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 to him having lost her speech. The master rubbed her palate with some "theodoricon emperisticon" and with a little "diacostorium." She soon recovered. An apothecary brought a youth to the hospital with a carbuncle on his face, and his throat and neck swollen beyond belief. The master said the youth must go home to die. "Is there then no remedy?" asked the apothecary. The physician replied, "I believe most truly that if thou wert to give tyriacum in a large dose, there would be a chance that he might live." The apothecary gave two doses of 3ij. each, which caused a profuse perspiration, and in due course the youth recovered. He advises smelling and swallowing musk, aloes wood, storax, calamita, and amber to prevent infection in cold weather, and in warm weather sandal wood, roses, camphor, acetositas citri, sour milk, and vinegar, taking syrup of vinegar in the morning and syrup of violets at mid-day. For gout he prescribes an ointment the principal constituent of which is goose grease. The preparation of this remedy is explained metrically. The verses begin thus:—

Anser sumatur, Veteranus qui videatur, Post deplumetur, Intralibus evacuetur.

Rheumatism was to be treated with olive oil, and the pharmacist is directed to warm it while he repeats the Psalm "Quare fremerunt gentes" as far as "Postula a me et dabo tibi gentes hereditatem tuam," then the Gloria and two prayers. This recitation was to be repeated seven times. There were no clocks available at that time, and this therefore was the method of prescribing the length of an operation. Dr. Moore says he finds this direction would cover about a quarter of an hour.