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Friday, February 5, 2010

Jack fell down and broke his crown

We're almost down to the Cape of Good Hope, and the weather has stayed fair for the last few days, just getting a little cooler. However, I am feeling a strange sense of loss after one of the crew fell from one of the crosstrees. He survived the fall, but took a dent on the noggin when he landed and had it not been for the willingness of our surgeon-barber to accept the assistance of an Indian physician from a trading dhow, I am afraid we would have lost him.
After the unfortunate fellow was diagnosed with bleeding into a part of the brain referred to as the Cave of Brahma by the physician, I suspect it was partly by virtue of being female that I was invited to assist in an operation to relieve pressure within his brain. Overruling the objections of his western counterpart, the physician first produced a natural sponge soaked in a pungent preparation which I learned later.1
Despite the smell from the sponge which I held over his nose, the patient quieted noticeably and I actually had to make an effort to engage him in conversation and keep him at least semi-conscious while the physician worked with astonishing speed and dexterity, making his incision, trephining a small piece of bone and spilling bloody fluid on the deck.
As soon as he had finished suturing the wound and I was able to remove the sponge, he applied a compress made with the leaves of the Ekdandi to staunch the bleeding. Now, several days later, the patient is recovering well although he complains of a splitting headache which is apparently caused by contamination of his spinal fluid. But he is able to perform light duties, mostly swabbing and sail-mending. But he shows a marked change in personality. Where he had been one of the more exuberant members of the crew, now he is quiet and rather withdrawn and I'm not sure whether it is the result of his injury, the remedy applied, or perhaps, the anaesthesia?
During their off-hours, his shipmates try to engage him in games and songs, looking for traces of their old comrade, but it seems he may not be there any longer. However, in their efforts to kindle the cheery spark of former times, I have learned that there are shanties for:
  • Hauling the halyard
  • Pumping the bilge
  • Winding the capstan or the windlass
  • And Fo'c'sle shanties for just making whoopie in off-hours!
The example below is a good Short-drag shanty from one of the African members of the crew:

References

    • Opium
    • Mulberry juice (from unripe berries)
    • Decoction of Mandragora root
    • Decoction of Ivy stem
    • Decoction of Hemlock stem
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2 comments:

Mama Bear said...

It's simply amazing.. the operations that took place back then.. they were a bit stronger than us today.. but.. I sure am glad.. that we have made HUGE advances in surgery! lol

( Myscha ) Kittybriton said...

I really need to pay more attention. I misheard, what he said was "the Cave of Brahma"

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