SEX - Avoided Subjects Discussed in Plain English - Page 36/41

sores on all parts of the body, often eats up the bone, destroys

internal organs, such as the liver, causes hardening of the lungs,

diseases of the blood vessels and eye diseases. Ulcers of the brain

and nerve paralysis often result from it. One of its most terrible

consequences is consumption of the spinal marrow and paralysis of the

brain, or paresis. The first slowly hardens and destroys the spinal

marrow, the second the brain. These diseases are only developed by

previous syphilitics. As a rule they occur from 5 to 20 years after

infection, usually 10 or 15 years after it. And they usually happen to

persons who believed themselves completely cured. Consumption of the

spinal marrow leads to death in the course of a few years of continual

torture. Paralysis of the brain turns the sufferer into a human ruin,

gradually extinguishing all mental and nervous functions, sentience,

movement, speech and intellect.

One danger of syphilis is the fact that its true nature may be

overlooked during the first period, because of the lack of pronounced

symptoms. Its early sores may easily be mistaken for some skin

affection. Mercury and other means are successful in doing away with

at least the more noticeable signs of syphilis during the first and

secondary stages. The modern medical treatment using mercury and

Salvarsan (606) in alternation, has been very successful. It is

claimed that by following it, syphilis may be totally cured if taken

in hand during the first stage. The sores developed during the first

two or three years of the disease are very infectious. In the case of

a chronic syphilis of three or four years' standing, the sores as a

rule are no longer infectious. It is possible, however, for a

syphilitic of this description to bring forth syphilitic children,

_without infecting his wife_. Such children either die at birth, or

later, of this congenital syphilis. They may also die of spinal

consumption or paresis between the ages of 10 and 20. The mortality of

all syphilitic children is very great. In most cases, however, healthy

children are born of the wedlock of _relatively cured_ syphilitics,

though they are often sterile. Young men who have had recourse to

prostitutes, often inoculate their wives with gonorrhea or syphilis,

and thus the plague is spread.

THE SOFT CHANCRE

The soft chancre is the third form of venereal disease (the hard

chancre being the first stage of syphilis). It is the least dangerous

of the venereal diseases, but unfortunately, relatively the one which