[1725]. Melier in Archives Gén. de Méd. xiv. 406.
[1726]. Corvisart’s Journ. de Méd. xvi. 21.
[1727]. Lancet, 1836–37, i. 271.
[1728]. Aufsätze und Beobachtungen, i. 93.
[1729]. Ollivier’s case in Arch. Gén. vii. 550.
[1730]. Corv. Journ. de Méd. xxxiv. 274.
[1731]. Aufsätze und Beobachtungen, i. 94, 100.
[1732]. Archives Gén. de Méd. li. 495.
[1733]. These effects must not be confounded with those which poppy-juice has been known to cause when spoiled. A whole family of Jews were attacked with violent vomiting and purging, in consequence of partaking of a decoction of poppy-heads, which had been kept four days in a hot stove, and had consequently undergone decomposition. The usual narcotism was not produced at all. (Rust’s Magazin, xxii. 484.)
[1734]. Mém. de l’Acad. des Sciences, xxxviii. 1735.