Curiosities of Medical Experience
By J. G. MILLINGEN, M.D., M.A. SURGEON TO THE FORCES; RESIDENT PHYSICIAN OF THE COUNTY OF MIDDLESEX PAUPER LUNATIC ASYLUM AT HANWELL; MEMBER OF THE MEDICAL SOCIETY OF THE ANCIENT FACULTY OF PARIS; OF THE MEDICAL SOCIETY OF BORDEAUX; AND AUTHOR OF “THE ARMY MEDICAL OFFICER’S MANUAL,” &c.
SECOND EDITION.
REVISED AND CONSIDERABLY AUGMENTED.
IN ONE VOLUME.
LONDON: RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty. 1839.
WHITING, BEAUFORT HOUSE, STRAND.
TO SIR JAMES M’GRIGOR, Bart. M.D., F.R.S., K.T.S., &c. &c. DIRECTOR GENERAL OF THE ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, TO WHOSE ZEAL AND EXAMPLE THE MEDICAL OFFICERS OF HER MAJESTY’S FORCES ARE SO MUCH INDEBTED FOR THAT DISTINGUISHED CHARACTER AND CONSIDERATION THEY COLLECTIVELY AND INDIVIDUALLY HOLD IN THE ESTIMATION OF THE EUROPEAN ARMIES, THIS WORK IS INSCRIBED, AS A TESTIMONIAL OF PUBLIC RESPECT AND SINCERE PRIVATE ESTEEM, BY THE AUTHOR.
The rapid sale of the first edition of this work has induced the publisher to reprint it with considerable additions in a less expensive, and more concise form—and the author embraces this opportunity, gratefully to acknowledge the liberality with which it has been received, and the indulgence shown to its many imperfections. At the same time he cannot but regret, that in some quarters it has been surmised that he yielded credence to the many strange relations which he has recorded from various medical works, but which he merely narrated, to show the fallacy even of experience, and the many dangers that may arise from the most ingenious theories and doctrines, in the very ratio of their apparent plausibility.
Although these sketches were not intended for the profession, yet they may prove of some utility to the pupil who commences the arduous study of medicine. They may convince him, that great names, however justly respected and renowned, do not constitute a sufficient basis, on which to rest a satisfactory and conclusive judgment; and, as Locke has justly observed, that “ reverence or prejudice must not be suffered to give beauty or deformity to any of their opinions .” He will find that of which further experience will subsequently convince him, that medical investigation is too often founded upon analogy and hypothesis—but let not this painful and disheartening impression arrest his progress, or deter him from seeking to assist his judgment by collecting “the scattered parts of truth,” for in speaking of hypothesis, Dr. Crichton has thus expressed himself: “There is a period in knowledge, when it must be indulged in if we mean to make any progress; it is that period when the facts are too numerous to be recollected without general principles, and yet, where the facts are too few to constitute a valid theory. If the exterior form of an edifice is often the principal motive with men for examining its internal structure; so it is in science, that the splendour of an hypothesis, and the desire of proving its solidity, are more frequent motives for research than a mere love of knowledge.”
J. G. Millingen
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PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
INTRODUCTION.
OBESITY.
DWARFS.
GIGANTIC RACES.
UNLAWFUL CURES.
VOICE AND SPEECH.
ECSTATIC EXALTATION.
VARIETIES OF MANKIND.
ON THE INHUMATION OF THE DEAD IN CITIES.
BURIED ALIVE.
SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION.
BRASSICA ERUCA, OR THE ROCKET PLANT.
CAGLIOSTRO.
LUNAR INFLUENCE ON HUMAN LIFE AND DISEASES.
SPECTACLES.
LEECHES.
SOMNAMBULISM.
MEDICAL POWERS OF MUSIC.
THE FOOD OF MANKIND. ITS USE AND ABUSE.
INFLUENCE OF IMAGINATION.
ANCIENT IDEAS OF PHRENOLOGY.
PERFUMES.
LOVE PHILTERS AND POTIONS.
VENTRILOQUISM.
CHAUCER’S DESCRIPTION OF A PHYSICIAN. THE DOCTOR OF PHYSIC.
DÆMONOMANIA.
THE PLAGUE.
ABSTINENCE.
POISON OF THE UPAS, OR IPO.
HOMOPHAGOUS AND POLYPHAGOUS.
CAUSES OF INSANITY.
LEPROSY.
THE ASPIC.
SELDEN’S COMPARISON BETWEEN A DIVINE, A STATESMAN, AND A PHYSICIAN.
THE LETTUCE.
MEDICAL FEES.
ENTHUSIASM.
MEDICINAL EFFECTS OF WATER.
PROVERBS AND SAYINGS REGARDING HEALTH AND DISEASE.
THE NIGHT-MARE.
INCUBATION OF DISEASES.
QUACKERY AND CHARLATANISM.
ON THE USE OF TEA.
MANDRAGORE.
BARBER-SURGEONS, AND THE PROGRESS OF CHIRURGICAL ART.
ON DREAMS.
ON FLAGELLATION.
ON LIFE AND THE BLOOD.
OF THE HOMŒOPATHIC DOCTRINES.
DOCTRINE OF SIGNATURES.
COFFEE.
AQUA TOPHANIA.
PLICA POLONICA AND HUMAN HAIR.
ANIMAL MAGNETISM.
POISONOUS FISHES.
MEMORY AND THE MENTAL FACULTIES.
AFFECTIONS OF THE SIGHT.
HELLEBORE.
SYMPATHIES AND ANTIPATHIES.
THE ARCHEUS OF VAN HELMONT.
MONSTERS.
LONGEVITY.
CRETINISM.
TEMPERAMENTS.
SOLAR INFLUENCE.
SWEATING FEVER.
SMALLPOX.
GENERATIVE ANIMALCULES.
CIRCULATION OF THE BLOOD.
DRUNKENNESS.
DECAPITATION.
MUMMIES.
HYDROPHOBIA.
ON THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF THE SCIENCE OF MEDICINE.
MEDICINE OF THE CHINESE.
EXPERIMENTS ON LIVING ANIMALS.