
"All those who have at any time given clinical demonstrations on disease must have felt the desire to impress more firmly on their hearers the remembrance of what they have seen than is possible in an ordinary lecture. After many attempts to arrive at this in some other way, I have now tried to preserve, in a measure, the impressions of a term’s clinical work in the form of the lectures contained in the following pages. In my descriptions I have endeavoured, as far as possible, to follow the actual course of the lectures. Naturally, not only must this work give up all claim to the actual presentation of the patients, for which the student can only be compensated by personal experience in the hospital, but we must also forego the great help to teaching afforded by the assistant’s little awkwardnesses and blunders, which so often serve to point out to the teacher the right method of instruction. On the other hand, the material can in this way be worked up more concisely, more systematically, and more completely than is generally possible in the hospital.In these lectures I have always kept the diagnostic point of view in the foreground, being convinced of its fundamental importance, not only to our scientific ideas, but also as affecting the advice we shall have to give in our medical practice, and the methods of treatment to be adopted by us. In my opinion, what the student ought to learn in the hospital, besides the examination of patients, is not text-book knowledge, which he can acquire just as well, or better, at home, but how to turn his observations to account, and the careful judgment of any given case. These lectures, then, must not in any way be looked upon as a textbook of alienism. Their aim will be far better attained if they prove of some value as a guide to the clinical investigation of the insane.The examples of disease, which for obvious reasons have been taken from entirely separate years, and some of which have been utilized elsewhere, do not profess in their brief outline to be scientific records. Nevertheless, each individual case is delineated with the greatest possible truth to life, while the diagnostic developments are almost entirely taken directly from notes upon clinical demonstrations. Inquiries as to the further history of the patients were carried on, as far as possible, up to going to press, and, for the most part, were only added after the whole was complete."This classic includes the following chapters:I. Introduction: MelancholiaII. Depressed Stages of Maniacal-Depressive Insanity (Circular Stupor)III. Dementia PraecoxIV. Katatonic StuporV. States of Depression in General ParalysisVI. Epileptic InsanityVII. Maniacal ExcitementVIII. Mixed Conditions of Maniacal-Depressive InsanityIX. Katatonic ExcitementX. Megalomania in General ParalysisXI. Alcoholic Mental DisturbancesXII. Insanity in Acute DiseasesXIII. Varieties of DeliriumXIV. Puerperal InsanityXV. Paranoia, or Progressive Systematized InsanityXVI. Paranoidal Forms of Dementia PraecoxXVII. Different Forms of DelusionsXVIII. Chronic AlcoholismXIX. Morphinism and CocainismXX. Final Stages of General Paralysis of the InsaneXXI. Final Stages of Dementia PraecoxXXII. Dementia From Coarse Brain LesionsXXIII. Senile DementiaXXIV. Epileptic Feeble-MindednessXXV. Hysterical InsanityXXVI. Insanity After Injuries to the HeadXXVII. Irrepressible Ideas and Irresistible FearsXXVIII. Congenital States of DiseaseXXIX. Morbid PersonalitiesXXX. Morbid Criminals and VagabondsXXXI. Imbecility-IdiocyXXXII. Cretinism—Concluding Remarks