842 HENRY JACOB BIGELOW. 



Medical Education in America. Address before the Massachusetts Medi- 

 cal Society. 1871. 



Death by Chloroform and alleged Death by Ether. Boston Medical and 

 Surgical Journal. 1872. 



Alleged Death from Ether. Letter to the Editor of the British Medical 

 Journal. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 1873. 



Turbinated Corpora Cavernosa. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 

 1875. 



The True Neck of the Femur: its Structure and Pathology. Boston Med- 

 ical and Surgical Journal. 1875. 



A History of the Discovery of Modern Ansesthesia: a Century of Ameri- 

 can Medicine. Philadelphia. 1876. 



New Methods and Treatment of Extrophy of the Bladder and Erectile 

 Tumors. Boston INledical and Surgical Journal. 1876. 



Lithotrity by a Single Operation. American Journal of Medical Sciences. 

 1878. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 1878. 



Rapid Lithotrity with Evacuation. 1878. 



Litholapaxy. New York Medical Record. 1879. 



Litholapaxy. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 1879. 



Litholapaxy. Letter to the London Lancet. Boston Medical and Sur- 

 gical Journal. 1879. 



Litholapaxy : an Improved Evacuator. Boston Medical and Surgical 

 Journal. 1880. 



The Code of Ethics adopted by the Massachusetts ^ledical Society. A 

 Minority Report. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 1880. 



Remarks on Modern Lithotrity. Lancet. 1881. 



Radical Cure of Umbilical Hernia. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 

 1882. 



A Case of Disease of the Liver. 1882. 



Lithotrity with Evacuation. 1882. 



A Simplified Evacuator for Litholapaxy. Boston IMedical and Surgical 

 Journal. 1883. 



A Radical Cure for Umbilical Hernia. Boston Medical and Surgical 

 Journal. 1889. 



Fees in Hospitals. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 1889. 



An Old Portrait of a Surgeon. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 

 1889. 



The second publication on the list is entitled " Fragments of Medi- 

 cal Science and Art." Under this head is printed " An Address 

 delivered in 1846," 



The great aim' of this essay is to show the importance of the 

 imagination in science. The " Numerical Method " of Louis was at 

 that time looked up to, by the more ardent disciples of that admirable 

 observer and teacher, as the master-key which was to unlock all the 



