Fig. 12 (No. 61).—Left eye, temporal half.
Fig. 13 (No. 108).—Right eye, nasal half.
Fig. 14 (No. 50).—Right eye, lower half.
Fig. 15 (No. 136).—Left eye, upper half.
Backward Dislocations.—Dislocations backward are the rule, and very wide variations are found both in the completeness and in the direction of the displacement.
Those in which the lenses, or their nuclei, have been completely dislocated into the vitreous, and there lie floating more or less freely (Pl. II., Fig. [14]), are 9 in number. In 7 of them the cataracts were Morgagnian, and in the 2 others there was a bulky nucleus with a thin covering of stiff cortex. In 7 the tension of the globe was high; in 6 the retina was completely or nearly completely detached, and in 2 of them it was so much folded as to limit the movements of the lens.