In the natural and healthy state, under a proper system of diet, and with sufficient exercise, the bowels are relieved regularly once every day. In some constitutions, however, the ordinary period is shorter or longer than this—twice a-day, or only once in two days; but such differences are unimportant when they do not proceed from morbid causes, or in any way disturb the health. Habit, in this as in other operations under the influence of the nervous system, is powerful in modifying the result, and in sustaining healthy action when once fairly established. Hence the obvious advantage of observing as much regularity in relieving the system as in taking our meals, and the impropriety of attempting to break through the habit when once formed. Sleep seems to be favourable to the progress of nutrition, and it is apparently during the night that the assimilation of the daily food is completed, and its residue prepared for being expelled along with the other excretions. Hence there is a natural tendency in the bowels to act in the morning, and we ought therefore to encourage it by a voluntary effort. Even the reception of breakfast into the stomach seems to act as a stimulus to intestinal contraction, and in consequence many persons experience the inclination immediately after their morning repast, and suffer if they are prevented from yielding to it.
Where, either from constitutional weakness, sedentary occupation, or other unavoidable causes, the bowels are unable to act sufficiently to relieve the system without assistance, we have, of course, no choice but to select that which is most suitable to the circumstances and most gentle in its operation; because, if assistance be not afforded, the health will assuredly suffer. Numerous examples of this kind are met with every day; and, when treating them, we should always be careful to aid Nature as far as possible by an appropriate diet and regimen, and not trust to medicine alone for rectifying the consequences of the patient’s misconduct. We ought, in short, never to lose sight of the great truth, that, if the bowels were originally constituted by the Creator with power to act sufficiently on the application of their own stimulus, food, there must necessarily be a wide departure from His laws in some part of our conduct to cause the loss of that power; and therefore, whenever we find the bowels unable to act without medicine, our first business ought to be to discover and rectify the error into which we have fallen,—and recourse should be had to medicine only in so far as it shall be necessary to remedy the consequences which the transgression has brought upon us.
As the sole object of the present volume is to make the reader acquainted with the natural laws of the animal economy, and with the means by which aberrations from them may be prevented and health preserved, I shall not enter at all upon the discussion either of the morbid conditions of the bowels, or of the remedies by which these may be cured—and consequently shall say nothing farther of the use of purgative or other medicines. The consideration of these matters is not only foreign to the subject, but would require an extent of detail much beyond my present limits.
Perhaps some persons may think, that, before concluding, I ought to apologize for having introduced to the notice of the general reader such topics as those discussed in this and some of the former chapters. In doing so, I have been actuated by a deep sense of the misery arising from the prevailing ignorance on topics which, although in themselves as interesting and important as any to which the human mind can be directed, have nevertheless been passed over in silence, partly from not the least suspicion being generally entertained of their real bearing on our health and happiness, and partly also from false notions of delicacy diverting attention from their calm and deliberate examination. In endeavouring, therefore, to unfold what I conceive to be useful truths, in the language of reason, I confess that I feel no apprehension that any well-constituted mind will receive contamination from the perusal of what is contained in these pages.
INDEX.
- Abercrombie, Dr, quoted on intemperate eating, [225], [282].
- Absorbents of the bowels, [163].
- Absorption most active before breakfast, [195].
- Rapid absorption of liquids from the stomach, [38], [79], [117], [140], [195].
- Acids, in what cases they promote digestion, [104].
- Acidity of stomach, [283].
- Ages, different, require different kinds of food, [255].
- Americans intemperate and rapid eaters, [223], [294].
- Animal food more digestible and nutritious than vegetable, [118], [138], [281], [283].
- Cause of its greater digestibility, [140].
- Also more stimulating, [141].
- Why apparently more binding, [183].
- Improper for infants, [264].
- Anxiety impedes digestion, [300].
- Aorta, [170].
- Appetite, its necessity as a warning that nutriment is required, [10], [11].
- Susceptible of being trained, [32].
- Not to be relied on when morbid, [34].
- See [Hunger]. [Thirst.]
- Arrowroot, [125], [138].
- Barras quoted on the sensibility of the stomach, [85].
- Bathing improper immediately after meals, [295].
- Beaumont, Dr, his view of the exciting cause of hunger, [18].
- Quoted on mastication, [53].
- His observations on the stomach of a patient named St Martin, quoted, [73], [78], [88], [106], [112], [128], [133], et seq., [283], [285], [289], [308], [319].
- Makes little pretension to the honour of discovery, [108], [147].
- Summary of inferences drawn from his experiments, [147].
- Quoted on the quantity of food proper to be eaten, [219].
- Bile secreted by the liver, [173].
- Account of it, [174].
- Not found in the stomach during health, [175].
- Its presence there facilitates the digestion of fat and oily food, [285].
- Birds, gizzards of granivorous, [50], [71].
- Blaine quoted on hunger, [20].
- Bladder, [170].
- Blood circulated in the stomach increased by its action, [77], [289].
- Breathing necessary for the conversion of chyle into blood, [168].
- Fulness of blood, [240].
- Bloodletting improper immediately after meals, [295].
- Bloodvessels of the stomach, [76].
- Boarding-schools, time for breakfast and dinner in, [193], [201], [205].
- Insufficient food often given there, [250], [277].
- Bowels described, [154].
- Their different coats—
- the peritoneal, [156];
- muscular, [158];
- and mucous, [160].
- Action of purgatives on the, [158], [162].
- Contain air, [160].
- Their sympathy with the skin, [161].
- Excretion and absorption of the, [161].
- Conditions essential to their perfect action, [169].
- Their vermicular or peristaltic motion, [158], [179], [330].
- Their nerves, [169].
- Why most open when vegetable food is used, [183], [326].
- Do not naturally require the aid of laxatives, [238].
- Their uses, [324];
- as an outlet of waste matter, [325].
- Their action bears a relation to the kind of food, [326].
- Causes of their inactivity considered, [330].
- Natural aids to their action, [159], [330].
- General neglect of these, [331].
- Bad health thence arising, [332].
- Their regularity important, [337].
- Bowel-complaint frequently produced by chill of the skin, [162], [325].
- Brachet, his experiments shewing that hunger is an affection of the brain, [14].
- Quoted on hunger, [20].
- Brain the seat of the sensations of hunger and thirst, [12].
- Should not be overtasked in childhood, [271].
- Influence of its state upon digestion, [296], et seq.
- Breakfast, proper time for, [193].
- Labour before it improper without refreshment, [193].
- Diseases easily caught before breakfast, [194].
- Reading newspapers during it improper, [52].
- Liquid food necessary, [307].
- Brigham, Dr, referred to, [271].
- Caldwell, Dr, quoted on intemperate eating in America, [223];
- on the influence of the state of the brain as a source of indigestion, [301].
- Carnivorous animals have small organs of digestion, [68], [140], [145].
- Their existence necessary, [98].
- Their gastric juice, [102].
- Carsewell, Prof., on softening and erosion of the dead stomach by the gastric juice, [99], note.
- Cassius, his leanness as described by Shakspeare, [300].
- Cheerfulness promotes digestion, [126], [297].
- Chewing, [40].
- See [Mastication].
- Chicken, [286].
- Children, great importance of regulating their diet properly, [204], [232].
- Prevalent error of over-feeding them, [233], [273].
- Suffer also from deficiency of food, [249].
- Animal diet not to be given them too early, [264].
- Impropriety of tasking and confining them too much at school, [269].
- Dull children often become talented men, [270].
- Whether they ought to be allowed wine, [315].
- Cholera, loss of the fluid parts of the body in, [38], [162], [305].
- Chyle, [62].
- Its composition the same, from whatever food derived, [58].
- Chylification described, [152].
- This subject rather obscure, [153].
- Chyle converted into blood in the lungs, [167].
- Chyme, [62], [127].
- Clark, Dr, on the great importance of the proper regulation of diet in youth, [266], [267], [276].
- Clarke, Adam, a dunce at school, [270].
- Climate ought to modify food, [143].
- Appetite in warm climates, [28].
- Coagulation of milk and albumen by gastric juice, [100], [116].
- Cœcum, [178].
- Coffee, [209], [307], [312].
- Colon described, [178].
- Condiments, [150].
- Constitution, food ought to vary according to, [252].
- Susceptible of being greatly modified by regimen, [279].
- Consumption, pulmonary, how productive of leanness of the body, [167].
- Often the result of mismanagement of diet in childhood, [266], [276].
- Cornaro, [226].
- Costiveness, causes of, [159], [239], [326].
- How removable, [329].
- Cumberland, Richard, beneficial effects of his temperate habits, [299].
- Deffand, Madame de, quoted, [19].
- Deglutition of food, [55].
- Diet. See [Food]. [Meals.]
- Dietetics, principles of, viewed in relation to the laws of digestion, [187].
- Digestion vigorous and rapid in proportion to the quantity of nourishment required by the body, [22].
- Organs of, described, [58], et seq.
- Its wonderful power of reducing the most opposite varieties of food to the same substance, [58].
- Nervous energy essential to, [83], [296].
- Different theories of, [109].
- Is a chemico-vital process, [111].
- Conditions requisite for it—
- 1. A sufficiency of gastric juice, [112];
- 2. A temperature of 98° or 100°, [119];
- and, 3. Gentle agitation of the contents of the stomach, [121].
- Aided by laughter and cheerfulness, [126].
- Ill performed when previous meal remains in stomach, [129].
- Comparative digestibility of different kinds of food, [133].
- Time required for digestion of the same article different in different states of the body, [136].
- Animal food more digestible than vegetable, [118], [138], [281], [283];
- and why, [140].
- A proper selection of food not the only requisite of good digestion, [188].
- Is the temperature of the stomach raised during digestion? [146].
- Vegetable food partly digested in the intestines, [180].
- Vigorous in youth, [272].
- Retarded by bodily or mental exertion immediately before or after eating, [288], et seq.
- Intellectual vivacity diminished while digestion is going on, [290], [296].
- Influence of the mind upon digestion, [296], et seq.
- Dinner, proper time for, [199].
- Necessity of early dinner-hours for children, [204].
- Fashionable late dinner-hours, [207].
- Relaxation necessary after dinner, [208].
- Time for dinner ought to vary with circumstances, [209].
- Second courses, [226].
- Drams at, [323].
- Dressmakers, an improvement in the regulation of their establishments suggested, [230].
- Drink necessary to supply the waste of the liquid portions of the body, [36].
- Bad effects when withheld, [37].
- Absorbed directly from the stomach into the system, [38], [79], [117], [140], [195].
- Temperature of drinks considered, [308].
- Water as a drink, [314].
- Wine and other fermented liquors, [314].
- Spirits hurtful, [316].
- Sudden changes of its temperature hurtful to the teeth, [45].
- See [Liquid]. [Thirst.]
- Dunglison’s Elements of Hygiene quoted and recommended, [305], [311].
- Duodenum, [62], [170].
- Eating ought not to be too rapid, [51], [122].
- Times of, [188].
- Eating too much, a prolific source of disease, [24], [219].
- Conditions to be observed before and after eating, [273].
- See [Food]. [Meals.]
- Epiglottis, [55].
- Excrement, [153], [178].
- Excretion of waste matter into the bowels, [161].
- Exercise renders appetite keen, [19], [21], et seq.
- Prevents costiveness, [180], [332].
- Improper immediately before and after meals, [288].