[2345] Tetrabiblos I, ii, 84; Kühn XII, 253.
[2346] Tetrabiblos I, ii, 84; Kühn XII, 248, 284-5.
[2347] Tetrabiblos I, ii, 111; Kühn XII, 291-3.
[2348] Tetrabiblos II, iv, 34; Kühn XII, 860. Perhaps a closer correspondence than this could be found. In his preceding 33rd chapter, headed Curatio erosorum dentium ex Galeno, Aëtius includes use of the tooth of a dead dog pulverized in vinegar, which is to be held in the mouth, or filling the ear next the tooth with “fumigated earthworms” or with oil in which earthworms have been cooked.
[2349] Tetrabiblos I, ii, 49.
[2350] Tetrabiblos IV, i, 39.
[2351] Tetrabiblos III, iii, 35.
[2352] Tetrabiblos II, ii, 12. Marcellus, cap. 20 (p. 188) also speaks of “those who often think that they are made sport of by an incubus.”
[2353] Tetrabiblos, I, ii, 177.
[2354] Tetrabiblos, IV, i, 86.