Page 12 - 2018 Spring Newsletter
P. 12

SPECIAL COLLECTIONS










                                                                        Decorated publishers’ bindings held sway until
                                                                        the introduction of the dust jacket led to their
                                                                        demise in the early twentieth century. They gave
                                                                        rise to new forms of decoration and illustration
                                                                        and attracted the best talent of the day.

                                                                        The BOUND FOR THE PEOPLE exhibit,
                                                                        January through April 2018, showcased examples
                                                                        of rare book publishers bindings that are housed
                                                                        in our Special Collections.










        REMEDY FOR MENTAL STUPOR


        Drinking too much coffee? Let Special Collections help with an
        alternative remedy. This one appears in a sixteenth-century Aztec
        herbal.

        For Mental Stupor: He whose mind is in this condition should
        drink the juice of the tlahtlocotic root crushed in warm water so
        that he will vomit. A few days later both the bark and roots of the
        flowers yolloxochitl and cacauaxochitl are to be crushed in water;
        he is to drink the juice before lunch…His forehead, moreover, is
        to be anointed with the brain of a stag and the feathers of a dove,
        crushed and put in water, and human hair. On his neck he shall
        carry the stone found in the stomach of the swallow.

        The original manuscript was created in 1552 by two individuals
        of Aztec descent. One, Martinus de la Cruz, was a physician;
        the other, Badianus, rendered the former’s pharmacological
        knowledge into Latin. The manuscript, decorated with pigments
        made of native materials, is not only astoundingly beautiful, but an
        important witness to Aztec medicine at the time of the conquest.
        Though created in present-day Mexico by an artist and scribe of
        Aztec descent, the original manuscript now resides at the Vatican
        Library. Special Collections houses a facsimile made in 1940 and
        edited by Emily Emmart.

        For more details visit http://library.tcu.edu/spcoll










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