174 NOTES TO THE 
calidiora ingrediatur—quandoquidem sanguis et spiritus vehe- 
mentius a ne dissipentur aut — sedandi. com- 
Yet this see rary to the doctrine 
delivered Ghrvcci' in the Schola itself, 1, 331, Frigte gang 
quia sunt inimica minutis, unless, in one case, a moderate cool- 
ness be understood, in the other, pose cold. ae ‘the 
whole I adhere to the third secon 
- 25. Dieta in som saliva 
ing is to be preserved. An appetite, with slender diet prece- 
dent, are the signs that it is a real and not a false appetite, 
that the body requires food, and that it is not an artificial 
stimulus. The original reading i is followed in all the printed 
editions, and is considered as the best by all the a 
who mention saliva by the by only, legitur 
et a gives a sense equally good, Ga len (de Locis 
Affects, lib. 3. cap. 6.) as quoted by the commentators, had 
observed that a eis thin, watry, and free from any bad taste 
is a Sane of — and that shes former food is concocted.— 
a person is really hungry we say ‘his mouth waters.” 
lL ty For cerebella, sae some MSS. have prosunt domi- 
nabus. 
1. 33. Ova sorbilia, dressed so 
1. 37, Frisca—this word is ey by Villa Nova, frothing 
and sparkling, quod spumando sonum facit, sive quando in eo 
Rn 4h oie A 
fresh not dead, consequently lively. Ital. Frizzare, to be 
ely 
1. 45. Scrotina, probably scrotini. 
1. 50. Bené lymphatum, mixed with water. Altered to dilu- 
tum in some later editions. 
1. 51. Cerevisia, quasi Cere risia, derived from Ceres, was 
Ce ee eee eee me ee eee 
