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So with Laigle, Aquila, a place which must have somehow taken its name from an eagle, possibly from some incident or legend, as there is certainly nothing in the look of Laigle to suggest eagles in a general way. Its lords of course called themselves "Gilbertus," "Richeras," or anything else "de Aquila," "of Laigle."

Among the literary monuments of early English medicine the "Compendium Medicinae" of Gilbertus Anglicus merits a prominent position as the earliest complete treatise on general medicine by an English author which has been preserved to our day, and equally because it forms in itself a very complete mirror of the medical science of its age and its country.

Lord Bacon has set down the abuse, of which I am speaking, among the impediments to the Advancement of the Sciences, when he observes thatmen have used to infect their meditations, opinions, and doctrines, with some conceits which they have most admired, or some Sciences which they have most applied; and give all things else a tincture according to them utterly untrue and improper.…” So have the alchemists made a philosophy out of a few experiments of the furnace; and Gilbertus, our countryman, hath made a philosophy out of the observations of a lodestone.

Oliver Wendell Holmes expresses high praise and requests to have sent to him everything which Dr. Handerson might in future write. It seems eminently appropriate that the essay on "Gilbertus Anglicus." the last from the pen of Dr.

P. Pansier, of Avignon, however, who has carefully examined and published this manuscript , reports that while it contains some formulae found also in the Compendium of Gilbert, it contains many others from apparently other sources, and he was unable to convince himself that the compilation was in fact the work of Gilbertus Anglicus. Dr.

"He is Gilbert de Suilly, Gilbertus de Soliaco, the chancellor of the College of Autun." "Hold on, here's my shoe; you are better placed than I, fling it in his face." "Saturnalitias mittimus ecce nuces." "Down with the six theologians, with their white surplices!" "Are those the theologians? I thought they were the white geese given by Sainte-Genevieve to the city, for the fief of Roogny."

Pansier also furnishes us with a list of the chancellors of Montpellier, which contains the name of a certain "Gillibertus," chancellor of the university in 1250. He could find, however, no evidence that this Gillibertus was Gilbertus Anglicus, author of the Compendium Medicinae.