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"W'il ■ ,•■ ',: ;v Till',' .' oa the Popul; •:-i. :\i:-'-.-:. IJy J. Forste : .1 ;o:r ., s o." Pym, Elio , I ri' Mveii. . ;.; an Historic -'..la i'lcture 'jv Ci.> ;r.o)p. 5 vols. lis. 6 Ti.i (■•:,..■ <,:.i,' foZ«Hft'.<- ■!•;;< V . . Forster's ;.„-t--. . of LIV';-of thP :iic r.ntHRITISl WV : ■"t:>.\:l!.S. By .^r .^un.es ? .ackintos Right Hon. T. P. Courtenay, and J. Forste Esq. 7 vols. . ... 24s. 6 LI VES of the most Eminent ENGLISl POETS. By R. Beil, Esq. 2 vols. . i London: Longman^ Brown^ Green, and Longmans. I THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID THE MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH, AND THE MEDICAL ASPECTS OF THE HUMAN MIND. BY JAMES BOWER HAEEISON, M.R.C.S.L. ETC. FORMERLY ONE OF THE RESIDENT MEDICAL OFFICERS OF THE MANCHESTER KOVAL INFIRMARY", AND SURGEON TO THE ARDWICK AND ANCOATS DISPENSARY, ETC. LONDON : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, AND LONGMANS. 1852. cAMkoL London : Spottiswoodes and Shaw, New-street.Square. PREFACE. In youth it is not common to think much about death. A person would be considered to be of a very serious turn of mind who gave attention to such a subject in the earlier periods of his life. There comes a time, however, sooner or later, in which it is per- ceived that there is a reality in the meaning of the speeches we have so long unthinkingly made or heard others make. We wake up to the conviction that we are ourselves no exception to the rule ; in fact, to the con- viction that we shall die. Already we find ourselves in the middle period of life ; already the scene is shifting, and we begin to perceive that it will shift still more. It wants no great A 2 [virfR?;.S'^"i iv PREFACE. exhortation, then, to see that every one is in- dividually interested in all that relates to death. A person must be wanting in reflection if he does not consider, at least when he has made some progress in life, that he will very soon find himself at his journey's end. It is natural then to have a curiosity about death ; and it is partly with a view to satisfy this curiosity, and partly with a view to fill up the intervals left by more arduous professional studies, that I have written what follows. But some will say the subject is a distasteful one, and, like Hotspur's fop, be offended that a slovenly, unhandsome corse should be brought between the wind and their nobility. The true nobility of the mind does not, however, shrink from contemplating human nature in all its phases, untricked out with ornament or dis- guised by forms. I am sure the reader who has the curiosity to look at these pages will not be wanting in such nobility of mind. In order to relieve the subject, I have pur- posely introduced more collateral matter than PREFACE. V might be absolutely necessary for its eluci- dation. I have never thought it essential that a book should be dry in order to be useful. The second paper in this volume I have been induced to reprint from the Psychological Journal, because it has received the appro- bation of many friends in whose judgment I am pleased to confide. I am aware that it contains remarks to which some may take ex- ception ; but I write not to echo the sentiments of others, but to make known my own. I regret that at the time I wrote it 1 had not had the advantage of reading the very able remarks of Dr. Conolly, in his Croonian lectures delivered before the College of Physicians. The fearless and humane character of these lectures deserves a higher praise than it is in the author's power to bestow. Higher Broughton, Manchester, 1851. CONTENTS Page The Medical Aspects of Death - - 1 The Medical Aspects or the Human Mind - 113 THE MEDICAL ASPECTS OE DEATH, Hamlet. Pr'ythee, Horatio, tell me one thing. Hor. What's that, my lord ? Ham. Dost thou think Alexander looked o' this fashion i' the earth ' Hor. Even so. Ham. And smelt so? pah! Hor. Even so, my lord. Shakspeare. THE MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH, "Dost thou think Alexander looked o' this fashion i' the earth ? " How pregnant is such a question with meaning, — the noble dust of Alexander hke the corrupting skull of the king's jester ! How natural to ask ourselves the question, Shall we also look o' this fashion i' the earth ? — we want no Horatio to answer, "Even so." But though it is common to speak of death, I do not think it is very com- mon to consider it. We are, in truth, too much afraid to look at it in its physical aspects. The subject may seem repulsive, but it is one which a rational being should not altogether B 2 4 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. disregard, because many practical advantages arise from making it an object of study. It must be remembered that it is a privilege peculiar to human nature, to preconsider the last moments of existence. But I am not one of those who would wish to throw a gloom upon life, and carry the skull round at the feast — I would rather throw the light of reason, as far as it will shine, on the mysteries of the grave. How interesting are our first impressions of death ! — when we first looked timidly at the familiar features of a dear parent stiffened and pinched with the hand of death ! Who cannot recall to mind that cold apartment which had so lately been the scene of anxious watching and tender solicitude, — the formal sheeted corse, — the appalling stillness of the com- pressed lip and icy coldness of that last kiss? It is at such times that the feelings rise to the noblest sentiments of our nature, and we see the littleness of human ambition, and the emptiness of our fondest wishes; — at these periods alone can we perceive the real signi- iS 3IEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 5 ficance of life, for then the hurry of business is suspended, and there is a pause in the drama of events. It would be curious to trace the forms and ceremonies which surviving friends have adopted to show their respect for the dead. The custom of strewing flowers on the tomb is, perhaps, one of the most simple and touch- ing. This custom is beautifully alluded to in Cymbeline": — " With fairest flowers, Whilst summer lasts and I live here, Fidele, I'll sweeten thy sad grave : thou shalt not lack The flower that's like thy face, pale primi-ose, nor The azure hare-bell like thy veins ; no nor The leaf of eglantine, whom not to slander, Outsweeten'd not thy breath." I shall not stop, however, to dwell on these topics, nor describe the '^ trappings and suits of woe," which are not always the accompani- ments of real grief. The nodding plumes and lengthened processions of the great only betray how little wealth and rank can rescue their B 3 6 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. possessors from the common fate of human kind. In how many cases might we not say, with Byron, — "Of all The fools who flock'd to swell or see the show, Who cared about the corpse ? the funeral Made the attraction, and the black the woe." * The Signs of death are important in a medi- cal point of view ; for though the extinction of life is generally too apparent to admit of ques- tion, there can be no doubt but that occasional errors have arisen. In most of these cases, it is certain that undue haste and culpable care- lessness have contributed to the result ; but we all feel so deeply the horror of such mistakes, that some fear is excusable, even when we have no apprehension of such carelessness on the part of those who may have to do the last offices for ourselves. In all periods the subject of premature interment has excited great in- * Byron's Vision of Judgment. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 7 terest, and the very fears which have been entertained have been the occasion of many- stories equally marvellous and horrible. In order to provide against premature inter- ment, the Eomans are said to have waited seven days before they interred the dead; those who had charge of the corpse calling the name of the deceased many times in a loud voice. It was this custom which constituted the Conclamatio, Just before the body was finally buried, the name was again loudly called ; and then it was considered proper to enter on the funeral ceremonies. Terence makes allusion to this custom when he says, "Desine, — jam conclamatum est." If we are to believe French writers, it would seem that, formerly, premature interments were very common in France. It is to be hoped, however, that many of their statements are exaggerated or incorrect. Bruhier has col- B 4 8 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. lected together upwards of 180 cases, in which mistakes were made as to the signs of death : of these, 52 were interred alive, 4 opened before death, 53 recovered spontaneously after having been shut up in the coffin (renfermees dans le cerceuil), 72 reputed dead without being so. At the same time that we are happy to think that Bruhier must have greatly in- dulged his imagination, it is probable that the French hospitals may have been the scene of many culpable errors. Louis, in his more able letter on the Signs of Death, which was published in 1752, relates the case of a young woman, en couches ^ who left the Hotel-Dieu on account of the pre- valence of an epidemic, and sought refuge at the Hopital de la Salpetriere. On her way she fainted twice, and again on her arrival fell into a fainting fit. She was thought by the sisters of charity to be dead, and remained two hours exposed in the court to a rigorous cold. She was then carried into the salle des morts (dead-house). Some time afterwards, a pupil MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 9 hearing groans, came affrighted to inform Louis. Louis went to the spot, but found her ah^eady dead; though she had made efforts to get extricated from the winding sheet in which she was enveloped, and had one foot on the ground, out of the litter, and an arm leaning on the bar of the trestle of a dissecting table, by the side of which she had been placed.* Many of the stories told of persons being buried alive, partake too much of the mar- vellous, to meet with unqualified acceptance. In periods of great mortality, and when epi- demics have raged, there can be little doubt, however, that such instances have occurred. The philanthropic Howard, in his work on Prisons, says : — "I have known instances where persons, supposed to be dead of the gaol fever and brought out for burial, on being washed with cold water, have shown signs of life, and soon afterwards recovered." I have * Art. Inliumations precipitees : Diet, de Mcdecine et de Chii'urgie. 10 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. myself frequently heard people express their fears of being interred alive. I remember a young lady who, on her death-bed, made a solemn appeal to her father, that her body might be thrown into the sea as soon as it should be known that she was dead. Her father properly and ingeniously opposed her wish, in expressing his desire that her remains should rest in the same grave with his own. A lady in Manchester had so strong a fear of being buried alive, that she left a sum of money, the interest of which was to be received only on conditions that her body was kept above ground. The body was bound over closely like a mummy, and was deposited in the Natural History Museum, where, I believe, it may still be seen by the curious. Perhaps this feeling had been induced by some circumstances in her life, which had rendered her extremely fearful of such mis- takes. Dr. Paris tells us, " that the daughter of Henry Laurens, the first president of the Ame- MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 11 rican Congress, when an infant, was laid out as dead of the smallpox ; upon which the window of the apartment, that had been carefully closed during the progress of the disease, was thrown open to ventilate the chamber, when the fresh air revived the supposed corpse, and restored her to her family: this circumstance occasioned in her father so powerful a dread of living interment, that he directed by will that his body should be burnt, and enjoined on his children the performance of this wish as a sacred duty."* Amongst the ordinary signs of death the absence of respiration is that which is most popular, but at the same time the most likely to deceive. To ascertain whether the breath- ing be entirely suspended, it is a common practice to hold a looking-glass to the face, that the respiration may be indicated by the mist on its surface. * Medical Jurisprudence, p. 5. 12 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. In King Lear we have the passage — " Lend me a looking glass ; If that her breath will mist or stain the stone, Why, then she lives." Act V. So. III. For the same reason the stirring of any- light substance, such as down, which may rest about the mouth, has been regarded as a fine indication of the act of respiration; but this, like the mist on the looking-glass, is but a deceptive or inaccurate method ; and Shaks- peare accordingly represented Prince Henry as having been deceived, when he carried oif the crown from his father's pillow — " By his gates of breath There lies a downy feather which stirs not ; Did he suspire, that light and weightless down Perchance must move." * If the observance of the respiration be taken as the indication of life, and its absence as a proof of death, the exposure of the naked chest * For the suggestion of these apt quotations, I am In- debted to Paris's Med. Jurisprudence. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 13 and abdomen would enable the spectator to form a much more accurate appreciation of it, especially if it be made carefully and for a sufficient length of time. One indication of death is found in the Rigidity of the corpse. It is true that persons in some nervous diseases have been represented as closely assimilating the dead, even with re- spect to the stiffness of the body. The pro- fessional man could scarcely, however, be deceived by such cases. The stiffness of death is often not fairly established until the body is already cold*, and, when overcome by pressure, does not return, as the contractions which arise from nervous causes. Some cases of catalepsy have been related which are in- deed very astonishing, but, as I have said, they could only deceive unprofessional people, and those not familiar with the appearances of a corpse. * Sommer observed, that, contrary to the statement of Nysten, the body became rigid before it was completely cold. 14 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. The rigidity of death appears to come on with various degrees of rapidity, and its dura- tion is also various. It usually commences in about seven hours*, but it may be deferred considerably longer, even to twenty or thirty hours. When the body is greatly weakened by disease, the rigidity conies on much sooner, but is more evanescent. It has been known to arise in fifteen or twenty minutes. Again, in its duration there is much variety; ordi- narily it exists from twenty-four to thirty-six hours, but may continue many days. Much may be supposed to depend on the humidity and warmth of the atmosphere. There is something singular in this stiffening of the body. It seems like the final act of life, and has been supposed to be the last effort of muscular power. Every one must be struck with the analogy it presents to the coagulation of the blood ; and, indeed, it has been ima- gined by some physiologists that it was * According to Sommer, seldom if ever later. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 15 dependent on that cause. This does not appear in reality to be the case ; but there are still many interesting points of similarity between these phenomena, and they are both probably dependent on the last efforts of life. The rigidity of the corpse is, perhaps, never entirely wanting, though it may be brief in particular cases. It does not seem to be confined to the exter- nal muscles of the body, but is also evident, and indeed particularly manifested, in the heart and great blood-vessels. The walls of the heart contract forcibly after the external signs of death, and the arteries also contract, and propel their contents into the veins. Before this cir- cumstance w^as properly understood, it was common to suppose that this contracted state of the heart was the result of disease ; and even in modern times this error has been made. In the same way the ancients Avere misled by this contraction ; for, as they found the arteries void of blood, they regarded them as tubes for the conveyance of air ; and in this way arose the 16 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. term artery (a^p, air; TYjpsM, to keep), improperly used to indicate a blood-vessel. The rapidity with which the body cools after death, must be very dependent on the circum- stances in which it is placed, and the manner in which it is clothed. According to Dr. Taylor, the average time is about fifteen or sixteen hours when not much clad, and when the temperature is about 60°. He has known a body keep warm thirty or forty hours ; and as he remarks, the heat would obviously remain the longest, when the death was violent and the person robust. There is always, how^ever, some uncertainty in judging of the period of death by the warmth of the body.* It is a curious fact in relation to the tempe- rature of the body, that in cases of Asiatic cholera, the body, previously quite cold, has become warm immediately before, or even after death.! * See Guy's Hospital Keports, p. 388. vol. vii. 1851, Remarks on Strangulation. I See Alison's Pathology. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 17 The effects of Stimulants in producing mus- cular contractions soon after the cessation of all outward signs of vitality, are curious and interesting. When punctures are made in the limbs or heart, contractions follow, and in some cases alternate contractions and relaxations continue for some time. The most astonishing experiments of this kind are, however, those made by the agency of galvanism on the human body. The appearances produced by it are of the most frightful nature, and awaken horrible fancies on the mind of the spectator; — the eyes roll wildly, and the countenance is distorted with ghastly grins, whilst the limbs move in forcible and convulsive actions. The most suc- cessful effort to resuscitate by galvanism, was that made on the body of John White, who was executed for a murder at Louisville. The particulars are given in the Annals of Electricity. The body, after hanging twenty- five minutes, was cut down, and, whilst yet warm, and even trembling, was subjected to c 18 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the stimulus of galvanism. The man suddenly- rose from his bench to a sitting posture, after- wards stood on his feet, opened his eyes, and gave a terrific screech. His chest worked as if in respiration. One of the surgeons present exclaimed that he was alive. On another shock being given, he jumped up with a sudden bound, disenoaojed himself from the wires, and ran into a corner of the room. He frequently opened his eyes, and the breathing became so regular, that many addressed him, but he made no sign of understanding. Nevertheless, by the assistance of a medical student, he took a few steps on the floor, and seated himself in an arm-chair. He seemed like a man intoxicated, and overcome with the exertion he had made. Every effort was put in practice to equalise the circulation ; but congestion of the brain event- ually came on, and terminated his existence. A man of the name of Clydesdale, who was executed for murder at Glasgow, was also made the subject of a similar experiment. In respect to the application of stimulants, MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 19 it is not likely that the more powerful, such as electricity or galvanism, will be made use of by any other than medical men ; and this mode of testing the continuance of life is therefore more interesting in a physiological point of view, than useful in its practical application. Cold water to the face and sinapisms to the feet are often employed in the last moments of life, — if not to test the existence of vitality, at least to act as curative agents. When Putrefaction commences, there can, of course, be no longer any doubt of the de- parture of life, — premising, that the putre- faction is general, and not of a local kind. There is nothing more appalling and humilia- ting than the decomposition of the dead ; " Before Decay's effacing fingers Have swept the lines where Beauty lingers," we may, indeed, persuade ourselves, that the dead are only silent and unmovable ; but when changes gradually manifest themselves, and we can no longer recognise the familiar features c 2 20 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. we have so often looked upon, we see the greatness of that alteration, and feel what it is to die. Shall we " look upon those lips that we have kissed we know not how oft," pale, cold, and repulsive, and not experience the immensity of this change ! The peculiar cadaverous odour of the body- is well known to most people, and the ap- pearances of incipient putrefaction need no explanation. The finer changes are, perhaps, best indicated by the flaccidity of the cornea, and the loss of transparency in the eye. These can seldom be mistaken by medical men, though death may undoubtedly take place before they are strikingly apparent. Amongst other indications of decomposition, the gravi- tation and transudation of the blood to the surface on which the body lies, are important subjects for consideration, because they have been mistaken by persons ignorant of such matters for indications of injuries and bruises. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 21 They often present very singular lines and marks, and have certainly a very close resem- blance to the extravasations produced by blows. These marks have been termed sugillations, — the term sugillation is rather an awkward word, but it is derived from the Latin sugillatio, which sisrnifies a black mark. Several instances are recorded of their being mistaken for the ecchymoses produced by blows. Belloc relates an instance where a woman, who was pregnant, was ill-treated by her hus- band, who kicked her on the thigh and abdo- men. She subsequently fell ill of the small- pox, and died. The second day of the fever she had an abundant haemorrhage from the nose, the blood being dissolved and hlack {dis- sous et tres noir). She died covered with sugil- lations, and some traces of the small-pox. It then became a question, whether she had died from violence. The body was exhumed for the purpose of inspection, but the medical men who made the examination concluded that her c 3 22 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. death was the result of the epidemic small- pox.* Beck, in a note, quotes a case from Phillips's Law of Evidence, of a John Stringer, who was tried for the murder of his wife, in the year 1765. It appeared that they had often quar- relled; and a young surgeon gave it as his opinion that the marks found on the body had the appearances of mortification produced by bruises. The man was found guilty ; but a Mr. Carsan, an eminent surgeon, who had from mere curiosity also examined the body, was convinced that the marks were those of incipient putrefaction; and on the case being fairly represented to the Archbishop of Canterbury, a complete pardon was eventually obtained.! Sugillations may be distinguished from ecchymoses, by their being found only on the more dependent parts of the body, or those which have already been dependent, and from * Belloc, Cours de Medicine Legale, p. 318. t Medical Jurisprudence, p. 492. Edit, for 1838. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 23 their not being accompanied by corresponding subcutaneous extravasations. In the case of su- gillations, therefore, if the skin be fairly divided, the livid appearance will not be found traceable to any more deeply-seated cause. The blood, too, in the case of sugillations is thin and fluid from its decomposition ; whereas, in the lividity from blows, clots are commonly found beneath the spot indicated. But the effects of gra- vitation are not only to be taken into consi- deration in estimating the external appearances of the body, but also in considering the in- ternal parts ; and this is of great consequence in the appreciation of the appearances supposed to be the result of disease. Sometimes discolourations of the body after death assume the appearance of stripes, as if the subject had been previously beaten. The term Vihices {yibex, a stripe) has been adopted to express this appearance. Certainly, any one not previously aware that such marks are com- mon, would be strongly tempted to suppose that they were produced by flagellation. It seems c 4 24 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. that these marks are caused by the dress and Avrappings of the corpse causing the transu- dation of the blood to be determined to par- ticular parts. In the year 1837, M. P. Manni, professor in the University of Rome, offered to the Academy of Sciences, to place at its disposal the sum of 1500 francs, to be given to the author of the best memoir on the question of apparent death. In the same year the Academy proposed the following questions on the subject for a prize: 1. What are the distinctive cha- racters of apparent death? 2. What are the means to prevent premature interment ? It was not until the year 1846 that any memoir appeared which Avas considered worthy of the prize ; and it was then adjudicated to M. Bouchut, whose treatise is now before the public* It appears from M. Bouchut's able researches, * Traite des Sigiies tie la Mort, et des Moyens de pre- venir les Enterrements prematures. Par E. Bouchut, Paris, ehez J. B. Baillicre, 1849. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 25 that the sounds of the heart, as indicated by the stethoscope, are never entirely wanting, except in real death ; and that the longest interval between the last beats of the heart is about six or seven seconds. These, there- fore, are very important points in ascertaining the departure of life at the earliest possible period. The remarks of M. Bouchut are in- deed such as must naturally recommend them- selves to our reason; but he is the first who has fairly made the state of the heart in ap- parent death the subject of direct observation and experiment. M. Bouchut further insisted on the complete dilatation of the pupil as a corroborative sign of death, remarking that, though contracted in the death struggle, it afterwards and speedily becomes dilated ; so truly may we say that, " la pupille est la fenetre de I'ame." It would seem, then, that the indications of death are sufficiently marked to render it im- probable that premature interment can often take place ; and whenever this occurs, it must 26 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. be the result of great carelessness, ignorance, and haste. Even the alterations which take place after the body is committed to the grave, have engaged the attention of medical inquirers, and M. Orfila, in his treatise on Judicial Ex- humations, has brought forward much curious matter respecting them. It is not very pro- bable that the features of the dead can be recognized after fourteen or fifteen days' inter- ment ; and in three or four months all vestiges of the face are destroyed. In cases, however, where pains are taken to exclude the air, the preservation may be wonderfully protracted; and on this point I may add some very interesting particulars relative to the posthumous examination of the body of Charles I. Until a recent period, doubt had been enter- tained as to the precise spot where the remains of Charles I. were buried. In the progress of some alterations which were made in connexion with the tomb-house MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 27 of St. George's Chapel, an aperture was acci- dentally made in Henry YIII.'s vault, through which the workmen saw two coffins, supposed to contain the bodies of Henry VIII. and Jane Seymour, and a third covered with a black velvet pall which, from Mr. Herbert's narrative (Athen^e Oxonienses), was conjec- tured to contain the body of Charles I. By the desire of the Prince Regent, and in his presence, an examination of this latter was made on the 1st of April, 1813. On removing the pall a plain leaden coffin was discovered, on which were inscribed, in large letters. King Charles, 1648. A square opening was made into the upper part of the lid, and through this a wooden coffin was seen, very much decayed, inclosing the body, carefully wrapped up in cere-cloth. It appeared that a quantity of greasy and resinous matter had been melted into the coffin so as to fill it completely, and exclude the air. It was not an easy matter to detach the cere-cloth from the body, except at such parts as were covered with unctuous 28 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. matter, and these presented a correct impres- sion of the features to which they had been applied. When the face was at length uncovered, it presented a dark discoloured appearance, but the forehead and temples had lost nothing of their muscular substance, and the face was long and oval. The cartilage of the nose was gone ; the left eye was open and full when first exposed, but it rapidly vanished. The pointed beard, so characteristic of this period, was perfect. Many of the teeth remained, and the left ear was found entire. It was im- possible not to perceive the likeness which still remained to the coins and busts, and especially the pictures of the king by Vandyke. When the cere-cloth was sufficiently disengaged, the head was found loose and detached from the body ; the hair was thick at the back part of the neck, and had been apparently cut short for the convenience of the executioner. At first it seemed black, but when cleaned and dried, presented a beautiful brown colour. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 29 The fourth cervical vertebra was cut trans- versely and smoothly, as if from a heavy blow of a sharp instrument. The examination having proceeded thus far, was thought to be sufficient to identify the body, and the head was immediately restored, and the coffin soldered up again. The other coffins were not disturbed ; but the larger one, which is believed to have contained Henry YIIL, and was six feet ten inches in length, was beaten in, as if by violence, and its outer wooden covering was decayed, and In small fragments. Through the opening the skeleton of the king might be perceived, but there was nothing found of a discriminative character, and no inscription on the coffin. It is supposed, that the coffin of King Henry had been Injured by the pre- cipitous introduction of that of King Charles, at a period when little respect was paid to the remains of monarchs. It may be interesting to add, that a very small mahogany coffin, covered with crimson velvet, lay on the pall which covered King Charles, and contained 30 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the still-born child of the Princess Georo'e of o Denmark, afterwards Queen Anne.* If the fear of premature interment be not unnatural, the fear of death itself is obviously less so. In some cases, however, illness gradually re- moves this dread, and the change is welcomed, and even earnestly desired ; the sufferer has ceased to take an interest in the things around him: they have lost all the charms they bor- rowed from hope and anticipation, and he has no future earthly prospect but the grave. But even where the act of dying is dreaded, there are many who would not altogether be ignorant of the change. I have known people express a strange fear of dying whilst they are asleep. I was once earnestly asked by a patient who Avas on her death bed to awaken her if I thought she was dying. I should imagine that this fear was not uncommon; for I have heard it named more than once * See Sir H. Halford's Essays. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 31 in my own experience. In a very interesting memoir of Mr. Edgeworth, a part of which is autobiographical, the w^riter states that his wife expressed this dread ; but, alas ! the sleep of death is one from which we cannot awaken our dearest friends ! " Three days before she died," says Mr. Edgeworth, " I was suddenly called up to her room. I found her in violent convulsions. Youth, beauty, grace, charms of person and accomplishments of mind, reduced to the ex- treme of human misery, must have wrung the most obdurate heart. What must her hus- band feel at such a moment ? I felt her pulse, and whispered, ^ You are not dying ; ' she looked at me with an effort of resolution and kindness to thank me. 7f! y(^ ^ tf ^ T^ " She soon fell asleep, and awakened smiling. ' I am smiling,' said she, * at my asking you to sit beside me as a sort of protection, and at my being afraid to die in my sleep, when I never felt afraid of dying when awake.' " 32 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. Sometimes consciousness remains to the last moment of existence, and even when the tongue refuses to speak, the wistful eye and wave of the hand serve to impress the dying injunction. How beautifully and truly is this pictured in the story of Lefevre, where the poor soldier looks first at his son, and then at my Uncle Toby ; " and the ligature, fine as it is, was never broken ! " When death is inevitable, it becomes the duty of a medical man to consider the pro- priety of informing his patient of his condition. The subject is very ably treated in a paper by Sir H. Halford ; and written in his usual classical style. Sir Henry thinks it desirable that the physician should make known his opinion rather to the friends than to the patient, and allow the friends themselves to be the means of communicating the intelli- gence to the sick. " They do so," he says, " without destroying his hopes, for the patient will still believe that he has an appeal to his physician beyond their fears ; whereas, if the MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 33 physician lay open his clanger to him, however delicately he may do this, he runs a risk of appearing to pronounce a sentence of con- demnation to death, against which there is no appeal." * Sir H. Halford goes on to say, "that in the case of his late majesty (alluding to George lY., who died on the 25th of June, 1830), the Government and the royal family ■were informed, on the 27th of April, that his majesty's disease was seated in his heart, and that an effusion of water into the chest was soon to be expected. It was not, however, until the latter end of May, when his majesty was so discouraged by repeated attacks of embarrassment in his breathing, as to desire me to explain to him the nature of his com- plaint, and to give him my candid opinion of its probable termination, that the opportunity occurred of acknowledging to his majesty the extent of my fears for his safety. This com- munication was not necessary to suggest to * Influence of Disease on the JMind, Essays and Ora- tions, p. 83. D 34 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the king tlie propriety of religious offices, for his majesty had used them daily ; but it determined him, perhaps, to appoint an early day to receive the sacrament. He did receive it with every appearance of the most fervent piety and devotion, and acknowledged to me repeatedly afterwards, that it had given him great consolation, true comfort. After this, when 'he had set his house in order,' I thought myself at liberty to interpret every new symptom, as it arose, in as favourable a light as I could, for his majesty's satisfaction ; and we were enabled thereby to rally his spirits in the intervals of his frightful attacks, to main- tain his confidence in his medical resources, and to spare him the pain of contemplating approaching death, until a few minutes before his majesty expired." The changes which immediately precede death are, of course, more or less painful, according to their nature and severity ; yet there can be no doubt but that dissolution itself is the cessation of suffering. In some MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 35 instances the approach of death is betokened by strange and awful sensations ; and it is probable that where consciousness remains to the last, the feelings are always peculiar and unmistakeable. These premonitions of death often give rise to a degree of restlessness, and a wish for change, which is odd and capricious in its manifestations. Persons who have long re- mained tranquil will suddenly express a desire to be dressed and go down stairs, or have their beds moved to another position. Strange yearnings for particular places and old scenes sometimes arise, which seem like the shadowing forth of dim instincts, which have been con- cealed in the recesses of the mind. How pain- fully must such longings have been felt when death has hovered over the couch in the wild and inhospitable districts of the tropics, or the frozen regions of the extreme north ! With the exception of those who are worn down by long illness, or reduced to despair by mental anguish and misfortune, there are few D 2 36 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. who can believe that they have accomplished all the purposes of life; and we naturally look forward to the infirmities of old age to wean us from the interests of the world. But even then we are reluctant to leave ; and it is only when deserted by friends, that we can say in the words of the poet, — " I have liv'd long enough ; my way of life Is fall'n into the sear — the yellow leaf." In speaking of others it is common to regard life as properly terminating when usefulness, activity, and fortune are declining. When, reverses succeed a happy and prosperous career, we say that existence has been too protracted : it is on this account that the poets have spoken of the happiest moment of life as the most proper time for death ; a notion certainly more poetical than rational. Thus, in Don Juan, Byron says, speaking of his lovers, — " Why did they Then not die ? — they had Kv'd too long Should an hour come to bid them breathe apart." Canto IV. V. 28. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 37 And Shakspeare makes Othello exclaim : — " If I were now to die, 'Twere now to be most happy ; for I fear My soul hath her content so absolute, That not another comfort like to this Succeeds in unknown fate." I might bring forward many other illus- trations of the same kind, but it would only be to digress. There is, in truth, in many minds a fearful presentiment that great happiness cannot be of long duration ; but if the pros- perous periods of life are those which seem to form the natural climax and terminating point of life, they are those in which we could least bear the loss of others. The sudden removal of one who is in the very midst of his usefulness, in whose success we had "gar- nered up our hearts," creates a revulsion of feeling which poor humanity can ill support. The consolations of religion are the only con- solations which deserve the name, and it is the idea alone that separation is temporary, that can stem the torrent of overpowering grief. D 3 38 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. It is the anticipation of a re-union hereafter which throws the only ray of light that can penetrate the gloom of the mourner's mind. He is yet to have a meeting beyond the grave ; and whilst this idea mitigates grief, it renders the prospect of death itself less terrible. It was in this way that Mrs. Garrick endea- voured to remove the terrors of death, after the loss of the great actor. On the 20th of April, 1781, Boswell writes, " Mrs. Garrick had this day, for the first time since his death (her husband's), a select party of his friends to dine with her. The company were Miss Hannah More, who lived with her, and whom she called her chaplain; Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs. Elizabeth Carter, Sir Joshua Eeynolds, Dr. Burney,Dr. Johnson, and myself. We found ourselves very elegantly entertained at her house in the Adelphi, where I have passed many a pleasing hour with him ^ who gladdened life.' She looked well, talked of her husband with complacency ; and while she cast her eyes on his portrait which hung over the chimney- MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 39 piece, said that ^ death was now the most agreeable object to her.' " The uncertainty and brevity of life would furnish fit topics for medical as well as for moral reflection. How often must they pre- sent themselves to the physician's mind ! — Sometimes he meets death in early tender infancy ; — sometimes in robust manhood ; — sometimes in feeble old age; — sometimes in the sudden apoplexy ; — sometimes in the wasting consumption. As he looks upon the aged sufferer, he must often call to mind how transient are youth and beauty, and the boast of manly strength and of womanly elegance. It is with something of this feeling that the following passage will be read which I extract from Andersen's Story of My Life. As a little boy, Andersen had formerly seen the great actress, the Donau-weibchen, at the theatre of Odense. He saw how much she was honoured, and the homage that was paid to her. " Many years afterwards," says he, D 4 40 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. "when, as a student, I visited Odense, I saw in one of the chambers of the Hospital, where the poor widows lived, and where one bed stood by another, a female portrait, hanging over one bed in a gilt frame. " It was Lessing's Emelia Galotti, and repre- sented her as pulling the rose to pieces; but the picture was a portrait. It appeared singular in contrast with the poverty by which it was surrounded. et e l^Jiom does it represent ? ' asked I. " ' Oh,' said one of the old women, ' it is the face of the German lady who was once an actress.' And then I saw a little delicate woman, whose face was covered with wrinkles, and in an old silk gown that once had been black. This was the once celebrated singer, who, as the Donau-weibchen, had been ap- plauded by every one."* But if life is but brief and vain in the re- trospect of age, how shall we speak of it with the uncertainties of the most promising career ? * Hans Christian Andersen's Story of My Life, trans- lated by Mary Howitt, p. 114. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 41 In the spring of 1781, all the talent and fashion of London had been invited to the town-house of Mr. Thrale in Grosvenor square, to partake of a sumptuous entertainment. On the dawn which followed that very night, the owner of the mansion had terminated his existence in an attack of apoplexy. — The same catastrophe, perhaps, now awaits many who are looking to the future with equal joy and with equal promise. The hodily changes which immediately pre- cede, and, in some sense, may be said to consti- tute, death, deserve and repay consideration. It might seem, on a first attention, that the modes in which death takes place are so vari- ous, and the diseases to which the human frame is liable so numerous, that it would be impos- sible to reduce the subject to any simple and practical form of inquiry. It will be found, however, on a more inti- mate acquaintance, that much advantage may be gained by classification and arrangement. 42 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. and a sort of analysis made which requires no forced construction, and no metaphysical nicety. Death may indeed be said to begin at differ- ent parts of the body, according as they are severally the first to suffer those irreparable and grave changes which issue in the destruc- tion of life. It will be found that the nature, symptoms, and peculiarities of the act of dying, are determined by the organ first mortally attacked; so that, by considering the subject in relation to these parts, we are assisted in ar- ranging our ideas. The alterations which directly occasion disso- lution seem principally effective, either in the arrest of the circulation or the respiration ; and the manner in which they tell in producing these effects, will now, therefore, briefly, come under our consideration. As the heart is the great mover of the circu- lation, we can easily conceive that whatever brings it to a stop must be fatal to life. Ex- tensive losses of blood operate in this manner, MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 43 and they furnish us with a good illustration of the manner in which death takes place. The sufferer becomes pale and faint, his lips white and trembling ; after a while the breathing be- comes distressed, and a rushing noise seems to fill the ears. The pulse is soft, feeble, and wavering; and the exhaustion and prostration are more and more alarming. Soon a curious restlessness arises, and he tosses himself from side to side. At length the pulse becomes un- certain, and the blood is feebly thrown to the brain. The surface assumes an icy coldness. The mind is yet untouched, and the sufferer knows himself to be dying. In vain the pulse is sought at the wrist — in vain efforts are made to re-excite warmth — the body is like a living corpse. Now a few convulsive gaspings arise, and the countenance sets in the stiff image of death. Such are the more striking phenomena which attend the fatal haemorrhages. The failure of the vital powers, from the withdrawal of blood, may be regarded as a sort of type of this mode of death, since the various 44 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. symptoms which have been named, arise from the cessation of the healthy circulation. A dread of the loss of blood may almost be considered as an instinctive feeling ; at any rate its importance is early impressed on the mind, and is never forgotten. In childhood it is looked at with alarm ; and the stoutest mind, cannot but view with horror those perilous gushes of blood which bring us into the very jaws of destruction. The description which Byron gives us of Manfred's death, may be considered as a highly poetical representation of the state we have portrayed. " Abbot. Alas ! how pale thou art — thy Hps are white — And thy breast heaves — and in thy gasping thi'oat The accents rattle — Give thy prayers to heaven — Pray — albeit but in thought, — but die not thus. Manfi^ed. 'Tis over — my dull eyes can fix thee not ; But all things swim around me, and the earth Heaves as it were beneath me. Fare thee well — Give me thy hand." ^ Gradually exhausting complaints, such as interfere with the nutrition of the body, act MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 45 much in the same manner as dh^ect losses of blood, but obviously more slowly. Privations of various kinds and wasting complaints which impair the general strength, tell at last, in ex- hausting the heart's power, and life terminates in the gradual failure of the circulation of the blood. In chronic ailments, the weary sufferer feels the extreme exhaustion which months and years of suffering have produced. He cannot lift himself in bed — he fears to raise his head, and can scarcely grasp the extended hand of friendship, or return the pressure of affection. The heart's power is at last fatally depressed. The following, which is quoted from Thack- rah's work on Digestion and Diet, is extracted from Hufeland's Journal, and gives an interest- ing picture of the effects of extreme abstinence. " A German merchant, a3t. 32, depressed by severe reverses of fortune and consequent slights of his relatives, formed the resolution of destroying himself by abstinence. With this view he repaired on the 15th of September, 1818, to an unfrequented wood, where he con- 46 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. structed a hut of boughs, and remained without food till the 3rd of October following. 'At this period he was found by the landlord of a neigh- bouring pothouse, still alive, but feeble, speech- less, and insensible. Broth, with yolk of an egg, was given him. He swallowed it with difficulty, and died immediately. In the pocket of the unfortunate man was found a journal written in pencil, singular in its kind, and re- markable as a narrative of his feelings and sen- timents. It begins thus : — " The generous philanthropist who shall one day find me here after my death, is requested to inter me ; and, in consideration of this service, to keep my clothes, purse, knife, and letter-case. I more- over observe that I am no suicide, but have died of hunger, because, through wicked men, I have lost the whole of my very considerable property, and am unwilling to become a burden to my friends." The ensuing remark is dated Sept. 17th, the second day of abstinence. "I yet live ; but how have I been soaked during the night, and how cold has it been ! O God ! MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 47 when will mj sufferings terminate ! No human being has for three days been seen here — only- some birds." The next extract continues — " And again three days ; and I have been so soaked during the night, that my clothes to-day are not yet dry. How hard is this, no one knows ; and my last hour must soon arrive. Doubtless during the heavy rain a little water has got into my throat, but the thirst is not to be slaked with water ; moreover, I have had none even of this for six days, since I am no longer able to move from the place. Yester- day, for the first time during the eternity which, alas ! I have already passed here, a man ap- proached me within the distance of eight or ten paces. He was certainly a shepherd ; I sa- luted him in silence, and he returned it in the same manner. Probably he wdll find me after my death ! Finally, I here protest before the all-wise God, that notwithstanding all the misfortunes which I have suffered from my youth, I yet die very unwillingly ; although ne- cessity has imperiously driven me to it. Never- 48 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. theless, I pray for it. — More can I not write for faintness and spasms ; and this will be the last. Dated near Forest, by the side of the Goat public-house, Sept. 29th, 1818.— J. F. N." Stories are related of persons remaining months, and even years, without food ; but they are unworthy of belief. It is not probable that life can be continued many days without food ; and a week is perhaps an average period, if fluids also be withheld. In the hospitals for the insane, instances are sometimes met with of obstinate refusal of food, and in these cases of insanity it seems that the abstinence is better tolerated. In the brute creation fast- ing is more endui'able. Miiller says, referring to Tiedemann, that salamanders, tortoises, and gold fish may be kept for years without food ; some birds from twenty-five to twenty- eight days; and dogs for twenty-five to thirty-six days. Some time after I had entered into the medi- cal profession, but whilst yet a pupil, I was in- MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 49 vited by a fellow-student to dine with him. Whilst we were chattins: too-ether after dinner, we fell into conversation respecting a man who had recently died from an extensive burn. The gentleman's father, who was an intelligent man, overheard our remarks, and joining in the conversation, asked me to explain to him how it happened that the burn occasioned death. I attempted an explanation, but soon felt my incompetence to offer a satisfactory reply, and I was not a little surprised to find myself foiled in what I considered the simplest possible matter ; for I had imagined, before I attempted the explanation, that the subject did not re- quire a moment's consideration. I remember that my fellow-student was equally unsuccess- ful. It seemed curious to me at the time, that I should hesitate in rendering a reason for a fact which so frequently presents itself to the medical inquirer. The phenomena, however, which are the most familiar to us, are often the last to chal- lenge our attention. E 50 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. Now, independently of the mere loss of blood, other causes may depress the action of the heart. The heart's action may be arrested by what is called a shock. It is not easy to explain in what manner it acts, nor to define the meaning in a precise manner; but every one knows what is meant by it. A shock is a sudden im- pression on the nervous system. It plays an important part in many cases of violent death, and in those remarkable instances of disease in which life is extinguished with fearful rapidity. There are many accidents in which there is little loss of blood ; and yet the injury is great, and its consequences terrible. The suiFerer turns pale — his countenance changes, and he feels that he is fatally wounded. Sickness and complete prostration follow, and the heart never rallies. In this manner, extensive burns and scalds, and dreadful blows, or internal lacg- rations produce death. In the same way the strong mineral acids, when taken internally. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 51 appear to destroy, by their depressing influence on the heart. The internal lesion of the stomach causes a sympathetic failure of the circulation. But the effects of shock are much more nu- merous and interesting than might at first be imagined. At least, impressions on the nervous system, analogous in their nature, play an im- portant part in the fatal termination of many diseases. Violent inflammations seem, when fatal, to act by their depressing influence. We do not see, a priori, any actual reason why these inflammations should be productive of death ; but we know it to be an ultimate fact that they operate in lowering the vital powers, and bringing the circulation to a stand. Amongst the instances of fatal collapse there are none more striking than those which arise from perforating ulcers. Insidious disease may go on, in persons having every appearance of health, and be suddenly fatal by ulceration of the stomach or bowels, and the escape of E 2 52 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. their contents into the abdominal cavity. The apertures produced by the perforating ulcers are often singularly defined, and resemble the holes cut out by a punch or sharp circular instrument. The fatal issue of these lesions is gener,ally so unexpected, so rapid, and so painful, as to suggest the idea of poisoning, or of hernia. My late and valued friend, Dr. Howard, related to me a case, which, at the time, made great impression on his mind . On the 10th of February, 1845, Dr. How- ard was requested to visit a young woman who was taken suddenly ill at a factory in Man- chester. When he got there, he found her lying on the floor with a pale, sunken coun- tenance, a weak pulse, and a cold surface. She spoke in a feeble whisper, and was too much exhausted to reply to many questions, but by her gestures she indicated that she had pain in her stomach. It appeared that she had been taken ill about three o'clock. Dr. Howard recommended that she should be taken to the Infirmary, and she died there, in about twelve MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 53 hours after her removal. It was thought at the Infirmary that she had taken poison, but on examination of the body after death, a round hole was found in the stomach, such as is produced by a perforating ulcer. The edges of the ulcer were smooth and even. One or two such instances have fallen under my own notice, and must be met with in the course of the experience of every medical man. Fatal fainting is not unfrequently the result of actual disease of the heart, although death from affections of the heart is not always of a sudden or uncomplicated kind. The walls of the heart are sometimes thin and dilated, and there is a soft struggling palpitation which has been aptly compared to the fluttering of a bird against the bars of its cage. At other times the heart is overloaded with fatty deposits, so that its natural fleshy struc- ture is proportionally defective. In very inor- dinately fat people the heart is often found in E 3 54 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. this state, and is unable to propel the blood with sufficient force to meet the exigencies of the system. Occasionally, bony deposits are found in the heart and great vessels, and the natural contractions of the heart are painful and irregular. From these, and other causes, which probably produce a spasm of the heart, arises the disease called angina pectoris. The celebrated John Hunter died of this disease, and it is well known to be suddenly fatal. Sir Everard Home tells us that, " On the 16th of October, 1793, when in his usual state of health, he went to St. George's Hos- pital, and meeting with some things which irri- tated his mind, and not being perfectly master of the circumstances, he withheld his senti- ments ; in which state of restraint he went into the next room, and turning round to Dr. Robinson, one of the physicians of the hospital, he gave a deep groan, and dropped down dead." The sudden death of the benevolent and highly accomplished Dr. Arnold, as represented MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 55 by his biographer, may serve as a further illus- tration of the angina pectoris. It was between five and six o'clock on Sunday morning that he awoke with a sharp pain across his chest, which he mentioned to his wife on her asking whether he felt well, adding that he had felt it slightly on the preceding day, before and after bathing. He then again composed himself to sleep ; but Mrs. Arnold watched him with extreme anxiety, and was soon led to infer that he was seriously ill. The pain seemed to increase and to pass down the left arm, which called to Mrs. Arnold's remembrance what she had heard of this fatal disease. About a quarter to seven Dr. Bucknill (the son of their usual medical attendant) visited him. " He was then lying on his back — his countenance much as usual — his pulse, though regular, was very quick, and there was cold perspiration on the brow and cheeks." He apologised in a cheerful manner for troubling Dr. Bucknill at so early an hour, and then proceeded to in- E 4 56 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. quire as to the nature and danger of his ill- ness. After the physician had informed him that his complaint was a spasm of the heart, and answered the questions which were pro- posed, he quitted the house to furnish himself with the necessary remedies. On his return. Dr. Arnold said, "If the pain is again as severe as it was before you left, I do not know how I can bear it." He again questioned Dr. Bucknill as to the danger of his complaint, and in such a manner that it was impossible to avoid telling him the truth. He afterwards inquired as to the remedies to be adopted, and on being told, answered " Ah ! very well." The physician, who was dropping the laudanum into a glass, turned round and saw him looking quite calm, but with his eyes shut. In another minute he heard a rattle in his throat, and a convulsive struggle, flew to the bed, and called to one of the servants to fetch Mrs. Arnold. The family soon arrived ; but the sobs and cries of his children were unable to affect him — "the eyes were fixed, the countenance was unmoved : there MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 0/ was a heaving of the chest, deep gasps escaped at prolonged intervals, and just as the usual medical attendant arrived, and as the old school- house servant, in an agony of grief, rushed with the others into the room in the hope of seeing his master once more, he breathed his last."* This occurred shortly before eight in the morning. His biographer continues, " What that Sunday was in Rugby, it is hard fully to represent, — the incredulity, — the be- wilderment, — the agitating inquiries for eveiy detail, — the blank, more awful than sorrow, that prevailed through the vacant services of that long and dreary day, — the feeling as if the very place had passed away with him who had so emphatically been in every sense its head, — the sympathy which hardly dared to contemplate, and which yet could not but fix the thouorhts and looks of all on the desolate house, where the fatherless family were gathered round the chamber of death." * Arnold's Life, vol. ii. p. 337. 58 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. In Dr. Arnold's case, the heart was found soft and thin, but without any valvular disease. A great many more cases might be cited in illustration of this interesting disease, but I shall content myself with one which I take from Dr. Latham's excellent " Clinical Lec- tures on Diseases of the Heart." " N. P. was about fifty-five years of age. He had filled a high judicial office in India, and when his stated period of service had expired, he returned home with unimpaired health. Ten years had wrought little change in his person, except that from having been thin and muscular, he was slightly tending to fat and corpulency. " He had now been more than a twelvemonth in England, and had taken up his residence in Hampshire, and was in the enjoyment of his wonted health, when one day after a morning's shooting, without any extraordinary fatigue or exertion, he felt at dinner an unusual pain in the region of his heart. The pain was not extreme, but enough to make him leave the MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 59 table, and retire into his library. Warm appli- cations were made to the chest, and the pain soon ceased altogether. He then begged that he might be left alone to repose until tea-time. In less than an hour his wife returned into the room, and found him lying upon the sofa, just in the position she had left him. — She believed him asleep, but found him dead. The exami- nation of his body (continues Dr. Latham), as it was reported to me, disclosed nothing that could account for his death, but a thin fat heart ; fat was deposited on it at the expense of its muscular substance." * Besides disease of the heart itself, we may have disease of the great blood-vessels, — what is called Aneurism. Sometimes these diseases of the blood-vessels are very obscure ; often they originate on the great vessel, the aorta, which arises immediately from the heart. Dr. Farre described to Dr. Watson a case which incul- cates the necessity of attending minutely to * Latham's Clinical Medicine, vol. ii. p. 388. 60 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. what a patient says. A man consulted Dr. Farre, having just been told by another physi- cian that he was fanciful, and that there was nothing amiss with him. Dr. Farre was very particular In his inquiries at every visit he paid, so much so, Indeed, that the man became vexed and said pettishly, " I know, that if you split me down the middle, I am sound on my right side and diseased on my left." This was unfortunately too true : he was found dead In bed a short time afterwards.* I remember a man who came regularly as an out-patient to the Manchester Infirmary, com- plaining of pain in the shoulder ; I supposed at first that he had rheumatism, but one day I told him to strip off his coat, and then I found that he had an aneurism of the subclavian artery, of which he subsequently died. I need scarcely say that these cases of aneurism are fatal, much as disease of the heart itself. The blood-vessel at length gives way, and the patient dies from * Vide Watson's Lectures. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 61 the escape of blood and the fatal fainting which ensues. Some attention has been given by medical men to the state in which the blood is found to be distributed after death. The heart con- tains several cavities, through which the blood is progressively received and expelled. Where the arrest of the circulation has commenced, however, in the heart itself, it is obvious that the cavities will be pretty equally affected, and that we shall not find one side to be gorged with blood whilst the other is empty. The subject will again come before us when we treat of the next division of this subject, in which it will be seen that unequal distribu- tions arise from another species of death. The mode of death which has been described is not one of pain. It may have been pre- ceded by considerable suffering, as in the case of burns and scalds. But the act of dying is one of relief; or if the sensations are uneasy and fearful, they cannot be called painful in the common sense of the term. 62 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. I now come to speak of another mode of death, which has been called, but not very correctly, Asphyxia. In the cases which I have previously described, the first great or palpable interference with the continuance of life, has been the failure of the heart — so that actual death may be said to have begun at the heart. I have further to consider the cases where death begins at the lungs. Impor- tant as it is that the blood should be cir- culated through the body, it is of equal im- portance that it should be in a state of purity. In order to maintain its purity, it is essential that it should be exposed to the air in the lungs. The existence of air is so well known to be necessary for life, that the term expire, which signifies to breathe out, is also adopted to express the act of dying. The symptoms which attend asphyxia vary considerably from those previously described. They are, ob- viously, more or less protracted according as the cause operates with gijeater or less severity. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 63 When the breathing is largely obstructed, the complexion becomes dark, and the lips bluish — the veins turgid and prominent, and the face bloated and enlarged. After a time the brain is confused, and stupor creeps on, whilst the air is with difficulty sucked through the accumulated secretions of the air passages. The blood becomes thus gradually more and more perverted, until at length its circulation through the lungs is rendered difficult or im- possible. The heavy gurgling respiration gra- dually passes into a state of extreme effiDrt ; — now the breathing seems stopped, and now a deep inspiration again lights up the me- chanism of the body, but life eventually fails, as the blood ceases to circulate. All causes which operate in preventing access of air to the lungs may occasion death. Thus drowning, strangling, and suffocation from gaseous ex- halations, are fatal, by obstructing the purifi- cation of the blood. In general, this mode of death is not so rapid as that which has just been described. 64 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. but occasionally it is very brief. In drowning, it does not seem that life can be preserved more than three or four minutes, that is, when submersion is complete. The respiration may, no doubt, be somewhat longer sus- pended when fainting ensues, for then the circulation, being temporarily arrested, the necessity for air is less urgent. The accounts which are given of persons remaining alive for hours under water cannot be trusted to. The access of air to the lungs may be imme- diately prevented by inflammation of the wind- pipe, as in the case of croup, or, still more strikingly, by spasmodic affections. The complaint known to medical men by the name of Laryngismus stridulus, is, in this manner, suddenly fatal to infants. Some diseases of the lungs are so gradual in their progress, that the quantity of blood in the body becomes diminished in proportion to their limited capacity for respiration. Hence the balance is so finely preserved to the last, that death takes place with great difficulty. I MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 65 have sat for hours beside patients in the last stages of consumption, and watched the ema- ciated and dying frame alternately reviving and sinking until the patient himself became fearful that he should never die. It is erroneously imagined that death in consumption is always easy : fortunately it may be so in some cases ; it is very much otherwise in most. Mechanical obstructions are well known to occasion death by impeding the breathing. Pieces of meat or other bodies may get im- pacted in the wind-pipe, and cause death before they can be removed. I remember an instance of this sort which occurred in the market-place in Manchester. A woman, whilst eating an oyster, fell into a fit of laughter, when she was suddenly observed to become livid in the face, and shortly after- wards died of suffocation. The oyster was found partly fixed in the upper part of the windpipe. There is an interesting and instructive case of the same nature related in the Lancet. A man, F 66 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. who had just been married, got into a dispute with one of his own party, and was knocked down by a blow. Eventually he was able to re- join his party ; but it was observed that whilst engaged at his dinner he hastily got up and went out of the room. A friend followed him, but immediately returned to announce that the man was dead. On examining the body after death, a surgeon pronounced that he had died from apoplexy, and attributed the fit to the injuries he had received in the quarrel. The coroner, Mr. Wakley, asked the surgeon if he had examined the windpipe. The surgeon confessed that he had not done so ; whereupon he was desired to complete the examination. He repaired presently to perform his task, and on his return stated that he found a piece of meat wedged firmly in the glottis. Thus death had, in reality, arisen from this source ; and the congested state of the brain was the effect of impeded respiration, and not the first occasion of his death. Whilst treating upon the subject of Asphyxia, MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 67 I cannot refrain from introducing some parti- culars of the awful catastrophe which oc- curred at the Black Hole at Calcutta, as they will furnish an interesting exemplification of the effects of deprivation of air. In 1756, the viceroy of Bengal laid siege to the factory at Calcutta. Mr. Holwell and the garrison car- ried on the defence with great spirit and bravery, but were ultimately obliged to sur- render. They consisted of about 145 men and one woman. The whole of this company, many of whom were dangerously wounded, were shut up the same night in a small prison, about eighteen feet square. The prison, which was strongly built round with walls, had only two small windows at one end, which were secured by strong bars. As the prisoners had only about eighteen square inches of space for each individual, the heat and oppression soon became insupportable. Attempts were, at first, vainly made to force open the door. Mr. Holwell, who was near one of the windows, endeavoured to reason r 2 68 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. with the prisoners, and advised them not to exhaust their strength. This recommendation had the effect of producing some calm, but it was only temporary, for they could not long bear the frightful position, and many already were in the act of dying. Mr. Holwell then suggested that they should take off their clothes to afford more room. An effort was subsequently made to fan the air with their hats, but the exertion could not be borne. One of the company suggested that they should all kneel down, and rise up alternately. This was done several times, but many could not raise themselves when the signal was given. The situation was now frightful. The weak were trodden to death. One hour had only yet elapsed. About nine o'clock, renewed efforts were made to force the door; some became furiously delirious ; others vainly sought to pro- voke the sentinels to fire upon them. Thirst became excessive. At last the guards gave Mr. Holwell and two of his friends some water in their hats, but it was soon spilled, and the two MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 69 friends were suffocated in the general eager- ness to obtain it. Mr. Holwell was, for a long while, respected as the leader of the un- fortunate assembly, but in time the natural love of life prevailed over all other feelings. The crowd eagerly pressed to the window, and, seizing the iron bars, chmbed on his shoulders. He begged for his life, and giving up his position near the window, got to the other end of the dungeon ; but here the air was so corrupt, that his breathing was almost impossible. He again, therefore, tried to make his way to the window over the bodies of the dead, and there he resolved to wait patiently for death. He struggled through four rows of his companions, but one row still inter- vened between him and the window. His thirst was excessive, and he endeavoured to allay it by sucking the moisture from his shirt. As midnight approached, the despair became unbounded and terrible ; they all called out aloud for air, and then the noise suddenly ceased, and the greater part laid down and F 3 70 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. died. A Dutchman got on one of Mr. Hol- well's shoulders, and a black soldier on the other : he remained thus till two in the morning, when a marine officer forced him from his place. Mr. Holwell retired to the end of the prison, where he was soon deprived of sense. About five in the morning, the vice- roy inquired if Mr. Holwell was still living ; and being informed that it might be possible to recover him, if the door was immediately opened, gave commands to that effect. Unfor- tunately, however, the door opened inwards ; and, owing to the numbers of the dead, twenty minutes elapsed before it could be accom- plished. Eventually Mr. Holwell was rescued alive from a heap of the dead. At a quarter past six, 23 persons were taken away alive from 146, who had been incarcerated the night previously. When the air which is breathed, is not, by its chemical nature, calculated for the purposes of respiration, it produces effects very similar to a deficiency of air: thus, gases, which are not MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 71 actually poisonous in themselves, cause fatal results, just as the exclusion of air altogether. It is probable that the carbonic acid gas, which is commonly known as fixed air, is in- jurious in itself * ; but it is certain, also, that its fatal effects are greatly dependent on its preventing the access of the air. Many accidents have arisen from the use of charcoal fires and stoves. Mr. Coathupe, of Wraxall, was nearly killed in making some experiments with Joyce's stove, which was absurdly imagined by the inventor to burn charcoal without contamina- ting the air. He closed every aperture in the room, kindled the stove, and waited for the results. In a few hours giddiness came on, with sickness and great prostration ; afterwards ago- nising headache, throbbing of the arteries, and sense of suffocation. With difficulty he opened the window, and sought to remove the stove ; but when his wife entered the room, seven hours after, he was unable to explain what * See Christison on Poisons. r 4 72 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. had occurred, although conscious of what was passing. I think the charcoal fire is a favourite means of death Avith the French. It is stated that, in 1834 and 1835, no fewer than 360 cases of poisoning with charcoal occurred in Paris. I have read of French people sitting down coolly to note their sensations whilst breathing the deadly atmosphere, until the pen has fallen from their hands. There is often a love story mixed with these French deaths ; and we cannot but regret that affection should be so curiously mingled with deplorable irregularities of mind. The respiration may be prevented by me- chanical pressure ; but no doubt, where death is produced in this manner, it is often accom- panied with injuries to the internal organs. The barbarities of former times furnish us with dreadful instances of death resulting from compression of the chest. In order to oblige a criminal to plead at the bar when he refused to do so, he was sometimes stretched on his back. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. /d whilst a large iron weight was placed on his chest, and additions gradually made until he consented to do what was required, or sank under the infliction. Even as late as the reign of George the Second, such practice has been adopted. The press yard in the Old Bailey was the site of some of these dreadful torments. From this mode of death Major Strangeways died in 1659. The story is of considerable interest. The major lived with a sister very happily in a farm, until the latter became acquainted with one Fussel, a lawyer. This gave great offence to Strangeways, who swore that he would kill him. The brother and sister, consequently, parted. Some time after, whilst Fussel was in London, he was shot whilst he sat in his lodgings. Suspicion fell on Strangeways, but difficulty was experienced in tracing the murder to him. At last the ex- pedient suggested itself of examining all the gunsmiths in London, to discover, if possible, what guns had been lent or sold on the day of the murder. This plan only excited ridicule as '74: MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. an impracticable one ; but, curiously enough, the matter was thus traced to Strangeways. Strangeways refusing to plead at the bar, was sentenced, by Lord Chief Justice Glynn, " ' to be put into a mean house stopped from any light, and that he be laid upon his back with his body bare, and his arms and legs stretched by cords in opposite directions ; and that upon his body shall be laid as much iron and stone as he can bear, and more ; and the first day he shall have three morsels of barley-bread; and the next shall he drink thrice of the water in the next channel to the prison door, but of no spring or fountain : and this shall be his punish- ment till he die.' On the Monday following, at eleven in the forenoon, the sheriffs and other officers came to the press yard, whither the miserable prisoner was presently brought. He wore a mourning cloak, beneath which he ap- peared clothed in white from head to foot. By the sheriffs he was conducted to a dungeon, where, after prayers, his friends placed them- selves at the corner of the press, whom he de- MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 75 sired, when he gave the word, to lay on the weights ! This they did at the signal ' Lord Jesus receive my soul ; ' but, finding the weight too light for sudden execution, many of those standing by added their burdens to disburthen him of his pain. He died in about eight or ten minutes."* The respiration is sometimes brought to a stop by causes which operate on the brain, and the peculiarities of this mode of death are so characteristic, as to deserve consideration under a separate head. Death may be said, in this case, to begin at the head, and the respiration comes to a stand, after a period of stupor and insensibility. This is the state which is familiarly known as apoplexy. The patient lies snoring out his existence, unconscious of the weeping friends who sit around his bed. The phenomena of apoplexy seem to be pro- duced by causes which obstruct the circulation * Knight's London, vol. iv. p. 301. 76 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. in the brain, or which injure the brain itself.* The giving way of blood-vessels is the common cause of apoplexy. The patient falls into a state of insensibility and complete helplessness. He breathes with a heavy snoring noise, and a blowing of the lips may often be remarked, which has been aptly compared to the smoking of a pipe. The blood-vessels of the neck and face are gorged, and the veins are especially prominent. The pupils of the eyes are dilated, and often unequally so. Consciousness is abo- lished. This state continues indefinitely, but at length the breathing becomes laborious — the mucus is heard rattling in the throat — the temperature falls — spasmodic twitchings play on the countenance, and sometimes horrible distortions flit over the face : death after a time closes the scene. The action of poisons called narcotics is well known to be fatal in this way : opium pro- * What Is called pressure on the brain is not neces- sary for the production of coma. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 77 duces this species of death, when given in over- doses. I have stated that the pupils of the eye are generally dilated in death by coma ; but when the coma is produced by narcotics, this effect is not so common. Dr. Elliotson relates the case of a German gentleman, who was a friend of his, and who had remarkably large pupils. This gentleman took it into his head to destroy himself, and for this purpose took a large quan- tity of opium. After taking the poison, he men- tioned what he had done, and, amongst other persons. Dr. Elliotson was sent for. Insensibi- lity did not come on for a considerable time ; and the gentleman resisted powerfully all at- tempts to relieve him, asserting, that if he chose to die, it was only barbarity to attempt to prevent him. At length his countenance became livid, the pulse slow, the breathing stertorous, and the pupil contracted to the size of a pin's point. The jugular vein was opened, and cold water dashed on his face. In spite of all efforts he died ; and Dr. Elliot- 78 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. son remarks, " I have never seen a case re- cover in which the pupil was so contracted."* Extreme cold produces death, perhaps chiefly in the way of apoplexy, by retarding the cir- culation, and preventing its equable diffusion on the surface of the body. That it acts, at least in a great measure, in this way would seem likely from the torpor which it occasions, and which is so commonly remarked. The effects of intense cold are well exemplified in the interesting narrative of Captain Cook, where he relates what befell Dr. Solander and Sir J. Banks on the hills of Terra del Fuego. Sir J. Banks and Dr. Solander had been botanising, and had travelled a considerable way through swamps, when the weather, which had been fine, changed and became intensely cold and gloomy, and the wind was accompanied with snow. Finding it impos- sible to return to the ship before morning, they resolved to penetrate into a wood, and * Vide Elliotson's Lect. on the Practice of Pliysic. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 79 build a wigwam, and kindle a fire. For this purpose they passed through another swamp. Dr. Solander, aware of the effects of cold on the human body, from experience he had already had in Norway and Sweden, cautioned his friends against the torpor which it occa- sions, and conjured the company, under any circumstances, not to give way to it,. " Who- ever sits down," said he, " will sleep ; and whoever sleeps, will wake no more." Thus admonished, they continued their journey ; and they had not proceeded far, before the cold was so great as to produce the effects he had named. Dr. Solander himself was the first to experience the torpor, and entreated his com- panions to let him lie down. Sir J. Banks in vain remonstrated with him ; and he lay down on the ground, although it was covered wdth snow. A black servant was affected simi- larly, and, in spite of remonstrance, also lay down. In a few minutes they fell into a profound sleep. Fortunately, some of the party who had been sent in advance, soon 80 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. brought intelligence that a fire had been lighted about a quarter of a mile on the way. Sir J. Banks then endeavoured to awake Dr. Solander, and happily succeeded, though he had already almost lost the use of his limbs. The poor black died, as well as another black servant who had been left with him. In the interesting account which Barry O'Meara gives, of the residence of Napoleon at St. Helena*, he mentions that, on one occa- sion, Buonaparte asked him what he thought was the easiest mode of dying; and himself observed, that death by cold was the easiest of all others, because, " si muore dormiendo," one dies sleeping. In describing the Russian campaign. Napoleon further remarked, " Par- ties when sent out on duty in advance, aban- doned their posts, and went to seek the means of warming themselves in the houses. They separated in all directions, became helpless, and fell an easy prey to the enemy ; others lay * Vide O'Meara's Residence at St. Helena, vol. i. p. 179. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 81 down, — fell asleep — a little blood came from their nostrils, and, sleeping, they died." * When death is produced by hanging or strangling, it may be supposed that it is brought about entirely by the exclusion of air from the lungs : in many cases, however, this mode of death is complicated by the apoplexy which arises from the pressure exercised on the blood- vessels of the neck. From these combined causes insensibility arises in a few seconds, and death follows in a few minutes afterwards. Persons who have recovered from suspension do not commonly remember what has passed, but it may be possible to recollect some of the sensations. The celebrated poet Cowper, whose fine talents were unhappily touched with mad- ness and melancholy, relates his own unhappy experience. It may not be uninteresting in this place to glance at the particulars which he has left us. The death of the reader of the Journals of * Op. Cit. vol. i. p. 192. G 82 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the House of Lords had opened a situation which Cowper was desirous to occupy, but for which, he feared that he had not sufficiently- prepared himself. When the time drew near in which he was to present himself before the House of Lords, to be examined as to his competency, he became nervous and excited, and his madness came over him like a cloud. In November, 1763, he went to an apothecary's shop, and bought some laudanum with a view to put an end to his existence. This he car- ried about with him, and often was on the point of taking it, but his resolution as often gave way, or he was prevented by the fear of interruption. Once he thought of taking it whilst he was travelling in a coach, and once he shut himself up in his room in the Temple, and placed the laudanum by his bedside in a basin. He then got on the bed, and stretched out his hand to put the basin to his lips ; but just then the key turned in the door, and his laundress's husband entered. He started up, hid the basin, and affected an air of composure. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 83 On the day previous to that on which he was to go before the House, he resolved once more to effect his purpose ; he bolted his door, and with a piece of scarlet binding attempted to hang himself. First he fixed it to some or- namental work at the corner of the bed, draw- ing up his feet that they might not touch the ground. The carved work gave way and the binding with it. Then he fixed it to the tester of his bed, but the frame broke and again let him down. The third time he fastened it to the angle of the door, using a chair to reach it, which he afterwards pushed away with his feet. Whilst he hung he thought he heard a voice say three times, " 'T is over." When he came to himself he heard his own groans, and experienced a feeling like that of a flash of lightning passing over his whole body. In a few seconds more he found himself on his face on the floor. He immediately jumped up and got into bed; he had a red mark round his neck, and a broad crimson spot sliowed the stagnation of the blood under one G 2 84 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. eye. Soon after he had got into bed he heard a noise in the dining room where the laundress was lighting a fire. She must have passed the door which was open whilst he was hang- ing, but did not perceive him. Presently, how- ever, she came, having heard his fall, and sup- posing that he was in a fit. " I sent her," says Cow^per, describing the scene, " to a friend, to whom I related the whole affair, and despatched him to my kinsman at his coffee house. As soon as the latter arrived, I pointed to the broken garter w^hich lay in the middle of the room ; I apprised him also of the attempts I had been making. His words were, ' My dear Mr. Cowper, you terrify me ! To be sure you cannot hold the office at this rate — where is the deputation?' I gave him the key of the drawer where it was deposited ; and, his business requiring his immediate attendance, he took it away with him : and thus ended all my connection with the Parliament office."* * Vide Cowper's Life and Correspondence, by Southey, vol. i. p. 130. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 85 When death is produced by a failure of the respiratory organs, whether commencing or not with apoplectic coma, the blood is found chiefly accumulated in the right side of the heart, the difficult transmission of the blood through the lungs j^reventing its due arrival at tlie left side. This, therefore, is a distinguishing character of the appearances presented after death by Asphyxia. The two great modes of death which have been noticed, are, however, in themselves sufficiently apparent, and cannot well escape the attention of any persons of ob- servation. In the very work from which I have recently quoted there is an interesting illus- tration of this. I will oive it in O'Meara's own words. — Whilst conversing with Napo- leon he had fallen into a fainting fit, and dropped on the floor : — " When I recovered my senses," says he, " and opened my eyes, the first object which presented itself to my view I shall never forget; it w^as the countenance of Napoleon bending over my face, and regarding me with an ex- G 3 86 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. presslon of great concern and anxiety. With one hand he was opening my shirt collar, and with the other holding a bottle de vinaigre de quatre voleurs to my nostrils. He had taken off my cravat, and dashed the contents of a bottle of eau de Cologne over my face. ' When I saw you fall,' said he, ' I at first thought that your foot had slipped ; but seeing you remain without motion, I apprehended that it was a fit of apoplexy; observing, however, that your face was the colour of deatli, your lips white and without motion, and no evident respiration or bloated countenance, I concluded directly that it was a fit of syncope, or that your soul had departed.' " It is obvious, however, that death may take place in more complicated ways than those which have eno-ao^ed our attention. The same causes which enfeeble the action of the heart, not unfrequently destroy also the healthy changes of the blood in the lungs. Thus the patient is often equally in danger of death from syncope and asphyxia, and he sinks partly from MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 87 the one, and partly from the other. Apoplexy is sometimes so suddenly fatal, that the sufferer seems to die chiefly from the shock which he has received ; and many violent causes of death, Avhich obstruct the respiration, such as hanging or strangling, are also prejudicial in impeding the circulation in the neck, and occasioning apoplectic congestion. When death is pro- duced by starvation, it is attended with inflam- mation of the stomach and bowels, and a degree of febrile action, which more or less complicate the process. There can be little doubt, how- ever, from the emaciation and great debility which ensue, that life is chiefly destroyed in the manner already considered as a failure of the action of the heart. In addition to the influence of cold in pro- ducing coma, it also, no doubt, tends to depress the heart's action, and destroy the nervous energy. At the same time, the very prominent manner in which the brain is affected by reduc- tion of temperature, renders it probable that G 4 88 . MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the condition of coma is a first great step in the arrest of the vital actions. The modes of death, then, which we have considered, have close alliances with each other, but, for the sake of simplicity, they have been spoken of in their more elementary forms. Nor is the consideration of them in a separate manner devoid of practical advantages; for it is of the greatest importance, in many dis- eases, especially in fevers, to bear in mind the tendencies w^iich present themselves to one or other mode of death ; and frequently the safety of the patient is attributable to the perseverance with which such tendencies are obviated. Sometimes coma has to be relieved — some- times difficult respiration has to be alleviated — sometimes the sinking strength requires the timely and diligent administration of nutri- ment. The medical man has thus, not seldom, to become the nurse of his patient, and often the machinery of life is alone kept in motion ])y the opportune aid which he affords. But MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 89 how often has the more devoted attention of woman called back to life the unconscious child ! how often relieved the agonies of man when the finger of death was pressing heavily on his eyelids! The chamber of sickness is thus hallowed by affection, and the torch of life rekindled by the light of love. We may state then, broadly, that any great and perilous arrest in the circle of actions w^hich constitutes life, is induced principally in the way of syncope or asphyxia, though it is unquestionable that death may arise in a manner which cannot be well classed under either of those heads. In some of the putrid fevers, for example, the depravation of the blood seems so general, that death (as evidenced by the decomposition of the solids and fluids of the body) appears actually in progress before any complete failure of the respiration or circulation. The introduction of some poisons, also, is peculiarly inimical to the vitality of the blood. Thus the death of King John is beautifully 90 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. described by Shakspeare, as commencing even in the blood itself — " It is too late ; the life of all his blood Is touch' (1 corruptibly ; and his pure brain, Which some suppose the soul's frail dwelling-house, Doth, by the idle comments that it makes, Foretell the ending of mortality." Act v. The resuscitation of dying persons is founded on a knowledge of the subjects which have engaged our attention ; for where the failure of the circulation or respiration depends on causes which are not necessarily permanent, temporary assistance may restore life. The use of stimu- lants and opiates, in cases of loss of blood, are the means of renewing the action of the heart when it has already nearly ceased to beat. The transfusion of blood is also sometimes resorted to. The late Mr. Ingleby, of Birming- ham, in his work on Htemorrhage *, mentions an instance in which he employed it with ad- vantage in the case of a woman who had just Ingleby on Uterine Ha3morrhage. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 91 been confined. All the usual means had been tried, and the patient did not rally. She was '^'in a constant state of jactitation, with a dewy sweat and pinched features." The respiration was difficult, "with the sound of air passing throu2:h the mucus." The patient became cold and insensible. With the assistance of two other medical gentlemen, with whom he advised, Mr. Ingleby proceeded to inject some blood into her veins which he had obtained from the arm of her husband. In less than five minutes, a per- ceptible improvement arose, which was con- firmed in about an hour. This operation is not, however, always so fortunate, and is liable to some serious objections. We require, no doubt, more experience on the subject ; but, in the mean time, it is one of considerable interest. Mr. Ingleby remarks, at the conclusion of his case, that the scriptural expression applied by Adam to Eve — " bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh," — seems in this case, to have been literally applicable. 92 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. It is, however, in cases where the respiration is suspended by the narcotic poisons that the most marked advantages may be seen from artificial aid. I shall relate a case with which I was much interested and surprised, and though a considerable time has now elapsed since it occurred, I feel no diminution of the astonishment I first experienced. A young woman of the name of Caroline Mercy was brought into the Infirmary at Manchester, on the 16th of June, 1849, at half past three, p.m. She had taken opium with a view to destroy herself, and was in a com- plete state of insensibility. It was impossible, by pulling the hair or pinching the skin, to excite any wincing or signs of uneasiness ; nor was any effect produced by the sudden aifusion of cold water. The pupils were contracted in an extreme degree ; and the countenance pre- sented that peculiar vacancy, or want of expres- sion, which is so characteristic of the influence of opium. The breathing was very consider- ably embarrassed, the inspirations and expi- MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 93 rations being separated by an unusually long interval, and accompanied by a slight rattle. The extremities were warm. As soon as she was put to bed, Mr. Gaskell, the resident me- dical officer, introduced the stomach pump, with which he injected and withdrew about a gallon of cold water; but towards the end of the operation, as the breathing became labo- rious, the rattle louder, and the surface assumed a more livid appearance, he thought it prudent to desist. He accordingly introduced into the stomach a solution of ammonia, afterwards removing with the pump as much as could be conveniently withdrawn. Large sinapisms were then placed down the back, but she appeared, notwithstanding, to get gradually worse; the respiration became more difficult, the lividity greater, and the pulse less full, and slightly irregular. Boiling water was now applied to the feet and legs, which had the effect for a time of increasing both the power and frequency of the respirations ; but the benefit was only of a very 94 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. transitory kind. At about a quarter past five, Mr. Gaskell thous^ht it desirable to assist the respiration by artificial means, and he accord- ingly proceeded to adopt the following ex- pedient. He placed a large pitch plaster on the abdomen, and, bv this means maintaining his hold, endeavoured to solicit the usual respi- ratory movements. This did not, however, give him so much assistance as he had ex- pected, and he was, therefore, induced to abandon it after a short trial. He then placed a similar plaster on each side of the chest, by which he was able to command a more decisive effect : he thus, with the assistance of the man nurse, alternately raised and depressed the ribs in imitation of the breathing. This plan was productive of some amendment : the lividity diminished, and the natural muscular efforts were more frequent and apparent : the assist- ance was adapted as carefully as possible to the indications of nature. In addition to these means, boiling vrater was occasionally applied to the arms and legs. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 9o At about five o'clock I came to ]\Ir. Gaskell's assistance. At this period the temperature of the body had become considerably reduced; and I remember the patient's appearance was ex- actly that of a dying woman : and I believe it was the impression both of Mr. Gaskell and myself that our patient could not survive long. The lips were of a livid colour, the expression of the countenance altogether cadaverous, and the rattle in the throat had become exceedinslv loud. Boiling water poured on the legs did not now excite the slightest movement, so that we were almost disposed to regard the case as hopeless. The circumstance, however, that whilst the exertions lasted, they had evidently been productive of advantage, did not suffer us to abandon further trial. We now laid aside the plasters, and takinor hold of the marmns of the ribs, endeavoured to support the respiration with our hands alone. Standing on each side of the bed, with our faces towards the feet of the patient, and our fingers curved round the cartilages of the ribs, we could easily enlarge 96 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the capacity of the chesty by approximating the ribs at the same time that they were elevated ; while, in expiration, the reverse movement could as easily be accomplished. By a steady continu- ance of these efforts, we had the pleasure of seeing a gradual improvement in our patient ; and towards six o'clock, the pulse had acquired the hard jerk which is commonly felt when the system is under the influence of opium. Short- ly after six, indications of returning sensation were evinced by occasional spasmodic quiver- ings of the muscles of the chest and abdomen. These spasmodic movements resembled the actions which usually denote approaching dis- solution, with this essential difference, how- ever, that they became more frequent and pro- longed at each time that they were renewed. A little before seven o'clock she raised her eye- lids, and at the same time her left arm was slightly elevated. By persisting in artificial respiration, and using means to rouse sensi- bility, such as forcibly striking the face and chest with a wet towel, and applying ammonia MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 97 to the nostrils, in about half an hour from this period the state of stupor had in a great measure disappeared. Instead of lying pros- trate on the back, she now lay on her side, and was enabled to breathe without assistance. We then caused her clothes to be put on, and the vesicated parts being dressed, she was taken out of bed, and compelled to walk about the room. It is worthy of remark, that whenever from fatigue we had been led to suspend our efforts to maintain the respiration, a degree of relapse followed ; the lips became more in- tensely livid, the pulsations of the heart more feeble and irregular, and the respirations fewer, and accompanied with a louder rattle. On again resuming operations, the converse was also noticed. When the amendment became decided, and the sensibility returned, the rattle disappeared altogether ; and this took place without any expectoration, notwithstanding it was natural to suppose that a considerable quantity of mucus was contained in the air H 98 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. passages. The woman was fortunately a fa- vourable subject for our manipulations, as the abdominal parietes were sufficiently lax to admit the easy prehension of the chest. As far as it could be done, we always waited for the natural indications of the act of respiration, and paid great attention to regulate our move- ments in correspondence with each other. At the conclusion, the cartilages of the ribs were slightly everted, and the cuticle removed in places by the unavoidable chafing of the hands. June 17. — It was found that she had been kept out of bed all night, which scarcely ap- peared necessary, and was, indeed, contrary to instructions. She had vomited through the night, and complained of shooting pains in the head. The pupils were less contracted; the pulse was not ascertained, owing to the vesi- cated condition of the arms. For several nights after this period she was troubled with a starting in her sleep, which, however, was gradually removed by the admi- nistration of twenty drops of laudanum every night at bed time. She also suffered a good MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 99 deal from the condition of her legs, which were severely scalded, especially on the posterior part, where they had been in contact with the hot water which had fallen on the bed. On the 27th of August she left the hospital, cured. After this account, which I have purposely given at length, as it illustrates the subject in a remarkable manner, it is natural to wish to know the previous circumstances of her case. The woman's husband, who was a master plumber, failed about four years before her admission. Since that time he had lived irregularly, a circumstance which caused her to be much distressed and dejected in spirits. Two years after this failure she left her husband to reside with her mother, but was persuaded again to live with her husband, who had promised an amendment, which, it seems, he did not keep ; she again became low spirited, pawned her clothes, and was ashamed to return to her mother. On Sunday, the 16th of June, she sat down H 2 100 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. to dinner at one o'clock, when, after a quarrel, she left the house, and purchased sixpenny- worth of laudanum at four different shops : she said she obtained about a dessert spoonful for a penny, and drank it as she purchased it. She then went to a neighbour's house, and can only recollect feeling heavy, and that she had brandy given her.* When death is anticipated, there is a com- mon curiosity to know the period at which it will take place. But from what has been just said, it will be evident that it is not always possible to predict the precise time, nor are the symptoms which indicate its approach always to be relied on. When the evidences of dissolution, however, begin to manifest them- selves, a general failure of the temperature, with a cold dew on the skin, may generally be consi- dered as indicative that the scene is about to close. In many cases it is easy to recognise the fatal turn which diseases take by the alterations * See Lancet, for Oct. 1840. Case of recovery from tlie effects of opium, by J. Bower Harrison. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 101 which the symptoms undergo. Where internal inflammations are about to issue in death, there is mostly a striking change in the expression of the face, and sometimes a curious shrinking of the body. I shall never forget one instance in which these signs were particularly manifest. A young woman, who had formerly been a servant in INIanchester, became iU, was unable to continue in service, and was eventually removed to the Infirmary. One day, as I went to visit her as usual, I observed a complete alteration in her countenance. It seemed shrunk and diminutive, with a ghastly paleness. She put out her hand and said, " You seem as if you did not know me." — She spoke in a changed voice. She complained of no pain, but I remarked a trembling in her hands, like that of the shaking palsy. The mind was perfectly collected, but her usual features seemed only mimicked by their pale shrunk copy. She said she knew that she was going to die, — and so it proved. The nose and lips are very characteristic in H 3 102 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. the dying. The lips become pale, the nostrils dilated and dark looking, and the hairs about the lips seem more than usually apparent ; the teeth look like pieces of ordinary bone, and the eyes seem to shadow through the eyelids, or are partially turned under the lids ; the nails look dark, and the ends of the fingers sodden. Finally, convulsive twitchings often show themselves in the face, with singular elevations of the eyebrows, and staring of the eyes. A gap- ing attempt to breathe terminates the struggle. When coma is present, a mucous rattle is generally of fatal import ; and, e contrario, when the lungs are affected, the supervention of coma is equally to be dreaded. When fluids taken by the patient flow back from his mouth, or fall heavily down his throat as if poured into an ordinary tube, death is soon to be expected. In young children, a curious playing with the bed-clothes often attends fatal aftections of the brain. I remember a little child, who had her handkerchief in her hand, which she spread out MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 103 repeatedly with apparent care, and in a fantastic manner, that Avould have been amusing hut for its fatal import. The picking of bed-clothes and catching of the hands, as if at imaginary objects, are well known as terrible indications. Chomel remarks, as of serious presage, the automatic manner in which a patient will un- ceasingly draw his hand to his side, in spite of the efforts of the physician to ascertain his pulse. I might enlarge much on such points, but it would, perhaps, be "to consider too curiously to consider so." The signs of death are not, however, always very marked; for when death arises in ad- vanced and feeble age, the vital powers are so easily depressed, and the heart's action brought to a stand in so imperceptible a manner, that it is common to speak of it as a quiet sleep. Madame D'Arblay, writing to her husband, graphically describes the death of her revered father. Dr. Burney, the celebrated author of the History of ^lusic. " An awful stillness pervaded his apartment ; H 4 104 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. aud so soft became his breathing, that I dropped my head by the side of his pillow, to be sure that he breathed at all. There, anxiously, I remained, and such was my position, when his faithful man-servant, George, after watchfully looking at him from the foot of his bed, sud- denly burst out into an audible sob, crying out, ' My master ! My dear master ! ' ** For a moment, however, only ; an alarm from his outcry had been raised, and the servants, full of sorrow, hurried into the chamber, which none of the family, that could assemble, ever quitted, and a general lamentation broke forth. " Yet could I not believe that all had ceased thus suddenly, without a movement, without even a sigh ! and, conjuring that no one would speak or interfere, I solemnly and steadily per- sisted in passing a full hour or more in listening to catch again a breath I could so reluctantly lose ; but all of life, of earthly life, was gone for ever ; and here, mon ami, I drop the curtain." * Memoirs of Dr. Burnej, p. 432. MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 105 So frequently as medical men are called upon to contemplate the last hours of human existence, it is to be regretted that they have not more often given to their fellow men the reflections into which they must naturally have • been led. It cannot but be, that many ac- complished minds are to be found in a pro- fession which is so enlightened ; and it is not then easy to assign any sufficient reason for this silence. Possibly a kind of false delicacy may have operated on some minds, and others may have been diverted from such thoughts by the pressure of active occupation. It is com- mon to suppose that medical men are blunted in their feelings by the nature of their avoca- tions. It may be that there is some foundation for such an opinion ; but I think the apparent want of sympathy sometimes found, is more frequently the effect of a strong temporary direction of the mind to the contemplation of curative means. Yet it must be owned that habit does much to lessen that exquisite sen- sibility with which we instinctively regard the 106 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. chamber of death. The anatomist, as he traces with curious scalpel the secret structure of the frame, loses in professional technicalities the awful truth that he contemplates his own likeness. The hoary-headed gravedigger, as he turns up the mould to receive his fellow man, thinks not how soon the sand will rattle on his own coffin, and his humble name " shine upon the plate." This indifference is, to some extent, good and necessary ; but it is sadly too common and too great. But yet to the medical man, above all others, there is something of terrible reality in death. The student pictures death in his own manner : he looks upon it as the distant prospect which is to surround him at the remotest period of his life, the haven and resting place of his toil, the slumber and quiet repose which is to terminate the harvest of his day. The father tells his children of a peaceful and a better country, and smooths the pillow of his sick child as he whispers words of consolation and affection. The medical man has fresh in his mind, with all its MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 107 ghastly reality^ tlie cold image of his once dear friend ; he yet hears the choking rattle in his throat, and yet wipes in imagination the per- spiration from his corpse-like brow. To what result then shall we come after the contemplation of death? — to the greatest and the best : the daylight of life is still around us, but the gloom of that night, in which no man can work, will soon be foreshadowed by sick- ness, infirmity, and age. Before this night steals upon us, and our ability for useful exertion ceases in the thickening obscurity, let us remember the reality of these things, — and, as we write our characters in the in- delible lansruao-e of deeds that can never be changed, let us remember, also, how soon the story will be told, and the book closed for ever. It is, indeed, a mortifying thing to think what a laborious preparation we make for a few years of existence. It is humiliating to look back to the cares of infancy — the nights of maternal watching and anxiety — the hopes of childhood 108 MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. — the dreary toils and frequent tasks of school life — the ambition of riper years, with its un- ceasing efforts to attain what we find at last to be vanity and vexation. For what do we prepare, — if gold and silver at last tire the eye — if the applause of the world is found empty and interested — if ambition estrano-es friend- ship — if wealth cools our best affections, and separates man from his fellow man ? For what do we prepare whilst the grave is so near to all of us, and the feet of those who are to carry us out are already lingering at the threshold of our doors ? But who is there that timely thinks on these things? Who can imagine his own death — anticipate the time when he shall be the object of fearfid regard in others — when he himself shall be the almost unconscious beinoj strus;- gling with the thickening breath, and gasping with the convulsive throes of death? Who can think of the world being without himself; of the things which he has called his own being entirely at the disposal of others? To MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DEATH. 109 realise such ideas is to catch a ghmpse of the true value of present interests. What then think we of the approbation of the great — the vanity of fashion, the pride of learning and the dignity of title ; — the remembrance of one kind feeling, one charitable action, one generous senti- ment and loving emotion, is more grateful to the heart, and more satisfying to the understanding. We are all too ready to avoid the contem- plation of death. The subject is not an agree- able one, and can seldom find a fitting place in our consideration. It is too soon, and we would put it off "till a more convenient season." But if we may not consider our own end, have we no one dear and precious to us in whose life our interests are intimately and affectionately entwined! — How shall we stand on the grave-side of such precious one, and with what thoughts shall we hereafter turn from the little circle of our mourning friends to the fresh landscape which surrounds the tomb ? THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. Macbeth. How does your patient, doctor ? Doctor. Not so sick, my lord, As she is troubled with thickcoming fancies, That keep her from her rest. Shakspeare. THE HUMAN MIND, &c.* There is nothing which is more common than to hear people speak of possessing a knowledge of human nature. It is usual to signify by this a mere acquaintance with the vices of mankind, which does, indeed, form one part of such knowledge, but it is not all. What is called a knowledge of human nature is said to be acquired only by mixing with the world, which imphes that a real intimacy with the workings, tendencies, and capabilities of the * Read at a Conversazione of the Manchester Royal Institution, and published in No. 10. of the Psychological Journal, edited by Dr. Forbes Winslow. 114 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED human mind is industriously kept back in our literature, and that by the general consent of mankind it is deemed better that a great part of the world should be ignorant of the true position of their fellow beings. Many of those who are teachers of religion and morality, have certainly derived their ideas on this subject from sources which show, in point of fact, a complete ignorance of human nature, or, at least, the studious disguisement of such know- ledge. The reserve, which is common and proper in society, may screen from the unreflecting, and those little conversant with life, much of the real nature of the human mind. The prescribed forms of living, of speaking and writing, and the conventional usages of mankind, have given an artificial hue to our actions and language, and thus the words of the great dramatist have become literally true, that " all the world is a stage, and all the men and women merely players." The true cha- racter of the human mind in its more intimi\te . IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 115 workirigs, is little confessed in our literature, and little acknowledged in our laws. Un- fortunately, the real appreciation of the human mind (with regard to its actual state, and not its abstract consideration) has scarcely appeared to fall within the province either of the moralist or metaphysician, and has remained a kind of neutral ground, unculti- vated because unclaimed. That knowledge which is sometimes designated a knoidedge of the icorld, approaches, perhaps, nearest to the subject in question, but is seldom possessed by those who are either desirous or capable of systematizing their information, and thus, much of what is really known of our common nature is lost both to the philosopher and the philanthropist. In the writings of some of our novelists, it is true, we find a considerable amount of this species of information, but it is for the most part rendered subservient only to the entertainment of the reader, and not in every case calculated for his edification. The 116 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED writings of Fielding, Smollett, Cervantes, and Le Sage, with many others of more modern date, amongst which I may mention those of Mr. Charles Dickens, abound in judicious re- flections on men and manners, and discover no little penetration into character and mind. After all, however, there is an evident defi- ciency in published or recognised informa- tion of this kind ; and hence the surprise or aflected surprise with which it is com- mon to view what are called the inconsistencies of human nature. That certain infirmities of mind are not incompatible with genius, it may be common to admit ; but when we approach the subject closer, we shall find the poetic temperament, more frequently than not, clouded with insanity or touched with perversity. The same bright spirit which rejoices in the sun- shine of nature is not less sensitive of the gloom. There is often a foreboding of evil, and often the imagination will heighten the calamities which are really present, until a IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 117 thousand heart-rending associations grow up in the fertility of the mind. The consideration of the human mind, then, '^ in what may be called its medical aspects, seems to me one which has not yet sufficiently engaged the general attention of mankind ; and I wish on the present occasion to bring it before your notice, as a subject which is neither devoid of interest, nor wanting m utility. The effect of temperament may first claim our attention. I shall not, however, confine myself to the divisions which strictly medical writers have formed on this subject, reserving to myself the freedom of the popular accepta- tion of the word. The constitution of the body as to its bulk and general aspect, as well seen in the coun- tenance as in the conformation of other parts, is known to be connected with accompanying peculiarities of mind which are of every day observation. There is an asperity in the coun- tenance and figure of some people which imme- I 3 118 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDEKED diately strikes us, and we feel a sort of intuitive dislike. There are others whose open counte- nance and portly bearing tell at once of gene- rous feelings and easy dispositions. Every one remembers the passage in the play of Julius Caesar : — " Would he were fatter ; but I fear him not, — Yet if my name were liable to fear, I do not know the man I should avoid So soon as that spare Cassius." The Sanguine Temperament, as the very name implies, is characterised by a constitution in which the blood-vessels are predominant; the face is red, and easily flushed, the com- plexion often light ; the temper hasty, the actions quick. Those who have this tempera- ment in a marked form, often act by impulse ; they are restless, and have difficulty in w^aiting for the result of their undertakings. The mind is often too easily excited to allow of a proper operation of its workings ; the ideas flow too quickly, and in a little while become confused. Such persons, when called upon in exciting cir- IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 119 cumstances, become embarrassed, — are what they call nervous, and lose self-possession — or act to disadvantao;e. The character of Peter in the sacred writino-s gives us a good example of this sanguine temper: we find him saying to his Lord, '* Though all men shall be offended because of thee, yet I will never be offended ; I will lay down my life for thy sake ; " and again ; " though I die with thee, yet will I not deny thee." But, as in many other sanguine people, the feeling wanted the support of a steady equa- nimity. When Jesus was betrayed, and Peter found himself accused of being in his company, he denied any knowledge of him ; and when he found that he was known by his accent, (" surely thou also art one of them, for thy speech betrayeth thee,") "he began to curse and to swear, saying, I know not the man." Such is often the fate of the warm protestations of sanguine people. The emotion which attends the expression of their sentiments gives the complexion to them whilst it exists, but it is I 4 120 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDEEED not enduring, and is succeeded by other emo- tions, which, for the time, overcome the better feelings of the heart. This sanguine tem- perament gives what we call the generous character; the warmth of temper which, in moderation, we rather admire as heightening the affections, and giving joy and gladness : but it has also its sorrows and its errors. — There is the quick resentment and the passionate grief, and these are the dark aspects which are full of tears and lamentation. Hamlet, you know, says to Horatio : — " Give me the man that is not passion's slave, And I will wear him in my heart's core ; Aye, in my heart of hearts, as I do thee." In sanguine people, the train of thoughts appears to be much quicker than in others. This is attended with certain advantages, but corresponding disadvantages. Such minds are imaginative — what is called ingenious. The associations are not too strong to forbid erratic thoughts ; relations are often readily perceived, but there is less exactness. The memory is. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 121 perhaps, less retentive, and the speed of the thoughts leads often to confusion. They crowd on one another until indistinctness arises. This indistinctness is sometimes painful. This kind of mind is what is called passion- ate ; hence the term hasty, which may be well used as indicative of a too rapid procession of thoughts. The mind cannot well operate in this hurried state. The ideas flash across, but they light up too fiercely a train of associations to admit the suggestions of other minds. The brain is, perhaps, over sensitive, and its powers too readily exhausted, and too intense whilst in operation. The Lymphatic Temperament is quite the reverse of the sanguine. Those who have this temperament are not easily moved, or excited ; the skin is pale. Such persons are better cal- culated to undergo anxieties, or meet the ex- isjencies of sudden emero;encies. The mind has not those quick sympathies, or brilliant ima- ginings, which distinguish a warmer temper- ament. 122 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED There is a steady, cool calculation, which is more adapted to worldly prosperity : feelings less readily w^ounded, and less apt to betray themselves in the excitement of life. Some possess this in a surprising degree, and many assume it. Many cover a natural sensibility by the forms and usages which polite life has invented, and studiously avoid showing the natural burst of affection, or the bitter out- pourings of grief. It is well, in some degree, that this should be done ; but let not nature be altogether de- stroyed, and all the fine sensibilities crushed, under an artful and sophisticated mannerism. There is a story told of a cockney, who visited the beautiful and romantic scenery of the Alps, and being asked his impression of a sublime prospect, which suddenly burst on his view, said, that he must confess "z^ icas a well got wp tMnrjr This is the school of fashion, which gives us two fingers to touch as a wel- come, after the absence of as many years. In some, the operations of the mind are so IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 123 slow that they seem to stagnate, and pass into reverie. The extreme of this condition lapses into a state of imbecility and fatuity ; but a certain degree of apathy has its advantages. The mind has time to act ; there is no over- crowding of ideas — no hurry of thought. There is more continuance of application — less impatience of consideration. The affections do not trouble the operations of the mind. There are not those quick sympathies which have re- lations with every thing that passes. There are some people, again, in whose constitution the nervous system seems to have an unnatural preponderance ; the mind seems to be constantly in a restless state, and to wear out the body in a ceaseless activity, or in the struggles of overweening ambition. Such cha- racters are ever pressing on in the competition of social life ; often a prey to cares and anxi- eties, which follow each other in a never-ending succession. " After life's fitful fever, " they indeed " sleep well^ Hypochondriacal feelings are, no doubt, in a 124 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED great measure, connected with constitution or temperament. Melancholy is much more com- mon than is generally conceived, and may be, as I have already hinted, perhaps in some de- gree inseparable from a mind which highly appre- ciates the beautiful, has quick sympathies with all around, and a thoughtful regard to the possibilities, and even probabilities of a chang- ing world. On this account it has always been considered by the poets as a poetic feeling, and though this view may have attracted the sneers of some, or the ridicule of others, there is a certain truth in the opinion. Ben Jonson alludes to this notion, with respect to melan- choly, as an accompaniment of sensibility, in his " Every Man in his Humoitr,'^ " Stephen. Ay, truly, sir, I am mightily given to me- lancholy. " Matthew. Oh ! it's your only fine humour, sir ; your true melancholy breeds your perfect fine wit, sir. I am melancholy myself divers times, sir ; and then do I no more but take pen and paper presently, and overflow your half a score or a dozen of sonnets at a sitting." — Act III., Scene 1. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 125 As:ain : — o " Ed. Knowall "What think you of this, coz ? " Stephen. Why, I do think of it ; and I will be more proud and melancholy and gentlemanlike than I have been, I'll insure you." — Act i., Scene 2. In Scott's " Diary " (May, 1827,) he says : — " Imagination renders us the victim of occa- sional low spirits. All belonging to this gifted, as it is called, but often unhappy class, must have felt, but for the dictates of religion, or the natural recoil of the mind from the idea of dissolution, there have been times when they would have been willing to throw away life, as a child does a broken toy. I am sure I know one who has often felt so." A disposition to melancholy is by no means, as might at first be imagined, necessarily^ indi- cated by a grave and staid deportment. In a large proportion of instances, it is even coupled with an exuberance of spirits, which Avould seem to promise a perpetual sunshine of cheerfulness. The mind, however, which is alive to joy, is 126 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED also, and perhaps equally, alive to sorrow ; and often passes by quick transitions from the one to +he other. Our great dramatist, in mingling the ludic- rous with the tragic, has evidently shown his acquaintance with this tendency of the human mind. Byron has happily blended in some of his most successful passages the sublime and the ridiculous, thereby greatly heightening the effect of both. In his " Corsair, " however, he has directly touched upon this peculiarity of the mind, where he says — " Strange though it seem, yet with extremest grief Is linked a mirth, — it doth not bring relief. That playfulness of sorrow ne'er beguiles, And smiles in bitterness, — but still it smiles." In Dr. Currie's Life of Burns, allusion is made to the combination of melancholy and gaiety in the character of that extraordinary poet. Notwithstanding the gaiety of Burns' writ- ings, he was constitutionally a melancholy man, and was subject " to those depressions of mind, Avhich are perhaps not wholly separable from IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 127 the sensibility of genius, but which, in him, arose to an uncommon degree." " Such a disposition is far from being at vari- ance with social enjoyments. Those who have studied the affinities of mind, know that a melan- choly of this description after a while seeks relief in the endearments of society, and that it has no distant connexion with the flow of cheerfulness, or even the extravao:ance of mirth."* In a letter from Sir Walter Scott to his daughter in-law, the following mention is made of Matthews, the comedian. " I am glad you like my old acquaintance, Matthews. Some day I will make him show his talent for your amusement in private — for I know him well. It is very odd — he is often subject to fits of deep melancholy."! From these cursorv remarks on melancholv, I may proceed to speak of some particular states of mind, which attend the same pecu- liarity of temperament, and though not incom- * P. 105. t Vol. iv. p. 10., Lockhart's Life. 128 THE HUMAN MIKD CONSIDERED patible with mental sanity, are yet to be considered as bordering upon derangement. Some of the illustrations I shall bring for- ward are from works of poetry, but may be considered, nevertheless, as expressive of actual facts, because 1 have scrupulously avoided making use of them where the subject had need of graver support ; so that in effect they are rather introduced to relieve and exemplify the matter, than to substantiate it. The curious feelings to which I allude, exist in various degrees of intensity in different people. They cannot be considered as common to everybody, and are far more frequent or pow- erful in the imaginative and eccentric, than in others. Yet I should conceive that they prevail to a greater extent than is commonly supposed. Amongst this class of feelings may be placed the disposition which is sometimes manifested by those who stand on precipitous cliffs to cast themselves down. This seems suggested by a kind of insane impulse, which is dreaded by the very person who indulges it. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 129 Scott beautifully alludes to such a feeling in " The Lady of the Lake." " There are, who have at midnight hour, In slumber scaled a dizzy tower, And on the verge that beetled o'er The ocean tides incessant roar, Dreamed calmly out their dangerous dream, Till wakened by the morning beam ; "When dazzled by the eastern glow, Such startler cast his glance below, And saw unmeasured depths around, And heard unintermitted sound, And thought the battled fence so frail, It waved like cobweb in the gale ; Amid his senses giddy wheel Did he not desperate impulse feel Headlong to plunge himself below. And meet the worst his fears foreshow ? " Canto II. 22. The same is alluded to by Shakspeare in his " Hamlet," when he is cautioned by Horatio not to follow the Ghost, — " What if it tempt you towards the flood, my lord, Or to the dreadful summit of the cliff That beetles o'er his base into the sea ; And there assume some other horrible form. Which might deprive your sovereignty of reason, K 130 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED And draw you into madness ? Think of it, — The very place puts toys of desperation, Without more motive^ into every brain, That looks so many fathoms to the sea. And hears it roar beneath." This, though fiction, is true to nature. We know how many have jumped from monu- ments, and given way to an impulse to suicide created by circumstances. Many instances of the same kind might be brought together, not merely from our classical writers, but from the pages of our journals and news- papers. The cases of suicide which seem to have been suggested by the contemplation of frightful precipices, deadly poisons, or^danger- ous weapons, may be considered under this head. Hence the importance of avoiding evil thoughts, and tampering with dangerous ideas. The same kind of feeling sometimes urges people to contemplate scenes of suffering and distress, which are painful to be witnessed, or pushes them on to acts which they at the same time dread. This tendency is also well alluded to by the great poet of nature in the scene in IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 131 " Romeo and Juliet, " where the latter con- templates her anticipated position in the tomb of all the Capulets : — " How if, when I'm laid into the tomb, I wake before the time that Komeo Comes to redeem me ? ***** Alack ! alack ! shall I not be distraught, Environed with all these hideous fears ? And madly play with my forefathers' joints. And pluck the mangled Tybalt from his shroud ? And in this rage with some great kinsman's bone, As with a club, dash out my desperate brains ? " This insane feeling is here well portrayed, where the very speaker has been previously expressing her horror of that dreadful place, where — " Bloody Tybalt, yet but green in earth, Lies festering in his shroud." There are feelings sometimes which are con- tradictory in their nature and objects. The mind is strangely perplexed in a war of emo- tions — emotions which are cherished whilst they are painful. Actions are not always dictated K 2 132 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED by the simple feelings which seem to have given them birth. How many persecuting spirits have wept for those they have perse- cuted ! There are those whose feelings of mercy and forgiveness have struggled hard and yet yielded to pride and an ignoble revenge. Such contradictory feelings do indeed partake of an insane character, and there is a fine sig- nificance in the words of the poet, — " That to be wroth with those we love, Doth work like madness in the brain." I bring forward these remarks on such states of mind, because I think it of great importance (as they really do existj that they should be at once deprecated as unhealthy and insane feel- ings ; and in order if possible to make it appear that the proper control of the mind, which constitutes virtue, is in reality the most con- ducive to a sound understandino-. Let it not be considered, however, that I mean to assert that mental derangement is necessarily the result of vice — it is more often the cause of it. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 133 To resume, however. In the autobiography of the celebrated Goethe, he makes reference to this most unfortunate contention of feelino;. Goethe says, — " I accordingly fell into that evil disposition of mind which often misleads us so far as to make us find a pleasure in torment- ing those whom we love ; and I abused the fondness of a young female by tyrannical and arbitrary caprices. Secure of the affection of Annette, and of her anxiety to please me, I vented on her all the ill-humour that the failure of my poetical essays, the apparent impossibility of doing myself honour by them, and everything else that occurred to vex me. I poisoned our best days by groundless and un- worthy jealousies. She long endured all these follies with angelic patience ; but I had the cruelty to tire it out."* Hazlitt observes, that men often "take a perverse delight in acting, not only contrary to reason, but in opposition to their own inclin- ations." t * P. 218. vol. i. t Characteristics, p. 82. K 3 134 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED Again and again I may say that the contem- plation of these curious workings of the mind should lead us to see the importance of attending to its due regulation, and make us regard im- proper feelings as insane impulses which are to be dreaded as disease. The peculiar notions which some eminent men entertain, probably against their better judgments, may be also just alluded to. Scott speaks of a feeling of pre-existence in his Diary (Feb. 17.): — '^ A hard day of working, being I think eight pages before dinner. I cannot, I am sure, tell if it is worth marking down, that yesterday, at dinner time, I was strongly haunted by what I would call the sense of pre-existence — viz. a confused idea that nothing that passed was said for the first time; that the same topics had been discussed, and that the same persons had stated the same opinions on them There was a vile sense of want of reality in all I said and did Something of this IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 135 insane feeling remains to-day, but a trifle only."* This feeling of pre-existence is a sort of poet- ical feeling ; — I mean that it is most frequently met with in persons of highly imaginative minds, or in those engaged in metaphysical pursuits. Dickens mentions, in his " Pictures from Italy," his first sight of Ferrara in the following terms : — " On the foreground was a group of silent peasant girls leaning over the parapet of a little bridge, looking now up at the sky, now down into the water ; in the distance a deep bell; the shadow of approaching night on everything. If I had been murdered there on some former life I could not have seemed to remember the place more thoroughly, or with more emphatic chilling of the blood ; and the real remembrance of it acquired in that minute is so strengthened by the imaginary recollection, that I hardly think I could forget it."t * P. 114. vol. vii. t P. 102. K 4 136 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED Shelley states, "that whilst walking with a friend in the neighbourhood of Oxford, a scene presented itself which he remembered long ago to have seen in a dream, " * Mrs. Shelley remarks on this, "I remember well his coming to me pale and agitated to seek refuge in conversation from the fearful emotions it excited." Many of us may have a sort of feeling of reminiscence of things which we in reality see for the first time, probably because they awaken a train of thought similar to what other objects may have previously excited. From these desultory remarks on the charac- ters of mind which accompany the more highly, and may be unduly, developed powers of the imagination, I may proceed to speak of the connexion of bodily disease with mental peculiarity Every one knows the effect of disease on the human mind in rendering it a prey * Shelley's Memoirs, p. 135. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 137 to uneasy feelings and capricious changes. Happy, indeed, is he who has no reminiscences of weary hours spent in midnight vigils, or long days of unrest, in which the mind refused to take its wonted pleasure in occupation or literature. We are, perhaps, too apt to regard our minds as above the influence of circum- stances, and altogether dependent on self- control and voluntary eiFort. Disease may teach us that the mind itself is the gift of a superior power, and its very complexion dependent on causes which we cannot com- mand. Shakspeare, as you all well know, makes a happy allusion to the effect of disease in enervating the mind, in Cassius's speech in contempt of Ctesar : — " He had a fever when he was in Spain, And when the fit was on him, I did mark How he did shake. 'Tis true, this god did shake ; His coward lips did from their colour fly ; And that same eye, whose bend doth awe the world. Did lose his lustre ! I did hear him groan ; Ay I and that tongue of his, that bade the Romans 138 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDEKED Mark him, and write Lis speeches in their books, Alas ! it cried, Give me some di-ink, Titinius, As a sick giidy Apoplexy and palsy bring the finest minds to imbecility. The sufferer yields to fits of passion, and readily "dissolves in tears," in alternate succession, and thus remains an object for pity and the tolerance of friendship, until another attack completes the ruin, and leaves him a miserable wreck — the shadow of his former self. " By this distemper," Sir Henry Halford tells us, "the talents of the great Marlborough were confounded." The most serene and powerful minds are troubled by disorders of this nature, — curious aversions, fits of irritation, and whining imbecility, take the place of easy and kindly dispositions ; so that our very virtues are dependent on the sufferance of a superior power. The languor and lassitude which accompany biliary derangements are well known and of common remark. The peculiar perverse states of mind which attend various forms of hysteria. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 139 furnish us with some of the most curious instances of human weakness which can pos- sibly engage the attention. The effects of indigestion in creating frightful dreams, have been experienced by us all. How rejoiced we are, after suffering from the most terrible nocturnal alarm, to awake, and "find it all a dream." Perchance a bull pursues us, and our limbs refuse to move, — a wild and dis- gusting animal fastens its teeth on us, and escape is in vain, — an immense load bears on us, and instant suffocation is impending. Sterne, in his " Sentimental Journey," illus- trates the effects of disease on the mind in his usual striking manner : — " The learned Smelfungus travelled from Boulogne to Paris, and from Paris to Rome, and so on. But he set out with the spleen and jaundice, and every object he passed by was discoloured or distorted. He wrote an account of them, but 'twas nothing but the account of his miserable feelings. I met Smelfungus in the grand portico of the Pan- 140 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDEKED theon, — *'Tis nothing but a huge cockpit,' said he. ... I popped upon Smelfun- gus again at Turin in his return home, and a sad tale of sorrowful adventures had he to tell. . . . He had been flayed alive, and bedevilled, and used worse than 8t. Bartho- lomew, at every stage he had come to. ' I'll tell it,' cried Smelfungus, ' to the world.' — 'You had better tell it,' said I, 'to your physician.' " It is well known that age induces great mental changes. We are all willing to suppose that we grow wiser as we grow older, and it is to be hoped that this is really the case; but so far as our morality is concerned, we should bear in mind that we forsake many of our vices only because the temptation no longer exists. We *' put aioay childish things " when we cease to have the desires of childhood ; and the vices of youth would often come back in advanced life if we could bring back the fresh feelings of youth, and all the impulses which first took possession of our souls. How IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 141 much such considerations should make us humble, charitable, and forgiving ; should ren- der us distrustful of our own virtue, and com- passionate for the failings of others. Delicate states of health often induce, or are connected with, states of mind which seem too refined for the common intercourse of life. There is often a precocity of mind in delicate children which far surpasses in nicety of feel- ing the ideas of those more advanced in age. They who have remembrance of their early sick beds can tell how little their own ideal creations were understood, and how little known were the deep recesses of their infant minds. The practical in after life takes the place of the poetical, and the fine sensibility shrinks and withers in the rude competition of actual life, and in reality "concealment, like a worm i' th' bud, feeds on the damask cheek." Debility of body is often, in fact, generally, productive of great mental susceptibility, and sometimes irritability of mind. Shakspeare says. 142 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED " Conceit in weakest bodies strongest works." People who have robust health, and have always enjoyed such, can enter little into the sentiments of others, nor appreciate the feelings which accompany feeble and imperfect states of health, or constitutions of greater delicacy and refinement. Shelley says, " I know not the internal constitution of other men. I see that in some external attributes they resemble me; but when, misled by that appearance, I have thought to appeal to some- thing in common, and unburden my inmost soul, I have found my language misunderstood, like one in a desert and savaoe land."* In considering the human mind, in its medical aspects, it might naturally enough be supposed, that the subject of insanity would form a prin- cipal part. I shall not, however, for many reasons, enter upon it in this place, further than to touch upon those lighter, or more partial derangements, whicli are less commonly made matter of observation or remark. * Memoirs, p. 189. IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 143 It has often appeared to me, that much good misfht arise from the consideration of mental sanity, on a finer scale than has hitherto been afforded. The condition of the mind may not be properly healthy, without being betrayed into those complete aberrations which shock the ob- server, or call for the interference of friendly restraint. The subject has its relations, both to morals and jurisprudence ; but there is, perhaps, no education which so fits the mind to enter on its consideration, as that which is prescribed by the study of medicine. When we contemplate our species in the workings of great and good minds, we cannot fail to feel proud of a humanity which is capable of achieving vast designs, and compass- ing mighty undertakings. The names of Newton and Locke inspire us with a kind of reverence for the capabilities of our nature. We then, indeed, perceive, that there is " a divinity which stirs within us, and indicates eternity to man." How high and godlike is the mind which can scan its own operations, sit 144 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED in judgment on itself, review the events of past ages, and anticipate the future progress of societies and nations. It would be a pleasing task to dwell on the greatness of the human mind. We see it in the honest and sturdy Franklin — the humble and philosophic Dalton — the persevering and indefatigable Priestley — the bold and imaginative Davy — the phi- lanthropic Howard — the laborious and highly- gifted Hunter. If we turn from this picture of the more lofty style of man, and look to those aberrations of the intellect which we find in the receptacles for the insane, we must feel a hunuliation at least equal to our previous gra- tification. Here we have the drivelling idiot — the raving madman — the moping melancholic — the incoherent dreamer — and the timid and suspicious hypochondriac. Nor is it a correct opinion, that the division between the intellec- tual and insane portion of mankind is so broad as it appears on a cursory consideration. That there are minor aberrations of mind which do not come within the limits of actual madness, there IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 145 can be no doubt ; nor is real insanity so far dissevered from the more healthy operations of the mind, as to be altogether incompatible with intermissions of extraordinary brightness. It is well known that many of our eminent writers, especially those of an imaginative kind, were hypochondriacs. The unfortunate Cow- per and Collins were of this class ; and Chat- terton and Haydon, it will be remembered, destroyed themselves under its influence. The Rev. Robert Hall had periods of actual insanity, and the elegant Chai^les Lamb probably escaped from his sister's fate only by the necessities of his own position. Whitbread, Romilly, London- derry, and Calcraft, put an end to their own existences ; but the list is too great to particu- larise, and it is enough to know, that learning and genius are not removed from the worst of human calamities. The fate of the unfortunate Swift is too well known to need comment ; but even before the period at which his mind gave way, it is too probable that he inwardly laboured under a L 146 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED mental infirmity which, in itself, might be nearly allied to his genius. The last document which we possess of Swift, as a rational and reflecting being, is given by Sir W. Scott, in his life of the Dean ; and, as Sir Walter says, awfully foretells the catas- trophe which shortly afterwards took place. " I have been very miserable all night, and to-day extremely deaf, and full of pain. I am so stupid and confounded, that I cannot ex- press the mortification I am under, both in body and in mind. All I say is, that I am not in torture; but I daily and hourly expect it. Pray let me know how your health is, and your family. I hardly understand one word I write. I am sure my days will be very few — few and miserable they must be. " I am, for those few days, yours entirely, "J. Swift. " If I do not blunder, it is Saturday." From these glimpses of the misfortunes and imperfections of great men we may see that genius is not unalloyed. Carlyle, in his esti- IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 147 mate of Scott, has much sense in the following remark : — " The truth is, our best definition of Scott were perhaps even this, that he was, if no great man, then something much plea- santer to be, a robust, thoroughly healthy, and withal very prosperous and victorious man." What we call genius has often a degree of eccentricity connected w^lth it, and, as Dr. Ferriar has hinted, may even have an alliance with insanity. "No doubt," says he, "the same causes which in a strong degree produce madness, may, in a lower, increase the natural powers of the mind." High cultivation and extraordinary talents are not in themselves the certain means of goodness nor of happiness. The mind, rendered more subtle and more oppressed with thought and ambition, looks back even to its primitive simplicity with a feeling little short of regret. Byron says — " I feel almost at times as I have felt ^ In happy childhood ; trees, and flowers, and brooks, Which do remember me of where I dwelt Ere my young mind was sacrificed to books, L 2 148 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED Come as of yore upon me, and can melt My heart witli recognition of their looks." * On the other hand, the mental powers which are the farthest removed from insanity are not perhaps the most ingenious, fertile, or ima- "•inative. The more l)rilliant mind w^iich sees relations not perceptible to others — the asso- ciations of which are not too strong and constant to forbid erratic flights, may be, on that very account, the more capricious, unsettled, and uncertain in its operations — possibly, the more easily pushed from its own balance, and lost from its very want of anchorage to slow and settled, albeit erroneous, doctrines. They who have undergone great changes of opinion can alone know what it is to abandon the landmarks of thought, and go out into a sea of meditation, without any well-known beacon to oruide them, or familiar appearance to mark their course. Errors may be dear, even sacred to the mind, and to abandon the errors whicli * Poetical epistle written to his sister. IX SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 149 ages have nursed, may indeed be difficult to those who have cherished them from their earliest infancy. As minds differ greatly in respect to the in- tellectual powers, so they differ also in regard to the affections and instinctive impulses, and these latter appear to be subject to aberrations independently of the former. The late Dr. Prichard, in a very able work on " Insanity in its Kelations to Jurisprudence," has treated of the subject under the head of "Moral In- sanity ; " and were I to state all that I think important, I should not content myself without transcribing the greater part of what he has written. It may seem rather startling to look upon moral aberrations as resulting from mental infirmities. I am far from wishing to appear as an apologist for vice, but a close attention to the subject obliges me, in fairness, to admit, that the propensities and impulses of the mind may want a just balance as well as the intellec- tual powers. I feel that I have not here room to do justice to the subject, but I may say that L 3 150 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED those who have given most attention to the various phases of insanity are coming to this opinion. Such views cannot, perhaps, alter materially our social relations nor penal insti- tutions, but they will at least make our charity more broad and lasting, and our compassion for the erring more enlightened. Undoubtedly the protection of society requires that the morally insane be arrested in the career of crime ; for if it needs he that offences come, it must also needs be that there be woe to him through whom they come. The facts upon which the evidence of moral insanity rests are too striking and numerous to admit of doubt, and the subject would pro- bably have long ago been more fully inves- tigated, had it not been for the privacy attached to instances of this kind, and the reluctance which is naturally felt to admit a plea which appears, at least on first consideration, to have dangerous consequences. The existence of moral insanity is recognised by Esquirol and Georget, on the continent, as IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 151 well as by Dr. Prichard, Dr. Hitch, and others, in England, — indeed, by the best authorities we have on the subject. Insanity is far from showing itself merely in hallucinations and illusions, as is commonly supposed. Often the first overt act of insanity is one of moral delinquency or extravagance, and however delicate the question may appear in a moral consideration, it is impossible to shut our eyes to the truth. In many of these instances it seems that the absence of moral control con- stitutes the essence of the disorder ; and persons are known to conduct themselves well in asylums who, immediately on being released, give way to excesses of maniacal excitement, or betray the most ridiculous eccentricities and absurdities. I may probably, on some future occasion, return to this subject ; here I can only hint at it. Independently of this moral insanity, there are also grades of difference in the passions and propensities of the mind, less excessive, but L 4 152 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED still worthy of study in connexion with such considerations as these. That attachments are to some extent in- stinctive, would appear from the maternal fondness even of the brute creation ; and it is beautiful to witness the tender offices to which it leads. There can be no doubt but that feel- ings of personal attachment are much stronger in some people than in others, and may even exist to a morbid degree. Sheridan, in his play called the Rivals, apostrophises love as the tormentor and fiend, " whose influence actins^ on men of dull souls makes idiots of them, but meeting subtler spirits betrays their course, and urges sensibility to madness." Dramatists and novelists have in all ages amused mankind with the tragical creations of fiction, but such stories interest only because the annals of real life have also their broken hearts. Perhaps one of the most beautiful deline- ations of human attachment in comparatively modern literature, is that of Goethe's Margaret, in his celebrated Faust. The clinging of affec- IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 153 tion in the last hour of horror and of crime rises to a sublimity which is only heightened by the confiding simplicity of the character. The mystical and unholy career of Faust contrasts with the beautifid love of Margaret, nor can there be imagined in the downward career of destruction any reproach which can speak so eloquently as the voice of unaltered love : — " Where I have him not, Is the grave to me, The whole world Is embittered to me. For him alone look I Out at the window. For him alone go I Out of the house. My peace is gone, My heart is heavy, I shall find it never. And never more." * How delicate is the sentiment of pity, — how exquisite the combination of sorrow and of love ! * From a prose translation of Faust. 154 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED Attachment to place may exist with more or less strength. Some persons have strong preferences for particular places, and feel, when removed, as if transplanted to an un- congenial soil, and pine for the scenes they have left. Amongst the Swiss, love of country some- times rises to a degree which actually impairs the health. I think Sir Walter Scott in his last illness felt, in the spirit of his own poetry, a strange yearning for the scenes of his native country, after literally " wandering on a foreign strand." Man is, perhaps, as beautiful in the passions and affections of his nature as in the highest reach of his intellectual powers. Terrible, indeed, are the passions, but they are also glorious and lovely. The very emotions, feelings, and instinctive impulses of our nature constitute more than all else our humanity. The cold calculations of the strongest minds are dead, without the warm influence of affec- tion ; and we would rather pardon the froward- IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 155 ness of childhood, and the caprice of woman, than lose all those endearing sentiments which bind us to the one and to the other. But there is a maddening impulse, which breaks out fiercely, and blinds the reason, or acts in spite of it. It comes fearfully over the horizon of the mind, like a storm, and rages in cruelty and guilt. The voice of pity pleads unheeded ; — but there comes a day when serenity is re- stored, and then all the better feelings of the heart come up as a memorial against it. It is at such times that every kind emotion and every tender sympathy of our nature bears with it a sting more terrible than reproof or revenge. Very strong and enduring hatreds are some- times indicative of insanity itself, especially where they are cherished without a sufficient cause. Happiness is compatible alone with a healthy balance of the mind, and the indulgence of proud hatred and uncharitable hostility is only a small remove from the ravings of the 156 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED madman, and the sound and fury " which signify nothing." In connexion with the subject of hatred, I may mention a law of the human mind which has always appeared to me of the greatest im- portance — I mean, that the passions are greatly augmented by the manifestation or expression of them. I have sometimes overheard an ani- mated conversation, passing by transitions of bitterness into the most violent quarrel, each party rather fanning his own feelings by the expression of them than listening to the abuse of his opponent. A w^oman will sometimes set her arms akimbo in the street and commence in a moderate tone of reproof, but after a time she will acquire greater and greater warmth until she flies at the cap of her antagonist. This law of the mind is very apparent in Lunatic Asylums. I remember an old woman at the County Hos- pital at Lancaster, who is always abusive, but the first few words she says, especially to a stranger, are tranquil enough ; after a little IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 157 time, however, she waxes louder and louder, and more and more vehement, although no remark or opposition may have been offered to what she has said. A tendency to excess sometimes seems to take its origin in mental peculiarity. Where the imagination strongly predominates there is often a liability to intemperance or excess, which brings talent to contempt, and is a mat- ter of surprise to those of more obtuse but evenly regulated minds. The fate of the un- fortunate Savage has been rendered familiar to all the lovers of literature by the able pen of Johnson. Addison and Parnell are said to have drunk to excess, and Burns is well known to have given way to the same vice. Anthony Wood, speaking of John Skelton, who, according to Erasmus, was " the light and glory of English literature," says, " that he was guilty of many crimes, as most poets are:'* Carlyle, in speaking of the literary man, saj^s, * Quoted from the " Memorials of London, " p. 237. 158 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED " His fame rarely exerts a favourable influence on his dignity of character, and never on his peace of mind; its glitter is external for the eyes of others ; within, it is but the aliment of unrest, the oil cast upon the ever-gnawing fire of ambition, quickening into fresh vehemence the blaze which it stills for a moment The calamities of these people are a fertile topic, and too often their faults and vices have kept pace with their calamities. Nor is it difficult to see how this has happened. Talent of any sort is generally accompanied with a peculiar fineness of sensibility. Of genius, this is the most essential constituent, and life in any shape has sorrows enough for hearts so formed."* In conclusion, I may observe, that it is im- possible, for many obvious reasons, to enter fully, in this place, into the subject of medical psychology, but it does seem to me that it is one which has not yet found its due place in human consideration. * Life of Schiller, p. 54, IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 159 The very routine and common-place order of life are disadvantageous to reflections of such a nature. — We hear the yell of the lunatic in his ward, and see around the hideous congregation of his associates, but as we close the door the sound dies on the ear — and it fades from the recollection also. We see poverty and guilt stalking about the streets of our cities, but we step into saloons, and forget, in the forms and usages of society, the misery we shut out. There are forms and usages in our very thoughts, also, which stop the generous flow of nobler and better feelino^s. We do not love mankind as we ought, because we do not know it — or we know it only in our own selfish circle, and forget that the same pattern of humanity is abroad ; sometimes great in the pride of beauty and vigour, and again miserable in depravity and crime. We respect the high- born and the successful, — we build statues to celebrate military prowess and statesman-like policy, — but we should learn, also, to love 160 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED man as man, to regard his failings as it becomes those whose judgments can only be made Avith partial knowledge and limited com- prehension, and in all his wanderings still to recognise his dear humanity. There are facts before us, respecting the habitudes of the human mind, which are as much to be relied on as any in physics, and as capable of being generalised and rendered available for practical ends. Ignorance of these facts is daily and hourly leading to cruel judgments, and to misery in all its various forms. I am glad to say that we have now a " Journal of Psychological Me- dicine," which will, no doubt, greatly aid in bringing about just views, and removing old and injurious notions. For my part, I most solemnly believe that there are varieties of mental constitution as great as any in outward form : and when I further consider the diffe- rence which circumstances and education produce, it appears most unfair and cruelly uncharitable to measure all by the same stan- IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASrECTS. 161 dard, and expect like results from different minds. Yet this is the practical effect of common notions — the doctrine which is tacitly implied in our literature and in our law. There is an old adage, that what man has done, man may do, but it would be ridiculous logic to interpret such a passage to signify that what one man has done, every man may do. The abstract mind — the general term ot logicians — I grant, has no disorders, no grades of health, no varieties of power — but of this abstraction there is nothing in nature. The mind is connected with the body, and affected by the body, and there is still a lesson of charity to be learnt from a knowledge of such an association. There is a common cry against the doctrine of different grades of mental and moral capa- city, as though it impugned the goodness of the Deity ; but to me it seems only in accord- ance with the great plan of Divine government which commits different talents to the care of his creatures. Some men are deformed, others M 162 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED good-looking — some invalids from infancy, others robust — some idiots, epileptics, insane — some rich from birth, others poor — some the descendants of a long and, may be, an honourable line of ancestors, others the children of beggars and of pick-pockets. The brains of men differ in shape and in volume ; and shall the mind be the same in all ? It seems to me on such a subject that not to think boldly, is to think unjustly, and to fear the truth on such a question, is to imagine that the works of the eternal Creator have need to be veiled by the flimsy apologies of his perish- inof creatures. Whilst these sheets were passing through the press, a remarkable instance of suicide occurred in Leicester, some notice of which may not be deemed irrelevant, as illustrative of the connexion of dis- ordered imagination with accomplishment of mind. IN S03IE OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 163 A lady, respectable both by birth and education, experienced a succession of misfortunes, and was eventually reduced to a state of want. Being of literary habits, she endeavoured to maintain herself by the sale of some books which she had published, but she did not meet with much success. Her means became gradually more and more limited ; and one evening having experienced disappointment, she put an end to her existence with poison. It would appear, from the papers she left behind her, that her mind was of a highly sensitive nature, and somewhat under the influence of insane feelings. How far these latter may have been cherished or evolved by misfortune, it is difficult to say. It is probable that they might, at least, have remained in subjection if it had not been for the pressure of calamities. The idea of suicide seems frequently to have entered her mind, and she had actually composed a prayer to the Almighty that no tempt- ations might lead her to such an end. It seems that she had written a statement of her case to Lady Peel, but the document had never been presented. At an appropriate address, which w^as delivered over her remains, some manuscripts were read, which show her to have been capable of high poetic feeling, but reveal also the strange M 2 164 THE HUMAN MIND CONSIDERED peculiarities of her mind. One extract runs thus, and will be read with interest. '"' The visitor was gone, but still the glory of his presence seemed to shine on the spot — still the solitary air seemed to murmur with tremulous de- light — and thus ever shall it be with those who have once, detaching themselves utterly from life, received the visit of the Angel. Faith, solitude, and space retain the splendour, and it settles like a halo round their graves. Wherever the soul can wander, the eternal soul of all things protects it still ! The thoughts of souls that would aspire like hers are all prayer! Canst thou think it no sorrow, either to reject all human ties, all friend- ship, all love, or to see day after day friendship and love wither from our life as blossoms from the stem ? Canst thou wonder how, with the power to live while the world shall last, that ere even our ordinary date be finished, we yet may prefer to die? — She arose fevered and oppressed with new- thoughts which raged within her, opened the case- ment, and the ocean lay suffused in the stormy light ; and the stillness of the heavens never more eloquently preached the morality of repose to the madness of earthly passions ; the very hush seemed only to deepen the wild desires of her soul, and the solemn stars, that are mysteries in themselves, seemed, by a kindred sympathy, to agitate the IN SOME OF ITS MEDICAL ASPECTS. 165 wings of the spirit, no longer contented with its thrall. As she gazed, a star shot from its brethren, and vanished from the depths of space ! " * * The particulars of this lady's death (whose name was CaroHne Charlotte Veasey Gilldea), are contained in the Leicester Chronicle for the 29th of November, 1851. THE END. London : Spottiswoodes and Shaw, New-Street-Square. THE MEDICAL ASPECTS OE DEATH, THE MEDICAL ASPECTS HUMAN MIND. BY JAMES BOWER HARRISON, M.R.C.S.E. ETC. FORMERLY SURGEON TO THE ABDWICK AND ANCOATS DISPENSARY, ETC. ETC. (l!)|iminns nf tjiB MtiM f ibss. " Mr. Harrison, the author of the very interesting little work before us, hcos succeeded in his attempt to add another stone to the pyramid so well commenced by previous inquirers. The first essay on the ' Medical Aspects of Death ' is a truly masterly account of all those appearances which simulate death, and of death itself; — and it is written in so philosophical a spirit, that it cannot but tend to fulfil the dictum of Johnson, that * he had found physicians to be amongst the most intelligent and well-in- formed of his friends.' From a production like the present it would be most difficult to find a quotation which wovUd convey an idea of its general tendency ; but we extract the following as a specimen of the author's mode of treating the subject. ♦ * * ♦ * * The second essay, which is one of rare merit, has been reprinted from Dr. Forbes Winslow's ' Psychological Jounial.' " — Lancet, January 10. 1852. " ' The Medical Aspects of Death ' is an excellently-written essa}'- on the signs of death, the changes the body experiences after death, premature interment, the bodily changes which im- mediately precede death, the mode in which death takes place, the way in which the various suicidal agents act in inducing death, and the signs of dying. Each of these sections is illus- trated by well-told anecdotes, and ornamented with most appro- priate quotations. The following extract will convey to our readers a good idea of Mr. Harrison's powers and style. * * * * " The second essay ' On the Human Mind, considered in some of its Medical Aspects,' is well written, and will well repay reading. It was originally published in the 'Psychological Journal.'" — Medical Times and Gazette, January 24. 1852. " In the elegant little volume now before us, bearing the above title, Mr. Harrison, of Manchester, already very favourably known as a medical writer, presents an interesting view of two important aspects of mortality. The latter, ' On the Medical Aspects of the Mind of Man,' a most able essay, has already appeared in the pages of our excellent contemporary, the ' Psychological Journal,' and we doubt not has there fallen under the observation of the ma- jority of om- readers. The former contains first an excellent resume of the signs of death, a subject which has lately been very fully investigated, chiefly by the French physiologists, and the im- portant results arrived at by whom we have recently noticed at length ; second, a review of the causes of death, or the mode in which life terminates ; and third, a notice of the antecedent symptoms of death, or the bodily changes which immediately precede it. The entire is written in a highly philosopliic spirit, containing throughout, not alone judicious observations on the intimate hnk between life and death, wliich do honour to the author, but valuable medical hints. We cordially commend the tone and character of these essays, and we earnestly press their pemsal on the profession. Indeed they may be read too, with advantage, by the non-professional public. " — Dublin Quarterly Medical Journal, February, 1852. " In this little volume, Mr. Harrison presents us with a couple of remarkably readable and pleasantly-written essays on two subjects, neither of which it is easy to treat pleasantly. In his preface, the author naively observes that he has 'never thought it essential that a book should be dry in order to be useful.' We think that he has produced a useful book : we are sm-e that he has not added to the stock of dry ones. " In the first essay, the premonitory signs of death, the several modes in which death is occasioned, and the indications of death having really taken place, are discussed with an absence of dis- agreeable detail, and yet with a fulness of description, that bespeak a skilful and not mipractised hand. We do not know of any other work in which the unprofessional reader could meet with the same information so intelligibly and pleasingly Conveyed, nor in which the medical man would find the subject so appositely garnished with anecdotes and classical illustrations. * * * "The second essay touches pointedly, but gently, upon the slighter deviations from health of mind, such as, not constituting acknowledged insanity, are still indicative of disorder of the mental balance. To do justice to Mr. Hanrison's mode of treating his subject, we should have to transcribe his essay. We need scarcely say that we commend this work to om* readers. It is such as we may fi-equently find convenient to place in the hands of our more intelligent patients. The author has managed to combine the utile with the dulce in a way which must ensure suc- cess." — Provincial, Medical, and Surgical Journal, March 3. 1852. London : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, AND LONGMANS, By the same Author ^ POPULAR MEDICAL ERRORS. Price 3s. 6J. London: LONGMAN AND CO. SOME REMARKS ON THE CONTAMINATION OF WATER WITH THE POISON OF LEAD. London; CHURCHILL. LETTER TO THE EARL OF SHAFTESBURY on the injurious effects of THE MANUFACTURE OF LUCIFER MATCHES, &c. &c. M.VNCHESTER : HAYCRAFT. AN ALPHABETICAL CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS In general and MISCELLANEOUS LITERATURE, PUBLISHED BY Messrs. LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. CLASSIFIED INDEX. Agriculture and Sural Affairs. Pages Bayldon on Valuing Rents, etc. - - 6 Caird's Letter on Agriculture - - - 7 Cecil's Stud Farm - . - - - 8 Loudon's Encyclopsedia of Agriculture - 1/ ,, Self-Instruction for Farmers, etc. 16 ,, (Mrs.) Lady'sCountry Companion 16 Low's Elements of Agriculture - - 17 ,, Ou Landed Property - - - 17 Arts, Manufactures, and Arclaitecture. Addison's Knights Templars - • - 5 Bourne's Catechism of the Steam Engine 6 Brande's Dictionarj- of Science, etc. - 6 Cresv'sEncvcl. of Civil Engineering - 8 Eastlake on'Oil Painting ... 9 Gwilt'sEncyclopfedia of Architecture - 11 Jameson's Sacred and Legendary Art 13, 14 Loudon's Rural Architecture . - - 17 Moseley's Engineering and Architecture 21 Steam Rngine (The) ,by the Artisan Club 5 Tate on Strength of Materials - - - 28 Ure's Dictiouary of Arts, etc. - - 31 Biograpby. Haines's Life of Baines . . - Bunsen's Hippolytns ... Foss"s Judges ot England Holcroft's Memoirs - - - • Holland's (Lord) Memoirs Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopsedia Maunder's Biographical Treasury - Southey's Life of Wesley - ,, Life and Correspondence Stephen's Ecclesiastical Biography .ley ... - Townsend's Twelve eminent Judges Waterton's Autobiography and Essays Books of General Utility. Acton's (Eliza) Cookery Book Black's Treatise on Brewing - Cabinet Lawyer (The) - Hints on Etiquette ... Hudson's Kxecutor's(juide ,, On Making Wills Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopiedia Loudon's Self Instruction ,, (Mrs.) Anyiteur Gardener Pages Maunder'sTreasury of Knowledge - - "20 ,, Scientificand LiteraryTreasury 19 ,, Treasury of History . .19 ,, Biographical Treasury - - 20 ,, Natural History - - - 19 Pocket and the Stud - ... 11 Pycroft's Course of English Reading - 23 Reece's Medical Guide ... - 23 Rich's Companion to the Latin Dictionary 23 Riddle's Latin Dictionaries and Lexicon 24 ,, and Freund's Latin Lexicon - 24 Rogers's Vegetable Cultivator - - 24 Roget's English Thesaurus - - - 25 Rovvton's Debater - - - . - 25 Short Whist . . . - 26 11 30 Traveller's Library ..... 29 Webster's Encyc). of Domestic Economy 52 Stud (The) for Practical Purposes Thomson's Interest Tables Botany and Gardening. Conversations on Botany - - - 8 Hooker's British Flora • - - - 12 ,, Guide to Kew Gardens - .12 Lindley's Introduction to Botany - - 16 Loudon's HortusBritannicus - - -17 ,, EncyclopaediaofTrees& Shrubs 17 ,, ,, Gardening - 17 ,, Encyclopfedia of Plants - - 17 ,, Self-Instruction for Gardeners 16 ,, (Mrs.) Amateur Gardener - 16 Rivers's Rose Amateur's Guide - - 24 Rogers's Vegetable Cultivator • .24 Chronology. Blair's Chronological Tables - - - 6 Bunsen's Ancient Egypt - - - 7 Haydn's Book of Dii;nities - - - 11 Nicolas's Chronology of History - - 15 Commerce and I^ercantile Affairs. Francis's Bank of England „ English Railway ,, Stock Exchange Lindsay's Navigation Laws Lorimer's Letters to a Master Mariner M'CuUoch's Dictionary of Commerce Steel's Shipmaster's Assistant Symons' Merchant Seamen's Law - Thomson's-Tables oMnterest - London: Frinted by M. Mason, Ivy Lane, Paternoster Kow. Criticism, History, and IWemoirSt Pages Addison's Knights Templars - Baltour's Sketches of Literature - Blair's Chron. and Historical Tables Buiiseu's Ancient Egypt _ - . ,, Hippolytus n , " Conybeare and Howson's St. Paul - Dennistoun's Dukes of Urbino Kastlake's History of Oil Painting Foss's Judges of England Francis's liank ot England „ English Railway „ Stock Exchange Gurney's Historical Sketches - Harrison On the English Language - Holland's (Lord) Foreign Reminis- cences - . - - ■ „ „ Whig Party - Jeffrey's (Lord) Contributions Kenible's Anglo-Saxons in England Larduer's Cabinet Cyclopaedia Macaulay's Essays ' " ' * ' „ History of England Mackintosh's Miscellaneous Works M'CuUoch's Dictionary, Historical, Geo- grapliical, and Statistical - - - 18 Mauuder's Treasury of History - - 19 Merivale's History of Home - - - 20 Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History - - 21 Mure's Ancient Greece - - - 21 Rich's Companion to the Latin Dictionary 23 Riddle's Latin Dictionaries - - - 24 ,, and Kreund's Latin Lexicon • 24 Rogers's Essays from the Edinburgh Rev. 24 Roget's English Thesaurus - - - 25 Scliiiiitz's History of Greece - - - 30 Schomberg'sTlieocratic Philosophy - 25 Slieplicrd's Church of Rome - - - 26 Sinclair's Popisli Legends - - - 26 Smith's (S.) Lectureson Moral Philosophy 26 Southey's The Doctor etc. - - - 27 Stephen's Essays in Ecclesiastical Bio- graphy 29 ,, Lectures on the History of France 28 Sydney Smith's Works - - - - 26 Taylor's l,oyola - - - - - 30 „ Wesley 30 Thirhvall's History of Greece - • - 30 Tooke's Histories of Prices - - - 31 Towiiseiid's State Trials - - - - 31 Turner's Anglo-Saxons - - - - 31 Sacred History of the World - 31 Zumpt's Latin Grammar - - - - 32 Geogrraphy and Atlases. lutler 's Ancient and Modern Geography ,, Atlas of General Geography Carpenters Varieties of Mankind - Erman's Travels through Siberia • Hall's Large Library Atlas - - - Johnston's General Gazetteer M'CuUoch's Geographical Dictionary Murray's Encyclopiedia ofGeography Sharp's British Gazetteer Juvenile Books. Amv Herbert - - » - . Corner's Children's Sunday Book Earl's Daughter (The) - Gertrude - . - - • Howitt's Boy's Country Book - „ Children's Year Laneton Parsonage - . - - • Mrs. Marcet's Conversations - Margaret Percival . . - _ - Marryat'sMasterman Ready - ,, Privateer's-Mau ,, Settlers in Canada . . - ,, Mission; or, Scenes in Africa Pycroft's Course of English Reading IVXedicine. Bull's Hints to Mothers „ Management of Children Carpenter's Varieties of Mankind Copland's Dictionary of Medicine Latham On Diseases of the Heart Moore On Health, Disease, and Remedy Pereira On Food and Diet Recce's Medical Guide IVIiscellaneous and General Ziiterature. Bailey's Discourses - - - - - ,, Theory ol Reasoning ... Carpenter's Varieties of Mankind - Graliam's English - ' - Haydn's Beatsou's Index ... Holland's Medical Physiology Hooker's Kew Guide . . . - Howitt's Rural Life of England ,, Visits to Remarkable Places - Jeffrey's (Lord) Contributions Lardner's Cabinet Cycloptedia Loudon's (Mrs.) Lady's Country Companion Macaulay's Critical and Historical Essays Mackintosh's (Sir J.) Miscellaneous Works Maitland's Church in the Catacombs Pascal's Works, by Pearce - - - Pycroft's Course of English Reading Ricli's Companion to the Latin Dictionary Riddle's Latin Dictionaries and Lexicon ,, and Freund's Latin Lexicon Rowton's Debater - . - - - Seaward 'e Narrative of his Shipwreck Sir Roger De Coverley - - . Southey's Common-Place Books „ The Doctor etc. - - . Stow's Training System - - _ « Sydney Smith's Works _ . . . Townsend's State Trials - . - _ Willoughby's (Lady) Diary _ . . Zincke's School of the Future - Zumpt's Latin Grammar - - . - Natural History in General. Callow's Popular Conchology ... 7 Ephemera and Young on the Salmon - 10 Gosse's Natural History of Jamaica - 10 Kirby and Speiice's Entomology - - 14 Lee's Elements of Natural History - 16 Mauuder's Treasury of Natural History 19 Turton's Shells of the British Islands - 31 Waterton's Essays on Natural History - 32 Youatt's The Dog - - - . - 32 ,, The Horse - - . - 32 TO Messrs. LONGxMAN and Co.'s CATALOGUE. STovels and IVorks of Fiction. Pages Lady Willoutrlibv's Diary - - - 32 Macdouald'sVilla Verotchio - - - 18 Marryat'sMasterman Ready - - - 19 ,, Privateer's-Maii - - - 19 ,, Settlers in Canada - - - 19 ,, Mission; or, Scenes in Africa - 19 Sir Ho^er De Coverley - - - - 26 Southey's The Doctor etc. - - - 27 One Vol. Encyclopaedias and Dictionaries. Blaine's, of Rural Sports - - - - 6 Brande's, of Science, Literature, aud Art 6 Copland's, of Medicine .... 8 Cresy's, of Civil Kngiueeriug - . • 8 Gwilt's, of Architecture .... 11 Johnston's Geographical Dictionary - 16 Loudon's, of Treesand Shrubs '- '- 17 ,, of Gardening - . • -17 ,, of Agriculture - - - -17 ,, ofl'lants 17 ,, of Rural Architecture - - 17 M'CuUoch's Geographical Dictionary - IS ,, Diitioiiaiy of Commerce - 18 Murray's Encyclop^ediaof Geography - 21 Sharp's British Gazetteer - - . • 26 Ure's Arts, Manufactures, and Mines - 31 Webster's Domestic Economy - - 32 Poetry and tlie Drama. Aikin's (Dr.) British Poets - - - Baillie's (Joanna) Poetical Works - Dante, by Cayley - - . . Flowers and their Kindred Thoughts - '. Fruits from the Garden and Field . . 5 Goldsmith's Poems, illustrated - - 1 L.E.L.'s Poetical Works - - . ] Linwood's Anthologia Oxoniensis • - 1 Macaulay's Lays otAucient Rome - - 1 Mackay's Poetry of the English Lakes - '■ Montgomery's Poetical Works . - i Moore's Irish Melodies •-..'. ,, LallaRnokh . - _ . 5 ,, Poetical Works .... 5 ,, Songs and Ballads - _ . ' Shakspeare, by Bowdler - - - . '. ,. 's Sentiments and Similes . 1 Southey's Poetical W^orks . - - li ,, British Poets . . - . i Swain's English Melodies - - - ; Tasso, by Smith . . _ . . i Thomson's Seasons, illustrated - . i Watts's Lyrics of the Heart - - . i Winged Thoughts ..... 5 Political Economy and Statistics. Caird's English Agriculture ... 7 Francis's Bank o< "England - - - 10 ,, English Railway . . . lO „ Stock Exchange - - -10 Laing's Denmark and the Duchies - - 14 „ Notes of a Traveller - . - 14 Lindsay's Navigation Laws - - - 16 M'CuUoch's Geographical, Statistical, and Historical Dictionary . . - 18 Pages M'CuUoch's Dictionary of Commerce - 18 „ London - - - . - 29 ,, On Taxation and Funding - 18 ,, Statistics of the British Empire IS Marcet's Conversations on Polit. Economy 19 Pashley on Pauperism - - - . 23 Tooke's History of Prices - « - 31 Religious and moral Works » etc. Amy Herbert - . - - - - 25 BIoomfield'sGreek Testament - - 6 ,, Annotations on ditto - - 6 „ CoUegeandSchool ditto - 6 Clissold on the Apocalypse ... 8 Conybeare and Howson's St. Paul - - 8 Corner's Sunday Book . . - . S Cox's Protestantism and Romanism - 8 Dale's Domestic Liturgy - - - 9 Discipline - - - - . . 9 Earl's Daughter (The) .... 25 Englishman's Hebrew Concordance . 19 ,, Greek Concordance • 19 Gertrude 25 Hook's (Dr.) Lectures on Passion Week 12 Home's Introduction to the Scriptures - 12 ,, Compendium of ditto - - 12 Jameson's Sacred and Legendary Art . 13 „ Monastic Legends - - -13 ,, Legends of the Madonna • 14 Jeremy Taylor's Works - - - - 14 Laneton Parsonage ... - - 25 Letters to my Unknown Friends . .16 ,, on Happiness - . - .16 Maitland's Church in the Catacombs . 18 Margaret Percival ... . . 26 Moore on the Power of the Soul . - 20 . „ on the Use of the Body - - 20 ,, on Man and his Motives . - 20 Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History - - 21 Neale's Closing Scene - - - - 22 ,, Resting Places of the Just- - 21 „ Riches that bring no Sorrow - 21 Newman's (J. H.) Discourses - - 22 Pascal's Works, by Pearce - - - 22 Readings for Lent - .... 14 Robinson's Lexicon of the Greek Testa- ment ---... Schoraberg's Theocratic Philosophy Shepherd's Church of Rome - Sinclair's Journey of Life ,, Popish Legends Smith's (J.) St. Paul's Shipwreck - ,, (S.) Lectures on Moral Philosophy Southey's Life of Wesley - - . Stephen's (Sir J.) Essays in Ecclesiastical Biography ----.. Tayler's (Rev. C. B.) Margaret , , ., Lady Mary Taylor's (J.) Thumb Bible - - - ;sley Tomlin€'s Introduction to the Bible Turner's Sacred H; story Willoughby's (Lady) Diary XLural SportSi Blaine'sDictionary of Sports . - 6 Cecil's Stud Farm ..... g The Cricket Field - - ... 9 Ephemera on Angling - - - - 10 „ 's Book of the Salmon . - 10 CLASSIFIED INDEX. Pages - 11 - 11 - 16 - U - 11 Hawker'slnstructions to Sportsmen The Hunting Field - •• . " Loudon's Lady's Country Companion Pocket and the Stud Practical Horsemanship - - - Pulman's Fly-Fishing - " " " o^ Ronalds's FIv-Fisher - - - ' X, Stable Talk and Table Talk - - " | The Stud, for Practical Men - - - 11 Wheatley's Rod and Line - - - ^' Tlie Sciences in General and Z^atlxematics. Bourne's Catechism of the Steam Engine Brande's Dictionary of Science, etc. - DelaBecheon theGeology of Cornwall, etc. ,, 's Geological Observer - De la Rive's Klectricity - - - - Herschel's Outlines of Astronomy - Humboldt's Aspects of Nature ,, Cosmos . . - - Holland's Medical Physiology Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia ,, Great Exhibition - . - Marcel's Conversations Moseley's Practical Mechanics ,, Engineering and Architecture Owen's Comparative Anatomy - Peschel's Phvsics - - - - - Phillips's PalffiOzoicFossilsof Cornwall, etc Portlock's Geology of Londonderry Smee's Electro-Metallurgy - - - Steam Engine (Ure), by the Artisan Club Tate on Strength of Materials ,, Exercises on Mechanics" Thomson's School Chemistry Veterinary Medicine. Page Cecil's Stud Farm - The Hunting Field - The Pocket and the Stud Practical Horsemanship - Stable Talk and Table Talk The Stud for Practical Purpos Youatt'sThe Dog - The Horse Voyages and Travels. Chesney's Euphrates and Tigris - " ? Davis's China - ^ Eothen - - - - -. " ' t^ Erman's Travels through Siberia - - '" Forbes's Dahomey '" Forester and Biddulph'sNoiway • - l" Hue's Tartary, Thibet, and China - - -y Humboldt's Aspects of Nature - - |,^ Jameson's Canada " " * " " ^4 Laing's Denmark " ' " " ' OQ ,, Norwav - - - " ' ij „ Notes of a Traveller " ' ' {4 Lardner's London - - " ' " It Mackay's English Lakes - " " " „5 Osborn's Arctic Journal • - - ' zi Pfeiffer's Voyage round the AVorld - ' 7~i Power's New Zealand Sketches - "04 Richardson's Overland Journey - - '~J Rovings in the Pacific - - - "7,"^ Seaw-ard's Narrative of his Shipwreck - -^ Snow's Arctic Voyage - - - " ^' Traveller's Library - - - - 29 VVernc's African Wanderings - - - 29 A^ ALPHABETICAL CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS AND NEW EDITIONS PUBLISHED BY Messrs. LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS. MISS ACTON, MODERN COOKERY-BOOK. Modern Cookery in all its Branches, reduced to a System of Easy Practice. For the use of Private Kamilies. 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