1-intox | intro-weigh | well--your
Part
1001 47| appear to the touch soft and well-boiled; then triturate finely and
1002 37| labor much, and live on well-fed pork, boiled with vinegar,
1003 41| a suitable regimen, and wet fomentations. But if the
1004 38| increase it, and linseed, and wheaten flour, and having removed
1005 | whenever
1006 | where
1007 50| copper, rub them upon a whetstone, add three oboli of saffron;
1008 1 | drastic purgatives, with whey, and milk at certain times.
1009 5 | bowels, or opening a vein, whichever of these may be proper;—
1010 8 | and, as regards drinks, whichsoever of those about to be described
1011 | whom
1012 38| apples, services, dates, or wild vine. If there be no fever,
1013 16| as it were, clearing the windpipe with a feather, it relieves
1014 10| wine, although both strong wines, if exchanged contrary to
1015 43| removing their head, feet, and wings, triturate their bodies
1016 24| patient is agitated, and wishes to vomit, and if he vomits
1017 26| that the patient, man or woman, who experiences these symptoms,
1018 16| Vinegar is more prejudicial to women than to men, for it creates
1019 24| the head, it is not to be wondered at that the feet become
1020 16| will do the more good. In a word, the acidity of vinegar
1021 12| person having received a wound in the leg, neither very
1022 23| and the neck a cerate, and wrap them round with wool, and
1023 31| filled with hot water, then, wrapping him up in a linen cloth,
1024 46| friction of the gymnasium and wrestling in the morning will be proper;
1025 3 | deserving of being consigned to writing which are undetermined by
1026 1 | neither have the ancients written anything worth regimen,
1027 28| patient, and the season of the year, and that largely and boldly,
1028 25| urine be thicker, and more yellowish, so much the better; but
1029 | your
|