[p. 348]and dissolve the phlegm,
and dilute the acrid and salt particles, so that the heat subsides,
and the irritation in the rectum is removed. Wherefore it is to be
treated thus: The patient is to be put into a hip-bath of hot water,
and sixty grains of the grana gnidia are to be pounded and infused
in a hemina of wine, with half a hemina of oil, and injected. This
brings away phlegm and faeces. When the patient does not take the
hip-bath, boil eggs in dark-colored fragrant wine, and apply to the
anus, and spread to the anus, and spread something warm below, either
a bladder filled with warm water, or linseed toasted and ground, and
its meal stirred up and mixed equally with dark, fragrant wine, and
oil, and this applied very warm as a cataplasm; or, having mixed barley
and Egyptian alum pulverized, form into an oblong ball (suppository?)
and warming it gently at the fire, make it into a cataplasm, foment,
form it into shape with the fingers, and then making it quite tepid,
introduce it into the anus. The external parts are to be anointed
with cerate, and a cataplasm of boiled garlic, with dark wine diluted,
is to be applied. But if you remove these things, let him take the
hip-bath of hot water, and having mixed together the juice of srychnos,
the grease of a goose, swine's seam, chrysocolla, resin, and white
wax, and then having melted in the same and mixed together, anoint
with these things, and while the inflammation lasts, use the cataplasm
of boiled garlic. And if by these means he be freed from the pain,
it is enough; but if not, give him the white meconium (Euphorbia peplus?),
or, if not it, any other phlegmagogue medicine. While the inflammation
lasts, the diet should be light.
Part 7
The strangury comes on in this way:-The bladder being heated from
the rectum, phlegm is attracted by the heat, and by the phlegm (inflammation?)
the strangury is occasioned. If, then, as is frequently the case,
it cease with the disease, well; but, not withstanding, if not, give
any of the medicines for strangury.
Part 8
If procidentia ani take place, having fomented the part with a soft
sponge, and anointed it with a snail, bind the man's hands together,
and suspend him for a short time, and the gut will return. But if
it still prolapse, and will not remain up, fasten a girdle round his
loins and attach a shawl behind, and having
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