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PHYSIOLOGICAL ILLUSTRATIONS.

Abortion.

Abortion[1] may be procured by the administration of powerful medicines, or by the application of mechanical violence, such as blows, or pressure on the abdomen; or by the introduction of sharp instruments into the uterus, so as to rupture the membranes. We shall offer a few remarks upon each of these several modes of accomplishing the criminal object in question. From a very early period attempts have been made to devise means of procuring abortion by the administration of certain drugs, which were considered as capable of acting specifically upon the womb, and of occasioning the exclusion of its contents. It would be idle to enumerate the various substances which have, at different times, been employed for such a purpose, not a few of which were derived from the fertile sources of credulity and superstition; and yet we are bound to admit, that upon this occasion at least, credulity has proved a blessing to mankind, by suggesting the substitution of a harmless amulet, or an inefficacious drug, for an application of extreme violence and danger, and, perhaps of death. The physicians of the present age disclaim the existence of any specific class of abortives, but we

  1. Abortio—Abortus, formed of ab from, and orior to be born. Among the ancient physicians the term Abactus or Abigeatus, was used for a miscarriage procured by art, or force of medicines, in contradistinction to Abortus, which is natural. But the moderns acknowledge no such distinction.