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Story August 18, 1892

Abilene Weekly Reflector

Abilene, Dickinson County, Kansas

What is this article about?

Cautionary account of a young southern woman's fatal addiction to cloves, beginning in childhood, exacerbating after parental death, leading to job loss, hospitalization in New York, and death from bodily shriveling, nerve damage, and convulsions.

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DANGER
IN
EATING CLOVES.

Too Much Indulgence In the Condiment Shrivels Up the Body.

Comparatively harmless as is the use of cloves in the beginning, the system soon feels a craving for the stimulating effect produced by them, and slowly and insidiously the habit grows until they become as much an absolute necessity to the victim as does brandy to the dipsomaniac or opium to the morphine fiend. It is in their supposed harmlessness that the danger of acquiring the clove habit lies. School girls, whose taste has been perverted by overindulgence in sweets, turn naturally to the spice canister in search of a change for the organs of taste with the almost invariable result that they finally discard the candies for the pungent little bud. The habit once acquired, the unconscious victim begins to find that what was once a pastime has now become a necessity, and instead of being satisfied with a small quantity, as at first, two or three ounces a day are found necessary to satisfy the system's craving. Then follows a gradual but certain breaking down of the constitution, beginning at the nerve centers, which finally brings the victim to a pitiable condition.

A full report of an exceptionally pathetic case has been given by a famous specialist in nervous diseases. The young woman, who is now on her deathbed, was once beautiful, fascinating and the acknowledged belle of her social circle. Ever since she can remember she has been a clove eater, she tells the physician, and attributes the formation of the habit to the fact that her early life was passed in one of the extreme southern states, where the use in cooking of large quantities of heating condiments was considered a necessity.

About the time that the habit had gained a complete mastery over the girl her parents died. The blow completely prostrated her for a time, and as soon as she had sufficiently recovered to do so she came to New York, where she soon found the employment the loss of her parents had made indispensable to her support. Already the deleterious effects of the cloves, which she daily consumed in ever-increasing quantities, had begun to make themselves apparent in her shrunken cheeks, lackluster eyes and generally debilitated appearance. Her appetite for wholesome food grew less and less as time went on, and the little that she did eat was so highly seasoned as to have been unpalatable to even an East India native. Her nervous system, which had become affected through the continued over-stimulation of the digestive organs, began to show signs of serious impairment, and she became cross and fretful, often flying into a passion over the most trivial incident connected with her daily duties. These outbursts would be followed by periods of depression, from which nothing seemed to rouse her, and she went about her work in such a listless fashion that her employers found it necessary to warn her that her position was in jeopardy. At last she became so disagreeable as to be utterly unbearable, and she was discharged.

Her little savings were soon consumed, and as her broken health became rapidly worse she was removed to Bellevue hospital.

Her friends in the south were communicated with, and before the hospital physicians had had time to discover the cause of her condition funds arrived and the suffering girl was placed in the private sanitarium presided over by the physician who tells her sad story.

In spite of all that can be done for her the poor girl continues to sink, and her death is but a question of a few weeks.

The symptoms which follow an over-indulgence in the clove habit may be easily discerned, as they are almost invariably the same in every case. Freed from all professional technicalities, they may be described as a general shriveling up of the entire body. The eyes become dull and heavy, the cheeks lose their color, the skin grows sallow and drawn, and the victim's general appearance is that of one who is suffering from some wasting disease. As the amount of cloves consumed is increased the appetite for food decreases, and frequent fainting fits occur, as the result of the lack of proper sustenance.

In the last stages the victim suffers intense pain in the stomach and abdominal regions, on account of the inflammation caused by the constant presence of the irritating agent. Last stage of all are convulsions, followed by long spells of delirium and finally death.—N. Y. Journal

What sub-type of article is it?

Medical Curiosity Biography Tragedy

What themes does it cover?

Misfortune Moral Virtue Tragedy

What keywords are associated?

Clove Habit Addiction Health Decline Nervous Diseases Wasting Disease

What entities or persons were involved?

Young Woman Famous Specialist In Nervous Diseases

Where did it happen?

Extreme Southern States, New York, Bellevue Hospital

Story Details

Key Persons

Young Woman Famous Specialist In Nervous Diseases

Location

Extreme Southern States, New York, Bellevue Hospital

Story Details

A young woman from the southern states develops a clove-eating habit, leading to severe health decline, loss of employment, and hospitalization in New York; she is now dying from the addiction's effects.

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