“Our situation was miserable: always wet, and suffering extreme cold in the night, without the least shelter from the weather. The little rum we had was of the greatest service; when our nights were particularly distressing, I generally served a tea-spoonful or two to each person, and it was always joyful tidings when they heard of my intention.”—Family Library, vol. xxv. Mutiny of the Bounty.
INDEX.
- Abbas the Great, his edict, [200]
- Alcohol the intoxicating principle of all liquors, [61]
- its action differs from that of opium, [106]
- Alexander the Great died of drunkenness, [22]
- Amurath IV. made smoking a capital offence, [81]
- Ardent Spirits, drunkenness modified by, [61]
- varieties of, [26], [63]
- Armstrong, Dr., his remarks on the disease of the brain, [141]
- Arrack a spirituous liquor long known in the East, [20]
- Balfour, Mr. Alexander, case communicated by, [214]
- Bangue possesses intoxicating properties, [98]
- Bardolph, his nose, [144]
- Barrow, Mr., his remarks on tobacco, [83]
- Beckon Medical Jurisprudence, extracts from, [194], [195]
- Beecher, Dr., his Sermons on Intemperance, [156], [255]
- Beer known to the Egyptians, [19]
- in the interior of Africa, [19]
- Belladonna, [100]
- Bitters often dangerous remedies, [139]
- Bladder, state of, [142]
- Bligh, Captain, his privations, [247]
- Blood and breath, state of, [142]
- Bonosus, hanged himself in a fit of despair, [23]
- Brain, state of, [140]
- Brande, Mr., his Table, [260]
- Brandy, [20], [26], [63]
- Brodie, Mr., his experiments on tobacco, [83]
- opinion regarding the absorption of Alcohol, [108]
- Broomley, Mr., his remedy for drunkenness, [123]
- Bunbury, his caricature of the “Long Story,” [57]
- Caldwell, Dr., on the cure of drunkenness, [218]
- Camphor possesses intoxicating properties, [103]
- Carbonic acid possesses intoxicating properties, [104]
- Cardinal Santa Crocé introduced tobacco into Italy, [80]
- Carnaro, extract from, [155]
- Catherine de Medicis the inventor of Snuff, [80]
- Catherine I. addicted to the use of tokay, [239]
- Chardin, extract from his Travels, [75]
- Chewing, [88]
- Children, effects of liquors on, [150], [243]
- Claret, the most wholesome of wines, [239]
- Clery, [104]
- Clutterbuck, Dr., his opinion of delirium tremens, [166]
- Cocculus Indicus, [99]
- Coffee useful in poisoning from opium, [129]
- Coke, Sir Edward, his judicial opinion, [190]
- Cold, effects of intense, [105]
- Coleridge, Mr., his case, [93]
- Collinson on Lunacy, extract from, [195]
- Combustion, spontaneous, [175]
- Commercial travellers addicted to intemperance, [31]
- Congee the drink of the natives of India, [220]
- Corpulency, [152]
- Darnel, [104]
- Darwin, Dr., averse to blooding in drunkenness, [121]
- his account of psora ebriorum, [146]
- opposes the sudden discontinuance of liquors, [198]
- Delirium tremens, [159]
- Demosthenes used cold water as a stimulus, [34]
- Desgenettes, observation by, [221]
- Digitalis, [99]
- Don Gio Maria Bertholi, case of, [181]
- Double vision, cause of, [114]
- Dreams, [171]
- Drunkard, choleric, [57]
- melancholy, [54]
- nervous, [57]
- periodical, [58]
- phlegmatic, [55]
- sanguineous, [52]
- surly, [55]
- Drunkards, sleep of, [170]
- spontaneous combustion of, [175]
- advice to inveterate, [236]
- Drunkenness, causes of, [28]
- modified by temperament, [52]
- modified by the inebriating agent, [61]
- physiology of, [111]
- method of curing the fit of, [120]
- pathology of, [132]
- judicially considered, [190]
- method of curing the habit of, [197]
- Dupuy, M., experiment by, [123]
- Ears, ringing in the, cause of, [116]
- Eason, Rebecca, inquest on her body, [79]
- Edgar, Professor, his account of Temperance Societies, [233]
- anecdote by, [253]
- Edgeworth, Mr., his case, [93]
- Eldon, Lord, case cited by, [195]
- Elevation of spirits, cause of, [116]
- Emaciation, [151]
- English regiment, anecdote of, [125]
- Epilepsy, [150]
- Ethers possess intoxicating properties, [104]
- Eyes, state of, [143]
- Flushing, cause of, [116]
- Fontenelle used coffee as a stimulus, [34]
- Gin, [25], [63]
- Good, Dr. Mason, a believer in spontaneous combustion, [186]
- Gordon, Duchess of, used opium, [72]
- Gout, [147]
- Grace Pitt, case of, [180]
- Grog, origin of the term, [238]
- Hair, state of, [146]
- Hales, Judge, his remarks on drunkenness, [167]
- rejects the plea of drunkenness, [191]
- Haller used cold water as a stimulus, [34]
- Hammer, Von, extract from his history of the Assassins, [101]
- Hannibal’s army ruined by intemperance, [22]
- Heart, palpitation of, [149]
- Heat and flushing, cause of, [116]
- Hemlock, [98]
- Hernandez de Toledo introduced tobacco into Europe, [80]
- Hibiscus Saldarissa, [27]
- Hislop, Sir Thomas, fact stated by, [220]
- Hobbes used tobacco as a stimulus, [34]
- Hop, [99]
- Hunter, Dr., experiments by, [243]
- Hyoscyamus, [101]
- Hysteria, [149]
- Inflammations, [147]
- Innocent, Pope, renewed Pope Urban’s bull, [81]
- James I., his “Counterblaste to Tobacco,” [82]
- Johnson, Dr., used tea as a stimulus, [34]
- Kain, Dr., recommends tartar emetic for the cure of habitual drunkenness, [216]
- Kaimes, Lord, fact related by, [71]
- Kidneys, state of, [141]
- Kinglake, Dr., his case, [95]
- Kinninmouth, Patrick, tried for blasphemy and adultery, [193]
- Langsberg, Matthew, his saying, [23]
- Leopard’s-bane, [98]
- Lewis, William, a great ale drinker, [69]
- Liquors, method of curing drunkenness from, [120]
- cannot always be suddenly discontinued with safety, [198]
- not always hurtful, [246]
- Liver, state of, [133]
- M’Donough, William, tried for murder, [194]
- Mackenzie, Sir George, says that the plea of drunkenness is never received in extenuation of crime, [191]
- Madame Millet, case of, [184]
- Madness, [157]
- Mahomet forbade wine to his followers, [20]
- Malt liquors, drunkenness modified by, [66]
- Mary Clues, case of, [177]
- Masurer, M., discovered the virtues of acetate of ammonia in drunkenness, [122]
- Mead the favourite drink of the Saxons, [19]
- Melancholy, [156]
- Mithridates, his body powerfully resisted poisons, [78]
- Montesquieu, quotations from, [16], [70], [221]
- Mosley, Dr., his observations on the effect of drinking cold water in the tropics, [222]
- Nepenthes, [27]
- Nervii refused to drink wine, [22]
- Newton used tobacco as a stimulus, [34]
- Nightmare, [172]
- Nitrous oxide, [131]
- drunkenness modified by, [89]
- North, Dr., his remarks on convulsions of children, [242]
- Nurses and children, effects of intoxicating agents on, [241]
- Odoherty, Morgan, his advice to drunkards, [240]
- Old age, premature, [154]
- Opium, drunkenness modified by, [70]
- used by the late Duchess of Gordon, [72]
- its action differs from that of alcohol, [106]
- method of curing drunkenness from, [126]
- Opium-Eater, English, his “Confessions,” [70], [76]
- Orfila, M., his experiments, [106], [129]
- Palm wine, [103]
- Paris and Fonblanque, extract from their Medical Jurisprudence, [176]
- Paris, Dr., excerpt from his Pharmacologia, [257]
- Peganum Harmala, [27]
- Perspiration, state of, [143]
- Pitcairn, Dr., and the highland chieftain, [213]
- Plugging, [88]
- Porter, [26], [67]
- Portland powder, [140]
- Psora ebriorum, [146]
- Punch, [237]
- Quakers, longevity of, [151], [155]
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, introduced tobacco into England, [81]
- Rollo, Dr., fact stated by, [220]
- Rum, [26], [63]
- Ryan, Dr., his opinion of delirium tremens, [166]
- Sack of Shakspeare supposed to have been sherry, [66]
- Saffron, [104]
- Schubert, extract from his Travels in Sweden, [195]
- Shakspeare, extracts from, [144], [153]
- Sinclair, Sir John, his remark on ale, [252]
- Skin, state of, [145]
- Sleep of Drunkards, [170]
- Sleep-walking, [17]
- Sleep-talking, [173]
- Smith, Dr. Gordon, a believer in spontaneous combustion, [187]
- Smoking, [86]
- Snuffing, [84]
- Spartans held ebriety in abhorrence, [22]
- Spirits, their adulteration, [24]
- their varieties, [25], [63]
- Spurzheim’s opinion of the sudden discontinuance of liquors, [198]
- Staggering and stammering, causes of, [115]
- Stanhope, Lord, his remarks on Snuffing, [84]
- Sterility, [150]
- Stomach, state of, [136]
- Tartar Emetic, use of, [216]
- Temperament, drunkenness modified by, [52]
- Temperance Societies, [223]
- Thackrah, his remarks on the intemperate habits of commercial travellers, [32]
- Tobacco, drunkenness modified by, [80]
- Tobacco, method of curing drunkenness from, [129]
- Toddy, [237]
- Tremors, [148]
- Trotter, Dr., averse to blooding in drunkenness, [121]
- his advice called in question, [198]
- Typhus fever, delirium of, sometimes mistaken for drunkenness, [126]
- Ulcers, [156]
- Urban VIII. excommunicated snuffers, [81]
- Vertigo, cause of, [112]
- Vinegar, its properties, [125], [128]
- Voltaire used coffee as a stimulus, [34]
- Walcheren fever, effects of spirits and smoking on, [225]
- Whisky, [26], [63]
- Wines, their adulteration, [24]
- drunkenness modified by, [65]
- Wolf’s-bane, [99]
THE END.
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EDWARD KHULL, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY.
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