better to give it in substance than in any of the preparations, "for busy chemists make this as well as other excellent medicines worse rather than better by their perverse and over officious diligence" (Pechey's translation). He advises 8 grains of steel filings made into two pills with extract of wormwood to be taken early in the morning and at 5 p.m. for thirty days; a draught of wormwood wine to follow each dose. "Next to the steel in substance," he adds, "I choose the syrup of it prepared with filings of steel or iron infused in cold Rhenish wine till the wine is sufficiently impregnated, and afterwards strained and boiled to the consistence of a syrup with a sufficient quantity of sugar."
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Dr. Thomas Sydenham. 1624-1689.
(Originator of Sydenham's Laudanum.)
Dr. Willis had a secret preparation of iron of which Dr. Walter Harris, physician in ordinary to Charles II,