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 troches, your hands being anointed with opobalsamum or expressed oil of nutmeg. Dry them on a sieve turned bottom upwards in an open place. Turn them frequently until they are quite dry, and keep them in a well-stopped glass or glazed vessel. They will keep good for a year, but it is better to make the treacle with them as soon after they are made as possible.

Quincy (1724) had great confidence in their virtues. He writes, "That they are Balsamic and greatly Restorative is confirm'd by long Experience; for we have many instances in Physical Histories of Persons arriving at a healthful old age by their frequent use, as well as others who recover'd from deplorable Decays and Weaknesses." Then he proceeds at considerable length to compare the juices of these animals with those of terebinthous plants, which are mostly evergreens. "Moreover they have been experienc'd to do wonders in cutaneous cases; the Force and Activity of their parts breaking thro' the little obstructions in the Miliary Glands, which turn into Ichor, Scabs, and Blotches" (those old practitioners knew exactly how their remedies acted); "and by restoring a free perspiration render the skin smooth and beautiful"; and much more on cures of itch, leprosy, and the worst skin eruptions.

Viper wine was a very popular tonic. It was believed to cure barrenness in women. An essence of vipers was believed in as an aphrodisaic, but Dr. James (1747) tells us that what was then advertised and sold in London under that name was tincture of cantharides. This author is sceptical about vipers altogether. He had given the flesh, broth, and salt of vipers in large quantities, but had come to the conclusion that the broths and flesh were no better than the broths and flesh of