Copy 1, Volume 1
The history of physick; from the time of Galen, to the beginning of the sixteenth century. Chiefly with regard to practice. In a discourse written to Doctor Mead / [John Freind].
- John Freind
- Date:
- 1725-1726
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The history of physick; from the time of Galen, to the beginning of the sixteenth century. Chiefly with regard to practice. In a discourse written to Doctor Mead / [John Freind]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![[ ] I n the third and fourth book, as we!! as in other places, he talks much of his own experience: in (peaking of the bite of a mad Dog, he (ays he has known a Hydro- phohia foccceed after a twelve-months di- ftance: fome tell us, he (ays that it will ap¬ pear after [even years and here he plain¬ ly means Paulas, whole words they are, tho’ he does not name him. He has fome new and proper remarks, where he treats of the Colick *■ and inflammations of the Livera: the diftindion he makes in the caufes of Palpitation leems to be his own , and is not taken notice of, as I can find, any where -, Oribajius, ALtius, and Pau- lus only tranforibe what they Cay, which indeed is very little upon this head, from Galen. He tells us, that this diforder ge¬ nerally arifes from too great a heat or ple¬ nitude of blood i but not always 5 for fometimes vapours, which fume upwards, may produce it. And the difference may & 4s 6, a 4? 7* ^ 4? 3a s ^ be](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30529360_0001_0271.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


