“During my koumiss
cure here I’ve gained ten pounds and my cough has grown weaker, but all the
same I’ll be returning home with exactly what I brought here: dull sound
beneath the clavicle.”
The
translators are Michael Henry Heim and Simon Karlinsky in Letters of Anton
Chekhov (1973). In a footnote, Karlinsky explains that before the discovery
of x-rays, the customary method for examining a patient with tuberculosis was
to thump him on the chest: “The quality of sound obtained and its location
informed the doctor of the extent of damage to the lung.” Chekhov adds: “I’ve been
drinking koumiss, but I haven’t been able to drink more than four bottles a
day; otherwise I get sick to my stomach.”
A brief
online search suggests koumiss might have some therapeutic effect, acting as a diuretic and thus relieving mucous
membranes of congestion. It’s hardly a cure for tuberculosis but might relieve symptoms.
The disease killed Chekhov three years later. He was a doctor. Typically, even
though he’s the one at the health resort, he spends half the letter diagnosing
Sobolevsky and prescribing treatment:
“Your
degeneration of the arteries or what is known as atheromatosis [fatty deposits
on the lining of arteries], is as natural at your age as hair turning gray . .
. You should do a lot of walking but do not exhaust yourself; avoid beef and
eat fowl, veal, fish and ham; don’t drink any alcohol, not even a drop; if you
must, drink only beer, but make sure it’s high-quality beer . . .”
According to
Donald Rayfield in Anton Chekhov: A Life (1997) Dr. Vladimir Shchurovsky
examined Chekhov, observed lesions and “irreversible necrosis” in both lungs,
and prescribed the koumiss cure. Rayfield continues:
“For the
first time since childhood, Anton put on weight. Four bottles of koumiss daily
made him twelve pounds heavier by mid-June. Fermented mares’ milk was easily
digestible. It was also thought to raise the body’s defences against
tuberculosis, encouraging the growth of benign flora at the expense of
tubercular bacilli in the gut. Olga, although she found her own ten stone
weight [140 pounds] excessive, tried it herself. Koumiss made them drowsy,
drunk and lascivious.”
*koulan:
“a species or sub-species of equine quadruped (Equus onager), closely
allied to the Dziggetai (with which it is united by some), found in central and
southern Asia: the wild ass of Mesopotamia (Iraq), Persia (Iran), and the banks
of the Indus.”
**kouprey:
“a large wild ox, Novibos (or Bos) sauveli, first
discovered in Cambodia in 1937.”
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