1st. By simply placing the patient upon the electrical stool. While the machine is in action the patient constantly emits the overplus of the electric fluid that he receives, which continually passes off from every part of his body, and produces a salutary effect. It may be suspected that so gentle a treatment could have but little influence. It is however upon good authority we assert, that nervous and sedentary persons have derived considerable advantage from this mode of application.

2d. By electric friction. Let the part affected be covered with a piece of flannel or woollen cloth, and place the patient upon the insulated chair, and connect him with the prime-conductor; then take a metallic ball, communicating with the earth, and rub it over the flannel or woollen cloth. Electricity thus applied has often removed violent spasms, and many other afflicting complaints.

3d. By drawing sparks. Let the patient, as in the last instance, be placed upon the insulated stool, and connected with the prime-conductor; then bring the metallic ball, communicating with the ground, within about half an inch of the part affected, and sparks will pass from it to the ball. Cutaneous eruptions, scrophulous tumours and deafness, are frequently benefitted, and sometimes removed, by this method of application. Deafness, in particular, has been entirely cured by the electric spark, when every other remedy has proved ineffectual. One of these cases came under our own observation. A gentleman who was affected with an almost total loss of hearing for more than six months, was advised by his physician to make a trial of electricity as a remedy. He applied to us, and was under our care about four or five weeks, when he left us almost entirely recovered. This gentleman was treated in the following manner.

We placed him on an insulated chair communicating with the prime-conductor. Then, with a blunt pointed wire inserted into a glass tube, we drew sparks from the meatus auditorius. This operation was continued for eight or ten minutes, at every visit. He commonly attended us twice or thrice a week. We were fully persuaded that the cure would have been more speedy, if he had received the electricity more frequently.

4th. By the stream. Place the patient as in the two last instances; then bring the point, instead of the ball, near the part affected. When the electrical stream is to be applied the wooden point is preferable to the metallic one. Inflammations and other diseases of the eyes, and several other disorders, have been thus removed.

5th. By the director. Place the patient on a chair—insulation in this case being unnecessary. Then lay the ball, which communicates with the outside coating of the director, upon the affected part; after which, bring the director, which must have been previously charged, near any other part of the body, and the intended operation will be performed. It is impossible to tell the precise quantity of electricity which ought to be administered in every complaint, because persons who are affected with the same disease will sometimes require very different degrees of electrization, which must be judged of by the nature of their constitution, their habits of body, and other circumstances. Small sparks will sometimes have more effect upon a delicate and irritable constitution, than pretty powerful shocks upon others. The Leyden phial, with Mr. Lane’s electrometer, is the most convenient instrument for sending shocks of different powers through particular parts of the body.—To use this.—Let the wire of the electrometer be placed at the proper distance for the required shock; connect a chain or wire, communicating with this, with the part affected—and let a communication be made between any other part of the body and the outside coating of the phial. Now turn the cylinder, and the phial, when it has received the proper charge, will discharge itself through the circuit formed by the chains or wires, and the part of the patient which was to be subjected to the shock.

CHAP. XIX.
Directions concerning the use of the electrical apparatus, with some practical rules for performing experiments with it to the best advantage.

The machine described in Chapter IV, or one similar to it, is capable of exhibiting the principal electrical phenomena, provided it be skilfully managed; but without such management it will constantly disappoint the electrician, and prove of little use. Let the following directions and observations, then, be attentively regarded.

1. Keep all the instruments as free as possible from dust and moisture.

2. When the weather is clear, the air dry and a little cold, the electric fire may be easily and copiously collected. But when the weather is hot or damp, the electrical machine is much less powerful.