General Index

- Mind Medicine

- Recipes

Bibliography

Notes

Notes for Recipes


Notes:

  1. Webster's II New College Dictionary. New York: Houghton Mifflin
    Company, 1995, 61.
  2. Kellerman, Henry and Anthony Burry. Psychopathology and Differential
    Diagnosis: A Primer
    . New York: Columbia University Press, 1988, 10.
  3. Webster's 100.
  4. Tuke, Daniel Hack, M.D., F.R.C.P. Chapters in the History of the Insane in
    the British Isles
    . London: Kegan Paul, Trench & Co, 1882, 39.
  5. Kellerman 76.
  6. Kellerman 76.
  7. Tuke 2.
  8. Websters 304.
  9. Kellerman 10.
  10. Howells, John, ed. World History of Psychiatry. New York: Brunner/
    Mazel, 1975, 190.
  11. Howells 190.
  12. Tuke 3.
  13. Tuke 3-4.
  14. Tuke 4.
  15. Tuke 4 & 31.
  16. Tuke 4.
  17. Tuke 31.
  18. Websters 500.
  19. Tuke 4.
  20. Jones, Wilfrid Llewelyn. Ministering to Minds Diseased. London:
    William Heinemann Medical Books, Ltd., 1983, 5.
  21. Tuke 109.
  22. Tuke 109.
  23. Websters 546.
  24. Kellerman 10.
  25. Tuke 4.
  26. Kellerman 10.
  27. Kellerman 10.
  28. Kellerman 35.
  29. Tuke 31.
  30. Websters 650.
  31. Tuke 109.
  32. Kellerman 76.
  33. Tuke 30.
  34. Kellerman 76.
  35. Tuke 30.
  36. Websters 734.
  37. Tuke 109.
  38. Kellerman 10.
  39. Kellerman 10.
  40. Kellerman 10.
  41. Tuke 109.
  42. Tuke 31.
  43. Tuke 31.
  44. Kellerman 95.
  45. Tuke 4.
  46. Tuke 3.
  47. Tuke 4.
  48. Tuke 31.
  49. Tuke 39.
  50. Tuke 3.
  51. Tuke 6.
  52. Tuke 3.
  53. Tuke 6.
  54. Tuke 6.

Recipe:

 

First, it must be explained that "the old Saxon term 'wood' is applied in these recipes to the frenzied. It survives in the Scotch 'wud', or mad" (53).

Among the most interesting of recipes, the cure for this disorder is a mixture of ale and holy water. In more difficult cases, a salve is to be "smeared on the temples and above the eyes" (54)