Acinus; it resembles basil, and is moderately astringent, therefore it restrains alvine and uterine discharges, when taken in a draught; and when applied as a cataplasm, is of use for erysipelas and phygethlon.

Commentary. Our old herbalists describe it under the name of wild basil, meaning perhaps the Ocimum pilosum, and there seems little reason to question their authority in this instance. Neither Galen nor Serapion has described it. Indeed we are not aware that any of the Arabians has described it except Ebn Baithar (ii, 254); neither have we found it in the Hippocratic collection, nor in the works of Celsus.

Ακόνιτον or Παρδαλιαγχὲς,

Aconitum, Wolfsbane, is possessed of septic and deleterious properties; it is, therefore, not to be taken internally, but externally it may be applied to flesh requiring erosion. The lycoctonon, being possessed of the same properties as the former, is particularly fatal to wolves, as the other is to panthers.

Commentary. The two species of aconite described by Dioscorides (iv, 77), and the other authorities, are generally supposed to be the Doronicum Pardalianches and the Aconitum Napellus. In the modern Greek Pharmacopœia, the Neomontanum is substituted for the former of these. The κάμμαρον of Hippocrates would seem to be the latter. It has been already treated of among the poisonous substances in the Fifth Book (§ 45.) It was used only as an anodyne, and principally in complaints of the eyes. Avicenna in treating of the aconites, borrows closely from Dioscorides (ii, 2, 361, 676.) He says of the lycoctonon, that it is not administered either internally or externally. Rhases says of the aconite, that it was used to relieve pains of the eyes. (Cont. l. ult. i, 20.)

Ἄκορον,

Acorum, Sweet Flag, heats and dries in the third degree. We use its root for a diuretic, and for scirrhus of the spleen. It also attenuates a thickened cornea.

Commentary. It appears indisputably to be the Acorus pseudacorus, as even Gerarde the old herbalist has clearly stated, and not the Acorus verus, as Dr. Hill and others have maintained. All the ancient authorities ascribe much the same virtues to it as our author. See particularly Dioscorides (i, 2); Avicenna (ii, 2, 45); Rhases (Cont. l. ult. 21); Serapion (c. 269.) In the modern Greek Pharmacopœia it is identified with the κάλαμος ἁρωματικός (p. 32.)

Ἀκρίδες,

Locustæ, Grasshoppers, in fumigations relieve dysuria, especially of women. The wingless grasshopper, when drunk in wine, relieves the bite of scorpions.