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Stammering, Its Cause and Cure by Benjamin Nathaniel Bogue
page 81 of 195 (41%)
with other children of his age, will probably find time for much
introspection, and on this account, as well as on account of the
lack of fresh air and exercise, will probably be in a physical
condition that of itself demands careful attention.

It has been found in examinations of stammerers and stutterers,
however, that they are usually of below normal chest expansion and
that the health, while not particularly bad, is subject to a great
improvement as a result of the proper treatment for stammering.

Charles Kingsley, the noted English divine and writer, and himself
a stammerer many years ago, has the following to say regarding the
effect of stammering on the body: "Continual depression of spirit
wears out body as well as mind. The lungs never act rightly, never
oxygenate the blood sufficiently. The vital energy continually
directed to the organs of speech and there used up in the
miserable spasm of mis-articulation cannot feed the rest of the
body; and the man too often becomes thin, pale, flaccid, with
contracted chest, loose ribs and bad digestion. I have seen a boy
of twelve stunted, thin as a ghost and with every sign of
approaching consumption. I have seen that boy a few months after
being cured, upright, ruddy, stout, eating heartily and beginning
to grow faster than he had ever grown in his life. I never knew a
single case in which the health did not begin to improve then and
there."





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