In case where persons have swallowed quicksilver,[1] bacon is the proper remedy to be employed. Poisons are neutralized by taking asses' milk; henbane more particularly, mistletoe, hemlock, the flesh of the sea-hare, opocarpathon,[2] pharicon,[3] and dorycnium:[4] the same, too, where coagulated milk[5] has been productive of bad effects, for the biestings,[6] or first curdled milk, should be reckoned as nothing short of a poison.[7] We shall have to mention many other uses to which asses' milk is applied; but it should be remembered that in all cases it must be used fresh, or, if not, as new as possible, and warmed, for there is nothing that more speedily loses its virtue. The bones, too, of the ass are pounded and boiled, as an antidote to the poison of the sea-hare. The wild ass[8] is possessed of similar properties in every respect, but in a much higher degree.
Of the wild horse[9] the Greek writers have made no mention,
it not being a native of their country; we have every reason to
believe, however, that it has the same properties as the animal
in a tame state, but much more fully developed. Mares' milk
effectually neutralizes the venom of the sea-hare and all
narcotic poisons. Nor had the Greeks any knowledge from
experience of the urns[10] and the bison,[11] although in India the
forests are filled with herds of wild oxen: it is only reasonable,
Fresh goats' milk cheese is given to persons who have taken mistletoe, and goats' milk itself is a remedy for cantharides. Taken with Taminian[13] grapes, goats' milk is an antidote to the effects of ephemeron. Goats' blood, boiled down with the marrow, is used as a remedy for the narcotic[14] poisons, and kids' blood for the other poisons. Kid's rennet is administered where per- sons have taken mistletoe, the juice of the white chamæleon,[15] or bull's blood: for which last, hare's rennet in vinegar is also used by way of antidote. For injuries inflicted by the pastinaca,[16] and the stings or bites of all kinds of marine animals, hare's rennet, kid's rennet, or lamb's rennet is taken, in doses of one drachma, in wine. Hare's rennet, too, generally forms an ingredient in the antidotes for poisons.
The moth that is seen fluttering about the flame of a lamp
is generally reckoned in the number of the noxious substances:
its bad effects are neutralized by the agency of goat's liver.
Goat's gall, too, is looked upon as an antidote to venomous
1.
2. sassa , with
which aloes are adulterated in Abyssinia, a thing that Galen tells us was
done with the carpathum of the ancients. The sea-hare is the Aplysia
depilans of Gmelin. It is not poisonous. See B. ix. c. 72, and B. xxxii.
c. 3.
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