Oh! ye doctors and potecaries, you’ll all go to hell,
For cheating our poor tripes of their daily meal.
H. Dumaresq.
The ball in this case was lodged in the rib, which ultimately became thickened around it. He recovered with good health, but with occasional spasms in the chest; and died of apoplexy, in Australia, twenty-five years afterward. His doggerel lines show the buoyant and unconquerable spirit of a soldier, who knew that his chance of recovery was small. It was a most gallant, a most friendly spirit. Peace to his manes.
If the ball had caused a greater degree of irritation, I was prepared to cut down upon the rib, and remove a part of it, if necessary; for I have seen balls so situated slip from their lodgment, roll on the diaphragm, and cause general inflammation, suppuration of the cavity, and death, which must almost always ensue in such cases, unless the ball can be removed, and the matter evacuated by an operation to be hereafter described.
General Macdonald, of the Royal Artillery, was present at Buenos Ayres, when a bombarder of that corps received a wound from a two-pound shot, which went completely through the right side, so that when led up to the general, who was lying on the ground, he saw the light quite through him, and supposed he was of course lost. This, however, did not follow, and some months afterward the man walked into General (then Captain) Macdonald’s room, so far recovered from the injury as to be able to undertake several parts of his duty before he was invalided; thus proving the advantage of a shot, however large, going through rather than remaining in the chest.
LECTURE XXIV.
Appearances After Death, Etc.
343. The appearances after death differ materially even in apparently similar wounds.
A French soldier, shot through the right side of the chest at the siege of Badajos, died in December, 1812, in Lisbon, apparently of consecutive phthisis. The ball had gone through the chest from before directly backward; the posterior wound was closed; the anterior one was fistulous, and discharged a small quantity of matter, of which he spat up daily a large quantity until he died. The lung was diseased throughout, and contained several vomicæ or small abscesses, from which the matter expectorated was secreted. The track of the ball was nearly filled up, although the part immediately around was harder than usual. The lung adhered in many places to the wall of the chest, which was much flattened.