Vermont Magazine | Page 63

Road in Sharon, Vermont although instructed in reading, writing, and the ground rules of arithmetic. His mother penned that the boy was often “given to meditation and deep study.” The year of 1811 brought horror to the Smith home when six of the children were diagnosed with typhoid fever. It was young Joseph who was struck hardest and would become prey to this awful disease. His leg would eventually become so infected that his physicians seriously discussed ampu- tation. Struck down with unspeakable pain that would have crippled an adult, young Joseph would go on to bear the agony of a grizzly procedure without any anesthesia. In “The History of Joseph Smith by His Mother,” Lucy Mack Smith delved into great detail about the boy’s anguish. “The surgeons commenced operating by boring into the bone of his leg, first on one side of the bone where it was affected, then on the other side, after which they broke it off with a pair of forceps or pincers. They thus took away large pieces of the bone. When they broke off the first piece, Joseph screamed out so loudly, that I could not forbear running to him. On my entering the room, he cried out, ‘Oh, mother, go back, go back; I do not want you to come in—I will try to tough it out, if you will go away.’ When the third piece was taken away, I burst into the room again—and oh, my God! What a spectacle for a mother’s eye! The wound torn open, the blood still gushing from it, and the bed literally covered with blood. Joseph was as pale as a corpse, and large drops of sweat were rolling down his face, whilst upon every feature was depicted the utmost agony! I was immediately forced from the room, and detained until the operation was completed; but when the act was accomplished, Joseph put upon a clean bed, the room cleared of every appearance of blood, and the instruments which were used in the operation removed, I was permitted again to enter.” Joseph would go on to later write of the incident: “I endured the most acute suffering for a long time under the care of Drs. Smith, Stone, and Perkins, of Ha- nover. At one time, 11 Doctors came from Dartmouth Medical College, at Hanover, New Hampshire, for the purpose of amputation, but, young as I was, I utterly refused to give my assent to the operation, but consented to their trying an experi- ment by removing a large portion of the bone from my left leg, which they did, and fourteen additional pieces of bone VTMAG.COM 2019 VTMAG.COM HOLIDAY HOLIDAY 2019 61 61