[1]. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, May 21, 1868.

[2]. “The Restorative Treatment of Pneumonia.” Third Edition. Edinburgh: Black, 1866.

[3]. British Medical Journal, December 28, 1867.

[4]. British Medical Journal, February 22, 1868.

[5]. See also some Lectures on Pneumonia by Dr. Waters, of Liverpool (British Medical Journal, October 1867), whose views and treatment, allied to those of Dr. Sieveking—I hope he will excuse me for thinking—are very unsatisfactory, when compared with the results obtained by a restorative practice.

[6]. Practitioner, November 1868.

[7]. Read at the third Quarterly Meeting of the Medico-Psychological Association, held at the Royal Medico-Chirurgical Society, April 29, 1869.

[8]. Extract from Nineteenth Annual Report of the Somerset Asylum:—“One female maniac, C. L., aged 35, single, most obscene in her conduct and language, noisy, destructive, and dirty, got rapidly well after the employment of the hypodermic injection of a solution containing half a grain of acetate of morphia.”

Extract from Twentieth Annual Report of the Somerset Asylum:—“The hypodermic injection of about half a grain of acetate of morphia in ♏︎x. of distilled water has been useful in cases of maniacal excitement with sleeplessness.”