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A90381 De morbis puerorum, or, a treatise of the diseases of children; with their causes, signs, prognosticks, and cures, for the benefit of such as do not understand the Latine tongue, and very useful for all such as are house-keepers, and have children. With the contents of the several chapters, as also an alphabetical table of all the diseases mentioned herein. By Robert Pemell practitioner in physick, at Cranebrooke in Kent. May the 29. 1653. Pemell, Robert. 1653 (1653) Wing P1132; Thomason E721_3; ESTC R207213 39,973 64

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reins and bladder or from debility weaknesse of the Sphincter muscle of the bladder and also because they abound with much moisture Sometimes the stone in the bladder doth hurt the Sphincter muscle that the bladder cannot shut nor well contiane the urine The signs The signs are manifest for the child cannot hold it's water night nor day but especially it comes from them in their sleep The Prognosticks This disease although it be not mortal yet it is very troublesome and if not cured in time it continues in many till death If it proceed from the stone it cannot be cured till the stone be taken away This disease is cured in many when they come to grown years without any means The cure Let the Nurses dyet be hot and dry The child must drink but little and let the belly of it be kept loose for hereby they pisse lesse The Wesand of a Cock in powder is commended also the stone of a Hedghog in powder if a scruple or more of either be taken morning and evening in Plantain water The bladder of a Bull or Goat dryed and in powder is good to be used as before or give the powder of Goats clawes in Pap or milk This following powder is commended Take a Hogs bladder or Botes or sheeps bladder dryed the stones of a Hare and the Wesand of a Cock dryed of each half a drachme Acorn cups two scruples Nep and Mace of each a scruple make all into powder and give hereof a scruple or half a drachme in the distilled water of Oaken leaves or give ten grains or a scruple of Acorn cups in powder morning and evening in Plantain or Oaken leafe water Or Take of the distilled water of Mirtles three ounces Conserve of Roses half an ounce sirup of dry Roses one ounce mix them together and give the child often of it being first shaken together Let the place about the bladder be anointed with oyl of Costus oyl of Orris or such like or make a Bath of Brimstone Nitre and the leaves of Oak and use it to the back and place about the bladder warm If the childe be of some reasonable growth make a plate of lead with holes therein and lay it to his back let it lye on for a moneth or two CHAP. 27. Of the disease called St. Anthonies fire or wilde fire as also of Burning and scalding THis disease is a great heat and rednesse that disperseth it self over the uppermost part of the body and it is twofold either onely with heat and rednesse or with inflammation heat and small pimples and very painful This the Vulgar call the Shingles Others are troubled with this disease as well as children The cause It is caused of thin and hot blood or of blood mingled with Choler The signs The signs are manifest for there is a rednesse upon the outward skin very hot and angry and many times doth flash abroad if it be not prevented by the use of means The Prognosticks Although many have this disease without danger yet the cure hereof must not be neglected least a worse disease follow For as * Hip. Aph. sect 6. 25. Hippocrates saith if an Erisipelas being outward be returned inwards it is evil but if on the contrary if being inward it be turned outwards it is a good sign If strong repercussive or repelling means be used in the beginning of the disease it is dangerous least the humour strike inward and so indanger the life of the party If this disease appear in the head it is more dangerous then in other parts because if the matter passe to the membranes of the brain it cause a Frenzie if to the muscles of the neck the Quinzie The cure First of all great care must be had to use such inward means as may expel the matter outward as give the child a scruple of London Treacle or five grains of the powder of Crabs clawes in Carduus water Then use outward means as take of Plantain water Rosewater Lettice and Housleek water of each one ounce Vinegar half an ounce mix them together and wet Linnen clouts therein and apply it a little warm so oft as it dryeth up let it be wet again in the same and applyed Or Take of Galens cooling oyntment one ounce and a half oyl of Roses two ounces of the oyntment called Populeon one ounce the juice of Plantain and Nightshade of each half an ounce the white of two or three eggs beaten mix them altogether and anoint with it See more in my book called Help for the Poor Pag 14. and 15. Against Burning or Scalding See my Help for the Poor page 1 2 3 4 5 6. where you have many easie and safe medicines CHAP. 28. Of Fretting Chafing or Galling of the Skin in the Groyns The cause CHildren are much troubled with the skin going off in their groins and thighs which is caused by reason of the sharpnesse of their urine especially if they be not often changed with fresh linnen The signs The signs are apparent for the skin is raw and the child very unquiet therewith The Prognostiks This disease is not hard to cure yet because it causeth pain and brings watchings to the childe if it be not taken in time it causeth ulceration in those parts The cure The Linnen of the child must be often changed lest by the wetnesse thereof the disease be made worse Wash the thighes and buttocks with Plantain water with Rose or Nightshade water or make a decoction with Plantain Shepheards-purse Horsetail and Knotgrasse and bathe the place therewith Or anoint it with a little Capons grease and lay a Linnen cloth to it or anoint it with Pomatum or strow on it the powder of a post or any old wood that is wormeaten or meal dust or Bean flower or else A powder Take red Roses and Orris root of each a quarter of an ounce beat them into powder and use it as before by strowing it upon the raw places FINIS An Alphabetical Table of all the Diseases in this Treatise B Belly fretting and griping thereof Page 31. Belly loose p. 34. Belly stopt p. 38. Bed-pissing therein p. 55. Boeeding of Teeth p. 10 Burning and scalding p. 7. Bursting or Ruptures p. 45 C CHafing and fretting of the groynes p. 58. Cods swollen p. 50. Coming forth of the Navel p. 47. Consumption and leannesse p. 29. Convulsion and falling sicknesse p. 6. Costivenesse or stopping of the belly p. 38. D DIfficult making of water p. 53. Dreams and starting p. 22. E EArs pained and inflamed p. 9. Ears worms thereof ibid. Ears moist ibid. F FAlling of the fundament p. 51. Falling sicknesse p. 16. Fear starting and terrible dreams p. 22. Fevers p. 15. Flux of the belly p. 34. Fretting in the belly p. 31. Fretting and chafing of the groyns p. 58. Fundament fallen p. 51. G GAlling of the skin in the groynes p. 78. Gripings and frettings of the belly p. 31. Groynes chafed or galled p. 58. H HEads of children sore p. 1. Hicket p. 30. I INflammation of the ears p. 9. Inflammation of the mouth and throat p. 12. Inflammation of the Navel p. 49. Itch and Scab p. 5. L LEannesse p. 29. Lice breeding p. 3. Loosenesse of the belly p. 34. M MEasels and small Pox p. 17. Mouth inflamed p. 13. N NAvel swollen or coming forth p. 47. Navel inflamed p. 49. O Often going to stool p. 52. P Pissing in bed p. 55 Pox and Measels p. 17 R REst wanting p. 20. Rickets p. 30. Rupture or Bursting p. 45. S SCab and Itch p. 5. Scalding and burning p. 57. Sores in the head p. 1. Starting and terrible dreams p. 22. Stomach weak p. 26. Stopping of the belly p. 38. Stone p. 53. Swelling of the Navel p. 47. Swelling of the Cods p. 50. T TEnesmus or often provoking to stool p. 52. Teeth breeding p. 10. Throat sore and inflamed p. 13. V ULcers and sores in the head p. 1. Ulcers of the ears p. 9. Vlcers of the mouth and throat p. 13. Vomiting and weaknesse of the stomach p. 26. VV VVAter difficult making therof p. 53. Watching out of measure and want of rest p. 20. Weaknesse of the stomach p. 26. Wilde fire p. 56. Worms p. 40. Worms in the eares p. 9. Worms of the heart liver c. p. 42. FINIS
from the party ready to die If lice be onely in the head in many it preserves their health because they consume much excrementitious humors Lice are engendred in the beginning of the Leprosie and in the second and third kinds of hectick Feavers If they breed much and that all over the body they are not onely very irksome but sometimes bring death The cure First for the prevention of lice and to hinder the breeding of them it will be very necessary to keep the child often changed and to comb often the head and to avoid all meats of ill juyce If the child be of any bignesse the body may be purged in this manner Take of Sene and Polipodium of each two drachmes Fumitory one drachme and a half Cream of Tartar a drach Licorice and Anniseed of each a drachme bruise the Polipodium and Licorice then infuse or steep them all in half a pint of water on hot embers and afterwards gently boyl them strain it and to the clear add of sirup of Roses one ounce let the child take every morning two or three spo●nfuls fasting and fast one hour after it then to take some warm posset-drink or broth Make a bath as followeth A Bath Take of Elecampane root bruised two ounces white Briony root bruised half an ounce Beets Mercury Sopewort Centory the lesser of each a handfull Lupines bruised one ounce Nitre half an ounce boyl these in water and make a bath for the head with which let the head be bathed morning and evening warm After bathing anoint the head once or twice a day if a strong child twice if a weak child but once with this oyntment following An oyntment Take of Stavesacre one ounce Wormwood Rue of each half an ounce Brimstone and Nitre of each two drachmes make all into powder and with two or three ounces of oyl of Bayes and one ounce of oyl of Wormwood make an oyntment Or take of Brimstone in powder half an ounce of Stavesacre in powder one ounce oyl of Wormwood two ounces and a half vinegar one ounce make all into an oyntment and use it as before is shewed Or take seawater or else Brine and strong lee of Ashes of each a quart Wormwood a good handful or two boyl it a while therein and afterwards wash the body or head therewith Many use stronger oyntments made with Arsenick or Quicksilver and white Hellebor but for young children it is not safe to use them This powder following is very good and safe A powder good and safe for Lice in the head Take of Coculus Indy a quarter of an ounce white Pepper a drachme beat them into a grosse powder and strew it into the heads of children for it will soon destroy the lice Or you may dip a comb in strong Mercury water or water made with Arsenick and so comb the childs head therewith CHAP. 3. Of the Scab and Itch. THe Scab and Itch is an infection of the skin sometimes with crusts or scabs sometimes dry sometimes onely in the head and sometimes in the whole body and doth much provoke to scratching The cause These come from the sharpnesse of the milk or from some salt humour abounding in the body and sometimes they bring this infection into the world with them The signes The signs are manifest Prognosticks If the Scab or Itch be small and do not hinder sleep it is the easier cured but if it do much molest and disquiet the childe in the night it is the more difficult to cure If they be of long continuance and have got a habit in the body they are not easily cured The cure For the cure of the Itch and Scab many use to give common Treacle which I do not approve of but rather advise to use flower of Brimstone morning and evening in milk or Posset drink Also sirup of Fumitory is good to give often half a spoonful thereof to children of growth If the head be scabby it is usual to anoint with burnt butter but this many times strikes into the body and makes the child sick You may anoint with this oyntment following An Oyntment Take oyl of Roses four ounces quick Brimstone in powder one ounce juice of Lemmons two ounces Rosin three ounces make all into an oyntment and anoint the head face or body with it but observe this that you do not anoint all over where the itch or scab is but anoint first at one place and when that is killed then use it to another place and so the rest one after another You may also anoint with the white Camphire oyntment or with Tarr and Hogs grease boyled together or you may use a decoction of Tobacco stalks boyled in water and vinegar If the Itch or Scab be hot and burning then use this oyntment following Take white lead and Lytharge of gold in fine powder of each five drachmes lee made of the ashes of a vine three drachmes oyl of Roses an ounce wax as much melt the wax and oyl first then put in the rest keeping it stirring and last of all add two yolks of eggs or rather the whites make an oyntment and use it See more in my book called Help for the Poor in Itch and Scab pag. 21 22. Cap. 23. CHAP. 4. Of the Falling sicknesse and convulsion THhese are diseases very incident to children newly born and because they are so neer of affinity I shall joyn them together The cause The falling sicknesse cometh sometimes by consent of the inferior or lower parts especially of the stomach and bowels when milk is corrupted in the stomach or hath an ill quality which doth often happen when the nurse is of an ill complexion or from the nurses ill dyet and to frequent drinking of wine and so ill vapors arise from the stomach too the brain and affect the membranes thereof or worms the Small Pox and Measels or Fevers may cause these fits or primarily it may come from the brain being ill affected Sometimes it may be Hereditary and come from the Parents Also vehement pains of the teeth whereby the brain is drawn into consent may cause convulsions in children Moreover sudden fears or beating the child may occasion these fits Some will have flegme to be the cause of the Falling sicknesse but if it were so then why might not old men whose brains are flegmatick have the Falling sicknesse and Infants as well as old men be taken with the Apoplexy which notwithstanding we see by experience doth not happen Therefore the falling sicknesse doth not proceed from flegme but rather from an occult and sharp quality which doth oppresse the membranes of the brain For although children do abound with flegme from whence suffocating rheumes and other diseases be bred yet doth not the Falling sicknesse follow except there be some venomous and corrupt vapour joyned therewith The signs The signs are manifest But whether it proceed from vitious or corrupt milk or from worms the small Pox or Measels breeding of
is subject to watchings else use not the last Outward means Outward means are these following make a Bath if it be Summer of the tops of Dill Cammomil flowers Mallowes Willow leaves Vine leaves and the heads of Poppy white or red and wash the feet therewith You may anoint the temples with oyl of Roses or oyl of Violets or water Lillies or with Populeon oyntment or you may use oyl of Nutmegs made by expression to the temples warm or you may make a Pulcis of white Poppy seed womans milk or Rose water or Nightshade water and the white of an egg with a little Saffron Anoint the nostrils with oyl of Violets mixed with the juice of Nightshade If it proceed from breeding of teeth then use those means set down in the Chapter of breeding teeth Let the Nurse use a good dyet and means that may cause sleep as Almond milk made with a decoction of Lettice and white Poppy seeds Or she may take a spoonful of sirup of white Poppy for three or four nights together in Posset drink CHAP. 11. Of Fear Starting and terrible dreams AMong the diseases that are incident to children Hippocrates mentions great fears and startings which is nothing else but troublesome sleep accompanied with terrible dreams The cause The causes hereof are impure and filthy vapors which mingle themselves with the animal spirits and trouble the same representing terrible fancies to the imagination now these vapors arise from the bad concoction of the stomach Therefore this disease is very subject to children who suck the milk very greedily or eat abundantly and so receiving more nourishment then the stomach can digest it is corrupt and so these vapors arise to the brain and trouble he animal spirits Neither is it absurd to say that these vapours do not onely ascend by the * Oesophagus is that part by which meat and drink are turned down into the stomach Oesophagus or gullet but that by the veins they ascend up to the head Elder children are subject to this disease as well as younger Galen saith these fears are caused when there is a natural imbecibillity or weaknesse of the childs stomach and the meat received is corrupted in it which cause vapours to arise up to the head and bring these startings Sometimes they come from worms and when they breed their teeth The signs The signs are manifest for they often start in their sleep screech and cry out suddenly and many times they shake and are all in a water and most times a hot and stinking vapour proceedeth out of the childs mouth The Prognosticks This disease must not be sleighted because many times it is the forerunner of the Falling sicknesse The cure For the cure hereof means must be used to take away the corrupt humours in the stomach Let the Nurse keep to a moderate dyet and use meats that hinder corruption and abstain from all vitious and corrupt food as Pease Beans Leeks Onions Colewort c. that so the milk may be good which the childe sucketh Let the childe suck but sparingly and moderately least by too often sucking the stomach be oppressed neither let the childe after sucking or feeding be laid to sleep but kept watching a while that so the nourishment may descend to the bottome of the stomach and the concoction be the better When it is laid to sleep let it not be much rocked for overmuch shaking of the child hindreth digestion and causeth the childe many times to vomit To remove the corrupt food in the stomach let the childe take oyl of sweet Almonds or sirup of Succory or Manna or a little hony of Roses solutive you may give a spoonful or two of either for these will cleanse the corrupt humours and provoke to stool Give the child half a scruple or more of Pyony seeds in a little milk morning and evening or give it a little Magister of Coral Or Take Magister of Coral a drachme species Pleres Archonticon a scruple Sugar dissolved in Rosewater one ounce make rouls or cakes and give of them to the childe or dissolve them in beer and so give them Let the stomach be anointed morning and evening with oyl of wormwood Mints Nardus Mastick or oyl of Nutmegs Or Take oyl of Wormwood and Mastick of each a drachme Cloves in powder ten grains wax half a drachme make a Liniment and anoint the stomach therewith If starting come of worms or from a feaver then use those means set down in the several Chapters Great care must be taken against all occasions of fear and frighting be taken away CHAP. 12. Of Rheume the Cough and shortnesse of breath THe Cough Rheume and shortnesse of breath doth oftentimes much molest and disquiet children The cause The cause of rheume in children is from their natural constitution or moist temper of brain from which many excrements are easily heaped together And this happens from abundance of milk oppressing the stomach from whence many vapours arise up to the brain and fill the same For if the brain be filled with excrementitious humours or molested with the cold air which the child was not used to in the mothers womb or with too much heat or being kept too hot either the head or body the matter gathered together in the brain doth plentifully fal down to the nostrils mouth or lungs Now if these excrementitious humours cannot be purged by the nostrils they slide down into the rough artery cause a cough If they fall down to the lungs they cause shortnesse of breath The Signs Whether the humor be hot or cold is easily known for if it be hot the humour is more thin and the child doth often sneese the face and cheeks are hot and the mouth of the child is hot which may be perceived by the nipples of the nurse as also in sucking If the humour be cold then the contrary is found Now whether the shortnesse of breath proceed of matter descending from the head or from a phlegmatick blood ascending from the veins to the lungs may be thus known if it come from the head there is a cough and rheume doth follow and sometimes as they breath they snort and make a noise because the air is stopped coming from the lungs But if it come from a flegmatick humour arising from the hypochonders then there is neither cough nor rheume and the hypochonders are puffed up and swollen The Prognosticks Rheumes and also the cough following and shortnesse of breath in infants and children are not to be neglected because strong Coughing doth not onely cause watchings and vomiting but Ruptures and Rheumes also bring suffocations and death many times These Rheumes and Coughs in children are not so easily cured because those medicines cannot be used which bring expectoration or spitting and to cause the matter to be easily spit out The cure Let the nurse keep a temperate dyet avoiding all sharp and salt meats as also all things that cause vapours to ascend up to
proceed from corrupt milk and sharp humours They are dangerous also that arise from worms The cure If these gripings come of winde and crude or raw humours and the body be bound it will be necessary to give the childe this or the like Clister A Clyster Take Pellitory of the wall and Camomil flowers of each half a handful boyl them in broth made of meat strain it and take two three or four ounces of this liquor and add to it hony of Roses solutive one ounce half the white of an Egg and make a Clister which may be given to a child of a moneth or two moneths old Or give it some oyl of sweet Almonds new with a little Sugar one hour before it sucks for this will loosen the belly and ease the pains Or You may give a scruple of Anniseed grosly beaten in Pap Milk or such like sweetened with Sugar To a child newly born it doth help herein and profitably purges away or expels from the bowels green choler and filthy flegme This doth Heurnius * Heurn meth ad prax lib. 2. cap. 26. fol. 293. commend by his own experience You may also give the child Penniroyal water with Sugar or Diascordium at night Outward means also which do moderately warm make thin and expel wind must be used as the oyl of Dill or oyl of Camomil with which anoint the belly warm morning and evening Or Bruise Pellitory of the wall and boyl it in oyl of Camomil or Sallad oyl and apply it warm to the belly Or Take Camomil flowers the tops of Dill of each a handful Fenegreek and Linseed bruised of each half an ounce boyl them in Wine and twise a day before feeding or sucking let the childs belly be bathed therewith If they come from corrupt milk and sharp humours then cleansing means are to be used as sirup of Roses hony of Roses solutive or sirup of Succory with Rubarb or give a Clyster made of the decoction of Bran and Pellitory of the wall adding one ounce or one ounce and a half of sirup of Roses solutive Or Take of the decoction of Barly 3. or 4. ounces oyl of Dill one ounce or one ounce and a half the white of one Egg make a Clister and give it Anoint the belly with oyl of Roses or oyl of Dill and oyl of Camomil mixed together The nurse must avoid all windy meats as Pease Beans Beets hard Eggs c. CHAP. 17. Of loosenesse and flux of the belly FLuxes of the belly and loosenesse doth often happen to children and that many times about the time of breeding their teeth as Hippocrates witnesseth Hip. Aph. 3. 25. The cause The cause hereof is bad concoction or corruption of the milk or nourishment For a Fever doth commonly follow the breeding of teeth so that by the unnatural heat the digestion is hurt then by much watching pain is increased and the concoction hindred Also by pain the necessary heat which brings good digestion is drawn from the stomach and so concoction is disturbed Moreover the heat of the fever doth stir up many humours which flowing to the belly cause these fluxes Again by reason of the Fever which happeneth to children about the time of breeding their teeth they suck or drink more then is meet and also the Nurse most times that shee may content the child doth often offer it the breast and so dispose it to sleep more then is necessary by which means both food and drink not being well concocted are avoided by stool both crude and corrupt * Mer. de morb pueror lib. 2. ch 25. fol 147. Mercurialis addeth an other cause of this flux while children breed their teeth viz. from the pain that is stirred up by unnatural heat from whence the humours are drawn to those parts they become putrid salt and sharp and so falling down to the stomach and from thence to the bowels stir up exceedingly the expulsive faculty from whence follow these fluxes But some do not concieve this to be probable First because those humours thus attracted or gathered together do not stay or abide in the mouth or gums but fall down to the stomach Secondly because the teeth and gums by the continual use of the milk or sucking are made more soft and temperate Thirdly because in moist children there cannot be so great a heat which can produce so much acrimonie and saltnesse Fourthly because if these humours were so salt and sharp they would soon breed ulcers of the mouth Sometimes when children do not breed teeth the cause may be from the outward air whereby the stomach belly of the child are too much cooled and therby concoction is hindred or when the stomach is oppressed with too much food or nourishment whereby crudities and corruption of the food doth follow so that if the same be not rejected or cast up by vomiting it is carried down to the belly and causeth these fluxes or it may arise from bad nourishment or from the badnes of the milk from whence corrupt juyce is bred in the stomach which nature expels by stool Sometimes it may proceed from the moistnes and loosenes of ●he bowels which moisture hath its original from some sharp humours in the stomach and from thence falls down in to the bowels The signes If the flux come from the breeding of teeth it may be known from the signs of breeding of teeth as in the sixt Chapter If it come from crude humours then the food is voided not concocted and the child is troubled with belching also the excrements are white and frothy If it come from hot humours and corrupt nourishment then the excrements are yellow or green also stinking and the pains of the belly are greater The Prognosticks If the flux in children be not violent the danger is not great neither must it be suddenly stopped because the corrupt humours in the stomach hereby are evacuated or purged which if they were stopt would prove dangerous From hence saith Hippocrates * Hip. de dentione fol. 59. except blood come forth stop it not till the seventh day be passed Such children as have loosnesse when they breed teeth are lesse subject to convulsions then those that are bound If children do not easily endure the flux but have weak stomachs and the spirits are low also the flux continuing long and they grow lean then must the loosenes be stayed That flux is dangerous in children if it come by reason of acute or sharp fevers and especially if the excrements be black The cure In the cure of loosenesse of the belly we must consider whether the child suck or not then whether the teeth break forth or not For if the child suck then the nurses milk must be looked on whether it be good or bad If bad then it must be mended or the Nurse changed The Nurse must use a binding dyet and abstain from fruits and raw nourishment as also from those things that are of hard
teeth or from fears the signs of those diseases will manifest If fear be the cause the standers by or tenders can evidence the same Now if none of these be the cause then it is probable it may arise primarily from the brain The Prognosticks The Falling sicknesse and convulsion are diseases very horrible to behold and dangerous in all persons and ages and doth kill many children that are taken therewith so soon as they be born Where these fits happen to young children 't is more dangerous then in grown persons because they can bear and endure the fits better The cure For the cure of these diseases somthing must be done in the fit and something when the fit is over What is to be done in the fit First in the fit give three or four drops of spirit of Castor in beer or milk also black Cherry water with a little sirup of Pyony or give a small spoonful of this following Julep A Julep Take of Piony water and linden water of each one ounce sirupe of Piony compound half an ounce spirit of black Cherries two drachmes magister of Coral a scruple mix them together and give it as before is shewed Put to the nostrils Rue bruised or oyl of Amber or Balsam of Amber Apply to the Region of the heart and to the Temples Mithridate or London Treacle with the juice of Rue and a little wine or water Epileptick of Langius Let the nape of the neck and the ridge of the back be anoynted with this following Take oyl of Castor or oyl of Euphorbium half an ounce the juice of Rue one ounce boyl them together to the consumption of the juice and use it Hang about the neck of the childe a thin slice of Piony or white Briony roots as green as you can What must be done when the fit is over Secondly something must be done out of the fit If the child be five or six years old you may give it this potion A purging potion Take of Agarick trochiscated four scruples infuse it five or six hours in Oxymel of Squils strain it hard and add thereto of Castor in powder three greins sirupe of Roses solutive with Agarick one ounce Balm water one ounce make a potion and give it in a morning fasting Let the child constantly take of the Julep before mentioned and be kept anointed with the oyl of Castor and juice of Rue also let it wear about it's neck constantly a root of male Peony or white Briony In Italy and other places where this disease is very frequent 〈◊〉 soon as children be born they cauterize or burn them in the neck with a hot iron or else drop a burning wax candle upon the place where they desire to make an Issue and that to prevent the falling sicknesse for hereby they think the brain is dryed and by pain the humour which doth flow or may flow is drawn and derived ●o the hinder part of the head especially if the Issue be made by burning for thereby whatsoever is gathered together in the brain that is offensive is evacuated Cornelius Celsus was of the same minde Lib. 3. Cap. 28. fol. 40. for he adviseth to have an Issue made there in two places and he saith it is the last refuge or remedy for to cure the Falling sicknesse But I conceive that it is not safe to use such a remedy in young and tender bodies for if the bodies of such young and tender children will not suffer purging or bleeding how shall they endure burning when as this must needs bring continual pain and watchings whereby the strength must also decay Again although an Issue may be profitable where the falling sicknesse ariseth primarily and chiefly from the brain yet when the Falling sicknesse ariseth from the lower parts which doth often happen to children it doth not profit when as the matter or ill vapor that cometh from the lower parts cannot be turned from the brain If the Falling sicknesse arise from worms then use means against worms as you may see in the Chapter of worms to which means may be added the root of Piony red Coral c. Let the Mother or Nurse keep a good dyet and neither eat nor drink any thing that may offend the childe or occasion these fits See more in my book of the chief diseases of the head in the 6. 7. Chapters CHAP. 5. Of the pain in the ears with inflammation moistures ulcers and worms thereof AMong the diseases of children a Hippocrat Appli sect 3. 24. Hippocrates in his Aphorismes doth nominate the moisture or running of the ears For when the brain of infants is very moist great part of that superfluous moisture is evacuated or purged by the ears yet this doth not often happen without inflammation Therefore when abundance of moist humours do flow plentifully to the ears they cause inflammation also grievous pain is joyned therewith which in moist bodies of children cannot be dispersed or dissolved but is turned into matter so that blood and matter doth flow out of the ears The cause The cause is abundance of moist humours and excrements of the brain which nature cannot expel by the nose and Palat. The signs The moisture of the ears is easily known by it's running but pain and inflammation thereof is not so easily discerned because infants cannot declare the same but it may be known by their crying out and unquietnesse especially being touched neer their ears also rednesse and heat is perceived about the ear or ears The Prognosticks These diseases are not to be sleighted for such pains in grown persons have proved dangerous much more therefore in children if it continue long Inflammation of the ears is many times dangerous and brings a delirium or dotage and indangers life In ulcers of the ears if the matter be white not too thick nor too thin neither bloody nor much stinking it is the better Inveterate and long continued Ulcers of the ears are dangerous because they soon turn to a Fistula The cure For pain of the ears use oyl of Roses or oyl of Violets warm or milk warm dropped into the ears and afterwards stopped with wool or drop therein the juice of Origanum and milk mixed together Or drop in a little Linseed oyl warm or use a decoction of the heads of white Poppy or the white of an Egg beaten and mixed with a little milk or put a little Saffron into the ears Against moistnesse of the ears and ulcers thereof use hony of Roses and water of hony dip a clout or tent therein and put it warm into the ears or put in oyl of bitter Almonds warm For worms in the ears use oyl of bitter Almonds and Myrrhe in powder as in two drachmes of oyl put of Myrrhe in powder a scruple or thirty grains or put the juyce of Wormwood warm into the ears Or take of Aloes Myrrhe and the seeds of Coloquintida of each a drachme boyl them in two ounces of oyl of Roses
strain ●t and drop of the strained liquor into the ears CHAP. 6. Of breeding and coming of teeth Among all diseases that children are subject to there is none more grievous or troublesome to them then the pain in breeding of their teeth For saith a Hip. Aph. sect 3. 25. Hippocrates The time of teeth breeding coming there hapneth itching of the gums feares Convulsions Fluxes of the belly especially when they bring forth their teeth and most principally to those children which are most fat and grosse and have their belly hard and bound Sometimes children are born into the world with teeth as experience witnesseth a Pliny Nat. Hist the 7. Book and 16. Chaper Pliny saith M. Curjus was so born who thereupon was surnamed Dentatus and C● Papyrius Carbo both of them very great men and right honourable Personages And Bald-Rousaeus de vitae hom primord cap de dent In the year 1564. Saith he saw a girle born with two teeth in her lower gums called cutters The time of breeding teeth The time of breeding teeth is about the seventh month and first those teeth are bred that are called Incisorii cutters or shearers in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they shew themselves when we laugh then within a little space of time come forth the Canini or Dog-teeth from their length above the rest They are called Oculares or eye teeth not that they reach to the orbit of the eye for they mount not higher then the Nostrils but because sprigs of the nerves which move the eyes are carried to them Last of all are bred the Molares or Grinders because like Millers they grind the meat Of these the hindermost are called Genuini dentes sapientiae the teeth of wisdom because they shew not themselves until men come to the years of discretion to wit the 28. 30. yea even to old age it self In some they never appear And first of all at their comming forth Children have a great itching of their gums afterwards there following a pricking of their gums at the roots as it were with needles from whence followeth vehement pain watchfulnesse inflammation of the gums fears fluxes of the belly and convulsions And this doth chiefly happen when they breed their Dog teeth or Eye teeth as the vulgar call them from whence we have a Proverb that Parents cannot rejoyce in their children till their eye teeth be come Sometimes about the seventh year children shee l their teeth or their teeth fall out and new come in their roome but this is without any pain although children cannot speak of their pain in breeding their teeth yet it may be known by these signs Signs of teeth breeding First from the time of breeding viz. about the seventh month Secondly because they often put their fingers in their mouth thereby to ease the pain Thirdly because the Nipples of the mother or nurse are more wrinkled then before Fourthly in those places where the teeth are breeding the gums are white and swollen Lastly divers accidents happen as pain watchfulnesse fluxes of the belly fevers convulsions Now these fears which follow upon the teeth breeding the inflammations of the gums and watchfulnesse they all come from pain and then humours are stirred up and choller abounding which brings fluxes of the belly The Prognosticks The breeding of teeth in Children is very grievous and troublesome by reason those diseases and symptomes that accompany the same in so much that many die thereof when convulsions and fevers are joyned therewith Hip. de dentione fol. 59. The longer the teeth are a comming forth the greater is the danger Such children as have a loosnesse when they breed teeth are lesse subject to Convulsions then those that are bound If an acute or sharp Fever happen to children breeding their teeth they are seldom taken with the Convulsion because by the Fever the matter that might bring a convulsion is taken away Such as are in good health when they breed their teeth if they be very drowsie and sleepy there is danger least they fall into convulsions Such as breed teeth in winter are lesse troubled then those in sommer and if they be a little helped they will endure it the ea●…er Not all that breed teeth being taken with convulsions do die but many escape Their teeth come forth hardest or with most pain that have a little Cough withall and if they be troubled with pricking and shooting of the gums they become very lean While children breed their Dog teeth or Eye teeth they are worst and more troublesome because they bring more sharp and grievous pain to them The cure Let the gums be often rubbed with the finger wet with Hony or with Hony and Butter mixed together or with the brains of a Hare or the brains of a Hare mixed with Capons grease and Hony If you cannot get a Hares brains take Conies brains Rub the gums often with red Coral It is good also to wash the outside of the cheek with a decoction of Mallows and Camomil flowers or to anoint the same with the juyce of Mallows and Butter mixed together If there be an inflammation of the gum● and the pain be very extream use oyl of Roses with the juyce of Nightshade If these medicines prevail not as many times comes to passe then the best way is to cut the gums for this is very safe and were it more used fewer Children would die for I am confident the want hereof doth occasion the death of many a child Dyet The Nurse must observe a good Dyet and be very temperat therein and rather incline to cooling then heating She may use Barly water made with Avens Lettice and Endive abstaining from all salt and sharp meats especially about the time of breeding their teeth CHAP. 7. Of the inflammation of the mouth and throat with ulcers and sores thereof OFtentimes there arise certain ulcers and sores in the mouthes of children called Aphthae which do not onely possesse the sides of the mouth the tongue and gums but sometimes the very Almonds and Pallat of the mouth Among the diseases of children Hippocrates * Hip. Aph. 3. 26. maketh mention of the inflammations of the Almonds of the mouth The cause They proceed from vitious and corrupt milk for seeing the inward parts of the mouthes in children are soft and tender and have not been used to any meat in the mothers womb if the milk be not very sweet and pleasant but sharp and corrupt these ulcers sores and inflammations are soon bred The same doth happen if the milk be corrupt in the stomach for from thence arise hot and sharp vapours especially considering the tendernesse of those parts about the mouth and throat The Prognosticks These inflammations and sores being not of any long continuance especially in tender and young infants are easily cured because they arise from a light cause and matter But such as are of long continuance are more hardly cured and have putrifaction
morning and evening warm You may anoint the stomach morning and evening with oyl of Mace made by expression If the milk be very hot then anoint the stomach with oyl of Quinces or oyl of Myrtles or oyl of Roses Or Take oyl of Roses and oyl Myrtles of each one ounce Vinegar two drachmes red Coral and the three Saunders in powder of each half an ounce mix them together and use it to the stomach Coral doth much prevail herein by an occult or hidden property and therefore it is hung about the neck of children to stay vomiting CHAP. 14. Of the Consumption or Leannesse of the Rickets CHildren do many times wax lean without any manifest cause and although they suck much or feed well yet they are not therewith nourished The cause Now the causes are many as the corruption of the milk for being either too hot or too cold it turns into ill humours and so hinders the breeding of good blood or it may come for want of suck from whence we see many times that when a childe consumes and pines away with sucking one Nurse if it suck an other it soon thrives and growes Again worms may be the cause both such as are bred in the belly as also in other parts or it may come by reason of a Feaver or from a flux of the belly The signs The signs are manifest The Prognosticks If the child consume for want of milk or a good Nurse this may soon be cured by getting a better Nurse If it come from worms in the belly or other parts it is not easily cured The Consumption in most children is dangerours if it be not taken in time and kills many The cure If the fault be in the milk that must be rectified by good dyet of the Nurse or if that do not help then the Nurse is to be changed If worms be the cause then means must be used to kill worms as you may see in the Chapter of worms If leannesse come from a Feaver or without any manifest cause make this following Bath A Bath Take the head and feet of a Wether boyl them till the bones fall asunder then bath the childe with this liquor twise a day and after bathing anoint with this following oynment Take of fresh Butter oyl of Roses and of Violets of each one ounce Hogs-grease or the fat of raw Pork half an ounce wax a quarter of an ounce make an oyntment and anoint the body with it warm twise a day Or Anoint the body with oyl of sweet Almonds and fresh butter mixed together or else anoint the body with the oyntment called Resumptivum or Resumptive oyntment Or If it come from great drynesse of the stomach bathe the stomach with milk warm and use this following Take of fresh Butter Hens grease of each half an ounce Saffron in powder five or six grains oyl of Violets or Wormwood three ounces mix them together and anoint the stomach morning and evening warm If it come from a flux of the belly then use the means to stay the loosenesse as in the Chapter of the flux of the belly Concerning the Rickets there is a learned Treatise set forth lately by three or four Doctors and since translated into English where you have that disease accurately and exactly handled unto which I refer the Reader CHAP. 15. Of the Hicket The cause THe Hicket in children is caused from the corrupt nourishment in the stomach or from abundance of milk in the stomach or from the coldnesse of the stomach by the outward air The Prognosticks The Hicket in children most times is void of danger and the cause being taken away it doth soon cease But if it happen to continue long or be complicated with some other disease as the Falling sicknesse or Convulsions many times it proves deadly The cure If the Hicket come from corrupt nourishment or fulnesse of the stomach 't is good to make the child vomit either by putting your finger in the throat of it or by putting down a feather anointed with oyl or by some other light and easie means that hereby the offensive matter may be taken away then use means to heat and strengthen the stomach as in the 13. Chapter and let the child be sparing in sucking and eating If it proceed from corruption and fault of the milk then means must be used to amend the same by good dyet of the Nurse as before and the corrupt milk to be purged away by syrupe of Roses or hony of Roses solutive then to use Conserve of red Roses with red Coral in powder or Bole-armoniack If it come from cold then let the stomach be warmed both with inward and outward means Give the child sirup of Mints or sirup of Betony and let the stomach be bathed with a decoction made of Mints Organy Wormwood Cyperus roots afterward anoint the stomach with oyl of Dil oyl of Mastick or oyl of Mints or apply a Pultis made with Mints and Dill seed bruised and oyl of Mastick Or Apply Mastick and Frankincense in powder mixed with the white of an egg to the hole of the stomach Or Take of Mastick one ounce Frankincense Dill seed ana Ê’ 2. make them into powder and mix them with the juice of Mints then wet Hempen clouts therein and apply it to the stomach warm CHAP. 16. Of Gripings and Frettings in the belly CHildren are very often troubled with gripings in their belly which sometimes commeth alone and sometimes with fluxes of the belly The cause These gripings come chiefly from the milk either being too windy or too sharp for if abundance of milk oppresse the childes stomach crudities and winde are soon bred which also doth the sooner happen if the Nurse have used windy meat or if the belly of the childe be tender and cannot endure the cold air But if the milk be corrupted in the stomach when it descends to the bowels it doth gnaw and pinch them so that it causeth great pains and gripings Sometimes worms are the cause thereof The signs These gripings are easily known for the childe is very unquiet and cryeth frequently neither will it suck and many times cannot make water because of the wind that oppresseth the neck of the bladder and stoppeth the urine If these gripings come of winde sometimes the pain remitteth or ceaseth and sometimes increaseth and the belly is puffed up and maketh a noise If they proceed from a humour the pain is almost continually and if from a tough and flegmatick humour the belly is most times bound and the excrements are like snot or snivel If they proceed from corrupt milk or choler and sharp humours then the belly is most times loose and that which is voided is yellow or green If worms be the cause then the signs of worms are manifest The Prognosticks These pains if they continue long they weaken the spirits and many times bring Convulsions and the Falling sicknesse Those pains are worst or most dangerous that
digestion If the Infant suck or not and the flux be of some continuance means must be used to stay it and such means as first cleanse and then bind the body as sirup of Roses solutive or hony of Roses solutive Clysters may be used A Clyster Take of Barly water made with steel four ounces red Sugar one ounce mix them together and make a Clyster Where the humours are cleansed and the flux doth proceed from a hot cause give sirup of dry Roses sirup of Quinces sirup of Mirtles sirup of red Coral c. Or give the powder of Mirtles with a little Dragons blood or give Sorrel seed Plantain seed or red Roses in powder with the yolk of an Egg rosted at the fire Or Take of Mullein flowers red Roses of each half a small handful of Comfry roots the greater and Tormentil roots of each a drach bruise the roots and boyl them all in water strain it and to three ounces of the clearest add one ounce of sirup of Quinces and give the child often of it or take Nutmeg and Mastick in powder of each a scruple give it at twise with the juyce or a scruple of Quinces Or Take Acorn cups Sorrel seed and the kernels of Raisons dryed of each a drachme white Poppy seed half a drachme make them into powder and give ten grains or twenty grains of it morning and evening in sirup of Quinces or sirup of red Coral Outward means must be used also Take oyl of Mirtles oyl of Roses oyl of Mastick of each one ounce with half an ounce of wax make an ointment and anoint the belly therewith morning and evening warm Or Bath the belly with a decoction made of red Roses Mullein Plantain in red Wine Or Take red Rose leaves Mullein of each a handful Cipres roots two drachmes Mastick half an ounce make them into grosse powder and make a quilt or bag which being boyled in red Wine apply it warm to the belly Or Take of the pulpe of Quince boyled in red Wine 4. ounces of tosted bread wet in Vinegar one ounce and a half with a little oyl of Mastick make a Pultis and apply it to the belly and stomach warm Or lay to the belly a plaister of a crust of bread or the Cerot called Stomachale If it come from a cold cause and that the excrements be white give sirup of Quinces with Mint water Some commend the maw of a Kid or Hare if ten grains thereof be given and the child to take no milk that day least it curdle in the stomach but give it bread boyled in water with Rosewater and Sugar Apply outwardly Mints Wormwood Mastick and Comin seed Or Take of Rose seeds one ounce Comin seed and Annised of each two drachmes make them into powder and with oyl of Mastick oyl of Wormwood and a little wax make an ointment and use it warm to the belly Or Apply Mints boyled in red Wine to the stomach or a crust of bread wet in Mint water or make a quilt or bag of Mints Wormwood red Roses Mastick Nutmegs and Cloves and apply it to the belly CHA.P. 18. Of Costivenes or stopping of the belly AS Children are often troubled with fluxes of the belly so are they many times troubled with stopping thereof The cause It may proceed from extream cold and drynesse of the belly which happens to some children from their birth or from tough and flegmatick humours which are as it were rowled up with the excrements and cleave so fast to the bowels that they are hardly voided or from corrupt milk with which the childe is nourished from whence tough and flegmatick humours are bred in the stomach which cometh to passe by reason of the weaknesse thereof as also when the mother or nurse feed upon tough meats and drink but little for it seldom happeneth that children are fed with such dyet except grown children or it may come from the intemperate heat of the Liver spleen or reins of the childe whereby the excrements become dry or it may happen when Choller that comes from the gall and should be carried down to the bowels is turned some other way The Signs The signs are manifest If it be from a natural drynesse then the childe is constantly bound and stopt If tough and thick flegme be the cause the excrements that are voided are mixed with the same If there be any error in the Mother or Nurse by ill dyet that is easily known If it be from the heat and drinesse of the Liver and Spleen or Kidneys it is known by those signs that shew the heat of those par●s If Choller be turned an other way and that be the cause then the excrements are white and not dyed at all with Choller and the skin of the child looks yellow The Prognosticks Children that are much bound in their bodies have seldom their health well and it is far better for youth to have their bellies loose then bound ill vapours arise from the excrements to the whole body and cause gripings of the belly pain of the head and many other distempers The cure First let the Mother or Nurse use a loosening dyet and such things as are mollifying And let them take also Manna Cassia or sirup of Roses or a little Hony in the morning If the child be of some reasonable growth then you may give it Manna or Cassia as from two drachmes to one ounce or if it be young you may give it half an ounce or one ounce of sirup of Roses Suppositories also made of Hony and Salt and put up into the body are good and safe or Violet comfits anointed with oyl and so used or Clisters may be given as take common oyl two three or four ounces of brown Sugar two or three drach the yolk of an egg Salt three or four corns make a Clyster and administer it Or Take of Marsh-mallowes half an ounce common Mallowes Pellitory of the Wall of each half a handful Cammomil flowers Linseed and Fenigreek bruised of each a drachme boyl them in sufficient water and take of the strained liquor three four or six ounces according to the age of the childe in which dissolve of Cassia two three or four drachmes common oyl one ounce or one ounce and a half with the yolk of an egg make a Clyster You may anoint the Navil of the childe with Butter or oyl of sweet Almonds either alone or mixed with a grain or two of Scammony or Coloquintida The Gall of an Ox or Cow laid upon a clout and so laid on the Navel causeth loosenesse or a plaister made with the gall of an Ox a rosted Onyon and Butter mixed together and applyed warm to the belly doth the same If you desire stronger means then take the juice of Walwort and Mildust boyl them together and apply them warm to the Navel CHAP. 19. Of Worms AMong all the diseases that are incident to children this of Worms is not the least There are