Langdon-Down-1866
Langdon-Down-1866
Langdon-Down-1866
OBSERVATIONS ON AN ETHNIC
CLASSIFICATION OF IDIOTS
BY J. LANGDON H. DOWN, M.D., LOND.
Those who have given any attention to congenital mental lesions, must have
been frequently puzzled how to arrange, in any satisfactory way, the different classes
of this defect which may have come under their observation. Nor will the difficulty
be lessened by an appeal to what has been written on the subject. The systems of
classification are generally so vague and artificial, that, not only do they assist but
feebly, in any mental arrangement of the phenomena which are presented, but they
completely fail in exerting any practical influence on the subject.
The medical practitioner who may be consulted in any given case, has, per-
haps in a very early condition of the child's life, to give an opinion on points of vital
importance as to the present condition and probable future of the little one. More-
over, he may be pressed as to the question, whether the supposed defect dates from
any cause subsequent to the birth or not. Has the nurse dosed the child with opium?
Has the little one met with any accident? Has the instrumental interference which
maternal safety demanded, been the cause of what seems to the anxious parents, a
vacant future? Can it be that when away from the family attendant the calomel pow-
ders were judiciously prescribed? Can, in fact, the strange anomalies which the child
presents, be attributed to the numerous causes which maternal solicitude conjures to
the imagination, in order to account for a condition, for which any cause is sought,
rather than hereditary taint or parental influence. Will the systems of classification,
either all together, or any one of them, assist the medical adviser in the opinion he is
to present, or the suggestions which he is to tender to the anxious parent? I think that
they will entirely fail him in the matter, and that he will have in many cases to make
a guarded diagnosis and prognosis, so guarded, in fact, as to be almost valueless, or to
venture an authoritative assertion which the future may perhaps confirm.
I have for some time had my attention directed to the possibility of making a
classification of the feeble-minded, by arranging them around various ethnic stan-
dards, -- in other words, framing a natural system to supplement the information to
be derived by an inquiry into the history of the case.
I have been able to find among the large number of idiots and imbeciles which
come under my observation, both at Earlswood and the out-patient department of
the Hospital, that a considerable portion can be fairly referred to one of the great di-
visions of the human race other than the class from which they have sprung. Of
course, there are numerous representatives of the great Caucasian family. Several
well-marked examples of the Ethiopian variety have come under my notice, present-
ing the characteristics malar bones, the prominent eyes, the puffy lips, and retreating
chin. The woolly hair has also been present, although not always black, nor has the
1
J. L. H. Down (1866): Observations on an Ethnic Classification of Idiots. In: London Hospital Reports, 3: 1866, 259-262.
skin acquired pigmentary deposit. They have been specimens of white negroes, al-
though of European descent.
Some arrange themselves around the Malay variety, and present in their soft,
black, curly hair, their prominent upper jaws and capacious mouths, types of the
family which people the South Sea Islands.
Nor has there been wanting the analogues of the people who with shortened
foreheads, prominent cheeks, deep-set eyes, and slightly apish nose, originally inhab-
ited the American Continent.
The great Mongolian family has numerous representatives, and it is to this di-
vision, I wish, in this paper, to call special attention. A very large number of congeni-
tal idiots are typical Mongols. So marked is this, that when placed side by side, it is
difficult to believe that the specimens compared are not children of the same parents.
The number of idiots who arrange themselves around the Mongolian type is so great,
and they present such a close resemblance to one another in mental power, that I
shall describe an idiot member of this racial division, selected from the large number
that have fallen under my observation.
The hair is not black, as in the real Mongol, but of a brownish colour, straight
and scanty. The face is flat and broad, and destitute of prominence. The cheeks are
roundish, and extended laterally. The eyes are obliquely placed, and the internal can-
thi more than normally distant from one another. The palpebral fissure is very nar-
row. The forehead is wrinkled transversely from the constant assistance which the
levatores palpebrarum derive from the occipito-frontalis muscle in the opening of the
eyes. The lips are large and thick with transverse fissures. The tongue is long, thick,
and is much roughened. The nose is small. The skin has a slight dirty yellowish tinge,
and is deficient in elasticity, giving the appearance of being too large for the body.
The boy's aspect is such that it is difficult to realize he is the child of Europe-
ans, but so frequently are these characters presented, that there can be no doubt that
these ethnic features are the result of degeneration.
The Mongolian type of idiocy occurs in more than ten per cent. of the cases
which are presented to me. They are always congenital idiots, and never result from
accidents after uterine life. They are, for the most part, instances of degeneracy aris-
ing from tuberculosis in the parents. They are cases which very much repay judicious
treatment. They require highly azotised food with a considerable amount of oleagi-
nous. They have considerable power of imitation, even bordering on being mimics.
They are humorous, and a lively sense of the ridiculous often colours their mimicry.
This faculty of imitation may be cultivated to a very great extent, and a practical di-
rection given to the results obtained. They are usually able to speak; the speech is
thick and indistinct, but may be improved very greatly by a well-directed scheme of
tongue gymnastics. The co-ordinating faculty is abnormal, but not so defective that it
cannot be greatly strengthened. By systematic training, considerable manipulative
power may be obtained.
2
J. L. H. Down (1866): Observations on an Ethnic Classification of Idiots. In: London Hospital Reports, 3: 1866, 259-262.
Apart from the practical bearing of this attempt at an ethnic classification, con-
siderable philosophical interest attaches to it. The tendency in the present day is to
reject the opinion that the various races are merely varieties of the human family
having a common origin, and to insist that climatic, or other influences, are insuffi-
cient to account for the different types of man. Here, however, we have examples of
retrogression, or at all events, of departure from one type and the assumption of the
characteristics of another. If these great racial divisions are fixed and definite, how
comes it that disease is able to break down the barrier, and to simulate so closely the
features of the members of another division. I cannot but think that the observations
which I have recorded, are indications that the differences in the races are not specific
but variable.