<SPAN name="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_VIII"id="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_VIII"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
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<p><i>The Opinion of the Learned concerning Children conceived and
born within Seven Months; with Arguments upon the Subject to
prevent Suspicion of Incontinency, and bitter Contest on that
Account. To which are added Rules to Know the Disposition of Man's
Body by the Genital Parts</i>.</p>
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<p>Many bitter quarrels happen between men and their wives upon the
man's supposition that the child comes too soon, and by
consequence, that he could not be the father; whereas, it is
<!-- Page 54 --> the want of
understanding the secrets of nature which brings the man into that
error; and which, had he known, might have cured him of his
suspicion and jealousy.</p>
<p>To remove which, I shall endeavour to prove, that it is
possible, and has been frequently known, that children have been
born at seven months. Paul, the Counsel, has this passage in the
19th Book of Pleadings, viz.: "It is now a received truth, that a
perfect child may be born in the seventh month, by the authority of
the learned Hippocrates; and therefore, we must believe that a
child born at the end of the seventh month in lawful matrimony may
be lawfully begotten."</p>
<p>Galen is of opinion that there is no certain time set for the
bearing of children; and that from Pliny's authority, who makes
mention of a woman that went thirteen months with child; but as to
what concerns the seventh month, a learned author says, "I know
several married people in Holland that had twins born in the
seventh month, who lived to old age, having lusty bodies and lively
minds. Wherefore their opinion is absurd, who assert that a child
at seven months cannot be perfect and long lived; and that it
cannot in all parts be perfect until the ninth month." Thereupon
the author proceeds to tell a passage from his own knowledge, viz.:
"<!-- Page 55 --> Of late there
happened a great disturbance among us, which ended not without
bloodshed; and was occasioned by a virgin, whose chastity had been
violated, descending from a noble family of unspotted fame. Several
charged the fact upon the Judge, who was president of a city in
Flanders, who firmly denied it, saying he was ready to take his
oath that he never had any carnal copulation with her, and that he
would not father that, which was none of his; and farther argued,
that he verily believed it was a child born in seven months,
himself being many miles distant from the mother of it when it was
conceived. Upon which the judges decreed that the child should be
viewed by able physicians and experienced women, and that they
should make their report. They having made diligent inquiry, all of
them with one mind, concluded the child, without discussing who was
the father, was born within the space of seven months, and that it
was carried in the mother's womb but twenty-seven weeks and some
odd days; but if she should have gone full nine months, the child's
parts and limbs would have been more firm and strong, and the
structure of the body more compact; for the skin was very loose,
and the breast bone that defends the heart, and the gristles that
lay over the stomach, lay higher than <!-- Page 56 --> naturally they should be, not plain,
but crooked and sharp, rigid or pointed, like those of a young
chicken hatched in the beginning of spring. And being a female, it
wanted nails upon the joints of the fingers; upon which, from the
masculous cartilaginous matter of the skin, nails that are very
smooth do come, and by degrees harden; she had, instead of nails, a
thin skin or film. As for her toes, there were no signs of nails
upon them, wanting the heat which was expanded to the fingers from
the nearness of the heart. All this was considered, and above all,
one gentlewoman of quality that assisted, affirming that she had
been the mother of nineteen children, and that divers of them had
been born and lived at seven months, though within the seventh
month. For in such cases, the revolution of the month ought to be
observed, which perfects itself in four bare weeks, or somewhat
less than twenty-eight days; in which space of the revolution, the
blood being agitated by the force of the moon, the courses of women
flow from them; which being spent, and the matrix cleansed from the
menstruous blood which happens on the fourth day, then, if a man on
the seventh day lie with his wife, the copulation is most natural,
and then the conception is best: and the child thus begotten may be
born in the seventh month and prove <!-- Page 57 --> very healthful. So that on this report,
the supposed father was pronounced innocent; the proof that he was
100 miles distant all that month in which the child was begotten;
as for the mother she strongly denied that she knew the father,
being forced in the dark; and so, through fear and surprise, was
left in ignorance."</p>
<p>As for coition, it ought not to be used unless the parties be in
health, lest it turn to the disadvantage of the children so
begotten, creating in them, through the abundance of ill humours,
divers languishing diseases. Wherefore, health is no better
discerned than by the genitals of the man; for which reasons
midwives, and other skilful women, were formerly wont to see the
testicles of children, thereby to conjecture their temperature and
state of body; and young men may know thereby the signs and
symptoms of death; for if the cases of the testicles be loose and
feeble, which are the proofs of life, are fallen, but if the secret
parts are wrinkled and raised up, it is a sign that all is well,
but that the event may exactly answer the prediction, it is
necessary to consider what part of the body the disease possesseth;
for if it chance to be the upper part that is afflicted, as the
head or stomach, then it will not so then appear by the members,
which are unconnected <!-- Page 58 --> with such grievances; but the lower part of the body
exactly sympathising with them, their liveliness, on the contrary,
makes it apparent; for nature's force, and the spirits that have
their intercourse, first manifest themselves therein; which
occasions midwives to feel the genitals of children, to know in
what part the gulf is residing, and whether life or death be
portended thereby, the symptoms being strongly communicated to the
vessels, that have their intercourse with the principal seat of
life.</p>
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