A two-volume 1846 translation of an examination of miracles in ancient times by a French polymath, first published in 1829.A Scottish physician, Anthony Todd Thomson (17781849), translated and edited this two-volume 1846 study of miracles in ancient times by French intellectual Anne-Joseph-Eus?be Baconni?re de Salverte (17711839), originally published in 1829. Volume 2 looks at the role of drugs and poisons in magic.A Scottish physician, Anthony Todd Thomson (17781849), translated and edited this two-volume 1846 study of miracles in ancient times by French intellectual Anne-Joseph-Eus?be Baconni?re de Salverte (17711839), originally published in 1829. Volume 2 looks at the role of drugs and poisons in magic.This examination of the connection between the belief in miracles and religious practices in ancient times was originally written by French politician and polymath Anne-Joseph-Eus?be Baconni?re de Salverte (17711839) and published in 1829. In 1846, it was translated into English by a Scottish physician and writer, Anthony Todd Thomson (17781849), and published in two volumes. Thomson explains that Salverte's work was an important study of miracles and the power of priests, and he had 'performed a beneficial service in throwing open the gates of ancient sanctuaries'. However, Thomson also states that he differed from Salverte over the idea of the miraculous, and that he had expunged or heavily edited any passages relating to Christianity, even changing 'miracles' in the original subtitle to 'apparent miracles'. Volume 2 discusses the role of drugs and poison in magic, as well as the influence of weather on miraculous events.1. Preparations of drugs and beverages, some soporific, others for producing temporary imbecility; 2. Effect of perfumes on the moral nature of man; 3. Influence of the imagination, seconded by physical accessories; 4. Medicine formed a part of the occult science; 5. Poisonous substances; 6. Sterility of the soil; 7. Meteorology; 8. The al£Ý