drug of any kind in the house."
"No brandy?" I ventured this suggestion again.
"No, doctor, no spirits of any kind, nor even wine, in the house,"
returned Mrs. H--, in an offended tone.
I was not the regular family physician, and had been called in to
meet the alarming emergency, because my office happened to be
nearest to the dwelling of Mr. H--. Feeling my position to be a
difficult one, I suggested that the family physician had better be
called.
"But the delay, doctor," urged the friends. "No harm will result
from it, be assured," I replied.
But my words did not assure them. However, as I was firm in my
resolution not to do any thing more for the patient until Dr.
S-- came, they had to submit. I wished to make a call of importance
in the neighbourhood, and proposed going, to be back by the time Dr.
S-- arrived; but the friends of the sick man would not suffer me to
leave the room.
When Dr. S-- came, we conversed aside for a few minutes, and I gave
him my views of the case, and stated what I had done and why I had
done it. We then proceeded to the bedside of our patient; there were
still no signs of approaching consciousness.
"Don't you think his head ought to be shaved and blistered?" asked
the wife, anxiously. Dr. S-- thought a moment, and then said--"Yes,
by all means. Send for a barber; and also for a fresh fly-blister,
four inches by nine."
I looked into the face of Dr. S-- with surprise; it was perfectly
grave and earnest. I hinted to him my doubt of the good that mode of
treatment would do; but he spoke confidently of the result, and said
that it would not only cure the disease, but, he believed, take away
the predisposition thereto, with which Mr. H-- was affected in a
high degree.
The barber came. The head of H-- was shaved, and Dr. S-- applied
the blister with his own hands, which completely covered the scalp
from forehead to occiput.
"Let it remain on for two hours, and then make use of the ordinary
dressing," said Dr. S--. "If he should not recover during the
action of the blister, don't feel uneasy; sensibility will be
restored soon after."
I did not call again, but I heard from Dr. S-- the result.
After we left, the friends stood anxiously around the bed upon which
the sick man lay; but though the blister began to draw, no signs of
returning consciousness showed themselves, further than an
occasional low moan, or an uneasy tossing of the arms. For full two
hours the burning
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