[605]. Annales d’Hygiène Publique, xvii. 338.
[606]. Pandectæ Medico-legales, P. i. s. iii. cas. xxvi. pp. 134, 135.
[607]. Diction. de Méd. et de Chir. Pratique, Art. Arsenic, iii. 340.
[608]. Archives Gén. de Médecine, vii 14.—Another case somewhat analogous has been related by Tonnelier in Corvisart’s Journal de Médecine (iv. 15). The person, a girl nineteen years of age, took the poison at eleven, dined pretty heartily at two, and concealed her sufferings till seven. Even before dinner, however, she had been observed occasionally to change countenance, as if uneasy.
[609]. Edin. Med. and Surg. Journal, xxvii. 450.
[610]. London Med. Chir. Trans. ii. 134.
[611]. Edin. Med. and Surg. Journal, xxix. 23. See also above, p. 77.
[612]. Mr. Page, Lancet, 1836–37, ii. 626.
[613]. Wendland in Augustin’s Archiv der Staatsarzneikunde, ii. 34.
[614]. Pyl’s Aufsätze und Beob. i. 55.