The most unusual old remedy for an illness that I've come
across in researching Newfoundland historical records involved an Eskimo woman's treatment
for blood poisoning. While her remedy appears to be rather odd, it certainly worked and it
saved the life of a young boy from Trinity Bay.
The boy was accompanying
his father on a fishing trip to the Labrador Coast when the incident occurred. He got a
hook caught in the palm of his hand. He removed the hook but failed to clean the wound
properly. Shortly afterwards his hand swelled and a dark colour began spreading up his
arm. The arm had become blood poisoned.
There was no doctor on the coast at that time, but the skipper knew of an old Eskimo
woman 40 miles away who possessed the knowledge of ancient Eskimo practices.
The woman viewed the injury and the condition of the boy's hand, then assumed command
of the situation with great confidence. She ordered the boy to remove his coat and roll up
his sleeves. She then ordered one of the men to go outside.
Using a knife, she lanced the wound quickly before the boy could protest. Using the
same knife, she cut through the back part of the hen's breast bone; then she straightened
out the boy's fingers and inserted the whole hand into the body of the hen through the
open cut. She then bound the hen tightly over the hand and told the boy to sit still for
awhile. The boy's father was surprised and astonished at the result. The dark colour in
the boy's arm retreated towards the hand. When it disappeared the hen died. The old lady
then ordered the men to bury the hen deeply so the dogs couldn't get at it. She noted that
if the dogs ate the hen they would become poisoned and die.
Meanwhile, the boy was cured and after a few days he was ready to resume work helping
his father.