liver
may be apprehended.
If, in connection with some or all of the above symptoms, the
breathing
be laboured and painful, with a disposition to remain in the erect or sitting position, with great anxiety and general distress, we must look to the
pulmonic viscera
as the seat of the disease.
Thus, by examining each and every individual symptom of disease, the intelligent sportsman will soon be able to arrive at the proximate cause of all this unnatural state of things, and then he will be competent to administer such remedies as may seem most likely to afford relief. Without these precautions, however, he would often be groping in the dark, and, consequently, not unfrequently, apply those remedies more calculated to aggravate than cure the malady.
[Contents]/[Detailed Contents, p. 4]/[Index]