Puslapio vaizdai
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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by

TICKNOR AND FIELDS,

in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.

UNIVERSITY PRESS: WELCH, BIGELOW, & Co.,

CAMBRIDGE.

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F. B. Perkins

Perkins

Mrs. H. B. Stowe

Charles J. Sprague.

Goldwin Smith

C. C. Hazewell
Mrs. A. M. Diaz
J. H. A. Bone
Bayard Taylor
Alice Cary

Griffith Gaunt; or, Jealousy. VIII, IX., X., XI., XII. Charles Reade.

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12, 174

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Passages from Hawthorne's Note-Books. VII., VIII, IX.,

Physical History of the Valley of the Amazons. I., II.

Pierpont, John

President and his Accomplices, The.

Mrs. M. L. Moody
C. C. Hazewell.
Henry James, Jr.

X., XI., XII.
Louis Agassiz
John Neal

E. P. Whipple

40, 189, 288, 450, 536, 682

49, 159

650

634

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Miss Ildrewe's Language of Flowers

Laugel's United States during the War, and Goldwin Smith's Address on the Civil War in America.
Marcy's Thirty Years of Army Life on the Border

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Moens's English Travellers and Italian Brigands, and Abbott's Prison Life in the South

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THE

ATLANTIC MONTHLY.

A Magazine of Literature, Science, Art, and Politics.

VOL. XVIII.—JULY, 1866. — NO. CV.

THE

THE CASE OF GEORGE DEDLOW.

HE following notes of my own case have been declined on various pretexts by every medical journal to which I have offered them. There was, perhaps, some reason in this, because many of the medical facts which they record are not altogether new, and because the psychical deductions to which they have led me are not in themselves of medical interest. I ought to add, that a good deal of what is here related is not of any scientific value whatsoever; but as one or two people on whose judgment I rely have advised me to print my narrative with all the personal details, rather than in the dry shape in which, as a psychological statement, I shall publish it elsewhere, I have yielded to their views. I suspect, however, that the very character of my record will, in the eyes of some of my readers, tend to lessen the value of the metaphysical discoveries which it sets forth.

I am the son of a physician, still in large practice, in the village of Abington, Scofield County, Indiana. Expecting to act as his future partner, I studied medicine in his office, and in 1859

and 1860 attended lectures at the Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. My second course should have been in the following year, but the outbreak of the Rebellion so crippled my father's means that I was forced to abandon my intention. The demand for army surgeons at this time became very great; and although not a graduate, I found no difficulty in getting the place of Assistant-Surgeon to the Tenth Indiana Volunteers. In the subsequent Western campaigns this organization suffered so severely, that, before the term of its service was over, it was merged in the Twenty-First Indiana Volunteers; and I, as an extra surgeon, ranked by the medical officers of the latter regiment, was transferred to the Fifteenth Indiana Cavalry. Like many physicians, I had contracted a strong taste for army life, and, disliking cavalry service, sought and obtained the position of First-Lieutenant in the Seventy-Ninth Indiana Volunteers, -an infantry regiment of excellent character.

On the day after I assumed command of my company, which had no captain, we were sent to garrison a part

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by TICKNOR AND FIELDS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts

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