[2281] Lib. i. cap. 92.

[2282] Comment. in libr. i. Dioscoridis, Venetiis, 1565. 106.

[2283] De medicina veteri et nova etc., Basileæ, 1571. 183.

[2284] Botanische Zeitung, xvii. (1859) 329, abstracted in the Jahresbericht of Wiggers, 1859. 18.

[2285] On one occasion I observed Venice Turpentine in a public drug sale in London, 21 barrels imported from Trieste being offered, 14 July, 1864.—D. H.

[2286] Lectures on the Materia Medica, Lond. ii. (1770) 398.

[2287] Thus if a thin layer of true Venice turpentine and another of common turpentine be spread on two sheets of paper it will be found after the lapse of some weeks that the former cannot be touched without adhering to the fingers, while the latter will have become a dry, hard varnish.

[2288] Herball, enlarged by Johnson, Lond. 1636. 1366.

[2289] Proceedings of the Royal Society, xi. (1862) 404.

[2290] Phil. Trans., vol. 152 (1862) 53.—We write the name Larixin instead of Larixine, with the concurrence of Dr. Stenhouse.