BIBLIOGRAPHV 351 the longest, is on the Morbus Gallicus—a very accurate descrip— tion of the symptoms . .. mercury was employed for its cure??). Aloysius Luisinus (de Luigini), De morbo gallico omnia quae extant apud omnes medicos cujuscunque nationis etc. Venetiis, 1566, 1567, 2 Vols. (This collection contains Fracastorius' writ— ings on syphilis; they appear also in the later, expanded edition of Luisinus, by G. Gruner, De morbo gallico scriptores etc., Jena, 1793.) J. de Vigo, Praetica in arte Chirurgica, Copiosa. Romae, 1514. Jean de Vigo, Le Mal Franecais, 1514, Traduc— tion et Commentaires, par Alfred Fournier, Paris, 1872. Col— lection choisie des Anciens Syphiliographes. (The Preface is a& long imaginary letter addressed by Vigo to the syphiliographers of the 19th cent., a ^plaidoyer! in which Fournier collects the evidence that the 16th cent. writers clearly distinguished syphilis from other venereal affections, and in their diagnosis and treat— ment were "aussi avanc6es en 1' an 1500 que vous ötes au XIXe siöcle". Fournier!s own Traitement de la Syphilis is still used by medical students at Paris, and was republished by Vigot, Paris, 1909.) G. Falloppius, De morbo gallico traetatus, Pata— vii, 1564. '"The Corpus Medicorum Graecorum, Leipzig, 1908—1929 (irreg— ularly issued), of which 13 parts have so far appeared, contains the works of Hippocrates, Rufus, Galen, Oribasius, Aetius, Paulus and others; edited by Heiberg, Ilberg, Helmreich, Well— mann and others. 'The Corpus Medicorum Latinorum, Vol. I, Leipzig, 1915, A. Cornelii Celsi quae supersunt, contains, in the Prolegomena of the editor, F. Marx, the best discussion of the Läife, works, and Greek sources of Celsus.