[2362] “Onager.”
[2363] Arising, by sympathy, from sores in other parts of the body.
[2364] See B. xxvi. c. 31. Bears’ grease is of no use whatever for the cure of gout.
[2365] See B. xix. c. 31, B. xxi. cc. 62, 104, and B. xxii. cc. 19, 20.
[2366] See B. xxi. c. 56.
[2367] This mode of cure, Ajasson says, is still employed in the East, where the preparation is known by the name of moza.
[2368] “Potum vero ex aquâ sublime.” The true reading and the meaning are equally doubtful.
[2369] Spoken of as “polea” in c. 57.
[2370] In B. viii. c. 50. Because the animal itself was supposed to be free from fever.
[2371] Or “quotidian,” daily fever.