[265] “Regimen autem implendo dentem corrosum est, ut impleatur in causa calida cum frigidis, et in frigida cum calidis. Secundo, ut non impleatur cum labore et vehementia addente in dolore, et ex propriis est gallia cum ciperis aut cum mastiche, et eligantur ex suprascriptis, calida aut frigida secundum opportunitatem, in contrarium dyscrasiæ dentis, sed ubi non fuerit multus recessus a mediocritate impleatur cum foliis auri.” Cap. xlviii, p. 195.
[266] In the Venetian edition (1542), however, all the figures which Arculanus inserted in his work are found in the beginning of the book, in a single table, together with the indication of the use to which each single instrument was destined.
[267] Alexandri Benedicti Veronensis de re medica opus, lib. vi, de affectibus dentium.
[268] Opera domini Joannis de Vigo in chyrurgia. Lugduni, 1521, lib. ii, tract. iii, cap. xiv, fol. 40.
[269] [The editions and translations of Vigo seem to have been endless. A French translation of his treatise on the wounds caused by firearms is said to have fallen into the hands of Paré, and had an inspiring influence upon the barber’s boy.—C. M.]
[270] Lib. v, cap. v, De doloribus dentium, fol. cxvii to cxix.
[271] Handbuch der Zahnheilkunde, Berlin, 1848, ii, 406.
[272] Geist-Jacobi, Geschichte der Zahnheilkunde, p. 80.
[273] A religious order of knights, established toward the close of the twelfth century, viz., during the third crusade. The original object of the association was to defend the Christian religion against the infidels, and to take care of the sick in the Holy Land.
[274] Geist-Jacobi, Geschichte der Zahnheilkunde, p. 82.