For your present, here's today's Forgotten English!
Warning: 19th-century medicine has been found to be harmful or fatal if swallowed.
-The Gneech
ustion
The act of burning; the state of being burnt; [from] Latin ustus, to burn. [Related to] ustorious, having the quality of burning.--Rev. John Boag's Imperial Lexicon, c. 1850
Feast Day of St. Alexander,
a third-century patron of charcoal burners. George Wood's Vitalogy: Food Remedies for All Diseases (1896) described some medical uses of charcoal: "In many cases of headache, two teaspoonfuls of pulverized charcoal, in half a teacup of milk, will effectually relieve the patient. ... In cases of costiveness, many persons are cured by taking a tablespoon three times a day. It is of great utility in arresting mortification of the bowels, taken in large doses. ... It will usually regulate foul breath. Dose, from one to three teaspoonfuls, one to three times a day; in urgent cases, it may be used every two or three hours. ... Mixed with corn-meal and wet with a strong ooze of oak-bark, it is a good application to parts in a state of gangrene or mortification. Charcoal prepared from the young shoots of willow is preferable for most medical purposes. This preparation can now be found in all drug stores."
Warning: 19th-century medicine has been found to be harmful or fatal if swallowed.
-The Gneech
no subject
Date: 2006-08-11 01:15 pm (UTC)I think that's why homeopathy became so popular in the first place – since it didn't do anything, it was better medicine than its contemporaries. ;)
no subject
Date: 2006-08-11 04:20 pm (UTC)I'm fairly certain, however, that charcoal won't do anything for gangrene unless it's actually applied during the charring process. And that's a rather drastic and haphazard "cure" - these days, I'd rather trust a competent scalpel-wielder.