 |
TS:
HDS :
Mrs Beeton :
1
2 3
Mrs Beeton: 3
Female servants
Duties of the cook
79. THE DUTIES OF THE COOK, THE KITCHEN AND THE SCULLERY MAIDS, are so
intimately associated, that they can hardly be treated of separately.
The cook, however, is at the head of the kitchen; and in proportion to
her possession of the qualities of cleanliness, neatness, order,
regularity, and celerity of action, so will her influence appear in the
conduct of those who are under her; as it is upon her that the whole
responsibility of the business of the kitchen rests, whilst the others
must lend her, both a ready and a willing assistance, and be especially
tidy in their appearance, and active, in their movements.
In the larger establishments of the middle ages, cooks, with the
authority of feudal chiefs, gave their orders from a high chair
in which they ensconced themselves, and commanded a view of all
that was going on throughout their several domains. Each
held a long wooden spoon, with which he tasted, without leaving his
seat, the various comestibles that were cooking on the stoves,
and which he frequently used as a rod of punishment on the backs
of those whose idleness and gluttony too largely
predominated over their diligence and temperance.
80. IF, AS WE HAVE SAID (3), THE QUALITY OF EARLY RISING be of the first
importance to the mistress, what must it be to the servant! Let it,
therefore, be taken as a long-proved truism, that without it, in every
domestic, the effect of all things else, so far as work is concerned,
may, in a great measure, be neutralized. In a cook, this quality is most
essential; for an hour lost in the morning, will keep her toiling,
absolutely toiling, all day, to overtake that which might otherwise have
been achieved with ease. In large establishments, six is a good hour to
rise in the summer, and seven in the winter.
81. HER FIRST DUTY, in large establishments and where it is requisite,
should be to set her dough for the breakfast rolls, provided this has
not been done on the previous night, and then to engage herself with
those numerous little preliminary occupations which may not
inappropriately be termed laying out her duties for the day. This will
bring in the breakfast hour of eight, after which, directions must be
given, and preparations made, for the different dinners of the household
and family.
82. IN THOSE NUMEROUS HOUSEHOLDS where a cook and housemaid are only
kept, the general custom is, that the cook should have the charge of the
dining-room. The hall, the lamps and the doorstep are also committed to
her care, and any other work there may be on the outside of the house.
In establishments of this kind, the cook will, after having lighted her
kitchen fire, carefully brushed the range, and cleaned the hearth,
proceed to prepare for breakfast. She will thoroughly rinse the kettle,
and, filling it with fresh water, will put it on the fire to boil. She
will then go to the breakfast-room, or parlour, and there make all
things ready for the breakfast of the family. Her attention will next be
directed to the hall, which she will sweep and wipe; the kitchen stairs,
if there be any, will now be swept; and the hall mats, which have been
removed and shaken, will be again put in their places.
The cleaning of the kitchen, pantry, passages, and kitchen
stairs must always be over before breakfast, so that it may not
interfere with the other business of the day. Everything
should be ready, and the whole house should wear a comfortable aspect
when the heads of the house and members of the family make their
appearance. Nothing, it may be depended on, will so please the
mistress of an establishment, as to notice that, although
she has not been present to see that the work was done, attention to
smaller matters has been carefully paid, with a view to giving
her satisfaction and increasing her comfort.
83. BY THE TIME THAT THE COOK has performed the duties mentioned above,
and well swept, brushed, and dusted her kitchen, the breakfast-bell will
most likely summon her to the parlour, to "bring in" the breakfast.
It is the cook's department, generally, in the smaller establishments, to
wait at breakfast, as the housemaid, by this time, has gone up-stairs
into the bedrooms, and has there applied herself to her various duties.
The cook usually answers the bells and single knocks at the door in the
early part of the morning, as the tradesmen, with whom it is her more
special business to speak, call at these hours.
84. IT IS IN HER PREPARATION OF THE DINNER that the cook begins to feel
the weight and responsibility of her situation, as she must take upon
herself all the dressing and the serving of the principal dishes, which
her skill and ingenuity have mostly prepared. Whilst these, however, are
cooking, she must be busy with her pastry, soups, gravies, ragouts, &c.
Stock, or what the French call consomme, being the basis of most made
dishes, must be always at hand, in conjunction with her sweet herbs and
spices for seasoning. "A place for everything, and everything in its
place," must be her rule, in order that time may not be wasted in
looking for things when they are wanted, and in order that the whole
apparatus of cooking may move with the regularity and precision of a
well-adjusted machine; - all must go on simultaneously. The vegetables
and sauces must be ready with the dishes they are to accompany, and in
order that they may be suitable, the smallest oversight must not be made
in their preparation. When the dinner-hour has arrived, it is the duty
of the cook to dish-up such dishes as may, without injury, stand, for
some time, covered on the hot plate or in the hot closet; but such as
are of a more important or recherche kind, must be delayed until the
order "to serve" is given from the drawing-room. Then comes haste; but
there must be no hurry, - all must work with order. The cook takes charge
of the fish, soups, and poultry; and the kitchen-maid of the vegetables,
sauces, and gravies. These she puts into their appropriate dishes,
whilst the scullery-maid waits on and assists the cook. Everything must
be timed so as to prevent its getting cold, whilst great care should be
taken, that, between the first and second courses, no more time is
allowed to elapse than is necessary, for fear that the company in the
dining-room lose all relish for what has yet to come of the dinner. When
the dinner has been served, the most important feature in the daily life
of the cook is at an end. She must, however, now begin to look to the
contents of her larder, taking care to keep everything sweet and clean,
so that no disagreeable smells may arise from the gravies, milk, or meat
that may be there. These are the principal duties of a cook in a
first-rate establishment.
In smaller establishments, the housekeeper often conducts the higher
department of cooking (see 58, 59, 60), and the cook, with the
assistance of a scullery-maid, performs some of the subordinate duties
of the kitchen-maid.
When circumstances render it necessary, the cook engages to perform the
whole of the work of the kitchen, and, in some places, a portion of the
house-work also.
85. WHILST THE COOK IS ENGAGED WITH HER MORNING DUTIES, the kitchen-maid
is also occupied with hers. Her first duty, after the fire is lighted,
is to sweep and clean the kitchen, and the various offices belonging to
it. This she does every morning, besides cleaning the stone steps at the
entrance of the house, the halls, the passages, and the stairs which
lead to the kitchen. Her general duties, besides these, are to wash and
scour all these places twice a week, with the tables, shelves, and
cupboards. She has also to dress the nursery and servants'-hall dinners,
to prepare all fish, poultry, and vegetables, trim meat joints and
cutlets, and do all such duties as may be considered to enter into the
cook's department in a subordinate degree.
Duties of the scullery-maid
86. THE DUTIES OF THE SCULLERY-MAID are to assist the cook; to keep the
scullery clean, and all the metallic as well as earthenware kitchen
utensils.
The position of scullery-maid is not, of course, one of high
rank, nor is the payment for her services large. But if she be
fortunate enough to have over her a good kitchen-maid and clever
cook, she may very soon learn to perform various little
duties connected with cooking operations, which may be of considerable
service in fitting her for a more responsible place. Now, it
will be doubtless thought by the majority of our readers, that
the fascinations connected with the position of the
scullery-maid, are not so great as to induce many people
to leave a comfortable home in order to work in a scullery. But we
are acquainted with one instance in which the desire, on the
part of a young girl, was so strong to become connected with the
kitchen and cookery, that she absolutely left her parents,
and engaged herself as a scullery-maid in a gentleman's house. Here
she showed herself so active and intelligent, that she very
quickly rose to the rank of kitchen-maid; and from this, so
great was her gastronomical genius, she became, in a short
space of time, one of the best women-cooks in England. After this, we
think, it must be allowed, that a cook, like a poet, nascitur,
non fit.
Duties of the lady's-maid
2243. The duties of a lady's-maid are more numerous, and perhaps more
onerous, than those of the valet; for while the latter is aided by the
tailor, the hatter, the linen-draper, and the perfumer, the lady's-maid
has to originate many parts of the mistress's dress herself: she should,
indeed, be a tolerably expert milliner and dressmaker, a good
hairdresser, and possess some chemical knowledge of the cosmetics with
which the toilet-table is supplied, in order to use them with safety and
effect. Her first duty in the morning, after having performed her own
toilet, is to examine the clothes put off by her mistress the evening
before, either to put them away, or to see that they are all in order to
put on again. During the winter, and in wet weather, the dresses should
be carefully examined, and the mud removed. Dresses of tweed, and other
woollen materials, may be laid out on a table and brushed all over; but
in general, even in woollen fabrics, the lightness of the tissues
renders brushing unsuitable to dresses, and it is better to remove the
dust from the folds by beating them lightly with a handkerchief or thin
cloth. Silk dresses should never be brushed, but rubbed with a piece of
merino, or other soft material, of a similar colour, kept for the
purpose. Summer dresses of barege, muslin, mohair, and other light
materials, simply require shaking; but if the muslin be tumbled, it must
be ironed afterwards. If the dresses require slight repair, it should be
done at once: "a stitch in time saves nine."
2244. The bonnet should be dusted with a light feather plume, in
order to remove every particle of dust; but this has probably
been done, as it ought to have been, the night before. Velvet
bonnets, and other velvet articles of dress, should be cleaned
with a soft brush. If the flowers with which the bonnet is
decorated have been crushed or displaced, or the leaves tumbled,
they should be raised and readjusted by means of flower-pliers.
If feathers have suffered from damp, they should be held near
the fire for a few minutes, and restored to their natural state
by the hand or a soft brush.
2245. The Chausserie, or foot-gear of a lady, is one of the
few things left to mark her station, and requires special care.
Satin boots or shoes should be dusted with a soft brush, or
wiped with a cloth. Kid or varnished leather should have the mud
wiped off with a sponge charged with milk, which preserves its
softness and polish. The following is also an excellent polish
for applying to ladies' boots, instead of blacking them: Mix
equal proportions of sweet-oil, vinegar, and treacle, with 1 oz.
of lamp-black. When all the ingredients are thoroughly
incorporated, rub the mixture on the boots with the palm of the
hand, and put them in a cool place to dry. Ladies' blacking,
which may be purchased in 6d, and 1s. bottles, is also very much
used for patent leather and kid boots, particularly when they
are a little worn. This blacking is merely applied with a piece
of sponge, and the boots should not be put on until the blacking
is dry und hardened.
2246. These various preliminary offices performed, the lady's-maid
should prepare for dressing her mistress, arranging her dressing-room,
toilet-table, and linen, according to her mistress's wishes and habits.
The details of dressing we need not touch upon, - every lady has her own
mode of doing so; but the maid should move about quietly, perform any
offices about her mistress's person, as lacing stays, gently, and adjust
her linen smoothly.
2247. Having prepared the dressing-room by lighting the fire, sweeping
the hearth, and made everything ready for dressing her mistress, placed
her linen before the fire to air, and laid out the various articles of
dress she is to wear, which will probably have been arranged the
previous evening, the lady's-maid is prepared for the morning's duties.
2248. Hairdressing is the most important part of the lady's-maid's
office. If ringlets are worn, remove the curl-papers, and, after
thoroughly brushing the back hair both above and below, dress it
according to the prevailing fashion. If bandeaux are worn, the hair is
thoroughly brushed and frizzed outside and inside, folding the hair back
round the head, brushing it perfectly smooth, giving it a glossy
appearance by the use of pomades, or oil, applied by the palm of the
hand, smoothing it down with a small brush dipped in bandoline. Double
bandeaux are formed by bringing most of the hair forward, and rolling it
over frizettes made of hair the same colour as that of the wearer: it is
finished behind by plaiting the hair, and arranging it in such a manner
as to look well with the head-dress.
2249. Lessons in hairdressing may be obtained, and at not an
unreasonable charge. If a lady's-maid can afford it, we would advise her
to initiate herself in the mysteries of hairdressing before entering on
her duties. If a mistress finds her maid handy, and willing to learn,
she will not mind the expense of a few lessons, which are almost
necessary, as the fashion and mode of dressing the hair is so
continually changing. Brushes and combs should be kept scrupulously
clean, by washing them about twice a week: to do this oftener spoils the
brushes, as very frequent washing makes them so very soft.
2260. Having dressed her mistress for breakfast, and breakfasted
herself, the further duties of the lady's-maid will depend altogether
upon the habits of the family, in which hardly two will probably agree.
Where the duties are entirely confined to attendance on her mistress, it
is probable that the bedroom and dressing-room will be committed to her
care; that, the housemaid will rarely enter, except for the weekly or
other periodical cleaning; she will, therefore, have to make her
mistress's bed, and keep it in order; and as her duties are light and
easy, there can be no allowance made for the slightest approach to
uncleanliness or want of order. Every morning, immediately after her
mistress has left it, and while breakfast is on, she should throw the
bed open, by taking off the clothes; open the windows (except in rainy
weather), and leave the room to air for half an hour. After breakfast,
except her attendance on her mistress prevents it, if the rooms are
carpeted, she should sweep them carefully, having previously strewed the
room with moist tea-leaves, dusting every table and chair, taking care
to penetrate to every corner, and moving every article of furniture that
is portable. This done satisfactorily, and having cleaned the
dressing-glass, polished up the furniture and the ornaments, and made
the glass jug and basin clean and bright, emptied all slops, emptied the
water-jugs and filled them with fresh water, and arranged the rooms, the
dressing-room is ready for the mistress when she thinks proper to
appear.
2261. The dressing-room thoroughly in order, the same thing is to be
done in the bedroom, in which she will probably be assisted by the
housemaid to make the bed and empty the slops. In making the bed, she
will study her lady's wishes, whether it is to be hard or soft, sloping
or straight, and see that it is done accordingly.
2262. Having swept the bedroom with equal care, dusted the tables and
chairs, chimney-ornaments, and put away all articles of dress left from
yesterday, and cleaned and put away any articles of jewellery, her next
care is to see, before her mistress goes out, what requires replacing in
her department, and furnish her with a list of them, that she may use
her discretion about ordering them. All this done, she may settle
herself down to any work on which she is engaged. This will consist
chiefly in mending; which is first to be seen to; everything, except
stockings, being mended before washing. Plain work will probably be one
of the lady's-maid's chief employments.
2263. A waiting-maid, who wishes to make herself useful, will
study the fashion-books with attention, so as to be able to aid
her mistress's judgment in dressing, according to the prevailing
fashion, with such modifications as her style of countenance
requires. She will also, if she has her mistress's interest at
heart, employ her spare time in repairing and making up dresses
which have served one purpose, to serve another also, or turning
many things, unfitted for her mistress to use, for the younger
branches of the family. The lady's-maid may thus render herself
invaluable to her mistress, and increase her own happiness in so
doing. The exigencies of fashion and luxury are such, that all
ladies, except those of the very highest rank, will consider
themselves fortunate in having about them a thoughtful person,
capable of diverting their finery to a useful purpose.
2264. Among other duties, the lady's-maid should understand the various
processes for washing, and cleaning, and repairing laces; edging of
collars; removing stains and grease-spots from dresses, and similar
processes.
2279. Ladies who keep a waiting-maid for their own persons are in the
habit of paying visits to their friends, in which it is not unusual for
the maid to accompany them; at all events, it is her duty to pack the
trunks; and this requires not only knowledge but some practice, although
the improved trunks and portmanteaus now made, in which there is a place
for nearly everything, render this more simple than formerly. Before
packing, let the trunks be thoroughly well cleaned, and, if necessary,
lined with paper, and everything intended for packing laid out on the
bed or chairs, so that it may be seen what is to be stowed away; the
nicer articles of dress neatly folded in clean calico wrappers. Having
satisfied herself that everything wanted is laid out, and that it is in
perfect order, the packing is commenced by disposing of the most bulky
articles, the dressing-case and work-box, skirts, and other articles
requiring room, leaving the smaller articles to fill up; finally, having
satisfied herself that all is included, she should lock and cover up the
trunk in its canvas case, and then pack her own box, if she is to
accompany her mistress.
2280. On reaching the house, the lady's-maid will be shown her lady's
apartment; and her duties here are what they were at home; she will
arrange her mistress's things, and learn which is her bell, in order to
go to her when she rings. Her meals will be taken in the housekeeper's
room; and here she must be discreet and guarded in her talk to any one
of her mistress or her concerns. Her only occupation here will be
attending in her lady's room, keeping her things in order, and making
her rooms comfortable for her.
2281. The evening duties of a lady's-maid are pretty nearly a repetition
of those of the morning. She is in attendance when her mistress retires;
she assists her to undress if required, brushes her hair, and renders
such other assistance as is demanded; removes all slops; takes care that
the fire, if any, is safe, before she retires to rest herself.
2282. Ironing is a part of the duties of a lady's-maid, and she should
be able to do it in the most perfect manner when it becomes necessary.
Ironing is often badly done from inattention to a few very simple
requirements. Cleanliness is the first essential: the ironing-board, the
fire, the iron, and the ironing-blanket should all be perfectly clean.
It will not be necessary here to enter into details on ironing, as full
directions are given in the "Duties of the Laundry-maid." A lady's-maid
will have a great deal of "Ironing-out" to do; such as light evening
dresses, muslin dresses, &c., which are not dirty enough to be washed,
but merely require smoothing out to remove the creases. In summer,
particularly, an iron will be constantly required, as also a
skirt-board, which should be covered with a nice clean piece of flannel.
To keep muslin dresses in order, they almost require smoothing out every
time they are worn, particularly if made with many flounces. The
lady's-maid may often have to perform little services for her mistress
which require care; such as restoring the colour to scorched linen, &c.
&c.
2288.
The valet and lady's-maid, from their supposed influence with
their master and mistress, are exposed to some temptations to which
other servants are less subjected. They are probably in communication
with the tradespeople who supply articles for the toilet; such as
batters, tailors, dressmakers, and perfumers. The conduct of
waiting-maid and valet to these people should be civil but independent,
making reasonable allowance for want of exact punctuality, if any such
can be made: they should represent any inconvenience respectfully, and
if an excuse seems unreasonable, put the matter fairly to master or
mistress, leaving it to them to notice it further, if they think it
necessary. No expectations of a personal character should influence them
one way or the other. It would be acting unreasonably to any domestic to
make them refuse such presents as tradespeople choose to give them; the
utmost that can be expected is that they should not influence their
judgment in the articles supplied - that they should represent them truly
to master or mistress, without fear and without favour. Civility to all,
servility to none, is a good maxim for every one. Deference to a master
and mistress, and to their friends and visitors, is one of the implied
terms of their engagement; and this deference must apply even to what
may be considered their whims. A servant is not to be seated, or wear a
hat in the house, in his master's or mistress's presence; nor offer any
opinion, unless asked for it; nor even to say "good night," or "good
morning," except in reply to that salutation.
Upper and under housemaids
2291. Housemaids, in large establishments, have usually one or more
assistants; in this case they are upper and under housemaids. Dividing
the work between them, the upper housemaid will probably reserve for
herself the task of dusting the ornaments and cleaning the furniture of
the principal apartments, but it is her duty to see that every
department is properly attended to. The number of assistants depends on
the number in the family, as well as on the style in which the
establishment is kept up. In wealthy families it is not unusual for
every grown-up daughter to have her waiting-maid, whose duty it is to
keep her mistress's apartments in order, thus abridging the housemaid's
duties. In others, perhaps, one waiting-maid attends on two or three,
when the housemaid's assistance will be more requisite. In fact, every
establishment has some customs peculiar to itself, on which we need not
dwell; the general duties are the same in all, perfect cleanliness and
order being the object.
Duties of the housemaid
2292. "Cleanliness is next to godliness," saith the proverb,
and "order"
is in the next degree; the housemaid, then, may be said to be the
handmaiden to two of the most prominent virtues. Her duties are very
numerous, and many of the comforts of the family depend on their
performance; but they are simple and easy to a person naturally clean
and orderly, and desirous of giving satisfaction. In all families,
whatever the habits of the master and mistress, servants will find it
advantageous to rise early; their daily work will thus come easy to
them. If they rise late, there is a struggle to overtake it, which
throws an air of haste and hurry over the whole establishment. Where the
master's time is regulated by early business or professional
engagements, this will, of course, regulate the hours of the servants;
but even where that is not the case, servants will find great personal
convenience in rising early and getting through their work in an orderly
and methodical manner. The housemaid who studies her own ease will
certainly be at her work by six o'clock in the summer, and, probably,
half-past six or seven in the winter months, having spent a reasonable
time in her own chamber in dressing. Earlier than this would, probably,
be an unnecessary waste of coals and candle in winter.
2293. The first duty of the housemaid in winter is to open the shutters
of all the lower rooms in the house, and take up the hearth-rugs of
those rooms which she is going to "do" before breakfast. In some
families, where there is only a cook and housemaid kept, and where the
drawing-rooms are large, the cook has the care of the dining-room, and
the housemaid that of the breakfast-room, library, and drawing-rooms.
After the shutters are all opened, she sweeps the breakfast-room,
sweeping the dust towards the fire-place, of course previously removing
the fonder. She should then lay a cloth (generally made of coarse
wrappering) over the carpet in front of the stove, and on this should
place her housemaid's box, containing black-lead brushes, leathers,
emery-paper, cloth, black lead, and all utensils necessary for cleaning
a grate, with the cinder-pail on the other side.
2300. The several fires lighted, the housemaid proceeds with her
dusting, and polishing the several pieces of furniture in the
breakfast-parlour, leaving no corner unvisited. Before sweeping the
carpet, it is a good practice to sprinkle it all over with tea-leaves,
which not only lay all dust, but give a slightly fragrant smell to the
room. It is now in order for the reception of the family; and where
there is neither footman nor parlour-maid, she now proceeds to the
dressing-room, and lights her mistress's fire, if she is in the habit of
having one to dress by. Her mistress is called, hot water placed in the
dressing-room for her use, her clothes - as far as they are under the
house-maid's charge - put before the fire to air, hanging a fire-guard on
the bars where there is one, while she proceeds to prepare the
breakfast.
2301. In summer the housemaid's work is considerably abridged: she
throws open the windows of the several rooms not occupied as bedrooms,
that they may receive the fresh morning air before they are occupied;
she prepares the breakfast-room by sweeping the carpet, rubbing tables
and chairs, dusting mantel-shelf and picture-frames with a light brush,
dusting the furniture, and beating and sweeping the rug; she cleans the
grate when necessary, and replaces the white paper or arranges the
shavings with which it is filled, leaving everything clean and tidy for
breakfast. It is not enough, however, in cleaning furniture, just to
pass lightly over the surface; the rims and legs of tables, and the
backs and legs of chairs and sofas, should be rubbed vigorously daily;
if there is a book-case, every corner of every pane and ledge requires
to be carefully wiped, so that not a speck of dust can be found in the
room.
2302. After the breakfast-room is finished, the housemaid should proceed
to sweep down the stairs, commencing at the top, whilst the cook has the
charge of the hall, door-step, and passages. After this she should go
into the drawing-room, cover up every article of furniture that is
likely to spoil, with large dusting-sheets, and put the chairs together,
by turning them seat to seat, and, in fact, make as much room as
possible, by placing all the loose furniture in the middle of the room,
whilst she sweeps the corners and sides. When this is accomplished, the
furniture can then be put back in its place, and the middle of the room
swept, sweeping the dirt, as before said, towards the fireplace. The
same rules should be observed in cleaning the drawing-room grates as we
have just stated, putting down the cloth, before commencing, to prevent
the carpet from getting soiled. In the country, a room would not require
sweeping thoroughly like this more than twice a week; but the housemaid
should go over it every morning with a dust-pan and broom, taking up
every crumb and piece she may see. After the sweeping she should leave
the room, shut the door, and proceed to lay the breakfast. Where there
is neither footman nor parlour-maid kept, the duty of laying the
breakfast-cloth rests on the housemaid.
2303. Before laying the cloth for breakfast, the heater of the tea-urn
is to be placed in the hottest part of the kitchen fire; or, where the
kettle is used, boiled on the kitchen fire, and then removed to the
parlour, where it is kept hot. Having washed herself free from the dust
arising from the morning's work, the housemaid collects the
breakfast-things on her tray, takes the breakfast-cloth from the napkin
press, and carries them all on the tray into the parlour; arranges them
on the table, placing a sufficiency of knives, forks, and salt-cellars
for the family, and takes the tray back to the pantry; gets a supply of
milk, cream, and bread; fills the butter-dish, taking care that the salt
is plentiful, and soft and dry, and that hot plates and egg-cups are
ready where warm meat or eggs are served, and that butter-knife and
bread-knife are in their places. And now she should give the signal for
breakfast, holding herself ready to fill the urn with hot water, or hand
the kettle, and take in the rolls, toast, and other eatables, with which
the cook supplies her, when the breakfast-room bell rings; bearing in
mind that she is never to enter the parlour with dirty hands or with a
dirty apron, and that everything is to be handed on a tray; that she is
to hand everything she may be required to supply, on the left hand of
the person she is serving, and that all is done quietly and without
bustle or hurry. In some families, where there is a large number to
attend on, the cook waits at breakfast whilst the housemaid is busy
upstairs in the bedrooms, or sweeping, dusting, and putting the
drawing-room in order.
2304. Breakfast served, the housemaid proceeds to the bed-chambers,
throws up the sashes, if not already done, pulls up the blinds, throwing
back curtains at the same time, and opens the beds, by removing the
clothes, placing them over a horse, or, failing that, over the backs of
chairs. She now proceeds to empty the slops. In doing this, everything
is emptied into the slop-pail, leaving a little scalding-hot water for a
minute in such vessels as require it; adding a drop of turpentine to the
water, when that is not sufficient to cleanse them. The basin is
emptied, well rinsed with clean water, and carefully wiped; the ewers
emptied and washed; finally, the water-jugs themselves emptied out and
rinsed, and wiped dry. As soon as this is done, she should remove and
empty the pails, taking care that they also are well washed, scalded,
and wiped as soon as they are empty.
2305. Next follows bedmaking, at which the cook or kitchen-maid, where
one is kept, usually assists; but, before beginning, velvet chairs, or
other things injured by dust, should be removed to another room. In
bedmaking, the fancy of its occupant should be consulted; some like beds
sloping from the top towards the feet, swelling slightly in the middle;
others, perfectly flat: a good housemaid will accommodate each bed to
the taste of the sleeper, taking care to shake, beat, and turn it well
in the process. Some persons prefer sleeping on the mattress; in which
case a feather bed is usually beneath, resting on a second mattress, and
a straw paillasse at the bottom. In this case, the mattresses should
change places daily; the feather bed placed on the mattress shaken,
beaten, taken up and opened several times, so as thoroughly to separate
the feathers: if too large to be thus handled, the maid should shake and
beat one end first, and then the other, smoothing it afterwards equally
all over into the required shape, and place the mattress gently over it.
Any feathers which escape in this process a tidy servant will put back
through the seam of the tick; she will also be careful to sew up any
stitch that gives way the moment it is discovered. The bedclothes are
laid on, beginning with an under blanket and sheet, which are tucked
under the mattress at the bottom. The bolster is then beaten and shaken,
and put on, the top of the sheet rolled round it, and the sheet tucked
in all round. The pillows and other bedclothes follow, and the
counterpane over all, which should fall in graceful folds, and at equal
distance from the ground all round. The curtains are drawn to the head
and folded neatly across the bed, and the whole finished in a smooth and
graceful manner. Where spring-mattresses are used, care should be taken
that the top one is turned every day. The housemaid should now take up
in a dustpan any pieces that may be on the carpet; she should dust the
room, shut the door, and proceed to another room. When all the bedrooms
are finished, she should dust the stairs, and polish the handrail of the
banisters, and see that all ledges, window-sills, &c., are quite free
from dust. It will be necessary for the housemaid to divide her work, so
that she may not have too much to do on certain days, and not sufficient
to fill up her time on other days. In the country, bedrooms should be
swept and thoroughly cleaned once a week; and to be methodical and
regular in her work, the housemaid should have certain days for doing
certain rooms thoroughly. For instance, the drawing-room on Monday, two
bedrooms on Tuesday, two on Wednesday, and so on, reserving a day for
thoroughly cleaning the plate, bedroom candlesticks, &c. &c.,
which she
will have to do where there is no parlour-maid or footman kept. By this
means the work will be divided, and there will be no unnecessary
bustling and hurrying, as is the case where the work is done any time,
without rule or regulation.
2306. Once a week, when a bedroom is to be thoroughly cleaned, the
house-maid should commence by brushing the mattresses of the bed before
it is made; she should then make it, shake the curtains, lay them
smoothly on the bed, and pin or tuck up the bottom valance, so that she
may be able to sweep under the bed. She should then unloop the
window-curtains, shake them, and pin them high up out of the way. After
clearing the dressing-table, and the room altogether of little articles
of china, &c. &c., she should shake the toilet-covers, fold them up, and
lay them on the bed, over which a large dusting-sheet should be thrown.
She should then sweep the room; first of all sprinkling the carpet with
well-squeezed tea-leaves, or a little freshly-pulled grass, when this is
obtainable. After the carpet is swept, and the grate cleaned, she should
wash with soap and water, with a little soda in it, the washing-table
apparatus, removing all marks or fur round the jugs, caused by the
water. The water-bottles and tumblers must also have her attention, as
well as the top of the washing-stand, which should be cleaned with soap
and flannel if it be marble: if of polished mahogany, no soap must be
used. When these are all clean and arranged in their places, the
housemaid should scrub the floor where it is not covered with carpet,
under the beds, and round the wainscot. She should use as little soap
and soda as possible, as too free a use of these articles is liable to
give the boards a black appearance. In the country, cold soft water, a
clean scrubbing-brush, and a willing arm, are all that are required to
make bedroom floors look white. In winter it is not advisable to scrub
rooms too often, as it is difficult to dry them thoroughly at that
season of the year, and nothing is more dangerous than to allow persons
to sleep in a damp room. The housemaid should now dust the furniture,
blinds, ornaments, &c.; polish the looking-glass; arrange the
toilet-cover and muslin; remove the cover from the bed, and straighten
and arrange the curtains and counterpane. A bedroom should be cleaned
like this every week. There are times, however, when it is necessary to
have the carpet up; this should be done once a year in the country, and
twice a year in large cities. The best time for these arrangements is
spring and autumn, when the bed-furniture requires changing to suit the
seasons of the year. After arranging the furniture, it should all be
well rubbed and polished; and for this purpose the housemaid should
provide herself with an old silk pocket-handkerchief, to finish the
polishing.
2311. The chambers are finished, the chamber candlesticks brought down
and cleaned, the parlour lamps trimmed; - and here the housemaid's utmost
care is required. In cleaning candlesticks, as in every other cleaning,
she should have cloths and brushes kept for that purpose alone; the
knife used to scrape them should be applied to no other purpose; the
tallow-grease should be thrown into a box kept for the purpose; the same
with everything connected with the lamp-trimming; the best mode of doing
which she will do well to learn from the tradesman who supplies the oil;
always bearing in mind, however, that without perfect cleanliness, which
involves occasional scalding, no lamp can be kept in order.
2312. The drawing and dining-room, inasmuch as everything there is more
costly and valuable, require even more care. When the carpets are of the
kind known as velvet-pile, they require to be swept firmly by a hard
whisk brush, made of cocoanut fibre.
2313. The furniture must be carefully gone over in every corner with a
soft cloth, that it may be left perfectly free from dust; or where that
is beyond reach, with a brush made of long feathers, or a goose's wing.
The sofas are swept in the same manner, slightly beaten, the cushions
shaken and smoothed, the picture-frames swept, and everything arranged
in its proper place. This, of course, applies to dining as well as
drawing-room and morning-room. And now the housemaid may dress herself
for the day, and prepare for the family dinner, at which she must
attend.
2314. We need not repeat the long instructions already given for laying
the dinner-table. At the family dinner, even where no footman waits, the
routine will be the same. In most families the cloth is laid with the
slips on each side, with napkins, knives, forks, spoons, and wine and
finger glasses on all occasions.
2315. She should ascertain that her plate is in order, glasses free from
smears, water-bottles and decanters the same, and everything ready on
her tray, that she may be able to lay her cloth properly. Few things add
more to the neat and comfortable appearance of a dinner-table than
well-polished plate; indeed, the state of the plate is a certain
indication of a well-managed or ill-managed household. Nothing is easier
than to keep plate in good order, and yet many servants, from stupidity
and ignorance, make it the greatest trouble of all things under their
care. It should be remembered, that it is utterly impossible to make
greasy silver take a polish; and that as spoons and forks in daily use
are continually in contact with grease, they must require good washing
in soap-and-water to remove it. Silver should be washed with a soapy
flannel in one water, rinsed in another, and then wiped dry with a dry
cloth. The plate so washed may be polished with the plate-rags, as in
the following directions:--Once a week all the plate should receive a
thorough cleaning with the hartshorn powder, as directed in the first
recipe for cleaning plate; and where the housemaid can find time, rubbed
every day with the plate-rags.
2319. For waiting at table, the housemaid should be neatly and cleanly
dressed, and, if possible, her dress made with closed sleeves, the large
open ones dipping and falling into everything on the table, and being
very much in the way. She should not wear creaking boots, and should
move about the room as noiselessly as possible, anticipating people's
wants by handing them things without being asked for them, and
altogether be as quiet as possible. It will be needless here to repeat
what we have already said respecting waiting at table, in the duties of
the butler and footman: rules that are good to be observed by them, are
equally good for the parlour-maid or housemaid.
2320. The housemaid having announced that dinner is on the table, will
hand the soup, fish, meat, or side-dishes to the different members of
the family; but in families who do not spend much of the day together,
they will probably prefer being alone at dinner and breakfast; the
housemaid will be required, after all are helped, if her master does not
wish her to stay in the room, to go on with her work of cleaning up in
the pantry, and answer the bell when rung. In this case she will place a
pile of plates on the table or a dumbwaiter, within reach of her master
and mistress, and leave the room.
2321. Dinner over, the housemaid removes the plates and dishes on the
tray, places the dirty knives and forks in the basket prepared for them,
folds up the napkins in the ring which indicates by which member of the
family it has been used, brushes off the crumbs on the hand-tray kept
for the purpose, folds up the table-cloth in the folds already made, and
places it in the linen-press to be smoothed out. After every meal the
table should be rubbed, all marks from hot plates removed, and the
table-cover thrown over, and the room restored to its usual order. If
the family retire to the drawing-room, or any other room, it is a good
practice to throw up the sash to admit fresh air and ventilate the room.
2322. The housemaid's evening service consists in washing up the
dinner-things, the plate, plated articles, and glasses, restoring
everything to its place; cleaning up her pantry, and putting away
everything for use when next required; lastly, preparing for tea, as the
time approaches, by setting the things out on the tray, getting the urn
or kettle ready, with cream and other things usually partaken of at that
meal.
2323. In summer-time the windows of all the bedrooms, which have been
closed during the heat of the day, should be thrown open for an hour or
so after sunset, in order to air them. Before dark they should be
closed, the bedclothes turned down, and the night-clothes laid in order
for use when required. During winter, where fires are required in the
dressing-rooms, they should be lighted an hour before the usual time of
retiring, placing a fire-guard before each fire. At the same time, the
night-things on the horse should be placed before it to be aired, with a
tin can of hot water, if the mistress is in the habit of washing before
going to bed. We may add, that there is no greater preservative of
beauty than washing the face every night in hot water. The housemaid
will probably be required to assist her mistress to undress and put her
dress in order for the morrow; in which case her duties are very much
those of the lady's-maid.
2324. And now the fire is made up for the night, the fireguard replaced,
and everything in the room in order for the night, the housemaid taking
care to leave the night-candle and matches together in a convenient
place, should they be required. It is usual in summer to remove all
highly fragrant flowers from sleeping-rooms, the impression being that
their scent is injurious in a close chamber.
2325. On leisure days, the housemaid should be able to do some
needlework for her mistress,--such as turning and mending sheets and
darning the house linen, or assist her in anything she may think fit to
give her to do. For this reason it is almost essential that a housemaid,
in a small family, should be an expert needlewoman; as, if she be a good
manager and an active girl, she will have time on her hands to get
through plenty of work.
2326. Periodical Cleanings. - Besides the daily routine which we have
described, there are portions of every house which can only be
thoroughly cleaned occasionally; at which time the whole house usually
undergoes a more thorough cleaning than is permitted in the general way.
On these occasions it is usual to begin at the top of the house and
clean downwards; moving everything out of the room; washing the
wainscoting or paint with soft soap and water; pulling down the beds and
thoroughly cleansing all the joints; "scrubbing" the floor; beating
feather beds, mattress, and paillasse, and thoroughly purifying every
article of furniture before it is put back in its place.
2327. This general cleaning usually takes place in the spring or early
summer, when the warm curtains of winter are replaced by the light and
cheerful muslin curtains. Carpets are at the same time taken up and
beaten, except where the mistress of the house has been worried into an
experiment by the often-reiterated question, "Why beat your carpets?" In
this case she will probably have made up her mind to try the cleaning
process, and arranged with the company to send for them on the morning
when cleaning commenced. It is hardly necessary to repeat, that on this
occasion every article is to be gone over, the French-polished furniture
well rubbed and polished. The same thorough system of cleaning should be
done throughout the house; the walls cleaned where painted, and swept
down with a soft broom or feather brush where papered; the window and
bed curtains, which have been replaced with muslin ones, carefully
brushed, or, if they require it, cleaned; lamps not likely to be
required, washed out with hot water, dried, and cleaned.
2328. As winter approaches, this house-cleaning will have to be
repeated, and the warm bed and window curtains replaced. The process of
scouring and cleaning is again necessary, and must be gone through,
beginning at the top, and going through the house, down to the kitchens.
2329. Independently of these daily and periodical cleanings, other
occupations will present themselves from time to time, which the
housemaid will have to perform. When spots show on polished furniture,
they can generally be restored by soap-and-water and a sponge, the
polish being brought out by using a little polish, and then well rubbing
it. Again, drawers which draw out stiffly may be made to move more
easily if the spot where they press is rubbed over with a little soap.
2330. Chips broken off any of the furniture should be collected and
replaced, by means of a little glue applied to it. Liquid glue, which is
sold prepared in bottles, is very useful to have in the house, as it
requires no melting; and anything broken can be so quickly repaired.
Duties of the maid-of-all-work
2340.
The general servant, or maid-of-all-work, is perhaps the only one
of her class deserving of commiseration: her life is a solitary one, and
in, some places, her work is never done. She is also subject to rougher
treatment than either the house or kitchen-maid, especially in her
earlier career: she starts in life, probably a girl of thirteen, with
some small tradesman's wife as her mistress, just a step above her in
the social scale; and although the class contains among them many
excellent, kind-hearted women, it also contains some very rough
specimens of the feminine gender, and to some of these it occasionally
falls to give our maid-of-all-work her first lessons in her multifarious
occupations: the mistress's commands are the measure of the
maid-of-all-work's duties. By the time she has become a tolerable
servant, she is probably engaged in some respectable tradesman's house,
where she has to rise with the lark, for she has to do in her own person
all the work which in larger establishments is performed by cook,
kitchen-maid, and housemaid, and occasionally the part of a footman's
duty, which consists in carrying messages.
2341. The general servant's duties commence by opening the shutters (and
windows, if the weather permits) of all the lower apartments in the
house; she should then brush up her kitchen-range, light the fire, clear
away the ashes, clean the hearth, and polish with a leather the bright
parts of the range, doing all as rapidly and as vigorously as possible,
that no more time be wasted than is necessary. After putting on the
kettle, she should then proceed to the dining-room or parlour to get it
in order for breakfast. She should first roll up the rug, take up the
fender, shake and fold up the table-cloth, then sweep the room, carrying
the dirt towards the fireplace; a coarse cloth should then be laid down
over the carpet, and she should proceed to clean the grate, having all
her utensils close to her. When the grate is finished, the ashes cleared
away, the hearth cleaned, and the fender put back in its place, she must
dust the furniture, not omitting the legs of the tables and chairs; and
if there are any ornaments or things on the sideboard, she must not dust
round them, but lift them up on to another place, dust well where they
have been standing, and then replace the things. Nothing annoys a
particular mistress so much as to find, when she comes down stairs,
different articles of furniture looking as if they had never been
dusted. If the servant is at all methodical, and gets into a habit of
doing a room in a certain way, she will scarcely ever leave her duties
neglected. After the rug is put down, the table-cloth arranged, and
everything in order, she should lay the cloth for breakfast, and then
shut the dining-room door.
2342. The hall must now be swept, the mats shaken, the door-step
cleaned, and any brass knockers or handles polished up with the leather.
If the family breakfast very early, the tidying of the hall must then be
deferred till after that meal. After cleaning the boots that are
absolutely required, the servant should now wash her hands and face, put
on a clean white apron, and be ready for her mistress when she comes
down stairs. In families where there is much work to do before
breakfast, the master of the house frequently has two pairs of boots in
wear, so that they may be properly cleaned when the servant has more
time to do them, in the daytime. This arrangement is, perhaps, scarcely
necessary in the summer-time, when there are no grates to clean every
morning; but in the dark days of winter it is only kind and thoughtful
to lighten a servant-of-all-work's duties as much as possible.
2343. She will now carry the urn into the dining-room, where her
mistress will make the tea or coffee, and sometimes will boil the eggs,
to insure them being done to her liking. In the mean time the servant
cooks, if required, the bacon, kidneys, fish, &c.; - if cold meat is to
be served, she must always send it to table on a clean dish, and nicely
garnished with tufts of parsley, if this is obtainable.
2344. After she has had her own breakfast, and whilst the family are
finishing theirs, she should go upstairs into the bedrooms, open all the
windows, strip the clothes off the beds, and leave them to air whilst
she is clearing away the breakfast things. She should then take up the
crumbs in a dustpan from under the table, put the chairs in their
places, and sweep up the hearth.
2345. The breakfast things washed up, the kitchen should be tidied, so
that it may be neat when her mistress comes in to give the orders for
the day: after receiving these orders, the servant should go upstairs
again, with a jug of boiling water, the slop-pail, and two cloths. After
emptying the slops, and scalding the vessels with the boiling water, and
wiping them thoroughly dry, she should wipe the top of the wash-table
and arrange it all in order. She then proceeds to make the beds, in
which occupation she is generally assisted by the mistress, or, if she
have any daughters, by one of them. Before commencing to make the bed,
the servant should put on a large bed-apron, kept for this purpose only,
which should be made very wide, to button round the waist and meet
behind, while it should be made as long as the dress. By adopting this
plan, the blacks and dirt on servants' dresses (which at all times it is
impossible to help) will not rub off on to the bed-clothes, mattresses,
and bed furniture. When the beds are made, the rooms should be dusted,
the stairs lightly swept down, hall furniture, closets, &c., dusted. The
lady of the house, where there is but one servant kept, frequently takes
charge of the drawing-room herself, that is to say, dusting it; the
servant sweeping, cleaning windows, looking-glasses, grates, and rough
work of that sort. If there are many ornaments and knick-knacks about
the room, it is certainly better for the mistress to dust these herself,
as a maid-of-all-work's hands are not always in a condition to handle
delicate ornaments.
2346. Now she has gone the rounds of the house and seen that all is in
order, the servant goes to her kitchen to see about the cooking of the
dinner, in which very often her mistress will assist her. She should put
on a coarse apron with a bib to do her dirty work in, which may be
easily replaced by a white one if required.
2347. Half an hour before dinner is ready, she should lay the cloth,
that everything may be in readiness when she is dishing up the dinner,
and take all into the dining-room that is likely to be required, in the
way of knives, forks, spoons, bread, salt, water, &c. &c. By
exercising
a little forethought, much confusion and trouble may be saved both to
mistress and servant, by getting everything ready for the dinner in good
time.
2348. After taking in the dinner, when every one is seated, she removes
the covers, hands the plates round, and pours out the beer; and should
be careful to hand everything on the left side of the person she is
waiting on.
2349. We need scarcely say that a maid-of-all-work cannot stay in the
dining-room during the whole of dinner-time, as she must dish up her
pudding, or whatever is served after the first course. When she sees
every one helped, she should leave the room to make her preparations for
the next course; and anything that is required, such as bread, &c.,
people may assist themselves to in the absence of the servant.
2350. When the dinner things are cleared away, the servant should sweep
up the crumbs in the dining-room, sweep the hearth, and lightly dust the
furniture, then sit down to her own dinner.
2351. After this, she washes up and puts away the dinner things, sweeps
the kitchen, dusts and tidies it, and puts on the kettle for tea. She
should now, before dressing herself for the afternoon, clean her knives,
boots, and shoes, and do any other dirty work in the scullery that may
be necessary. Knife-cleaning machines are rapidly taking the place, in
most households, of the old knife-board. The saving of labour by the
knife-cleaner is very great, and its performance of the work is very
satisfactory. Small and large machines are manufactured, some cleaning
only four knives, whilst others clean as many as twelve at once. Nothing
can be more simple than the process of machine knife-cleaning; and
although, in a very limited household, the substitution of the machine
for the board may not be necessary, yet we should advise all
housekeepers, to whom the outlay is not a difficulty, to avail
themselves of the services of a machine. We have already spoken of its
management in the "Duties of the Footman," No. 2177.
2352. When the servant is dressed, she takes in the tea, and after tea
turns down the beds, sees that the water-jugs and bottles are full,
closes the windows, and draws down the blinds. If the weather is very
warm, these are usually left open until the last thing at night, to cool
the rooms.
2353. The routine of a general servant's duties depends upon the kind of
situation she occupies; but a systematic maid-of-all-work should so
contrive to divide her work, that every day in the week may have its
proper share. By this means she is able to keep the house clean with
less fatigue to herself than if she left all the cleaning to do at the
end of the week. Supposing there are five bedrooms in the house, two
sitting-rooms, kitchen, scullery, and the usual domestic offices:--on
Monday she should thoroughly clean the drawing-room; on Tuesday, two of
the bedrooms; on Wednesday, two more; on Thursday, the other bedroom and
stairs; on Friday morning she should sweep the dining-room very
thoroughly, clean the hall, and in the afternoon her kitchen tins and
bright utensils. By arranging her work in this manner, no undue
proportion will fall to Saturday's share, and she will then have this
day for cleaning plate, cleaning her kitchen, and arranging everything
in nice order. The regular work must, of course, be performed in the
usual manner, as we have endeavoured to describe.
2354. Before retiring to bed, she will do well to clean up glasses,
plates, &c. which have been used for the evening meal, and prepare for
her morning's work by placing her wood near the fire, on the hob, to
dry, taking care there is no danger of it igniting, before she leaves
the kitchen for the night. Before retiring, she will have to lock and
bolt the doors, unless the master undertakes this office himself.
2355. If the washing, or even a portion of it, is done at home, it will
be impossible for the maid-of-all-work to do her household duties
thoroughly, during the time it is about, unless she have some
assistance. Usually, if all the washing is done at home, the mistress
hires some one to assist at the wash-tub, and sees to little matters
herself, in the way of dusting, clearing away breakfast things, folding,
starching, and ironing the fine things. With a little management much
can be accomplished, provided the mistress be industrious, energetic,
and willing to lend a helping hand. Let washing-week be not the excuse
for having everything in a muddle; and although "things" cannot be
cleaned so thoroughly, and so much time spent upon them, as ordinarily,
yet the house may be kept tidy and clear from litter without a great
deal of exertion either on the part of the mistress or servant. We will
conclude our remarks with an extract from an admirably-written book,
called "Home Truths for Home Peace." The authoress says, with respect to
the great wash - "Amongst all the occasions in which it is most difficult
and glorious to keep muddle out of a family, 'the great wash' stands
pre-eminent; and as very little money is now saved by having
everything done at home, many ladies, with the option of taking
another servant or putting out the chief part of the washing, have
thankfully adopted the latter course." She goes on to say - "When a
gentleman who dines at home can't bear washing in the house, but gladly
pays for its being done elsewhere, the lady should gratefully submit to
his wishes, and put out anything in her whole establishment rather than
put out a good and generous husband."
2356. A bustling and active girl will always find time to do a little
needlework for herself, if she lives with consistent and reasonable
people. In the summer evenings she should manage to sit down for two or
three hours, and for a short time in the afternoon in leisure days. A
general servant's duties are so multifarious, that unless she be quick
and active, she will not be able to accomplish this. To discharge these
various duties properly is a difficult task, and sometimes a thankless
office; but it must be remembered that a good maid-of-all-work will make
a good servant in any capacity, and may be safely taken not only without
fear of failure, but with every probability of giving satisfaction to
her employer.
Duties of the dairy-maid
2357. The duties of the dairy-maid differ considerably in different
districts. In Scotland, Wales, and some of the northern counties, women
milk the cows. On some of the large dairy farms in other parts of
England, she takes her share in the milking, but in private families the
milking is generally performed by the cowkeeper, and the dairy-maid only
receives the milkpails from him morning and night, and empties and
cleans them preparatory to the next milking; her duty being to supply
the family with milk, cream, and butter, and other luxuries depending on
the "milky mothers" of the herd.
Duties of the laundry-maid
2372. The laundry-maid is charged with the duty of washing and
getting-up the family linen, - a situation of great importance where the
washing is all done at home; but in large towns, where there is little
convenience for bleaching and drying, it is chiefly done by professional
laundresses and companies, who apply mechanical and chemical processes
to the purpose. These processes, however, are supposed to injure the
fabric of the linen; and in many families the fine linen, cottons, and
muslins, are washed and got-up at home, even where the bulk of the
washing is given out. In country and suburban houses, where greater
conveniences exist, washing at home is more common, - in country places
universal.
2373. The laundry establishment consists of a washing-house, an ironing
and drying-room, and sometimes a drying-closet heated by furnaces. The
washing-house will probably be attached to the kitchen; but it is better
that it should be completely detached from it, and of one story, with a
funnel or shaft to carry off the steam. It will be of a size
proportioned to the extent of the washing to be done. A range of tubs,
either round or oblong, opposite to, and sloping towards, the light,
narrower at the bottom than the top, for convenience in stooping over,
and fixed at a height suited to the convenience of the women using them;
each tub having a tap for hot and cold water, and another in the bottom,
communicating with the drains, for drawing off foul water. A boiler and
furnace, proportioned in size to the wants of the family, should also be
fixed. The flooring should be York stone, laid on brick piers, with good
drainage, or asphalte, sloping gently towards a gutter connected with
the drain.
2374. Adjoining the bleaching-house, a second room, about the same size,
is required for ironing, drying, and mangling. The contents of this room
should comprise an ironing-board, opposite to the light; a strong white
deal table, about twelve or fourteen feet long, and about three and a
half feet broad, with drawers for ironing-blankets; a mangle in one
corner, and clothes-horses for drying and airing; cupboards for holding
the various irons, starch, and other articles used in ironing; a
hot-plate built in the chimney, with furnace beneath it for heating the
irons; sometimes arranged with a flue for carrying the hot air round the
room for drying. Where this is the case, however, there should be a
funnel in the ceiling for ventilation and carrying off steam; but a
better arrangement is to have a hot-air closet adjoining, heated by
hot-air pipes, and lined with iron, with proper arrangements for
carrying off steam, and clothes-horses on castors running in grooves, to
run into it for drying purposes. This leaves the laundry free from
unwholesome vapour.
2375. The laundry-maid should commence her labours on Monday morning by
a careful examination of the articles committed to her care, and enter
them in the washing-book; separating the white linen and collars, sheets
and body-linen, into one heap, fine muslins into another, coloured
cotton and linen fabrics into a third, woollens into a fourth, and the
coarser kitchen and other greasy cloths into a fifth. Every article
should be examined for ink- or grease-spots, or for fruit- or
wine-stains. Ink-spots are removed by dipping the part into hot water,
and then spreading it smoothly on the hand or on the back of a spoon,
pouring a few drops of oxalic acid or salts of sorel over the ink-spot,
rubbing and rinsing it in cold water till removed; grease-spots, by
rubbing over with yellow soap, and rinsing in hot water; fruit- and
wine-spots, by dipping in a solution of sal ammonia or spirits of wine,
and rinsing.
2376. Every article having been examined and assorted, the sheets and
fine linen should be placed in one of the tubs and just covered with
lukewarm water, in which a little soda has been dissolved and mixed, and
left there to soak till the morning. The greasy cloths and dirtier
things should be laid to soak in another tub, in a liquor composed of
1/2 lb. of unslaked lime to every 6 quarts of water which has been
boiled for two hours, then left to settle, and strained off when clear.
Each article should be rinsed in this liquor to wet it thoroughly, and
left to soak till the morning, just covered by it when the things are
pressed together. Coppers and boilers should now be filled, and the
fires laid ready to light.
2377. Early on the following morning the fires should be lighted, and as
soon as hot water can be procured, washing commenced; the sheets and
body-linen being wanted to whiten in the morning, should be taken first;
each article being removed in succession from the lye in which it has
been soaking, rinsed, rubbed, and wrung, and laid aside until the tub is
empty, when the foul water is drawn off. The tub should be again filled
with luke-warm water, about 80 deg., in which the articles should again be
plunged, and each gone over carefully with soap, and rubbed. Novices in
the art sometimes rub the linen against the skin; more experienced
washerwomen rub one linen surface against the other, which saves their
hands, and enables them to continue their labour much longer, besides
economizing time, two parts being thus cleaned at once.
Duties of the sick-nurse
2416. All women are likely, at some period of their lives, to be called
on to perform the duties of a sick-nurse, and should prepare themselves
as much as possible, by observation and reading, for the occasion when
they may be required to perform the office. The main requirements are
good temper, compassion for suffering, sympathy with sufferers, which
most women worthy of the name possess, neat-handedness, quiet manners,
love of order, and cleanliness. With these qualifications there will be
very little to be wished for; the desire to relieve suffering will
inspire a thousand little attentions, and surmount the disgusts which
some of the offices attending the sick-room are apt to create. Where
serious illness visits a household, and protracted nursing is likely to
become necessary, a professional nurse will probably be engaged, who has
been trained to its duties; but in some families, and those not a few
let us hope, the ladies of the family would oppose such an arrangement
as a failure of duty on their part. There is, besides, even when a
professional nurse is ultimately called in, a period of doubt and
hesitation, while disease has not yet developed itself, when the patient
must be attended to; and, in these cases, some of the female servants of
the establishment must give their attendance in the sick-room. There
are, also, slight attacks of cold, influenza, and accidents in a
thousand forms, to which all are subject, where domestic nursing becomes
a necessity; where disease, though unattended with danger, is
nevertheless accompanied by the nervous irritation incident to illness,
and when all the attention of the domestic nurse becomes necessary.
2417. In the first stage of sickness, while doubt and a little
perplexity hang over the household as to the nature of the sickness,
there are some things about which no doubt can exist: the patient's room
must be kept in a perfectly pure state, and arrangements made for proper
attendance; for the first canon of nursing, according to Florence
Nightingale, its apostle, is to "keep the air the patient breathes as
pure as the external air, without chilling him." This can be done
without any preparation which might alarm the patient; with proper
windows, open fireplaces, and a supply of fuel, the room may be as fresh
as it is outside, and kept at a temperature suitable for the patient's
state.
2418. Windows, however, must be opened from above, and not from below,
and draughts avoided; cool air admitted beneath the patient's head
chills the lower strata and the floor. The careful nurse will keep the
door shut when the window is open; she will also take care that the
patient is not placed between the door and the open window, nor between
the open fireplace and the window. If confined to bed, she will see that
the bed is placed in a thoroughly ventilated part of the room, but out
of the current of air which is produced by the momentary opening of
doors, as well as out of the line of draught between the window and the
open chimney, and that the temperature of the room is kept about 64 deg..
Where it is necessary to admit air by the door, the windows should be
closed; but there are few circumstances in which good air can be
obtained through the chamber-door; through it, on the contrary, the
gases generated in the lower parts of the house are likely to be drawn
into the invalid chamber.
2419. These precautions taken, and plain nourishing diet, such as the
patient desires, furnished, probably little more can be done, unless
more serious symptoms present themselves; in which case medical advice
will be sought.
2420. Under no circumstances is ventilation of the sick-room so
essential as in cases of febrile diseases, usually considered
infectious; such as typhus and puerperal fevers, influenza,
hooping-cough, small- and chicken-pox, scarlet fever, measles, and
erysipelas: all these are considered communicable through the air; but
there is little danger of infection being thus communicated, provided
the room is kept thoroughly ventilated. On the contrary, if this
essential be neglected, the power of infection is greatly increased and
concentrated in the confined and impure air; it settles upon the clothes
of the attendants and visitors, especially where they are of wool, and
is frequently communicated to other families in this manner.
2421. Under all circumstances, therefore, the sick-room should be kept
as fresh and sweet as the open air, while the temperature is kept up by
artificial heat, taking care that the fire burns clear, and gives out no
smoke into the room; that the room is perfectly clean, wiped over with a
damp cloth every day, if boarded; and swept, after sprinkling with damp
tea-leaves, or other aromatic leaves, if carpeted; that all utensils are
emptied and cleaned as soon as used, and not once in four-and-twenty
hours, as is sometimes done. "A slop-pail," Miss Nightingale says,
"should never enter a sick-room; everything should be carried direct to
the water-closet, emptied there, and brought up clean; in the best
hospitals the slop-pail is unknown." "I do not approve,"
says Miss
Nightingale, "of making housemaids of nurses, - that would be waste of
means; but I have seen surgical sisters, women whose hands were worth to
them two or three guineas a week, down on their knees, scouring a room
or hut, because they thought it was not fit for their patients: these
women had the true nurse spirit."
2422. Bad smells are sometimes met by sprinkling a little liquid
chloride of lime on the floor; fumigation by burning pastiles is also a
common expedient for the purification of the sick-room. They are useful,
but only in the sense hinted at by the medical lecturer, who commenced
his lecture thus: - "Fumigations, gentlemen, are of essential importance;
they make so abominable a smell, that they compel you to open the
windows and admit fresh air." In this sense they are useful, but
ineffectual unless the cause be removed, and fresh air admitted.
2423. The sick-room should be quiet; no talking, no gossiping, and,
above all, no whispering; - this is absolute cruelty to the patient; he
thinks his complaint the subject, and strains his ear painfully to catch
the sound. No rustling of dresses, nor creaking shoes either; where the
carpets are taken up, the nurse should wear list shoes, or some other
noiseless material, and her dress should be of soft material that does
not rustle. Miss Nightingale denounces crinoline, and quotes Lord
Melbourne on the subject of women in the sick-room, who said, "I would
rather have men about me, when ill, than women; it requires very strong
health to put up with women." Ungrateful man! but absolute quiet is
necessary in the sick-room.
2424. Never let the patient be waked out of his first sleep by noise,
never roused by anything like a surprise. Always sit in the apartment,
so that the patient has you in view, and that it is not necessary for
him to turn in speaking to you. Never keep a patient standing; never
speak to one while moving. Never lean on the sick-bed. Above all, be
calm and decisive with the patient, and prevent all noises over-head.
2425. A careful nurse, when a patient leaves his bed, will open the
sheets wide, and throw the clothes back so as thoroughly to air the bed;
She will avoid drying or airing anything damp in the sick-room.
2426. "It is another fallacy," says Florence Nightingale, "to suppose
that night air is injurious; a great authority told me that, in London,
the air is never so good as after ten o'clock, when smoke has
diminished; but then it must be air from without, not within, and not
air vitiated by gaseous airs." "A great fallacy prevails also," she
says, in another section, "about flowers poisoning the air of the
sick-room: no one ever saw them over-crowding the sick-room; but, if
they did, they actually absorb carbonic acid and give off oxygen." Cut
flowers also decompose water, and produce oxygen gas. Lilies, and some
other very odorous plants, may perhaps give out smells unsuited to a
close room, while the atmosphere of the sick-room should always be fresh
and natural.
2427. "Patients," says Miss Nightingale, "are sometimes starved in the
midst of plenty, from want of attention to the ways which alone make it
possible for them to take food. A spoonful of beef-tea, or arrowroot and
wine, or some other light nourishing diet, should be given every hour,
for the patient's stomach will reject large supplies. In very weak
patients there is often a nervous difficulty in swallowing, which is
much increased if food is not ready and presented at the moment when it
is wanted: the nurse should be able to discriminate, and know when this
moment is approaching."
2428. Diet suitable for patients will depend, in some degree, on their
natural likes and dislikes, which the nurse will do well to acquaint
herself with. Beef-tea is useful and relishing, but possesses little
nourishment; when evaporated, it presents a teaspoonful of solid meat to
a pint of water. Eggs are not equivalent to the same weight of meat.
Arrowroot is less nourishing than flour. Butter is the lightest and most
digestible kind of fat. Cream, in some diseases, cannot be replaced.
But, to sum up with some of Miss Nightingale's useful maxims: Observation
is the nurse's best guide, and the patient's appetite the rule. Half a
pint of milk is equal to a quarter of a pound of meat. Beef-tea is the
least nourishing food administered to the sick; and tea and coffee, she
thinks, are both too much excluded from the sick-room.
|
|