ON PROFESSIONAL IMPOSTORS.
Rhases has an interesting chapter on this head. The frauds of impostors, he says, are more numerous than could be contained in his whole work. Some of them, he adds, pretend to be able to cure epilepsy, and having made a crucial incision in the back part of the head, they extract from the wound something which they hold in their hands, and thus impose upon people. Others, in like manner, cause it to be believed that they extract a small lizard by the nostrils. Some of these characters, he says, make it be believed that they remove films from the eye, by secretly introducing a small membrane into the eye, and taking it out again. Others manage to create a belief that they suck water from the ear with a reed. Others also make it be believed that they extract worms from the ears or teeth. Others practice a trick by which they obtain the credit of extracting the ranula below the tongue. Why should I mention those, he adds, who introduce pieces of bone into wounds and ulcers, and afterwards extract them? He says, it is not uncommon for these impostors to sound a man for the stone, pretend to find one, perform the operation, and exhibit a calculus which they themselves had introduced secretly into the incision. Others pretend to cure piles, make incisions about the anus, and form ulcers there which did not exist before. Certain of them affect by scarifications and other means to suck the vitreous humour from the hip-joint, while they exhibit something of the kind which they themselves have introduced. There are some who undertake to collect all the infirmities of the body into one spot, and then extract them; for this pretended object they raise an itching and violent heat in some place by means of alkekengi (winter cherry); and having accomplished this they exact a fee for removing the uneasiness from the spot, which they do by anointing it with oil. There are others who will make a man believe that he has swallowed hairs, glass, or the like; and then tickling his throat with a feather, and making him vomit, they exhibit the substance in question as if it had been brought up. Thus, he adds, they often do much mischief, and sometimes are guilty of culpable homicide. He concludes by warning sensible people to be upon their guard against such wretches. (Ad Mansor. vii. 27.)