[207] Amstel., 1658.
[208] Oneirocritica, etc. Lutetiæ, 1603.
[209] Σκιᾱς ὄναρ ἄνθρωποι. Pind. Pyth., viii.
[210] Comment. in Libr. de Diæt. Acut., i.
[211] Tom. v., pp. 306, 614, etc.; ed. Basil.
[212] See the Syd. Soc. edition of Paulus Ægineta, Vol. I., p. 264.
[213] Galen, by the way, mentions that Euryphon, the celebrated Cnidian physician in the days of Hippocrates, was in the practice of treating empyema with the actual cautery.—Comment. in Aphor., vii., 44. This is a strong confirmation of the opinion that this treatise must have emanated from the Cnidian school.
[214] See the Syd. Soc. edition of Paulus Ægineta, Vol. I., p. 354.
[215] I presume it was the rib itself that was perforated, and not the intercostal space. The term τρύπανον was generally applied to the trepan. The epithet τρυγλητήριον, or, as Foës proposes to read it, τρωλοδυτήριων, is probably derived from τρώγλη, a hole, and δύω, to penetrate; joined together, they would signify a trepan for boring holes.
[216] Morb. Acut., iii., 17.