The History of Sumatra eBook

William Marsden
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 680 pages of information about The History of Sumatra.

The History of Sumatra eBook

William Marsden
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 680 pages of information about The History of Sumatra.
instances affected is doubtless, from the description given of its dreadful symptoms, that severe kind of leprosy which has been termed elephantiasis, and is particularly described in the Asiatic Researches Volume 2, the skin coming off in flakes, and the flesh falling from the bones, as in the lues venerea.  This disorder being esteemed highly infectious, the unhappy wretch who labours under it is driven from the village he belonged to into the woods, where victuals are left for him from time to time by his relations.  A prang and a knife are likewise delivered to him, that he may build himself a hut, which is generally erected near to some river or lake, continual bathing being supposed to have some effect in removing the disorder, or alleviating the misery of the patient.  Few instances of recovery have been known.  There is a disease called the nambi which bears some affinity to this, attacking the feet chiefly, the flesh of which it eats away.  As none but the lowest class of people seem to suffer from this complaint I imagine it proceeds in a great degree from want of cleanliness.

SMALLPOX.

The smallpox (katumbuhan) sometimes visits the island and makes terrible ravages.  It is regarded as a plague, and drives from the country thousands whom the infection spares.  Their method of stopping its progress (for they do not attempt a cure) is by converting into a hospital or receptacle for the rest that village where lie the greatest number of sick, whither they send all who are attacked by the disorder from the country round.  The most effectual methods are pursued to prevent any person’s escape from this village, which is burnt to the ground as soon as the infection has spent itself or devoured all the victims thus offered to it.  Inoculation was an idea long unthought of, and, as it could not be universal, it was held to be a dangerous experiment for Europeans to introduce it partially, in a country where the disorder makes its appearance at distant intervals only, unless those periods could be seized and the attempts made when and where there might be well-founded apprehension of its being communicated in the natural way.  Such an opportunity presented itself in 1780, when great numbers of people (estimated at a third of the population) were swept away in the course of that and the two following years; whilst upon those under the immediate influence of the English and Dutch settlements inoculation was practised with great success.  I trust that the preventive blessing of vaccination has or will be extended to a country so liable to be afflicted with this dreadful scourge.  A distemper called chachar, much resembling the smallpox, and in its first stages mistaken for it, is not uncommon.  It causes an alarm but does not prove mortal, and is probably what we term the chickenpox.

VENEREAL DISEASE.

The venereal disease, though common in the Malay bazaars, is in the inland country almost unknown.  A man returning to his village with the infection is shunned by the inhabitants as an unclean and interdicted person.  The Malays are supposed to cure it with the decoction of a china-root, called by them gadong, which causes a salivation.

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The History of Sumatra from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.