page 876 note 1 Nor are they so attributed in Vāgbhaṭa I's Aṣṭāhga Saṁgraha (iv, 5, 11. 8 ff., p. 26; vi, 9, 11. 5–7, p. 214; iv, 23, 11. 16 ff., p. 130), whence they appear to be quoted, with some variants, by Dṛiḍhabala, the complementor of the Caraka Saṁhitā. In the case of the third formula (No. 31), while the second half is identical with the Caraka version (vv. 38–40), the first half, though identical in substance, differs in diction. In the case of the fifth formula (No. 33), the Jīv. ed. of 1896 appends a final half-line (CS., vi, 28, v. 152b, p. 783)Google Scholar ascribing the formula to Kṛishṇātreya. But this is a spurious addition; it is wanting in all MSS. and all editions (even Jīv.'s own ed. of 1877), except that of Gangādhar, who may have been himself the author of it. There is a similar spurious addition to the navāyasa-cūrṇa in Jīv. ed., 1896, p. 680, v. 69b, ascribing it to Kṛishṇātreya. It, too, is wanting in all MSS. and in most editions, even Jīv. 1877. It first appears in Gangādhar's ed. (1881), p. 377, whence it is taken into the Sena ed. (1897), p. 738. It is also taken into the Sena ed. of Cakrapāṇi's, Cikitsā Saṁgraha (1889), No. 8, p. 149;Google Scholar but it is wanting in the Pyari Mohan ed. (1879), p. 170. It is also wanting in the Siddhayoga, p. 124.Google Scholar