A second essay on the medicinal virtues of hemlock. [electronic resource] : In which its efficacy in the cure of many desperate disorders is fully confirmed by a great variety of remarkable cases, where this Remedy has been administered by several eminent Physicians and Surgeons in different Parts of Germany and Flanders, as well as by the author, Dr. Antony Störck, Aulic Councellor and one of the Principal Physicians to Her Most Sacred Majesty the Empress Queen, and Physician to the Pazmarian City-Hospital at Vienna. Together with corollaries and cautions. Translated from the original Latin, by a physician.
1761
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A second essay on the medicinal virtues of hemlock. [electronic resource] : In which its efficacy in the cure of many desperate disorders is fully confirmed by a great variety of remarkable cases, where this Remedy has been administered by several eminent Physicians and Surgeons in different Parts of Germany and Flanders, as well as by the author, Dr. Antony Störck, Aulic Councellor and one of the Principal Physicians to Her Most Sacred Majesty the Empress Queen, and Physician to the Pazmarian City-Hospital at Vienna. Together with corollaries and cautions. Translated from the original Latin, by a physician.
Uniform Title
Libellus secundus, quo confirmatur: cicutam non solum usu interno tutissime exhiberi. English
Publication Details
London : printed for T. Becket, and P. A De Hondt, at Tully's Head, near Surry-Street in the Strand, MDCCLXI. [1761]
Place of Publication or Printing
Great Britain -- England -- London.
Language
English
Description
[8],[1],iv-ix,[1],viii,159,[1]p. ; 8⁰.
Note
With a half-title.
A translation of 'Libellus secundus, quo confirmatur: cicutam non solum usu interno tutissime exhiberi', first published in Vienna in 1761.
In this edition there are four leaves (pp.[1],iv-ix,[1]) containing a dedication to the Most August Empress of the Romans and a list of errors in the previous translation.
Reproduction of original from Countway Library of Medicine.
A translation of 'Libellus secundus, quo confirmatur: cicutam non solum usu interno tutissime exhiberi', first published in Vienna in 1761.
In this edition there are four leaves (pp.[1],iv-ix,[1]) containing a dedication to the Most August Empress of the Romans and a list of errors in the previous translation.
Reproduction of original from Countway Library of Medicine.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Indexed In
English Short Title Catalog, N21671.
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.
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