. The art of taming and educating the horse : a system that makes easy and practical the subjection of wild and vicious horses ... : the simplest, most humane and effective in the world : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing .... Horses; Horses; Horses; CHR 1887; PRO Smith, James Somers, Jr. (donor). COUNTEK litRlTANTS. 1029 parativo inflammation, partalting in its nature of wbat is described by Virchow as tlie "secretoiy inflammatio


. The art of taming and educating the horse : a system that makes easy and practical the subjection of wild and vicious horses ... : the simplest, most humane and effective in the world : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing .... Horses; Horses; Horses; CHR 1887; PRO Smith, James Somers, Jr. (donor). COUNTEK litRlTANTS. 1029 parativo inflammation, partalting in its nature of wbat is described by Virchow as tlie "secretoiy inflammation," which, superseding the original diseased process (whether that be inflammation pure and simple or its efl'ects, idceration, caries, or a formation of a low form of fibrous tissues), excites the formation of reparative material by which the breaches are united, ulcers healed, and diseased action removed. " To illustrate this view, I will bring forward two fainiliar ex- amples: 1. The healing of a sinus or fistula, after the ai^plication of a blister, or of the actual cautery to the skin contingent to il; and 2. The removal of phlebitis (inflammation of the vein iu the neck after bleeding) by a blister. " In the first instance, we find that a sinus heals after a blister or cautery, bj^ the formation of an or- ganizablo exudate, which completely fills up the cavitjr of the sinus; and, in the second, we find that a blister assists in the obliteration of the in- flamed vein, not by removing the inflam- mation from it, but by promoting the formation of a large quantity of repara- tive lymph, and hast- ening its further de- velopment into fi- Fig. 8SI.—TheAspirat,,,-.* brous tissues, by which the vessel is transformed at the inflamed part into a fibrous cord. 'Now if the curative action were due to the removal of inflammation, we should find that in the first case the relief would be only of a temporary nature, the sinus would still remain, being generally the cau


Size: 1780px × 1403px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1887