[26] Montgéron, Tom. III. p. 697.

[27] Ibid. p. 698.

[28] Lettre du Dr. A—— à M. de Montgéron, p. 8.

[29] Ibid. p. 7.

[30] Montgéron, Tom. II. Idée de l'État des Convulsionnaires, pp. 45, 46. Montgéron does not allege, however, that any other part of the body than that where the warning pains were felt became insensible or invulnerable. He cites (Tom. III. p. 629) the case of a convulsionist who, "at the moment when they were striking her on the breast with all possible force with a stone weighing twenty-five pounds, bade them suspend the succors for a moment, till she adjusted, in another part of her dress, a pin that was pricking her."

[31] Montgéron, Tom. II. Idée de l'État des Convulsionnaires, pp. 31, 32.

[32] Montgéron, Tom. II. Idée de l'État des Convulionnaires, p. 33.

[33] Lettre du Dr. A—— à M. de Montgéron, p. 7.

[34] Réponse des Anti-Secouristes à la Réclamation, par M. Poncet, p. 4.

[35] Montgéron, Tom. III. p. 706.