C 351 ] 
VIII. That it may be of ufe alfo in intermitting 
fevers. 
IX. That a palfy in the left fide of the body is owing 
to the right fide of the brain, and vice verfa, 
X. That anger, the parent of numerous evils, k 
fometimes ufeful to paralytics. 
XI. That as long as the paralytic limbs are rigid, it 
it is an argument, that the burfal ligaments of the 
joints, and the fheaths of the tendons, are deficient 
in the fluid, adapted by nature for their lubri- 
cation. 
XII. That every fpecies of palfy does not arife from 
the nerves being either obflructed, or comprefled. 
In concluding this account, I cannot help obferv- 
ing, that, contrary to his ufual modefty, our author 
has been guilty of a flight plagiarifm in this work ; 
as, without quoting his author, he has tranflated from 
the French into Latin the tables above-mention’d, as 
well as his experiments, proving that electricity for- 
wards vegetation, from our worthy brother the Abbe 
Nollet’s treatife, intitled, Recbercbes fur les caufes 
parti cult eres des phenomenons electriques. See Nollet 
pag. 358 to 380. Dr. Bohadfch has only alter’d 
the date 1747 to 1750. But it is to be remem- 
ber’d, that thefe accounts were calculated for the 
meridian of Prague, and not for thofe of London 
and Paris. 
IN r. 
