[Essays and Miscellanies by Plutarch]@TWC D-Link bookEssays and Miscellanies BOOK II 17/40
So much the better (says Glaucias), for when supper is done, we will endeavor to discover it ourselves.
That being over, Glaucias and Xenocles drew the autumnal fruit.
One said that it scoured the body, and by this evacuation continually raised new appetites.
Xenocles affirmed, that ripe fruit had usually a pleasing, vellicating sapor, and thereby provoked the appetite better than sauces or sweetmeats; for sick men of a vitiated stomach usually recover it by eating fruit.
But Lamprias said, that our natural heat, the principal instrument of nutrition, in the midst of summer is scattered and becomes rare and weak, but when autumn comes it unites again and gathers strength, being shut in by the ambient cold and contraction of the pores, and I for my part said: In summer we are more thirsty and use more moisture than in other seasons; and therefore Nature, observing the same method in all her operations, at this change of seasons employs the contrary and makes us hungry; and to maintain an equal temper in the body, she gives us dry food to countervail the moisture taken in the summer.
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