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A19740 The copy of a letter written by E.D. Doctour of Physicke to a gentleman, by whom it was published The former part conteineth rules for the preseruation of health, and preuenting of all diseases vntill extreme olde age. Herein is inserted the authours opinion of tabacco. The latter is a discourse of emperiks or vnlearned physitians, wherein is plainly prooued that the practise of all those which haue not beene brought vp in the grammar and vniuersity, is alwayes confused, commonly dangerous, and often deadly. Duncon, Eleazar, 1597 or 8-1660. 1606 (1606) STC 6164; ESTC S109182 59,222 56

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particular thing in Physicke The whole life is required to the perfect knowledge of the pulse What can be here said in defence of Empiriks Hippocrates and Galen the most competent iudges of all matters belonging to our Arte require many things in all the professors of it two whereof are not to be found in the best of them for whosoeuer examineth their education shall finde that they neuer applied their youth to studie neuer had learned man to instruct them neuer vnderstood method or order of study and therefore can follow none in their practise for want whereof all they do is confused disordered and dangerous The ancients did signifie the difficulty of this Arte by placing a cragged or knotty staffe by the picture of Aesculapius meaning thereby that it was a deepe intricate and profound study full of knots and doubts which can not be explaned or dissolued but by such as haue long laboured in the diligent search of the secrets thereof Apollo was accounted amongst the heathen to be the god of Physicke and to haue reuealed it vnto Aesculapius his sonne so there is the same god of Wisdome and of physicke and learned Physicians were called by the ancients The sonnes of the gods But Empiriks whose yoong yeeres were neuer blessed with the knowledge of inferior Arts cannot in their riper age attaine to any meane knowledge in this diuine profession He that applieth not his minde to the study of the liberall sciences when he is yoong shall practise Physicke dangerously in his full age It is well knowen that scholars bestow almost twenty yeeres in study first in the Grammar schoole and then in the Vniuersity before they can take the degree of Doctours If there had beene a more easie and compendious way to this knowledge all ages had greatly erred in following this long laborious and chargeable course I might inlarge the difficulty of this Arte in setting downe the definition and diuision of it but I desire to auoid ted ousnesse therefore I will omit the former and touch the latter briefly This I note by the way that the knowledge of both these ●s necessary to euery meane Physician being the first step and entrance into that study This can not be comprehended without Grammar Logike and Philosophy for where a Philosopher endeth there a Physician beginneth and the other two are necessary guides to this Therefore Empiriks being ignorant of all these are not to be called Physitions the Artists name being iustly denied to them that vnderstand not the Arte. Physicke is diuided into fiue parts these haue no proper English or Latine names and therefore are strange to the best Empiriks The first comprehendeth those things which are of the essence and nature of man and are in number seuen The elements the temperament the humors the spirits the parts of the body the faculties and the actions The second searcheth out diseases with their causes and signes The third expresseth and explaneth the signes whereby the courses and times of diseases and consequently of life and death are prognosticated and foreknowen The fourth preserueth health and preuenteth diseases The last teacheth the meanes to take away diseases and to restore the body to perfect health The particulars contained vnder these heads are almost infinite and haue filled many large volumes Galen wrot 659 books of them That which hath beene written since will fill great libraries Out of all the best of these the learned professours of our Arte haue increased their knowledge and confirmed their iudgement whereas Empiriks haue not read any of them being ignorant of the languages wherin they are written and also destitute of other learning necessary to the vnderstanding of such books Of the fiue foresayd parts of Physicke Empiriks haue little to do with foure for vnder these the theory and speculation of our Arte is comprised and that is farre aboue their capacity therefore they exercise themselues in the last wh ch comprehendeth the practise only This reason is sufficient alone to bring all their practise into contempt with all men that haue any taste of learning for if of fiue parts necessary for euery Physician to know they be vtterly ignorant of foure and haue but a slender and superficiall skill in the fift if they rush into the practise of an Arte hauing neuer learned the theory which is in all learning accounted necessary to be knowen before the practise can happily be attempted they shall be driuen into infinite errours and precipitate many of their patients into the graue I need not adde further proofe of the antecedent I know you see a manifest and vndoubted truth in it those things are to be learned in schooles only into which Empiriks were neuer admitted Further there are in the Arte of Physicke sixteene indications as we ca●l them the knowledge of these is as necessary to direct a Physician in the cure of diseases as the Pilots Card in sailing They are as guides and conducters to leade vs into the vnderstanding of all things that may helpe or hurt our patients The consideration of euery one of these is so necessary that the omitting of one doth oft times marre the cure as Heurmus affirmeth Empiriks can not attaine to the knowledge of these though they had the experience of Nestors yeeres If it please you to heare some few of the obseruations that the methodicall cure of one disease requireth you may thereby coniecture the difficulty of the healing of that and others I take for example a Pleurisie wherein I omit as impertinent to this place the vsuall errour of Empiriks in taking other diseases for this and the danger of the sicke by the course of Physicke built vpon a false foundation First the learned Physician is to search out the proper signes of this disease and by them to distinguish it from others that haue some affinity with it then he looketh into the cause of it into the differences and into the symptomes or accidents that attend vpon it he examineth the naturall constitution of the patient his present state of body his former course of life his age his strength the time of the disease the season of the yeere c. he considereth the qualities and quantity of the humors from whence the matter of the disease floweth whether from the whole body or from one part by what passages it mooueth whether swiftly or slowly whether vehement paine draweth it or the sharpnesse or plenty of the humor stirreth vp or prouoketh the motion Out of an aduised consideration of all these first a diet is to be appointed this can not be the same in euery one that laboureth of this sicknesse but it requireth great variety and alteration agreeable to the foresaid circumstances Then followeth the consultation of the meanes of the cure what kinde of euacuation is fittest whether opening a veine or purging or both or neither for sometimes
multitude flocked to those that were boldest in the vse of this medicine for the fame of it for present remedy was spread abroad by them that gaue it and the danger concealed Thus the simple people greedy of the pleasant bait swallowed downe the killing hooke It was not easie for one to take warning by another the subtill Empiriks had so prouided for the credit both of the medicine and of themselues for when any died they gaue out that the medicine was not giuen soone enough whereas the sooner it commeth the more perill it bringeth or that the patient committed some fault which was the cause ofhis death for many had beene cured by this in other places Another pernicious error whereinto ignorance carrieth them is to seeke out medicines in the titles of diseases as in some English bookes in the title of an Ague they finde that Sorell is good for it and Carduus ben●dictus also the one being very hot and the other colde Heere Arte is necessary to distinguish of the humour and the complexion for he that giueth that which is not fit for both these bringeth no light danger Galen vtterly condemneth medicines giuen without distinction and sheweth the danger of them by an example in the practise of an vnlearned Physitian who hauing cured many of patnes in the cares proceeding from a colde cause gaue the same medicine in a hot cause with vnhappy successe Also he reporteth a greater error in another Physician who in the beginning of a sweat brought his patient into a bath whereupon followed present death If all our learned Physitians should bring together all the pitifull examples that they haue obserued in the practise of Empiriks they would fill large volumes Galen sayth many die because they obey not their Physician But they that ob●erue the practise of our Empiriks may as truly say many die because they obey their ignorant and vnlearned Physicians If their deadly errors could be perceiued by others as well as by those that professe the Arte some of them might be as famous as Themison of whom Iuuenal sayth Olde age is subiect to as many infirmities as Themison killed patients in one Autumne Galen sette●h forth their errors very liuely in these words As often as they visit their patients so often they erre by their inartificiall attempts But I will examine their errors no further The reasons brought in defence of Empiriks are now to be confuted The first and maine reason is their experience the very foundation of all their practise It is thus defined by Ga●en It is an obseruation and remembrance of that which hath fallen out often and after the same maner This definition vtterly maimeth the practise of our best Empiriks for by this it is cleere that experience reacheth not to the theorie and speculation of the Arte it teacheth not the knowledge of the difference of the constitutions of mens bodies nor of the causes of diseases nor method of curing them for none of the●e fall out after the same maner but it respecteth only some few things in the practise for in that also are many occurents that fall not out after the same maner and therefore can no● be learned by experience Diseases as they haue sundry causes so their symptomes and accidents are variable Heurnius speaking of one disease sayth it deludeth the Physician a thousand wayes What can experience learne in this great variety I confesse it is a necessary and effectuall meane to confirme the knowledge of a Physician The euent and successe of things past must be carefully obserued and layd vp in memory to be compared with things to come Many things also are found out by experience alone as the nature of simples wherein Galen commendeth it highly In finding out the vertue of medicines we must begin at exper ence sayth he To this agreeth that which he speaketh of the same argument in another place This first taught that Rubarbe purgeth choler and Agarike flegme Gesner amongst others was exceedingly industrious in this kinde found out many things in our Art by his experience as he affirmeth in his Epistles But this bringeth nothing to the credit of Empiriks for what are these few things in comparison of all those that are required in a Physician One reporteth that a yong man walking by the sea side and finding an old boat purposed to build a ship therewith neuer considering what a great number of other things were required to so great a worke Experience helpeth no more towards that great building of the Art of Physicke than that did towards a ship No learned man euer ascribed any commendation to experience in this Arte but when it was ioyned with learning Pliny speaketh thus of them that practise by experience without learning They learne by our perils and they trie experiments by our death Experience alone with a little helpe of nature maketh men skilfull in mechanicall trades in merchandize and in other kinds of buying and selling but the deepe knowledge conteined in the l berall sciences and in other learning rising out of them requireth much read ng long study great meditation and after the theoric or speculation of them is obteined then practise and experience confirmeth and establisheth them but without the former the latter is weake lame and maimed Galen in sundry places expresseth the danger of experience without learning and sheweth into what grieuous errou●s Empiriks fall for want of knowledge They runne rashly and without reason from one medicine to another hoping at the last to finde out that which shall helpe A dangerous and desperate kind of practise when for want of the light of Arte they are compelled to wander gro●ing in the darke dungeon of ignorance not knowing wh ch way to turne And yet in Galens time there were no such Empir●ks as in this age it was not then heard of that a man vtterly ignorant in the foundation of all learning durst presume to intrude himselfe into the practise of that deepe and intricate science The difference betwixt an Artist and him that worketh by experience is set ●oorth by Aristotle an Artist knoweth the causes and reasons of things subiect to his Arte an Empirike knoweth many things also but he is ignorant of the causes of them What thought he can in some things satisfie the ignorant vulgar with some shew of reason euery simple man can doe this in his trade yet in the great and maine points of the Arte Empiriks can yeeld no sound reason being vo d of the knowledge of Philosophy from wh ch the causes of such things are drawen Galen setteth Physicke as a perfect man vpon two legges Learning and Experience therefore the best Empirike is but a lame and left-legged Physician It is a full consent of all learned in Physicke or Philosophy That nothing can be happily done in the Art of Physicke without method and order
groweth thicke and grosse the minde is dull and sad This is too apparent in many though it be obscured by discretion in some I see not therfore how Tabacco can be acquited from procuring the ouerthrow of the perfect state both of body and minde and that not onlie in Tabacconists themselues but in their posterity also for the temperament and constitution of the father is ordinarily transfused into the children and the affections of the minde also depending vpon the other This is verified likewise in distempered and sicke bodies Fernelius saith what disease so euer the father hath that goeth into the childe The father giueth the forme nature and essence to the child as Galen affirmeth Therefore where the humours of the body haue contracted a sharpe heat and drinesse by drinking of Tabacco there the father getteth a childe like to himselfe wanting that kinde moisture that should protract his life vnto olde age and incline him to an ingenuous courteous and kinde carriage But many take it imagining that it doth inable them in some actions I confesse that it putteth a sharpe and fretting heat into the blood which doth incitare but they shall the sooner faile in their course for heat can not be preserued without moisture and Tabacco consumeth that by infusing a drie qualitie into the body by excesse of heat and by drawing out of moisture Therefore Tabacco though neuer so sparingly taken can not be good for you nor for yoong and sound bodies and the often vse of it in such bodies driueth them lentis gradibus into their graue long before that time that nature had assigned them Hippocrates sayth that which is done by little and little is done safely and in diet as well as in other things he commandeth all to be vsed with moderation Galen speaking of gentle opening medicines affirmeth that the often vse of them drieth vp the solid parts of the body and maketh the blood thicke and grosse which being burnt in the kidnies breedeth the stone This may as well be verified of Tabacco for many take it oftener than euer such opening medicines were taken and it hath also more heat and drinesse than those had and therefore greater power to hurt sound bodies There may peraduēture be a profitable vse of it in cold moist bodies but it must be taken very seldome and with great regard of sundry other circumstances To conclude sith it is so hurtfull and dangerous to youth I wish in compassion of them that it might haue the pernitious nature expressed in the name and that it were as well knowen by the name of Youths-bane as by the name of Tabacco The second thing is meat and drinke Our bodies as Galen affirmeth are in assiduo fluore in a continuall wasting the inward heat alwayes consuming part of the very substance of them The vse of meat and drinke is necessarie for the restauration of this dayly losse These rightly vsed according to the rules of physicke haue great power to preserue the body from diseases This is verified by Galen in the same booke To him Fernelius assenteth in these words He shall be troubled with no disease that layeth temperance for the foundation of his life And in the same chapter he addeth That neither the aire nor the affections of the minde nor any other cause doth breed diseases vnlesse there be a disposition in the body proceeding from some errour in diet There are fiue things to be obserued in the vse of meat The substance the quantity the qualities the times of eating and the order Touching the substance Galen sayth In victu salubri c. In healthfull diet the two chiefe things are meats of good iuice and not stopping Here to auoid tediousnesse I passe ouer meats of good nourishment most of them being well knowen to you and I will speake only of some few that are badde Meats of ill iuice fill the body with grosse humours subiect to putrifafaction which is one of the principall causes of most diseases Galen reporteth that when there was great scarsitie of corne thorowout the Romane Empire the people being compelled to eat roots and hearbs of bad nourishment fell into diseases of sundry kindes This he doth further confirme by the example of his owne body for during the time of his eating of ordinary fruits he was troubled with agues almost euery yeere but after that he left them and fed only on good meats he protracted his life vntill extreame olde age without any sicknesse The worst meats that are in vse with vs are of flesh Bulles beefe the blood whereof being accounted poison amongst Physicians may iustly make the flesh suspected specially for colde and weake stomacks All olde beefe is of hard digestion and breedeth grosse and melancholike blood Bores flesh is much of the same nature and the older and greater the worse There is the like reason of Bucks Male-goats and Rammes in their kinde their ill iuice increaseth with their yeeres and those vngelt are of harder and grosser nourishment Blood howsoeuer it be prepared is vtterly condemned by Galen so are the inwards of beasts and the feet also specially of the greater sort of them Of fishes the greater and older are the worst and bring most labour to the stomacke those that liue in muddy or standing waters are farre worse than those of the same kinde that keepe in grauelly or cleere riuers Ecles are iustly excluded from the number of holsome meats because they breed of putrifaction Most English fruits are forbidden in diet Many of them are profitable in medicines therefore Galen sayth Apples Peares and Medlers are not to be vsed as meats but as medicines The sooner ripe and the sooner subiect to corruption are most condemned because they are easily turned into putrifaction in the body Cucumbers are too vsuall with vs being vtterly reiected by Galen for their ill iuice and if they be not well concocted as they are neuer in a colde stomacke they are almost like to deadly poison Our common raw salads are full of danger Lettice is one of the best of their vsuall ingredients which though it be good in a hot stomacke yet being taken in a great quantity it pierceth to the heart and killeth as Galen affirmeth It is not safe for any man in the vse of these bad meats to presume vpon his strong stomacke for though naughty meats be well concocted yet Galen telleth vs that when the iuice of them is caried into the veines it reteineth the old nature This point is more largely handled by Ludouicus Merca●us a learned Italian But I conclude with Galen in the foresayd place we must abstaine from all meats of bad iuice though they be easie of concoction for by the vse of them our bodies will be filled with matter ready to putrifie vpon euery light occasion whereupon maligne and dangerous
and it is as true that experience can not teach this method This is confirmed by Plato He that thinketh he hath learned an Arte without the method of ●t let him know that he hath but the shadow of the Arte and not the Arte it selfe Therefore all the practise of our long experienced men being destitute of order and method can haue no approbation amongst the learned but it is to be vtterly reiected and banished out of the common-wealth as a pernicious and perillous enemy to the liues of men It is like to the walking of a blinde man in a knowen path wherein if there be a hole digged or a blocke layed he is in danger of falling so if there be any hidden thing in the disease in the causes or symptomes of it as there is commonly the Empirike is beyond his skill he stumbleth and falleth and the life of the sicke is in ieopardy Moreouer if an Empirike light vpon a rare disease not seene before by him or vpon a new disease whereof he neuer heard what safe course can he take here he wanteth learning and experience hath taught him nothing that bringeth any sparke of hope in this case Here he is vtterly confounded yet he will neuer confesse his ignorance and counsell his patient to send to a learned Physician but not knowing what to do in the disease nor able to giue any reason of it he p●onoun●●th the patient to be bewitched and so leaueth him Therefore though the vulgar may suppose that experience is sufficient for the cure of common and ordinary maladies yet it is absurd and senselesse to imagine that it can inable then in rare extraordinary and new sicknesses An Ague that seemeth to be but an ordinary and light sicknesse may haue some malignity in it or may be secretly fixed in some principall part or be accompanied with some other disease Heere experience can not distinguish that must proceed from Logicke and from knowledge in Naturall Philosophy but especially from anatomy and the grounds of Physicke Therefore experience is a blinde and weake guide to direct in these cases and no patient can assure himselfe that his disease is not within the compasse of some of these How can any man then call an Empirike to the cure of his body without great danger You see sir what a weake ground experience is to build all the practise of Physicke vpon Learning is as it were the very soule of this Arte which hath his full perfection when it is confirmed by experience but this wi●hout that is to be condemned as a dangerous thing But some men are so full of grosse ignorance and so dull of conceit that notwithstanding all that hath beene sayd they will be obstinate in their senselesse opinion that sufficient knowledge for the practise in Physicke may be gotten by experience alone I will not deale with these vnlearned men I write onely to you whom I know to be learned and iudiciall and therfore satisfied in this point and yet I will adde this out of Galen He that hopeth to heape vp the speculation of the Arte of Physicke by experience without learning hath need of a thousand yeeres This grand reason of experience is further vrged of some by the example of Atturneys at the common law most of these haue nothing to direct them but experience and obseruation and yet sundry things passe thorow their hands as substantially and effectually performed as by learned Counsellers therefore vnlearned Physicians well instructed by experience may do some cures as well as great scholars The answer to this is easie There are many things in law which belong meerely to Atturneys and require no learning also they follow presidents and vsuall formes and many things wh ch they doe are plaine transcripts written out of bookes verbatim wherein they cannot erre if they follow their paterne But it is farre otherwise in Physicke there is no vsuall forme to follow in iudging or curing of diseases things seldome fall out after the same maner the Physician must alter and change his course as the disease and accidents require wherein experience can not guide him but the rules of the Arte. But if I should grant that Empiriks are as Atturneys then it must follow that learned Physicians are as learned Counsellers and as Atturneys in doubtfull cases aske the opinion of them so should Empiriks do of the other this would make their practise farre freer from danger and preserue the ●ues of many of their patients But the case of an Atturney and of an Empirike is not alike if by his fault his client lose the day the matter may somtimes be brought about againe but if life be lost by the error of the Empirike it can not be restored The second reason brought in defence of Empir ks is That they reade English books sufficient to instruct them in their practise This reason seemeth to proceed from one that vnderstandeth his mother tongue only for if his iudgement were confirmed by the knowledge of learned languages he would not vrge this weake argument All the large volumes of Hipp. Gal. Auicen and all other famous Physicians both new and olde were first written in the Greeke or Latine tongues or afterward translated into one of them the ignorance whereof hath in all ages beene accounted a strong ba●●e to exclude all men from the profession of that Arte. That which is written in English is very little and light in respect of the whole nether can it be perfectly vnderstood without the helpe of Grammar and Logicke as euery meane scholar will confesse All nations Christian wherein the ciuill law is vsed can not affoord one man of any meane account in that profession that vnderstands not the Latine tongue wherein their large books are written And I dare confidently affirme that Physicke is as profound and intricate a study as the Ciuill law and requireth as much reading and knowledge o● tongues as that doth Therefore I see not why the practise of our most famous Empiriks should not be brought into base and contemptible account What though there be a profitable vse of Ministers in our Church that vnderstand English books only being yet able to execute their office in some commendable maner yet this reason holdeth not in Empiriks for first there is farre more Diuinity than Physicke written in our vulgar idiome all the grounds and principles of religion are set forth at large in it whereas no part of Hipp. Gal. c. is translated into that tongue Secondly Ministers haue farre greater helps in hearing the learned of that profession and in frequent conference with them whereas Empiriks labour alwayes to auoid the presence and company of learned Physicians being not able to speake any th ng sensibly in their profession nor willing to haue it knowen that they aske counsell of any man because they carry themselues as if they had the complete and absolute
knowledge of the Arte. Thirdly the maner of teaching differeth farre from the maner of practise and is not subiect to so many errours But on the other side as no Minister is able to confute a learned aduersarie that hath not skill at the least in the Latine tongue so no Empirike is able to encounter with sicknesse that great aduersarie to nature without weapons fetched from the Greeke or Latine tongue M. Latimer sayth in one of his sermons English Diuinity will neuer be able to expell Popery out of this land and it may as truly be sayd Engl●sh Physicians can not cure English diseases The third reason is They do many cures Th●s maketh much for their credit with them that perceiue not the falshood of it All cures are artificiall naturall or casuall No man of iudgement can ascribe artificiall cures to them that are not Artists I am not ignorant that nature is sayd to cure all diseases nor how that is to be vnderstood but by naturall cures I meane those that are performed by the strength of nature alone without any helpe of medicines and doubtlesse many of their cures are of this kinde for when the disease is dangerous or vnknowen as it is often to them there the most circumspect of them commonly giueth some light medicine that hath no power to alter the body or mitigate the disease as is required this is as one sayth to leaue a ship in a great storme to the violence of the waues If in this case the patient recouer by the aid of nature then this fortunate Empirike and his companions extoll and magnifie the cure as if rare and extraordinary skill had beene shewed in it when it was meerely naturall By casuall cures I meane not such as are meerely casuall and beside the purpose of them that giue the medicines of this kinde are the histories in Galen of two desperately sicke of the leprosie to both which was giuen wine wherein a viper had beene drowned both the giuers had a purpose to kill them the one of compassion the other of hatred but both the patients were cured by the secret and admirable vertue of the viper Like to this is that which we reade of a woman that gaue her husband the powder of a toad to rid him out of a painfull dropsie but by the violent operation of the poison all the matter of the disease was expelled and the man recouered But by casuall cures I vnderstand such as are performed by hap or chance in respect of the Arte being done without order or method as when one shooteth neglecting all the fiue things required in an Archer and yet hitteth the marke this is a meere chance and falleth out seldome Such are the cures of Empiriks Fulnesse of blood in the veines and of ill humors in the body are the common causes of most inward diseases here the learned Physician first collecteth all the signes of the disease then he referreth them to their causes and hauing diligently reuolued in in his minde all the indications belonging to the Art he proceedeth to the cure by taking away the cause of the disease The Empirike in the same case not knowing how to gather the signes of the sicknesse much lesse how to referre them to their causes attempteth the cure without consultation and by a weake and inartificiall coniecture openeth a veine or giueth a violent purger by both which rash and vnaduised courses many lose their liues but when any recouer the cure may fitly be called casuall more by good hap than by learning Light errors in the cure of a disease doe neuer appeare in a strong bodie as Hippoc. saith nor in a light disease no more than the ignorance of a pilot in a calme but a great disease and a violent storme trieth the skill of them both Sometimes grosse and gricuous errors are obscured and hidden for where the strength of nature weareth them out and the patient recouereth his health the Empericke can neuer be stained with the blot of them Therefore since almost all inward diseases proceed from fulnesse some are cured in strong bodies by emptying though that be done confusedly and without Arte. But this reason is further inforced that sundrie sicke persons recouer vnder them which came out of the hands of learned Physitians This is no argument of their knowledge for in long diseases patients are commonly desirous of change when somtimes the cause of the disease is taken awaie before and nothing required but time to gather strength Moreouer they that are tired with long sicknesse do vsually submit themselues to a stricter course both of medicines and diet vnder their second Physitian and though nothing be administred in either of these agreeable to Art yet some few may escape as a shippe or two in the losse of a great fleet may passe by rockes and sands and a●iue at the wished hauen Also some that haue beene afflicted with long sicknesse are willing to submit themselues to a farre stricter course vnder their second Physitian than vnder their first and are easily induced both to abstaine from things hurtfull be they neuer so pleasing to them and to take that which is offensiue And although the best of these vnlearned Practitioners cannot prescribe diet or medicine fitting to the temper of the body and agreeing to the nature of the disease yet a slender diet of rosted meats and a drying drinke which is a common course with them all doth sometimes cure an old disease proceeding from a cold and moist humour though all things be done confusedlie without order or methode Fernelius affirmeth that some great and dangerous diseases haue had an happie end by a slender and strict diet onel●e without any Arte. And this is the reason why learned Physitians doe sometimes faile in the cure of diseases of this kind because intemperate patients will not be barred from eating drinking according to their appetite but as fast as the Physitian diminisheth the matter of the sicknesse by emptying so fast they renew it againe by filling Therefore a seruant that by the basenesse of his condition is bound to follow all that which is prescribed agreeable to the rules of our Arte is cured in a shorter time and with more facility than those which are free and wi●l not subiect themselues to ordinarie meanes An Empiricke then that hath opportunity to draw patients ●rom their owne houses where they haue all pleasant things at command and to bring them into his strict custodie may well heale some by abstinence onely as Plin. reporteth of one Iulius a Romane and B●neuenius telleth of a patient of his both which were cured of a dropsie by abstaining from drinke Furthermore ignorance the mother of boldnesse maketh Empiriks more aduenturous in their practise and more hardy in the vse of strong and violent medicines by reason whereof they plucke vp the roote of some disease
this affection how profitable soeuer it be ifit exceedeth the limits bounds of moderation it is sometimes deadly therefore Fernel sayth it disperseth the spirits like lightning that they can not returne to mainteine life There is a lamentable example of one Di●goras who had three sonnes crowned Victors in one day at the solemne games of Olym●us and whiles he embraced them and they put their garlands vpon his head and the people reioycing with them cast flowers vpon him the olde man ouerfilled with ioy yeelded vp his life suddenly in the middes of the assembly But examples of this kinde are rare and therefore not to be feared Sorow Sorow and griefe hath great power to weaken the ablest state of body it doth as Plato speaketh exercise cruell tyranny Tuscul quest Cum omnis perturbatio m●sera est tum carni●icina est agritu do c. Tully discoursing of the affections of the mind hath these words Euery perturbation is miserable but griefe is a cruell torment lust hath with it heat mirth lightnesse feare basenesse but griefe bringeth farre greater things wasting torment vexation deformity it teareth it eateth and vtterly consumeth the mind and body also Histories affoord many examples of those that haue beene brought into consumptions and to death by sorrow and griefe Feare Feare is an expectation of ill it is commonly the forerunner of griefe it calleth the bloud suddenly from the outward parts to the heart and leaueth them destitute of their naturall heat for want whereof they tremble and shake the heart then suffereth violence also as appeareth by the weake and slow pulse and it is sometimes suddenly ouercome and suffocated by the violent recourse of bloud Feare killeth many Thus Publius Rutilius and Marcus Lepidus ended their liues as Pliny reporteth There are sundry examples in histories of those that through extreame feare haue had their haire changed into a whitish hoarenesse in one night Skenk obseruat This opinion is confirmed by Scaliger contra Cardan and the reason annexed Anger Anger may adde somewhat to health in colde and moist bodies for it is an increase of the heat of bloud about the heart Gal. de sanit tu enda lib. 2 ex Aristot This bringeth much hurt to cholericke bodies it is comprehended vnder the first of the fiue generall causes of agues it is also sometime the cause of an epilepsie or the falling sicknesse as a De locis affectis lib. 5 cap. 5. Galen affirmeth in the history of Diodorus the Grammarian but this affection be it neuer so violent taketh not away the life suddenly as b De sympt caus lib 2. Galen and most other Physitians affirme for in cold and weake constitutions it can not be vehement Magnani●s ob nullam animi aegritud moriuntur Gal. de locis affect lib. 5. and the strength of hot bodies wherein it is alwayes most violent will not yeeld vnto it I know that some c Cardan consil 1. are of contrary opinion but I may not enter into controuersies hauing beene already so long Other affections I omit as being neere the nature of some of these and hauing lesse power to hurt the body You see sir with what efficacy the affections of the minde worke into the body therefore it is as necessary for health to holde a meane and moderation in them as in the fiue other forenamed things For though we liue in a sweet and pure aire obserue a strict diet vse sleepe and exercise according to the rules of Physicke and keepe fit times and measure in expelling superfluities out of our bodies yet if we haue not quiet calme and placable mindes we shall subiect ourselues to those diseases that the minde yeelding to these passions commonly inflicteth vpon the body these are many in number grieuous to suffer and dangerous to life Thus I haue briefly run ouer these six things which being rightly vsed with speciall care and regard will preserue all strong bodies in continuall health and preuent all diseases vntill the radicall moisture be consumed and no oile left to maintaine the light of the lampe A Discourse of Empiricks or vnlearned Physicians A Preface to the Reader THe life of man is so precious as that all which a man hath he will giue for the ransome thereof Neither is this care of preseruing his owne life alone naturally implanted in the heart of man but that he may saue the life of others also how dangerously will he aduenture somtimes casting himselfe into deepe waters to saue one from danger of drowning sometimes breaking into an house flaming on euery side to deliuer one from perishing in the fire And this naturall instinct hath beene the cause also that publike persons haue by holesome lawes prouided for the safety thereof and priuate men haue spent their thoughts in discouering those stratagems whereby the life of man is oppugned Now because none are more pernicious enemies to the same than are these Empericks who vnder colour of drawing out the threed of mans life doe most cruelly cut the same in sunder before the time there haue beene some in all ages that haue vehemently inueighed ●ga●●st them and laboured with all diligence to suppresse them as it were to quench some gri●uous fire But hitherto all labour hath beene lost that was spent that way for like the Lernean monster against which Hercules fought in the roome of one seuen others haue arisen and haue by opposition growen both in number and estimation also with many and that partly by their owne diuellish and detestable practises and partly by the folly of others And first for themselues they will falsly vaunt what admirable cures haue beene performed by them that No mottall man is able to doe more than they can doe They will promise confidently to cure any disease though neuer so desperate as to breake a confirmed stone in the bladder or els To lodge it in some part of the bladder that it shall neuer paine them after And vnto such as are therefore left by the iudicious Physician because sentence of death hath already passed against them on an Indicatory day they will warrant life and that to the end they may be imployed after their betters which is no small credit vnto them Now if they be found to haue missed the cushion and the party dies as was foretold then will they pawne their liues that the disease was mistaken by the first Physitian and that if they had beene called to the cure but one day sooner it had beene a matter of nothing to haue saued his life for the partie died because he was let bloud if that were aduised by the other with good discretion or because he was not let blood if that were omitted vpon iust cause On the contrary the learned Physitian though he haue no religion will not for his credit sake be found to vtter any vntrueth is very sparing in reporting