results that girls become mothers at the
earliest possible period of their lives. A native medical witness
testified that in about 20 per cent of marriages children were born by
wives of from twelve to thirteen years of age. Cases of death caused by
the first act of sexual intercourse are by no means rare. They are
naturally concealed, but ever and anon they come to light. Dr. Chevers
mentioned some 14 cases of this sort in the last edition of his
'Handbook of Medical Jurisprudence for India,' and Dr. Harvey found 5
in the medicolegal returns submitted by the Civil Surgeons of the
Bengal Presidency during the years 1870-71-72.
"Reform must come from conviction and effort, as in every other case,
but meantime the strong arm of the law should be put forth for the
protection of female children from the degradation and hurt entailed by
premature sexual intercourse. This can easily be done by raising the
age of punishable intercourse, which is now fixed at the absurd limit
of ten years. Menstruation very seldom appears in native girls before
the completed age of twelve years, and if the 'age of consent' were
raised to that limit, it would not interfere with the prejudices and
customs which insist on marriage before menstruation."
In 1816 some girls were admitted to the Paris Maternite as young as
thirteen, and during the Revolution several at eleven, and even
younger. Smith speaks of a legal case in which a girl, eleven years
old, being safely delivered of a living child, charged her uncle with
rape. Allen speaks of a girl who became pregnant at twelve years and
nine months, and was delivered of a healthy, 9-pound boy before the
physician's arrival; the placenta came away afterward, and the mother
made a speedy recovery. She was thought to have had "dropsy of the
abdomen," as the parents had lost a girl of about the same age who was
tapped for ascites. The father of the child was a boy only fourteen
years of age.
Marvelous to relate, there are on record several cases of twins being
born to a child mother. Kay reports a case of twins in a girl of
thirteen; Montgomery, at fourteen; and Meigs reports the case of a
young girl, of Spanish blood, at Maracaibo, who gave birth to a child
before she was twelve and to twins before reaching fourteen years.
In the older works, the following authors have reported cases of
pregnancy before the appearance of menstruation: Ballonius, Vogel,
Morgagni, the anatomist of the kidney, Sc
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