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قراءة كتاب Experiments and Observations on the Following Subjects 1. On the preparation, calcination, and medicinal uses of Magnesia Alba. 2. On the solvent qualities of calcined Magnesia. 3. On the variety in the solvent powers of quick-lime, when used in differen

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Experiments and Observations on the Following Subjects
1. On the preparation, calcination, and medicinal uses of Magnesia Alba. 2. On the solvent qualities of calcined Magnesia. 3. On the variety in the solvent powers of quick-lime, when used in differen

Experiments and Observations on the Following Subjects 1. On the preparation, calcination, and medicinal uses of Magnesia Alba. 2. On the solvent qualities of calcined Magnesia. 3. On the variety in the solvent powers of quick-lime, when used in differen

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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EXPERIMENTS
AND
OBSERVATIONS

ON THE

FOLLOWING SUBJECTS;

1. On the preparation, calcination, and medicinal uses of Magnesia Alba. 4. On Various Absorbents, as promoting or retarding putrefaction.
2. On the Solvent Qualities of Calcined Magnesia. 5. On the comparative Antiseptic Powers of Vegetable Infusions prepared with Lime, &c.
3. On the variety in the Solvent Powers of Quick-Lime, when used in different quantities. 6. On the Sweetening Properties of Fixed Air.

BY
THOMAS HENRY, Apothecary.

Utut tamen se res habeat, ego bona saltem fide tradam quæ hactenus rescivi omnia.

Sydenham.

LONDON:
Printed for Joseph Johnson, No. 72,
St. Paul's Church-Yard.
MDCCLXXIII.


TO

Thomas Percival, M.D. F.R.S. & S.A.

Dear Sir,

WHEN I reflect how much the friendship with which you have favoured me has contributed to my happiness; that from you has been imbibed a considerable share of the small taste I possess for experimental inquiries; and that to your skilful and affectionate treatment I am greatly indebted even for the health I enjoy; it is impossible to hesitate a moment in the choice of a patron: gratitude and esteem direct me to inscribe this Treatise to you, and I chearfully obey their dictates. If to these any additional motive had been wanting, I should have received it from your having been an evidence to the result of many of the experiments related in the following pages.

That your own health may long enable you to continue exemplarily useful to your friends and to the public, is the sincere and ardent wish of,

Dear Sir,

Your truly affectionate

and very humble Servant,

Thomas Henry.

Manchester,
18th Jan. 1773.


THE
PREFACE.

A RIGHT composition of the several articles used in medicine, is of so much importance to the practice of it, that every attempt to improve or ascertain the method of preparing them, cannot fail of a candid reception from the public.

Though great advancement has been made within these few years in chemical pharmacy, by the labours of the very ingenious Dr. Lewis, and some other writers on chemistry and the materia medica, there is still a wide field left for improvement. It is to be wished that Apothecaries, to whose province researches of this kind more peculiarly belong, and many of whom are well qualified by a liberal education to pursue them with advantage, would give their attention to these material interests of the art: for while the several professors of medicine and of surgery, are most laudably and assiduously employed in adding to the enlargement of these sciences, why should the sons of pharmacy remain supinely inactive, and leave every thing towards the improvement of their profession to be performed by the members of the elder branch of physic, instead of contributing their share to its support? as if tacitly acknowledging themselves unequal to the task, and thereby incurring the too general, though unmerited, imputation of want of knowledge and skill in their department.

The first part of the ensuing Treatise, which relates an improved method of preparing Magnesia Alba, has been communicated to the College of Physicians; and that learned body have done the author the honour to insert it in the second volume of their TRANSACTIONS. It is here reprinted as a proper introduction to the subsequent pages.

The calcination of Magnesia is not a new process[a]; but, as in this state it is a medicine not much introduced into practice, perhaps a few hints may be suggested, in regard to its medicinal and pharmaceutical properties, which are not generally known; and it is hoped that some useful information may be communicated relative to the various action of absorbent medicines on the bile.

In the succeeding chapters, it is attempted to determine how far, and in what proportion, lime promotes the solution of vegetable astringents, and other drugs in water; and whether the action of antiseptic medicines, thus dissolved, be in any degree impaired or increased by this mode of obtaining tinctures from them.

In endeavouring to contribute to the determination of the question, whether fixed air has the power of restoring sweetness to putrid substances, the Author may at first sight appear to have transgressed his proper limits; but, as fixed air, if possessed of this property, is likely to be a valuable acquisition to the materia medica, he flatters himself he shall incur no censure by the attempt.


THE
CONTENTS.

CHAP. I.
Page
An Account of an improved Method of preparing Magnesia Alba. 1
CHAP. II.
Miscellaneous Observations. 12
CHAP. III.
On the Medicinal Properties of Magnesia Alba. 25
CHAP. IV.
On the Calcination of Magnesia Alba.

Pages