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A14055 A nevv booke of spirituall physik for dyuerse diseases of the nobilitie and gentlemen of Englande, made by William Turner doctor of Physik Turner, William, d. 1568. 1555 (1555) STC 24361; ESTC S118750 76,442 208

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a gētlemā thē a paynted ymage hath of a man The palsey in a natural body cōmeth of colde tough humores whyche are ingendred in the heade by often dronkennes and to muche excesse of meate drynke Yf the age the tyme of the yere and the strength of the patient wyll abyde it the letting of bloud in the begynnyng is very good for the healynge of thys disease but yf it be differred to longe thē is the disease incurable Euē so the spiritual hole palsey ignoraunce when as yonge gētlemen in theyr youth begyn to loyter wyl not learne but wyll rūne a huntyng and haukynge when as they shulde be at theyr booke they muste be let bloude oft tymes in the buttokes for the noble spiritual phisicion Salomon in the .xxii. of the Prouerbes teacheth vs thys remedie against the spiritual palsey Pro. 22. and the recepte of it is thys Stultitia colligata est in corde pueri virga disciplinae fugabit cam Folyshnes or vnlearnednes is bounde together in the harte of a boy but the rode of correction wyll driue it awaye Yf that the disease be so great that nether wordes nor herbes be able to heale it thē we muste accordyng vnto the greatnes of the disease vse remedies made of greater thynges Therfore thys receyte that I wyll apoynte wyll be verye good both to auoyde the disease and to dryue it away after that it hath ben taken of a chylde Recipe virgarum betulce aut salicis manipulum vnum quotidie pueri natibus adhibeatur ad sanguinis vsque effusionem donec conualuerit Plus millies me dicamentū hoc efficax esse probatum est And Salomon in the .23 Pro. 23. of hys Prouerbes sayeth playnlye that thys remedye can not hurte any chylde Noli sayeth he subtrahere a puero disciplinam c. Take not awaye correccion frō a chylde for yf thou beate hym with a rode he shal not dye Thou shalte beate hym wyth a rod thou shalte delyuer hys soule from hel The rod and correction gyue wysedome but the chylde that is suffred to haue his owne wyl shal shame hys mother Thus far Salomon yf this disease be ones healed in the nobilite it shall be the easyer to heale al other diseases whych they haue are in daunger of They that are disposed vnto this dysease or haue it muste vomit out the opinion that the parasites holde that gentlemē nede not to be learned they muste absteyne from to muche wyne and from al excesse of meate and drynke and then by the grace of God they shal be hole Yf thys physyke had ben wel practised L. yeares ago ther had not bene so many sycke in thys palsey as nowe are And they that now for age and by the oldnesse of the sycknesse are incurable myght haue bene easelye holpen But seyng the olde palsey can not be holpen by mannes physyke let vs carye with our prayers al olde ignoraunt men vnto Christ that he may make them fele hys truth and speak of his worde to the glory of God almyghty ¶ Of the Dropsye I Se so manye tokens in many gentlemen in Englande of the dropsie that I muste nedes thinke that there are many gētlemen sycke in that syckenes The cōmon tokēs of all the .iii. dropsies are these To be swelled puffed vp wyth wynde and water and to be excedyng thursty The fyrste kynde called Anasarca is almoste of hole water The seconde kynde called Ascitis is of two partes water and one parte wynde The thyrde parte called Timpanitis is of two partes wynde one of water as some phisicians holde The nobilitie in my tyme haue swelled so muche that nether theyr owne clothes whyche they had wonte to weare nor theyr fathers clothes whych was as byg men as these be wyll not holde thē but they muste haue bygger clothes and more costly garmentes Some swell so great that they can not be content wyth theyr fathers houses whych were as great men as these be for theyr fathers house wyll not holde thē for they bylde wyder houses and mo then theyr fathers dyd for one or two wyll not holde them And some swel so great that all the houses that theyr fathers and they haue buylded wyll not holde them but they muste also haue byshoppes houses and deanes houses parsons houses vicares houses and poore beggers houses called hospitalles And yet they swell so great that all these wyll not holde thē except they amende their maners vntyll they come to hell There is a place greate ynoughe for suche as can neuer get place enoughe for them but eyther by crafte or by compulsion or by frayng of their inferiors or by vnshamefast begging get theyr places and houses from them The other kynde of cōmon tokens that the watersyke haue is an excedyng greate thyrst and so greate that the more they drynke the more they desyre to drynke no drynke is able to quenche their thyrst Suche a thirst haue some of the nobilitie nowe suche one hath some had of late wherfore the nobilite hath now hath had the dropsy Some hauynge landes of theyr owne to lyue on haue peltyngly gone about from courte to court biynge fermes and bargaynes and ouerbyddyng al mē so that pere mē cā get no resonable price of ani ferme or bargaine for thē Sōe are so thirstye of fermes and namely of benefyces that they snatch vp all the reuersions that can be had in a countre though the fermers haue yet .xl. or .l. yeares to come There is one knyght that hathe ten benefices in one shere in hys handes and an other hath .xxii. as credible persones haue tolde me Some are so thyrsty for the fermes of vicarages parsonages that they bagge or bye the aduousons of them of the patrones as soone as they fall they wyll lette none haue the benefice but suche as wyl let them the benefice to ferme wyth house and lande and tythes wyth all that belongeth therto Other drinke vp the glebe lande let the reste alone Some haue by brybery simony and other vnlawful wayes robbed many a poore paryshe in Englande of their parsonages and persones and haue dronkē vp quyte the parsonages for them their heyres for euer wherwyth the churche of Christe had wonte to be fed both bodely and goostly Some newe gentlemen haue dronken vp not onely a great part of byshoppes landes but also haue dronken vp diuers churcheyardes hospitalles chapelles and chauntries to patche and cloute vp theyr lyuynges wyth all because their father lefte them neuer a foote of lande One of the nobilite lawe of late yeares a prety churche wyth a good large churche yarde the same was lorde of the towne there and he desyred the paryshe that they wolde lette hym haue the churche and churchyard promysing them a newe church a new church yarde in an other place the poore tenauntes durste not saye hym naye because he was theyr lorde In