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FOOTNOTES:

[1] “The Recovery of the Apparently Dead,” by Charles Kite, Member of the Corporation of Surgeons in London, and Surgeon at Gravesend in Kent. London, 1788.

[2] “Histoire de la Médecine,” La Haye, 1729, p. 333.

[3] “Linnæan Transactions,” 1797, vol. iv., p. 155. “An Account of the Jumping Mouse of Canada—Dipus Canadensis.”

[4] Archives gén de Med., 1827, xiv., p. 105.

[5] The case referred to, being attended with considerable doubt, is omitted.

[6] Evening News, Nottingham, January 10, 1896.

[7] Health, May 21, 1886, edited by Dr. Andrew Wilson, pp. 120-1. After relating other cases, Surgeon Curran continues:—“I have myself personally seen or heard on the spot of three such cases—cases that in other hands or in other localities might have passed as dead, were they not buried as such accordingly.”