CHAP. 31.—REMEDIES FOR DISEASES OF THE BOWELS. SEA-WORT:
ONE REMEDY. THE MYAX: TWENTY-FIVE REMEDIES. THE MITULUS:
EIGHT REMEDIES. PELORIDES: ONE REMEDY. SERIPHUM:
TWO REMEDIES. THE ERYTHINUS: TWO REMEDIES.
The silurus,
1 taken in its broth, or the torpedo,
2 used as
food, acts as a laxative upon the bowels. There is a sea-wort,
3
also, similar in appearance to the cultivated cabbage: it is
injurious to the stomach, but acts most efficiently as a purgative,
requiring to be cooked with fat meat for the purpose, in
consequence of its extreme acridity. The broth, too, of all
boiled fish is good for this purpose; it acting, also, as a strong
diuretic, taken with wine more particularly. The best kind
of all is that prepared from the sea-scorpion, the iulis,
4 and
rock-fish in general, as they are destitute of all rankness and
are free from fat. The proper way of cooking them is with
dill, parsley,
coriander, and leeks, with the addition of oil and
salt. Stale cybium,
5 too, acts as a purgative, and is particularly
useful for carrying off crudities, pituitous humours, and bile.
The myax
6 is of a purgative nature, a shell-fish of which
we shall take this opportunity of giving the natural history
at length. These fish collect together in masses, like the
murex,
7 and are found in spots covered with sea-weed. They
are the finest eating in autumn, and are found in the greatest
perfection in places where fresh-water streams discharge themselves
into the sea; for which reason it is that those of Egypt
are held in such high esteem. As the winter advances, they
contract a bitter flavour, and assume a reddish hue. The
liquor of these fish, it is said, acts as a purgative upon the
bowels and bladder, has a detergent effect upon the intestines,
acts aperiently upon all the passages, purges the kidneys, and
diminishes the blood and adipose secretions. Hence it is that
these shell-fish are found of the greatest use for the treatment
of dropsy, for the regulation of the catamenia, and for the removal
of jaundice, all diseases of the joints, and flatulency.
They are very good, also, for the reduction of obesity, for
diseases of the bile and of the pituitous secretions, for affections
of the lungs, liver, and spleen, and for rheumatic defluxions.
The only inconvenience resulting from them is, that
they irritate the throat and impede the articulation. They
have, also, a healing effect upon ulcers of a serpiginous nature,
or which stand in need of detergents, as also upon carcinomatous
sores. Calcined, the same way as the murex, and employed
with honey, they are curative of bites inflicted either
by dogs or human beings, and of leprous spots or freckles. The
ashes of them, rinsed, are good for the removal of films upon
the eyes, granulations of those organs and indurations of the
membrane, as also for diseases of the gums and teeth, and for
pituitous eruptions. They serve, also, as an antidote to dorycnium
8
and to opocarpathon.
9
There are two species of this shell-fish, of a degenerate kind:
the mitulus,
10 which has a strong flavour, and a saltish taste;
and the myisca,
11 which differs from the former in the roundness
of its shell, is somewhat smaller, and is covered with filaments,
the shell being thinner, and the meat of a sweeter flavour. The
ashes, also, of the mitulus, like those of the murex, are possessed
of certain caustic properties, and are very useful for the
removal of leprous spots, freckles, and blemishes of the skin.
They are rinsed, too, in the same manner as lead,
12 for the
removal of swellings of the eyelids, of indurations of the
membranes, and of films upon the eyes, as also of sordid ulcers
upon other parts of the body, and of pustules upon the head.
The meat of them, also, is employed as an application for bites
inflicted by dogs.
As to pelorides,
13 they act as a gentle laxative upon the
bowels, an effect equally produced by castoreum, taken in doses
of two drachmæ, in hydromel: where, however, a more drastic
purgative is required, one drachma of dried garden-cucumber
root is added, and two drachmæ of aphronitrum.
14 The
tethea
15 is good for griping pains in the bowels and for attacks
of flatulency: they are generally found adhering to the leaves
of marine plants, sucking their nutriment therefrom, and may
be rather looked upon as a sort of fungus than as a fish. They
are useful, also, for the removal of tenesmus and of diseases of
the kidneys.
There grows also in the sea a kind of absinthium, known by
some persons as "seriphum,"
16 and found in the vicinity of
Taposiris,
17 in Egypt, more particularly. It is of a more
slender form than the land absinthium, acts as a purgative
upon the bowels, and effectually removes intestinal worms.
The sæpia, too, is a laxative; for which purpose these fish are
administered
18 with the food, boiled with a mixture of oil, salt,
and meal. Salted mænæ,
19 applied with bull's gall to the navel,
acts as a purgative upon the bowels.
The liquor of fish, boiled in the saucepan with lettuces, dispels
tenesmus. River-crabs,
20 beaten up and taken with water, act
astringently upon the bowels, and they have a diuretie effect, if
taken with white wine. Deprived of the legs, and taken in
doses of three oboli with myrrh and iris, one drachma of each,
they disperse urinary calculi. For the cure of the iliac passion
and of attacks of flatulency, castoreum
21 should be taken,
with seed of daucus
22 and of parsley, a pinch in three fingers
of each, the whole being mixed with four cyathi of warm
honied wine. Griping pains in the bowels should be treated
with castoreum and a mixture of dill and wine. The fish
called "erythinus,"
23 used as food, acts astringently upon the
bowels. Dysentery is cured by taking frogs boiled with squills,
and prepared in the form of boluses, or else hearts of frogs
beaten up with honey, as Niceratus
24 recommends. For the
cure of jaundice, salt fish should be taken with pepper, the
patient abstaining from all other kinds of meat.