The Relationship of Maternal and Sexual
Emotion-Conception and Loss of Virginity-The
Anciently Accepted Signs of This Condition-The
Pervading Effects of Pregnancy on the Organism-Pigmentation-The
Blood and Circulation-The Thyroid-Changes
in the Nervous System-The Vomiting of Pregnancy-The
Longings of Pregnant Women-Maternal Impressions-Evidence
for and Against Their Validity-The Question
Still Open-Imperfection of Our Knowledge-The
Significance of Pregnancy.
In analyzing the sexual impulse I
have so far deliberately kept out of view the maternal
instinct. This is necessary, for the maternal
instinct is specific and distinct; it is directed
to an aim which, however intimately associated it
may be with that of the sexual impulse proper, can
by no means be confounded with it. Yet the emotion
of love, as it has finally developed in the world,
is not purely of sexual origin; it is partly sexual,
but it is also partly parental.
In so far as it is parental it is
certainly mainly maternal. There is a drawing
by Bronzino in the Louvre of a woman’s head gazing
tenderly down at some invisible object; is it her
child or her lover? Doubtless her child, yet
the expression is equally adequate to the emotion evoked
by a lover. If we were here specifically dealing
with the emotion of love as a complex whole, and not
with the psychology of the sexual impulse, it would
certainly be necessary to discuss the maternal instinct
and its associated emotions. In any case it seems
desirable to touch on the psychic state of pregnancy,
for we are here concerned not only with emotions very
closely connected with the sexual emotions in the
narrower sense, but we here at last approach that
state which it is the object of the whole sexual process
to achieve.
In civilized life a period of weeks,
months, even years, may elapse between the establishment
of sexual relations and the occurrence of conception.
Under primitive conditions the loss of the virginal
condition practically involves the pregnant condition,
so that under primitive conditions very little allowance
is made for the state, so common among civilized peoples,
of the woman who is no longer a virgin, yet not about
to become a mother.
There is some interest in noting the
signs of loss of virginity chiefly relied upon
by ancient authors. In doing this it is convenient
to follow mainly the full summary of authorities given
by Schurig in his Barthenologia early in
the eighteenth century. The ancient custom,
known in classic times, of measuring the neck
the day after marriage was frequently practiced to
ascertain if a girl was or was not a virgin.
There were various ways of doing this. One
was to measure with a thread the circumference
of the bride’s neck before she went to bed on
the bridal night. If in the morning the same
thread would not go around her neck it was a sure
sign that she had lost her virginity during the
night; if not, she was still a virgin or had been
deflowered at an earlier period. Catullus alluded
to this custom, which still exists, or existed
until lately, in the south of France. It
is perfectly sound, for it rests on the intimate response
by congestion of the thyroid gland to sexual excitement.
(Parthenologia, ; Bierent, La Puberté,
; Havelock Ellis, Man and Woman,
fourth edition, .)
Some say, Schurig tells us, that the
voice, which in the virgin is shrill, becomes
rougher and deeper after the first coitus. He
quotes Riolan’s statement that it is certain
that the voice of those who indulge in venery
is changed. On that account the ancients
bound down the penis of their singers, and Martial
said that those who wish to preserve their voices
should avoid coitus. Democritus who one day
had greeted a girl as “maiden” on the
following day addressed her as “woman,”
while in the same way it is said that Albertus
Magnus, observing from his study a girl going
for wine for her master, knew that she had had sexual
intercourse by the way because on her return her
voice had become deeper. Here, again, the
ancient belief has a solid basis, for the voice
and the larynx are really affected by sexual conditions.
(Parthenologia, ; Marro, La Puberté,
; Havelock Ellis, op. cit., pp. 271,
289.)
Others, again, Schurig proceeds, have
judged that the goaty smell given out in the armpits
during the venereal act is also no uncertain sign
of defloration, such odor being perceptible in those
who use much venery, and not seldom in harlots and
the newly married, while, as Hippocrates said,
it is not perceived in boys and girls. (Parthenologia,
; cf. the previous volume of these Studies,
“Sexual Selection in Man,” .)
In virgins, Schurig remarks, the pubic
hair is said to be long and not twisted, while
in women accustomed to coitus it is crisper.
But it is only after long and repeated coitus, some
authors add, that the pubic hairs become crisp.
Some recent observers, it may be remarked, have
noted a connection between sexual excitation and
the condition of the pubic hair in women. (Cf.
the present volume, ante .)
A sign to which the old authors often
attached much importance was furnished by the
urinary stream. In the De Secretis Mulierum,
wrongly attributed to Albertus Magnus, it is laid down
that “the virgin urinates higher than the
woman.” Riolan, in his Anthropographia,
discussing the ability of virgins to ejaculate urine
to a height, states that Scaliger had observed women
who were virgins emit urine in a high jet against
a wall, but that married women could seldom do
this. Bouaciolus also stated that the urine
of virgins is emitted in a small stream to a distance
with an acute hissing sound. (Parthenologia,
.) A folk-lore belief in the reality of
this influence is evidenced by the Picardy conte
referred to already (ante, , “La
Princesse qui pisse au dessus
les Meules.” There is no doubt a tendency
for the various stresses of sexual life to produce
an influence in this direction, though they act
far too slowly and uncertainly to be a reliable
index to the presence or the absence of virginity.
Another common ancient test of virginity
by urination rests on a psychic basis, and appears
in a variety of forms which are really all reducible
to the same principle. Thus we are told in De
Secretis Mulierum that to ascertain if a girl
is seduced she should be given to eat of powdered
crocus flowers, and if she has been seduced she
immediately urinates. We are here concerned with
auto-suggestion, and it may well be believed that
with nervous and credulous girls this test often
revealed the truth.
A further test of virginity discussed
by Schurig is the presence of modesty of countenance.
If a woman blushes her virtue is safe. In
this way girls who have themselves had experience of
the marriage bed are said to detect the virgin.
The virgin’s eyes are cast down and almost
motionless, while she who has known a man has
eyes that are bright and quick. But this sign
is equivocal, says Schurig, for girls are different,
and can simulate the modesty they do not feel.
Yet this indication also rests on a fundamentally
sound psychological basis. (See “The Evolution
of Modesty,” in the first volume of these
Studies.)
In his Syllepsilogia (Section
V, cap. I-II), published in 1731, Schurig
discusses further the anciently recognized signs of
pregnancy. The real or imaginary signs of
pregnancy sought by various primitive peoples
of the past and present are brought together by
Ploss and Bartels, Das Weib, bd. i, Chapter
XXVII.
Both physically and psychically the
occurrence of pregnancy is, however, a distinct event.
It marks the beginning of a continuous physical process,
which cannot fail to manifest psychic reactions.
A great center of vital activity-practically
a new center, for only the germinal form of it in
menstruation had previously existed-has
appeared and affects the whole organism. “From
the moment that the embryo takes possession of the
woman,” Robert Barnes puts it, “every
drop of blood, every fiber, every organ, is affected."
A woman artist once observed to Dr.
Stratz, that as the final aim of a woman is to become
a mother and pregnancy is thus her blossoming time,
a beautiful woman ought to be most beautiful when
she is pregnant. That is so, Stratz replied,
if her moment of greatest physical perfection corresponds
with the early months of pregnancy, for with the beginning
of pregnancy metabolism is increased, the color of
the skin becomes more lively and delicate, the breasts
firmer. Pregnancy may, indeed, often become visible
soon after conception by the brighter eye, the livelier
glance, resulting from greater vascular activity, though
later, with the increase of strain, the face may tend
to become somewhat thin and distorted. The hair,
Barnes states, assumes a new vigor, even though it
may have been falling out before. The temperature
rises; the weight increases, even apart from the growth
of the foetus. The efflorescence of pregnancy
shows itself, as in the blossoming and fecundated flower,
by increased pigmentation. The nipples with their
areolae, and the mid-line of the belly, become
darker; brown flecks (lentigo) tend to appear on the
forehead, neck, arms, and body; while striae-at
first blue-red, then a brilliant white-appear
on the belly and thighs, though these are scarcely
normal, for they are not seen in women with very elastic
skins and are rare among peasants and savages.
The whole carriage of the woman tends to become changed
with the development of the mighty seed of man planted
within her; it simulates the carriage of pride with
the arched back and protruded abdomen. The pregnant
woman has been lifted above the level of ordinary
humanity to become the casket of an inestimable jewel.
It is in the blood and the circulation
that the earliest of the most prominent symptoms of
pregnancy are to be found. The ever increasing
development of this new focus of vascular activity
involves an increased vascular activity in the whole
organism. This activity is present almost from
the first-a few days after the impregnation
of the ovum-in the breasts, and quickly
becomes obvious to inspection and palpation. Before
a quite passive organ, the breast now rapidly increases
in activity of circulation and in size, while certain
characteristic changes begin to take place around
the nipples. As a result of the additional work
imposed upon it the heart tends to become slightly
hypertrophied in order to meet the additional strain;
there may be some dilatation also.
The recent investigations of Stengel
and Stanton tend to show that the increase of
the heart’s work during pregnancy is less considerable
than has generally been supposed, and that beyond
some enlargement and dilatation of the right ventricle
there is not usually any hypertrophy of the heart.
The total quantity of blood is raised.
While increased in quantity, the blood appears on
the whole to be somewhat depreciated in quality, though
on this point there are considerable differences of
opinion. Thus, as regards haemoglobin, some investigators
have found that the old idea as to the poverty of
haemoglobin in pregnancy is quite unfounded; a few
have even found that the haemoglobin is increased.
Most authorities have found the red cells diminished,
though some only slightly, while the white cells,
and also the fibrin, are increased. But toward
the end of pregnancy there is a tendency, perhaps
due to the establishment of compensation, for the
blood to revert to the normal condition.
It would appear probable, however,
that the vascular phenomena of pregnancy are not altogether
so simple as the above statement would imply.
The activity of various glands at this time-well
illustrated by the marked salivation which sometimes
occurs-indicates that other modifying forces
are at work, and it has been suggested that the changes
in the maternal circulation during pregnancy may best
be explained by the theory that there are two opposing
kinds of secretion poured into the blood in unusual
degree during pregnancy: one contracting the vessels,
the other dilating them, one or the other sometimes
gaining the upper hand. Suprarenal extract, when
administered, has a vaso-constricting influence,
and thyroid extract a vasodilating influence; it may
be surmised that within the body these glands perform
similar functions.
The important part played by the thyroid
gland is indicated by its marked activity at the very
beginning of pregnancy. We may probably associate
the general tendency to vasodilatation during early
pregnancy with the tendency to goitre; Freund found
an increase of the thyroid in 45 per cent. of 50 cases.
The thyroid belongs to the same class of ductless
glands as the ovary, and, as Bland Sutton and others
have insisted, the analogies between the thyroid and
the ovary are very numerous and significant.
It may be added that in recent years Armand Gautier
has noted the importance of the thyroid in elaborating
nucleo-proteids containing arsenic and iodine,
which are poured into the circulation during menstruation
and pregnancy. The whole metabolism of the body
is indeed affected, and during the latter part of
pregnancy study of the ingesta and egesta has shown
that a storage of nitrogen and even of water is taking
place. The woman, as Pinard puts it, forms the
child out of her own flesh, not merely out of her
food; the individual is being sacrificed to the species.
The changes in the nervous system
of the pregnant woman correspond to those in the vascular
system. There is the same increase of activity,
a heightening of tension. Bruno Wolff, from experiments
on bitches, concluded that the central nervous system
in women is probably more easily excited in the pregnant
than in the non-pregnant state, though he was not
prepared to call this cerebral excitability “specific."
Direct observations on pregnant women have shown,
without doubt, a heightened nervous irritability.
Reflex action generally is increased. Neumann
investigated the knee-jerk in 500 women during pregnancy,
labor, and the puerperium, and in a large number found
that there was a progressive exaggeration with the
advance of pregnancy, little or no change being observed
in the early months; sometimes when no change was observed
during pregnancy the knee-jerk still increased during
labor, reaching its maximum at the moment of the expulsion
of the foetus; the return to the normal condition
took place gradually during the puerperium. Tridandani
found in pregnant women that though the superficial
reflexes, with the exception of the abdominal, were
diminished, the deep and tendon reflexes were markedly
increased, especially that of the knee, these changes
being more marked in primiparae than in multiparae,
and more pronounced as pregnancy advanced, the normal
condition returning with ten days after labor.
Electrical excitability was sensibly diminished.
One of the first signs of high nervous
tension is vomiting. As is well known, this phenomenon
commonly appears early in pregnancy, and it is by
many considered entirely physiological. Barnes
regards it as a kind of safety valve, a regulating
function, letting off excessive tension and maintaining
equilibrium. Vomiting is, however, a convulsion,
and is thus the simplest form of a kind of manifestation-to
which the heightened nervous tension of pregnancy
easily lends itself-that finds its extreme
pathological form in eclampsia. In this connection
it is of interest to point out that the pregnant woman
here manifests in the highest degree a tendency which
is marked in women generally, for the female sex, apart
altogether from pregnancy, is specially liable to convulsive
phenomena.
There is some slight difference of opinion
among authorities as to the precise nature and
causation of the sickness of pregnancy. Barnes,
Horrocks and others regard it as physiological; but
many consider it pathological; this is, for instance,
the opinion of Giles. Graily Hewitt attributed
it to flexion of the gravid uterus, Kaltenbach
to hysteria, and Zaborsky terms it a neurosis.
Whitridge Williams considers that it may be (1)
reflex, or (2) neurotic (when it is allied to
hysteria and amenable to suggestion), or (3) toxaemic.
It really appears to lie on the borderland between
healthy and diseased manifestations. It is said
to be unknown to farmers and veterinary surgeons.
It appears to be little known among savages; it
is comparatively infrequent among women of the
lower social classes, and, as Giles has found, women
who habitually menstruate in a painless and normal
manner suffer comparatively little from the sickness
of pregnancy.
We owe a valuable study of the sickness
of pregnancy to Giles, who analyzed the records
of 300 cases. He concluded that about one-third
of the pregnant women were free from sickness throughout
pregnancy, 45 per cent. were free during the first
three months. When sickness occurred it began
in 70 per cent. of cases in the first month, and
was most frequent during the second month.
The duration varied from a few days to all through.
Between the ages of 20 and 25 sickness was least
frequent, and there was less sickness in the third
than in any other pregnancy. (This corresponds
with the conclusion of Matthews Duncan that 25 is
the most favorable age for pregnancy.) To some extent
in agreement with Gueniot, Giles believes that
the vomiting of pregnancy is “one form of
manifestation of the high nervous irritability
of pregnancy.” This high nervous tension
may overflow into other channels, into the vascular
and excretory system, causing eclampsia; into
the muscular system, causing chorea, or, expending
itself in the brain, give rise to hysteria when
mild or insanity when severe. But the vagi
form a very ready channel for such overflow, and
hence the frequency of sickness in pregnancy.
There are thus three main factors in the causation
of this phenomenon: (1) An increased nervous
irritability; (2) a local source of irritation;
(3) a ready efferent channel for nervous energy.
(Arthur Giles, “Observations on the Etiology
of the Sickness of Pregnancy,” Transactions
Obstetrical Society of London, vol. xxv,
1894.)
Martin, who regards the phenomenon as
normal, points out that when nausea and vomiting
are absent or suddenly cease there is often reason
to suspect something wrong, especially the death of
the embryo. He also remarks that women who
suffer from large varicose veins are seldom troubled
by the nausea of pregnancy. (J.M.H.
Martin, “The Vomiting of Pregnancy,” British
Medical Journal, December 10, 1904.) These
observations may be connected with those of Evans
(American Gynaecological and Obstetrical Journal,
January, 1900), who attributes primary importance to
the undoubtedly active factor of the irritation
set up by the uterus, more especially the rhythmic
uterine contractions; stimulation of the breasts
produces active uterine contractions, and Evans
found that examination of the breasts sufficed to bring
on a severe attack of vomiting, while on another
occasion this was produced by a vaginal examination.
Evans believes that the purpose of these contractions
is to facilitate the circulation of the blood
through the large venous sinuses, the surcharging of
the relatively stagnant pools with effete blood
producing the irritation which leads to rhythmic
contractions.
It is on the basis of the increased
vascular and glandular activity and the heightened
nervous tension that the special psychic phenomena
of pregnancy develop. The best known, and perhaps
the most characteristic of these manifestations, is
that known as “longings.” By this
term is meant more or less irresistible desires for
some special food or drink, which may be digestible
or indigestible, sometimes a substance which the woman
ordinarily likes, such as fruit, and occasionally one
which, under ordinary circumstances, she dislikes,
as in one case known to me of a young country woman
who, when bearing her child, was always longing for
tobacco and never happy except when she could get a
pipe to smoke, although under ordinary circumstances,
like other young women of her class, she was without
any desire to smoke. Occasionally the longings
lead to actions which are more unscrupulous than is
common in the case of the same person at other times;
thus in one case known to me a young woman, pregnant
with her first child, insisted to her sister’s
horror on entering a strawberry field and eating a
quantity of fruit. These “longings”
in their extreme form may properly be considered as
neurasthenic obsessions, but in their simple and less
pronounced forms they may well be normal and healthy.
The old medical authors abound in narratives
describing the longings of pregnant women for
natural and unnatural foods. This affection
was commonly called pica, sometimes citra
or malatía. Schurig, whose works are
a comprehensive treasure house of ancient medical
lore, devotes a long chapter (cap. II) of
his Chylologia, published in 1725, to pica as
manifested mainly, though not exclusively, in
pregnant women. Some women, he tells us,
have been compelled to eat all sorts of earthy substances,
of which sand seems the most common, and one Italian
woman when pregnant ate several pounds of sand
with much satisfaction, following it up with a
draught of her own urine. Lime, mud, chalk,
charcoal, cinders, pitch are also the desired substances
in other cases detailed. One pregnant woman must
eat bread fresh from the oven in very large quantities,
and a certain noble matron ate 140 sweet cakes
in one day and night. Wheat and various kinds
of corn as well as of vegetables were the foods desired
by many longing women. One woman was responsible
for 20 pounds of pepper, another ate ginger in
large quantities, a third kept mace under her
pillow; cinnamon, salt, emulsion of almonds, treacle,
mushrooms were desired by others. Cherries were
longed for by one, and another ate 30 or 40 lemons
in one night. Various kinds of fish-mullet,
oysters, crabs, live eels, etc.-are
mentioned, while other women have found delectation
in lizards, frogs, spiders and flies, even scorpions,
lice and fleas. A pregnant woman, aged 33,
of sanguine temperament, ate a live fowl completely
with intense satisfaction. Skin, wool, cotton,
thread, linen, blotting paper have been desired,
as well as more repulsive substances, such as
nasal mucus and feces (eaten with bread).
Vinegar, ice, and snow occur in other cases. One
woman stilled a desire for human flesh by biting
the nates of children or the arms of men.
Metals are also swallowed, such as iron, silver,
etc. One pregnant woman wished to throw eggs
in her husband’s face, and another to have
her husband throw eggs in her face.
In the next chapter of the same work
Schurig describes cases of acute antipathy which
may arise under the same circumstances (cap.
III, “De Nausea seu Antipathia
certorum ciborum"). The list includes bread,
meat, fowls, fish, eels (a very common repulsion),
crabs, milk, butter (very often), cheese (often),
honey, sugar, salt, eggs, caviar, sulphur, apples
(especially their odor), strawberries, mulberries,
cinnamon, mace, capers, pepper, onions, mustard,
beetroot, rice, mint, absinthe, roses (many pages
are devoted to this antipathy), lilies, elder flowers,
musk (which sometimes caused vomiting), amber, coffee,
opiates, olive oil, vinegar, cats, frogs, spiders,
wasps, swords.
More recently Gould and Pyle
(Anomalies and Curiosities of
Medicine, have
briefly summarized some of the ancient and
modern records concerning
the longings of pregnant women.
Various theories are put forward concerning
the causation of the longings of pregnant women, but
none of these seems to furnish by itself a complete
and adequate explanation of all cases. Thus it
is said that the craving is the expression of a natural
instinct, the system of the pregnant woman really
requiring the food she longs for. It is quite
probable that this is so in many cases, but it is
obviously not so in the majority of cases, even when
we confine ourselves to the longings for fairly natural
foods, while we know so little of the special needs
of the organism during pregnancy that the theory in
any case is insusceptible of clear demonstration.
Allied to this theory is the explanation
that the longings are for things that counteract the
tendency to nausea and sickness. Giles, however,
in his valuable statistical study of the longings
of a series of 300 pregnant women, has shown that
the percentage of women with longings is exactly the
same (33 per cent.) among women who had suffered at
some time during pregnancy from sickness as among
the women who had not so suffered. Moreover,
Giles found that the period of sickness frequently
bore no relation to the time when there were cravings,
and the patient often had cravings after the sickness
had ceased.
According to another theory these
longings are mainly a matter of auto-suggestion.
The pregnant woman has received the tradition of such
longings, persuades herself that she has such a longing,
and then becomes convinced that, according to a popular
belief, it will be bad for the child if the longing
is not gratified. Giles considers that this process
of auto-suggestion takes place “in a certain
number, perhaps even in the majority of cases."
The Duchess d’Abrantes, the wife
of Marshal Junot, in her Mémoires gives
an amusing account of how in her first pregnancy a
longing was apparently imposed upon her by the anxious
solicitude of her own and her husband’s relations.
Though suffering from constant nausea and sickness,
she had no longings. One day at dinner after
the pregnancy had gone on for some months her
mother suddenly put down her fork, exclaiming:
“I have never asked you what longing you
have!” She replied with truth that she had
none, her days and her nights being occupied with suffering.
“No envie!” said the mother,
“such a thing was never heard of. I
must speak to your mother-in-law.” The two
old ladies consulted anxiously and explained to
the young mother how an unsatisfied longing might
produce a monstrous child, and the husband also now
began to ask her every day what she longed for.
Her sister-in-law, moreover, brought her all sorts
of stories of children born with appalling mother’s
marks due to this cause. She became frightened
and began to wonder what she most wanted, but
could think of nothing. At last, when eating a
pastille flavored with pineapple, it occurred
to her that pineapple is an excellent fruit, and
one, moreover, which she had never seen, for at
that time it was extremely rare. Thereupon she
began to long for pineapple, and all the more
when she was told that at that season they could
not be obtained. She now began to feel that she
must have pineapple or die, and her husband ran
all over Paris, vainly offering twenty louis
for a pineapple. At last he succeeded in
obtaining one through the kindness of Mme. Bonaparte,
and drove home furiously just as his wife, always
talking of pineapples, had gone to bed. He
entered the room with the pineapple, to the great
satisfaction of the Duchess’s mother. (In
one of her own pregnancies, it appears, she longed
in vain for cherries in January, and the child
was born with a mark on her body resembling a
cherry-in scientific terminology, a naevus.)
The Duchess effusively thanked her husband and wished
to eat of the fruit immediately, but her husband
stopped her and said that Corvisart, the famous
physician, had told him that she must on no account
touch it at night, as it was extremely indigestible.
She promised not to do so, and spent the night in
caressing the pineapple. In the morning the
husband came and cut up the fruit, presenting
it to her in a porcelain bowl. Suddenly, however,
there was a revulsion of feeling; she felt that she
could not possibly eat pineapple; persuasion was
useless; the fruit had to be taken away and the
windows opened, for the very smell of it had become
odious. The Duchess adds that henceforth, throughout
her life, though still liking the flavor, she was only
able to eat pineapple by doing a sort of violence
to herself. (Memories de la Duchesse d’Abrantes,
vol. iii, Chapter VIII.) It should be added
that, in old age, the Duchess d’Abrantes appears
to have become insane.
The influence of suggestion must certainly
be accepted as, at all events, increasing and emphasizing
the tendency to longings. It can scarcely, however,
be regarded as a radical and adequate explanation of
the phenomenon generally. If it is a matter of
auto-suggestion due to a tradition, then we should
expect to find longings most frequent and most pronounced
in multiparous women, who are best acquainted with
the tradition and best able to experience all that
is expected of a pregnant woman. But, as a matter
of fact, the women who have borne most children are
precisely those who are least likely to be affected
by the longings which tradition demands they should
manifest. Giles has shown that longings occur
much more frequently in the first than in any subsequent
pregnancy; there is a regular decrease with the increase
in number of pregnancies until in women with ten or
more children the longings scarcely occur at all.
We must probably regard longings as
based on a physiological and psychic tendency which
is of universal extension and almost or quite normal.
They are known throughout Europe and were known to
the medical writers of antiquity. Old Indian
as well as old Jewish physicians recognized them.
They have been noted among many savage races to-day:
among the Indians of North and South America, among
the peoples of the Nile and the Soudan, in the Malay
archipelago. In Europe they are most common among
the women of the people, living simple and natural
lives.
The true normal relationship of the
longings of pregnancy is with the impulsive and often
irresistible longings for food delicacies which are
apt to overcome children, and in girls often persist
or revive through adolescence and even beyond.
Such sudden fits of greediness belong to those kind
of normal psychic manifestations which are on the verge
of the abnormal into which they occasionally pass.
They may occur, however, in healthy, well-bred, and
well-behaved children who, under the stress of the
sudden craving, will, without compunction and apparently
without reflection, steal the food they long for or
even steal from their parents the money to buy it.
The food thus seized by a well-nigh irresistible craving
is nearly always a fruit. Fruit is usually doled
out to children in small quantities as a luxury, but
we are descended from primitive human peoples and
still more remote ape-like ancestors, by whom fruit
was in its season eaten copiously, and it is not surprising
that when that season comes round the child, more
sensitive than the adult to primitive influences,
should sometimes experience the impulse of its ancestors
with overwhelming intensity, all the more so if, as
is probable, the craving is to some extent the expression
of a physiological need.
Sanford Bell, who has investigated the
food impulses of children in America, finds that
girls have a greater number of likes and dislikes
in foods than boys of the same age, though at the same
time they have less dislikes to some foods than
boys. The proclivity for sweets and fruits
shows itself as soon as a child begins to eat
solids. The chief fruits liked are oranges, bananas,
apples, peaches, and pears. This strong preference
for fruits lasts till the age of 13 or 14, though
relatively weaker from 10 to 13. In girls,
however, Bell notes the significant fact from
our present point of view that at mid-adolescence there
is a revived taste for sweets and fruits.
He believes that the growth of children in taste
in foods recapitulates the experience of the race.
(S. Bell, “An Introductory Study of the
Psychology of Foods.” Pedagogical Seminary,
March, 1904.)
The heightened nervous impressionability
of pregnancy would appear to arouse into activity
those primitive impulses which are liable to occur
in childhood and in the unmarried girl continue to
the nubile age. It is a significant fact that
the longings of pregnant women are mainly for fruit,
and notably for so wholesome a fruit as the apple,
which may very well have a beneficial effect on the
system of the pregnant woman. Giles, in his tabulation
of the foods longed for by 300 pregnant women, found
that the fruit group was by far the largest, furnishing
79 cases; apples were far away at the head, occurring
in 34 cases out of the 99 who had longings, while
oranges followed at a distance (with 13 cases), and
in the vegetable group tomatoes came first (with 6
cases). Several women declared “I could
have lived on apples,” “I was eating apples
all day,” “I used to sit up in bed eating
apples." Pregnant women appear seldom to long
for the possession of objects outside the edible class,
and it seems doubtful whether they have any special
tendency to kleptomania. Pinard has pointed out
that neither Lasegue nor Lunier, in their studies of
kleptomania, have mentioned a single shop robbery committed
by a pregnant woman. Brouardel has indeed found
such cases, but the object stolen was usually a food.
A further significant fact connecting
the longings of pregnant women with the longings of
children is to be found in the fact that they occur
mainly in young women. We have, indeed, no tabulation
of the ages of pregnant women who have manifested
longings, but Giles has clearly shown that these chiefly
occur in primiparae, and steadily and rapidly decrease
in each successive pregnancy. This fact, otherwise
somewhat difficult of explanation, is natural if we
look upon the longings of pregnancy as a revival of
those of childhood. It certainly indicates also
that we can by no means regard these longings as exclusively
the expression of a physiological craving, for in
that case they would be liable to occur in any pregnancy
unless, indeed, it is argued that with each successive
pregnancy the woman becomes less sensitive to her own
physiological state.
There has been a frequent tendency,
more especially among primitive peoples, to regard
a pregnant woman’s longings as something
sacred and to be indulged, all the more, no doubt,
as they are usually of a simple and harmless character.
In the Black Forest, according to Ploss and Bartels,
a pregnant woman may go freely into other people’s
gardens and take fruit, provided she eats it on
the spot, and very similar privileges are accorded
to her elsewhere. Old English opinion, as
reflected, for instance, in Ben Jonson’s
plays (as Dr. Harriet C.B. Alexander has pointed
out), regards the pregnant woman as not responsible
for her longings, and Kiernan remarks ("Kleptomania
and Collectivism,” Alienist and Neurologist,
November, 1902) that this is in “a most
natural and just view.” In France at the
Revolution a law of the 28th Germinal, in the
year III, to some extent admitted the irresponsibility
of the pregnant woman generally,-following
the classic precedent, by which a woman could
not be brought before a court of justice so long
as she was pregnant,-but the Napoleonic
code, never tender to women, abrogated this.
Pinard does not consider that the longings of
pregnant women are irresistible, and, consequently,
regards the pregnant woman as responsible. This
is probably the view most widely held. In any
case these longings seldom come up for medico-legal
consideration.
The phenomena of the longings of pregnancy
are linked to the much more obscure and dubious phenomena
of the influence of maternal impressions on the child
within the womb. It is true, indeed, that there
is no real connection whatever between these two groups
of manifestations, but they have been so widely and
for so long closely associated in the popular mind
that it is convenient to pass directly from one to
the other. The same name is sometimes given to
the two manifestations; thus in France a pregnant
longing is an envie, while a mother’s
mark on the child is also called an envie,
because it is supposed to be due to the mother’s
unsatisfied longing.
The conception of a “maternal
impression” (the German Versehen) rests
on the belief that a powerful mental influence working
on the mother’s mind may produce an impression,
either general or definite, on the child she is carrying.
It makes a great deal of difference whether the effect
of the impression on the child is general, or definite
and circumscribed. It is not difficult to believe
that a general effect-even, as Sir Arthur
Mitchell first gave good reason for believing, idiocy-may
be produced on the child by strong and prolonged emotional
influence working on the mother, because such general
influence may be transmitted through a deteriorated
blood-stream. But it is impossible at present
to understand how a definite and limited influence
working on the mother could produce a definite and
limited effect on the child, for there are no channels
of nervous communications for the passage of such
influences. Our difficulty in conceiving of the
process must, however, be put aside if the fact itself
can be demonstrated by convincing evidence.
In order to illustrate the nature of
maternal impressions, I will summarize a few cases
which I have collected from the best medical periodical
literature during the past fifteen years. I have
exercised no selection and in no way guarantee the
authenticity of the alleged facts or the alleged
explanation. They are merely examples to
illustrate a class of cases published from time
to time by medical observers in medical journals of
high repute.
Early in pregnancy a woman found her
pet rabbit killed by a cat which had gnawed off
the two forepaws, leaving ragged stumps; she was
for a long time constantly thinking of this. Her
child was born with deformed feet, one foot with
only two toes, the other three, the os calcis
in both feet being either absent or little developed.
(G.B. Beale, Tottenham, Lancet, May 4,
1889).
Three months and a half before birth
of the child the father, a glazier, fell through
the roof of a hothouse, severely cutting his right
arm, so that he was lying in the infirmary for a long
time, and it was doubtful whether the hand could
be saved. The child was healthy, but on the
flexor surface of the radial side of the right
forearm just above the wrist-the same spot
as the father’s injury-there
was a naevus the size of a sixpence. (W. Russell,
Paisley, Lancet, May 11, 1889.)
At the beginning of pregnancy a woman
was greatly scared by being kicked over by a frightened
cow she was milking; she hung on to the animal’s
teats, but thought she would be trampled to death,
and was ill and nervous for weeks afterwards.
The child was a monster, with a fleshy substance-seeming
to be prolonged from the spinal cord and to represent
the brain-projecting from the floor
of the skull. Both doctor and nurse were struck
by the resemblance to a cow’s teats before
they knew the woman’s story, and this was
told by the woman immediately after delivery and before
she knew to what she had given birth. (A. Ross
Paterson, Reversby, Lincolnshire, Lancet,
September 29, 1889.)
During the second month of pregnancy
the mother was terrified by a bullock as she was
returning from market. The child reached full
term and was a well-developed male, stillborn.
Its head “exactly resembled a miniature
cow’s head;” the occipital bone was
absent, the parietals only slightly developed,
the eyes were placed at the top of the frontal
bone, which was quite flat, with each of its superior
angles twisted into a rudimentary horn. (J.T.
Hislop, Tavistock, Devon, Lancet, November 1,
1890.)
When four months pregnant the mother,
a multipara of 30, was startled by a black and
white collie dog suddenly pushing against her
and rushing out when she opened the door. This
preyed on her mind, and she felt sure her child
would be marked. The whole of the child’s
right thigh was encircled by a shining black mole,
studded with white hairs; there was another mole
on the spine of the left scapula. (C.F. Williamson,
Horley, Surrey, Lancet, October 11, 1890.)
A lady in comfortable circumstances,
aged 24, not markedly emotional, with one child,
in all respects healthy, early in her pregnancy
saw a man begging whose arms and legs were “all
doubled up.” This gave her a shock,
but she hoped no ill effects would follow.
The child was an encephalous monster, with the extremities
rigidly flexed and the fingers clenched, the feet
almost sole to sole. In the next pregnancy
she frequently passed a man who was a partial
cripple, but she was not unduly depressed; the
child was a counterpart of the last, except that the
head was normal. The next child was strong and
well formed. (C.W. Chapman, London,
Lancet, October 18, 1890.)
When the pregnant mother was working
in a hayfield her husband threw at her a young
hare he had found in the hay; it struck her on
the cheek and neck. Her daughter has on the left
cheek an oblong patch of soft dark hair, in color
and character clearly resembling the fur of a
very young hare. (A. Mackay, Port Appin, N.B.,
Lancet, December 19, 1891. The writer records
also four other cases which have happened in his
experience.)
When the mother was pregnant her husband
had to attend to a sow who could not give birth
to her pigs; he bled her freely, cutting a notch
out of both ears. His wife insisted on seeing
the sow. The helix of each ear of her child
at birth was gone, for nearly or quite half an
inch, as if cut purposely. (R.P. Roons, Medical
World, 1894.)
A lady when pregnant was much interested
in a story in which one of the characters had
a supernumerary digit, and this often recurred
to her mind. Her baby had a supernumerary digit
on one hand. (J. Jenkyns, Aberdeen, British
Medical Journal, March 2, 1895. The writer
also records another case.)
When pregnant the mother saw in the
forest a new-born fawn which was a double monstrosity.
Her child was a similar double monstrosity (cephalothora
copagus). (Hartmann, Muenchener Medicinisches
Wochenschrift, N, 1895.)
A well developed woman of 30, who had
ten children in twelve years, in the third month
of her tenth pregnancy saw a child run over by
a street car, which crushed the upper and back part
of its head. Her own child was anencephalic
and acranial, with entire absence of vault of
skull. (F.A. Stahl, American Journal of
Obstetrics, April, 1896.)
A healthy woman with no skin blemish
had during her third pregnancy a violent appetite
for sunfish. During or after the fourth month
her husband, as a surprise, brought her some sunfish
alive, placing them in a pail of water in the porch.
She stumbled against the pail and the shock caused
the fish to flap over the pail and come in violent
contact with her leg. The cold wriggling fish
produced a nervous shock, but she attached no importance
to this. The child (a girl) had at birth
a mark of bronze pigment resembling a fish with
the head uppermost (photograph given) on the corresponding
part of the same leg. Daughter’s health
good; throughout life she has had a strong craving
for sunfish, which she has sometimes eaten till
she has vomited from repletion. (C.F.
Gardiner, Colorado Springs, American Journal Obstetrics,
February, 1898.)
The next case occurred in a bitch.
A thoroughbred fox terrier bitch strayed and was
discovered a day or two later with her right foreleg
broken. The limb was set under chloroform with
the help of Roentgen rays, and the dog made a
good recovery. Several weeks later she gave
birth to a puppy with a right foreleg that was
ill-developed and minus the paw. (J. Booth, Cork,
British Medical Journal, September 16,
1899.)
Four months before the birth of her
child a woman with four healthy children and no
history of deformity in the family fell and cut
her left wrist severely against a broken bowl; she
had a great fright and shock. Her child,
otherwise perfect, was born without left hand
and wrist, the stump of arm terminating at lower
end of radius and ulna. (G. Ainslie Johnston,
Ambleside, British Medical Journal, April
18, 1903.)
The belief in the reality of the transference
of strong mental or physical impressions on the mother
into physical changes in the child she is bearing
is very ancient and widespread. Most writers on
the subject begin with the book of Genesis and the
astute device of Jacob in influencing the color of
his lambs by mental impressions on his ewes. But
the belief exists among even more primitive people
than the early Hebrews, and in all parts of the world.
Among the Greeks there is a trace of the belief in
Hippocrates, the first of the world’s great physicians,
while Soranus, the most famous of ancient gynaecologists,
states the matter in the most precise manner, with
instances in proof. The belief continued to persist
unquestioned throughout the Middle Ages. The first
author who denied the influence of maternal impressions
altogether appears to have been the famous anatomist,
Realdus Columbus, who was a professor at Padua, Pisa,
and Rome at the beginning of the sixteenth century.
In the same century, however, another and not less
famous Neapolitan, Della Porta, for the first time
formulated a definite theory of maternal impressions.
A little later, early in the seventeenth century,
a philosophic physician at Padua, Fortunatus
Licetus, took up an intermediate position which still
finds, perhaps reasonably, a great many adherents.
He recognized that a very frequent cause of malformation
in the child is to be found in morbid antenatal conditions,
but at the same time was not prepared to deny absolutely
and in every case the influence of maternal impression
on such conditions. Malebranche, the Platonic
philosopher, allowed the greatest extension to the
power of the maternal imagination. In the eighteenth
century, however, the new spirit of free inquiry, of
radical criticism, and unfettered logic, led to a
sceptical attitude toward this ancient belief then
flourishing vigorously. In 1727, a few years after
Malebranche’s death, James Blondel, a physician
of extreme acuteness, who had been born in Paris,
was educated at Leyden, and practiced in London, published
the first methodical and thorough attack on the doctrine
of maternal impressions, The Strength of Imagination
of Pregnant Women Examined, and exercised his
great ability in ridiculing it. Haller, Roederer,
and Soemmering followed in the steps of Blondel,
and were either sceptical or hostile to the ancient
belief. Blumenbach, however, admitted the influence
of maternal impressions. Erasmus Darwin, as well
as Goethe in his Wahlverwandtschaften, even
accepted the influence of paternal impressions on
the child. By the beginning of the nineteenth
century the majority of physicians were inclined to
relegate maternal impressions to the region of superstition.
Yet the exceptions were of notable importance.
Burdach, when all deductions were made, still found
it necessary to retain the belief in maternal impressions,
and Von Baer, the founder of embryology, also accepted
it, supported by a case, occurring in his own sister,
which he was able to investigate before the child’s
birth. L.W.T. Bischoff, also, while submitting
the doctrine to acute criticism, found it impossible
to reject maternal impressions absolutely, and he remarked
that the number of adherents to the doctrine was showing
a tendency to increase rather than diminish.
Johannes Mueller, the founder of modern physiology
in Germany, declared himself against it, and his influence
long prevailed; Valentin, Rudolf Wagner, and Emil
du Bois-Reymond were on the same side. On the
other hand various eminent gynaecologists-Litzmann,
Roth, Hennig, etc.-have argued in
favor of the reality of maternal impressions.
The long conflict of opinion which
has taken place over this opinion has still left the
matter unsettled. The acutest critics of the ancient
belief constantly conclude the discussion with an expression
of doubt and uncertainty. Even if the majority
of authorities are inclined to reject maternal impressions,
the scientific eminence of those who accept them makes
a decisive opinion difficult. The arguments against
such influence are perfectly sound: (1) it is
a primitive belief of unscientific origin; (2) it
is impossible to conceive how such influence can operate
since there is no nervous connection between mother
and child; (3) comparatively few cases have been submitted
to severe critical investigation; (4) it is absurd
to ascribe developmental defects to influences which
arise long after the foetus had assumed its definite
shape; (5) in any case the phenomenon must be
rare, for William Hunter could not find a coincidence
between maternal impressions and foetal marks through
a period of several years, and Bischoff found no case
in 11,000 deliveries. These statements embody
the whole of the argument against maternal impressions,
yet it is clear that they do not settle the matter.
Edgar, in a manual of obstetrics which is widely regarded
as a standard work, states that this is “yet
a mooted question." Ballantyne, again, in a discussion
of this influence at the Edinburgh Obstetrical Society,
summarizing the result of a year’s inquiry,
concluded that it is still “sub judice."
In a subsequent discussion of the question he has
somewhat modified his opinion, and is inclined to
deny that definite impressions on the pregnant woman’s
mind can cause similar defects in the foetus; they
are “accidental coincidences,” but he
adds that a few of the cases are difficult to explain
away. At the same time he fully believes that
prolonged and strongly marked mental states of the
mother may affect the development of the foetus in
her uterus, causing vascular and nutritive disturbances,
irregularities of development, and idiocy.
Whether and in how far mental impressions
on the mother can produce definite mental and
emotional disposition in the child is a special
aspect of the question to which scarcely any inquiry
has been devoted. So distinguished a biologist
as Mr. A.W. Wallace has, however, called
attention to this point, bringing forward evidence
on the question and emphasizing the need of further
investigation. “Such transmission of mental
influence,” he remarks, “will hardly
be held to be impossible or even very improbable,”
(A.W. Wallace, “Prenatal Influences on Character,”
Nature, August 24, 1893.)
It has already been pointed out that
a large number of cases of foetal deformities, supposed
to be due to maternal impressions, cannot possibly
be so caused because the impression took place at a
period when the development of the foetus must already
have been decided. In this connection, however,
it must be noted that Dabney has observed a relationship
between the time of supposed mental impressions and
the nature of the actual defect which is of considerable
significance as an argument in favor of the influence
of mental impressions. He tabulated 90 carefully
reported cases from recent medical literature, and
found that 21 of them were concerned with defects
of structure of the lips and palate. In all but
2 of these 21 the defect was referred to an impression
occurring within the first three months of pregnancy.
This is an important point as showing that the assigned
cause really falls within a period when a defect of
development actually could produce the observed result,
although the person reporting the cases was in many
instances manifestly ignorant of the details of embryology
and teratology. There was no such preponderance
of early impressions among the defects of skin and
hair which might well, so far as development is concerned,
have been caused at a later period; here, in 7 out
of 15 cases, it was distinctly stated that the impression
was made later than the fourth month.
It would seem, on the whole, that
while the influence of maternal impressions in producing
definite effects on the child within the womb has
by no means been positively demonstrated, we are not
entitled to reject it with any positive assurance.
Even if we accept it, however, it must remain, for
the present, an inexplicable fact; the modus operandi
we can scarcely even guess at. General influences
from the mother on the child we can easily conceive
of as conveyed by the mother’s blood; we can
even suppose that the modified blood might act specifically
on one particular kind of tissue. We can, again,
as suggested by Fere, very well believe that the maternal
emotions act upon the womb and produce various kinds
and degrees of pressure on the child within, so that
the apparently active movements of the foetus may
be really consecutive on unconscious maternal excitations.
We may also believe that, as suggested by John Thomson,
there are slight incooerdinations in útero,
a kind of developmental neurosis, produced by some
slight lack of harmony of whatever origin, and leading
to the production of malformations. We know, finally,
that, as Fere and others have repeatedly demonstrated
during recent years by experiments on chickens, etc.,
very subtle agents, even odors, may profoundly affect
embryonic development and produce deformity. But
how the mother’s psychic disposition can, apart
from heredity, affect specifically the physical conformation
or even the psychic disposition of the child within
her womb must remain for the present an insoluble mystery,
even if we feel disposed to conclude that in some
cases such action seems to be indicated.
In comprehending such a connection,
however at present undemonstrated, it may well
be borne in mind that the relationship of the
mother to the child within her womb is of a uniquely
intimate character. It is of interest in this
connection to quote some remarks by an able psychologist,
Dr. Henry Rutgers Marshall; the remarks are not
less interesting for being brought forward without
any connection with the question of maternal impressions:
“It is true that, so far as we know, the nervous
system of the embryo never has a direct connection
with the nervous system of the mother: nevertheless,
as there is a reciprocity of reaction between
the physical body of the mother and its embryonic
parasite, the relation of the embryonic nervous system
to the nervous system of the mother is not very far
removed from the relation of the pre-eminent part
of the nervous system of a man to some minor nervous
system within his body which is to a marked extent
dissociated from the whole neural mass.
“Correspondingly, then, and within
the consciousness of the mother, there develops
a new little minor consciousness which, although
but lightly integrated with the mass of her consciousness,
nevertheless has its part in her consciousness taken
as a whole, much as the psychic correspondents of the
action of the nerve which govern the secretions
of the glands of the body have their part in her
consciousness taken as a whole.
“It is very much as if the optic
ganglia developed fully in themselves, without
any closer connection with the rest of the brain
than existed at their first appearance. They would
form a little complex nervous system almost but
not quite apart from the brain system; and it
would be difficult to deny them a consciousness
of their own; which would indeed form part of the
whole consciousness of the individual, but which
would be in a manner self-dependent.”
It must, if this is so, be said that before birth,
on the psychic side, the embryo’s activities
“form part of a complex consciousness which
is that of the mother and embryo together.”
“Without subscribing to the strange stories of
telepathy, of the solemn apparition of a person
somewhere at the moment of his death a thousand
miles away, of the unquiet ghost haunting the
scenes of its bygone hopes and endeavors, one may
ask” (with the author of the address in medicine
at the Leicester gathering of the British Medical
Association, British Medical Journal, July
29, 1905) “whether two brains cannot be so tuned
in sympathy as to transmit and receive a subtile
transfusion of mind without mediation of sense.
Considering what is implied by the human brain
with its countless millions of cells, its complexities
of minute structure, its innumerable chemical compositions,
and the condensed forces in its microscopic and ultramicroscopic
elements-the whole a sort of microcosm of
cosmic forces to which no conceivable compound
of electric batteries is comparable; considering,
again, that from an electric station waves of
energy radiate through the viewless air to be
caught up by a fit receiver a thousand miles distant,
it is not inconceivable that the human brain may
send off still more subtile waves to be accepted
and interpreted by the fitly tuned receiving brain.
Is it, after all, mere fancy that a mental atmosphere
or effluence emanates from one person to affect another,
either soothing sympathetically or irritating antipathically?”
These remarks (like Dr. Marshall’s) were made
without reference to maternal impressions, but
it may be pointed out that under no conceivable
circumstance could we find a brain in so virginal
and receptive a state as is the child’s in the
womb.
On the whole we see that pregnancy
induces a psychic state which is at once, in healthy
persons, one of full development and vigor, and at
the same time one which, especially in individuals
who are slightly abnormal, is apt to involve a state
of strained or overstrained nervous tension and to
evoke various manifestations which are in many respects
still imperfectly understood. Even the specifically
sexual emotions tend to be heightened, more especially
during the earlier period of pregnancy. In 24
cases of pregnancy in which the point was investigated
by Harry Campbell, sexual feeling was decidedly increased
in 8, in one case (of a woman aged 31 who had had
four children) being indeed only present during pregnancy,
when it was considerable; in only 7 cases was there
diminution or disappearance of sexual feeling.
Pregnancy may produce mental depression; but
on the other hand it frequently leads to a change of
the most favorable character in the mental and general
well-being. Some women indeed are only well during
pregnancy. It is remarkable that some women who
habitually suffer from various nervous troubles-neuralgias,
gastralgia, headache, insomnia-are only
free from them at this moment. This “paradox
of gestation,” as Vinay has termed it, is specially
marked in the hysterical and those suffering from
slight nervous disorders, but it is by no means universal,
so that although it is possible, Vinay states, to
confirm the opinion of the ancients as to the beneficial
action of marriage on hysteria, that is only true of
slight cases and scarcely enables us to counsel marriage
in hysteria. Even a woman’s intelligence
is sometimes heightened by pregnancy, and Tarnier,
as quoted by Vinay, knew many women whose intelligence,
habitually somewhat obtuse, has only risen to the
normal level during pregnancy. The pregnant woman
has reached the climax of womanhood; she has attained
to that state toward which the periodically recurring
menstrual wave has been drifting her at regular intervals
throughout her sexual life; she has achieved
that function for which her body has been constructed,
and her mental and emotional disposition adapted,
through countless ages.
And yet, as we have seen, our ignorance
of the changes effected by the occurrence of this
supremely important event-even on the physical
side-still remains profound. Pregnancy,
even for us, the critical and unprejudiced children
of a civilized age, still remains, as for the children
of more primitive ages, a mystery. Conception
itself is a mystery for the primitive man, and may
be produced by all sorts of subtle ways apart from
sexual connection, even by smelling a flower.
The pregnant woman was surrounded by ceremonies, by
reverence and fear, often shut up in a place apart.
Her presence, her exhalations, were of extreme potency;
even in some parts of Europe to-day, as in the Walloon
districts of Belgium, a pregnant woman must not kiss
a child for her breath is dangerous, or urinate on
plants for she will kill them. The mystery has
somewhat changed its form; it still remains. The
future of the race is bound up with our efforts to
fathom the mystery of pregnancy. “The early
days of human life,” it has been truly said,
“are entirely one with the mother. On her
manner of life-eating, drinking, sleeping,
and thinking-what greatness may not hang?"
Schopenhauer observed, with misapplied horror, that
there is nothing a woman is less modest about than
the state of pregnancy, while Weininger exclaims:
“Never yet has a pregnant woman given expression
in any form-poem, memoirs, or gynaecological
monograph-to her sensations or feelings."
Yet when we contemplate the mystery of pregnancy and
all that it involves, how trivial all such considerations
become! We are here lifted into a region where
our highest intelligence can only lead us to adoration,
for we are gazing at a process in which the operations
of Nature become one with the divine task of Creation.