ART AND MEDICINE
ILLNESS IN LITERATURE
Mark Twain, 1863

It is a good thing,
perhaps, to write for the amusement of the public,
but it is a far higher and nobler thing to write
for their actual and tangible benefit. If it prove
the means of restoring to health one solitary
sufferer among my race, of lighting up once more
the fire of hope and joy in his faded eyes, or
bringing back to his dead heart again the quick,
generous impulses of other days, I shall be amply
rewarded for my labor; my soul will be permeated
with the sacred delight [a person] feels when
he has done a good, unselfish deed.
Having led a pure and blameless life
. . . Let the public do itself the honor to read
my experience in doctoring a cold, as herein set
forth, and then follow in my footsteps.
The first time I began to sneeze, a friend told
me to go and bathe my feet in hot water and go
to bed. I did so. Shortly afterward, another friend
advised me to get up and take a cold shower-bath.
I did that also. Within the hour, another friend
assured me that it was policy to “feed a cold
and starve a fever.” I had both. So I thought
it best to fill myself up for the cold, and then
keep dark and let the fever starve awhile.
In a case of this kind, I seldom
do things by halves; I ate pretty heartily; I
conferred my custom upon a stranger who had just
opened his restaurant that morning; he waited
near me in respectful silence until I had finished
feeding my cold, when he inquired if the people
about Virginia City were much afflicted with colds?
I told him I thought they were. He then went out
and took in his sign.
I started down toward the office,
and on the way encountered another bosom friend,
who told me that a quart of salt-water, taken
warm, would come as near curing a cold as anything
in the world. I hardly thought I had room for
it, but I tried it anyhow. The result was surprising.
I believed I had thrown up my immortal soul.
Now, I . . . caution against following such portions
of it as proved inefficient with me, and acting
upon this conviction, I warn against warm salt-water;
it may be a good enough remedy, but I think it
is too severe. If I had another cold in the head,
and there were no course left me but to take either
an earthquake or a quart of warm salt-water, I
would take my chances on the earthquake.
After the storm which had been raging
in my stomach had subsided, and no more good Samaritans
happening along, I went on borrowing handkerchiefs
again and blowing them to atoms, as had been my
custom in the early stages of my cold, until I
came across a lady who said she had lived in a
part of the country where doctors were scarce,
and had from necessity acquired considerable skill
in the treatment of simple “family complaints.”
I knew she must have had much experience, for
she appeared to be a hundred and fifty years old.
She mixed a decoction composed of
molasses, aquafortis, turpentine, and various
other drugs, and instructed me to take a wine-glass
full of it every fifteen minutes. I never took
but one dose; that was enough; it robbed me of
all moral principle, and awoke every unworthy
impulse of my nature. Under its malign influence
my brain conceived miracles of meanness, but my
hands were too feeble to execute them; at that
time, had it not been that my strength had surrendered
to a succession of assaults from infallible remedies
for my cold, I would have tried to rob the graveyard.
Like most other people, I often feel mean, and
act accordingly; but until I took that medicine
I had never reveled in such supernatural depravity,
and felt proud of it. At the end of two days I
was ready to go to doctoring again. I took a few
more unfailing remedies, and finally drove my
cold from my head to my lungs.
I got to coughing incessantly, and my voice fell
below zero; I conversed in a thundering bass,
two octaves below my natural tone; I could only
[sleep] by coughing myself down to a state of
utter exhaustion, and then the moment I began
to talk in my sleep, my discordant voice woke
me up again.
My case grew more and more serious
every day. Plain gin was recommended; I took it.
Then gin and molasses; I took that also. Then
gin and onions; I added the onions, and took all
three. I detected no particular result, however,
except that I had acquired a breath like a buzzard’s.
I found I had to travel for my health.
I went to Lake Bigler with my reportorial comrade,
Wilson. We sailed and hunted and fished and danced
all day, and I doctored my cough all night. By
managing in this way, I made out to improve every
hour in the twenty-four. But my disease continued
to grow worse.
A sheet-bath was recommended. I had
never refused a remedy yet, and it seemed poor
policy to commence then; therefore I determined
to take a sheet-bath, notwithstanding I had no
idea what sort of arrangement it was. It was administered
at midnight, and the weather was very frosty.
My breast and back were bared, and a sheet (there
appeared to be a thousand yards of it) soaked
in ice-water, was wound around me until I resembled
a swab for a Columbiad [an obsolete thick gun
that is very thinck behind he trunnions designed
for throwing shells and shot at high angles of
elevation].
It is a cruel expedient. When the chilly
rag touches one’s warm flesh, it makes him start
with sudden violence, and gasp for breath just
as men do in the death-agony. It froze the marrow
in my bones and stopped the beating of my heart.
I thought my time had come.
Young Wilson said the circumstance reminded him
of an anecdote about a negro who was being baptized,
and who slipped from the parson’s grasp, and came
near being drowned. He floundered around, though,
and finally rose up out of the water considerably
strangled and furiously angry, and started ashore
at once, spouting water like a whale, and remarking,
with great asperity, that “one o’ dese days some
gen’1’man’s nigger gwyne to get killed wid jis’
such damn foolishness as disl”
Never take a sheet-bath-never. Next
to meeting a lady acquaintance who, for reasons
best known to herself, don’t see you when she
looks at you, and don’t know you when she does
see you, it is the most uncomfortable thing in
the world.
But, as I was saying, when the sheet-bath failed
to cure my cough, a lady friend recommended the
application of a mustard plaster to my breast.
I believe that would have cured me effectually,
if it had not been for young Wilson. When I went
to bed, I put my mustard plaster – which was a
very gorgeous one, eighteen inches square – where
I could reach it when I was ready for it. But
young Wilson got hungry in the night, and – here
is food for the imagination.
After sojourning a week at Lake Bigler,
I went to Steamboat Springs, and, besides the
steam-baths, I took a lot of the vilest medicines
that were ever concocted. They would have cured
me, but I had to go back to Virginia City, where,
notwithstanding the variety of new remedies I
absorbed every day, I managed to aggravate my
disease by carelessness and undue exposure.
I finally concluded to visit San
Francisco, and the first day I got there a lady
at the hotel told me to drink a quart of whisky
every twenty-four hours, and a friend up-town
recommended precisely the same course. Each advised
me to take a quart; that made half a gallon. I
did it, and still live.
Now, with the kindest motives in
the world, I offer for the consideration of consumptive
patients the variegated course of treatment I
have lately gone through. Let them try it; if
it don’t cure, it can’t more than kill them.®
*Extract from Curing a Cold in The Complete Humorous Sketches and Tales of Mark Twain, Ed.
Charles Neider, USA: Da Capo Press, 1996:25 - 28
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