St. Valentine’s Day is upon us, advice on how to spend the
day is everywhere. The goal of this post
is not to add to this abundance of advice but to look back on how early UMB
graduates studied love.
The first, a humorous, pseudo-science article titled “The
Science of Kissing” found in the 1899 Bones,
Molars, and Briefs Yearbook. Perhaps
it’s important to note that early college and university yearbooks
served as more than a volume of photographs documenting the events of the year;
instead they were literary and satirical pieces, highlighting milestones as
well as inside jokes and embarrassing stories.
“The Science of Kissing” is an excellent example of applying
literature and satire to the medical profession. In this piece an anonymous—presumably
medical—student argues against an article claiming that kissing is a dangerous
pastime due to the passage of germs and bacteria. Most likely the article alluded to did not
exist. In “The Science of Kissing” the
student claims to have pursued his own experiments and proven that when done
correctly and with the appropriate partner kissing can be beneficial. The student states:
“Kisses,
when selected with due care and taken on the installment plan, will not only
restore a misplaced appetite, but are especially beneficial in cases of hay
fever, as they banish that tired feeling’, tone up the liver, invigorate the
heart, and make the blood to sing thro’ the system like a giant Jew’s harp. I
found by patient experiment that the health microbe became active at fifteen,
reaches maturity at twenty, begins to lose its vigor at forty, and is quite
useless as a tonic when, as someone has tersely expressed it, a woman’s kisses
begin to “taste of her teeth.” Thin, bluish lips produce very few
health germs, and those scarce worth the harvesting; but a full, red mouth,
with Cupid curves at the corners, will yield enormously if the crop be properly
cultivated. I did not discover whether the blonde or brunette variety is
entitled to precedence in medical science, but incline to the opinion that a
judicious admixture is most advisable from a therapeutical standpoint.”
It sounds like kissing, when done correctly and with the
right individual, could solve all our minor health issues! The student
continues to give advice on how to best collect the health germs when the
correct person is found:
The
best results can be obtained about the midnight hour, when the dew is on the
rose, the jasmine Iaid drunken with its own perfume, and the mockbird trilling
alast good-night to its drowsy mate. You entice your best girl into the garden to
watch Venus’ flaming orb hanging like the Kohinoor pendant from the crescent
moon, You pause beneath the great gnarled live oak, its myriad leaves rustling
softly as the wings of seraphs. Don’t be in a hurry, and for God’s sake don’t
gab—in such a night silence is the acme of eloquence.” In such a night
Trolius mounted the Trojan walls and sighed his soul toward the Grecian tents
where Cressid lay.” She watches the fireflies respiring in phosphorescent flame,
amid the clover blooms while you watch her, and twine a spray of honeysuckle in
her hair. She looks very beautiful with her face upturned in the moonlight; but
don’t say a word about it, for there’s a little of the poseur about all the
daughters of Eve. She withdraws her eyes from the stars, slowly, turns them
dreamily upon yours, and you note that they are filled with astral fire. They
roam idly over the shadowy garden, then close as beneath a weight of weariness.
Her head rests more heavily against your shoulder, and her bosom trembles with
a half-audible sigh. There is now really no occasion for further delay. Do not
swoop down upon the health germs like a hungry hen-hawk on a green gosling, but
incline your head gently until your carefully deodorized breath is upon her
lips—there pause, for the essence of enjoyment is in anticipation. The man who
gulps down a glass of old wine without first inhaling its oenanthic and
feasting his eyes upon its ruddy splendors, is simply a sot. Wait until you
have noted the dark lashes reclining upon the cheek of sun-flushed snow,
“the charm of married brows,” the throat of alabaster, the dimple in
her chin, the wine-tint of her half-parted lips, with their glint of pearl—wait
until her eyes half open, look inquiringly into yours, and close again, then
cincture her gently but firmly with one arm, support her chin with the other
hand, and give the health germs ample time to change their home. A kiss, to
have any scientific value, should last one minute and seven seconds by
Shrewsbury clock, and be repeated seven times, not in swift succession, but
with the usual interval between wine at a symposiac.”
We here at the HS/HSL Historical Collections feel healthier
already, just by reading this article.
But perhaps you aren’t as lucky in love this Valentine’s Day
and kissing will not be part of your day.
Perhaps, instead, you are looking for a cure for “The Effects of
Disappointed Love.” Not to worry, Joseph
McCoy Sitler, 1928 graduate of the School of Medicine, has some advice for you in
his dissertation of that title.
Sitler’s interesting dissertation
differs from most at the time because it looks at a human emotion and mental
state rather than an illness or disease or the anatomy of the body. Yet he
claims it is an important ailment for doctors to consider:
“The
subject, I have chosen as an Inaugural Dissertation, is one which from its
novelty, may be deemed trifling, and uninteresting, but as it so materially
concerns the health, happenings and welfare of that portion of the human
family, whose lot it is to alleviate the misfortunes, and avert the miseries of
ma imperiously demands our serious and considerate attention.”
Arguably, Sitler is an early proponent of mental health. He
argues that all humans can be victims of this debilitating ailment no matter
their disposition. He also believes that
many go without treatment because they 1) fail to seek treatment or 2) are
treated for symptoms of an entirely different ailment. His dissertation describes an early attempt
to understand human emotion and mental health and how to help someone with
deficiencies in this area. Sitler
identifies the best treatment for disappointed love as:
“…we
should not as in the first which solely depends upon two much tone use the
remunerative plan but rather endeavor to invigorate and strengthen the systems
with mild but effective tonics. The best
of these is cheerful conversation and agreeable company. Very often when medicine in all its forms
initially fails to accomplish any desirable purpose towards the restoration of
health a tour through some agreeable part of the country remote from the noise
disturbances and ingeminated atmosphere of populous cities where the patient
can enjoy the advantages of salubrious breezes accompanied by some intimate
friend to whom she can communicate her sorrows and receive condolence will
almost effect a total radical cure.”
Sitler puts lesser value in medical tonics and medicines but
does acknowledge the value of mineral waters when combined with sea air:
“Mineral
waters…are very useful in the disease.
Sea bathing has been practiced and its effects found to be very
beneficial. Perhaps a great many of the
advantages supposed to be derived from the use of the sea bath ought to be
attributed to the change of scenery and company which the patient experiences
rather than the tonic influence it exerts over the human consumption. Yet no doubt this is a powerful adjuvant to
other measures.”
And with that should anyone look for us, we’ll be at the
beach, soaking up the healing powers of the sea. Happy Valentine’s Day to all!