Add to these unfavourable influences syphilis, alcohol and tobacco (which, unfortunately, must be added in many instances), and the chance of escape from disease of the circulation in the soldier is practically
nil. But "soldier's heart" is also met with elsewhere than in the army. The clergyman from the slums of London or other great city, who has lived and toiled and – it may be said truly – has fought with various success through alternate periods of excitement and depression, and has thus suffered much both in mind and body, comes to us with high-tension pulse, a tortuous radial artery, a large heart and a systolic murmur over the aorta, and complains of an attack of angina. His wife, who has laboured in the parish for years (she is 76, and still active in her work of charity), has also a thickened radial artery, a large heart, and a systolic basic murmur, with no discoverable cause of these evidences of a diseased circulation but the life that she has led amongst the poor around her. Perhaps such cases of cardio-vascular disease might be most correctly said to be due to the wear and tear of life. They are met with also in the traveller or explorer, who has spent most of his life in search of adventure; and they are found in a man who has never left home, but whose years have been filled with the toil and anxiety of his position as an owner of land, or with prolonged litigation.