This section is from the book "The Dog And The Sportsman", by John Stuart Skinner. Also available from Amazon: The Dog And The Sportsman.
In the present case this is a very easy thing to accomplish. The assistant should press down the lid as much as possible around the eye, and the operator, taking the eye in his left hand, and pulling it slowly but firmly forwards, should cut through the nerve, and adipose and other substance, with one stroke of his scalpel, the division being made as closely as possible to the lids without wounding them.
The bleeding will not be considerable, and will be easily checked. The eyelids must be opened, and a little very soft lint introduced into the cavity, not sufficient in quantity to press painfully on the lender parts within, yet enough tolerably to fill the hollow when gorged with blood. A piece of linen, or a cap contrived for the purpose, must then be securely tied over the eye, and the patient dismissed with a dose of physic. On the following day the lint may be removed from the socket, and not in one case in twenty will there be any after bleeding. The blemish will be considerably less than if the eye had been forcibly returned, and the sight destroyed.
 
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