<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<p class="center"><small>OPIUM EATING AND SMOKING—MESCAL BUTTONS</small></p>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> narcotic <span class="err" title="original: properities">properties</span> of the
poppy have been known from
times of great antiquity. The
first mention we have of its use
is by Theophrastus, who lived
about 300 years <small>B.C.</small> It is supposed
that the potion known
under the name of Nepenthe,
prepared by Helen of Troy, and
given to the guests of Menelaus,
to drive away their care, was
none other than a wine of opium.
This conjecture receives support
from Homer, who states that
Nepenthe was obtained from
Thebes, the ancient capital of
Egypt. According to Prosper
Alpinus, the Egyptians were
practised opium eaters, and were
often faint and languid through
the want of it. They prepared
and drank it in the form of "Cretic
Wine," which they flavoured
and made hotter by the addition
of pepper and other aromatics.
The Turks and Persians employed
opium as a medicine, and
also for eating, from a very early
period. Dioscorides, the ancient
Greek pharmacist, describes
how the capsules from
which the drug is collected
should be cut, and Celsus, a
Roman physician of the first
century, frequently alludes to
opium in his works under the
quaint name of "poppy tears."</p>
<p>The introduction of opium
into India seems to have been
connected with the spread of
Mahomedanism, the earliest record
we have of its use in that
country being made by Barbosa
in 1511, although it is more than
probable it was used in India
long before that time. Pyres,
the first ambassador from Europe
to China in 1516, speaks of
the opium of Egypt, Cambay,
and the kingdom of Coûs, in
Bengal, and states it was eaten
by "the kings and lords, and
even the common people, though
not so much because it costs
dear." The Mogul Government
uniformly sold the opium monopoly,
and the East India Company
did likewise.</p>
<p>The properties of opium have
also been known from early
times to the Persians, who flavoured
the drug with aromatics,
and held it in great esteem. By
them it was commonly called
Theriaka. It is supposed to
have been first introduced to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</SPAN></span>
China by the Arabs, who traded
with the Chinese as early as the
ninth century. Towards the end
of the eighteenth century a
trade sprang up with India,
which rapidly increased, till it
led to political difficulties, culminating
in the war of 1842, and
the signing of the treaty of Nanking,
after which five ports of
China were opened to foreign
trade, opium being admitted as
a legalised import in 1858.
Opium smoking in China was
practised in the seventeenth century,
and gradually extended
over the entire empire, and at
the present time is almost a recognised
habit among the people.</p>
<p>With regard to the introduction
of opium into India, the
Mahomedans once having established
its use began to make it a
source of income. The Great
Mogul monopolized the opium
production and trade, and derived
an immense income from
the sale of the monopoly. With
respect to its use in India, it is
not easy to state with certainty
whether or not and in what
periods, it has increased over the
various parts of the country.
From the most recent reports it
appears that "the largest amount
of opium is produced in the
central tract of the Ganges, extending
from Dinapore in the
east, to Agra in the west, and
from Gorakhpur in the north to
Hazaribagh in the south, and
comprising an area of about 600
miles long and 200 miles broad."
In the district of Bengal, the
Government has the monopoly
of the opium industry, and the
districts are divided into two
agencies, Behar and Benares,
which are under the control of
officers residing in Patna and
Ghazipur. In 1883 the amount of
acres under poppy cultivation
was in Behar 463,829, and in
Benares agency 412,625; but
the export of opium has somewhat
diminished since then. Any
one may undertake the industry,
but cultivators are obliged to sell
the opium exclusively to the
Government agencies, at a price
which is fixed beforehand by the
officials. The Government sells
the ready goods to merchants at
a much higher price, which difference
is paid by the country to
which the opium is exported. In
India itself, the sale of opium is
restricted to licensed shopkeepers,
a practice which has proved to be
useful, because in some places,
when the licensed shops have
been closed, a greater number of
unlicensed and secret shops have
sprung up, and have made the
contract insufficient.</p>
<p>The opium question is so
complex in its nature, and is so
largely influenced by the habits<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span>
and constitution of those nations
who are addicted to its use,
that it is obvious that only those
with skilled medical knowledge,
who are on the spot and have
lived and had a daily experience
of the people, are in a proper
position to deal with the question
at all. So much has been
written by religious enthusiasts,
and other persons totally ignorant
of the nature and properties
of the drug, that one almost
hesitates to touch upon the
question at all. Our only excuse
for so doing is, that the following
facts have been furnished
by reliable medical
authorities, who are really in a
position to judge on the subject.</p>
<p>The cause which led to the use
of this narcotic drug by the
races of the East may have been
primarily due to the prohibition
of wine by the Moslems, but
more likely on account of its
valuable remedial or protective
properties, needed by a race
subject to malaria and kindred
diseases, and to counteract the
effect of the hot climate to
which they are exposed. It is a
remedy at hand, and would seem
to be one to which they at
once fly. The evil lies more in
the smoking than the eating of
the drug; the former habit
is more prevalent in China, and
has the most demoralizing effect.
The extent of its use in the East
varies according to the geographical
and social differences of
the people, and it is used in
various degrees of moderation
and excess.</p>
<p>The drug is employed in
various forms, according to the
class of people who consume it.
In India it is largely used in the
crude state, and is sold at about
two annas a drachm, in small
square pieces. The opium eater
will take two or three grains and
roll them into the form of a pill
between his fingers, and then
chew or swallow it, often twenty
times in the day. It is also used
in a liquid form called Kusambah
made by macerating opium in
rose-water; others boil it with
milk, then collect the cream and
eat it. The varieties for smoking
are known as Chundoo and Mudat,
the former being a very impure
extract of a fairly stiff consistence,
and the latter made from
the refuse of Chundoo, of which
it largely consists; but being
much cheaper, is chiefly used
by the low-class Hindoos and
Mahomedans. From two to
four grains a day may be called
a moderate use of the crude
drug. The poorer people regularly
give it to children up to
two years of age, to keep them
quiet, also as a preventive
against such complaints as enteritis,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
so common in the East;
and so before youth is reached
they become inured to its action.
Licences to sell the drug are sold
to the highest bidder at the
opium auctions, the licensee
having the privilege of supplying
a certain number of small dealers.</p>
<p>The Chinese smoker usually
lays himself down on his side,
with his head supported by
a pillow. On the straw mat
beside him, between his doubled-up
knees and his nose, a small
glass oil lamp, covered with a
glass shade, is burning. Close to
this is a tray, containing a
small round box holding the
drug, a straight piece of wire
used for manipulating it, a
knife to scrape up fragments,
and the pipe used for smoking.
The latter is about two feet long,
with a bore of about half an inch
in diameter, and is not unlike the
stem of a flute before it is fitted.
About two inches from the bottom
of the tube, is a closed cup or
bowl of earthenware or stone,
having a central perforation.
To charge the pipe, a small portion
of the drug (weighing a few
grains) is picked up with the wire,
kneaded and rolled in the closed
surface of the cup, then heated
in the flame of the lamp till it
swells. This is rolled up and
again manipulated, then finally
placed in the aperture in the
surface of the bowl. It is then
lighted from the lamp, and the
smoke drawn into the lungs
through the tube till the first
charge is exhausted.</p>
<p>In a report made by the
<em>British Medical Journal</em> concerning
the use of opium in
India, from the evidence of
medical men long resident in that
country, there seems a general
concensus of opinion that opium
eating, in the majority of cases,
exercises no unfavourable influence
on the people who indulge
in the habit, and that it is
a prophylactic against fever,
and prevents the natives from
malaria and excessive fatigue.
There is no comparison between
the effects of the opium habit
and the habitual use of alcohol.
English people cannot judge from
their own standard, the manners
and customs of people living
under conditions with which they
are unacquainted. While we
look on opium as a narcotic,
the Hindoo uses it as a stimulant
to enable him to go through hard
work on the smallest quantity
possible of food. In Persia, at
the present time, according to
Wills, nine out of ten of the
aged, take from one to five
grains of the drug daily. It is
largely used by the native
physicians. It does not appear
that the moderate use of Persian<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
opium in the country itself, is
deleterious. Opium smoking is
almost unknown, and when it is
smoked, it is, as a rule, by a
doctor's orders. The opium pill-box—a
tiny box of silver—is as
common in Persia as the snuff-box
was once with us. Most men
of forty in the middle and upper
classes use it. They take from
a grain to a grain and a half,
divided into two pills, one in the
afternoon and one at night.
The majority of authorities agree
that opium smoking as a habit is
much more harmful and attended
with more demoralizing
influences than opium eating;
but either habit is undoubtedly
harmful to Europeans, and when
once formed, is extremely difficult
to break.</p>
<p>Paracelsus is generally credited
with being the originator of the
word "laudanum," which is now
employed as the popular name
for tincture of opium. Yet there
seems little doubt the word was
first applied to the gum of the
cistus. Clusius in his "Rariorum
Plantarum Historia" states,
"The gum of the cistus is called
in Greek and Latin, ladanum,
and in shops laudanum." It
is therefore very likely that the
secret preparation originated by
Paracelsus which he called
laudanum, was composed of the
gum of the cistus as well as
opium, and that he adopted the
title from the former ingredient.</p>
<p>The Kiowa and other Mexican
Indians use the fruit of the
<em>Anhelonium Lewinii</em>, which they
call "mescal buttons," to produce
a species of intoxication and
stimulation during certain of
their religious ceremonies. The
effects of this fruit, which like
Indian hemp varies considerably
in different individuals, are very
peculiar, and have been described
by Lewin, Prentiss and
Morgan.</p>
<p>The eating of the fruit first
results in a state of strange
excitement and great exuberance
of spirits, accompanied by
great volubility in speech. This
is shortly followed by a stage of
intoxication in which the sight is
affected in a very extraordinary
manner, consisting of a kaleidoscopic
play of colours ever in
motion, of every possible shade
and tint, and these constantly
changing. The pupils of the eyes
are widely dilated, cutaneous
sensation is blunted, and thoughts
seem to flash through the brain
with extraordinary rapidity. The
colour visions are generally only
seen with closed eyes, but the
colouring of all external objects
is exaggerated. Sometimes there
is also an indescribable sensation
of dual existence.</p>
<p>Recent investigation into the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
pharmacology of the mescal
plant prove it to be a poison of
a very powerful nature. Lethal
doses produce complete paralysis,
and death is caused by respiratory
failure.</p>
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