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as we now look at unmoved. It was a boldness not of knowledge that first made light of such signs of dying, and found that what looked like a sleep of death was as safe as the beginning of a night's rest. Still, with all fair allowance for these and other difficulties, we cannot but see and wonder that for more than forty years of this century a great truth lay unobserved, though it was covered with only so thin a veil that a careful physiological research must have discovered it. The discovery ought to have been made by following the suggestion of Davy. The book in which he wrote that nitrous oxide-capable of destroying physical pain-may probably be used with advantage during surgical operations,' was widely read, and it would be hard to name a man of science more widely known and talked of than he was. Within two years of the publication of his Researches, he was appointed to a professorship in the Royal Institution; and in the next year he was a favourite in the fashionable as well as in the scientific world; and all his life through he was intimately associated with those among whom all the various motives for desiring to find some means 'capable of destroying physical pain' would be most strongly felt. Curiosity, the love of truth, the love of marvels, the desire of ease, self-interest, benevolence-all were alert in the minds of men and women who knew and trusted whatever Davy said or wrote, but not one mind was earnestly directed to the rare promise which his words contained. His own mind was turned with its full force to other studies; the interest in surgery which he may have felt during his apprenticeship at Bodmin was lost in his devotion to poetry, philosophy, and natural science, and there is no evidence that he urged others to undertake the study which he left. Even his biographers, his brother Dr. John Davy, and his intimate friend Dr. Paris, both of whom were very capable physicians and men of active intellect, say nothing of his suggestion of the use of nitrous oxide. It was overlooked and utterly forgotten till the prophecy was fulfilled by those who had never heard of it. The same may be said of what Faraday, if it were he, wrote of the influence of sulphuric ether. All was soon forgotten, and the clue to the discovery, which would have been far easier with ether than with nitrous oxide, for it needed no apparatus, and even required mixture with air, was again lost. One could have wished that the honour of bringing so great a boon to men, and so great a help in the pursuit of knowledge, had been won by some of those who were giving themselves with careful cultivation to the search for truth as for its own sake. But it was not so: science was utterly at fault; and it was shown that in the search for truth there are contingencies in which men of ready belief and rough enterprise, seeking for mere utility even with selfish purposes, can achieve more than those who restrain themselves within the range of what seems reasonable.

Such instances of delay in the discovery of truth are always

wondered at, but they are not uncommon. Long before Jenner demonstrated the utility of vaccination it was known in Gloucestershire that they who had had cow-pox could not catch the small-pox. For some years before the invention of electric telegraphy, Professor Cumming of Cambridge, when describing to his class the then recent discovery by Oersted of the power of an electric current to deflect a magnet, used to say, 'Here, then, are the elements which would excellently serve for a system of telegraphy.' Yet none of his hearers, active and cultivated as they were, were moved from the routine of study. Laennec quotes a sentence from Hippocrates which, if it had been worthily studied, might have led to the full discovery of auscultation. Thus it often has been; and few prophecies can be safer than that our successors will wonder at us as we do at those before us; will wonder that we did not discern the great truths which they will say were all around us, within reach of any clear, earnest mind.

They will wonder, too, as we may, when we study the history of the discovery of anesthetics, at the quietude with which habitual miseries are borne; at the very faint impulse to action which is given by even great necessities when they are habitual. Thinking of the pain of surgical operations, one would think that men would have rushed after the barest chance of putting an end to it as they would have rushed to escape from starving. But it was not so; the misery was so frequent, so nearly customary, deemed so inevitable, that, though it excited horror when it was talked of, it did not excite to strenuous action. Remedies were wished for and sometimes tried, but all was done vaguely and faintly; there was neither hope enough to excite intense desire, nor desire enough to encourage hope; the misery was put up with' just as we now put up with typhoid fever and sea-sickness, with local floods and droughts, with the waste of health and wealth in the pollutions of rivers, with hideous noises and foul smells, and many other miseries. Our successors, when they have remedied or prevented them, will look back on them with horror, and on us with wonder and contempt for what they will call our idleness or blindness or indifference to suffering.

JAMES PAGET.

INDEX TO VOL. VI.

The titles of articles are printed in italics.

A

ABI

BIVERD, probable occupation of,
by the Russians, 398-399
About (Edmond), Clerical Education in
France, 447-460

Achaians, religion of the, 757

its analogies with Hebrew Scripture,
765-767

Adye (Lt. Gen. Sir J.), The British
Army, 344-360

Afghan war, India's contribution to the
cost of the, 647-648

Afghan War, the Results of the, 377-400
Agra, description of, 126-129

Agricultural Reform, the Public Interest
in, 571-584
Ahmedabad, 721
Ahmednuggur, 712

Ajmere, description of, 247-248
Alexander of Abonotichus, the story of,

553-570

Alkali waste heaps, noxious effects of,
859

Allahabad, description of, 123
Allman (Dr.), his biological discourse

at the British Association meeting,
915-916, 927

Alsace-Lorraine since 1871, 819-831
Althaus (Dr. J.), The Functions of the
Brain, 1021-1032

Anæsthetics, history of the discovery of
their use, 1119–1125
Anglicanism, difficulties in, 76–87
Anthropomorphism the dominant prin-
ciple in Achaian religion, 757-759
Apollonius of Tyana, 551-553
Aragonite, 733

Army Bill, the Irish members' conduct
with regard to the, 205, 209-210
Discipline and Regulation Act, 612-
614

Purchase Bill, Tory obstruction of
the, 205

improved scheme of service in the, 8
Indian, cost of the, 658-663
Army, the British, 344-360
-Flogging in the, 604-614
Arnold (Matthew), The French Play in
London, 228-243

BIS

Artists, Government and the, 968-984
Asia, Central, the Russian expedition to,
392-398

Assyria, commercial arrangements of,
793

Atheism, Modern, and Mr. Mallock, 585–
603, 999-1020

Audiometer, researches with the, 738-
739

Augustine, baptismal doctrine of, 694-

695

Australia, transportation to, 875, 877-
884, 888-891

BABYLONIA, a banking firm of, 793
D Balrampur, Maharajah of, 251-252
Bangalore, 548

Banks, early national, 801-802
Baptism, 685-704

Bassein, 723

Bath, Order of the, why so termed, 689
Beaconsfield, Lord, the Political Novels
of, 504-528

Bear (William E.), The Public Interest
in Agricultural Reform, 571-584
Belgium, relation of bishops and clergy
in, 1112
Bellary, 707
Benares, 256

Bengal, ryot holdings in, 260

Bengal, the Domesday Book of, 1033-
1050

Berlin Memorandum, British policy in
connection with the, 208

-Treaty of, the Turkish reforms stipu-
lated in the, 214–215

Bernhardt (Mlle.), as compared with
Rachel, 130

Bevington (Miss L. S.), Modern Atheism
and Mr. Mallock, 585-603, 999-
1020

Bidder, visualising faculty of, 159
Bills, parliamentary arrangements for
the discussion of, 775-777

Biology illustrated by dynamics, 919-
927

Bishoprics, new, creation of, 84

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Calcite, 733

Calcutta, description of, 537

cession of, to the East India Com-
pany, 1035-1036

Canada, Moose-hunting in, 45-65
Canadian Tariff Act, 176
Candahar, 385-386, 388-389
Cape Colony, policy of establishing re-
sponsible government in the, 269-278
Carlisle (Bishop of), The Unity of
Nature: a Speculation, 915–927
Cauvery, river, 543

Cawnpore, description of, 124-126
Chaplin (Mr.), the motion of, 223-224
Cheilo-angioscopy, 745

Child, the banking house of, 805
China, early currency of, 789-791
China, The Book Language of, 904-914
Chinchona plantation, a, 547
Chlorophyll, properties and functions of,

743-744

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DIN

Clerical Education in France: a Keply,
447-460

Cobden on British manufactures, 181
Coconada, export trade of, 539
Coins, Aristotle's description of the
origin of, 796

etymology of, 804-805

Colonies, how not to retain the, 170–178
Comédie Française, the, 182-200
Committees, parliamentary, facilities for
obstruction in, 778-779

Commons, House of, declining condition
of the, 514-516, 527

Commons, House of, Public Business in
the, 769-788

Communion, practice of, in the Church
of England, 80

Comte (Auguste), English recognition
of, 627-628

Concordat, the French, 1094-1098
Confession in the Church, 81
Congregationists, French, school work
of the, 29-40, 450-451

Conservatism, strength of, 361–362
Contagion, as distinguished from infec-
tion, 810

- nature and mode of action of, 810-
815
Contagium vivum, the doctrine of, 740
Convicts, condition of, under the hulk
system, 873-874

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DACCA, description of, 536

Dahll (Dr.), discovery of a new
metal by, 736

Daubrée (M.), his researches in experi-
mental geology, 729-732

Davies (Miss Emily), exertions of, in
behalf of women's education, 312, 313
Deccan, the, 715-718

Delhi, notes of a visit to, 244–245
Derbunga, 530

Diamond fields, policy of annexing the,
267-269

Dieulafait (M.), on the prevalence of
lithium in nature, 735-736
Dining, art of, 103-113

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ASTERN question, British versus
European Interests in the, 207-208

Education, condition of, in England and

on the Continent, compared, 630-632
business view of, 990-992
Education Question in France, the, 23-44
A Reply to, 447-460

-

Women's, Personal Recollections of,
308-321

Clerical, in France: a Reply, 447–
460
Edwards (Rev. W. Walter), Compulsory
Providence: a Reply to Mr. Blackley,
893-903

Egyptians, ancient, coinage unknown
among the, 792-793

Eighteenth Century, a Plea for the,
1082-1092

Election, prospects of the Liberals at the,
368-370

Electoral systems, efficiency of, as means

of securing representation, 144-149
Elliot (Prof.), on Mr. Bidder's visualis-
ing faculty, 159

Ellis (R. L.), his notion of mathematical
chemistry, 919

Emotions, part played in recreation by
the, 407-408

England, Modern, Familiar Letters on,
615-638

England, history of coinage in, 802-804
-banking in, 805-806

English rule in India, a rajah's opinion
of, 257

dissatisfaction of natives with, 720-

721

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Farmers' Alliance, agricultural re-
forms proposed by the, 578-584
Farmers, tenant, Parliamentary repre-
sentation of, 578-579

the question of security for, 579-581
Irish, hardships of the, 958-960
Farming, profitable nature
of, in
America, 16-17

Indian, 126, 134–135, 245, 253
Fawcett (Henry), The New Departure in
Indian Finance, 639-663
Feeding, Food and, 99-118

Ferry (Jules), the law of, 27, 40, 43-44,
447-454

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Flogging in the Army, 604-614
Floods of Bengal, 1044-1046
Food and Feeding, 99-118
Forbes (Archibald), Flogging in the
Army, 604-614

Foreign policy of the late Government,
220-222

France, hatred of, for Germany, 820
the stage in, 190-191

France, the Education Question in, 23-44
Clerical Education in: a Reply, 447–
460

Free trade, meaning of, 180

French Play in London, the, 228-243

Church, on the Present State of the,
1093-1118

Friendly societies, position of, 897-898
Froude (J. A.), A Cagliostro of the
Second Century, 551–570
Fyzabad, 256

GALETY at the, 182-183, 241-242

YAIETY Theatre, the Comédie Fran-

Galton (Francis), Generic Images, 157-
169

Game laws, reform of the, 582
Gandamak, treaty of, 382-392
Ganges, river, 533

Garnish of dishes, 100, 101
Generic Images, 157–169
Geology, experimental, 728-732
George the Third, government of, 510-
512

Germany, hatred of the French in, 820

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