CHAP. 23.—FACTS CONNECTED WITH THE MENSTRUAL DISCHARGE.
Over and above these particulars, there is no limit to the
marvellous powers attributed to females. For, in the first
place, hailstorms, they say, whirlwinds, and lightning
1 even,
will be scared away by a woman uncovering her body while
her monthly courses are upon her. The same, too, with all
other kinds of tempestuous weather; and out at sea, a storm
may be lulled by a woman uncovering her body merely, even
though not menstruating at the time. As to the menstrual
discharge itself, a thing that in other respects, as
2 already
stated on a more appropriate occasion, is productive of the most
monstrous effects, there are some ravings about it of a most
dreadful and unutterable nature. Of these particulars, however, I do not feel so much shocked at mentioning the following. If the menstrual discharge coincides with an eclipse of
the moon or sun, the evils resulting from it are irremediable;
and no less so, when it happens while the moon is in conjunction with the sun; the congress with a woman at such a period
being noxious, and attended with fatal effects to the man. At
this period also, the lustre of purple is tarnished by the touch
of a woman: so much more baneful is her influence at this
time than at any other. At any other time, also, if a woman
strips herself naked while she is menstruating, and walks
round a field of wheat, the caterpillars, worms, beetles, and
other vermin, will fall from off the ears of corn. Metrodorus
of Scepsos tells us that this discovery was first made in Cappadocia; and that, in consequence of such multitudes of can-
tharides being found to breed there, it is the practice for
women to walk through the middle of the fields with their
garments tucked up above the thighs.
3 In other places, again,
it is the usage for women to go barefoot, with the hair
dishevelled and the girdle loose: due precaution must be taken,
however, that this is not done at sun-rise, for if so, the crop
will wither and dry up. Young vines, too, it is said, are injured irremediably by the touch of a woman in this state; and
both rue and ivy, plants possessed of highly medicinal virtues,
will die instantly upon being touched by her.
Much as I have already stated on the virulent effects of this
discharge, I have to state, in addition, that bees, it is a well-known fact, will forsake their hives if touched by a menstruous
woman; that linen boiling in the cauldron will turn black, that
the edge of a razor will become blunted, and that copper vessels will contract a fetid smell and become covered with verdigrease, on coming in contact with her. A mare big with foal,
if touched by a woman in this state, will be sure to miscarry;
nay, even more than this, at the very sight of a woman,
though seen at a distance even, should she happen to be
menstruating for the first time after the loss of her virginity,
or for the first time, while in a state of virginity. The bitumen
4 that is found in Judæa, will yield to nothing but the
menstrual discharge; its tenacity being overcome, as already
stated, by the agency of a thread from a garment which has
been brought in contact with this fluid. Fire itself even, an
element which triumphs over every other substance, is unable
to conquer this; for if reduced to ashes and then sprinkled
upon garments when about to be scoured, it will change their
purple tint, and tarnish the brightness of the colours. Indeed
so pernicious are its properties, that women themselves, the
source from which it is derived, are far from being proof against
its effects; a pregnant woman, for instance, if touched with
it, or indeed if she so much as steps over it, will be liable to
miscarry.
Laïs and Elephant is
5 have given statements quite at variance, on the subject of abortives; they mention the efficacy
for that purpose of charcoal of cabbage root, myrtle root, or
tamarisk root, quenched in the menstrual discharge; they say
that she-asses will be barren for as many years as they have
eaten barley-corns steeped in this fluid; and they have enumerated various other monstrous and irreconcileable properties,
the one telling us, for instance, that fruitfulness may be ensured
by the very same methods, which, according to the statement
of the other, are productive of barrenness; to all which stories it
is the best plan to refuse credit altogether. Bithus of Dyrrhachium informs us that a mirror,
6 which has been tarnished by
the gaze of a menstruous female, will recover its brightness if
the same woman looks steadily upon the back of it; he states,
also, that all evil influences of this nature will be entirely
neutralized, if the woman carries the fish known as the sur
mullet about her person.
On the other hand, again, many writers say that, baneful as
it is, there are certain remedial properties in this fluid; that it
is a good plan, for instance, to use it as a topical application for
gout, and that women, while menstruating, can give relief by
touching scrofulous sores and imposthumes of the parotid
glands, inflamed tumours, erysipelas, boils, and defluxions of
the eyes. According to Laïs and Salpe, the bite of a mad (log,
as well as tertian or quartan fevers, may be cured by putting
some menstruous blood in the wool of a black ram and enclosing it in a silver bracelet; and we learn from Diotimus of
Thebes that the smallest portion will suffice of any kind of
cloth that has been stained therewith, a thread even, if inserted and worn in a bracelet. The midwife Sotira informs
us that the most efficient cure for tertian and quartan fevers is
to rub the soles of the patient's feet therewith, the result being
still more successful if the operation is performed by the woman
herself, without the patient being aware of it; she says, too,
that this is an excellent method for reviving persons when
attacked with epilepsy.
Icetidas the physician pledges his word that quartan fever
may be cured by sexual intercourse, provided the woman is
just beginning to menstruate. It is universally agreed, too, that
when a person has been bitten by a dog and manifests a dread
of water and of all kinds of drink, it will be quite sufficient
to put under his clip a strip of cloth that has been dipped in
this fluid; the result being that the hydrophobia will immediately disappear. This arises, no doubt, from that powerful
sympathy which has been so much spoken of by the Greeks,
and the existence of which is proved by the fact,
7 already mentioned, that dogs become mad upon tasting this fluid. It is a well-
known fact, too, that the menstruous discharge, reduced to ashes,
and applied with furnace soot and wax, is a cure for ulcers upon
all kinds of beasts of burden; and that stains made upon a garment with it can only be removed by the agency of the urine
of the same female. Equally certain it is, too, that this fluid, reduced to ashes and mixed with oil of roses, is very useful, applied
to the forehead, for allaying head-ache, in women more particularly; as also that the nature of the discharge is most virulent in females whose virginity has been destroyed solely by
the lapse of time.
Another thing universally acknowledged and one which I
am ready to believe with the greatest pleasure, is the fact, that
if the door-posts are only touched with the menstruous fluid
all spells of the magicians will be neutralized—a set of men
the most lying in existence, as any one may ascertain. I will
give an example of one of the most reasonable of their prescriptions—Take the parings of the toe-nails and finger-nails
of a sick person, and mix them up with wax, the party saying
that he is seeking a remedy for a tertian, quartan, or quotidian
fever, as the case may be; then stick this wax, before sunrise,
upon the door of another person—such is the prescription they
give for these diseases! What deceitful persons they must be
if there is no truth in it! And how highly criminal, if they
really do thus transfer diseases from one person to another!
Some of them, again, whose practices are of a less guilty
nature, recommend that the parings of all the finger-nails
should be thrown at the entrance of ant-holes, the first ant to be
taken which attempts to draw one into the hole; this, they say,
must be attached to the neck of the patient, and he will experience a speedy cure.