Treatise on Poisons by Sir Robert Christison

3. _Poisoning with Tartar-Emetic and Charcoal Fumes._—Under the head of

poisoning with antimony, notice has already been taken of the case of a man who, after swallowing seventeen grains of tartar-emetic, attempted to commit suicide by suffocating himself with the fumes of burning charcoal. He recovered from both attempts, suffered severely from the usual narcotic effects of carbonic acid gas, but showed scarcely any symptom of the irritant action of tartar-emetic.[2558]