FOURTH LECTURE. 323 



sibility of this planet's having some influence on 

 worms, on remedies, or even on diseases. 



(9) See § I. 



(10) This is the pretended anthelmintic power 

 of bitters, as the professor of the Decima judicious- 

 ly remarks in his JVotes a la Matiere medicale de 

 Cullen ; see tome vi, note no. 83, 



(11) See § LXXll, no, S. 

 (IS) See § LXXIX. 



(13) ilnatrijpsolos;ia ossia dottrina delle frizio' 

 ni die comprende il nuovo metodo di agire sul cor* 

 po umanoy per mezzo di frizio ni fatte cogli umori 

 animali, e colle varie sostanze che nlV ordinario si 

 somministrano internamentej edizione quarta^ vol. 

 ii ; Pavia, 1799, 1800, 8°. 



(14) See Anatripsologittj vol. i, art. v. 



(15) See Anatripsologia, vol, ii. art. ii^ vol. ii, 

 art. IV. Frictions on the abdomen of children with 

 the two following liniments, are of great ultility. 



1, Take a drachm of ox gall and of Venice 

 soap, and form them into a liniment with a con- 

 venient quantity of oil of tansy. 



S. Digest for twenty four hours in a warm place, 

 in a sufficient quantity of gastric juice or purified 

 saliva, two ounces of ox gall, half an ounce of pul- 

 verized socotorine aloes, and of prepared cucumis 

 colocynthis, and make the whole into a linimeut 

 with fat. 



(16) Cepa officin. class, hexand. ord. monogyn. 

 biennis ; scapo nudo inferae ventricoso lougiore, 

 foliis teretibus. 



