48 THE CABINET OF NATURAL HISTORY, 
As hov’ring o’er the scarlet bloom, 
Or resting on a lily’s stem, 
Does fancy in the rich perfume 
Bring thoughts of love with them? 
And when I see thee quickly dart 
On whirring wing from flower to flower, 
Say, is thy little constant heart 
Quick beating for thy true love’s bower? 
Go, haste thee, then, sweet bird of love, 
And quickly sip the rich repast ; 
For birds, as well as mortals, prove 
That joys the sweetest, seldom last. 
Go, sparkle on thy short-lived day, 
*Mid Frora’s treasures bright, 
Like zephyrs wing thy wanton way, 
For ah! too swiftly comes thy night. 
And when at eve thou leay’st my porch, 
Go lead thy little love to rest ; 
The fire-fly be thy hymen’s torch, 
A full blown rose thy tiny nest. 
TO PREVENT HYDROPHOBIA. 
Tur saliva of the mad dog, has the property, when in- 
serted under the skin, of communicating hydrophobia to 
other animals, and to man. M. Coster has been able, by 
the use of Chlorine, to decompose this deadly poison, and 
render it harmless, preventing the approach of hydropho- 
bia in animals bitten by dogs decidedly rabid. There 
can be no doubt of the accuracy of the experiment on 
which this statement is predicated. 
From this the most important practical results follow: 
Make a strong wash by dissolving two table-spoonfuls 
of the chloruret of lime in halfa pint of water, and instantly 
and repeatedly bathe the part bitten. The poison will 
in this way be decomposed. It has proved successful 
when applied within six hours after the animal has been 
bitten. 
From what we now know of the powers of Chlorine, it 
is not too much to hope for, that it may prove an antidote 
to every case of poison, provided it be applied in season, 
and before the system is fatally affected. 
It appears highly probable that hydrogen, from its being 
the lightest and most subtle of all known ponderable 
bodies, may enter into the composition of such active 
agents as poison. Fontana examined the poison of the 
viper and of other animals, but we know not whether, as 
in prussic acid, hydrogen is the active principle. In the 
present No. it appears that Chlorine destroyed the effect 
of prussic acid, the most active poison known, even after it 
had gone far towards producing death. It is therefore credi- 
ble, that it may destroy other poisons, having a similar 
constitution; and we can readily understand the modus 
operandi in such cases; for Chlorine takes hydrogen from 
every combination, and of course destroys the peculiar 
character of the compound. Prussic acid itself consists of 
nothing but the ordinary elements of animal matter, such 
as are daily used for food; but in the acid they are 
combined in a peculiar manner, and the withdrawing of 
hydrogen from it, at once subverts the combination, and 
renders it harmless. 
The practical use which we would make of the facts 
which we know, and of the theoretical views which we en- 
tertain is, that Chloride of Lime should be kept in every 
family ready for instant use in the multiplied cases in 
which it is applicable.-—Stlliman’s Journal. 
EFFICACY OF AMMONIA IN CURING THE STINGS OF BEES, 
AND COUNTERACTING OTHER POISONS. 
BY DR. CHURCH, OF COOPERSTOWN, N. ¥. 
A young man in this place had accidentally overset a 
hive of bees, and before he could escape, they had settled, 
in great numbers, on different parts of his body and limbs, 
and stung him very severely. It was about halfan hour after 
the accident happened, when he came to my office in 
great agony, and he had searcely time to give an account 
of it before he fainted. JI immediately applied the ammo- 
nia to the parts that had been stung, his legs, arms, and 
breast. He directly recovered from his faintness, and ex- 
perienced no pain or other inconvenience afterwards. 
It is several years since I first used the aqua ammoniz, 
to counteract the effect of the bites of insects and stings 
of bees, and it has invariably produced instant relief—gene- 
rally complete. I have often seen children crying in ex- 
cessive pain from the sting of a bee, and on the application 
ofthe ammonia they would immediately cease complaining 
and become cheerful; so complete and sudden is the relief 
it produces. I always use it for musquito bites, and they 
never trouble me farther. I was led to the use of it in these 
cases, from the instantaneous effect it was said to have in 
counteracting the operation of prussic acid. In the second 
number of the American Journal of Medical Sciences, 
(Philadelphia,) for last year, it will be seen that Dr. Moore, 
of Alabama, used it with great success in the cure of ve- 
nomous serpents. JI have sometimes noticed that the ap- 
plication is more efficacious than at others, and I think it 
must be on account of its being sometimes carbonated and 
at others not.—Jé. 
