nk 
‘them, fhew an » inordinate action in the blood-veffels of the 
pulps which probably, in this difeafe, pafles much farther 
into the tube of the hair than ufual. influence which 
this difeafe has upon the conftitution, points out the pro priety 
the comnioy growth 
The. ractice Fas cut- 
Gialtiers iit uec it lofe ef of its juices a eva- 
fentin, from ee its tube and the ends of its fibres al- 
"The. Stic of faving a ‘beard and cutting the hair of 
Ge teats 
“Ss 
believe, been juftly de -precate fome 
e latter has bee fuppofed, and w ith much 
arent reafon, to weaken the esa - by diverting 
¢ blood from the brain to the furface of the head. he 
connection which exifts between the iat and the organs of 
generation, and likewife between it and the mufcular ilrength 
of the individual, would feem to render it 
has, we 
ift: 
. at 
eadhticiy uifhed for rigour aa hardihood. “They 
ae lkewite reputed to have fuperior a = venereal 
extirpation of the bea 1¢ North 
Aadinargs as having the oppofite ‘fe othe aving, 
ribute to the well-known itrength of tes people, 
eait or loft by accident, refembles in f 
if the pulp which fuitained the old hair degenc~ 
z d; while another pulp has forme 
which the new hair is produced : this wed is 
elses mes the cavity of the bulb, which undergoes n 
late for txemplify ing the aged and growth of 
and * AEE r. fhews the natural fize oe: 
= as, 
~ head be wafhed with fome of it warm 
re-produétion of hairs, when they are either greene é 
TR. 
can be procured in fufficient ane fuch as that of hogs 
and 5 ee other forts a Pas 
difeafes of, & jee g the many remedies for 
eae a the hair, he eit aes recommended in the 
Philofophical Tranfactions. To make hair grow, take a 
quantity of. ie largeft and fineit roots of the common Land 
! n be collected; let them he taken out of t 
. goa in the month of December ; bruife them in a mar ble le 
mortar, and boil them in a quantity of white wine ill there 
only remains as much as will cover them ; let this be care- 
fully flrained off, and every night, going to bed, let thie 
The other preferip- 
tion is this: burn the flender twig's ot vines to afhes, and 
boil thefe afhes in fuch a quantity of common water as will 
make a ftrong lye; Iet this be itrained clear off, and the 
head wafhed every night with fome of it warm. When the 
hair is good, but in danger of falling off by degrecs, the 
afhes of the vine branches are to be boiled im red-wine inttead 
of water, and this lye is to be ufed inilead of the other. 
When the perio m wears powder, let fome hermodatzyls be 
reduced to fine flour and mixed with it: let this be the ered 
forty-three years fier her d 
out plentifully through the cleft 
that there was since. the caffin Had fome 
been corre all over with hair. he cover bemg sche 
the fe ed in its tae es | but from 
the crown of the head to ea es 
whole Rructure fell a onee, tee nothin in his and but 
a handful of, scithes i nor any other 
bone left ; yet the rage folid,, and trong enough. 
Mr. Arnold, in the fame Colleétions,, gives a relation of a 
mai: hanged for theft, who, in a little time, when he yet 
ex ae the heh hast hie: ad died. covered over 
a ame 
7 Some fu 
5 rae 
