Publisher's Synopsis
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1895 edition. Excerpt: ... CHAPTER III. THE YOUNG MOTHER. Hopes and Fears--Signs and Symptoms of Pregnancy-- Duration of Pregnancy--Diseases of Pregnancy. Among the Hebrew people the hope and ambition of every maiden was marriage, and the prayer of every wife was for offspring. Each girl felt that she might be the predestined mother of the Messiah; hence the sacred bond was held yet more sacred, and earth's dearest, closest union was yet more valued and more reverenced for the possible fruit it might bear. Thus the marriage-bed was surrounded with the strictest ceremonial, and hedged around by the most rigid laws of sanitary purity, the result being a fertility unknown among other nations. At the present time the desire for a son is the paramount feeling with young Hindu wives, for, according to the Hindu belief, the birth of a son, and his performance of his father's funeral obsequies, are essential to the salvation of each man. Especially among the Brahmins so paramount is this necessity that when all hopes of male issue are abandoned, the law permits the fiction of adoption; so that the adopted, standing in the place of a natural born son, performs the funeral rites, and the father's soul is thereby saved from the chamber of Gehenna, which is called Put. Hence a son is called Puira, from Put, hell, and ratha, to save. Although uninfluenced by the hopes of the Hebrew or the fears of the Hindu wife, there are few wives who do not heartily desire a child. The motherly instinct is strong in us, and may be recognised in the affection lavished by the little girl on her doll. Just as the act of reproduction is the highest and least selfish of our physical functions, so the desire for offspring, for whose sake the mother is even prepared to sacrifioe a part of her very...