To arrest looseness of the bowels, deer's blood is used; the ashes also of deer's horns; the liver of a wild boar, taken fresh and without salt, in wine; a swine's liver roasted, or that of a he-goat, boiled in five semisextarii of wine; a hare's rennet boiled, in quantities the size of a chick-pea, in wine, or, if there are symptoms of fever, in water. To this last some persons add nut-galls, while others, again, content themselves with hare's blood boiled by itself in milk. Ashes; too, of burnt horse-dung are taken in water for this purpose; or else ashes of the part of an old bull's horn which lies nearest the root, sprinkled in water; the blood, too, of a he-goat boiled upon charcoal; or a decoction made from a goat's hide boiled with the hair on.
For relaxing the bowels a horse's rennet is used, or else the blood, marrow, or liver of a she-goat. A similar effect is produced by applying a wolf's gall to the navel, with elaterium;[1] by taking mares' milk, goats' milk with salt and honey, or a she-goat's gall with juice of cyclaminos,[2] and a little alum—in which last case some prefer adding nitre and water to the mixture. Bull's gall, too, is used for a similar purpose, beaten up with wormwood and applied in the form of a suppository; or butter is taken, in considerable doses.
Cœliac affections and dysentery are cured by taking cow's
liver; ashes of deer's horns, a pinch in three fingers swallowed
in water; hare's rennet, kneaded up in bread, or, if there is
any discharge of blood, taken with polenta;[3] or else boar's
For all defluxions of the bowels it is recommended to apply
soft cheese, and for cœliac affections and dysentery old cheese,
powdered, one cyathus of cheese being taken in three cyathi of
ordinary wine. Goats' blood is boiled down with the marrow
of those animals for the cure of dysentery; and the cœliac flux
is effectually treated with the roasted liver of a she-goat, or,
what is still better, the liver of a he-goat boiled in astringent
wine, and administered in the drink, or else applied to the navel
with oil of myrtle. Some persons boil down the liver in three
sextarii of water to half a sextarius, and then add rue to it.
For both the cœliac flux and dysentery, kid's rennet is employed, taken in myrtle wine in pieces the size of a bean, or else kid's blood, prepared in the form of a dish known by the name of "sanguiculus."[6] For dysentery an injection is employed, made of bull glue dissolved in warm water. Flatulency is dispelled by a decoction of calf's dung in wine. For intestinal affections deer's rennet is highly recommended, boiled with beef and lentils, and taken with the food; hare's fur, also reduced to ashes and boiled with honey; or boiled goat's milk, taken with a small quantity of mallows and some salt; if rennet is added, the remedy will be all the more effectual. Goat suet, taken in any kind of broth, is possessed of similar virtues, care being taken to swallow cold water immediately after. The ashes of a kid's thighs are said to be marvellously efficacious for intestinal hernia; as also hare's dung, boiled with honey, and taken daily in pieces the size of a bean; indeed, these remedies are said to have proved effectual in cases where a cure has been quite despaired of. The broth too, made from a goat's head, boiled with the hair on, is highly recommended.
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