The Recreations of a Country Parson eBook

Andrew Kennedy Hutchison Boyd
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 487 pages of information about The Recreations of a Country Parson.

The Recreations of a Country Parson eBook

Andrew Kennedy Hutchison Boyd
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 487 pages of information about The Recreations of a Country Parson.
intended for the lady patients.  Every one is a little nervous at first taking this bath.  One cannot be too warm before having it:  we always took a rapid walk of half an hour, and came up to the ordeal glowing like a furnace.  The faithful William was waiting our arrival, and ushered us into a little dressing-room, where we disrobed.  William then pulled a cord, which let loose the formidable torrent, and we hastened to place ourselves under it.  The course is to back gradually till it falls upon the shoulders, then to sway about till every part of the back and limbs has been played upon:  but great care must be taken not to let the stream fall upon the head, where its force would probably be dangerous.  The patient takes this bath at first for one-minute; the time is lengthened daily till it reaches four minutes, and there it stops.  The sensation is that of a violent continuous force assailing one; we are persuaded that were a man blindfolded, and so deaf as not to hear the splash of the falling stream, he could not for his life tell what was the cause of the terrible shock he was enduring.  It is not in the least like the result of water:  indeed it is unlike any sensation we ever experienced elsewhere.  At the end of our four minutes the current ceases; we enter the dressing-room, and are rubbed as after the plunge-bath.  The reaction is instantaneous:  the blood is at once called to the surface.  ‘Red as a rose were we:’  we were more than warm; we were absolutely hot.

Mr. Lane records some proofs of the force with which the douche falls:—­

In a corner of one dressing-room is a broken chair.  What does it mean?  A stout lady, being alarmed at the fall from the cistern, to reduce the height, carefully placed what was a chair, and stood upon it.  Down came the column of water—­smash went the chair to bits—­and down fell the poor lady prostrate.  She did not douche again for a fortnight.

Last winter a man was being douched, when an icicle that had been formed in the night was dislodged by the first rush of water, and fell on his back.  Bardon, seeing the bleeding, stopped the douche, but the douchee had not felt the blow as anything unusual.  He had been douched daily, and calculated on such a force as he experienced.

Although most patients come to like the douche, it is always to be taken with caution.  That it is dangerous in certain conditions of the body, there is no doubt.  Sir E. B. Lytton speaks strongly on this point:—­

Never let the eulogies which many will pass upon the douche tempt you to take it on the sly, unknown to your adviser.  The douche is dangerous when the body is unprepared—­when the heart is affected—­when apoplexy may be feared.

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The Recreations of a Country Parson from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.