love and labor for the 
helpless, and reverence for the hoary head ? And yet, how 
few children are trained thus to regard the orphan, the 
aged, the helpless, and the vicious around them ! 

Great houses are built for these destitute ones, and all the 
labor and self-denial in taking care of them is transferred 
to paid agents, while thousands of families are thus de- 
prived of all opportunity to cultivate the distinctive virtues 
of the Christian household. 

In this connection, let us look at some facts recently pub- 
lished in the city of New-York. 

The writer, Rev. TV. O. Yan Meter, says in his report : 

" The following astounding statistics are carefully selected from the 
Reports of the Police, Board of Health, Citizens' Association, and more 
than twelve years' personal experience." 

He then gives the following description of a section of 
the city only a few rods from the stores and residences of 
those who count their wealth by hundreds of thousands and 
millions, many of them professing to be followers of Christ : 

"First, we see old sheds, stable lofts, dilapidated buildings, too worth- 
less to be repaired, lofts over warehouses and shops; cellars, too 
worthless for business purposes, and too unhealthy for horses or pigs, 
and therefore occupied by human beings at high rent. Second, houses 
erected for tenant purposes. Take one near our Mission, as a fair speci- 
men of the better class of 'model' 1 tenanjt houses. It contains ono 
hundred and twenty-six families is entered at the sides from alleys 
eight feet wide ; and by reason of another barrack of equal height, the 
rooms are so darkened, that on a cloudy day it is impossible to sew in 
them without artificial light It has not one room that can be thorough- 
ly ventilated. 

"The vaults and sewers which are to carry off the filth of one hundred 



436 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



and twenty-six families bayo grated openings in the alleys, and door- 
ways in the cellars, through which the deadly miasma penetrates and 
poisons the air of tne house and courts. The water-closets for the 
whole vast establishment are a range of stalls, without doors, and 
accessible not only from the building, but even from the street. Com 
fort here is out of, the question ; common decency impossible, and the 
horrid brutalities of the passenger-ship are day after day repeated, but 
on a larger scale. 

" In similar dwellings are living five hundred and ten thousand per- 
sons, (nearly one half of the inhabitants of the city,) chiefly from the la- 
boring classes, of very moderate means, and also the uncounted thou- 
sands of those who do not know to-day what they shall have to live on 
to-morrow. This immense population is found chiefly in an area of less 
than four square miles. The vagrant and neglected children among 
them would form a procession in double file eight miles long from the 
Battery to Harlem. 

" In the Fourth ward, the tenant-house population is crowded at the 
rate of two hundred and ninety thousand inhabitants to the square 
mile. Such packing was probably never equaled in any other city. 
Were the buildings occupied by these miserable creatures removed, and 
the people placed by each other, there would be but one and two ninths 
of a square yard for each, and this unparalleled packing is increasing. 
Two hundred and twenty-four families in the ward live below the side- 
walk, many of them below high-water mark. Often in very high tide they 
are driven from their cellars or lie in bed until the tide ebbs. Not one half 
of the houses have any drain or connection with the sewer. The liquid 
refuse is emptied on the sidewalk or into the street, giving forth sick- 
ening exhalations, and uniting its fetid streams with others from similar 
sources. There are more than four hundred families in this ward whose 
homes can < nly be reached by wading through a disgusting deposit of 
filthy refuse. 'In one tenant-house one hundred and forty-six were 
sick with small-pox, typhus fever, scarlatina, measles, marasmus, phthisis 
pulmonalis, dysentery, and chronic diarrhea. In another, containing 
three hundred and forty-nine persons, one in nineteen died during the 
year, and on the day of inspection, which was during the most healthy 
season of the year, there were one hundred and fifteen persons sick! 
In another (in the Sixth Ward, but near us,) are sixty-five families ; 
seventy-seven persons were sick or diseased at the time of inspection, 
and one in four always sick. In fifteen of these families twenty-five 
children were living, thirty-seven had died.' 

44 Here are found the lowest class of sailor boarding-houses, dance- 
houses, and dens of infamy. There are less than two dwelling-houses 



HOMELESS^ HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 437 

for each rum-hole. Here are the poorest, vilest, most degraded, and 
desperate representatives of all nations. In the homes of thousands 
here, a ray of sunlight never shines, a flower never blooms, a bird song 
is never heard, a breath of pure air never breathed." 

A procession of vagrant and neglected children that in 
double file would reach eight miles, living in such filth, 
vice, and unhealthf ul pollution ; all of them God's children, 
all Christ's younger brethren, to save whom he humbled 
himself, even to the shameful death of the cross ! 

Meantime, the city of New- York has millions of wealth 
placed in the hands of men and women who profess to be 
followers of Jesus Christ, and to have consecrated them- 
selves, their time, and their wealth to his service. And they 
daily are passing and repassing within a stone's throw of the 
streets where all this misery and sin are accumulated ! 

So in all our large cities and towns all over the land are 
found similar, if not so extensive, collections of vice and 
misery. And even where there are not such extremes of 
degradation, there are contrasts of condition that should 
" give us pause." For example, in the vicinity of our large 
towns and cities will be seen spacious mansions inhabited 
by professed followers of Jesus Christ, each surrounded by 
ornamented grounds. Not far from them will be seen 
Bin all tenement-houses, abounding with children, each house 
having about as many square yards of land as the large 
houses have square acres. In the small tenements, the boys 
rise early and go forth with the father to work from eight to 
ten hours, with little opportunity for amusement or for 
reading or study. In the large houses, the boys sleep till 
a late breakfast, then lounge about till school-time, then 
spend three hours in school, stimulating brain and nerves. 
Then home to a hearty dinner, and then again to school. 

So with the girls : in the tenement-houses, they go to 
kitchens and shops to work most of the day, with little 
chance for mental culture or the refinements cf taste. In 
the large mansions, the daughters sleep late, do little or no 



438 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

labor for tlie family, and spend their time in school, or in 
light reading, ornamental accomplishments, or amusement. 

Thus one class are trained to feel that they are a privi- 
leged few for whom others are to work, while they do lit- 
tle or nothing to promote the improvement or enjoyment 
of their poorer neighbors. 

Then, again, labor being confined chiefly to the unrefined 
and uncultivated, is disgraced and rendered unattractive to 
the young. One class is overworked, and the body deterio- 
rates from excess. The other class overwork the brain 
and nerves, and the neglected muscles grow thin, flabby, 
and weak. 

Notice also the style in which they accumulate the ele- 
gances of civilization without even an attempt to elevate 
tjieir destitute neighbors to such culture and enjoyment. 
Their expensive pictures multiply on their frescoed walls, 
their elegant books increase in their closed bookcases, their 
fine pictures and prints remain shut in portfolios, to be 
only occasionally opened by a privileged few. Their hand- 
some equipages are for the comfortable and prosperous 
not for the feeble and poor who have none of their own. 
All their social amusements are exclusive, and their expen- 
sive entertainments are for those only who can return the 
same to them. 

Our Divine Master thus teaches, " When thou makest 
a feast, call not thy kinsmen or thy rich neighbors, lest 
they also bid thee again, and a recompense be made thee. 
But when thou makest a feast, call the poor, for they can 
not recompense thee ; for thou shalt be recompensed at the 
resurrection of the just." Again, our Lord, after perform- 
ing the most servile office, taught thus : " If I, your Lord 
and Master, have washed your feet, ye ought to wash one 
another's feet." 

In all these large towns and cities are women of wealth 
and leisure, who profess to be followers of Jesus Christ. 
Some of them, having property in their own right, live in 



HOMELESS, HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 439 

large mansions, with equipage and servants demanding a 
large outlay. They travel abroad, and gather around them- 
selves the elegant refinements of foreign lands. They give, 
perhaps, a tenth of their time and income (which is far less 
than was required of the Jews) for benevolent purposes, 
and then think and say that they have consecrated them- 
selves and all they have to the service of Christ. 

If there is any thing plainly taught in the New Testa- 
ment it is, that the followers of Christ are to be different 
and distinct from the world around them ; "a peculiar 
people," and subject to opposition and ill-will for their dis- 
tinctive peculiarities. 

Of these peculiarities demanded, humility and meekness 
are conspicuous: " Come and learn of me, for I am meek 
and lowly, and ye shall find rest." Now, the grand aim 
of the rich, worldly, and ambitious is to be at least equal, 
or else to rise higher than others, in wealth, honor, and 
position. This is the great struggle of humanity in all 
ages, especially in this country, and among all classes, to 
rise higher to be as rich or richer than others to be as 
well dressed to be more learned, or in more honored posi- 
tions than others. This was the very thing that made con- 
tention among the apostles, even in the company of their 
Lord, as they walked and " disputed who should be the 
greatest." " And Jesus sat down and called the twelve, 
and said unto them, If any man desire to be first, the same 
shall be last and servant of all;" and " he that is least air ong 
you shall be great." 

At another time, the ambitious mother of two disciples 
came and asked that her sons might have the highest place 
in his kingdom, and the other disciples were " moved with 
indignation." Then the Lord taught them that the honor 

o 

and glory of his kingdom was to be exactly the reverse of 
this world ; and that whoever would be great must be a 
minister, and who would be chief must be a servant; eveii 
as the Son of Man came not to be ministered to, but to 
minister. 



440 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

Again, lie rebuked the love of high position and the 
desire of being counted wise as teachers of others : " Be 
not ye called Rabbi, neither be ye called Master ; but he 
that is greatest among you shall be your servant, and who- 
soever exalteth himself shall be abased." 

Then, as to the strife after wealth, into which all are 
now rushing so earnestly, the Lord teaches : " Lay not up 
for yourselves treasures on earth. Whosoever of you for- 
saketh not all that he hath can not be my disciple. Sell 
that ye have, and give alms ; provide yourselves with bags 
that wax not old a treasure in heaven that faileth not." 
To the rich young man, asking how to gain eternal life, 
the reply was, " Sell all thou hast, and give to the poor, 
and come and follow me." When the poor widow cast, in 
all her living, she was approved. When the first Christians 
were' " filled with the Holy Ghost," they sold all their pos- 
sessions, to be distributed to those that had need, and were 
approved. 

And nowhere do we find any direction or approval of 
laying up money for self or for children. A man is ad- 
monished to provide sustenance and education for his 
family, but never to lay up money for them ; and the his- 
tory of the children of the rich is a warning that, even in 
a temporal view, the chances are all against the results of 
such use of property. We are to spend all to save the world. 
For this we are to labor and sacrifice ease and wealth, and 
we are to train children to the same self-sacrificing labors. 
All that is spent for earthly pleasure ends here. Nothing 
goes into the future world as a good secured but training 
our own and other immortal minds. Thus only can we lay 
up treasures in heaven. 

There is a crisis at hand in the history of individuals, 
of the church, and of our nation, which must inaugurate a 
new enterprise to save " the whole world." There must 
be something coming in the Christian churches more con- 
sistent, more comprehensive, more in, keeping with the 



HOMELESS) HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 441 

command of our ascending Lord" Go ye (all my follow- 
ers) into all the world, and preach the gospel to every crea- 
ture ; he that believeth shall be saved, and he that be- 
lieveth not shall be damned 1" 

It is in hope and anticipation of such a " revival " of the 
true, self-denying spirit of Christ and of his earnest follow- 
ers, that plans have been drawn for simple modes of living, 
in which both labor and economy may be practiced for 
benevolent ends, and yet without sacrificing the refinements 
of high civilization. One method is exhibited in the first 
chapters, adapted to country residence. In what follows 
will be presented a plan for a city home, having the same 
aim. 

The chief points are to secure economy of labor and 
time by the selection and close packing of conveniences, and 
also economy of health by a proper mode of warming and 
ventilation. In this connection will be indicated opportu- 
nities and modes that thus may be attained for aiding to 
save the vicious, comfort the suffering, and instruct the 
ignorant. 

Fig. 71 is the ground plan of a city tenement occupy- 
ing two lots of twenty-two feet front, in which there can 
be no side windows ; as is the case with most city houses. 
There are two front and two back-parlors, each twenty feet 
square, with a bedroom and kitchen appended to each: 
making four complete sets of living-rooms. A central hal] 
runs from basement to roof, and is lighted by skylights. 
There is also a ventilating recess running from basement 
to roof with whitened walls, and windows opening into it 
secure both light and air to the bedrooms. On one end ol 
this recess is a trash-flue closed with a door in the basement, 
and opening into each story, which must be kept closed to 
prevent an upward draught, causing dust and light articles to 
rise. At the other end is a dumb-waiter, running from cellar 
to roof, and opening into the hall of each story. Four chim- 
neys are constructed near the centre of the house, one for 



442 THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 

4J 

each suite of rooms, to receive a smoke-pipe of cast-iron or 
terra cotta, as described previously, with a space around it for 
warm air ; and this serves as the exhausting-sliaf t to carry 
off the vitiated air from parlors, kitchens, bedrooms, and 
water-closets. In each kitchen is a stove such as is described 
in Chapter IV., its pipe connecting with the central cast- 
iron or terra cotta pipe. The stove can be inclosed by 
sliding doors shutting off the heat in warm weather. These 
kitchen stoves, and a large stove in the basement to warm 
the central hall, would suffice for all the rooms, except in the 
coldest months, when a small terra cotta stove, made for this 
purpose, or even an ordinary iron stove, placed by one 
window in each of the parlors, would give the additional 
heat needed ; while fresh air could be admitted from the 
windows behind the stove, and thus be partially warmed. 

This exhibits the essential feature and peculiarity of Mr. 
Leeds's system of ventilation, before described. Fresh air, 
admitted at the bottom of a slightly raised window, is to 
enter below a window-seat which projects over the stove ; 
the air being thus warmed before entering the room. The 
flue of the stove is seen (in the finished corner of Fig. 71, 
which is a model for the four other suites of rooms on each 
floor) running along the wall to the front chimney, which 
also receives the corresponding stove-flue from the nearest 
window in the adjoining parlor : the same arrangement be- 
ing repeated at the back of the house. Thus, the two front 
and back chimneys are for the heating and ventilating 
parlor stoves ; the four central chimneys for cooking, heat- 
ing, and ventilation. 

"When possible, in a large building, steam generated in 
the basement heater will be found better than the parlor 
stove. In this case, the room will be heated by the coil 
of steam-pipe mentioned before ; the slab covering it being 
the window-seat, or guard, under which the cool fresh air 
is con iucted to be warmed before passing into the room. 



Fig. 71. 




444 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 



Fig. 72 shows one side of the parlor, giving a series of 
sli ding-doors, behind which are hooks, shelves, and " shelf - 
boxes," as described earlier in the book. 



Fig. 72. 




The recess occupied by the sofa stands between these two 
closets. In case the room is used for sleeping, the double 
couch on page 30 might be substituted for the sofa, serving 
as a lounge by day, and two single beds by night. The 
curtain hanging above can be so fastened by rings on a 
strong semi-circular wire as to be let down while dressing 
and undressing, as is done in- some of our steamboats. 

Fig. 73. 




HOMELESS, HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 



445 



Pockets and hooks on the inside of the curtains may be 
made very useful. 

Fig. T3 represents another side of the same room where 
are two large windows, each having a cushioned seat in its 
recess, (although one may be occupied by a stove, as describ- 
ed above.) A study-table with drawers on both the front 
and back sides furnishes large accommodations for many 
small articles. 

Fig. 74 represents a third side of the same room, with 
sliding doors glazed from top to bottom to give* light to the 
bedroom and kitchen. 

Pig. 74. 




The fourth side appears on the ground plan (Fig. 71.) 
The ottomans and a few chairs will complete the needful 
furniture. 

By means of forms, shelves, and shelf-boxes, the kitchen 
could hold all stores and implements for cooking and setting 
tables, on the method shown page 34. The eating table is 
close to the kitchen and N sink, so that few steps are required 
to bring and remove every article. Thus stove, sink, cook- 
ing materials, the table and its furniture, are all in close 
proximity, and yet, when the inmates are seated at table, 
the sliding-doors will shut out the kitchen, while the bad air 
and smells of cooking are carried off by the ventilating ex- 
haust-shaft. 



446 THE AMERICAN WOMAN"* S HOME. 

The bedroom has a bath-tub and water-closet. The tub 
need not be more than four feet long, and a half-cover 
raised by a hinge will, when down, hold wash-bowl and 
pitcher, when the tub is not in use. Around the bedroom 
high and \vide shelves and shelf -boxes near the ceiling serve 
to store large articles ; and narrower shelves with pegs 
under them for clothing, protected by a curtain, furnish 
other conveniences for storage. The trash-flue serves to 
send off rubbish with but few steps, and the dumb waiter 
brings up fuel, stores, etc. Each bedroom must be provided 
with a ventilating register at the top, connecting with the 
warm foul-air flue in the chimney. 

For a family of four persons, one parlor, with its kitchen 
and bedroom, couches and side closets, would supply all 
needful accommodations. For a larger family, sliding-doors 
into the adjacent parlor, its appended kitchen being arrang- 
ed for another bedroom, would accommodate a family of 
ten persons. 

A front and a back entrance may be in the basement, 
which can be used for family stores, each family having 
one room. A general laundry with drying closets could be 
provided in the attic, and lighted from the roof. 

Such a building, four stories high, would accommodate 
sixteen families of four members, or eight larger families, 
and provide light, warmth, ventilation, and more comforts 
and conveniences than are usually found in most city houses 
built for only one family. Here young married persons 
with frugal and benevolent tastes could commence house- 
keeping in a style of comfort and good taste rarely excelled 
in mansions of the rich. The spaces usually occupied by 
stairs, entries, closets, etc., would on this plan be thrown into 
fine large airy rooms, with every convenience close at hand. 

In one of our large cities is to be found a Christian lady 
who inherited a handsome establishment with means to sup- 
port it in the style common to the rich. In the spirit of 
Christ she " sold all that she had, and gave to the poor," by 



HOMELESS, HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 447 

establishing a Home for Incurables, and making her home 
with them, giving her time and wealth to promoting their 
temporal comfort and spiritual welfare. "Was this doing 
more than her duty more than the example and teachings 
of Christ require ? 

Suppose several ladies of similai views and character in 
one city, having only moderate wealth and leisure, unite to 
erect such a building as the one described, in a light and 
healthful part of the city of New- York, and then should 
take up their residence in it, and from the vast accumula- 
tion of misery and sin at hand on every side, should select 
the orphans, the aged, the sick, and the sinful, and spend 
time and money for their temporal and spiritual elevation ; 
would they do more than the example and teachings of 
Christ enjoin ? Or , would their enjoyment, even in this 
life, be diminished by exchanging a routine chiefly of per- 
sonal gratification for such self-denying ministries ? It 
was "for ike joy that was set before Him" through the 
everlasting ages that our Lord " endured the cross," and it is 
to the same supernal glories that he invites his followers, 
and by the same path he trod. 

Here it probably will be said that all rich women can 
not do what is here suggested, owing to multitudinous 
claims, or to incapacity of mind or body for carrying out 
such an attempt. It will also be said that there are many 
other ways for practicing self-denial besides selling our 
homes and taking a humbler style of living. This is all 
true. But we are told that there are "greatest" and 
" least " in that kingdom of heaven where the chief happi- 
ness is in living to serve others, and not for self. Those 
who can not change their expensive style of living, and are 
obliged to spend most of their thoughts and wealth on self 
and those who are a part of self, will be among the least 
and lowest in happiness and honor, while those who take 
the low places on earth to raise others will be the happiest 
and most honored in the kingdom of heaven. 



448 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 1 S HOME. 

There are many residences in our large cities where 
women claiming to be Christ's followers live in almost soli- 
tary grandeur till the warm season, and then shut them up 
to spend their time at watering-places or country resorts. 
The property invested in such city establishments, and the 
income required to keep them up, would secure " Christian 
homes " to many suffering, neglected, homeless children of 
Christ, who are living in impure air, with all the debasing 
influences found in city tenement-houses. Meantime, the 
owners of this wealth are suffering in mind and body for 
want of some grand and noble object in life. If such could 
not personally live in such an establishment as is here de- 
scribed, by self-denying arrangements and combinatior 
with others they could provide and superintend one. 

Our minds are created in the image of our Father in 
heaven, and capable of being made happy, as his is, by the 
outpouring of blessings on others. And when we are in- 
vited by our divine Lord to take his yoke and bear his 
burden, it is for our own highest happiness as well as for 
the good of others. And whoever truly obeys finds the 
yoke easy and the burden light, and that they bring rest to 
the soul. But those who shrink from the true good, to live 
a life of self-indulgent ease, will surely find that mere 
earthly enjoyments pall on the taste, that they perish in 
the using, that they never satisfy the cravings of a soul 
created for a higher sphere and nobler mission. 

The Bible represents that there is an emergency a great 
conflict in the world unseen and that we on earth, who are 
Christ's people, are to take a part in this conflict and in the 
" fellowship of his sufferings," to redeem his children from 
the slavery of sin and eternal death ; and there is the same 
call to labor and sacrifice now as there was when he com- 
manded, " Go into all the world and preach the Gospel to 
every creature." 

But is not the larger part of the church especially those 
who have wealth practically living on no higher princi- 



HOMELESS) HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 449 

pies than the pious Jews and virtuous heathen ? Are they 
not living just as if there were no great emergency, no 
terrible risks and danger to their fellow-men in the life to 
come ? Are they not living just as if all men were safe 
after they leave this world, and all we need to aim at is to 
make ourselves and others virtuous and happy in this life, 
without disturbing anxiety about the life to come ? And 
is the training of most Christian families diverse from that 
of pious Jews, in reference to the dangers of our fellow- 
men in the future state, and the consequent duty of labor 
and sacrifice in order to extend the true religion all over 
the earth ? 

One mode of avoiding self-denial in style of living is by 
the plea that, if all rich Christians gave up the expensive 
establishments common to this class and adopted such 
economies as are here suggested, it would tend to lower 
civilization and take away support from those living by the 
fine arts. But while the world is rushing on to such pro- 
fuse expenditure, will not all these elegancies and refine- 
ments be abundantly supported, and is there as much dan- 
ger in this direction as there is of avoiding the self-denying 
example of Christ and his early followers ? They gave up 
all they had, and " were scattered abroad, preaching the 
word ;" and was there any reason existing then for self- 
denying labor that does not exist now ? There are more 
idolaters and more sinful men now, in actual numbers, 
than there were then ; while teaching them the way of 
eternal life does not now, as it did then, involve the " loss 
of all things " and " deaths often." 

Moreover, would not the fine arts, in the end, be better 
supported by imparting culture and refined tastes to the 
neglected ones? Teaching industry, thrift, and benevo- 
lence is far better than scattering alms, which often do 
more harm than good ; and would not enabling the masses 
to enjoy the fine arts and purchase in a moderate style sub- 
serve the interests of civilization as truly as for the rich 



450 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

to accumulate treasures for themselves in the common ex- 
, elusive style ? 

Suppose some Protestant lady of culture and fortune 
should unite with an associate of congenial taste and 
benevolence to erect such a building as here described, and 
then devote her time and wealth to the elevation and sal- 
vation of the sinful and neglected, would she sacrifice as 
much as does a Lady of the Sacred Heart or a Sister of 
Charity, many of whom have been the daughters of princes 
and nobles ? They resign to their clergy and superiors not 
only the control of their wealth but their time, labor, and 
conscience. In doing this, the Roman Catholic lady is 
honored and admired as a saint, while taught that she is 
doing more than her duty, and is thus laying up a store of 
good works to repay for her own past deficiencies, and also 
to purchase grace and pardon for humbler sinners. If this 
is really believed, how soothing to a wounded conscience ! 
And what a strong appeal to generous and Christian feel- 
ing ! And the more terrific the pictures of purgatory and 
hell, the stronger the appeal to these humane and benevo- 
lent principles. 

But how would it be with the Protestant woman prac- 
ticing such self-denial ? For example, the lady of wealth 
and culture, who gave up her property and time to provide 
a home for incurables would her pastor say she was doing 
more than her duty ? and if not, would he preach to other 
rich women who, in other ways, could humble themselves 
to raise up the poor, the ignorant, and the sinful, that they 
are doing less than their duty ? 

Is it not sometimes the case, that both minister and peo- 
ple, by example, at least, seem to teach that, the more 
riches increase, the less demand there is for economy, labor, 
and self-denial for the benefit of the destitute and the 
sinful ? 

Protestants are little aware of the strong attractions 
which are drawing pious and benevolent women toward 



HOMELESS, HELPLESS, AND VICIOUS. 451 

the Roman Catholic Church. To the poor and neglected 
in humble life are offered a quiet home, with sympathy 
and honored work. To the refined and ambitious are 
offered the best society and high positions of honor and 
trust. To the sinful are offered pardon for past offenses 
and a fresh supply of " grace " for all acts of penitence or 
of benevolence To the anxiously conscientious, perplexed 
with contention^ as to doctrines and duties, are offered an 
infallible pope and clergy to decide what is truth and duty, 
and what is the tiuR interpretation of the Bible, while 
they are taught that the " faith " which saves the soul is 
implicit belief in the teachings of the .Roman Catholic 
Church. All this enables many, even of the intelligent, to 
receive the other parts of a system that contradicts both 
common sense and the Bible. 

Meantime, a highly educated priesthood, with no family 
ties to distract attention, are organizing and employing 
devoted, self-denying women, all over the land, to perform 
the distinctive work that Protestant women, if wisely 
trained and organized by their clergy, could carry out in 
thousands of scattered Christian homes and villages. 

In the Protestant churches, women are educated only to 
be married ; and when not married, there is no position 
provided which is deemed as honorable as that of a wife. 
But in the Eoman Catholic Church, the unmarried woman 
who devotes herself to works of Christian benevolence is the 
most highly honored, and has a place of comfort and re- 
spectability provided which is suited to her education and 
capacity. Thus come great nunneries, with lady superiors 
to control conscience and labor and wealth. 

But a time is coming when the family state is to be 
honored and ennobled by -single women, qualified to sus- 
tain it by their own industries ; women who will both sup- 
port and train the children of their Lord and Master in the 
true style of Protestant independence, controlled by no 
superior but Jesus Christ. And in the Bible they will 



452 THE A3IERICAJX WOMAN'S HOME. 

find the Father of the faithful, to both Jews and Gentiles, 
their great exemplar. For nearly one hundred years Abra 
ham had no child of his own ; but his household, whom he 
trained to the number of three hundred and eighteen, were 
children of others. And he was the friend of God, chosen 
to be father of many nations, because he would " command 
his household to do justice and judgment and keep the 
way of the Lord." 

The woman who from true love consents to resign her 
independence and be supported by another, while she 
bears children and trains them for heaven, has a noble 
mission ; but the woman who earns her own independence 
that -she may train the neglected children of her Lord and 
Saviour has a still higher one. And a day is coming when 
Protestant women will be trained for this their highest 
m. :stry and profession as they never yet have been. 



xxxvm. 

THE CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORHOOD. 

THE spirit of Christian missions to heathen lands and the 
organizations to carry them forward commenced, in most 
Protestant lands, within the last century. The writer can 
remember the time when an annual collection for domes- 
tic missions was all the call for such benefactions in a 
wealthy New-England parish ; while such small pittances 
were customary that the sight of a dollar-bill in the col- 
lection, even from the richest men of the church-members, 
produced a sensation. 

In the intervening period since that time, the usual mode 
of extending the Gospel among the heathen has been for a 
few of the most self -sacrificing men and women to give up 
country and home and all the comforts and benefits of a 
Christian community, and then commence the family state 
amid such vice and debasement that it was ruinous to 
children to be trained in its midst. And so the result has 
been, in multitudes of cases, that children were born only to 
be sent from parents to be trained by strangers, and the 
true " Christian family" could not be exhibited in heathen 
lands. And as a Christian neighborhood, in its strictest 
sense, consists of a collection of Christian families, such a 
community has been impossible in most cases among the 
heathen. 

When our Lord ascended, his last command was, " Go ye 
into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature." 
For ages, most Christian people have supposed this command 
was limited to the apostles. In the present day, it has 



Fig. 75. 




THE CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORHOOD. 455 

been extended to include a few men and women who 
should practice the chief labor and self-sacrifice, while 
most of the church lived at ease, and supposed they were 
obeying this command, by giving a small portion of their 
abundance to support those who performed the chief labor 
and self-sacrifice. 

But a time is coming when Christian churches will under 
stand this command in a much more comprehensive sense ; 
and the " Christian family" and " Christian neighborhood" 
will be the grand ministry of salvation. In order to assist 
in making this a practicable anticipation, some additional 
drawings are given in this chapter. The aim is to illustrate 
one mode of commencing a Christian neighborhood that is 
so economical and practical that two or three ladies, with 
very moderate means, could carry it out. 

A small church, a school- house, and a comfortable family 
dwelling may all be united in one building, and for a very 
moderate sum, as will be illustrated by the following ex- 
ample. 

At the head of the first chapter is a sketch which repre- 
sents a perspective view of the kind of edifice indicated. On 
the opposite page (Fig. 75) is an enlarged and more exact 
view of the front elevation of the same, which is now build- 
ing in one of the most Southern States, where tropical plants 
flourish. The three magnificent trees on the drawing heading 
the first chapter are live-oaks adorned with moss, rising over 
one hundred feet high and being some thirty or more feet 
in circumference. Nearly under their shadow is the build- 
ing to be described. 

Fig. 76 is the ground plan, which includes one large room 
twenty-five feet wide and thirty-five feet long, having a bow 
window at one end, and a kitchen at the other end. The 
bow- window has folding-doors, closed during the week, and 
within is the pulpit for Sunday service. The large room 
may be divided either by a movable screen or by sliding- 
doors with a large closet on either side. The doors make 



456 



THE AMERICAN WOMAN^S HOME. 




SCHOOL ROOM 



a more perfect separation ; but the screen affords more room 
for storing family conveniences, and also secures more per- 
fect ventilation for the whole large room by the exhaust-flue. 

Thus, through the 

Fig< 76< week, the school can be 

in one division, and the 
other still a sizable room, 
and the kitchen be used 
for teaching domestic 
economy and also for the 
eating-room. On Sun- 
day, if there is a mov- 
able screen, it can be 
moved back to the fire- 
place ; or otherwise, the 
sliding - doors may be 
opened, giving the whole 
space to the congrega- 
tion. The chimney is 
finished off outside as a 
steeple. It incloses a 
cast-iron or terra cotta 
pipe, which receives the 
stove-pipe of the kitchen 
and also pipes connect- 
ing the two fire-places 
with the large pipe, and 
finds exit above the slats 
of the steeple at the pro- 
jections. Thus the chim- 
ney is made an exhaust- 
shaft for carrying off vitiated air from all the rooms both 
above and below, which have openings into it made for the 
purpose. 

Two good-sized chambers are over the large lower story, 
as shown in Fig. 77. Large closets are each side of these 



-MOVABLE-SCREEN" 



LIVING ROOM 




THE CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORHOOD. 



457 



Fig. 77. 




CHAMBER 



chambers, where are slatted openings to admit pure air ; and 
under these openings are registers placed to enable pure air 
to pass through the floor 
into the large, room be- 
low. Thus a perfect 
mode of ventilation is se- 
cured for a large number. 

On Sunday, the fold- 
ing-doors of the bow- 
wiiidow are to be opened 
for the pulpit, the slid- 
ing-doors opened, or the 
screen moved back, and 
camp - chairs brought 
from the adjacent closet 
to seat a congregation of 
worshipers. 

During the week, the 
family work is to be 
done in the kitchen, and 
the room adjacent be 
used for both a school 
and an eating -room. 
Here the aim will be, 
during the week, to col- 
lect the children of the 
neighborhood, to be 
taught not only to read, 
write, and cipher, but to 
perform in the best man- 
ner all the practical duties of the family state.' Two 
ladies residing in this building can make an illustration 
of the highest kind of "Christian family," by adopting 
two orphans, keeping in training one or two servants to 
send out for the benefit of other families, and also pro- 
viding for an invalid or aged member of Christ's neglected 



CHAMBER 




BALCONY 



458 THE AMERICAN WOMAN 1 S HOME. 

ones. Here also they could employ boys and girls in van 
ous kinds of floriculture, horticulture, bee-raising, and other 
out-door employments, by which an income could be received 
and young men and women trained to industry and thrift, 
so as to earn an independent livelihood. 

The above attempt has been made where, in a circuit of 
fifty miles, with a thriving population, not a single church 
is open for Sunday worship, and not a school to be found ex- 
cept what is provided by faithful Koman Catholic nuns, 
who, indeed, are found engaged in similar labors all over 
our country. The cost of such a building, where lumber is 
$50 a hundred and labor $3 a day, would not much exceed 
$1200. 

Such destitute settlements abound all over the West and 
South, while, along the Pacific coast, China and Japan are 
sending their pagan millions to share our favored soil, 
climate, and government. 

Meantime, throughout our older States are multitudes of 
benevolent, well-educated, Christian women in unhealthful 
factories, offices, and shops ; and many, also, living in refined 
leisure, who yet are pining for an opportunity to aid in 
carrying the Gospel to the destitute. Nothing is needed but 
funds that are in the keeping of thousands of Christ's pro- 
fessed disciples, and organizations for this end, which are 
at the command of the Protestant clergy. 

Let such a truly " Christian family" be instituted in any 
destitute settlement, and soon its gardens and fields would 
cause " the desert to blossom as the rose," and around would 
soon gather a " Christian neighborhood." The school-house 
would no longer hold the multiplying worshipers. A cen- 
tral church would soon appear, with its appended accommo- 
dations for literary and social gatherings and its appliances 
for safe and healthful amusements. 

The cheering example would soon spread, and ere long 
colonies from these prosperous and Christian communities 
would go forth to shine as " lights of the world" in all the 



THE CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORHOOD. 459 

now darkened nations. Thus the " Christian family" and 
" Christian neighborhood" would become the grand ministry, 
as they were designed to be, in training our whole race 
for heaven. 

This final chapter should not close without a few encou- 
raging words to those who, in view of the many difficult 
duties urged in these pages, sorrowfully review their past 
mistakes and deficiencies. None can do this more sincerely 
than the writer. How many things have been done un- 
wisely even with good motives ! How many have been 
left undone that the light of present knowledge would have 
secured ! 

In this painful review, the good old Bible comes as the 
abundant comforter. The Epistle to the Komans was 
written especially to meet such regrets and fears. It 
teaches that all men are sinners, in many cases from igno- 
rance of what is right, and in many from stress of tempta- 
tion, so that neither Greek nor Jew can boast of his own 
righteousness. For it is not " by works of righteousness " 
that we are to be considered and treated as righteous per- 
sons, but through a "faith that works by love;" that faith 
or 'belief which is not a mere intellectual conviction, but a con- 
trolling purpose or spiritual principle which habitually con- 
fools the feelings and conduct. And so long as there is 
this constant aim and purpose to obey Christ in all things, 
mistakes in judgment as to what is right and wrong are 
pitied, " even as a father pitieth his children," when from 
ignorance they run into harm. And even the most guilty 
transgressors are freely forgiven when truly repentant and 
faithfully striving to forsake the error of their ways. 

Moreover, this tender and pitiful Saviour is the Almighty 
One who rules both this and the invisible world, and who 
" from every evil still educes good." This life is but the 
infant period of our race, and much that we call evil, in 
his wise and powerful ruling may be for the highest good 
of all concerned. 



460 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

The Blessed Word also cheers us with pictures of a dawn 
ing day to which we are approaching, when a voice shall 
be heard under the whole heavens, saying, " Alleluia" 
" the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of 
our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall reign forever 
and ever." And " a great voice out of heaven" will pro- 
claim, " Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and 
he shall dwell with them, and they shall be his people. 
And God himself shall be with them, and be their God. 
And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes ; and 
there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying ; 
neither shall there be any more pain ; for the former things 
are passed away." 

The author still can hear the echoes of early life, when 
her father's voice read to her listening mother in exulting 
tones the poet's version of this millennial consummation, 
which was the inspiring vision of his long life-labors a 
consummation to which all their children were consecrated, 
and which some of them may possibly live to behold. 



" scenes surpassing fable, and yet true ! 
Scenes of accomplished bliss ! which who can see, 
Though but in distant prospect, and not feel 
His soul refreshed with foretaste of the joy ! 

" Rivers of gladness water all the earth, 
And clothe all climes with beauty ; the reproach 
Of barrenness is past. The fruitful field 
Laughs with abundance ; and the land once lean, 
Or fertile only in its own disgrace, 
Exults to see its thistly curse repealed. 

" Error has no place : 
That creeping pestilence is driven away ; 
The breath of Heaven has chased it. In the heart 
No passion touches a discordant string, 
But all is harmony and love. Disease 
Is not : the pure and uncontaminate blood 
Holds its due course, nor fears the frost of age. 



THE CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORHOOD. 461 

One song employs all nations ; and all cry, 
' Worthy the Lamb, for he was slain for us!' 
The dwellers in the vales and on the rocks 
Shout to each other ; and the mountain-tops 
From distant mountains catch the flying joy ; 
Till, nation after nation taught the strain, 
Earth rolls the rapturous hosanna round. 

" Behold the measure of the promise filled 1 
See Salem built, the labor of a God ! 
Bright as a sun the sacred city shines ; 
All kingdoms and all princes of the earth 
Flock to that light ; the glory of all lands 
Flows into her ; unbounded is her joy, 
And endless her increase. Thy rams are there, 
Nebaioth, and the flocks of Kedar there ; 
The looms of Ormus and the mines of Ind, 
And Saba's spicy groves pay tribute there. 

u Praise is in all her gates : upon her walls, 
And in her streets, and in her spacious courts, 
Is heard salvation. Eastern Java there 
Kneels with the native of the farthest west ; 
And ^Ethiopia spreads abroad the hand, 
And worships. Her report has traveled forth 
Into all lands. From every clime they come 
To see thy beauty, and to share thy joy, 
Zion 1 an assembly such as earth 
Saw never, such as Heaven stoops down to seel n * 

* Cowper's Tost. 



AN APPEAL 
TO AMEEIOAK WOMEN, 

BT THE 

SEXIOR AUTHOR OF THIS' VOLUME. 



MY HONORED COUNTRYWOMEN : 

IT is now over forty years that I have been seeking to 
elevate the character and condition of our sex, relying, aa 
to earthly aid, chiefly on your counsel and cooperation. 
I am sorrowful at results that have followed these and 
similar efforts, and ask your sympathy and aid. 

Let me commence with a brief outline of the past. I 
commenced as an educator in the city of Hartford, Ct., 
when only the primary branches and one or two imperfect 
accomplishments were the ordinary school education, and 
was among the first 'pioneers in seeking to introduce some 
of the higher branches. The staid, conservative citizens 
queried of what use to women were Latin, Geometry, and 
Algebra, and wondered at a request for six recitation 
rooms and a study-hall for a school of nearly a hundred, 
who had as yet only one room. The appeal was then 
made to benevolent, intelligent women, and by their in- 
fluence all that was sought was liberally bestowed. 

But the course of study then attempted was scarcely half 
of what is now pursued in most of our colleges for young 
women, while there has been added a round and extent 



464 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

of accomplishments then unknown. Yet this moderate 
amount so stimulated brain and nerves, and so excited 
competition, that it became needful to enforce a rule, re- 
quiring a daily report, that only two hours a day had 
been devoted to study out of school hours. Even this did 
not avail to save from injured health both the teacher 
who projected these improvements and many of her pu 
pils. This example and that of similar institutions spread 
all over the nation, with constantly increasing demand for 
more studies, and decreasing value and respect for domestic 
pursuits and duties. 

Ten years of such intellectual excitement exhausted the 
nervous fountain, and my profession as a school-teacher 
was ended. 

The next attempt was to introduce Domestic Economy 
as a science to be studied in schools for girls. For a while it 
seemed to succeed ; but ere long was crowded out by Poli- 
tical Economy and many other economies, except those 
most needed to prepare a woman for her difficult and sacred 
duties. 

In the progress of years, it came to pass that the older 
States teemed with educated women, qualified for no other 
department of woman's profession but that of a school- 
teacher, w r hile the newer States abounded in children 
without schools. 

I again appealed to my countrywomen for help, ad- 
dressing them through the press and also by the assistance 
of a brother (in assemblies in many chief cities) in order 
to raise funds to support an agent. The funds were be- 
stowed, and thus the services of Governor Slade were 
secured, and, mainly by these agencies, nearly one thou- 
sand teachers were provided with schools, chiefly in the 
West. 

Meantime, the intellectual taxation in both private and 
public schools, the want of proper ventilation in both 
families and schools, the want of domestic exercise which 



' AN APPEAL TO AMERICAN WOMEN. 465 

is so valuable to the feminine constitution, the pernicious 
modes of dress, and the prevailing neglect of the laws of 
health, resulted in the general decay of health among 
women. At the same time, the overworking of the brain 
and nerves, and the " cramming " system of study, resulted 
in a deficiency of mental development which is very 
marked. It is now a subjecUof general observation that 
young women, at this day, are decidedly inferior in mental 
power to those of an earlier period, notwithstanding their 
increased advantages. For the mind, crowded with undi- 
gested matter, is debilitated the same as is the body by 
over-feeding. 

Recent scientific investigations give the philosophy 
of these results. For example, Professor Houghton, of 
Trinity College, Dublin, gives as one item of protracted 
experiments in animal chemistry, that two hours of severe 
study abstracts as much vital strength as is demanded by 
a whole day of manual labor. The reports of the Massa- 
chusetts Board of Education add other facts that, in this 
connection, should be deeply pondered. For example, in 
one public school of eighty-five pupils only fifty-four had 
refreshing sleep ; fifty -nine had headaches or constant 
weariness, and only fifteen were perfectly well. In this 
school it was found, and similar facts are common in all 
our public and high schools, that, in addition to six school- 
hours, thirty-one studied three hours and a half; thirty- 
five, four hours ; and twelve, from four to seven hours. 
And yet the most learned medical men maintain that the 
time devoted to brain labor, daily, should not exceed six 
hours for healthy men, and three hours for growing 
children. 

Alarmed at the dangerous tendencies of female educa- 
tion, I made another appeal to my sex, which resulted in 
the organization of the American Woman's Education As- 
sociation, the object being to establish endowed professional 
schools, in connection with literary institutions, in which 



466 THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

woman's profession should be honored and taught as are 
the professions of men, and where woman should be trained 
for some self-supporting business. From this effort several 
institutions of a high literary character have come into 
existence at the West, but the organization and endowment 
of the professional schools is yet ii /complete from many com- 
bining impediments, the chief being a want of appreciation 
of woman's profession, and of the science and training 
which its high and sacred duties require. But the reports 
of the Association will show that never before were such 
superior intellectual advantages secured to a new country 
by so economical an outlay. 

Let us now look at the dangers which are impending. 
And first, in regard to the welfare of the family state, the de- 
cay of the female constitution and health has involved such 
terrific sufferings, in addition to former cares and pains of 
maternity, that multitudes of both sexes so dread the risks 
of marriage as either to avoid it, or meet them by methods 
always injurious and often criminal. Not only so, multi- 
tudes of intelligent and conscientious persons, in private and 
by the press, unaware of the penalties of violating nature, 
openly impugn the inspired declaration, "Children are a 
heritage of the Lord." 

Add to these, other influences that are robbing home of 
its safe and peaceful enjoyments. Of such, the condition of 
of domestic service is not the least. We abound in domes- 
tic helpers from foreign shores, but they are to a large extent 
thriftless, ignorant, and unscrupulous, while as thriftless 
and inexperienced housekeepers, from boarding-school life, 
have no ability to train or to control. Hence come antago- 
nism and ceaseless " worries " in the parlor, nursery, and 
kitchen, while the husband is wearied with endless com- 
plaints of breakage, waste of fuel and food, neglect, dis- 
honesty, an*d deception, and home is any thing but a harbor 
of comfort and peace. Thus come clubs to draw men from 
comfortless homes, and, next, clubs for the deserted women. 



AN APPEAL TO AMERICAN WOMEN. 467 

Meantime, domestic service disgraced, on one side, by the 
stigma of our late slavery, and, on the other, by the influx 
into our kitchens of the uncleanly and ignorant is shunned 
by the self-respecting and well educated, many of whom 
prefer either a miserable pittance or the career of vice to 
this fancied degradation. Thus comes the overcrowding in 
all avenues for woman's work, and the consequent lowering 
of wages to starvation prices for long protracted toils. 

From this come diseases to the operatives, bequeathed 
often to their offspring. Factory girls must stand ten 
hours or more, and consequently in a few years debility and 
disease ensue, so that they never can rear healthy chil- 
dren, while the foreigners who supplant them in kitchen 
labor are almost the only strong and healthy women to 
rear large families. The sewing-machine, hailed as a bless- 
ing, has proved a curse to the poor ; for it takes away pro- 
fits from needlewomen, while employers testify that wo- 
men who use this machine for steady work, in two years or 
less become hopelessly diseased and can rear no children. 
Thus it is that the controlling political majority of New- 
England is passing from the educated to the children of 
ignorant foreigners. 

Add to these disastrous influences, the teachings of " free 
love;" the baneful influence of spiritualism, so called; 
the fascinations of the demi-monde ; the poverty of thou- 
sands of women who, but for desperate temptations, would 
be pure all these malign influences are sapping the foun- 
dations of the family state. 

Meantime, many intelligent and benevolent persons im- 
agine that the grand remedy for the heavy evils that oppress 
our sex is to introduce woman to political power and office, 
to make her a party in primary political meetings, in polit- 
ical caucuses, and in the scramble and fight for political of- 
fices ; thus bringing into this dangerous melee the distinctive 
tempting power of her sex. Who can look at this 
danger without dismay ? 



468 TEE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME. 

But it is neither generous nor wise to join in the calumny 
and ridicule that are directed toward philanthropic and con- 
scientious laborers for the good of our sex, because we fear 
their methods are not safe. It would be far wiser to show 
by example a better way. 

Let us suppose that our friends have gained the ballot 
and the powers of office : are there any real beneficent 
measures for our sex, which they would enforce by law and 
penalties, that fathers, brothers, and husbands would not 
grant to a united petition of our sex, or even to a majority 
of the wise and good ? "Would these not confer what the 
wives, mothers, and sisters deemed best for themselves and 
the children they are to train, very- much sooner than they 
would give power and office to our sex to enforce these ad- 
vantages by law ? Would it not be a wiser thing to ask for 
what we need, before trying so circuitous and dangerous a 
method 1 God has given to man the physical power, so 
that all that woman may gain, either by petitions or by 
ballot, will be the gift of love or of duty ; and the ballot 
never will be accorded till benevolent and conscientious 
men are the majority a millennial point far beyond our 
present ken. 

The 'American Woman's Education Association aims at 
a plan which its members believe, in its full development, 
will more effectually remedy the " wrongs of woman " than 
any other urged on public notice. Its general aim has been 
stated ; its details will appear at another time and place. 
Its managers include ladies of high character and position 
from six religious denominations, and also some of the most 
reliable business men of New- York. Any person wno is 
desirous to aid by contributions to this object can Learn 
more of the details of the plan by addressing me at No. 69 
West Thirty-eighth Street. But it is needful to state that 
letters from those who seek aid or employment of any 
Bort can not be answered at present, nor for some months 
to come. 



AN APPEAL TO AMERICAN WOMEN. 469 

Every woman who wishes to aid in this effort for the safety 
and elevation of our sex can do so by promoting the sale of 
this work, and its introduction as a text-book into schools. 
An edition for the use of schools will be in readiness next 
fall, which will contain school exercises, and questions that 
will promote thought and discussion in class-rooms, in ref- 
erence to various topics included in the science of Domestic 
Economy. And it is hoped that a previous large sale of 
the present volume will prepare the public mind to favor 
the introduction of this branch of study into both public 
and private schools. Ladies who write for the press, and all 
those who have influence with editors, can aid by directing 
general attention to this effort. 

All the profits of the authors derived from the edition 
of this volume prepared for schools, will be paid into the 
Treasury of the A. W. E. Association, and the amount will 
be stated in the annual reports. 

The complementary volume of this work will follow 
in a few months, and will consist, to a great extent, of 
receipt?, and directions in all branches of domestic economy, 
especially in the department of healthful and economical 
cooking. The most valuable receipts in my Domestic Re- 
ceipt-Book, heretofore published by the Harpers, will be re- 
tained, and a very large number added of new ones, which 
are healthful, economical, and in many cases ornamental. 
One special aim will be to point out modes of economizing 
labor in preparing food. 

Many directions will be given that will save from pur- 
chasing poisonous milk, meats, beers, and other medicated 
drinks. Directions for detecting poisonous ingredients in 
articles for preserving the hair, and in cosmetics for the 
complexion, which now are ruining health, eye-sight, and 
comfort all over the nation, will also be given. 

Particular attention will be given to modes of preparing 
and preserving clothing, at once economical, healthful, and 
in good taste. 



470 THE AMERICAN WOMArfS HOME. 

A large portion of the book will be devoted to instruction, 
in the various ways in which women may earn an inde- 
pendent livelihood, especially in employments that can be 
pursued in sunlight and the open air. 

Should any who read this work wish for more minute 
directions in regard to ventilation of a house already built, 
or one projected, they can obtain his aid by addressing 
Lewis Leeds, "No. 110 Broadway, New- York City. His 
associate, Mr. Herman Kreitler, who prepared the architec- 
tural plans in this work relating to Mr. Leeds's system, can 
be addressed at the same place. 

CATHAEINE E. BEECHES. 
NEW-YORK, June 1, 1869. 



APPENDIX. 



A GLOSSAET 

OF SUCH WORDS AND PHRASES AS MAY NOT EASILY BE UNDERSTOOB 
BY THE YOUNG READER. 

[Many words not contained in this GLOSSARY will be found explained 
in the body of the work, in the places where they first occur.] 

Action brought "by the Commonwealth : A prosecution conducted in the 
name of the public, or by the authority of the State. 

Albumen : Nourishing matter stored up between the undeveloped germ 
and its protecting wrappings in the seed of many plants. It is the flowery 
part of grain, the oily part of poppy seeds, the fleshy part in cocoa-nuts, 
etc. 

Alcoholic : Made of or containing alcohol, an inflammable liquid which 
is the basis of ardent spirits. 

Alkali, (plural, alkalies :) A chemical substance, which has the property of 
combining with and neutralizing the properties of acids, producing 
salts by the combination. Alkalies change most of the vegetable blues 
and purples to green, red to purple, and yellow to brown. Caustic 
alkali: An alkali deprived of all impurities, being thereby rendered 
more caustic and violent in its operation. . This term is usually applied to 
pure potash. Fixed alkali : An alkali that emits no characteristic smell, 
and can not be volatilized or evaporated without great difficulty. Potash 
and soda are called the fixed alkalies. Soda is also called a fossil or 
mineral alkali, and potash the vegetable alkali. Volatile alkali : An 
elastic, transparent, colorless, and consequently an invisible gas, known 
by the name of ammonia or aminoniacal gas. The odor of spirits of 
hartshorn is caused by this gas. 

Anglo-American : English-American, relating to Americans descended 
from English ancestors. 

Anther : That part of the stamen of a flower which contains the pollen or 
farina, a sort of mealy powder or dust, which is necessary to the pro- 
duction of the flower. 

Anthracite : One of the most valuable kinds of mineral coal, containing no 
bitumen. It is very abundant in the United States. 

Aperient: Opening. 

Archmlogy : A discourse or treatise on antiquities. 



474 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

Arrowroot : A white powder, obtained from the fecula or starch of several 
species of tuberous plants in the East and West-Indies, Bermuda, and 
other places. That from Bermuda is most highly esteemed. It is used 
as an article for the table, in the form of puddings, and also as a highly 
nutritive, easily digested, and agreeable food for invalids. It derives its 
name from having been originally used by the Indians as a remedy 
for the poison of their arrows, by mashing and applying it to the wound. 

Articulating process : The protuberance or projecting part of a bone, by 
which it is so joined to another bone as to enable the two to move upon 
each other 

Asceticism : The state of an ascetic or hermit, who flies from society and 
lives in retirement, or who practices a greater degree of mortification 
and austerity than others do, or who inflicts extraordinary severities 
upon himself. 

Astral lamp : A lamp, the principle of which was invented by Benjamin 
Thompson, (a native of Massachusetts, and afterward Count Rumford,) 
in which the oil is contained in a large horizontal ring, having at the 
centre a burner which communicates with the ring by tubes. The ring 
is placed a little below the level of the flame, and from its large surface 
affords a supply of oil for many hours. 

Astute : Shrewd. 

Auricles : (From a Latin word, signifying the ear,) the name given to two 
appendages of the heart, from their fancied resemblance to the ear. 

Baglim, (George :) An eminent physician, who was- born at Ragusa, in 
1668, and was educated at Naples and Paris. Pope Clement XIV., on 
the ground of his great merit, appointed him, while a very young man, 
Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the College of Sapienza, at Rome. 
He wrote several works, and did much to promote the cause of medical 
science. He died A.D. 1706. 

Bass, or bass-wood : A large forest-tree of America, sometimes called the 
lime-tree. The wood is white and soft, and the bark is sometimes used 
for bandages. 

Bell, Sir Charles : A celebrated surgeon, who was born in Edinburgh, in 
the year 1778. He commenced his career in London, in 1806, as a lec- 
turer on Anatomy and Surgery. In 1830, he received the honors of 
knighthood, and in 1836 was appointed Professor of Surgery in the 
College of Edinburgh. He died near Worcester, in England, April 29th, 
1842. His writings are very numerous and have been much celebrated. 
Among the most important ol these, to general readers, are his Illustra- 
tions of Paley's Natural Theology, and his treatise on The Hand, its 
Mecfianism and Vital Endowments, as evincing Design. 

Bergamot : A fruit which was originally produced by ingrafting a branch 
of a citron or lemon-tree upon the stock of a peculiar kind of pear, 
called the bergamot pear. 

Biased , Cut diagonally from one corner to another of a square or rect- 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 475 

angular piece of cloth. Bias pieces : Triangular pieces cut as above 
mentioned. 

Bituminous : Containing bitumen, which is an inflammable mineral sub- 
stance, resembling tar or pitch in its properties and uses. Among 
different bituminous substances, the names naphtha and petroleum 
have been given to those which are fluid, maltha to that which has the 
consistence of pitch, and asphaltum to that which is solid. 

Blight : A disease in plants by which they are blasted or prevented 
from producing fruit. 

Blonde lace : Lace made of silk. 

Blood heat : The temperature which the blood is always found to main- 
tain, or ninety-eight degrees of Fahrenheit's thermometer. 

Blue vitriol : Sulphate of copper. 

Blunts : Needles of a short and thick shape, distinguished from Sharps, 
which are long and slender. 

Backing : A kind of thin carpeting or coarse baize. 

Botany : (From a Greek word signifying an herb,) a knowledge of 
plants ; the science which treats of plants. 

Brazil wood: The central part or heart of a large tree which grows 
in Brazil, called the CcEsalpinia echinata. It produces very lively 
and beautiful red tints, but they are not permanent. 

Bronze : A metallic composition, consisting of copper and tin. 

Brulure: A French term, denoting a burning or scalding; a blasting 
of plants. 

Brussels, (carpet :) A kind of carpeting, so called from the city of Brussels, 
in Europe. Its basis is composed of a warp and woof of strong linen 
threads, with the warp of which are intermixed about five times the 
quantity of woolen threads of different colors. 

Bulb : A root with a round body, like the onion, turnip, or hyacinth, 
Bulbous : Having a bulb. 

Byron, (George Gordon, ) Lord : A celebrated poet, who was bora in Lon- 
don, January 22d, 1788, and died in Missolonghi, in Greece, April 18th, 
1824. 

Calisthenics : From two Greek words /taXoj-, kalos, beauty, and oOevof, 
sthenos, strength, being the union of both. 

Camwood : A dyewood, procured from a leguminous (or pod-bearing) 
tree, growing on the western coast of Africa, and called Baphianitida. 

Canker-worm: A worm which is very destructive to trees and plants. 
It springs from an egg deposited by a miller that issues from the 
ground, and in some years destroys the leaves and fruit of apple 
and other trees. 

Capillary : A minute, hair-like tube. 

Carbon: A simple, inflammable body, forming the principal part of 
wood and coal, and the whole of the diamond. 



476 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

Carbonic acid : A compound gas, consisting of one part of carbon and 
two parts of oxygen ; fatal to animal life. It has lately been obtained 
in a solid form. 

Carbonic Oxide : A compound, consisting of one part of carbon and one 
part of oxygen ; it is fatal to animal life. Burns with a pale, blue 
flame, forming carbonic acid. 

Carmine: A crimson color, the most beautiful of all the reds. It is 
prepared from a decoction of the powdered cochineal insect, to which 
alum and other substances are added. 

Caseine : One of the great forms of blood-making matter ; the cheesy 
or curd-part of milk ; found in both animal and vegetable kingdoms. 

Caster : A small vial or vessel for the table, in which to put vinegar, 
mustard, pepper, etc. Also, a small wheel on a swivel-joint, on which 
furniture may be turned in any direction. 

Chancellor of the Exchequer: In England, the highest judge of the 
law; the principal financial minister of a government, and the one 
who manages its revenue. 

Cliateau : A castle, a mansion. 

Chemistry : The science which treats of the elementary constituents of 
bodies. 

Chinese belle, deformities of: In China, it is the fashion to compress 
the feet of female infants, to prevent their growth ; in consequence 
of which, the feet of all the females of China are distorted, and so 
email that the individuals can not walk with ease. 

Chloride : A compound of chlorine and some other substance. Chlorine is a 
simple substance, formerly called oxymuriatic acid. In its pure state, it is 
a gas of green color, (hence its name, from a Greek word signi- 
fying green.) Like oxygen, it supports the combustion of some inr 
flammable substances. CJdoride of lime is a compound of chlorine 
and lime. 

Cholera infantum : A bowel-complaint to which infants are subject. 

Chyle : A white juice formed from the chyme, and consisting of the finer 
and more nutritious parts of the food. It is afterward converted 
into blood. 

Chyme : The result of the first process which food undergoes in the 
stomach previously to its being converted into chyle. 

Cicuta : The common American hemlock, an annual plant of four or 
five feet in height, and found commonly along walls and fences and 
about old ruins and buildings. It is a virulent poison as well as 
one of the most important and valuable medicinal vegetables. It is 
a very different plant from the hemlock-tree or Pinus Canadensis. 

Clarke, (Sir Charles Mansfield,) Dr. : A distinguished English physician 
and surgeon, who was born in London, May 28th, 1782. He was ap- 
pointed physician to Queen Adelaide, wife of King William IV., in 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 477 

1830, and in 1831 lie was created a baronet. He was the author of 
several valuable medical works. 

Cobalt : A brittle metal, of a reddish-gray color and weak metallic lus- 
tre, used in coloring glass. It is not easily melted nor oxidized in the 
air. 

Cochineal : A color procured from the cochineal insect, (or Coccus cacti,) 
which feeds upon the leaves of several species of the plant called cac- 
tus, and which is supposed to derive its coloring matter from its food. 
Its natural color is crimson ; but, by the addition of a preparation of 
potash, it yields a rich scarlet dye. 

Cologne-water : A fragrant perfume, which derives its name from having 
been originally made in the city of Cologne, which is situated on the 
river Rhine, in Germany. The best kind is still procured from that 
city. 

Comparative anatomy: The science which has for its object a compari- 
son of the anatomy, structure, and functions of the various organs of 
animals, plants, etc., with those of the human body. 

Confection : A sweetmeat ; a preparation of fruit with sugar ; also a pre- 
paration of medicine with honey, syrup, or similar saccharine substance, 
for the purpose of disguising the unpleasant taste of the medicine. 

Cooper, Sir Astley Paston : A celebrated English surgeon, who was 
born at Brooke, in Norfolk county, England, August 23d, 1768, and 
commenced the practice of surgery in London, in 1792. He was ap- 
pointed surgeon to King George IV., in 1827, was created a baro- 
net in 1821, and died February 12th, 1841. He was the author of many 
valuable works. 

Copal : A hard, shining, transparent resin, of a light citron color, 
brought originally from Spanish-America, and now almost wholly 
from the East-Indies. It is principally employed in the preparation of 
copal varnish, 

Copper, Sulphate of: See Sulphate of copper. 

Copperas: (Sulphate of iron or green vitriol,) a bright green mineral 
substance, formed by the decomposition of a peculiar ore of iron 
called pyrites, which is a sulphuret of iron. It is first in the form of a 
greenish-white powder or crust, which is dissolved in water, and beau- 
tiful gre^en crystals of copperas are obtained by evaporation. It ia 
principally used in dyeing and in making black ink. Its solution, 
mixed with a decoction of oak bark, produces a black color. 

Coronary : Relating to a crown or garland. In anatomy, it is applied to 
arteries which encompass the heart, in the manner, as it is fancied, of 
a garland. 

Corrosive sublimate : A poisonous substance, composed of chlorine and 
quicksilver. 

Cosmetics : Pi >parations which some people foolishly think will preserve 
and beautify the skin. 



478 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

Cream of tartar : See Tartar. 

Curculio : A weevil or worm, which affects the fruit of the plum tree 
and sometimes that of the apple-tree, causing the unripe fruit to fall 
to the ground. 

Cuvier, Baron : The most eminent naturalist of the present age ; was 
born A. D. 1769, and died A.D. 1833. He was Professor of Natura 
History in the College 6f France, and held various important posts 
under the French government at different times. His works on Nat 
ural History are of the greatest value. 

Cynosure : The constellation of the Lesser Bear, containing the star near 
the North Pole, by which sailors steer. It is used, in a figurative 
sense, as synonymous with pole-star or guide, or any thing to which the 
eyes of many are directed. 

De Tocquemlle : See Tocquemlle. 

Diamond cement : A cement sold in the shops, and used for mending 
broken glass and similar articles. 

Drab : A thick woolen cloth, of a light brown or dun color. The name 
is sometimes used for the color itself. 

Dredging-box : A box with holes in the top, used to sift or scatter flour on 
meat when roasting. 

Drill : (In husbandry,) to sow grain in rows, drills, or channels ; the row 
of grain so sowed, 

Duchess of Orleans : See Orleans. 

The East, and the Eastern States : Those of the United States situated in 
the north-east part of the country, including Maine, New-Hampshire, 
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Vermont. 

Elevation, (of a house :) A plan representing the upright view of a house, 
as a ground-plan shows its appearance on the ground. 

Euclid : A celebrated mathematician, who was born in Alexandria, in 
Egypt, about two hundred and eighty years before Christ. He dis- 
tinguished himself by his writings on music and geometry. The most 
celebrated of his works is his Elements of Geometry, which is in 
use at the present day. He established a school at Alexandria, which 
became so famous that, from his time to the conquest of Alexandria by 
the Saracens, (A.D. 646,) no mathematician was found who had not 
studied at Alexandria. Ptolemy, King of Egypt, was one of his 
pupils ; and it was to a question of this king, whether there was not a 
shorter way of coming at geometry than by the study of his Elements, 
that Euclid made the celebrated answer, " There is no royal path to 
geometry." 

^uator or equinoctial line : An imaginary line passing round the earth, 
from east to west and directly under the sun, which always shines 
nearly perpendicularly down upon all countries situated near the 
equator. 

Evolve : To throw off, to discharge. 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 4?fl 

Exchequer : A court in England in which the Chancellor presides, and 
where the revenues of and the debts due to the king, are recovered. 
This court was originally established by King William, (called " the 
Conqueror,") who died A.D. 1087 ; and its name is derived from a 
checkered cloth (French echiguier, a chess-board, checker-work) on the 
table. 

Excretion : Something discharged from the body, a separation of animal 
matters. 

Excrementitious : Consisting of matter excreted from the body ; contain- 
ing excrements. 

Fahrenheit, (Gabriel Daniel :) A celebrated natural philosopher, who was 
born at Dantzig, A.D. 1686. He made great improvements in the ther- 
mometer, and his name is sometimes used for that instrument 

Farinaceous : Mealy, tasting like meal. 

Fell : To turn down on the wrong side the raw edges of a seam after it 
has been stitched, run, or sewed, and then to hem or sew it to the cloth. 

Festivals of the Jews, the three great annual : These were, the Feast 
of the Passover, that of Pentecost, and that of Tabernacles ; on oc- 
casion of which, all the males of the nation were required to vis-it the 
temple at Jerusalem, in whatever part of the country they might 
reside. See Exodus 23 : 14, 17 ; 34 : 23 ; Leviticus 23 : 4 ; Deuter- 
onomy 16 : 16. The Passover was kept in commemoration of the de- 
liverance of the Israelites from Egypt, and was so named because the 
night before their departure the destroying angel, who slew all the 
first-born of the Egyptians, passed over the houses of the Israelites 
without entering them. See Exodus 12. The Feast of Pentecost was 
so called from a word meaning the fiftieth, because it was celebrated on 
the fiftieth day after the Passover, and was instituted in commemoration 
of the giving of the Law from Mount Sinai on the fiftieth day from the 
departure out of Egypt. It is also called the Feast of Weeks, because 
it was kept seven weeks after the Passover. See Exodus 34 : 22 ; 
Leviticus 23 : 15-21 ; Deuteronomy 16 : 9, 10. The Feast of Taber- 
nacles, or Feast of Tents, was so called because it was celebrated un- 
der tents or tabernacles of green boughs, and was designed to com 
memorate their dwelling in tents during their passage through the 
wilderness. At this feast they also returned thanks to God for the 
fruits of the earth after they had been gathered. See Exodus 23: 
16 ; Leviticus 23 : 34-44 ; Deuteronomy 16 : 13 ; and also St. John 7 : 2. 

Fire-blight : A disease in the pear and some other fruit-trees, in which 
they appear burnt as if by fire. It is supposed by some to be caused 
by an insect, others suppose it to be caused by an over-abundance of 
sap. 

Fluting-iron : An instrument for making flutes, channels, furrows, or hol- 
lows in ruffles, etc. 



480 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

Foundation muslin, : A nice kind of buckram, stiff and white, used for the 

foundation or basis of bonnets, etc. 

Free States : A phrase formerly used to distinguish those States in which 
slavery was not allowed, as distinguished from Slave States, in which 
slavery did exist. 

French chalk : A variety of the mineral called talc, unctuous to the touch, 
of greenish color, glossy, soft, and easily scratched, and leaving a 
silvery line wLen drawn on paper. It is used for marking on cloth, and 
extracting grease- spots. 

Fuller's earth : A species of clay remarkable for its property of absorbing 
oil, for which reason it is valuable for extracting grease from cloth, 
etc. It is used by fullers in scouring and cleansing cloth, whence its 
name. 

Fustic : The wood of a tree which grows in the West-Indies called 
Morus tinctoria. It affords a durable but not very brilliant yellow 
dye, and is also used in producing some greens and drab colors. 

Gattric : (From the Greek yaarriQ, gaster, the belly,) belonging or relating 
to the belly, or stomach. Gastric juice : The fluid which dissolves the 
food in the stomach. It is limpid, like water, of a saltish taste, and 
without odor. 

Geology : The science which treats of the formation of the earth. 

Gluten : The glue-like, sticky, tenacious substance which gives adhesiveness 
to dough. The principle of gelly, (now generally written jelly.) 

Gore : A triangular piece of cloth. Goring : Cut in a triangular shape. 

Gothic : A peculiar and strongly-marked style of architecture, sometimes 
called the ecclesiastical style, because it is most frequently used in 
cathedrals, churches, abbeys, and other religious edifices. Its principle 
seems to have originated in the imitation of groves and bowers, under 
which the ancients performed their sacred rites ; its clustered pillars and 
pointed arches very well representing the trunks of trees and their in- 
locking branches. 

Gourmand or Gormand : A glutton, a greedy eater. In agriculture, it 
is applied to twigs which take up the sap but bear only leaves. 

Green vitriol : See Copperas. 

Griddle : An iron pan, of a peculiarly broad and shallow construction, 
used for baking cakes. 

Ground-plan: The map- or plan of the floor of any building, in which 
the various apartments, windows, doors, .fire-places, and other things 
are represented, like the rivers, towns, mountains, roads, etc., on a map. 

Gum Arabic : A vegetable j uice which exudes through the bark of the 
Acacia, Mimosa nilotica, and some other similar trees growing in 
Arabia, Egypt, Senegal, and Central Africa. It is the purest of all 
gums. 

Hardpan : The hard, unbroken layer of earth below the mould or culti- 
vatea soil 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 481 

Hartshorn, (spirits of:) A volatile alkali, originally prepared from the 
horns of the stag or hart, but now procured from various other 
substances. It is known by the name of ammonia or spirits of 
ammonia. 

Hemlock : see Cicuta. 

Horticulturist : One skilled in horticulture, or the art of cultivating gar- 
dens : horticulture being to the garden what agriculture is to the farm, 
the application of labor and science to a limited spot, for convenience, 
for profit, or for ornament though implying a higher state of cultiva- 
tion than is common in agriculture. It includes the cultivation of 
culinary vegetables and of fruits, and forcing or exotic gardening as. far 
as respects useful products. 

Hydrogen : A very light, inflammable gas, of which water is in part 
composed. It is used to inflate balloons. 

Hypochondriasis : Melancholy, dejection, a disorder of the imagination, in 
which the person supposes he is afflicted with various diseases. 

Hysteria or hysterics : A spasmodic, convulsive affection of the nerves, 
to which women are subject. It is somewhat similar to hypochondriasis 
in men. , 

Ingrain : A kind of carpeting, in which the threads are dyed in the grain 
or raw material before manufacture. 

Ipecac : (An abbreviation of ipecacuanha,) an Indian medicinal plant, act- 
ing as an emetic. 

Isinglass : A fine kind of gelatin or glue, prepared from the swimming^ 
bladders of fishes, used as a cement, and also as an ingredient in food 
and medicine. The name is sometimes applied to a transparent mineral 
substance called mica. 

Jams : A side-piece or post. 

Kamtschadales : Inhabitants of EamtscJiatka, a large peninsula situated 
on the north-eastern coast of Asia, having the North Pacific Ocean on 
the east. It is remarkable for its extreme cold, which is heightened by 
a range of very lofty mountains extending the whole length of the pen- 
insula, several of which are volcanic. It is very deficient in vegetable 
productions, but produces a great variety of animals, from which the 
richest and most valuable furs are procured. The inhabitants are in 
general below the common height, but have broad shoulders and large 
heads. It is under the dominion of Russia. 

Kerosene : Refined Petroleum, which see. 

Kink : A knotty twist in a thread or rope. 

Lambrequin : Originally a kind of pendent scarf or covering attached to a 
helmet to protect and adorn it. Hence, a pendent ornamental curtain 
over a window. - 

Lapland : A country at the extreme north part of Europe, where it is very 
cold. It contains lofty mountains, some of which are covered with pel 
' petual snow and ice. 



482 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

Latin : The language of the Latins or inhabitants of Latium, the 
principal country of ancient Italy. After the building of Rome, that 
city became the capital of the whole country. 

Leguminous : Pod-bearing. 

Lent : A fast of the Christian Church, (lasting forty days, from Ash- 
Wednesday to Easter,) in commemoration of our Saviour's miraculous 
fast of forty days and forty nights in the wilderness. The word Lent 
means spring, this fast always occurring at that season of the year. 

Levite : One of the tribe of Levi, the son of Jacob, which tribe was set 
apart from the others to minister in the services of the Tabernacle, and 
the Temple at Jerusalem. The priests were taken from this tribe. See 
Numbers 1 : 47-53. 

Ley : Water which has percolated through ashes, earth, or other sub- 
stances, dissolving and imbibing a part of their contents. It is gen- 
erally spelled lye. 

Linnaeus, (Charles :) A native of Sweden, and the most celebrated natu- 
ralist of his age. He was born May 13th, 1707, and died January llth, 
1778. His life was devoted to the study of natural history. The 
science of botany, in particular, ig greatly indebted to his labors. His 
Amcenitates Academicce (Academical Recreations) is a collection of 
the dissertations of his pupils, edited by himself, a work rich in mat- 
ters relating to the history and habits of plants. He was the first who 
arranged Natural History into a regular system, which has been gen- 
erally called by his name. His proper name was Linne. 

Lobe : A division, a distinct part ; generally applied to the two divisions 
of the lungs. 

Loire : The largest river of France, being about five hundred and fifty 
miles in length. It rises in the mountains of Cevennes, and empties 
into the Atlantic Ocean about forty miles below the city of Nantes. 
It divides France into two almost equal parts. 

London Medical Society : A distinguished association, formed in 1773. 
It has published some valuable volumes of its transactions. It has 
a library of about 40,000 volumes, which is kept in a house presented 
to the Society, in 1788, by the celebrated Dr. Lettsom, who was one of 
its first members. 

Louis XIV. : A celebrated King of France and Navarre, who was born 
September 5th, 1638, and died September 1st, 1715. His mother having 
before had no children, though she had been married twenty-two years, 
his birth was considered as a particular favor from heaven, and he was 
called the " Gift of God." He is sometimes styled " Louis the Great," 
and his reign is celebrated as an era of magnificence and learning, and 
is notorious as a period of licentiousness. He left behind him monu- 
ments of unprecedented splendor and expense, consisting of palaces, 
gardens, and other like works. 



GLOSSARY CF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 483 

Lumbar : (From the Latin lurribus, the loin,) relating or pertaining to 
the loins. 

Lunacy, wi*it of: A judicial proceeding to ascertain whether a person 
be a lunatic. 

Mademoiselle : The French word for miss, a young girl. 

Magnesia: A light and white alkaline earth, which enters into the 
composition of many rocks, communicating to them a greasy or soapy 
feeling and a striped texture, with sometimes a greenish color. 

Malaria : (Italian, mal'aria, bad air,) a noxious vapor or exhalation ; a 
state of the atmosphere or soil, or both, which, in certain regions and 
in warm weather, produces fever, sometimes of great violence. 

Mammon : Riches, the Syrian god of riches. See Luke 16 : 11-13 ; St. 
Matthew 6 : 24. 

Mexico : A country situated south-west of the United States and extend- 
ing to the Pacific Ocean. 

Miasms : Such particles or atoms as are supposed to arise from distem 
pered, putrefying, or poisonous bodies. 

Michilimackinac or Mackinac : (Now frequently corrupted into Mack- 
inaw, which is the usual pronunciation of the name,) a military post 
in the State of Michigan, situated upon an island, about nine miles in 
circuit, in the strait which connects Lakes Michigan and Huron. It 
is much resorted to by Indians and fur-traders. The highest summit 
of the teland is about three hundred feet above the lakes and com- 
mands an extensive view of them. 

Midsummer : With us, the time when the sun arrives at his greatest 
distance from the equator, or about the twenty-first of June, called 
also the summer solstice, (from the Latin sol, the sun, and sto, to stop or 
stand still,) because when the sun reaches this point he seems to stand 
still for some time, and then appears to retrace his steps. The days 
are then longer than at any other time. 

Migrate : To remove from one place to another ; to change residence. 

Mildew : A disease of plants ; a mould, spot, or stain in paper, cloths, 
etc., caused by moisture. 

Militate : To oppose, to operate against. 

Millinet : A coarse kind of stiff muslin, formerly used for the foundation 
or basis of bonnets, etc. 

Mineralogy : A science which treats of the inorganic natural substances 
found upon or in the earth, such as earths, salts, metals, etc., and 
which are called by the general name of minerals. 

MinutifB : The smallest particulars. 

Monastic-ism : Monastic life ; religiously recluse life in a monastery or 
house of religious retirement. 

Montagu, Lady Mary Worthy : One of the most celebrated among the 
female literary characters of England. She was daughter of Evelyn, 
Duke of Kingston, and was born about 1690, at Thoresby, in England 



484 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

She displayed uncommon abilities at a very early age, and was edu 
cated by the best 'masters in the English, Latin, Greek, and French 
languages. She accompanied her husband (Edward Wortley Montagu) 
on an embassy to Constantinople, and her correspondence with her 
friends was published and much admired. She introduced the practice 
of inoculation for the small-pox into England, which proved of great 
benefit to millions.' She died at the age of seventy-two, A.D. 1762. 

Moral Philosophy : The science which treats of the motives and rules 
of human actions, and of the ends to which they ought to be directed. 

Moreen : A kind of woolen stuff used for curtains, covers of cushions, 
bed hangings, etc. 

Mortise : A cavity cut into a piece of timber to receive the end of another 
piece called the Tenon. 

Mucous: Having the nature of mucus, a glutinous, sticky, thready, 
transparent fluid, of a salt savor, produced by different membranes of 
the body, antl serving to protect the membranes and other internal 
parts against the action of the air, food, etc. The fluid of the mouth 
and nose is mucus. 

Mucous membrane : That membrane which lines the mouth, nose, intes- 
tines, and other open cavities of the body. 

Muriatic acid : An acid composed of chlorine and hydrogen, called also, 
hydrochloric acid and spirit of salt. 

Mush-stick : A stick to use in stirring mush, which is corn-meal boiled in 
water. 

Nankeen or Nankin : A light cotton cloth, originally brought from 
Nankin, in China, whence its name. 

Nash, (Richard :) Commonly called Beau Nash, or King of Bath, a cele- 
brated leader of the fashions in England. He was born at Swansea, in 
South- Wales, October 8th, 1674, and died in the city of Bath, (England,) 
February 3d, 17G1. 

Natural History : The history of animals, plants, and minerals. 

Natural Philosophy -: The science which treats of the powers of nature, 
the properties of natural bodies, and their action one upon another. It 
is sometimes called physics. 

New-milch cow : A cow which has recently calved. 

Newton, (Sir Isaac :) An eminent English philosopher and mathematician, 
who was born on Christmas day, 1642, and died March 20th, 1727. He 
was much distinguished for his very important discoveries in Optics 
and other branches of Natural Philosophy. See the first volume of Pur- 
suit of Knowledge under Difficulties, forming the fourteenth volume 
of TJie School Library, larger series. 

Night- Soil : Human excrement, so-called because usually removed from 
privies by night. 

Non-ljearers : Plants which bear no flowers nor fruit. 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 485 

Northern States : Those of the United States situated in the northern 
and eastern part of the country. 

Ordinary : See Physician in ordinary. 

OH of Vitriol : (sulphuric acid, or vitriolic acid,) an acid composed of 
oxygen and sulphur: 

Oino-mania : A disease of the brain produced by excessive use of alcoholic 
stimulants ; derived from two Greek words, oinos, wine, and mania, 
madness. The same disease sometimes arises from overuse of tobacco 
ad other stimulants of the nerves. 

Orleans, (Elizabeth Charlotte de Bamere^) Duchess of: Second wife of 
Philippe, the brother of Louis XIV., was born at Heidelberg, May 26th, 
1652, and died at the palace of St. Cloud, in Paris, December 8th, 1722. 
She was author of several works ; among which were Memoirs and 
Anecdotes of the Court of Louis XIV. 

Ottoman : A kind of hassock or thick mat for kneeling upon ; so-called 
from being used by the Ottomans or Turks. 

Oxalic acid : a vegetable acid, which exists in sorrel. 

Oxide : A compound of a substance with oxygen, though not enough 
oxygen to produce an acid ; for example, oxide of iron, or rust of metals. 

Oxidize : To combine oxygen with a body without producing acidity. 

Oxygen : The vital element of air, a simple and very important substance 
which exists in the atmosphere and supports the breathing of animals 
and the burning of combustibles. It was called oxygen from two Greek 
words, signifying to produce acid, from its power of giving acidity to 
many compounds in which it predominates. 

Oxygenized : Combined with oxygen. 

Pancreas: A gland within the abdomen just below and behind the 
stomach, and providing a fluid to assist digestion. In animals, it is 
called the sweet-bread. Pancreatic : Belonging to the pancreas. 

Parterre : A level division of ground, a flower-garden. 

Pearlnsh: The common name for impure carbonate of potash, which in a 
purer form is called Saleratus. 

Peristaltic : Contracting in successive circles ; worm-like. 

Petroleum : Rock oil, an inflammable, bituminous liquid exuding from 
rocks or from the earth in the neighborhood of the carboniferous 01 
coal-bearing formation. 

Phosphorus : One of the elementary substances. 

Physician in Ordinary to the Queen : The physician who attends the 
Queen in ordinary cases of illness. 

Pitt, William : A celebrated English statesman, son of the Earl of Chat- 
ham. He was born May 28th, 1759, and at the age of twenty-three was 
made Chancellor of the Exchequer, and soon afterward Prime Minis- 
ter. He died January 23d, 1806. 

Political Economy : The science which treats of the general causes affect- 
ing the production, distribution, and consuni plion of articles of ex- 



486 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

changeable value, in reference to their effects upon national wealth and 
welfare. 

Pollen : Tlie fertilizing 1 dust of flowers, produced by the stamens and 
falling upon the pistils inorder to render a flower capable of produc- 
ing fruit or seed. 

Potter's clay : The clay used in making articles of pottery. 

Prairie : A French word, signifying meadow. In the United States, it is 
applied to the remarkable natural meadows or plains which are found 
in the Western States. In some of these vast and nearly level plains, 
the traveler may wander for days without meeting with wood or 
water, and see no object rising above the plane of the horizon. They 
are very fertile. 

Prime Minister : The person appointed by the ruler of a nation to have 
the chief direction and management of the public affairs. 

Process : A protuberance or projecting part of a bone. 

Pulmonary : Belonging to or affecting the lungs. Pulmonary artery : 
An artery which passes through the lungs, being divided into several 
branches, which form a beautiful network over the air-vessels, and 
finally empty themselves into the left auricle of the heart. 

Puritans : A sect which professed to follow the pure word of God in op- 
position to traditions, human constitutions, and other authorities. In 
the reign of Queen Elizabeth, part of the Protestants were desirous of 
introducing a simpler, and, as they considered it, a purer form of 
church government and worship than that established by law, from 
which circumstance they were called Puritans. In process of time, 
this party increased in numbers and openly broke off from the church, 
laying aside the English liturgy, and adopting a service-book published 
at Geneva by the disciples of Calvin. They were treated with great 
rigor by the government, and many of them left the kingdom and set- 
tled in Holland. Finding themselves not so eligibly situated in that 
country as they had expected to be, a portion of them embarked for 
America, and were the first settlers of New-England. 

Quixotic : Absurd, romantic, ridiculous ; from Don Quixote, the hero of a 
celebrated fictitious work written by Cervantes, a distinguished Spanish 
writer, and intended to reform the tastes and opinions of his country- 
men. 

Reeking : Smoking, emitting vapor. 

Residuum : The remainder or part which remains. 

Routine : A round or course of engagements, business, pleasure, etc. 

To Run a seam : To lay the two edges of a seam together and pass the 
threaded needle out and in, with small stitches, a few threads below the 
edge and on a line with it. 

To Run a stocking : To pass a thread of yarn, with a needle, straight 
along each row of the stocking, as far as is desired, taking up one loop 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 487 

and missing two or three, until the row is completed, so as to double 
the thickness at the part which is run. 

Sabbatical year : Every seventh year among the Jews, which was a year 
of rest for the laud, when it was to be left without culture. In this 
Year, all debts were to be remitted, and slaves set at liberty. tSee Ex 
odus 21:2; 23 : 10 ; Leviticus 25 : 2, 3, etc. ; Deuteronomy 15 : 12 ; and 
other similar passages. 

Saleratus : See Pearlash. 

Sal ammoniac : A salt, called also muriate of ammonia, which derives its 
name from a district in Libya, Egypt, where there was a temple of Ju- 
piter Ammon, and where this salt was found. 

Scotch Highlanders : Inhabitants of the Highlands of Scotland 

Selvedge : The edge of cloth, a border. Improperly written selvage. 

Service-book : A book prescribing the order of public services in a church 
or congregation. 

Sharps : See Blunts. 

Shorts : The coarser part of wheat bran. 

Shrubbery : A plantation of shrubs. 

Siberia : A large country in the extreme northern part of Asia, having 
the Frozen Ocean on the north, and the Pacific Ocean on the east, and 
forming a part of the Russian empire. The northern part is extremely 
cold, almost uncultivated, and contains but few inhabitants. .It fur- 
nishes fine skins, and some of the most valuable furs in the world. It 
also contains rich mines of iron and copper, and several kinds of 
precious stones. 

Sinclair, Sir John : Of whom it was said, " There is no greater name in 
the annals of agriculture than his," was born in Caithness, Scotland, 
May 10th, 1754, and became a member of the British Parliament in 1780. 
He was strongly opposed to the measures of the British government 
toward America, which produced the American Revolution. He was 
author of many valuable publications on various subjects. He died 
December 21st, 1835. 

Sirloin : The loin of beef. The appellation " sir " is the title of a knight 
or baronet, and has been added to the word " loin," when applied to 
beef, because a king of England, in a freak of good humor, once con- 
ferred the honor of knighthood upon a loin of beef. 

Slack : To loosen, to relax, to deprive of cohesion. 

Soda : An alkali, usually obtained from the ashes of marine plants. 

To Spade : To throw out earth with a spade. 

Spermaceti : An oily substance found in the head of a species of whale 
called the spermaceti whale. 

Spindling : Shooting into a long, small stalk. 

Spinous process : A process or bony protuberance, resembling a spine or 
thorn, whence it derives its name. 



488 GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 

Spool : A piece of cane or reed or a hollow cylinder of wood, with a ridge 
at each end, used to wind yarn and thread upon. 

Stamen, (plural, stamens and stamina :) In weaving, the warp, the thread, 
any thing made of threads. In botany, that part of a flower on which 
the artificial classification is founded, consisting of the filament or stalk, 
and the anther, which contains the pollen or fructifying powder. 

Stigma, (plural stigmas and stigmata :) The summit or top of the pistil of 
a flower. 

Style or Stile : The part of the pistil hetween the germ and the stigma. 

Sub-carbonate : An imperfect carbonate. 

Sulphates, Sulphats, Sulphites : Salts formed by the combination of some 
base with sulphuric acid, as Sulphate of copper, (blue vitriol or blue 
Btoue,) a combination of sulphuric acid with copper. Sulphate of iron : 
Copperas or green vitriol. Sulphate of lime : Gypsum or plaster of 
Paris. Sulphate of magnesia : Epsom salts. Sulphate of potash : A 
chemical salt, composed of sulphuric acid and potash. Sulphate of soda : 
Glauber's salts. Sulphate of zinc : White vitriol. 

SulpJiuret : A combination of an alkaline earth or metal With sulphur, 
as Sulphuret of iron, a combination of iron and sulphur. 

Sulphuric acid : Oil of vitriol, vitriolic acid. 

Suture : A sewing ; the uniting of parts by stitching ; the seam 01 joint 
which unites the flat bones of the skull, which are notched like the 
teeth of a saw, and the notches, being united together, present the 
appearance of a seam. 

Tartar: A substance, deposited on 'the inside of wine casks, consisting 
chiefly of tartaric acid and potass. Cream of tartar : The crude tartar 
separated from all its impurities by being dissolved in water and then 
crystallized, when it becomes a perfectly white powder. 

Tartaric acid : A vegetable acid which exists in the grape. 

Technology : A description of the arts, considered generally in their 
theory and practice as connected with moral, political, and physical 
science. 

Three-ply or triple ingrain : A kind of carpeting, in which the threads 
are woven in such a manner as to make three thicknesses of the cloth. 

Tic douloureux : A painful affection of the nerves, mostly those of the 
face. 

Tocquenille, (Alexis de :) A celebrated statesman and writer of France, 
and author of volumes on the political condition, and the peniten- 
tiaries of the United States, and other works. 

Trachea : The windpipe, so named (from a Greek word signifying rough) 
from the roughness or inequalities of the cartilages of which it is 
formed, 

Truckle-bed or Trundle-bed: A bed that runs on wheels. 

Tuber : A solid, fleshy, roundish root, like the potato. Tuberous : Thick 
and fleshy ; composed of or having tubers. 



GLOSSARY OF WORDS AND REFERENCES. 489 

Tucks, (improperly Tacks} : Folds in garments. 

Turmeric : The root of a plant called Curcuma longa, a native of th% East. 
Indies, used as a yellow dye. 

Twaddle : Idle, foolish talk or conversation. 

Unbolted: Unsifted. 

Unslacked : Not loosened or deprived of cohesion. Lime, when it has 
been slacked, crumbles to powder from being deprived of cohesion. 

Valance : The drapery or fringe hanging round the cover of a bed, couch, 
or other similar article. 

Vascular : Relating to or full of vessels. 

Venetian : A kind of carpeting, composed of a striped woolen warp on a 
thick woof of linen thread, 

Verisimilitude : Probability, resemblance to truth. 

Verbatim : Word for word. 

Vice versa: The side being changed, or the question reversed, or the 

. terms being exchanged. 

Viscera, (plural of viscus :) Organs contained in the great cavities of the 
body, the skull, the abdomen, and the chest. Generally applied to the 
contents of the abdomen. 

Vitriol : A compound mineral salt of a very caustic taste. Blue Vitriol, 
sulphate of copper. Green Vitriol, see Copperas. OH of Viti*iol, sul- 
phuric acid. White Vitriol, sulphate of zinc. 

Waffle-iron : An iron utensil for the purpose of baking waffles, which are 
thin and soft cakes indented by the iron in which they are baked. 

Wash-leather : A soft, pliable leather dressed with oil, and in such a way 
that it may be washed without shrinking. It is used for various arti- 
cles of dress, as undershirts, drawers, etc., and also for rubbing sil- 
ver, and other articles having a high polish. The article known in 
commerce as chamois or shammy leather is also called wash-leather. 

Welting-cord : A cord sewed into the welt or border of a garment. 

The West or Western World. When used in Europe, or in distinction 
from the Eastern World, it means America. When used in this coun- 
try, the West refers to the Western States of the Union. Western 
Wilds : The wild, thinly-settled lands of the Western States. 

White vitriol : see Zinc. 

Wilton carpet : A kind of carpets made in England, and so called from 
the place which is the chief seat of their manufacture. They are wool- 
en velvets with variegated colors. 

Writ of lunacy. See Lunacy. 

Xantippe : The wife of Socrates, noted for her violent temper and scolding 
propensities. The name is frequently applied to a shrew, or peevish 

' turbulent, scolding woman. 

Zinc : A bluish white metal, which is used as a constituent of brass and 
some other alloys. Sulphate of Zinc or Wlrite vitriol : A combination 
of zinc with sulphuric acid. 



INDEX: 

ANALYTICAL AND ALPHABETICAL. 



Absorbents of the skin, 151. 

Accidents and antidotes, 348-352. 

Accounts, 239. 

Acids, 350, 351. 

Air, evils of the want of pure, 42, 

49-58. Exercise in the, 24. 

Change of, for infants, 270. Of 

sick-rooms, 339. See Ventilation. 
Albany Orphan Asylum, 275. 
Alcholic drinks, 138-142. See Stim- 
ulating. 
America, anticipations as to, 210. 

Conspicuous station of, 211. 

Labor in, 211. Domestic labor 

in, 307-314, 333, 334. 
American women, their equality, 

316. Too little exercise, 314. 

Precedence given to, by the 

other sex, 201. Must become 

instructors to their servants, 314. 
Amusements, 287-302. 
Anger, on silence in, 215, 216. See 

Temper and Tones. 
Animal food, 124, 131, 136. For 

young children, 276. See Food. 
Animals, 393-402. 
Anthracite coal, 82. 
Ants, red and black, 377. 
Anxiety, a countenance of, 213. 
Appetite of the sick not to be 

tempted, 339. 

Appetites, gratification of the, 223. 
Apple-trees, preserving from insects, 

392. 
Apportionment of time, 222,225,247. 

By regular division of work, 226. 

Jewish, 210. 



Argand burners, 362. 

Aristocracy, English, 249 The 
prejudice of, as to labor, 191. 
Courtesy of. limited,. ^00. Man- 
ners of democracy and, 200. 
Dornesjtics of, 321. 

Arm, muscles of the, 113, 114. 

Arsenic, poisoning from, 350. 

Arteries, tying up, 348 

Associated charities, 243, 244. 



Baglivi, on health during Lent, 

132. 

Balls, 290. 
Baskets, 375. Hanging, for flowers, 

95, 96. 

Bath, on using the, 156. 
Bathing iniants, 269, 270. See 

Washing. 

Bathing-rooms, 86, 446. 
Beaumont, Dr., experiments by, on 

the digestibility of food, 136, 

note. 

Beauty in the house, 84-103. 
Bed-bugs, 377. 
Bedrooms, care of, 369, 370. 
Beds and bedding, 30, 31, 359. On 

making, 370. 
Bees, 401. 

Benevolence, 233-235. Sf,6 Charity. 
Bituminous coal, 361. 
Black ants, 377. 
Bleeding at the lungs, stomach, OT 

throat, 351. 

Blindness, guarding against, 269 
Blisters, on ujvssiing, o4l. 



492 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



Blood, details as to the circulation 
of the, 106, 107. Effect of day- 
light on the, 193 ; of exercise, 115. 
Crowded to the brain when one 
is excited, 111. When a cause 
of mental disease, 256, 257. Stop- 
ping, 348, 351. When dancing, 
290. See Circulation. 

Blood-vessels, 44-46, 107. 

Breakfast-tea, 188. 

Body, change 'and renovation of 
the, 121, 122. Connection of mind 
and, 255. See Mind. 

Boldness in domestics, 330. 

Bones, described, 158-159. 

Bowels, 335-338, note. 

Bowls and vases for growing 
plants, 99. 

Boys, small, made useful, 228. Do- 
mestic arts taught to, 229. See 
Children. 

Brain, 108. Excitement of the, 255. 
Over-action of the, 258. 

Bread, 170. Aerating, -171-173. 
Mixing, 174. Baking, 175. 

Breakfast, late, 195. 

Broadcloths, cutting, 358. 

Broken limbs, 349. 

Bruises, 348 

Budding, hints on, 385. 

Bulbs, 384. 

Burne, Dr., cited, 336. 

Burns, treatment of, 349. 

Butler, Fanny Kemble, on theatres, 
291. 

Butter, 176. Bad, in America, 177. 
How to make good, 178. 

Buttonholes, 353. 

Byron, Lord, 260. 



C 



Cakes, keeping till meal-time, 276. 

Candles, 362. To make, 365. 

(Japs for infants forbidden, 269. 

Card-playing, 291. 

Castle-building, 259. 

Caterpillars, 392. 

Cathartics, 336, 338. 

Catholics, health of, during Lent, 
132. Good works of, 450, 458. 

Cellars, vegetables in dark, 192. 
On the care of, 376. Ventilation 
of, in model cottage, 427. 

Cell-life, 105-107. 

Chambers, care o", 369. Couches 



for, 30, 31. Furniture for, 36. 
Ventilation of, in model cottage, 
427. In city house, 441-446. 

Character, dependence of happiness 
on, 234, 235. Self-deny ing' bene- 
volence of Christ's, 234. 

Charcoal, 361. 

Charity, Sisters of, 346. 

Charity, 118. On giving in, 232- 
246. Difficulty respecting, 233. 
General principles respecting, 
235. Objects for receiving, 242. 
For souls of men, 242, 243. By 
furnishing the poor with means 
of earning support, 243. Associa- 
tions for, 244. Indiscriminate be- 
stowal of, 244. Benefit of districts 
in distributing, 245. On j udging 
of other people's, 246. 

Children, washing, 157. Living in 
the dark, 192. Early retiring 
and rising of, 195. Cultivation of 
good manners in, 202. Too great 
familiarity with, 204, 279. Should 
acknowledge acts of kindness, 
205 ; ask leave to iise others' arti- 
cles, 205 ; avoid wounding others' 
feelings, 205, 283 ; to be taught 
to keep silence, 207 ; do not sur- 
round with too many rules, 282. 
On making allowances for, 285. 
Waiting on, 228. On making 
usei'ul, 229, 230. On paying, for 
services, 229, 283. On giving 
youn ger, to ol der, 230. Precocity 
in, 258. Eating too often, 276. 
To be guarded as to dishonesty, 
deceit, impurity, and running in 
debt, 285. Sharing fruits and 
flowers, 295. See Boys, Girls, and 
Young children. 

Chinese, regard for old age, 306. 
Preservation of fertilizing matter, 
403. 

Chimneys, smoky, 76, 79. 

Chocolate, 189. 

Christianity, principles of, identical 
with democratic, 200, 201. 

Chromos, 91. 

Churches, ill-ventilated, 55. 

Circulation, in the skin of infants, 
165, 166. Effect of cold on, 113. 
In the aged, 166, 305. See Blood. 

Clarke, Dr., on animal diet for very 
young children, 275. 

( leanliness, 151, 157. Of the sick, 
339. 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



493 



Closets, of conveniences, 227. Slid- 
ing, 444. Earth, 403-418. 

Clothing and clothes, 159-106. De- 
ficiency of, for infants, 2ii9. Rule 
as to quantity of, 165, 166. /See 
Dress, and Tight dressing. 

Coal, 361. 

Cockroaches, 377. 

Coffee. See Tea. 

Cold, on exposure to, 165, 166. 

Cold and hot, food, 135. Drinks 
145. 

Collecting of specimens, 297. 

Colleges, physicians in, 258. 

Colors for different complexions, 
356. 

Combe, Andrew, on drinks, 145, 
146. On exercising the brain, 
259. On infants, 265-268. On 
the bowels, 336. 

Complexions, colors for the diffe- 
rent, 356. 

Condiments in food, 133, 190. 

Confectionery, 189. 

Conservatories, 41. 

Constipation, 337, note. 

Conveniences, on providing, 228. 
For cooking, 373. For the sick 
room, 339. Close packing of, 
Chap. II. 

Cooking, 167-190. 

Cowper, quoted, 460. 

Cooper, Sir Astley, cited, 255. 

Corrosive sublimate,poisoning from, 
350. 

Corsets, 164. 

Couches, cheap, 30, 31. 

Courtesy, want of, 197 ; causes of it, 
198. See Democracy. 

Cows, to take care of, 397. 

Creeping of infants, 271. 

Cribs for infants, 269. 

Crickets, 377. 

Crockery for the kitchen, 373. 

Cruelty in amusements, 287. 

Crying of infants, 271, 

Curculios, 392. 

Currants, 390. 

Curtains, 88, 367. 

Curvature. See, Spine. 

Cuts, remedies for, 348. 

Cutting and sewing, 353-358. 



Dancing, 288-290. 

Daughters, as domestic assistants, 



309. Educated to domestic work, 
314. See Girls. 

Day, on converting into night, 191. 
Influence of, on vegetables and 
blood, 193. 

Debt, on running into, 285. 

Decoration, home, 84-103. 

Democracy of early rising, 191. 
Principles of, identical with Chris- 
tian, 200. Tendencies of, as to the 
female sex, 201. Courtesy of man- 
ners and, 209, 210. 

Derangement from over-excite- 
ment, 257. 

Diet. See Food. 

Digestion, organs of, 128. Details 
respecting, 133-135. Articles 
easiest for, 133. Experiments 
respecting, 136. Bulk of food 
necessary to, 136. 

Dirt not healthy, 157. 

Dish-cloths, 372. 

Dishes, on washing, 372, 373, 

Dolls, benefits from, 298. 

Domestic amusements, 287-300. 

Domestic exercise, 113-118. 

Domestic economy, indispensable 
part of education, 14. 

Domestic duties, dignity of, 220. 

Domestic servants, peculiar difficul- 
ties as to, in America, 313. On 
making allowances for. $27-330. 
Care of, 307-334. Of aristocratic 
lands, 321. Placing ourselves in 
their situation, 327. Exorbitant 
wages of, 326. Instability and 
discontent of, and the remedy, 
329. Pride and insubordination 
of, and the remedy, 330. Bold 
and forward, 330. Dress and 
rooms of, 323. Finding fault 
with, 331. Beds for, 370. 

Domestic service, cause of its being 
avoided by American girls, 322. 

Dress, too much attention to, 231. 
Of domestics, 323, 330. See 
Clothing. 

Drinks, on healthful, 138-149. 

Drowning, 349. 

Dumb-waiters, 446. 

Dusting, 369. 



E 



Early rising, 191-196. Democratic, 
191. Reasons for, 193. Longevi- 
ty and, 195. Effects of, on a fami- 



494 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



ly, 195 ; on the community, 196 ; 
on systematic duty, 231. 

Earth-closets, 403-418. 

Earthen-ware, 373. 

Eating, intemperance in, 127. Too 
fast, 134. Should not be follow- 
ed by exercise, 134. See Food. 

Economy, valuable only for com- 
fort, 214. 

Education in America, 211. 

Employment for the different divi- 
sions of a week, 226, 227. On 
regular, for all the family, 228. 

Enjoyments. See Amusements and 
Happiness. 

Equality. See Democracy, Sexes, 
and Women. 

Establishments, expensive, given 
up, 242. 

Exercise, 112-118. Neglect of, 287. 
Indispensable to the health of 
the several parts of the human 
frame, 116, 117. Of the muscles, 
113-115. Food to be graduated 
by, 130. After eating," bad, 134. 
Evils of want of, 116. On fur- 
nishing interesting, 117. Walk- 
ing for, 117. On excessive, of the 
mind and feelings, 256-258. Too 
little, of intellect and feeling, 259. 

Expenses, on keeping account of, 
239. 

Eyes, screening, from light, 365. 
Of infants', 269. 



F 



Family, on early rising in the, 195. 
Fathers neglecting the, 300. On 
attachments of, 300. 

Fasting in sickness, 336. 

Fault-finding, 331. 

Feather beds, 370. 

Feelings, inactivity of the, 259. 

Feet, on protecting the, 166. Keep- 
ing those of infants warm, 269. 

Figs, 390. 

Filberts, 390. 

Finger-nails, 206. 

Fire, escaping from, 352. f 

Fire-places and fires, 360, 361, 
368. 

Fishing, 287. 

Fleas, 377. 

Flies, on destroying, 377. 

Flower-baskets, 98. 



Flower seeds, on planting, 380. 

Fluids, on taking, 136. 

Food, on the conversion of, into 
nourishment, 125. Responsibili- 
ty as to, in a family, 119. Pro- 
portion of nutritive elements in, 
124. On taking too much, 125, 
126. On one kind of, for each 
meal; 133. Quantity of, to be 
graduated by exercise, 130. On 
the quality of, 132. Stimulating, 

133. Animal and vegetable, 131, 
132. Kinds of, most easily di- 
gested, 133. Injurious, from bad 
cooking, 133. On eating, too fast, 

134. On exercise, after taking, 
134. On hot and cold, 135. High- 
ly concentrated, 136. Certain 
bulk of, necessary to digestion, 
136. For infants, 266. For nurses, 
267. Sickness from improper, 
337. Preparing, for the sick, 
341. 

Foreigners, employed as domestics. 

320. 

Forewarning domestics, 331. 
Forwardness of domestics, 330. 
Frocks, to make, 355. 
Fruit, on the cultivation of, 294, 

389. 

Fuel, hints as to, 360. 
Furnaces, 79-83, 420. 



G 



Games of children, 297. 

Garden seeds, to plant, 333. 

Gardening, 381. 

Gardens, on laying out, 382. 

Gas, 362. 

Gastric juice, 126. 

Gathering, in shirts, 354. 

Girls, small, made useful, 230, 
Forming habits of system, 232. 
See Daughters. 

Gooseberries, 390. 

Government of children, 278. Un- 
steadiness in, and over-govern- 
ment, 281. Maxims on, 282, 283. 
See Children, Subordination, and 
Young children. 

Grafting, 386, 387. 

Grapes, 391. 

Grates, 361. 

Gratifications, on physical, 226, 237 

Grease in marble, 068. 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



495 



Habit, of system and order, 220- 
232. In infants, 271. Of the 
bowels, 338. 

Handkerchiefs, cleansing, 298. 

Happiness, dependence of, on cha- 
racter, 234. On living to make, 
235. Connected with duties, 247, 
248. 

Health, connection of exercise and, 
116 ; of the quantity of food and, 
130 ; of the quality, 117. Of Ca- 
, tholics during Lent, 132. Not 
from dirt, 157. Effect of early 
rising on, 192. On the duty of 
sacrificing, 224. Causes which 
injure the mind's, 255. Amuse- 
ments and, 287. Laughter and, 
297. Ventilation and, 50-55. Con- 
nection of, with cellars, 376. See 
Air, Exercise, and Sickness. 

Hearths, 368. 

Heart, 46. 

Help, see Domestics. 

Horse-racing, 289. 

Horses, care of, 396, 397. 

Hospitality, on manifesting, 301, 
302. 

Hot and cold food and drinks, 135, 
145. 

Hot-beds, 379. 

Housekeepers, preservation of good 
temper in, 212-219. Allowances 
to be made for, 213. General 
principles for, 214-216. See 
American women. 

Housekeeping, dignity and difficul- 
ty of, 212. See Labor. 

House-plants, to repot, 381. 

Houses, on the construction of, 23- 
42, 441-446. 

Hunger, 126. As a guide for tak- 
ing food, 130. 

Hunting, 287. 



Imaorination, 199. Works of, 259, 
2i)3. See Novel-reading. 

Impostors, soliciting charity, 244. 

Impurity of thought, 285, 286. 

Indigestion, 133-137. See Health. 

Infants, mortality among, 266. On 
giving to the older children, 228. 
Use of, to elicit charity, 244. Ig- 
norance of parents concerning, 



263, 264. Importance of know- 
ing how to take care of, 265. 
Combe, Bell, and Eberle on, cited, 
265-268. Food for, 268. Medi- 
cines for, 267. Pure air for, 268. 
Keeping warm, 269. Keeping 
their heads cool, 269. Bathing, 

270. To creep, 271. Habits, 271. 
Teething, 272, 273. Constipa- 
tion, 273. Diarrhea, 274. Use 
of water in fever, 274. Crying, 

271. See Children and Mortali- 
ty- 
Ingrafting, 386. 

Insects, on destroying, 377. Pre- 
serving tree's from, 392. Pre- 
serving domestic animals from, 
395. , 

Intemperance, in eating, 127. In 
drinking, 138. Woman's respon- 
sibility as to, 149. 

Ignorance, of architects, 62, 63. Of 
parents concerning infants, 263- 
265. Of young girls concerning 
dangers of wrong dressing, 158. 
Of domestic servants in America, 
320, 321. 

Iron- ware, 373. 



Jewish use of time, 249. 
Jokes, 297. 



Kernel of wheat, constituent parts 

of, 122. 

Kerosene, 363. 
Kidneys, 154. 
Kitchens, 35, 371-375. On taking 

care of, 371. Oil-cloths for, 371. 

Furniture for, 374 



Labeling powders, 342. 

Labor, nobility of, 19, 21, 23. Out- 
door, 52. Domestic, 323-327. 

Lanibrequims, 88, 89. 

Lamps, 363* Care of, 364 

Laughter, 297. 

Laundry, 39-41. Neighborhood, 
334. In city house, 446. 

Lent, health during, 132. 

Lewis Leeds, on ventilation. 424- 
426,423. 



496 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



Life, object of, 235. 

Light, effects of, 192, 193. Screen- 
ing eyes from, 269, 362. 

Lightning. 351. 

Lightning-rods, 352. 

Lights, 360. 

Linens, 356. 

Liquids, on taking, 136. 

Literature, guarding, 293. 

Longevity, Sinclair on, 195. 

Louis XIV., manners of his age, 
211. 

Lungs, 44. Effects of tight-dress- 
ing on the, 161. Bleeding at the, 
351. 

Luxuries. See Superfluities. 



M 



Mahogany furniture, 368. 

Manners, good, 197. American de- 
fect in, and cause of it, 198. Of 
the Puritans and their posterity, 
199. Principles respecting, 200. 
Proprieties in, 201. On cultiva- 
tion of, 202. Leading points as 
to, claiming attention, 204. Chil- 
dren to be taught, 205. On con- 
ventional, 206. At table, 207. 
Charity for bad, 209. Of the age 
of Louis XIV, 211. See Chil- 
dren. 

Manual labor of Christ, 18, 19. 

Marble, stains on, 368. 

Mattresses, 31,370. 

Meals, should be five hours apart, 
129. Time of English, 191, 192. 

Meat, on eating, 132. Butcher- 
ing and trimming, 178. Waste 
of, in America, 179. French 
economy in, 180. Cooking, 181- 
185. 

Mechanical amusements, 298. 

Medical men needed in literary in- 
stitutions, 258. 

Medicines, on giving to infants, 266. 
On administering, 336. ' Different 
effects of different, 338, 340. La- 
beling, 342. 

Men engaged in women's work, 
229. 

Mending, 358. 

Mental excitement, effect of, on 
health, 256-258. On reducing 
youthful, 258. Effect of, on the 
mind, 257 See Mind. 

Mexicans, teeth of, 145. 



Microscopic wonders in animal and 
vegetable cells, 105. In muscu- 
lar fibre, 113. In zymotic dis- 
eases, 421. In alcoholic effects 
on the brain, 140. 

Milk, mothers', for infants, 266. 

Milkweed-silk, 280. 

Mind, connection of body and, 255. 
Causes which injure the health 
of the, 255-260. On inactivity of. 
259. Indications of diseased, 261. 
Wholesome occupation for, 260, 
261. See Health and Mental ex 
citement. 

Mineralogical collections, 297. 

Missions, 453. 

Modesty in children, 285. 

Moisture in heatdd rooms, 79-81, 
425. 

Money, children's earning. 229. 

Morals in children, 286. See Chil- 
dren and Young children. 

Mortality among infants, 266. 
Causes of it, 267. At the Albany 
Orphan Asylujn, 275. See In- 
fants. 

Mothers, should regulate daughters' 
dress, 165. Few qualified to train 
children, 264. Influence of, 212- 
214. Teaching boys domestic 
arts, 229. See American women 
and Women. 

Movable screen, 28, 29. 

Mucous membrane, 123. 

Muscles, 113, 114. Exercise of the, 
116, 117, 258. Excessive exercise 
of, 117. 

Music, 296. 

Mosquitoes, 377. 



N 



Nails, cleaning, 207. 

Nash, Beau, biography of, 11. 

Neatness, in housekeeping, 215. Of 
sick-rooms, 340, 341. See Clean- 
liness. 

Needle- work, bad economy in, 354. 

Neftel, Dr. William, on the use of 
water in fevers, 274. 

Nerves, 107-110. Ramification of 
the, 110. Health of, dependent 
on muscular exercise, 111. Ex- 
cited by stimulating drinks, 138. 
Exercise and inactivity of, 111. 
Debility of, 112. 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



497 



New-Englanders, one cause of their 
tact, 229. Early condition of 
home labor among, 308 - 810. 
Present condition of domestic ser- 
vice among, 811-813. 

Night, converting, into day, 191. 

Night-gowns, 358. 

Night-lamps, 365. 

Novel-reading, 292, 293. 

Nursery, 278, 279. 

Nursery, soil for a, 379. 

Nursing, on food while, 267. Of 
the sick, 342-347. 



Obedience of children, 279. See 
Children and Government. 

Objects of charity, 242. 

Oils, 362-364. 

Oil-cloths for kitchens^ 371. 

Open fire-places, 419. 

Opium, antidote for, 351. 

Order, on a habit of, 220-232. 

Ornaments, 225. 

Orphan Asylum at Albany, 274. 

Over-government, 281. See Chil- 
dren and Government. 



Packing of conveniences, 25, 441. 

Pain, amusements causing, 287. 

Pancreas, 154. 

Parents, exercising of authority by, 
280. Managing children, 275- 
286. Ignorance of, 263. Should 
provide amusements, 293. Join- 
ing in children's sports, 300. 

Parlors, 367 368. How to furnish, 
85-91. On the care of, 368. 
Sweeping, 369. 

Passions, the, 112. See Temper. 

Pelvic organs displaced by tight- 
dressing, 162. 

Peristaltic motion, 128. 

Perspiration, 152, 154. As a cure 
for illness, 338. 

Physical education of children, 
275. See Exercise and Health. 

Physicians, obeying, 341. 

Piano, playing on the, 296. 

Pictures, 91, 93. Hanging and 
cleansing, 367. 

Pills, 338. 

Plans, for apportioning time, 226. 
For duties, 226, 228. For model 



cottage, 25-42. For Christian 
city tenement, 441-446. For 
church, school-house, and family, 
dwelling in one building, 455- 
458. 

Planting, flower-seeds, 380. Gar- 
den-seeds, 381. 

Plants, collecting, 295, 296. Soil 
for, 379. Propagation of, 384. 
See Flowers and Seeds. 

Poisoning, 350, 351. Household, 
43. 

Politeness. See Courtesy and Man- 
ners. 

Poor, Mosaic laws as to the, 249. 
On work for the, 243. See Cha- 
rity. 

Pores. See Skin. 

Positions, effects of, 160. 

Potato, 185, 186. 

Pot-plants, soil for, 331. 

Pots, transplanting from, 381. 

Poultry, 400. 

Powders, labeling, 342. 

Precocity in children, 258. 

Preservation of the aged, 303. 

Propagation of plants, 34. 

Propensities, 236. 

Property, Jews' use of, 249. Un- 
equal distribution of, 251. On 
sharing, 252. On using, proper- 
ly, 253, 254. 

Pruning, 387, 388. 

Punctuality and want of it, 196. 

Puritans, manners of the, 197. 



Quality of food, 132, 133. 
Quantity of food, 130. See Food, 



R 



Rats, 378. 

Reciprocal action of 'plants and ani- 
mals, 48, 49. 

Red ants, 377. 

Regular employment for members 
of a family, 228. 

Religion, perversion of, 258. 

Religious excitement, 259. 

Respect, American want of, 202. 
Should be required at home, 204 
See Courtesy. 

Respiration, organs of, 44. 

Rewards, governing by, 282. 



498 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



Roman Catholics, health of, during 

Lent, 132. Nuns, 458. 
Rooms, care of, 368. 
Rose-bushes, 386. 
Running into debt, 366, 378. 



S 



St. Martin, Alexis, experiments on, 
respecting food, 136. 

Salt, for bleeding, 351. 

Salts, 338. 

School, on sending young children 
to, 277. 

School-rooms and school-houses not 
ventilated, 276. 

Scolds, 216, 217. 

Screens, movable, 28, 29, 456. See 
Eyes. 

Secret vice, 286. 

Secreting organs, 153, 154. 

Seeds, on planting, 380, 381. Of 
fruit, on planting, 389. 

Self-denial, happiness of, 235. Dis- 
tinction as to, 235. In children, 
277, 284. 

Servants, 306, 334. 

Services, paying children for, 229. 

Sewing, by girls, 298. Hints on, 
353-358. 

Sewing-trunks, 227. 

Sexes, American, 201. 

Sheep, 399. 

Shells, collecting, 297. 

Shirts, making, 357. 

Sickness, on ignorance and inex- 
perience in time of, 336. On 
nursing in, 342, 347. From chills 
and food, 336. Remedies for 
slight, 338. See Health. 

Sick-rooms, hints on, 339. Furni- 
ture for, 340. 

Silence, children to keep, 207, 283. 
When in anger, 216. 

Sinclair, Sir John, on longevity and 
early rising, 195. 

Sinks, 35, 36. 

Sisters of Charity, 346. 

Skin, described, 150. Function of 
the, 151. Waste matter from the, 
152. Absorbent vessels of the, 
151. Circulation in the, in in- 
fants, 165. Effect of cold on the 
circulation in the, 166. Bathino- 
infants, 270. 

Sleep, amount of, required, 194. On 



protracting, 194. See Ventila, 
tion. 

Smoky chimneys, 76, 78. 
Snow, bathing in, 166. 
Soda or Saleratus poisoning, 350. 
Soil, on the preparation of, 379. 
Soups, 183, 184. 
Specimens, collecting, 297. 
Spencer, Herbert, on training of 

children, 262, 263. 
Spine, disease of the, 160. Curva- 
ture of the, 160. 

Sprains, 349. 

Stain-mixture, 369. 

Stains, removing, from marble, 
369. 

Starch, to make, 291. To prepare, 
292. 

Starvation for want of oxygen, 48 

State charities of Massachusetts, 
434. 

Statuettes, 94. 

Stimulating drinks, 138, 144. Ex- 
cite the nervous system, 138. De- 
bilitate the constitution, 138. 
Temptation from using, 139. 
Reasons for and against using, 
considered, 139, 140. Authori- 
ties on, 141, 142. 

Stimulating food, 133. See Animal 
food and Food. 

Stock-grafting, 387. 

Stomach, 128 Peristaltic motion 
of the, 128. Effects on, of too 
much food, 129. Rule for the la- 
bor and repose of the, 129, 134. 
Power of accommodation in the, 
134. 

Store-rooms, 376. 

Stoves, 66-79. 

Stove-pipes, 361. 

Strangers, hospitality to, 301, 302. 

Strawberries, 155. 

Straw matting, 86, 93. 

Strychnia, antidote for, 351. 

Subordination, social, 199. Of chil- 
dren and others, 201, 202. See 
Government. 

Sunlight, importance of, to human 
life, 193, 194. 

Superfluities, 237. Duty as to. 
238. 
iveepi 

Swine, 

Sympathy, on silent social, 213. 

System, continual change and re- 
novation of the human, 122. On 



ANA L YTJCAL INDEX. 



499 



habits of, 220-232. By dividing 
the week, 22G. In proper conve- 
niences, 227. On attempting too 
much, at once, 230. On com- 
mencing, while young, 232. 



Table, manners, 206, 207. 

Taste for solid reading, 294. 

Tea, coffee and, on the use of, 143, 
144. Cause nervous debility, 144. 
Love of, not natural, 144. No 
nourishment in, 144. Should not 
be drank hot, 145. How to make 
properly, 187-189. See Stimulat- 
ing. 

Teachers, 257. 

Teeth, effects of hot drinks on, 145. 
Care of, 273. 

Teething of infants, 271. 

Temper, on the preservation of 
good, in a housekeeper, 212-219. 
See Passions. 

Temptations, amusements with, 
286, 287. 

Tests of good kerosene, 363, 364 

Tendons, 114. 

Theatres, 288, 291. 

Thinning plants, 388. 

Thoughts, on pure, 286. 

Thunder-storms, 352. 

Tight dressing, 160-165. 

Time, on apportioning, 222, 226, 
227. On saving, 247, 248. Errors 
as to employing, 249. Devoted 
by Jews to religion, 249, 250. 

Tin-ware, 374. 

Tocqueville, M. De, on aristocratic 
and democratic manners, 209, 
210. 

Tones of voice, 212. On governing 
the, 216. Governing by angry, 
217. Effects of angry, on chil- 
dren, 283. 

Tracts or books, and charity, 245. 

Transplanting, 381, 382, 389. 

Trees, on transplanting, 382. Prun- 
ing and thinning, 387, 388. 

Trials. See Difficulties. 

Trunks, sewing, 227. 

Turkeys, 400. 



Unbolted flour, 135-137. 
Use of water in fevers, 274. 



Vegetable food, 124, 128. See Ani- 
mal food and Food. 

Vegetables, effect of light and dark- 
ness on, 192. Cooking, 185-187 

Ventilation, importance of, Chapa 
III. and IV. Statistics of, 423. 
Of sleeping-rooms, 426. Of school- 
rooms, 255, 256, 456. Of sick, 
rooms, 339. Leeds's mode of, 419- 
432. See Air. 

Vermin, on destroying, 377. 

Vertebra, 160. 

Virtue. See Morals. 

Vulgar habits, 206. 

W 

Wages, exorbitant, of domestics, 

328. Offering higher, 328. 
Walking for exercise, 117. 
Ward's case, how to make one 

cheaply, 100. 
Wardrobes, in movable screen, 28, 

29. 

Waring on earth-closets, 403. 
Warm air, tends to rise, 60. Can 

be used for ventilation, 63. Needs 

moisture, 80-83. 
Warm drinks, more wholesome 

than hot, 145. How to make, 

187-189. 
Washing, of the body, 156. Of 

children, 157. Of infants, 269. 

Water for, 157. Of dishes, 372, 

373. See Bathing. 
Waste matter from the skin, 154. 
Water, on drinking, 143, 147. 

Plunging infants in cold, 270. 

See Drinks and Stimulating. 
Wealthy and benevolent women, 

examples of, 252-254. Plan for, 

to take care of homeless and 

vicious, 447. 
Wheat, proportion of nutritious 

elements in, 122, 123. Unbolted, 

136, 137. 

Wicks, 364,. Of candles, 365. 
Window, how to decorate, 96. 
Winter air, 420. 
Women, not properly trained for 

their work, 13. American esteem 

for, 201. Influence of, on individ- 
uals and nations, 214. Respon- 

sibility of, as to intemperance. 

149. importance and difficulty of 



500 



ANALYTICAL INDEX. 



their duties, 220-222. General 
principles for, 223 ; frequent in- 
version of them, 225. Men en- 
gaged in their work, 229. On 
their keeping accounts of expen- 
ditures, 239. Appeal to American, 
462-470. See American women. 

Wood, for fuel, 360. 

Wooden-ware, 375. 

Work-baskets, 354, 355. 



Yellows, the, 392. 

Young children, management of, 
275-286. Animal food for, 275. 
Intellectual and moral training 
of, 276. On appreciating their en- 
joyments and pursuits, 280. Mod- 
esty and propriety in, 285. Im- 
purity of thought in, 286. 



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ANNOUNCEMENT ! 



LIFE OF JESUS, THE CHRIST. 

BY HENRY WARD BEECHER. 



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over the land by their announcement that the greatest living 
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~ MAR 




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made of Mr. Beecher's usefulness is no less remarkable. To be published 
in weekly verbatim reports of sermons so largely extemporaneous, and 
yet to be always acceptable to readers, shows a fertility of resource, an 
effective continuity of thought, and an enduring power of sympathetic 
emotion rarely possessed. 



TERMS: 

Single Numbers, 8 Cents. 

For sale by all dealers and carriers. The trade supplied by the 

AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY. 

SUBSCRIPTIONS. 

Yearly subscription price, $3, giving two volumes of over 400 
pages each. 

Half-yearly subscription price, $1.75. 
Subscriptions may begin with any number. 



CASH PREMIUMS! 

We are induced to offer the following CASH PREMIUMS to those who 
will engage in obtaining subscribers for PLYMOUTH PULPIT. 

For every 5 Subscriptions at $3 each, $3 cash. 
u 12 9 u 

u 25 " " " 20 " 

u 50 50 

Let the money be forwarded to us with lists of names, the amount of 
premium being deducted from the same. Canvassers find lists very 
easily made up for PLYMOUTH PULPIT, and several are at the present 
time receiving large returns from such labors. 

CLUBS IN VILLAGES AND TOWNS 

May be procured by any enterprising man or woman. Send for Speci- 
men Copy, Free. Take it and go among your friends and neighbors. 
In a half day you will often accomplish the task, and Five, Ten, or 
Fifteen Dollars will be earned, together with the satisfaction of 
knowing that you have benetitted those around you. 

Specimen copies for this purpose will be mailed to applicants. 

J. B. FORD & CO., 

3O Parlt ROTV, 

NEW-YORK 



New Series, 1868-9, 

Embellished with a new STEEL PORTRAIT of Mr. BEECHER 

the best likeness of him ever published and a superb 

piece of engraving. One large 8vo vol., 

extra Cloth. Price, $2.50. 



MR. BEECHEB'S discourses need no new commendation. Their fresh- 
ness and originality of method in presenting the old familiar truths, their 
felicity of illustration, their aptness, skill, and impressiveness, make them 
interesting to readers of every class and denomination. These Sermons 
are selected from those preached by Mr. Beech er during the past fall, 
winter, and spring, and are, therefore, especially well adapted to the 
present requirements of the community. This volume, which is the 
first of a series to be issued once every six months, contains also the 
Prayers and indication of the Scripture Lesson and Hymns 
sung, appropriate to each Sermon, in Plymouth Church. 

THE MINES OF THE WEST, 

A full Statistical Account of the Mineral Development of the Pacific 
States and Territories, for the year 1868, with Sixteen Illustrations ; 
and a Treatise on the Relation of Governments to Mining, 
with delineation of the Legal and Practical Mining Systems of all 
Countries, from early ages to the present time. 

By ROSSITER W. RAYMOND, Ph.D., United States Commissioner of Mining 
Statistics, Svo, extra cloth, $1.75. 

In preparing himself for his task, Mr. Raymond traveled some 13,000 miles, visit- 
Ing and examining personaHy the mines, conversing with their managers, and obtain- 
ing from them such information and assistance as he needed. His attainments and 
previous experience in connection with the Mining Journal well qualified him for the 
office ; and his conclusions, the well-weighed convictions of an accute observer and 
practical mineralogist, will carry with them great weight. Hound Table. 

Well worthy the attention of the general public. Philadelphia Post. 

Mr. Raymond's report has attracted marked attention by its clearness of state- 
ment, and the broad, scientific view which it presents of the whole subject of mining, 
in its relation to legislation. JK T. Commercial Advertiser. 

Either of the above mailed, post-paid, on receipt of price. 






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