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sassafras; to this decoction after it is strained, add a glass of rum or brandy, and sweeten with sugar for ordinary drink. Sometimes an inward fever attends such as are poisoned, for which he ordered the following: Take one pint of wood ashes and three pints of water, stir and mix well together, let them stand all night and strain or decant the lye off in the morning, of which ten ounces may be taken six mornings following, warmed or cold according to the weather. These medicines have no sensible operation, though sometimes they work on the bowels, and give a gentle stool. The symptoms attending such as are poisoned, are as follows: A pain of the breast, difficulty of breathing, a load at the pit of the stomach, an irregular pulse, burning and violent pains of the viscera above and below the navel, very restless at night, sometimes wandering pains over the whole body, a reaching inclination to vomit, profuse sweats (which prove always serviceable), slimy stools, both when costive and loose, the face of pale and yellow color, sometimes a pain and inflamation of the throat, the appetite is generally weak, and some cannot eat anything; those who have been long poisoned are generally very feeble and weak in their limbs, sometimes spit a great deal, the whole skin peels, and lastly the hair falls off. Cesar's cure for the bite of a rattlesnake: Take of the roots of plantane or hoarhound (in summer roots and branches together), a sufficient quantity; bruise them in a mortar, and squeeze out the juice, of which give as soon as possible, one large spoonful; this generally will cure; but if he finds no relief n an hour after you may give another spoonful which never hath failed. If the roots are dried they must be moistened with a little water. To the wound may be applied a leaf of good tobacco, moistened with rum. _The Massachusetts Magazine_, IV, 103-104 (1792). [2] _The Pennsylvania Gazette_, Sept. 11, 1740. [3] _The City Gazette and Daily Advertiser_, June 22, 1797. [4] _The Columbian Gazette_, II, 742-743. [5] Delany, "Condition of the Colored People," 111. [6] C. G. Woodson, "The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861." THE NEGRO SOLDIER IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION The facts as to the participation of Negroes in the American Revolution have rec
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