Notes and Queries, Number 61, December 28, 1850 by Various
page 21 of 98 (21%)
page 21 of 98 (21%)
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_Mice as a Medicine_ (Vol. ii., pp. 397. 435.).--The remedy of the roast mouse recommended in _The Pathway to Health_ (which I find is in the British Museum), is also prescribed in _Most Excellent and Approved Remedies_, 1652:--"Make it in powder," says the author, "and drink it off at one draught, and it will presently help you, especially if you use it three mornings together." The following is "an excellent remedy to stanch bleeding:"-- "Take a toad and dry him very well in the sun, then put him in a linen bag, and hang him with a string about the neck of the party that bleedeth, and let it hang so low that it may touch the breast on the left side near unto the heart; and this will certainly stay all manner of bleeding at the mouth, nose," &c. Sage leaves, yarrow, and ale, are recommended for a "gnawing at the heart;" which I think should be "made a note of" for the benefit of poor poets and disappointed authors. WEDSECNARF. _Mice as a Medicine_ (Vol. ii., pp. 397. 435.).--I was stopping about three years ago in the house of a gentleman whose cook had been in the service of a quondam Canon of Ch. Ch., who averred that she roasted mice to cure her master's children of the hooping cough. She said it had the effect of so doing. CHAS. PASLAM. |
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