Behind the gilded coach pale Care ascends, And haunts his victim wheresoe’er he wends, On foreign shores the exile tries, in vain, To banish thought, and fly from mental pain. At palace gate and cottage door Death knocks alike, nor long nor loud— The shuddering tenant, rich or poor, Next morn lies folded in the shroud. Grand-mamma was a Mag, who laid eggs by the score; And had she not died, might have laid many more. “Mercantile motives!” What motives led the doctor to study, and now to practise physick?—Answer. Merely to heal the sick without fee or reward. What are the motives which lead the lawyer to waste his time and health by the midnight lamp, studying Coke upon Littleton?—Answer. The prospective pleasure of pleading the causes of those who come into court “in forma pauperis”! But then there is the parson. He spends years of his life and thousands of his money at Oxford and Cambridge, studying theology and mythology—with the view of going forth to preach the word to Jew and Gentile, and without the most remote prospect of worldly advantage! Mercantile motives, indeed! Dr. Struve with great labour, expense, and skill, has imitated the Wisbaden waters, so that those who are unable to ascend the Rhine, may yet drink at the Kochbrunnen, without feeing the Spa Doctor. “Vice is a monster of such horrid mein, That to be hated, needs but to be seen— But seen too oft—familiar with his face, We first endure—then pity—then embrace.” “Wildbad, Aug. 18, 1839. Heim.” Circumstances did not permit me to accept the kind invitation, and I can only thus return my thanks to Count De Witt for his politeness to a casual bath-acquaintance. J. J. “Behind rolls the stormy Tamina, hemmed in at one side by the dark Bath-house and the impending cliffs, while, on the other, a giant wall of perpendicular rock, starting up daringly, and shutting out the world—almost the light of Heaven—closes up the scene. Our guide proposed that we should visit the mineral springs that boil up from the depth of an awful cavern, several hundred paces from the Bath-house. A bridge, thrown from rock to rock, crosses the flood, and a narrow ledge of planks, fixed, I know not how, against the side of the rock, and suspended over the fierce torrent, leads through a long dark chasm to the source. I ventured but a little way; for, when I found myself on the terrifying shelf, without the slightest ballustrade, and felt it slippery, from the continual spray, and saw nothing between us and the yawning gulf, to which darkness, thickening at every step, gave increased horror, I made a few rapid reflections on foolhardiness, and retreated.” The following lines were found in an Album at an Inn in the Canton of Glarus, in the Summer of 1825, written by an anonymous English tourist, immediately after visiting the Baths of Pfeffers. [Communicated by C. Raine, Esq.] Oft hast thou marvell’d much, I trow. At him who twirl’d with well pois’d toe On Strasburg’s pointed spire:— Or him who, on the quivering slope Of the tight-brac’d elastic rope, Could bound in air much higher:— But had they quaffed the fervid wave In Pfeffers’ dark and vapoury cave— (Those half adventurous people)— And paced the dizzy, fragile plank Along the chasm’s terrific flank, They then had scorned the paltry prank Of dancing on a steeple. The ancient history of Carlsbad is interesting: it shews the powers of mendacious tradition. There is a certain mountain on the left bank of the Teple, termed Hirschensprung [Spring of the stag], which carries in its very name a wondrous tale. As early as the middle of the fourteenth century, Charles IV. Emperor of Germany, and King of Bohemia, was pursuing a stag, and the animal, pressed closely by the hounds, ascended that lofty mountain. The huntsmen, unable to follow, on account of the steepness of the ascent, were returning by the bank of the river, supposing they had lost their game, when—imagine their surprise—they heard the cries of the scalded animal on the opposite side. The cause was easily explained. In the last despairing hope of escape, the animal had made a leap, from the top of the Hirschensprung, over the Teple; and had fallen, quite accidentally, into the boiling, bubbling Sprudel. The distance, as the crow flies, may be a mile, perhaps a mile and a half (more or less), a difference in tradition’s eye, of no importance. Thus the stag was found, and the Sprudel discovered, simultaneously. Tradition’s stories are always complete. King Charles happened to have a bad leg, for which (of course) the exercise of hunting was beneficial; he happened to try the waters, and happened to get well. The place henceforth assumed his name, Carlsbad (Charles’ bath), and rose by degrees to the importance it now possesses. I brought home one of the pretty stamps, made of Sprudelstein; and had the cruelty to break it up for chemical examination. I found it to be composed, as stalactites in all parts of the world are, of the earthy carbonates; which, originally held in solution by carbonic acid gas, are precipitated on its escape. The Sprudel contains a very small quantity of carbonic acid, only sufficient, as Beecher has observed, to keep its earthy carbonates in solution. As the water approaches the exit of the cauldron, and the gas ceases to be under pressure, it resumes its wonted elasticity, passes quietly off with the vapour which issues from the boiler, and leaves its irony carbonates, sticking to the edge of the reservoir. Carbonate of lime is the main ingredient of the Sprudelstein—it contains besides, carbonate of magnesia and iron; to the latter, its reddish-brown colour is to be attributed. There is a portion of iron also, as peroxyde; and minute traces of one or two other substances. With regard to the incrustations: they are nothing more nor less than petrifactions (as they are called), made exactly in the same manner as other petrifactions, by the deposition of the earthy carbonates. The difference in colour from other petrifactions arises from the difference in the composition of the Sprudel water and the water in other parts, where the white incrustations are formed. The Sprudel contains a small quantity of the carbonate of iron. This is deposited with the carbonates of lime and magnesia; and hence the brown colour. It must be confessed that the idea of daily ingurgitating such lots of secretions from some “great unknown” animal in the bowels of the earth, is not a very comfortable one, and requires a stouter stomach than that which is necessary for the digestion of the bear’s broth at Wisbaden. There is one consolation, that the whole is a dream; since there is just as much proof or probability of the Spas of Germany being a secretion from a living animal, as that the German Ocean is a secretion from Neptune or Amphitrite. On dissection the disease was found to be in the mesenteric glands.
I prefer the following formula.
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No. XIV. WILL BE PUBLISHED IN APRIL, 1842, Beginning the Volume for that Year. LEE ON DISEASES OF WOMEN. Researches on the Pathology and Treatment of some of the most important Diseases of Women. By Robert Lee, M.D., F.R.S. 8vo. Plates. Price 7s. 6d. “In taking leave of Dr. Lee’s work, we feel it to be alike our pleasure and duty once more to record our opinion of its high and sterling merits: it ought to have a place on the shelves of every physician in the kingdom.”—Johnson’s Medico-Chirurgical Review. CLUTTERBUCK ON BLOOD-LETTING. ON THE PROPER ADMINISTRATION OF BLOOD LETTING, FOR THE CURE AND PREVENTION OF DISEASE By Henry Clutterbuck, M.D. BY THE SAME AUTHOR. AN ESSAY ON PYREXIA; OR, SYMPTOMATIC FEVER, As Illustrative of the Nature of Fever in general. 8vo. Price 5s. PARIS’S APPENDIX TO THE PHARMACOLOGIA. Completing the Work according to THE NEW LONDON PHARMACOPŒIA. With some Remarks on Various Criticisms upon the London Pharmacopoeia, 8vo, 2s. 6d. or bound with the Pharmacologia in One Volume, cloth lettered, Price £1 6s. 6d. WALLER’S MIDWIFERY. ELEMENTS OF PRACTICAL MIDWIFERY; Or, Companion to the Lying-in-Room. By Charles Waller, Lecturer on Midwifery. Second Edition with Plates. 18mo. Price 4s. 6d. SELECTA E PRÆSCRIPTIS; Or, SELECTIONS FROM PHYSICIANS’ PRESCRIPTIONS; Containing Lists of the Terms, Abbreviations, &c., used in Prescriptions, with Examples of Prescriptions grammatically explained and construed, and a Series of Prescriptions illustrating the use of the preceding Terms. Intended for the use of Medical Students. Eighth Edition, with Key. 32mo. cloth. Price 5s. BOYLE’S DISEASES OF WESTERN AFRICA. A PRACTICAL MEDICO-HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE WESTERN COAST OF AFRICA, TOGETHER WITH THE SYMPTOMS, CAUSES, AND TREATMENT, OF THE FEVERS AND OTHER DISEASES OF WESTERN AFRICA. By James Boyle, Colonial Surgeon to Sierra Leone. 8vo. Price 12s. “To all Army and Navy Surgeons who may have to visit Tropical Climates generally, and the African Coast in particular, Mr. Boyle’s volume is indispensable, and indeed we strongly recommend it to the perusal of our brethren in all countries.”—Johnson’s “Influence of Tropical Climates on European Constitutions.”—Page 359. “Mr. Boyle’s Volume is evidently the work of an experienced Tropical Practitioner.” “His descriptions of the Diseases of Africa, particularly of the Fevers, are excellent, and his practical suggestions bear all the stamp of observation and experience.” “We can conscientiously recommend his book as a safe Tropical Guide.”—British and Foreign Medical Review, April, 1841. DIEFFENBACH ON THE CURE OF STUTTERING. MEMOIR ON THE RADICAL CURE OF STUTTERING BY SURGICAL OPERATIONS. Translated from the German, By Joseph Travers, Late House-Surgeon to St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, 8vo, with Plates, Price 3s. DIEFFENBACH ON THE RESTORATION OF THE NOSE. Surgical Observations on the Restoration of the Nose, and on the Removal of Polypi and other Tumours from the Nostrils. Translated from the German of Dieffenbach. With the History and Physiology of Rhinoplastic Operations. Notes, &c. By J. S. Bushnan, M.D., 8vo. With 26 Plates. Price 12s. MACFARLANE’S CLINICAL REPORTS. CLINICAL REPORTS OF THE SURGICAL PRACTICE OF THE GLASGOW ROYAL INFIRMARY. By John Macfarlane, M.D., Senior Surgeon to the Royal Infirmary. 8vo. Price 7s. THOMAS’S PRACTICE OF PHYSIC. THE MODERN PRACTICE OF PHYSIC: Exhibiting the Character, Causes, Symptoms Prognostics, Morbid Appearances, and Improved Method of Treating the Diseases of all Climates By R. Thomas, M.D. 10th Edition, Revised and considerably Enlarged. One thick Volume 8vo. Price 18s. boards. PHILOSOPHY IN SPORT MADE SCIENCE IN EARNEST. Being an attempt to illustrate the First Principles of Natural Philosophy by the aid of Popular Toys and Sports. Foolscap 8vo. 4th Edition. Price 10s. 6d. With numerous Illustrations. HILL ON LUNATIC ASYLUMS. TOTAL ABOLITION OF PERSONAL RESTRAINT IN THE TREATMENT OF THE INSANE. A Lecture on the Management of Lunatic Asylums and the Treatment of the Insane; with Statistical Tables, showing the complete Practicability of the System advocated. By R. G. Hill, late House-Surgeon of the Lincoln Lunatic Asylum. Royal 8vo. Price 6s. UNDERWOOD ON THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. A TREATISE ON THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. With Directions for the Management of Infants. Ninth Edition. With Additions, by Dr. Marshall Hall. 8vo. Price 15s. SPURZHEIM’S WORKS ON PHRENOLOGY, &c.
BLAINE’S VETERINARY ART. THE OUTLINES OF THE VETERINARY ART; or, a Treatise on the Anatomy, Physiology, and Curative Treatment of the Diseases of the Horse, and subordinately, of those of Neat Cattle and Sheep. By D. P. Blaine, Fourth Edition. With Surgical and Anatomical Plates. 8vo. Price £1 4s. ANATOMICAL SKETCHES AND DIAGRAMS. By Thomas Wormald and A. M. McWhinnie, Teachers of Practical Anatomy at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital. 4to. Price 4s. each Part. The Four Parts now published are intended to illustrate the greater part of the course and distribution of the whole of the Cerebral Nerves, the various important regions of the front of the Neck, the course of relations of the Thoracic Duct in the Neck, the distribution of the Laryngeal Nerves, the regions of the Axilla and bend of the elbow-joint, in the order most convenient for their examination. The Series will be completed in about Six Parts, embracing the more intricate parts of Anatomy. FLOOD ON THE ARTERIES. Illustrated by many Wood-cuts and Plate. THE SURGICAL ANATOMY OF THE ARTERIES minutely given, and especially arranged for the Dissecting Room, together with the Descriptive Anatomy of the Heart, and the Physiology of the Circulation in Man and Inferior Animals. By Valentine Flood, A.M., M.D., Lecturer on Anatomy and Operative Surgery in the North London School of Medicine. 12mo. Cloth lettered. Price 7s. DR. KNOX’S ANATOMICAL ENGRAVINGS. A Series of Engravings descriptive of the Anatomy of the Human Body. Engraved by Edward Mitchell.
“We have examined the illustrative plates which have accompanied these publications; and we have in consequence arrived at the conclusion, that Dr. Knox and Mr. Mitchell have effected that which the student of Anatomy has so long desired. We have now a work which every tyro in the science may study with advantage, and every practitioner derive improvement from.”—Johnson’s Medico-Chirurgical Review. GRAINGER’S GENERAL ANATOMY. ELEMENTS OF GENERAL ANATOMY, Containing an Outline of the Organization of the Human Body. By R. D. Grainger, Lecturer on Anatomy and Physiology. 8vo. 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Price 10s. 6d. “We know of no book which contains within the same space so much valuable information, the result not of fanciful theory, nor of idle hypothesis, but of close persevering clinical observation, accompanied with much soundness of judgment and extraordinary clinical tact”—Johnson’s Medico-Chirurgical Review. “The work of Dr. Billing is a lucid commentary upon the first principles of medicine, and comprises an interesting account of the received doctrines of physiology and pathology. We strongly recommend not only the perusal but the study of it to the student and young practitioner, and even to the ablest and most experienced, who will gain both information and knowledge from reading it.”—London Medical and Surgical Journal. MACILWAIN’S MEDICINE AND SURGERY, Medicine and Surgery one Inductive Science, being an attempt to improve its Study and Practice on a plan in closer alliance with Inductive Philosophy. By George Macilwain, Consulting Surgeon to the St. Ann’s Society, &c. 8vo. Price 12s. BY THE SAME AUTHOR. THE UNITY OF THE BODY, As illustrated by some of the more striking Phenomena of Sympathy with a view to enlarge the grounds and improve the practice of the CONSTITUTIONAL TREATMENT OF LOCAL DISEASES. 8vo. Price 6s. ANNESLEY’S DISEASES OF INDIA. SKETCHES OF THE MOST PREVALENT DISEASES OF INDIA. Comprising a Treatise on Epidemic Cholera in the East, &c. &c. By James Annesley, Esq. Of the Madras Medical Establishment. Second Edition, 8vo. 18s. “Mr. Annesley is a man of such ample experience, sound judgment, and scrupulous fidelity, that every thing falling from his pen is highly valuable.”—Dr. James Johnson, (“Influence of Tropical Climates on European Constitutions.”) KOECKER ON ARTIFICIAL TEETH. AN ESSAY ON ARTIFICIAL TEETH, OBTURATORS, AND PALATES, With the Principles for their Construction and Application. Illustrated by 21 plates. By Leonard Koecker, Surgeon-Dentist. 8vo. 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A NEW SYNOPSIS, OR THE Containing their Definition, Principles, and Treatment, with a New Pathology of Fever and Inflammation. By Robert Stevens. 8vo. Price 7s. 6d. RAILWAY MAPS. ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, IRELAND. With all the Railways. Size, 33 Inches by 21. Engraved by Lizars. Price 5s. each, in Leather Case. 7s. 6d. Mounted and Varnished, with Roller. JARDINE’S SCOTTISH SALMONIDÆ. ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE SCOTTISH SALMONIDÆ, By Sir William Jardine, Bart. Parts I, & II, Elephant Folio, Price £3 3s. each, coloured. JARDINE AND SELBY’S ORNITHOLOGY. ILLUSTRATIONS OF ORNITHOLOGY, by Sir W. Jardine, Bart., and P. J. Selby, Esq. In Numbers, Royal 4to. Price 6s. 6d. Imperial 4to. Price 12s. 6d. Containing Six coloured Plates of new and interesting Species, with copious Descriptions. Seven Numbers are now published. CORNARO ON HEALTH AND LONG LIFE. SURE METHODS OF ATTAINING A LONG AND HEALTHFUL LIFE. With the Means of Correcting a bad Constitution. By Lewis Cornaro. 38th Edition, 18mo, Price 3s. GREEN ON MEDICAL REFORM. THE TOUCHSTONE OF MEDICAL REFORM. In Three Letters, to SIR ROBERT H. INGLIS, Bart., M.P. By Joseph H. Green, F.R.S., Professor of Anatomy to the Royal Academy, &c., 8vo, Price 2s. 6d. HIGHLEY’S GENERAL MEDICAL CATALOGUE, OF MODERN WORKS, WITH THEIR PRICES AND DATES. Corrected up to October, 1841. Price 1s. PUBLISHED BY S. HIGHLEY, 32, FLEET STREET. THE NATURALIST’S LIBRARY. CONDUCTED BY SIR WILLIAM JARDINE, Bart., F.R.S.E., F.L.S., &c. In Volumes the size of the Waverley and Byron, Each containing 30 to 40 Plates, coloured from Nature, Price 6s. each. Among the Contributors to the Work are P. J. Selby, Esq., J. O. Westwood, Esq., Colonel Hamilton Smith, W. Swainson, Esq., J. Duncan, Esq., G. R. Waterhouse, Esq., &c. “We take shame to ourselves for not having directed the attention of our readers who love Natural History (and who do not?) to the Naturalist’s Library. It is a very delightful work, and should grace the shelves of every man who has a family. Productions of this kind, will, we hope, displace the trash which was formerly in the hands and on the lips of young persons, and give them that relish for the study of nature, so invigorating to the mind, and so calculated to fit it for the sober occupations of life.”—Lancet. CONTENTS OF THE TWENTY NINE VOLUMES The Work is so arranged, that any Volume or Subject may be taken by itself.—General Title Pages for the Subscriber to the entire Series, and additional Title Pages for the purchasers of detached Subjects, are supplied throughout. 1 & 3. HUMMING BIRDS, 68 Coloured Plates: with Memoirs and Portraits of LinnÆus and Pennant. 2. MONKEYS, 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Buffon. 4. LIONS, TIGERS, &c., 28 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Cuvier. 5. PEACOCKS, PHEASANTS, TURKEYS, &c., 30 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Aristotle. 6. BIRDS of the GAME KIND, 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Sir T. S. Raffles. 7. FISHES of the PERCH GENUS, &c., 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Sir J. Bankes. 8. COLEOPTEROUS INSECTS (Beetles), 32 Coloured Plates: Portrait and Memoir of Ray. 9. COLUMBIDÆ (Pigeons), 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Pliny. 10. BRITISH BUTTERFLIES, 36 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Werner. 11. RUMINATING ANIMALS, containing Deer, Antelopes, Camels, &c., 35 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Camper. 12. RUMINATING ANIMALS, containing Goats, Sheep, Wild and Domestic Cattle, &c., &c., 33 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of John Hunter. 13. ELEPHANTS, RHINOCEROSES, TAPIRS, &c., 31 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Sir H. Sloane. 14. BRITISH MOTHS, SPHINXES, &c., 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Madame Merian. 15. PARROTS, 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Bewick. 16. WHALES, 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Lacepede. 17 & 19. BIRDS OF WESTERN AFRICA, 68 Coloured Plates; Portraits and Memoirs of Bruce and Le Vaillant. 18. FOREIGN BUTTERFLIES, 33 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Lamarck. 20 & 24. BIRDS of GREAT BRITAIN and IRELAND, 68 Coloured Plates; Portraits and Memoirs of Sir R. Sibbald and Smellie. 21. FLYCATCHERS, their Natural Arrangement and Relations, 33 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Baron Haller. 22. BRITISH QUADRUPEDS, 36 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Ulysses Aldrovandi. 23. AMPHIBIOUS CARNIVORA, including the Walrus, Seals, and Herbivorous Cetacea, 33 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Peron. 25 & 28. DOGS, including also the Genera HyÆna and Proteles, 70 Coloured Plates; Portraits and Memoirs of Pallas and D’Azara. 26. BEES, including their Management, 32 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Huber. 27. FISHES, their Structure and Uses, 33 Coloured Plates; Portrait and Memoir of Salviani. 29. INTRODUCTION to ENTOMOLOGY, 38 Coloured Plates; Portraits and Memoirs of Swammerdam and De Geer. 30. MARSUPIALIA, or POUCHED ANIMALS, 36 Coloured Plates, Portrait, and Memoir of Barclay. 31. HORSES—The Equidae, or Genus Equus of Authors, 35 Coloured Plates, Portrait and Memoir of Gesner. 32. FISHES OF BRITISH GUIANA, Vol. I., By Schomburgk, with his Life, Travels, and Portrait, 34 Coloured Plates. Completion of the Work. The following Volumes, with which considerable progress has been made, will complete the Series, forming in all 40 Volumes.
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