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The Midwife's Vade-Mecum, a non-fiction book by Aristotle |
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Chapter 11. Directions and Cautions for Midwives... |
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_ CHAPTER XI Directions and Cautions for Midwives; and, first, what ought to be the qualifications of a midwife.
She should be polite and affable in her manners, sober and chaste, not given to passion, liberal and compassionate towards the poor, and not greedy of gain when she attends the rich. She should have a cheerful and pleasant temper, so that she may be the more easily able to comfort her patients during labour. She must never be in a hurry, though her business may call her to some other case, lest she should thereby endanger the mother or the child. She ought to be wary, prudent, and intelligent, but above all, she ought to be possessed by the fear of God, which will give her both "knowledge and discretion," as the wise man says. _ |