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      <p>On Regimen in Acute Diseases By Hippocrates

PART 1

Those who composed what are called &quot;The Cnidian Sentences&quot; have described
accurately what symptoms the sick experience in every disease, and
how certain of them terminate; and in so far a man, even who is not
a physician, might describe them correctly, provided he put the proper
inquiries to the sick themselves what their complaints are. But those
symptoms which the physician ought to know beforehand without being
informed of them by the patient, are, for the most part, omitted,
some in one case and some in others, and certain symptoms of vital
importance for a conjectural judgment. But when, in addition to the
diagnosis, they describe how each complaint should be treated, in
these cases I entertain a still greater difference of opinion with
them respecting the rules they have laid down; and not only do I not
agree with them on this account, but also because the remedies they
use are few in number; for, with the exception of acute diseases,
the only medicines which they give are drastic purgatives, with whey,
and milk at certain times. If, indeed, these remedies had been good
and suitable to the complaints in which they are recommended, they
would have been still more deserving of recommendation, if, while
few in number, they were sufficient; but this is by no means the case.
Those, indeed, who have remodeled these &quot;Sentences&quot; have treated of
the remedies applicable in each complaint more in a medical fashion.
But neither have the ancients written anything worth regimen, although
this be a great omission. Some of them, indeed, were not ignorant
of the many varieties of each complaint, and their manifold divisions,
but when they wish to tell clearly the numbers (species?) of each
disease they do not write for their species would be almost innumerable
if every symptom experienced by the patients were held to constitute
a disease, and receive a different name. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 2

For my part, I approve of paying attention to everything relating
to the art, and that those things which can be done well or properly
should all be done properly; such as can be quickly done should be
done quickly; such as can be neatly done should be done neatly; such
operations as can be performed without pain should be done with the
least possible pain; and that all other things of the like kind should
be done better than they could be managed by the attendants. But I
would more especially commend the physician who, in acute diseases,
by which the bulk of mankind are cut off, conducts the treatment better
than others. Acute diseases are those which the ancients named pleurisy,
pneumonia, phrenitis, lethargy, causus, and the other diseases allied
to these, including the continual fevers. For, unless when some general
form of pestilential disease is epidemic, and diseases are sporadic
and [not] of a similar character, there are more deaths from these
diseases than from all the others taken together. The vulgar, indeed,
do not recognize the difference between such physicians and their
common attendants, and are rather disposed to commend and censure
extraordinary remedies. This, then, is a great proof that the common
people are most incompetent, of themselves, to form a judgment how
such diseases should be treated: since persons who are not physicians
pass for physicians owing most especially to these diseases, for it
is an easy matter to learn the names of those things which are applicable
to persons laboring under such complaints. For, if one names the juice
of ptisan, and such and such a wine, and hydromel, the vulgar fancy
that he prescribes exactly the same things as the physicians do, both
the good and the bad, but in these matters there is a great difference
between them. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 3

But it appears to me that those things are more especially deserving
of being consigned to writing which are undetermined by physicians,
notwithstanding that they are of vital importance, and either do much
good or much harm. By undetermined I mean such as these, wherefore
certain physicians, during their whole lives, are constantly administering
unstrained ptisans, and fancy they thus accomplish the cure properly,
whereas others take great pains that the patient should not swallow
a particle of the barley (thinking it would do much harm), but strain
the juice through a cloth before giving it; others, again, will neither
give thick ptisan nor the juice, some until the seventh day of the
disease, and some until after the crisis. Physicians are not in the
practice of mooting such questions; nor, perhaps, if mooted, would
a solution of them be found; although the whole art is thereby exposed
to much censure from the vulgar, who fancy that there really is no
such science as medicine, since, in acute diseases, practitioners
differ so much among themselves, that those things which one administers
as thinking it the best that can be given, another holds to be bad;
and, in this respect, they might say that the art of medicine resembles
augury, since augurs hold that the same bird (omen) if seen on the
left hand is good, but if on the right bad: and in divination by the
inspection of entrails you will find similar differences; but certain
diviners hold the very opposite of these opinions. I say, then, that
this question is a most excellent one, and allied to very many others,
some of the most vital importance in the Art, for that it can contribute
much to the recovery of the sick, and to the preservation of health
in the case of those who are well; and that it promotes the strength
of those who use gymnastic exercises, and is useful to whatever one
may wish to apply it. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 4

Ptisan, then, appears to me to be justly preferred before all the
other preparations from grain in these diseases, and I commend those
who made this choice, for the mucilage of it is smooth, consistent,
pleasant, lubricant, moderately diluent, quenches thirst if this be
required, and has no astringency; gives no trouble nor swells up in
the bowels, for in the boiling it swells up as much as it naturally
can. Those, then, who make use of ptisan in such diseases, should
never for a day allow their vessels to be empty of it, if I may say
so, but should use it and not intermit, unless it be necessary to
stop for a time, in order to administer medicine or a clyster. And
to those who are accustomed to take two meals in the day it is to
be given twice, and to those accustomed to live upon a single meal
it is to be given once at first, and then, if the case permit, it
is to be increased and given twice to them, if they appear to stand
in need of it. At first it will be proper not to give a large quantity
nor very thick, but in proportion to the quantity of food which one
has been accustomed to take, and so as that the veins may not be much
emptied. And, with regard to the augmentation of the dose, if the
disease be of a drier nature than one had supposed, one must not give
more of it, but should give before the draught of ptisan, either hydromel
or wine, in as great quantity as may be proper; and what is proper
in each case will be afterward stated by us. But if the mouth and
the passages from the lungs be in a proper state as to moisture, the
quantity of the draught is to be increased, as a general rule, for
an early and abundant state of moisture indicates an early crisis,
but a late and deficient moisture indicates a slower crisis. And these
things are as I have stated for the most part; but many other things
are omitted which are important to the prognosis, as will be explained
afterwards. And the more that the patient is troubled with purging,
in so much greater quantity is it to be given until the crisis, and
moreover until two days beyond the crisis, in such cases as it appears
to take place on the fifth, seventh, or ninth day, so as to have respect
both for the odd and even day: after this the draught is to be given
early in the day, and the other food in place is to be given in the
evening. These things are proper, for the most part, to be given to
those who, from the first, have used ptisan containing its whole substance;
for the pains in pleuritic affections immediately cease of their own
accord whenever the patients begin to expectorate anything worth mentioning,
and the purgings become much better, and empyema much more seldom
takes place, than if the patients used a different regimen, and the
crises are more simple, occur earlier, and the cases are less subject
to relapses. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 5

Ptisans are to be made of the very best barley, and are to be well
boiled, more especially if you do not intend to use them strained.
For, besides the other virtues of ptisan, its lubricant quality prevents
the barley that is swallowed from proving injurious, for it does not
stick nor remain in the region of the breast; for that which is well
boiled is very lubricant, excellent for quenching thirst, of very
easy digestion, and very weak, all which qualities are wanted. If,
then, one do not pay proper attention to the mode of administering
the ptisan, much harm may be done; for when the food is shut up in
the bowels, unless one procure some evacuation speedily, before administering
the draught, the pain, if present, will be exasperated; and, if not
present, it will be immediately created, and the respiration will
become more frequent, which does mischief, for it dries the lungs,
fatigues the hypochondria, the hypogastrium, and diaphragm. And moreover
if, while the pain of the side persists, and does not yield to warm
fomentations, and the sputa are not brought up, but are viscid and
unconcocted, unless one get the pain resolved, either by loosening
the bowels, or opening a vein, whichever of these may be proper;-
if to persons so circumstanced ptisan be administered, their speedy
death will be the result. For these reasons, and for others of a similar
kind still more, those who use unstrained ptisan die on the seventh
day, or still earlier, some being seized with delirium, and others
dying suffocated with orthopnoee and riles. Such persons the ancients
thought struck, for this reason more especially, that when dead the
affected side was livid, like that of a person who had been struck.
The cause of this is that they die before the pain is resolved, being
seized with difficulty of respiration, and by large and rapid breathing,
as has been already explained, the spittle becoming thick, acid, and
unconcocted, cannot be brought up, but, being retained in the bronchi
of the lungs, produces riles; and, when it has come to this, death,
for the most part, is inevitable; for the sputa being retained prevent
the breath from being drawn in, and force it speedily out, and thus
the two conspire together to aggravate the sputa being retained renders
the respiration frequent, while the respiration being frequent thickens
the sputa, and prevents them from being evacuated. These symptoms
supervene, not only if ptisan be administered unseasonably, but still
more if any other food or drink worse than ptisan be given.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 6

For the most part, then, the results are the same, whether the patient
have used the unstrained ptisan or have used the juice alone; or even
only drink; and sometimes it is necessary to proceed quite differently.
In general, one should do thus: if fever commences shortly after taking
food, and before the bowels have been evacuated, whether with or without
pain, the physician ought to withhold the draught until he thinks
that the food has descended to the lower part of the belly; and if
any pain be present, the patient should use oxymel, hot if it is winter,
and cold if it is summer; and, if there be much thirst, he should
take hydromel and water. Then, if any pain be present, or any dangerous
symptoms make their appearance, it will be proper to give the draught
neither in large quantity nor thick, but after the seventh day, if
the patient be strong. But if the earlier-taken food has not descended,
in the case of a person who has recently swallowed food, and if he
be strong and in the vigor of life, a clyster should be given, or
if he be weaker, a suppository is to be administered, unless the bowels
open properly of themselves. The time for administering the draught
is to be particularly observed at the commencement and during the
whole illness; when, then, the feet are cold, one should refrain from
giving the ptisan, and more especially abstain from drink; but when
the heat has descended to the feet, one may then give it; and one
should look upon this season as of great consequence in all diseases,
and not least in acute diseases, especially those of a febrile character,
and those of a very dangerous nature. One may first use the juice,
and then the ptisan, attending accurately to the rules formerly laid
down. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 7

When pain seizes the side, either at the commencement or at a later
stage, it will not be improper to try to dissolve the pain by hot
applications. Of hot applications the most powerful is hot water in
a bottle, or bladder, or in a brazen vessel, or in an earthen one;
but one must first apply something soft to the side, to prevent pain.
A soft large sponge, squeezed out of hot water and applied, forms
a good application; but it should be covered up above, for thus the
heat will remain the longer, and at the same time the vapor will be
prevented from being carried up to the patient&apos;s breath, unless when
this is thought of use, for sometimes it is the case. And further,
barley or tares may be infused and boiled in diluted vinegar, stronger
than that it could be drunk, and may then be sewed into bladders and
applied; and one may bran in like manner. Salts or toasted millet
in woolen bags are excellent for forming a dry fomentation, for the
millet is light and soothing. A soft fomentation like this soothes
pains, even such as shoot to the clavicle. Venesection, however, does
not alleviate the pain unless when it extends to the clavicle. But
if the pain be not dissolved by the fomentations, one ought not to
foment for a length of time, for this dries the lungs and promotes
suppuration; but if the pain point to the clavicle, or if there be
a heaviness in the arm, or about the breast, or above the diaphragm,
one should open the inner vein at the elbow, and not hesitate to abstract
a large quantity, until it become much redder, or instead of being
pure red, it turns livid, for both these states occur. But if the
pain be below the diaphragm, and do not point to the clavicle, we
must open the belly either with black hellebore or peplium, mixing
the black hellebore with carrot or seseli, or cumin, or anise, or
any other of the fragrant herbs; and with the peplium the juice of
sulphium (asafoetida), for these substances, when mixed up together,
are of a similar nature. The black hellebore acts more pleasantly
and effectually than the peplium, while, on the other hand, the peplium
expels wind much more effectually than the black hellebore, and both
these stop the pain, and many other of the laxatives also stop it,
but these two are the most efficacious that I am acquainted with.
And the laxatives given in draughts are beneficial, when not very
unpalatable owing to bitterness, or any other disagreeable taste,
or from quantity, color, or any apprehension. When the patient has
drunk the medicine, one ought to give him to swallow but little less
of the ptisan than what he had been accustomed to; but it is according
to rule not to according to rule not to give any draughts while the
medicine is under operation; but when the purging is stopped then
he should take a smaller draught than what he had been accustomed
to, and afterwards go on increasing it progressively, until the pain
cease, provided nothing else contra-indicate. This is my rule, also,
if one would use the juice of ptisan (for I hold that it is better,
on the whole, to begin with taking the decoction at once, rather than
by first emptying the veins before doing so, or on the third, fourth,
fifth, sixth, or seventh day, provided the disease has not previously
come to a crisis in the course of this time), and similar preparations
to those formerly described are to be made in those cases.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 8

Such are the opinions which I entertain respecting the administering
of the ptisan; and, as regards drinks, whichsoever of those about
to be described may be administered, the same directions are generally
applicable. And here I know that physicians are in the practice of
doing the very reverse of what is proper, for they all wish, at the
commencement of diseases, to starve their patients for two, three,
or more days, and then to administer the ptisans and drinks; and perhaps
it appears to them reasonable that, as a great change has taken place
in the body, it should be counteracted by another great change. Now,
indeed, to produce a change is no small matter, but the change must
be effected well and cautiously, and after the change the administration
of food must be conducted still more so. Those persons, then, would
be most injured if the change is not properly managed, who used unstrained
ptisans; they also would suffer who made use of the juice alone; and
so also they would suffer who took merely drink, but these least of
all. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 9

One may derive information from the regimen of persons in good health
what things are proper; for if it appear that there is a great difference
whether the diet be so and so, in other respects, but more especially
in the changes, how can it be otherwise in diseases, and more especially
in the most acute? But it is well ascertained that even a faulty diet
of food and drink steadily persevered in, is safer in the main as
regards health than if one suddenly change it to another. Wherefore,
in the case of persons who take two meals in the day, or of those
who take a single meal, sudden changes induce suffering and weakness;
and thus persons who have not been accustomed to dine, if they shall
take dinner, immediately become weak, have heaviness over their whole
body, and become feeble and languid, and if, in addition, they take
supper, they will have acid eructations, and some will have diarrhoea
whose bowels were previously dry, and not having been accustomed to
be twice swelled out with food and to digest it twice a day, have
been loaded beyond their wont. It is beneficial, in such cases, to
counterbalance this change, for one should sleep after dinner, as
if passing the night, and guard against cold in winter and heat in
summer; or, if the person cannot sleep, he may stroll about slowly,
but without making stops, for a good while, take no supper, or, at
all events, eat little, and only things that are not unwholesome,
and still more avoid drink, and especially water. Such a person will
suffer still more if he take three full meals in the day, and more
still if he take more meals; and yet there are many persons who readily
bear to take three full meals in the day, provided they are so accustomed.
And, moreover, those who have been in the habit of eating twice a
day, if they omit dinner, become feeble and powerless, averse to all
work, and have heartburn; their bowels seem, as it were, to hang loose,
their urine is hot and green, and the excrement is parched; in some
the mouth is bitter, the eyes are hollow, the temples throb, and the
extremities are cold, and the most of those who have thus missed their
dinner cannot eat supper; or, if they do sup, they load their stomach,
and pass a much worse night than if they had previously taken dinner.
Since, then, an unwonted change of diet for half a day produces such
effects upon persons in health, it appears not to be a good thing
either to add or take from. If, then, he who was restricted to a single
meal, contrary to usage, having his veins thus left empty during a
whole day, when he supped according to custom felt heavy, it is probable
that if, because he was uneasy and weak from the want of dinner, he
took a larger supper than wont, he would be still more oppressed;
or if, wanting food for a still greater interval, he suddenly took
a meal after supper, he will feel still greater oppression. He, then,
who, contrary to usage, has had his veins kept empty by want of food,
will find it beneficial to counteract the bad effects during that
day as follows: let him avoid cold, heat, and exertion, for he could
bear all these ill; let him make his supper considerably less than
usual, and not of dry food, but rather liquid; and let him take some
drink, not of a watery character, nor in smaller quantity than is
proportionate to the food, and on the next day he should take a small
dinner, so that, by degrees, he may return to his former practice.
Persons who are bilious in the stomach bear these changes worst, while
those who are pituitous, upon the whole, bear the want of food best,
so that they suffer the least from being restricted to one meal in
the day, contrary to usage. This, then, is a sufficient proof that
the greatest changes as to those things which regard our constitutions
and habits are most especially concerned in the production of diseases,
for it is impossible to produce unseasonably a great emptying of the
vessels by abstinence, or to administer food while diseases are at
their acme, or when inflammation prevails; nor, on the on the whole,
to make a great change either one way or another with impunity.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 10

One might mention many things akin to these respecting the stomach
and bowels, to show how people readily bear such food as they are
accustomed to, even if it is not naturally good, and drink in like
manner, and how they bear unpleasantly such food as they are not accustomed
to, even although not bad, and so in like manner with drink; and as
to the effects of eating much flesh, contrary to usage, or garlic,
or asafoetida, or the stem of the plant which produces it, or things
of a similar kind possessed of strong properties, one would be less
surprised if such things produce pains in the bowels, but rather when
one learned what trouble, swelling, flatulence, and tormina the cake
(maza) will raise in the belly when eaten by a person not accustomed
to it; and how much weight and distention of the bowels bread will
create to a person accustomed to live upon the maza; and what thirst
and sudden fullness will be occasioned by eating hot bread, owing
to its desiccant and indigestible properties; and what different effects
are produced by fine and coarse bread when eaten contrary to usage,
or by the cake when usually dry, moist, or viscid; and what different
effects polenta produces upon those who are accustomed and those who
are unaccustomed to the use of it; or drinking of wine or drinking
of water, when either custom is suddenly exchanged for the other;
or when, contrary to usage, diluted wine or undiluted has been suddenly
drunk, for the one will create water-brash in the upper part of the
intestinal canal and flatulence in the lower, while the other will
give rise to throbbing of the arteries, heaviness of the head, and
thirst; and white and dark-colored wine, although both strong wines,
if exchanged contrary to usage, will produce very different effects
upon the body, so that one need the less wonder that a sweet and strong
wine, if suddenly exchanged, should have by no means the same effect.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 11

Let us here briefly advert to what may be said on the opposite side;
namely, that a change of diet has occurred in these cases, without
any change in their body, either as to strength, so as to require
an increase of food, or as to weakness, so as to require a diminution.
But the strength of the patient is to be taken into consideration,
and the manner of the disease, and of the constitution of the man,
and the habitual regimen of the patient, not only as regards food
but also drink. Yet one must much less resort to augmentation, since
it is often beneficial to have recourse to abstraction, when the patient
can bear it, until the disease having reached its acme and has become
concocted. But in what cases this must be done will be afterwards
described. One might write many other things akin to those which have
been now said, but there is a better proof, for it is not akin to
the matter on which my discourse has principally turned, but the subject-matter
itself is a most seasonable proof. For some at the commencement of
acute diseases have taken food on the same day, some on the next day;
some have swallowed whatever has come in their way, and some have
taken cyceon. Now all these things are worse than if one had observed
a different regimen; and yet these mistakes, committed at that time,
do much less injury than if one were to abstain entirely from food
for the first two or three days, and on the fourth or fifth day were
to take such food; and it would be still worse, if one were to observe
total abstinence for all these days, and on the following days were
to take such a diet, before the disease is concocted; for in this
way death would be the consequence to most people, unless the disease
were of a very mild nature. But the mistakes committed at first were
not so irremediable as these, but could be much more easily repaired.
This, therefore, I think a strong proof that such or such a draught
need not be prescribed on the first days to those who will use the
same draughts afterwards. At the bottom, therefore, they do not know,
neither those using unstrained ptisans, that they are hurt by them,
when they begin to swallow them, if they abstain entirely from food
for two, three, or more days; nor do those using the juice know that
they are injured in swallowing them, when they do not commence with
the draught seasonably. But this they guard against, and know that
it does much mischief, if, before the disease be concocted, the patient
swallow unstrained ptisan, when accustomed to use strained. All these
things are strong proofs that physicians do not conduct the regimen
of patients properly, but that in those diseases in which total abstinence
from food should not be enforced on patients that will be put on the
use of ptisans, they do enforce total abstinence; that in those cases
in which there should be no change made from total abstinence to ptisans,
they do make the change; and that, for the most part, they change
from abstinence to ptisans, exactly at the time when it is often beneficial
to proceed from ptisans almost to total abstinence, if the disease
happen to be in the state of exacerbation. And sometimes crude matters
are attracted from the head, and bilious from the region near the
chest, and the patients are attacked with insomnolency, so that the
disease is not concocted; they become sorrowful, peevish, and delirious;
there are flashes of light in their eyes, and noises in their ears;
their extremities are cold, their urine unconcocted; the sputa thin,
saltish, tinged with an intense color and smell; sweats about the
neck, and anxiety; respiration, interrupted in the expulsion of the
air, frequent and very large; expression of the eyelids dreadful;
dangerous deliquia; tossing of the bed-clothes from the breast; the
hands trembling, and sometimes the lower lip agitated. These symptoms,
appearing at the commencement, are indicative of strong delirium,
and patients so affected generally die, or if they escape, it is with
a deposit, hemorrhage from the nose, or the expectoration of thick
matter, and not otherwise. Neither do I perceive that physicians are
skilled in such things as these; how they ought to know such diseases
as are connected with debility, and which are further weakened by
abstinence from food, and those aggravated by some other irritation;
those by pain, and from the acute nature of the disease, and what
affections and various forms thereof our constitution and habit engender,
although the knowledge or ignorance of such things brings safety or
death to the patient. For it is a great mischief if to a patient debilitated
by pain, and the acute nature of the disease, one administer drink,
or more ptisan, or food, supposing that the debility proceeds from
inanition. It is also disgraceful not to recognize a patient whose
debility is connected with inanition, and to pinch him in his diet;
this mistake, indeed, is attended with some danger, but much less
than the other, and yet it is likely to expose one to much greater
derision, for if another physician, or a private person, coming in
and knowing what has happened, should give to eat or drink those things
which the other had forbidden, the benefit thus done to the patient
would be manifest. Such mistakes of practitioners are particularly
ridiculed by mankind, for the physician or nonprofessional man thus
coming in, seems as it were to resuscitate the dead. On this subject
I will describe elsewhere the symptoms by which each of them may be
recognized. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 12

And the following observations are similar to those now made respecting
the bowels. If the whole body rest long, contrary to usage, it does
not immediately recover its strength; but if, after a protracted repose,
it proceed to labor, it will clearly expose its weakness. So it is
with every one part of the body, for the feet will make a similar
display, and any other of the joints, if, being unaccustomed to labor,
they be suddenly brought into action, after a time. The teeth and
the eyes will suffer in like manner, and also every other part whatever.
A couch, also, that is either softer or harder than one has been accustomed
to will create uneasiness, and sleeping in the open air, contrary
to usage, hardens the body. But it is sufficient merely to state examples
of all these cases. If a person having received a wound in the leg,
neither very serious nor very trifling, and he being neither in a
condition very favorable to its healing nor the contrary, at first
betakes himself to bed, in order to promote the cure, and never raises
his leg, it will thus be much less disposed to inflammation, and be
much sooner well, than it would have been if he had strolled about
during the process of healing; but if upon the fifth or sixth day,
or even earlier, he should get up and attempt to walk, he will suffer
much more then than if he had walked about from the commencement of
the cure, and if he should suddenly make many laborious exertions,
he will suffer much more than if, when the treatment was conducted
otherwise, he had made the same exertions on the same days. In fine,
all these things concur in proving that all great changes, either
one way or another, are hurtful. Wherefore much mischief takes place
in the bowels, if from a state of great inanition more food than is
moderate be administered (and also in the rest of the body, if from
a state of great rest it be hastily brought to greater exertion, it
will be much more injured), or if from the use of much food it be
changed to complete abstinence, and therefore the body in such cases
requires protracted repose, and if, from a state of laborious exertion,
the body suddenly falls into a state of ease and indolence, in these
cases also the bowels would require continued repose from abundance
of food, for otherwise it will induce pain and heaviness in the whole
body. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 13

The greater part of my discourse has related to changes, this way
or that. For all purposes it is profitable to know these things, and
more especially respecting the subject under consideration,- that
in acute diseases, in which a change is made to ptisans from a state
of inanition, it should be made as I direct; and then that ptisans
should not be used until the disease be concocted, or some other symptom,
whether of evacuation or of irritation, appear in the intestines,
or in the hypochondria, such as will be described. Obstinate insomnolency
impairs the digestion of the food and drink, and in other respects
changes and relaxes the body, and occasions a heated state, and heaviness
of the head. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 14

One must determine by such marks as these, when sweet, strong, and
dark wine, hydromel, water and oxymel, should be given in acute diseases.
Wherefore the sweet affects the head less than the strong, attacks
the brain less, evacuates the bowels more than the other, but induces
swelling of the spleen and liver; it does not agree with bilious persons,
for it causes them to thirst; it creates flatulence in the upper part
of the intestinal canal, but does not disagree with the lower part,
as far as regards flatulence; and yet flatulence engendered by sweet
wine is not of a transient nature, but rests for a long time in the
hypochondria. And therefore it in general is less diuretic than wine
which is strong and thin; but sweet wine is more expectorant than
the other. But when it creates thirst, it is less expectorant in such
cases than the other wine, but if it do not create thirst, it promotes
expectoration better than the other. The good and bad effects of a
white, strong wine, have been already frequently and fully stated
in the disquisition on sweet wine; it is determined to the bladder
more than the other, is diuretic and laxative, and should be very
useful in such complaints; for if in other respects it be less suitable
than the other, the clearing out of the bladder effected by it is
beneficial to the patient, if properly administered. There are excellent
examples of the beneficial and injurious effects of wine, all which
were left undetermined by my predecessors. In these diseases you may
use a yellow wine, and a dark austere wine for the following purposes:
if there be no heaviness of the head, nor delirium, nor stoppage of
the expectoration, nor retention of the urine, and if the alvine discharges
be more loose and like scrapings than usual, in such cases a change
from a white wine to such as I have mentioned, might be very proper.
It deserves further to be known, that it will prove less injurious
to all the parts above, and to the bladder, if it be of a more watery
nature, but that the stronger it is, it will be the more beneficial
to the bowels. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 15

Hydromel, when drunk in any stage of acute disease, is less suitable
to persons of a bilious temperament, and to those who have enlarged
viscera, than to those of a different character; it increases thirst
less than sweet wine; character;the lungs, is moderately expectorant,
and alleviates a cough; for it has some detergent quality in it, whence
it lubricates the sputum. Hydromel is also moderately diuretic, unless
prevented by the state of any of the viscera. And it also occasions
bilious discharges downwards, sometimes of a proper character, and
sometimes more intense and frothy than is suitable; but such rather
occurs in persons who are bilious, and have enlarged viscera. Hydromel
rather produces expectoration, and softening of the lungs, when given
diluted with water. But unmixed hydromel, rather than the diluted,
produces frothy evacuations, such as are unseasonably and intensely
bilious, and too hot; but such an evacuation occasions other great
mischiefs, for it neither extinguishes the heat in the hypochondria,
but rouses it, induces inquietude, and jactitation of the limbs, and
ulcerates the intestines and anus. The remedies for all these will
be described afterwards. By using hydromel without ptisans, instead
of any other drink, you will generally succeed in the treatment of
such diseases, and fall in few cases; but in what instances it is
to be given, and in what it is not to be given, and wherefore it is
not to be given,- all this has been explained already, for the most
part. Hydromel is generally condemned, as if it weakened the powers
of those who drink it, and on that account it is supposed to accelerate
death; and this opinion arose from persons who starve themselves to
death, some of whom use hydromel alone for drink, as fancying that
it really has this effect. But this is by no means always the case.
For hydromel, if drunk alone, is much stronger than water, if it do
not disorder the bowels; but in some respects it is stronger, and
in some weaker, than wine that is thin, weak, and devoid of bouquet.
There is a great difference between unmixed wine and unmixed honey,
as to their nutritive powers, for if a man will drink double the quantity
of pure wine, to a certain quantity of honey which is swallowed, he
will find himself much stronger from the honey, provided it do not
disagree with his bowels, and that his alvine evacuations from it
will be much more copious. But if he shall use ptisan for a draught,
and drink afterward hydromel, he will feel full, flatulent, and uncomfortable
in the viscera of the hypochondrium; but if the hydromel be taken
before the draught, it will not have the same injurious effects as
if taken after it, but will be rather beneficial. And boiled hydromel
has a much more elegant appearance than the unboiled, being clear,
thin, white, and transparent, but I am unable to mention any good
quality which it possesses that the other wants. For it is not sweeter
than the unboiled, provided the honey be fine, and it is weaker, and
occasions less copious evacuations of the bowels, neither of which
effects is required from the hydromel. But one should by all means
use it boiled, provided the honey be bad, impure, black, and not fragrant,
for the boiling will remove the most of its bad qualities and appearances.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 16

You will find the drink, called oxymel, often very useful in these
complaints, for it promotes expectoration and freedom of breathing.
the following are the proper occasions for administering it. When
strongly acid it has no mean operation in rendering the expectoration
more easy, for by bringing up the sputa, which occasion troublesome
hawking, and rendering them more slippery, and, as it were, clearing
the windpipe with a feather, it relieves the lungs and proves emollient
to them; and when it succeeds in producing these effects it must do
much good. But there are cases in which hydromel, strongly acid, does
not promote expectoration, but renders it more viscid and thus does
harm, and it is most apt to produce these bad effects in cases which
are otherwise of a fatal character, when the patient is unable to
cough or bring up the sputa. On this account, then, one ought to consider
beforehand the strength of the patient, and if there be any hope,
then one may give it, but if given at all in such cases it should
be quite tepid, and in by no means large doses. But if slightly acrid
it moistens the mouth and throat, promotes expectoration, and quenches
thirst; agrees with the viscera seated in the hypochondrium, and obviates
the bad effects of the honey; for the bilious quality of the honey
is thereby corrected. It also promotes flatulent discharges from the
bowels, and is diuretic, but it occasions watery discharges and those
resembling scrapings, from the lower part of the intestine, which
is sometimes a bad thing in acute diseases, more especially when the
flatulence cannot be passed, but rolls backwards; and otherwise it
diminishes the strength and makes the extremities cold, this is the
only bad effect worth mentioning which I have known to arise from
the oxymel. It may suit well to drink a little of this at night before
the draught of ptisan, and when a considerable interval of time has
passed after the draught there will be nothing to prevent its being
taken. But to those who are restricted entirely to drinks without
draughts of ptisan, it will therefore not be proper at all times to
give it, more especially from the fretting and irritation of the intestine
which it occasions, (and these bad effects it will be the more apt
to produce provided there be no faeces in the intestines and the patient
is laboring under inanition,) and then it will weaken the powers of
the hydromel. But if it appears advantageous to use a great deal of
this drink during the whole course of the disease, one should add
to it merely as much vinegar as can just be perceived by the taste,
for thus what is prejudicial in it will do the least possible harm,
and what is beneficial will do the more good. In a word, the acidity
of vinegar agrees rather with those who are troubled with bitter bile,
than with those patients whose bile is black; for the bitter principle
is dissolved in it and turned to phlegm, by being suspended in it;
whereas black bile is fermented, swells up, and is multiplied thereby:
for vinegar is a melanogogue. Vinegar is more prejudicial to women
than to men, for it creates pains in the uterus. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 17

I have nothing further to add as to the effects of water when used
as a drink in acute diseases; for it neither soothes the cough in
pneumonia, nor promotes expectoration, but does less than the others
in this respect, if used alone through the whole complaint. But if
taken intermediate between oxymel and hydromel, in small quantity,
it promotes expectoration from the change which it occasions in the
qualities of these drinks, for it produces, as it were, a certain
overflow. Otherwise it does not quench the thirst, for it creates
bile in a bilious temperament, and is injurious to the hypochondrium;
and it does the most harm, engenders most bile, and does the least
good when the bowels are empty; and it increases the swelling of the
spleen and liver when they are in an inflamed state; it produces a
gurgling noise in the intestines and swims on the stomach; for it
passes slowly downwards, as being of a coldish and indigestible nature,
and neither proves laxative nor diuretic; and in this respect, too,
it proves prejudicial, that it does not naturally form does in the
intestines: and, if it be drunk while the feet are cold, its injurious
effects will be greatly aggravated, in all those parts to which it
may be determined. When you suspect in these diseases either strong
heaviness of the head, or mental alienation, you must abstain entirely
from wine, and in this case use water, or give weak, straw-colored
wine, entirely devoid of bouquet, after which a little water is to
be given in addition; for thus the strength of the will less affect
the head and the understanding: but in which cases water is mostly
to be given for drink, when in large quantity, when in moderate, when
cold, and when hot; all these things have either been discussed already
or will be treated of at the proper time. In like manner, with respect
to all the others, such as barley-water, the drinks made from green
shoots, those from raisins, and the skins of grapes and wheat, and
bastard saffron, and myrtles, pomegranates, and the others, when the
proper time for using them is come, they will be treated of along
with the disease in question, in like manner as the other compound
medicines. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 18

The bath is useful in many diseases, in some of them when used steadily,
and in others when not so. Sometimes it must be less used than it
would be otherwise, from the want of accommodation; for in few families
are all the conveniences prepared, and persons who can manage them
as they ought to be. And if the patient be not bathed properly, he
maybe thereby hurt in no inconsiderable degree, for there is required
a place to cover him that is free of smoke, abundance of water, materials
for frequent baths, but not very large, unless this should be required.
It is better that no friction should be applied, but if so, a hot
soap (smegma) must be used in greater abundance than is common, and
an affusion of a considerable quantity of water is to be made at the
same time and afterwards repeated. There must also be a short passage
to the basin, and it should be of easy ingress and egress. But the
person who takes the bath should be orderly and reserved in his manner,
should do nothing for himself, but others should pour the water upon
him and rub him, and plenty of waters, of various temperatures, should
be in readiness for the douche, and the affusions quickly made; and
sponges should be used instead of the comb (strigil), and the body
should be anointed when not quite dry. But the head should be rubbed
by the sponge until it is quite dry; the extremities should be protected
from cold, as also the head and the rest of the body; and a man should
not be washed immediately after he has taken a draught of ptisan or
a drink; neither should he take ptisan as a drink immediately after
the bath. Much will depend upon whether the patient, when in good
health, was very fond of the bath, and in the custom of taking it:
for such persons, especially, feel the want of it, and are benefited
if they are bathed, and injured if they are not. In general it suits
better with cases of pneumonia than in ardent fevers; for the bath
soothes the pain in the side, chest, and back; concocts the sputa,
promotes expectoration, improves the respiration, and allays lassitude;
for it soothes the joints and outer skin, and is diuretic, removes
heaviness of the head, and moistens the nose. Such are the benefits
to be derived from the bath, if all the proper requisites be present;
but if one or more of these be wanting, the bath, instead of doing
good, may rather prove injurious; for every one of them may do harm
if not prepared not prepared by the attendants in the proper manner.
It is by no means a suitable thing in these diseases to persons whose
bowels are too loose, or when they are unusually confined, and there
has been no previous evacuation; neither must we bathe those who are
debilitated, nor such as have nausea or vomiting, or bilious eructations;
nor such as have hemorrhage from the nose, unless it be less than
required at that stage of the disease (with those stages you are acquainted),
but if the discharge be less than proper, one should use the bath,
whether in order to benefit the whole body or the head alone. If then
the proper requisites be at hand, and the patient be well disposed
to the bath, it may be administered once every day, or if the patient
be fond of the bath there will be no harm, though he should take it
twice in the day. The use of the bath is much more appropriate to
those who take unstrained ptisan, than to those who take only the
juice of it, although even in their case it may be proper; but least
of all does it suit with those who use only plain drink, although,
in their case too it may be suitable; but one must form a judgment
from the rules laid down before, in which of these modes of regimen
the bath will be beneficial, and in which not. Such as want some of
the requisites for a proper bath, but have those symptoms which would
be benefited by it, should be bathed; whereas those who want none
of the proper requisites, but have certain symptoms which contraindicate
the bath, are not to be bathed. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 1

Ardent fever (causus) takes place when the veins, being dried up
in the summer season, attract acrid and bilious humors to themselves;
and strong fever seizes the whole body, which experiences aches of
the bones, and is in a state of lassitude and pain. It takes place
most commonly from a long walk and protracted thirst, when the veins
being dried up attract acrid and hot defluxions to themselves. The
tongue becomes rough, dry, and very black; there are gnawing pains
about the bowels; the alvine discharges are watery and yellow; there
is intense thirst, insomnolency, and sometimes wandering of the mind.
To a person in such a state give to drink water and as much boiled
hydromel of a watery consistence as he will take; and if the mouth
be bitter, it may be advantageous to administer an emetic and clyster;
and if these things do not loosen the bowels, purge with the boiled
milk of asses. Give nothing saltish nor acrid, for they will not be
borne; and give no draughts of ptisan until the crisis be past. And
the affection is resolved if there be an epistaxis, or if true critical
sweats supervene with urine having white, thick, and smooth sediments,
or if a deposit take place anywhere; but if it be resolved without
these, there will be a relapse of the complaint, or pain in the hips
and legs will ensue, with thick sputa, provided the patient be convalescent.
Another species of ardent fever: belly loose, much thirst, tongue
rough, dry, and saltish, retention of urine, insomnolency, extremities
cold. In such a case, unless there be a flow of blood from the nose,
or an abscess form about the neck, or pain in the limbs, or the patient
expectorate thick sputa (these occur when the belly is constipated),
or pain of the hips, or lividity of the genital organs, there is no
crisis; tension of the testicle is also a critical symptom. Give attractive
draughts. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 2

Bleed in the acute affections, if the disease appear strong, and the
patients be in the vigor of life, and if they have strength. If it
be quinsy or any other of the pleuritic affections, purge with electuaries;
but if the patient be weaker, or if you abstract more blood, you may
administer a clyster every third day, until he be out of danger, and
enjoin total abstinence if necessary. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 3

Hypochondria inflamed not from retention of flatus, tension of the
diaphragm, checked respiration, with dry orthopnoea, when no pus is
formed, but when these complaints are connected with obstructed respiration;
but more especially strong pains of the liver, heaviness of the spleen,
and other phlegmasiae and intense pains above the diaphragm, diseases
connected with collections of humors,- all these diseases do not admit
of resolution, if treated at first by medicine, but venesection holds
the first place in conducting the treatment; then we may have recourse
to a clyster, unless the disease be great and strong; but if so, purging
also may be necessary; but bleeding and purging together require caution
and moderation. Those who attempt to resolve inflammatory diseases
at the commencement by the administration of purgative medicines,
remove none of the morbific humors which produce the inflammation
and tension; for the diseases while unconcocted could not yield, but
they melt down those parts which are healthy and resist the disease;
so when the body is debilitated the malady obtains the mastery; and
when the disease has the upper hand of the body, it does not admit
of a cure. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 4

When a person suddenly loses his speech, in connection with obstruction
of the veins,- if this happen without warning or any other strong
cause, one ought to open the internal vein of the right arm, and abstract
blood more or less according to the habit and age of the patient.
Such cases are mostly attended with the following symptoms: redness
of the face, eyes fixed, hands distended, grinding of the teeth, palpitations,
jaws fixed, coldness of the extremities, retention of airs in the
veins. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 5

When pains precede, and there are influxes of black bile and of acrid
humors, and when by their pungency the internal parts are pained,
and the veins being pinched and dried become distended, and getting
inflamed attract the humors running into the parts, whence the blood
being vitiated, and the airs collected there not being able to find
their natural passages, coldness comes on in consequence of this stasis,
with vertigo, loss of speech, heaviness of the head, and convulsion,
if the disease fix on the liver, the heart, or the great vein (vena
cava?); whence they are seized with epilepsy or apoplexy, if the defluxions
fall upon the containing parts, and if they are dried up by airs which
cannot make their escape; such persons having been first tormented
are to be immediately bled at the commencement, while all the peccant
vapors and humors are buoyant, for then the cases more easily admit
of a cure; and then supporting the strength and attending to the crisis,
we may give emetics, unless the disease be alleviated; or if the bowels
be not moved, we may administer a clyster and give the boiled milk
of asses, to the amount of not less than twelve heminae, or if the
strength permit, to more than sixteen. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 6

Quinsy takes place when a copious and viscid defluxion from the head,
in the season of winter or spring, flows into the jugular veins, and
when from their large size they attract a greater defluxion; and when
owing to the defluxion being of a cold and viscid nature it becomes
enfarcted, obstructing the passages of the respiration and of the
blood, coagulates the surrounding blood, and renders it motionless
and stationary, it being naturally cold and disposed to obstructions.
Hence they are seized with convulsive suffocation, the tongue turning
livid, assuming a rounded shape, and being vent owing to the veins
which are seated below the tongue (for when an enlarged uvula, which
is called uva, is cut, a large vein may be observed on each side).
These veins, then, becoming filled, and their roots extending into
the tongue, which is of a loose and spongy texture, it, owing to its
dryness receiving forcibly the juice from the veins, changes from
broad and becomes round, its natural color turns to livid, from a
soft consistence it grows hard, instead of being flexible it becomes
inflexible, so that the patient would soon be suffocated unless speedily
relieved. Bleeding, then, in the arm, and opening the sublingual veins,
and purging with the electuaries, and giving warm gargles, and shaving
the head, we must apply to it and the neck a cerate, and wrap them
round with wool, and foment with soft sponges squeezed out of hot
water; give to drink water and hydromel, not cold; and administer
the juice of ptisan when, having passed the crisis, the patient is
out of danger. When, in the season of summer or autumn, there is a
hot and nitrous defluxion from the head (it is rendered hot and acrid
by the season), being of such a nature it corrodes and ulcerates,
and fills with air, and orthopnoea attended with great dryness supervenes;
the fauces, when examined, do not seem swollen; the tendons on the
back part of the neck are contracted, and have the appearance as if
it were tetanus; the voice is lost, the breathing is small, and inspiration
becomes frequent and laborious. In such persons the trachea becomes
ulcerated, and the lungs engorged, from the patient&apos;s not being able
to draw in the external air. In such cases, unless there be a spontaneous
determination to the external parts of the neck, the symptoms become
still more dreadful, and the danger more imminent, partly owing to
the season, and the hot and acrid humors which cause the disease.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 7

When fever seizes a person who has lately taken food, and whose bowels
are loaded with faces which have been long retained, whether it be
attended with pain of the side or not, he ought to lie quiet until
the food descend to the lower region of the bowels, and use oxymel
for drink; but when the load descends to the loins, a clyster should
be administered, or he should be purged by medicine; and when purged,
he should take ptisan for food and hydromel for drink; then he may
take the cerealia, and boiled fishes, and a watery wine in small quantity,
at night, but during the day, a watery hydromel. When the flatus is
offensive, either a suppository or clyster is to be administered;
but otherwise the oxymel is to be discontinued, until the matters
descend to the lower part of the bowels, and then they are to be evacuated
by a clyster. But if the ardent fever (causus) supervene when the
bowels are empty, should you still judge it proper to administer purgative
medicine, it ought not be done during the first three days, nor earlier
than the fourth. When you give the medicine, use the ptisan, observing
the paroxysms of the fevers, so as not to give it when the fever is
setting in, but when it is ceasing, or on the decline, and as far
as possible from the commencement. When the feet are cold, give neither
drink nor ptisan, nor anything else of the kind, but reckon it an
important rule to refrain until they become warm, and then you may
administer them with advantage. For the most part, coldness of the
feet is a symptom of a paroxysm of the fever coming on; and if at
such a season you apply those things, you will commit the greatest
possible mistake, for you will augment the disease in no small degree.
But when the fever ceases, the feet, on the contrary, become hotter
than the rest of the body; for when the heat leaves the feet, it is
kindled up in the breast, and sends its flame up to the head. And
when all the heat rushes upwards, and is exhaled at the head, it is
not to be wondered at that the feet become cold, being devoid of flesh,
and tendinous; and besides, they contract cold, owing to their distance
from the hotter parts of the body, an accumulation of heat having
taken place in the chest: and again, in like manner, when the fever
is resolved and dissipated, the heat descends to the feet, and, at
the same time, the head and chest become cold. Wherefore one should
attend to this; that when the feet are cold, the bowels are necessarily
hot, and filled with nauseous matters; the hypochondrium distended:
there is jactitation of the body, owing to the internal disturbance;
and aberration of the intellect, and pains; the patient is agitated,
and wishes to vomit, and if he vomits bad matters he is pained; but
when the heat descends to the feet, and the urine passes freely, he
is every way lightened, even although he does not sweat; at this season,
then, the ptisan ought to be given; it would be death to give it before.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 8

When the bowels are loose during the whole course of fevers, in this
case we are most especially to warm the feet, and see that they are
properly treated with cerates, and wrapped in shawls, so that they
may not become colder than the rest of the body; but when they are
hot, no fomentation must be made to them, but care is to be taken
that they do not become cold; and very little drink is to be used,
either cold water or hydromel. In those cases of fever where the bowels
are loose, and the mind is disordered, the greater number of patients
pick the wool from their blankets, scratch their noses, answer briefly
when questions are put to them, but, when left to themselves, utter
nothing that is rational. Such attacks appear to me to be connected
with black bile. When in these cases there is a colliquative diarrhoea,
I am of opinion that we ought to give the colder and thicker ptisans,
and that the drinks ought to be binding, of a vinous nature, and rather
astringent. In cases of fever attended from the first with vertigo,
throbbing of the head, and thin urine, you may expect the fever to
be exacerbated at the crisis; neither need it excite wonder, although
there be delirium. When, at the commencement, the urine is cloudy
or thick, it is proper to purge gently, provided this be otherwise
proper; but when the urine at first is thin, do not purge such patients,
but, if thought necessary, give a clyster; such patients should be
thus treated; they should be kept in a quiet state, have unguents
applied to them, and be covered up properly with clothes, and they
should use for drink a watery hydromel, and the juice of ptisan as
a draught in the evening; clear out the bowels at first with a clyster,
but give no purgative medicines to them, for, if you move the bowels
strongly, the urine is not concocted, but the fever remains long,
without sweats and without a crisis. Do not give draughts when the
time of the crisis is at hand, if there be agitation, but only when
the fever abates and is alleviated. It is proper to be guarded at
the crises of other fevers, and to withhold the draughts at that season.
Fevers of this description are apt to be protracted, and to have determinations,
if the inferior extremities be cold, about the ears and neck, or,
if these parts are not cold, to have other changes; they have epistaxis,
and disorder of the bowels. But in cases of fever attended with nausea,
or distention of the hypochondria, when the patients cannot lie reclined
in the same position, and the extremities are cold, the greatest care
and precaution are necessary; nothing should be given to them, except
oxymel diluted with water; no draught should be administered, until
the fever abate and the urine be concocted; the patient should be
laid in a dark apartment, and recline upon the softest couch, and
he should be kept as long as possible in the same position, so as
not to toss about, for this is particularly beneficial to him. Apply
to the hypochondrium linseed by inunctions, taking care that he do
not catch cold when the application is made; let it be in a tepid
state, and boiled in water and oil. One may judge from the urine what
is to take place, for if the urine be thicker, and more yellowish,
so much the better; but if it be thinner, and blacker, so much the
worse; but if it undergo changes, it indicates a prolongation of the
disease, and the patient, in like manner, must experience a change
to the worse and the better. Irregular fevers should be let alone
until they become settled, and, when they do settle, they are to be
treated by a suitable diet and medicine, attending to the constitution
of the patient. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 9

The aspects of the sick are various; wherefore the physician should
pay attention, that he may not miss observing the exciting causes,
as far as they can be ascertained by reasoning, nor such symptoms
as should appear on an even or odd day, but he ought to, be particularly
guarded in observing the odd days, as it is in them, more especially,
that changes take place in patients. He should mark, particularly,
the first day on which the patient became ill, considering when and
whence the disease commenced, for this is of primary importance to
know. When you examine the patient, inquire into all particulars;
first how the head is, and if there be no headache, nor heaviness
in it; then examine if the and sides be free of pain; for if the hypochondrium
be painful, swelled, and unequal, with a sense of satiety, or if there
be pain in the side, and, along with the pain, either cough, tormina,
or belly-ache, if any of these symptoms be present in the hypochondrium,
the bowels should be opened with clysters, and the patient should
drink boiled hydromel in a hot state. The physician should ascertain
whether the patient be apt to faint when he is raised up, and whether
his breathing be free; and examine the discharges from the bowels,
whether they be very black, or of a proper color, like those of persons
in good health, and ascertain whether the fever has a paroxysm every
third day, and look well to such persons on those days. And should
the fourth day prove like the third, the patient is in a dangerous
state. With regard to the symptoms, black stools prognosticate death;
but if they resemble the discharges of a healthy person, and if such
is their appearance every day, it is a favorable symptom; but when
the bowels do not yield to a suppository, and when, though the respiration
be natural, the patient when raised to the night table, or even in
bed, be seized with deliquium, you may expect that the patient, man
or woman, who experiences these symptoms, is about to fall to fall
into a state of delirium. Attention also should be paid to the hands,
for if they tremble, you may expect epistaxis; and observe the nostrils,
whether the breath be drawn in equally by both; and if expiration
by the nostrils be large, a convulsion is apt to take place; and should
a convulsion occur to such a person, death may be anticipated, and
it is well to announce it beforehand. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 10

If, in a winter fever, the tongue be rough, and if there be swoonings,
it is likely to be the remission of the fever. Nevertheless such a
person is to be kept upon a restricted diet, with water for drink,
and hydromel, and the strained juices, not trusting to the remission
of the fevers, as persons having these symptoms are in danger of dying;
when, therefore, you perceive these symptoms, announce this prognostic,
if you shall judge proper, after making the suitable observations.
When, in fevers, any dangerous symptom appears on the fifth day, when
watery discharges suddenly take place from the bowels, when deliquium
animi occurs, or the patient is attacked with loss of speech, convulsions,
or hiccup, under such circumstances he is likely to be affected with
nausea, and sweats break out under the nose and forehead, or on the
back part of the neck and head, and patients with such symptoms shortly
die, from stoppage of the respiration. When, in fevers, abscesses
form about the legs, and, getting into a chronic state, are not concocted
while the fever persists, and if one is seized with a sense of suffocation
in the throat, while the fauces are not swelled, and if it do not
come to maturation, but is repressed, in such a case there is apt
to be a flow of blood from the nose; if this, then, be copious, it
indicates a resolution of the disease, but if not, a prolongation
of the complaint; and the less the discharge, so much worse the symptoms,
and the more protracted the disease; but if the other symptoms are
very favorable, expect in such a case that pains will fall upon the
feet; if then they attack the feet, and if these continue long in
a very painful, and inflamed state, and if there be no resolution,
the pains will extend by degrees to the neck, to the clavicle, shoulder,
breast, or to some articulation, in which an inflammatory tumor will
necessarily form. When these are reduced, if the hands are contracted,
and become trembling, convulsion and delirium seize such a person;
but blisters break out on the eyebrow, erythema takes place, the one
eyelid being tumefied overtops the other, a hard inflammation sets
in, the eye become strongly swelled, and the delirium increases much,
but makes its attacks rather at night than by day. These symptoms
more frequently occur on odd than on even days, but, whether on the
one or the other, they are of a fatal character. Should you determine
to give purgative medicines in such cases, at the commencement, you
should do so before the fifth day, if there be borborygmi in the bowels,
or, if not, you should omit the medicines altogether. If there be
borborygmi, with bilious stools, purge moderately with scammony; but
with regard to the treatment otherwise, administer as few drinks and
draughts as until there be some amendment, and the disease is past
the fourteenth day. When loss of speech seizes a person, on the fourteenth
day of a fever, there is not usually a speedy resolution, nor any
removal of the disease, for this symptom indicates a protracted disease;
and when it appears on that day, it will be still more prolonged.
When, on the fourth day of a fever, the tongue articulates confusedly,
and when there are watery and bilious discharges from the bowels,
such a patient is apt to fall into a state of delirium; the physician
ought, therefore, to watch him, and attend to whatever symptoms may
turn up. In the season of summer and autumn an epistaxis, suddenly
occurring in acute diseases, indicates vehemence of the attack, and
inflammation in the course of the veins, and on the day following,
the discharge of thin urine; and if the patient be in the prime of
life, and if his body be strong from exercise, and brawny, or of a
melancholic temperament, or if from drinking has trembling hands,
it may be well to announce beforehand either delirium or convulsion;
and if these symptoms occur on even days, so much the better; but
on critical days, they are of a deadly character. If, then, a copious
discharge of blood procure an issue to the fullness thereof about
the nose, or what is collected about the anus, there will be an abscess,
or pains in the hypochondrium, or testicles, or in the limbs; and
when these are resolved, there will be a discharge of thick sputa,
and of smooth, thin urine. In fever attended with singultus, give
asafoetida, oxymel, and carrot, triturated together, in a draught;
or galbanum in honey, and cumin in a linctus, or the juice of ptisan.
Such a person cannot escape, unless critical sweats and gentle sleep
supervene, and thick and acrid urine be passed, or the disease terminate
in an abscess: give pine-fruit and myrrh in a linctus, and further
give a very little oxymel to drink; but if they are very thirsty,
some barley-water. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 11

Peripneumonia, and pleuritic affections, are to be thus observed:
If the fever be acute, and if there be pains on either side, or in
both, and if expiration be if cough be present, and the sputa expectorated
be of a blond or livid color, or likewise thin, frothy, and florid,
or having any other character different from the common, in such a
case, the physician should proceed thus: if the pain pass upward to
the clavicle, or the breast, or the arm, the inner vein in the arm
should be opened on the side affected, and blood abstracted according
to the habit, age, and color of the patient, and the season of the
year, and that largely and boldly, if the pain be acute, so as to
bring on deliquium animi, and afterwards a clyster is to be given.
But if the pain be below the chest, and if very intense, purge the
bowels gently in such an attack of pleurisy, and during the act of
purging give nothing; but after the purging give oxymel. The medicine
is to be administered on the fourth day; on the first three days after
the commencement, a clyster should be given, and if it does not relieve
the patient, he should then be gently purged, but he is to be watched
until the fever goes off, and till the seventh day; then if he appear
to be free from danger, give him some unstrained ptisan, in small
quantity, and thin at first, mixing it with honey. If the expectoration
be easy, and the breathing free, if his sides be free of pain, and
if the fever be gone, he may take the ptisan thicker, and in larger
quantity, twice a day. But if he do not progress favorably, he must
get less of the drink, and of the draught, which should be thin, and
only given once a day, at whatever is judged to be the most favorable
hour; this you will ascertain from the urine. The draught is not to
be given to persons after fever, until you see that the urine and
sputa are concocted (if, indeed, after the administration of the medicine
he be purged frequently, it may be necessary to give it, but it should
be given in smaller quantities and thinner than usual, for from inanition
he will be unable to sleep, or digest properly, or wait the crisis);
but when the melting down of crude matters has taken place, and his
system has cast off what is offensive, there will then be no objection.
The sputa are concocted when they resemble pus, and the urine when
it has reddish sediments like tares. But there is nothing to prevent
fomentations and cerates being applied for the other pains of the
sides; and the legs and loins may be rubbed with hot oil, or anointed
with fat; linseed, too, in the form of a cataplasm, may be applied
to the hypochondrium and as far up as the breasts. When pneumonia
is at its height, the case is beyond remedy if he is not purged, and
it is bad if he has dyspnoea, and urine that is thin and acrid, and
if sweats come out about the neck and head, for such sweats are bad,
as proceeding from the suffocation, rales, and the violence of the
disease which is obtaining the upper hand, unless there be a copious
evacuation of thick urine, and the sputa be concocted; when either
of these come on spontaneously, that will carry off the disease. A
linctus for pneumonia: Galbanum and pine-fruit in Attic honey; and
southernwood in oxymel; make a decoction of pepper and black hellebore,
and give it in cases of pleurisy attended with violent pain at the
commencement. It is also a good thing to boil opoponax in oxymel,
and, having strained it, to give it to drink; it answers well, also,
in diseases of the liver, and in severe pains proceeding from the
diaphragm, and in all cases in which it is beneficial to determine
to the bowels or urinary organs, when given in wine and honey; when
given to act upon the bowels, it should be drunk in larger quantity,
along with a watery hydromel. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 12

A dysentery, when stopped, will give rise to an aposteme, or tumor,
if it do not terminate in fevers with sweats, or with thick and white
urine, or in a tertian fever, or the pain fix upon a varix, or the
testicles, or on the hip-joints. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 13

In a bilious fever, jaundice coming on with rigor before the seventh
day carries off the fever, but if it occur without the fever, and
not at the proper time, it is a fatal symptom. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 14

When the loins are in a tetanic state, and the spirits in the veins
are obstructed by melancholic humors, venesection will afford relief.
But when, on the other hand, the anterior tendons are strongly contracted,
and if there be sweats about the neck and face, extorted by the violent
pain of the parched and dried tendons of the sacral extremity (these
are very thick, sustaining the spine, and giving rise to very great
ligaments, which terminate in the feet,) in such a case, unless fever
and sleep come on, followed by concocted urine and critical sweats,
give to drink a strong Cretan wine, and boiled barley-meal for food;
anoint and rub with ointments containing wax; bathe the legs and feet
in hot water, and then cover them up; and so in like manner the arms,
as far as the hands, and the spine, from the neck to the sacrum, are
to be wrapped in a skin smeared with wax; this must extend to the
parts beyond, and intervals are to be left for applying fomentations,
by means of leather bottles filled with hot water, then, wrapping
him up in a linen cloth, lay him down in bed. Do not open the bowels,
unless by means of a suppository, when they have been long of being
moved. If there be any remission of the disease, so far well, but
otherwise, pound of the root of bryonia in fragrant wine, and that
of the carrot, and give to the patient fasting early in the morning,
before using the affusion, and immediately afterwards let him eat
boiled barley-meal in a tepid state, and as much as he can take, and
in addition let him drink, if he will, wine well diluted. If the disease
yield to these means, so much the better, but, if otherwise, you must
prognosticate accordingly. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 15

All diseases are resolved either by the mouth, the bowels, the bladder,
or some other such organ. Sweat is a common form of resolution in
all these cases. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 16

You should put persons on a course of hellebore who are troubled with
a defluxion from the head. But do not administer hellebore to such
persons as are laboring under empyema connected with abscesses, haemoptysis,
and intemperament, or any other strong cause, for it will do no good;
and if any thing unpleasant occur the hellebore will get the blame
of it. But if the body have suddenly lost its powers, or if there
be pain in the head, or obstruction of the ears and nose, or ptyalism,
or heaviness of the limbs, or an extraordinary swelling of the body,
you may administer the hellebore, provided these symptoms be not connected
with drinking, nor with immoderate venery; nor with sorrow, vexation,
nor insomnolency, for, if any of these causes exist, the treatment
must have respect to it. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 17

From walking arise pains of the sides, of the back, of the loins,
and of the hip-joint, and disorder of the respiration has often been
from the same cause, for, after excesses of wine and flatulent food,
pains shoot to the loins and hips, accompanied with dysuria. Walking
is the cause of such complaints, and also of coryza and hoarseness.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 18

Disorders connected with regimen, for the most part, make their attack
accordingly as any one has changed his habitual mode of diet. For
persons who dine contrary to custom experience much swelling of the
stomach, drowsiness, and fullness; and if they take supper over and
above, their belly is disordered; such persons will be benefited by
sleeping after taking the bath, and by walking slowly for a considerable
time after sleep; if, then, the bowels be moved, he may dine and drink
a small quantity of wine not much diluted; but if the bowels are not
opened, he should get his body rubbed with hot oil, and, if thirsty,
drink of some weak and white wine, or a sweet wine, and take repose;
if he does not sleep he should repose the longer. In other respects
he should observe the regimen laid down for those who have taken a
debauch. With regard to the bad effects of drinks, such as are of
a watery nature pass more slowly through the body, they regurgitate,
as it were, and float about the hypochondria, and do not flow readily
by urine; when filled up with such a drink, he should not attempt
any violent exertion, requiring either strength or swiftness, but
should rest as much as possible until the drink has been digested
along with the food; but such drinks as are stronger or more austere,
occasion palpitation in the body and throbbing in the head, and in
this case the person affected will do well to sleep, and take some
hot draught for which he feels disposed; for abstinence is bad in
headache and the effects of a surfeit. Those who, contrary to usage,
restrict themselves to one meal, feel empty and feeble, and pass hot
urine in consequence of the emptiness of their vessels; they have
a salt and bitter taste in the mouth; they tremble at any work they
attempt; their temples throb; and they cannot digest their supper
so well as if they had previously taken their dinner. Such persons
should take less supper than they are wont, and a pudding of barley-meal
more moist than usual instead of bread, and of potherbs the dock,
or mallow, and ptisan, or beets, and along with the food they should
take wine in moderation, and diluted with water; after supper they
should take a short walk, until the urine descend and be passed; and
they may use boiled fish. 

Articles of food have generally such effects as the following: Garlic
occasions flatulence and heat about the chest, heaviness of the head,
and nausea, and any other habitual pain is apt to be exasperated by
it; it is diuretic, which, in so far, is a good property which it
possesses; but to eat it when one means to drink to excess, or when
intoxicated. Cheese produces flatulence and constipation, and heats
the other articles of food; and it gives rise to crudities and indigestion,
but it is worst of all to eat it along with drink after a full meal.
Pulse of all kinds are flatulent, whether raw, boiled, or fried; least
so when macerated in water, or in a green state; they should not be
used except along with food prepared from the cerealia. Each of these
articles, articles, however, has bad effects peculiar to itself. The
vetch, whether raw or boiled, creates flatulence and pain. The lentil
is astringent, and disorders the stomach if taken with its hull. The
lupine has the fewest bad effects of all these things. The stalk and
the juice of silphium (asafoetida), pass through some people&apos;s bowels
very readily, but in others, not accustomed to them, they engender
what is called dry cholera; this complaint is more especially produced
by it if mixed with much cheese, or eaten along with beef. Melancholic
diseases are most particularly exacerbated by beef, for it is of an
unmanageable nature, and requires no ordinary powers of stomach to
digest it; it will agree best with those who use it well boiled and
pretty long kept. Goat&apos;s flesh has all the bad properties of beef;
it is an indigestible, more flatulent and engenders acid eructations
and cholera; such as has a fragrant smell, is firm, and sweet to the
taste, is the best, when well baked and cooled; but those kinds which
are disagreeable to the taste, have a bad smell, and are hard, such
are particularly bad, and especially if very fresh; it is best in
summer and worst in autumn. The flesh of young pigs is bad, either
when it is too raw or when it is over-roasted, for it engenders bile
and disorders the bowels. Of all kinds of flesh, pork is the best;
it is best when neither very fat, nor, on the other hand, very lean,
and the animal had not attained the age of what is reckoned an old
victim; it should be eaten without the skin, and in a coldish state.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 19

In dry cholera the belly is distended with wind, there is rumbling
in the bowels, pain in the sides and loins, no dejections, but, on
the contrary, the bowels are constipated. In such a case you should
guard against vomiting, but endeavor to get the bowels opened. As
quickly as possible give a clyster of hot water with plenty of oil
in it, and having rubbed the patient freely with unguents; put him
into hot water, laying him down in the basin, and pouring the hot
water upon him by degrees; and if, when heated in the bath, the bowels
be moved, he will be freed from the complaint. To a person in such
a complaint it will do good if he sleep, and drink a thin, old, and
strong wine; and you should give him oil, so that he may settle, and
have his bowels moved, when he will be relieved. He must abstain from
all other kinds of food; but when the pain remits, give him asses
milk to drink until he is purged. But if the bowels are loose, with
bilious discharges, tormina, vomitings, a feeling of suffocation,
and gnawing pains, it is best to enjoin repose, and to drink hydromel,
and avoid vomiting. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 20

There are two kinds of dropsy, the one anasarca, which, when formed,
is incurable; the other is accompanied with emphysema (tympanites?)
and requires much good fortune to enable one to triumph over it. Laborious
exertion, fomentation, and abstinence (are to be enjoined). The patient
should eat dry and acrid things, for thus will he pass the more water,
and his strength be kept up. If he labors under difficulty of breathing,
if it is the summer season, and if he is in the prime of life, and
is strong, blood should be abstracted from the arm, and then he should
eat hot pieces of bread, dipped in dark wine and oil, drink very little,
and labor much, and live on well-fed pork, boiled with vinegar, so
that he may be able to endure hard exercises. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 21

Those who have the inferior intestines hot, and who pass acrid and
irregular stools of a colliquative nature, if they can bear it, should
procure revulsion by vomiting with hellebore; but if not, should get
a thick decoction of summer wheat in a cold state, lentil soup, bread
cooked with cinders, and fish, which should be taken boiled if they
have fever, but roasted if not feverish; and also dark-colored wine
if free of fever; but otherwise they should take the water from medlars,
myrtles, apples, services, dates, or wild vine. If there be no fever,
and if there be tormina, the patient should drink hot asses&apos; milk
in small quantity at first, and gradually increase it, and linseed,
and wheaten flour, and having removed the bitter part of Egyptian
beans, and ground them, sprinkle on the milk and drink; and let him
eat eggs half-roasted, and fine flour, and millet, and perl-spelt
(chondrus) boiled in milk;- all these things should be eaten cold,
and similar articles of food and drink should be administered.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 22

The most important point of regimen to observe and be guarded about
in protracted diseases, is to pay attention to the exacerbations and
remissions of fevers, so as to avoid the times when food should not
be given, and to know when it may be administered without danger;
this last season is at the greatest possible distance from the exacerbation.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 23

One should be able to recognize those who have headache from gymnastic
exercises, or running, or walking or hunting, or any other unseasonable
labor, or from immoderate venery; also those who are of a pale color,
or troubled with hoarseness; those who have enlarged spleen, those
who are in a state of anaemia, those who are suffering from tympanites,
those having dry cough and thirst, those who are flatulent, and have
the course of the blood in their veins intercepted; those persons
whose hypochondria, sides, and back are distended: those having torpor;
those laboring under amaurosis, or having noises in their ears; those
suffering from incontinence of urine or jaundice, or whose food is
passed undigested; those who have discharges of blood from the nose
or anus, or who have flatulence and intense pain, and who cannot retain
the wind. In these cases you may do mischief, but cannot possibly
do any good by purging, but may interrupt the spontaneous remissions
and crises of the complaints. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 24

If you think it expedient to let blood, see that the bowels be previously
settled, and then bleed; enjoin abstinence, and forbid the use of
wine; and complete the cure by means of a suitable regimen, and wet
fomentations. But if the bowels appear to be constipated, administer
a soothing clyster. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 25

If you think it necessary to give medicines, you may safely purge
upwards by hellebore, but none of those should be purged downwards.
The most effectual mode of treatment is by the urine, sweats, and
exercise; and use gentle friction so as not to harden the constitution;
and if he be confined to bed let others rub him. When the pain is
seated above the diaphragm, place him erect for the most part, and
let him be as little reclined as possible; and when he is raised up
let him be rubbed for a considerable time with plenty of hot oil.
But if the pains be in the lower belly below the diaphragm, it will
be useful to lie reclined and make no motion, and to such a person
nothing should be administered except the friction. Those pains which
are dissolved by discharges from the bowels, by urine, or moderate
sweats, cease spontaneously, if they are slight, but if strong they
prove troublesome; for persons so affected either die, or at least
do not recover without further mischief, for they terminate in abscesses.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 26

A draught for a dropsical person. Take three cantharides, and removing
their head, feet, and wings, triturate their bodies in three cupfuls
(cyathi) of water, and when the person who has drunk the draught complains
of pain, let him have hot fomentations applied. The patient should
be first anointed with oil, should take the draught fasting, and eat
hot bread with oil. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 27

A styptic. Apply the juice of the fig inwardly to the vein; or having
moulded biestings into a tent, introduce up the nostril, or push up
some chalcitis with the finger, and press the cartilages of the nostrils
together; and open the bowels with the boiled milk of asses: or having
shaved the head apply cold things to it if in the summer season.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 28

The sesamoides purges upwards when pounded in oxymel to the amount
of a drachm and a half, and drunk; it is combined with the hellebores,
to the amount of the third part, and thus it is less apt to produce
suffocation. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 29

Trichiasis. Having introduced a thread into the eye of a needle push
it through the upper part of the distended eyelid, and do the same
at the base of it; having stretched the threads tie a knot on them,
and bind up until they drop out: and, if this be sufficient, so far
well; but if otherwise, you must do the same thing again. And hemorrhoids,
in like manner, you may treat by transfixing them with a needle and
tying them with a very thick and large woolen thread; for thus the
cure will be more certain. When you have secured them, use a septic
application, and do not foment until they drop off, and always leave
one behind; and when the patient recovers, let him be put upon a course
of hellebore. Then let him be exercised and sweated; the friction
of the gymnasium and wrestling in the morning will be proper; but
he must abstain from running, drinking, and all acrid substances,
except marjoram; let him take an emetic every seven days, or three
times in a month; for thus will he enjoy the best bodily health. Let
him take straw-colored, austere, and watery wine, and use little drink.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 30

For persons affected with empyema. Having cut some bulbs or squill,
boil in water, and when well boiled, throw this away, and having poured
in more water, boil until it appear to the touch soft and well-boiled;
then triturate finely and mix roasted cumin, and white sesames, and
young almonds pounded in honey, form into an electuary and give; and
afterwards sweet wine. In draughts, having pounded about a small acetabulum
of the white poppy, moisten it with water in which summer wheat has
been washed, add honey, and boil. Let him take this frequently during
the day. And then taking into account what is to happen, give him
supper. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 31

For dysentery. A fourth part of a pound of cleaned beans, and twelve
shoots of madder having been triturated, are to be mixed together
and boiled, and given as a linctus with some fatty substance.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 32

For diseases of the eyes. Washed spodium (tutty?) mixed with grease,
and not of a thinner consistence than dough, is to be carefully triturated,
and moistened with the juice of unripe raisins; and having dried in
the sun, moisten until it is of the consistence of an ointment. When
it becomes again dry, let it be finely levigated, anoint the eyes
with it, and dust it upon the angles of the eyes. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 33

For watery eyes. Take one drachm of ebeny and nine oboli of burnt
copper, rub them upon a whetstone, add three oboli of saffron; triturate
all these things reduced to a fine powder, pour in an Attic hemina
of sweet wine, and then place in the sun and cover up; when sufficiently
digested, use it. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 34

For violent pains of the eyes. Take of chalcitis, and of raisin, of
each 1 dr., when digested for two days, strain; and pounding myrrh
and saffron, and having mixed must, with these things, digest in the
sun; and with this anoint the eyes when in a state of severe pain.
Let it be kept in a copper vessel. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 35

Mode of distinguishing persons in an hysterical fit. Pinch them with
your fingers, and if they feel, it is hysterical; but if not, it is
a convulsion. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 36

To persons in coma, (dropsy?) give to drink meconium (euphorbia peplus?)
to the amount of a round Attic leciskion (small acetabulum).

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 37

Of squama aeris, as much as three specilla can contain, with the gluten
of summer wheat: levigate, pound, form into pills, and give; it purges
water downwards. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 38

A medicine for opening the bowels. Pour upon figs the juice of spurge,
in the proportion of seven to one: then put into a new vessel and
lay past when properly mixed. Give before food. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

APPENDIX PART 39

Pounding meconium, pouring on it water, and straining, and mixing
flour, and baking into a cake, with the addition of boiled honey,
give in affections of the anus and in dropsy; and after eating of
it, let the patient drink of a sweet watery wine, and diluted hydromel
prepared from wax: or collecting meconium, lay it up for medicinal
purposes. 
</p>
    </body>
    <back>
      <div type='colophon'>
        <head>Colophon</head>
        <p>This file was originally marked up using the Text Encoding Initiative XML markup language for use in an experiment/studuy colloquially called "How 'great' are the Great Books?" ( 
        <xref url='http://infomotions.com/sandbox/great-books/'>http://infomotions.com/sandbox/great-books/</xref>) by Eric Lease Morgan. It's Infomotions unique identifier is hippocrates-on-3680.</p>
        <p rend='center'>
          <figure url='http://infomotions.com/logo.gif' rend='center'>
            <lb />
            <figDesc>Infomotions Man says, "Give back to the 'Net."</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div>
    </back>
  </text>
</TEI.2>
