← Book details

Vegetable Diet: As Sanctioned by Medical Men, and by Experience in All Ages: Including a System of Vegetable Cookery

Full book · ReadAI club library

Vegetable Diet: As Sanctioned by Medical Men, and by Experience in All Ages: Including a System of Vegetable Cookery

by Alcott, William A. (William Andrus) · Page 5 of 274 · 95,875 words

Tip · Use the reading mode control above and choose Scroll for a smoother flow through the full text.

C. Smith.--Mr. Graham.--Dr. J. M. Andrews, Jr.--Dr. Sweetser.--Dr. Pierson.--Physician in New York.--Females' Encyclopedia.--Dr. Van Cooth.--Dr. Beaumont.--Sir Everard Home.--Dr. Jennings.--Dr. Jarvis.--Dr. Ticknor.--Dr. Coles.--Dr. Shew.--Dr. Morrill.--Dr. Bell.--Dr. Jackson.--Dr. Stephenson.--Dr. J. Burdell.--Dr. Smethurst.--Dr. Schlemmer.--Dr. Curtis.--Dr. Porter, 92-175 CHAPTER VI. TESTIMONY OF PHILOSOPHERS AND OTHER EMINENT MEN. General Remarks.--Testimony of Plautus.--Plutarch.--Porphyry.--Lord Bacon.--Sir William Temple.--Cicero.--Cyrus the Great.--Gassendi.--Prof. Hitchcock.--Lord Kaims.--Dr. Thomas Dick.--Prof. Bush.--Thomas Shillitoe.--Alexander Pope.--Sir Richard Phillips.--Sir Isaac Newton.--The Abbé Gallani.--Homer.--Dr. Franklin.--Mr. Newton.--O. S. Fowler.--Rev. Mr. Johnston.--John H. Chandler.--Rev. J. Caswell.--Mr. Chinn.--Father Sewall.--Magliabecchi.--Oberlin and Swartz.--James Haughton.--John Bailies.--Francis Hupazoli.--Prof. Ferguson.--Howard, the Philanthropist.--Gen. Elliot.--Encyclopedia Americana.--Thomas Bell, of London.--Linnæus, the Naturalist.--Shelley, the Poet.--Rev. Mr. Rich.--Rev. John Wesley.--Lamartine, 176-222 CHAPTER VII. SOCIETIES AND COMMUNITIES ON THE VEGETABLE SYSTEM. The Pythagoreans.--The Essenes.--The Bramins.--Society of Bible Christians.--Orphan Asylum of Albany.--The Mexican Indians.--School in Germany.--American Physiological Society, 223-235 CHAPTER VIII. VEGETABLE DIET DEFENDED. General Remarks on the Nature of the Argument.--1. The Anatomical Argument.--2. The Physiological Argument.--3. The Medical Argument.--4. The Political Argument.--5. The Economical Argument.--6. The Argument from Experience.--7. The Moral Argument.--Conclusion, 236-296 * * * * * VEGETABLE COOKERY. CLASS I. FARINACEOUS OR MEALY SUBSTANCES. Bread of the first order.--Bread of the second order.--Bread of the third kind.--Boiled Grains.--Grains in other forms--baked, parched, roasted, or torrefied.--Hominy.--Puddings proper, 291-308 CLASS II. FRUITS. The large fruits--Apple, Pear, Peach, Quince, etc.--The smaller fruits--Strawberry, Cherry, Raspberry, Currant, Whortleberry, Mulberry, Blackberry, Bilberry, etc., 308-309 CLASS III. ROOTS. The Common Potato.--The Sweet Potato, 309-311 CLASS IV. MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES OF FOOD. Buds and Young Shoots.--Leaves and Leaf Stalks.--Cucurbitaceous Fruits.--Oily Seeds, etc., 311-312 VEGETABLE DIET. CHAPTER I. ORIGIN OF THIS WORK. Experience of the Author, and his Studies.--Pamphlet in 1832.--Prize Question of the Boylston Medical Committee.--Collection of Materials for an Essay.--Dr. North.--His Letter and Questions.--Results. Twenty-three years ago, the present season, I was in the first stage of tuberculous consumption, and evidently advancing rapidly to the second. The most judicious physicians were consulted, and their advice at length followed. I commenced the practice of medicine, traveling chiefly on horseback; and, though unable to do but little at first, I soon gained strength enough to perform a moderate business, and to combine with it a little gardening and farming. At

Other legal sources