She has taught men, during the last few years, to
foresee and elude the most destructive storms; and
there is no reason for doubting, and many reasons
for hoping, that she will gradually teach men to elude
other terrific forces of nature, too powerful and too
seemingly capricious for them to conquer. She
has discovered innumerable remedies and alleviations
for pains and disease. She has thrown such light
on the causes of epidemics, that we are able to say
now that the presence of cholera—and probably
of all zymotic diseases—in any place, is
usually a sin and a shame, for which the owners and
authorities of that place ought to be punishable by
law, as destroyers of their fellow-men; while for
the weak, for those who, in the barbarous and semi-barbarous
state—and out of that last we are only just
emerging—how much has she done; an earnest
of much more which she will do? She has delivered
the insane—I may say by the scientific insight
of one man, more worthy of titles and pensions than
nine-tenths of those who earn them—I mean
the great and good Pinel—from hopeless misery
and torture into comparative peace and comfort, and
at least the possibility of cure. For children,
she has done much, or rather might do, would parents
read and perpend such books as Andrew Combe’s
and those of other writers on physical education.
We should not then see the children, even of the
rich, done to death piecemeal by improper food, improper
clothes, neglect of ventilation and the commonest
measures for preserving health. We should not
see their intellects stunted by Procrustean attempts
to teach them all the same accomplishments, to the
neglect, most often, of any sound practical training
of their faculties. We should not see slight
indigestion, or temporary rushes of blood to the head,
condemned and punished as sins against Him who took
up little children in His arms and blessed them.
But we may have hope. When we compare education
now with what it was even forty years ago, much more
with the stupid brutality of the monastic system,
we may hail for children, as well as for grown people,
the advent of the reign of common sense.
And for woman—What might I not say on that
point? But most of it would be fitly discussed
only among physicians and biologists: here I will
say only this—Science has exterminated,
at least among civilised nations, witch-manias.
Women—at least white women—are
no longer tortured or burnt alive from man’s
blind fear of the unknown. If science had done
no more than that, she would deserve the perpetual
thanks and the perpetual trust, not only of the women
whom she has preserved from agony, but the men whom
she has preserved from crime.