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A69832 Culpeper's directory for midwives: or, A guide for women. The second part. Discovering, 1. The diseases in the privities of women. 2. The diseases of the privie part. 3. The diseases of the womb ... 14. The diseases and symptoms in children. Culpeper, Nicholas, 1616-1654. 1651 (1651) Wing C7488; Wing C7497; ESTC R171645 150,923 300

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the org●ns of sense and motion with the liver spleen stomach belly mesentery bladder strait ●ut back hips arms and legs and causeth sym●toms As Galen ●aith the mother or hysterical ●●●●ion is one name but hath under it innume●●ble Symptoms Chap. 4. Of Suffocation of the Womb. IN this they seem to be strangled And there are so many Symptoms at once that it is impossible to define it by one Sometimes there is only short breath sometimes the animal actions are hurt the whole body is cold from a malignant vapor sent up from the womb The immediate Cause is a vapor malignant and venemous sent up by the arteries veins and nerves that hurt the actions of the parts it goes to This vapor is like air or wind thin and little but very strong to get presently through the whole body it chie●ly ascends to the gullet and causeth choaking as eating of Mushrooms Hellebore and other poysons There is often short difficult breathing with heart-ach vomiting and loathing If the vapor go first to the heart the motion of it ceaseth and there is swounding and she falls down If it go to the brain the animal actions are hurt When ●eed and terms corrupt in the womb with other bad humors they breed this evil vapor because they are the best substance and the beginning of generation they are worst when corrupted especially seed to hurt the whole body Somtimes it is in women with child when they have not their after pu●ging but evil humors a●e le●t and corrupt in the womb The chief cause of this humor is in the trumpet of the womb and stones the body of which is hollow and loose the stones being in bladders and have hollowness full of water which in hyst●rical women is yellow and thicker then ordinary This trumpet and the stones are often taken for the womb it self● when they are swollen with corrupt seed and humors and wind and reach to the navel of which in the Chapter of ascent of the Womb. This disease is breeding sooner or longer as the matter is more or less somtimes corrupt humo●s lie still and if they be stirred they send a venom or vapor to the whole body now in women subject to this disease sweet s●ents to the nose or taken in or anger will move these huhumors and vapors They are according to the variety of the symptoms and efficient cause or venemous humors for corrupt blood especially seed puts on another Nature That Suffocation is at hand it appears by laziness weakness of the legs paleness sad countenance and the motion of somthing like a ball in the belly with noise like Froggs Snakes or Crows so that some think it devillish There is also belching yawning yexing short wind heart-beating loathing dulness laughture at the coming of the fit ●rom the vapor g●tting into the membr●ne of the breast that tickle them some cry some both laugh and cry These Symptoms increase when the fit comes and the jaws are closed that she seems to be choaked and sense and motion is gone or depraved Some have Convulsions some h●ar what is done about them but cannot speak the ●ul●e i● less the whole body is cold and the eyes 〈◊〉 as if they were dead When the ●it declines humors s●ow from the ●riv●●i●s the gu●s rumble the eyes open the cheeks grow red and the body warm the animal actions return and the patient sighs and comes to her self It is known to be from corrupt seed if the terms are in order and short breath and low voice Suffocation and Convulsions and all Symptomes are then more vehement and at the end of the fit there flows a humor like seed out of the privities It is from the terms if they be stopt or flow not orderly and if there be a dis●ase in the womb it is neither from the seed no● the terms 1. If there come swounding or a great Convulsion or quenching of natural heat it is deadly 2. Suffocation from corrupt seed is more dangerous then that which is from the terms mixt with melancholick humors 3. The longer it lasts and the worse the symptoms the more is the danger It ceaseth in yong women when they begin to bear children 4. The oftner the fit comes the more you may ●ear the quenching of the natural heat by weakning of the heart often and if she foam at the mouth she dies The Cure of the Fit In the fit you must discuss the malignant vapors that riseth from the womb and turn it f●om the principal parts and you must evacuate the matter that breeds it and prevent its return Cal upon her loud pluck the hairs of her privities and ears make strong Ligatures and Frictions cup the legs and thighs and g●oyns hold stinks to the nose as Partridg-feathers burnt hairs Leather Horn Castor Assa foetida Galbanum oyl of Amber Rue the warts on Horses legs dried and the pouder upon coals burnt makes a ●ume which if taken in the nose suddenly raised them Apply sweet Scen●s to the privi●ies as Cive● Musk Gallia and Al●pta mos●hata or pouder of Cloves Or Take Storax calamita Benzoin each a dram Gallia moschata half a s●ruple make Tro●hes with Gum Tr●ganth and let the Fume be taken into the womb by a Funnel A Liniment Take Storax Benzoin each a dram Gallia moschata half a scruple Civet four grains liquid Storax half a scruple with Cotton put it into the womb Clysters to discuss wind draw down the matter Take the Carminative D●coction a pint Electuary of Hiera six drams Benedicta laxativa an ●●●ce Oyl of Rue and Bayberri●s each a dram Use Womb-clysters and Pessaries to women that have known man Take Electuary of Hiera and Diaphaenicon each two drams Turpentine half an ounce Honey of Mercury an ●unce Castor hal● a dram ●●th Wool make a Pessary Oyl of Tin applied to the navel doth remove the sit Or Rue Castor and sneesing Pouders As Take white Hellebore hal● a scruple long Pepper ●nd Ginger each half a dram or put Oyl of Am●●● into the Nose and E●rs Apply to the Womb this Take Oyl of Rue ●a●s each two oun●●s Cummin seed C●st●r dissol●●● in Vin●gar e●ch two drams with Wax make a 〈◊〉 Or use a ●l●●s●●r of ●●lb●num Ca●or and A●●a foetida A compound distilled Water Take Zedoary ●●smp s●●ds Lovage ●●●ts each two oun●●s Mirrh Castor each half an o●nce Piony roots four oun●●● Misteto of the Oak gathered in the wain of the Mo●n three ounces ad water of Motherwort four pin●s an● half Spirit of Wine a pint and half steep them eig●● daies distil and give a spoonful with Tile-flower or Mugwort water or Oyl of Amber some drops Or Take Castor Mirrh Assa faetida each a s●rupl●● Pepper half a scruple with syrup of Mugwort m●l● Pills give three The Cure out of the Fit First prevent the ●eed from corrupting in the womb and if it be corrupt evacuate it presen●●y
their shape the malignant are known by their hardness and heat and blewness fil●h and pain They are often hard to be cured because the pox is with them and they are in a place to which Medicines are hard to be applied and to continue The Myrmeciae are not cut off but they leave a great ulcer the Thymi and Clavi grow again Acrochordones once cut leave no root After Universals and order of diet either use Medicines or cut or burn them to discuss then use Sage dried with Figs Organ Rue burnt dry Savin Frankincense with Wine and Vinegar or Snakes skins with Figs these also dry These corrode eat and burn as juyce of wild Cowcumbers with Salt Milk of Figgs Sheeps dung Goats gall with Niter Aqua fortis Spirit of Vitriol Sulphur Butter of Antimony Take heed that you hurt not the parts adjacent but defend them with Bole sealed Earth Rosewater and Vinegar if you put the Corrosives into Nut-shells change them twice or thrice in a day and wash the part with a clensing Decoction and then cut or burn Chap. 7. Of the Haemorrhoids of the Womb. THe veins that end in the neck of the womb often swel like the Haemorrhoids it is from gross blood that comes to these veins out of the time of the terms Inordinate flux of terms may occasion it when t●●y slow out of the usual time they grow thick and cannot get out of the veins but swel them They are to be touched and with a Speculum matricis to be seen There is pain and bleeding without order she is pale and lazy Correct the blood purge and bleed in the arm to derive and revel of which in the diseases of the womb If pain be abate it by sitting in a Decoction of Mallows Althaea Chamomil M●lilot flowers Moulin Lineseed Foenugreek of which also make Fomentations and Oyntments with Butter Populeon and Opium if there be pain Take Populeon Oyl of Roses and sweet Almonds fresh Butter each half an ounce Saffron a s●●●ple with the yolk of an Egg make an Oyntment Or Take Mu●ilage of Quinces Althaea ea●h half an ounce Oyl of Roses and Hens gre●se each a dram the yolk of an Eg and Saffron half a dram mix them in a leaden Mortar If pain be gone or abated and they bleed not use Dryers of Bole Earth of Lemnos Acacia Ceruss froath of Silver Lead burnt and washed long Birthwort Allum Verdigreece If they swell with blood evaporate it or ●oment with the Decoction of Mallows Althaea Pellitory Chamomil flowers Moulin Melilot seeds of Line and Foenugre●k If they do not good open them by Fig leaves rub'd upon them or by Horsleeches of which Chap. 2. If there be proud flesh take it o●t as is shewed If they bleed gently l●t Nature alone to the work for it is good and ●rees from other diseases If the flux be g●eat and abate the strength open a vein in the arm divers times and do as in over slowing of the terms Question How do the Haemorrhoids differ from the Terms flowing or stopt Mercurialis saith That though a flux of terms be immod●rate yet it hath its periods and is without pain and makes not the body lean but it is contrary in the Haemorrhoids But this is not true for the body is not made lean alwaies by the Haemorrhoids nor do the courses keep their periods alwai●s Besides the pain which is almost alwaies in the Haemorrhoids they differ in that the terms flow from the veins of the womb and its neck but the Haemorrhoids are when the blood flows too much to the veins that nourish the privities and there either sticks or is evacuated Chap. 8. Of Ulcers in the Neck of the Womb. THey are seldome cured in the body of the womb and they are simple and clean or ●ordid and malignant Are a flux of sharp humors that lasts long in the Pox and Gonorrhaea Corrupt afterbirths and courses after child●earing detained inflammations turned to imposthui●es● these are the internal The external are sharp Medicines hard travail a reat child taken out by ●orce violent le●hery wounds falls strokes Are pain and constant biting that increaseth ●●●●cially in co●ulation or when Wine or Hydr●mel is injected You may also see it with a Speculum also there is matter gentle or ●ilthy if the ulcer go towards the bladder they piss hot and often there is pain in the roots of the eyes to the hands and fingers fainting and a little ●ever somtimes The external Causes are to be related by the patient If it be from the pox or Gonorrhaea the signs of them will appear of which Hippocrates They are hard to be cured because they are in a part fit to receive humors soft and moist and that hath consent with many parts Hence are divers Symptoms the great old and foul are worst when they corrode and are hollow they are seldome cured they that may easily have Medicines applied to them are easie●t cured First stop the flux of humors to the part if it be either from the whole body or any part And amend the distemper of the womb that it may neither breed nor receive bad humors If the French pox be with it resist that first If there be pain first abate that with Milk steeled or with three whites of Eggs and Mucilage of Fleabane or an Emulsion of Poppy seeds Or Take Althaea roots an ounce Dill seed two drams Barley a pugil Faenugreek and Lineseed each an ounce Fleabane and Poppy seed each half an ounce boyl them in Milk Of which in pain of the womb In a foul ulcer first use Clensers as Whey Barley water Honey Wormwood Smallage Orobus Orris Birthwort Mirrh Turpentine Allum As Take new Milk boyled a pint Honey half a pint Orris pouder half an ounce Use it hot often every day When that which was injected is voided wash with the decoction of Mallows and put up this Pessary Take Eruum and Lentils in pouder and Orris each two drams with Honey Or Take Diapompholigos with Frankincense Mastich Mirrh Aloes as the ulcer requires Or use Fumes As Take Frankincense Mastich Mirrh Storax Calamite Gum of Juniper Labdanum each an ounce make a Pouder or Troches with Turpentine If there be suspicion of the French pox add a little Cinnabar In a very foul ulcer and Aegyptiacum or Apostolorum or a little Spirit of Wine In a creeping corroding ulcer with clen●ers mix cold drying and astringent Medicines Allum water Plantane and Rose-water with Pomegranate flowers boyled and Pomegranate peels and Cypress-nuts is also good and with Aloes After clensing fill it with flesh and heal it up As Take Tutty washed half an ounce Litharge Ceruss Sarcocol each two drams with Oyl of Roses and Wax make an Oyntment Or smoak the privities with Mirrh Frankincense Gum or Juniper Labdanum two drams in pouder with Turpentine make Troches Or use Sulphur or Allum Baths and Plaisters
the body and it could not form the child 〈◊〉 would Nature make milk of it Therefore menstrual blood onely offends quantity and not in any mani●e●t or hidden q●lity But it hath strange qualities when it is 〈◊〉 with bad humors or is kept too long in body to be corrupted and cause great Sy●toms but this is when it is mix●● with bad mors or is out of its vessels and so corrupts Question 3. Of the ●ext of Aristotle 7. de hist Animalium c●p●● and how it is to be underst●od Aristotle writes thus Constantly every month ●ome have their Terms but most in the third as ●f he should say Few women have their courses ●very month but many have them every third ●onth This is against Galen and against expe●ience for it is certain that among six hundred women scarce one hath them every third month Therefore there is either an errour in the Greek Text or in the Translation or great Men do often 〈◊〉 which is probable and so did Arist tle in this of Physick Therefore it is in vain to defend their ●rrour Chap. 2. Of the Terms flowing too soon ORdinarily they begin at fourteen but many have had them sooner A child of ele●en daies old had a bloody humor flowing from 〈◊〉 privities Another of five years old had eve●y month a moderate flux Fernel reports that Girl of eight years old had the Terms but these 〈◊〉 rare and for the most part very lecherous 〈◊〉 short lived Chap. 3. Of want and stopping of the Terms SOme Women have them not till eighteen or twenty Some before and then they stop for a time without either giving suck or being with child Some have been without them three five or seven months and then they came agai● This is an evil constitution or suppression of th●● which it ought to flow from the fault of the blood and stoppage of the passages When Terms are wanting either blood is wanting o● stopt It is wanting either be●ause it i● not made or dispersed or turned to other use● for nature being more sollicito●s to preserve the individual person then to propagate the speci●s spends 〈◊〉 in preserving of the person Blood is not made from divers causes as a●e cold constitution of ●iver Heart or a disease which distempers the ●●wels Or often bleeding from great vessels or ●●om having many issues which take from the blood It is spent other waies as before ripe age an● when women are with child or give suck or i● hot Natures and fat women in whom it is tu●ned to fat It is in vain to provoke Terms i● these There are other external evident causes of s●●●ping of the Terms as too great labour trouble●●adness fear but these last do not only wast 〈◊〉 blood but cool and corrupt it and cause obs●●ctions as Hippocrates speaks of Phatusa the 〈◊〉 of Pytheus The proper causes are the straitness of 〈◊〉 passages or evil conformation of the 〈◊〉 through which it should slow Or the closin● the womb of which we spake but I speak 〈◊〉 of the ve●sels The usual cause of obs●●uction is thick 〈◊〉 humors f●om the blood too thi●k or mixed 〈◊〉 melancholy which comes with it to the vei●● the womb and stops them This thick blood comes from a cold distemper of the stomach liver and spleen from thick and gross food and drinking cold water when the Terms flow So thought Galen in his time of the Roman women that drank Snow-water● and had few or no courses● Straitness is when the body of the womb is made thicker either by Nature or other causes as a cold and dry or hot and dry diste●per Thirdly straitness is from compression of the vessels by a Scirrhus or hardness of the parts adjacent as the straight gut or by the stone in the bladder and the womb displaced Fourthly the flesh may grow together by a membrane that grows to the vessels or a ●●ar after a wound Or after a mischance when the veins annexed to the Secundine grow so together that they cannot be opened of which in the first Question They are not the same in women and Virgins for blood stopt in Virgins goes to and ●ro changeth the colour and brings Feavers especially the white Feaver or Green-sickness But in women it goes more to the womb and brings Symptomes as loathing vomiting and Pica Galen hath other signs as heaviness a lazy pain in the loyns neck and behind in the head that reacheth to the roots of the eyes from the sp●eading of the blood stopt through the whole body This laziness is chie●ly in the thighs and leggs by reason of the veins there consenting with the womb And are of a green complexion and hairy with a beard and shrill voice You may know women with child from such a● want their Terms only by p●●per signs First the women with child keep their colour but the other are pale and ill-c●loured they are merry the other sad 2. Their Symptoms daily grow milder but in the other they daily grow worse 3. You may feel the child move 4. It is perceived in a month You shall know from what causes the Terms are stopt thus If the Liver be cold there is no blood made that is superfluous and there are signs of a ●old Liver and you may know that blood is not sent to the womb when there is no heaviness pain or tumor about the womb the liver or spleen are stopt If it be ●rom flegm or melancholy which is o●ten there are signs of their abounding as laz●ness paleness seldom pulse crude urin Hippocrates saith That if the Terms stop ther● are diseases in the womb tumors imposthumes ulcers and barrenness and diseases in the whole body Green-sickness Leucophlegmacy Dropsie Vomiting of blood Heart-ach Cough And the longer they have been stopt the ha●der they are to be opened If the blood stop● go out at the nose it is good If it have great Symptomes there is fear of death You must not give Medicines to move the Terms to extenuate lean persons nor to such as want blood and have a weak Liver but they must be sed high First see i● blo●d abound and then a●ter a Leni●ive open a vein● and l●t that blood which is in the veins be drawn to the womb Gal●● took th●ee ●ints of blood at three times f●om 〈◊〉 le●n wom●n and cured her of an old stopping 〈◊〉 the Terms You must open the ankle vein● the fir●t day the right the next the left four or five daies before the time Or you may cup and ●●ari●ie the Leggs And bind the parts below and rub them after general evacuation opening of the Haemorrhoids doth hurt and so do Issues because they draw from the womb Hiera picra hal● an ounce or Pills de T●ibus o● Hiera simple are good first Then prepare as Take water of Mugwort 〈◊〉 Maidenhair ●a●h three ●u●ces Syrup o●●he five Roots and of Mugwort each two ounces ma●e
with proper things as we shewed in the distempers of the Womb. But take heed that you move not the Terms when you attenuate for that wil melt the ●erous humors and fix them more in the vessels use neither Vinegar no● sharp things After purging consume the reliques by sweat if choler be in fault that must not be sweated out discuss it with warm Baths and do so in melancholy Use Pessaries Fomentations and Fumes to the womb Give Treacle Mithridate or the Decoction of An●elica roots if cold humors are the cause Chap. 9. Of Terms coming before their time THese shew an ill constitution And it is a depraved excretion of the Terms that comes for the time often f●r somtimes they fl●w sooner or twice in a month The immediate Cause is hurt of the retentive and expul●ive faculty so that the blood flows not or sooner or late● or oftner the cause why they come sooner is in the blood that stirs●up the expulsive faculty in the whole body or in the womb somtimes all causes meet the blood is too much or too sharp and hot and if the retentive faculty in the womb be weak and the expulsive strong● and of quick sense it is sooner A fall stroke or passion are the evident Causes They will relate it and the signs of the causes are these If it be from much blood there are the signs of plethory heat thinness and sharp humors are known by the distemper of the whole The weakness of the retentive faculty and loosness of the vessels is known from a loose and moist habit of body It is not dangerous but troublesom and hinders conception I● they come too soon from hurt in the faculty provoked by too much plethory Let blood use a spare diet and much exercise If it be from sharp blood temper it by good diet and Medicines as in the choleri●k distemper of the womb Use Baths of Iron-water that corrects the distempers of the bowels then evacuate If it come from the retentive faculty and loosness of the vessels correct the cold and moist distem●er with gentle astringents I● it be from a stroke or fall cu●e it as the vessels opened are cured of which before Chap. 10. Of Terms that come after their usual time VVHen they stay longer then ordinary and return without order at no set time the causes are little and thick blood straitness of the passages weakness of the expulsive faculty and dulness Either of these causes may stop the Terms bu● if all meet the disease is worse For if blood be not bred in such a quantity that it may prick Nature forward to expel it the purging of it is di●●ered till there be enough to stir up Nature to expel it If thi●k humors are in the blood the passages stopt and the faculty weak the Terms mu●t needs be disordered and the purging of them differed longer If it be from want of blood she hath either lived poor in diet or exercised too much and she ●inds no inconvenience by the want of her Terms If it be from gross slimy blood there are signs of Cacochymy The weakness of the faculty is known by the cold distemper of the womb It is not so dangerous as stoppage of the terms but it is bad enough in a plethorick or cacochymical body If little blood be use a ●uller diet and exercise not If blood be gross and foul make it thin and cut it and after Preparatives let the humors mixed therewith be evacuated It is good to purge presently after the Terms and to use Calamints and to purge often Also four or five daies before the Terms sca●i●●e the ankles and hold the feet in warm wa●●● ●ub the legs apply Cupp●ng-glasses without S●●●ification to the inside of the thighs and use Fumes and Pessaries Anoin● the bottom of the belly with things to provoke the Terms If there be a numness use things against the Palsie Chap. 11. Of the Terms voided another way SOmetimes they come out at the nose or are vomited up or flow out by the Haemorrhoid veins Hence Hippocrates saith that a woman that vomits blood is cured by having her t●rms or by a bloody flux Somtimes they are pissed ●orth Dodon●eus saies that they come out at the eyes like tears somtimes Ama●us Lusitanus saith they will come forth at the Teats of the breasts and at the navel at the little finger or ring-●inger every month as Mercat●s observed thrice Are stoppage of the Terms from straitness of the vessels in the womb or evil conformation of the womb It is more troublesom then dangerous and hinders conception It is best when they come out at the nose for it is a part that Nature useth to disburden her self by First bring the blood to the womb again and abate it Open the ankle-vein three daies before she begins to bleed Or cup the thighs or rub them Or use Baths Fomentations Oyntments Womb-clysters Pessaries and the like mentioned in Suppression of the Terms Chap. 12. Of the Whites IT is a ●oul excretion from the womb white and somtimes blew or green or reddish no at a set time nor every month but disorderly longer or shorter Before or after the Terms and when they are stopt Virgins seldom have this disease and women with child have it somtimes It differs from the running of the reins for it is in less quantity whiter and thicker and at a greater distance It differs from night pollution which is onely in sleep with imagination of Venery The immediate Cause is an excrementitious humor flegm choler or melancholy Somtimes it is like waterish blood It is gathered in the whole body or in the stomach liver or spleen For they who have crudities in the stomach are subject to this disease Somtimes the womb alone is distempered after often mischances or when the womb is very cold and moist This matter flows through the veins of the womb or of the neck of it which use to carry blood and Nature abuseth them to carry excrements especially if they are bred in the womb The remote causes are whatsoever doth breed ●ad humors some have it after strong purges or long bathing Somtimes they are pale somtimes blew red waterish and green somtimes slimy or cold or sharp or stinking In young people it is reddish The face is discoloured the urin thick there is loathing and heartach If the humor be sharp and corrupt there is a Feaver If it be flegmatick and much the ligaments of the womb are loose and it falls out thus Hippocrates and there are saith he swelled eyes evil colour and short breathing If it be not bred in the womb the humor is from a Cacochymy If it be from a fault in another part the signs of that wil appear If it come only from the womb there will be but little if from the whole body there will be more It is often long
because ●e brain is not so shaken as to cause ●oaming ●or is the vapor so fixed in the roots of the ner●es but they often do hear It is grievous and hath grievous Sym●toms ●ut it is not so bad as a true Epilepsie and if you ●ve proper Medicines it never returns The Cure of the Fit Use things as in Suffocation of the womb or ●ther-sits as Rue and Castor are good against 〈◊〉 Also out of the sit you must cure it as the Mo●● using things that respect the womb and the 〈◊〉 As● Take Piony roots S●orzonera Misle●● t●● O●k each half an ounce Polyp●dy of the 〈◊〉 an oun●e Rue Pennyroyal Calamint● each a 〈◊〉 Seseli Pion● Agnus castus seeds each ●●dram● Carthamus s●eds br●ised half an ounce 〈◊〉 of Rosemary S●ge S●aehas Borage e●ch two pugils boyl them to a pin● and half strain and ad● juyce of Bettony Yarrow Mercury Mug●●rt S●n●a five ounces Agarick Epithymum each half an ounce Rhubarb Cloves each two drams Ani●●● I ●nnel s●ed each three drams boyl strain with S●gar and half an ounce of Cinnamon make Syrup give two ounces And these Pills twice in a week a scruple o●● dram an hour afore Supper Take Piony ro●●● Senna each half an ounce Mugwort Botto●● Rue Yarrow each half a handful● boyl them cl●rifie the Decoction add juyce of Mercury an ounce Aloes an ounce and half let it settle pour of the clea● add Rhubarb sprinkled with Cinnamon water 〈◊〉 drams Agarick half an ounce Mastich Epil●p●● pouder each half a dram with Syrup of Mugw●● make Pills To strengthen the Head and the Womb and to mend its Distemper Take Fecula o● Pim●● dram of Briony Amber Misleto of the Oak e●●● half a dram Bezoar stone Mans s●ull each a s●r●ple make a pouder give half a dram with Scorzon●● or Tile flower water or with Sugar make Rouls An ●lectuary Take Conserve of Balm Ti● fl●wers Rosemary● Lilly co●vals Scorzonera 〈◊〉 ●an●ied each an ounce Diamosch● dulce a dra● pouder of Agnus castus seeds and Piony ro●ts 〈◊〉 two drams with Syrup of St●●has Chap. 8. Of pain of the He●● from the Womb. MAny ●●ins come from the Wom● bu● 〈◊〉 chief and greatest are in th● Head ●●●ver or on one side o● in the eyes Matter ascends to the membranes of the head by the veins and arteries from the womb It is a ●●po● or humor from blood and humors somtimes bad blood that is thin goes from the womb vessels to the great vessels and gets to the head t● the membranes there and causeth a stretching ulce●ated or pricking or beating pain when it is carried through the arteries being ●ul of blood They think their head will be torn and the membranes and it is behind in the head or when the terms flow or ar● disordered from consent with the womb If it be from a vapor there is no h●●viness and it ceaseth presently if from a humo● there is heaviness Thes● pa●●s are great and cause wa●ching We have spoken of the headach but here it is ●●om the womb therefore consider what humo●● offend in the womb and let them be purged and the distemper of the womb amended as w● shewed in the Distemper of the Womb. There is also a pain in the loyns because bad h●mors go from the veins of the womb and arte●ies to the great vessels and so are sent by the ●●pill●● veins into the membranes and stretch them and cause pain these humors must have ●●●per Purges ●●●stion In what part of the Head is the pain that comes by consent from the Womb I● i● in the crown before and behind but chiefly ●ehind by reason of the joyning of the Back with the womb for the womb is nervous and ●o●s●nts ●ith the membranes of the brain by the membranes of the ●arrow of the ●ack and so ●erves ●uff●●●ith n●rves ●i●her by communi●●tion of matter or pain and because the original of the nerves is in the hinder part of the head women are more pained there then men because of the Womb. Chap. 9. Of the Diseases of the Heart and beating of the Arteries in the Back and sides from the Womb. THe heart beats and the arteries also as we shewed in the Green-sickness and it is by ●●il v●pors s●nt by the ●●teries to the hea●t from the womb that a●ise from terms and evil hum●●● gathered in the womb and this is known by ●ther Signs and Symptomes of a distempered womb To discuss the malignant vapors from the heart give Cordials as in Chap. 3. of palpi●●tion of the Heart as Aqua vitae Cinnamenwater and Epithems Baggs and Liniments The arteries also beat with the heart as i● Widdows on the lef● Hypochondrion and Bac● where there is a great artery and the artery th●● beats in the Back is part of the great artery they which beat in the Hypochondrion are the lesse● spleniti●k and mesenterick branches therefo●e the beating is mo●e in the Back then in the Hypochondrion but both puls●tions come fro● the same cause The inflammation of the a●teries is the Cause of this beating when evil humors are sent fr●● the womb i●to the great branches of the arte●●● and there b●●t● the heart being over-hot Somtimes the motion of this artery is all the body over and from a hot humor the hot humors go to the heart and cause a feaver but because there is little putrefaction it vanisheth presently If the heat of the humors go to the brain by the arte●ies there is madness Some seek the cause in the v●ins and say that the arteries suffer from the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them You m●y feel it wi●h your hand laid upon the Hypochondrion and there are signs of a distempered womb and melancholy from the womb if heat continue in the arteries and go to the whole ●ody it consumeth it It is seemingly a small disease but it is not ●ithout danger because it comes from a bad cause that weakens the bowels It is cured as melancholy from the womb and ●●opping of the terms and as Hypochondriack melancholy from the womb which follows Chap. 10. Of the Diseases of the Spleen and the Hypochondriack Disease from the Womb. SOmtimes the Spleen and the Hypochondria suffer from the womb so that you may doubt ●hat disease it is 〈◊〉 from the womb by the arteries the womb 〈…〉 one from the preparing arteries 〈◊〉 from the Hypogastrick a●t●ry That from 〈…〉 goes almost to all parts of the 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 branches of the spleen there 〈…〉 b●● blood is ●●ed in the womb and 〈…〉 ●pwa●d to the 〈…〉 g●●● eas●●y from thenc● to the 〈…〉 ●●d t● the s●leen and the parts adjacent in the abdomen and the sooner 〈◊〉 Nature useth to send bad humors to ign●●●● parts These humors are gathered by suppre●●i●● of terms which though they seem to be onel● 〈◊〉 the veins yet they get to the arteries by their Anastomosis Therefore those women that ●av●
it seems to fall rather then be expelled and the bones of the privities must needs be divided That which follows the birth is above humane capa●ity namely the transmutation of the navel vessels and lungs and heart in the infant and why Nature ordered it of which Galen elegantl● in the 15. Book of the Use of Parts and 6. Chapter There is also a legitimate birth when it is acco●ding to the Law of Nature and an illegitimate when it is before or after the time Hippocra●es saith that a birth in the seventh month is vital and legitimate And it is sooner f●om the strength of the faculty and matter ●it for formation yet it is commonly weak except the ●eventh month be compleat Of the eighth month Hippocrates ●aith thus None live● that is born in the eighth month because i● cannot bear the two affliction● to follow but the reason of the Arithmeticians is better that say an even month is imper●ect The ninth and tenth month are the best as Hi●p●crate● ●aith A child is born in ten months at t●e f●rthest and so ●aies the wisest Salomon Some say that a child may ●e born in the eleventh month and Peter Apponensis was so born and some say they have been born in the fourteenth and fifteenth month but rare things are not to be counted the Law of Nature Generally Physitians agree with Hippocrates though some dissent Chap. 2. Of Abortion IT is the exclusion of a child not perfect nor living before legitimate time This time is defined by Hippocra●es Whosoever conceiveth doth it within seven daies but they are properly abortions that come before the seventh day and though some are in the fifth and sixth month that have lived y●t that must not d●rogate from the common Law of Nature Some differences of Abortion are from the time and bigness of the child For that which is cast out is little and round without distinction of members at first like a Grape Somtimes as long as a ●inger and members may be distinguished And somtimes the child is almost perfect The immediate Cause is the expulsive faculty sti●red up and that is done by three means from Galen from the weight bigne●s and pain There are more causes which we shal place in two Ranks The first is of the manner of the causes that provoke the expulsive faculty The other is that which ●indeth out these waies by all the causes The expulsive f●culty is first provoked by the child being weak either from evil seed or being dead The child is weak for want of food and from the mothers diseases either in her whole body or in the womb or parts adjacent that consent as Feavers Inflammations Fainting Convulsions Pain Vomiting Neesing Cough that move the Spirits and humors● and shake the child and stir up Nature to expel it Also straitness of the womb causeth Abortion by which means it cannot contain a great child Al●o shortness of the navel-vessels which Fabricius first observed The outward Causes are cold air after hot and moist which gets into the womb and provokes it and hu●ts the child The Astrologers add the malignant aspects of the Stars also too much or too little meat Great watchings purging and flux of blood by the womb and Haemorrhoids Also violent motion as leaping carrying of burdens strokes on the belly or ba●k Also passions as anger fear sorrow Also bleeding purging fasting ●mel of brims●one or ashes hoofs burnt or stink of the snu●● of a candle If the breasts be less or much milk flow from them or she feel much and often pain about th● belly or loyns that go to the Pubes and Os sac●um with a de●ire of thrusting forth in the womb If the child change its place and if it f●l lower when it was in the middle of the belly there is fear of miscarr●ing It is dangerous alwa●●s because it is with violence there are also great Symptoms they are in l●●s danger that have already brought forth a ●hild ●●●refore the ●irst is most danger●us and 〈◊〉 mou●●s of the vessels ar● to●n and they commonl● become barren Abortion is mo●t dange●o●s in the sixth seventh and eighth month be●●●se th● in●ant being ●●eater ●●useth greater pain and breaks the Ligaments worse To preserve from Abortion Consider the constitution before she is with child and prevent every cause If it be like to come from Plethory before Conception open a vein and after Conception in the fourth or ●i●th month in the arm I● it be from Cacochymy purge the whole body and purge the womb with Pessaries and streng●hen it of which in the cold and moist distemper of the Womb If she have conceived open a vein before the time she used to abort i● there Cacochymy purge gently at times If there be a cold distemper of body by flegm that hurts the womb give the d●coction of China or Sar●a with strengtheners of the child Avoid the external Causes of Abortion and if they have done hur● help it presently L●t n●t the belly be bound if the child be weak ●●move the causes of weakness and strengthen i●● Use things that strengthen the womb and child as Coral as Kermes-berries Or Take Magistery of Coral a dram Pearl p●●pared half a dram Ivory shaved a dram Ma●●i●● half a dram grains of Kermes a dram Manus ●●risti with Pearl two drams make a Pouder I● th● Abortion be at hand and the pains increase give this Pouder with a rear Eg Or Take Con●●r●● of red Roses two drams red Coral a●● Ma●●i●h ●●●h a scruple give i● presently Use the ●ounte●●es Oy●tment outwardly to the Loyns R●ins P●c●●n and Perinaeum Or Take Oyl of Roses Mirt●es Ma●●i●h Q●inces ea●● two ounces Oyl of Mints an ounce Bdellium 〈◊〉 in Vinegar liquid Storax each two ounces Oyl of Nutmegs by expression a dram with Wax make an Oyntment Of the same with Pitch Rosin Colophony you may make P●aisters Let her hold a Loadstone in her hand or tie it to her navel or wear an Eagle stone under her arm-pits or Coral Jaspar Smaragds Diamonds If these will not keep the child up you must give over A●●ringents and use Leni●ives Question Whether the straitness of the Womb is the Cause of Abortion Hippocrates 1. de morb saith That the Womb may cause Abortion if they be windy thic● great 〈◊〉 little and he shews in another place that Abortion may be from the straitn●ss of the womb And in another place he saith I● a woman in the third ●ourth or fifth m●nth mi●●arry often a●● at the s●me time it is because the womb wil not stretch And Galen confirms the same and i● st●nds to reason for natural birth is when the womb cannot contain the child for its growth Th●r●for● i● it be ●●eternaturally too little it i● the cause o● Mor●●on And though N●ture hath made the womb ●o hold the child yet i● i● be not made large enough it cannot ●●ntain
have Symptomatical ●eavers also from in●●ammation of the Pleura Jaws or Liver because some of the ●oul humors are sent to some private part and makes an inflamation to which the ●eaver is joyned and the causes are as before mentioned If there be a Pleuri●ie she is in great danger The question is whether she must bleed above or below I say thus First this ●eaver is not properly Symptomatical but primary and hath the inflammation its associate while Nature sends part of the matter to the Pleura or other part Secondly note that Nature is in an er●or while she sends the vitious humors which she should expel by the womb to the Pleura Thirdly note that the vitious mo●ion of Nature is not to be helped therefore which should be done if you should presently open a vein in the arm but the blood is to be voided by the womb which is Natures way Fourthly i● the Pleuri●ie be not abated by o●ening a vein in the a●kle for revulsion but the Symp●oms continue or increase you must not continue to open the veins beneath because they evacuate not from the part affected which is ne●ess●ry in such a dangerous disease It is a sign that the matter is fastned to the part that it cannot again be brought to the womb by revulsion Therefore then you may open a vein in the arm on the same side to evacuate and derive the blood from the part or there about or she will be in danger of death And fear not that Nature will be taken from her ordinary motion towards the womb thereby for the vein that was opened in the foot prevented that and if you fear any danger you may prevent it by Frictions and cupping of the leggs while you let blood in the arm And you may give Clysters that may cause the humors moving upwards to come down and loosen the passages of the womb that blood may flow out the better As Take Pellitory of the Wall Mallows Althaea red Coleworts each a handful Chamomil●●owers half a handful Faenugreek and Linseed each half an ounce boyl them in Water to a pint strained add lenitive Electuary an ounce Diacatholicon or Cassia half an ounce Oyl of Violets two ounces make a Clyster If the Feaver abate and the time of the flux of the Lochia be past give a gentle Purge Cure the rest as an ordinary Pleurisie onely take heed that while the after-flux lasts you give no binding Medicine Also she may have a Quinzie while she lies in while the vitious matter flows to the jaws The ●ure of which bleeding is to be done as in the Pleuris●e but the rest is to be done as in the Quin●●ie And if the Liver be inflamed by the motion of the humors to it you must bleed as in the Pleurisie and Quinzie Yet it is not so needful in the arm as in the Pleuri●ie by reason of the greater distance of the Liver from the arm for the Pleura and the breast are nearer and consent more with the arms but the vein in the leg● is near to the hollow vein as the distribution of the upper veins to the arms The rest of the Cure of the inflammation ●f the Liver is in Lib. 3. onely observe that you must not use too great Coolers or Binders in women in Child-bed but things that are of thin parts least the flux called Lochia or after-blood should be stopped THE FOURTH BOOK THE THIRD PART Of the Diseases of Womens Breasts THE FIRST SECTION Of Diseases of the Breasts Chap. 1. Of the increased number of Breasts and gr●atness extraordinary THOUGH Nature hath ordained two in all women yet some have Breasts like men others have had two on each side that had milk The figure of the Breasts is round pointed at the nipple a little it ought not to be soft nor hard and of an indifferent bigness and it is better they be indifferent though th●y hold not so much milk least they be subject to C●n●ers and in●lammations and when they are too big they have not a temperate heat The Causes of over-great Breasts is much blood and the ●●●ength of heat attracting and ●onco●ting it these are remote causes but the immedi●te cause is the la●geness of the passages and loosness which is in the first conformation and furthered by idl●ness much sleep and few terms and often handling of the Breasts by whi●h the blood and the heat is drawn to the Breasts It is easier to keep them from growing great then to abate them when too big with good diet and Topicks that repel by cooling and binding and drying As Take Mirtle leaves● Horstayl Plantane Mints red Roses each a handful Pomegranate flowers two pugil● boyl them in red Wine and Vinegar and with a Spunge apply it to the breasts● and let it dry or apply Hemlo●k bruised with Vinegar Or Take pouder of Com●r●●roots two drams Pom●granate flowers red R●●●s Frankincense Mastich each half an ounce ●●●ley ●●our red Oakre each an ounce and half with Rose-wat●● the white of an E● and ● little Vineg●r make a Cataplasme These may be laid to the Breasts and under the arm-pi●s to astringe the vessels and hinder the blood from flowing to them Hemlock Henbane and other Narcoticks are forbidden because they weaken the natural heat and hinder the breeding of milk Dryers and Discussers are good in women t●at have great Breasts after weaning to consume the moisture As Take Bean and Orobus meal each tw● ounces and half Com●rey roots in pouder half an ounce Mints three drams Wormwood Chamomil fl●wers an● Roses ea●h two drams boyl and add two ounces of Oyl of Mastich make a Cata●lasme The Breasts are too little when the flux of blood to the Breasts is hindered diminished intercepted revelled or turned another way or when the blood is not drawn by the Breasts as in a dry Liver-famine much labour or in watchings feavers and other diseases that consume the body The same is when the radical moisture of the Breasts is con●umed You must remove the cause that breeds it and ●●ten friction wil attract blood and foment with warm water in which Emollients have been boyl●d with white Wine and then anoint with Oyl of sweet Almonds or of Indian-nuts Loosness of the Breasts is cured by astringents Chap. 2. Of Swelling of the Breasts with Milk VVHen the milk carrying veins are too full the Breasts swell all over or in ●a●● and are pained by stretching and red Som●●●es the milk congeal●th and is a hard Tu●●● ●h● cause is abundance of milk or blood that ●●kes it or the weakness of the child that cannot ●u●k o● because he is weaned I● o●t●n ●●●seth without remedies Somtimes 〈◊〉 is an in●●●mmation or the milk hardens to a 〈◊〉 You must hinder the breeding of much milk of which hereafter and consume that which is bred in women that give suck the child will draw them or a Puppy Or use a Glass to su●k with they which wil not give
Oyl of Roses Mastich each half an ounce red Sander● Coral each a scruple with Wax mix it If the feaver come from breeding of it abate the pain and give the Alterers of which Chap. 14. of Bleeding of Teeth Of Meazles and small Pox. There are Epidemical feavers at certain times that cast out Meazles and small Pox of whic● before The cause is not only from the impurity of the terms but from the malignity of the air for they are more or less as the air is purer or impurer Somtimes it is infectious and the humors are so co●rupt that worms breed under the scabs and corrode the bones and internal parts as hath been seen in bodies opened dead of this disease If the disease be very infectious before there is a ●eaver it is good to preserve by change of air and Antidotes when many die of it but when few die it is not amiss to let them alone lea●● they have it in a more dangerous time for most will have it only give a gentle Purge and ●ortifie Nature that she may better expel them If there be a ●eaver use no more Preservatives ●ut labour to get them forth by Medicines mentioned and defend the eyes and throat and ●●event deformity of which before Chap. 3. Of the Milkey Scab Achores and Favi THe milkey Scab is at the first sucking the Acho●es are after The Achores are scabs not white and the white scab is not only in the face but all over the body The Achores are only in the head but they are cured alike They are all ulcers chiefly in the head with hol●s that run with matter constantly They come from excrementitious humors waterish and sharp mixed of thick and thin very ●alt Therefore they are sometimes yellow or white or red or black but alwaies salt and bi●ing and itching that makes them scratch They are g●thered in the womb and from corruption of the milk The Vulgar think they are healthful when they run because Nature sends them forth and if they strike in they cause diseases and Epilep●ies They cure in time ●f themselves but if the matter be very bad it pierceth the skull Dry these not rashly so they disfigure not the ●●c● nor hurt the eyes But drive them forth with ●●abious C●rduus water and Cordials Use no Coolers nor Astringents least the matter be stroke in Let the Nurse forbear salt and sharp ●nd spiced things and strong Wine Pepare the humors with Borage S●●●ory Buglo●s Fumit●●y Hops Polypody and Dock roots Then purge with Senna Polypody Epithymum Rhu●●●b and strengthen th● Bowels As Take Conserve of Borage Bugloss Violets Fumit●ry Succory each an ounce Succory roots and Citrons candied each half an ounce Diarrhodon Diamargartion ●rigid Harts-horn each a s●ruple with 〈◊〉 o●● G●●●i-●●o●●rs mak● an Electuary Let the Nurse take every day two drams Or Take Harts-horn prepared two drams Mag●stery of Coral a dram Diamargariton frigid half a dram give half a dram or a dram of this Pouder Let the child be purged with Manna or Raisons laxative If you fear great putrefaction under the scabs and that wil turn to a scald head or eat the skul wash the head with Decoction of Mallows Barley Celandine Wormwood or with Althaea-roots boyled in Boyes urine and Barley water And then anoint with Oyl of Roses bitter Almonds and a little Litharge Or Take ashes of Mirtles and Nut shells each a dram Tutty a dram and half Butter washed with Rose-water an ounce Or Take juyce of Beets Celandine each an ounce Hogs grease two ounces Sulphur a dram Or Take Cer●ss Litharge each two drams Pomegranate flowers and Agarick e●ch a dram with Oyl of Roses and Vinegar make an Oyntment or wash with Soap and then with the Decoction When the skull is bare use Honey of Roses and Spirit of Wine and after round Birthwort and Balsom of Peru and Turpentine with Tobacco water Chap. 4. Of a scald Head IF Achores or Favi last long or are ill cured They turn to a Scald which is a scabby ulcer that corrodes the skin and stinks it is called Tin●a or Moth which eats garments● as this doth the flesh Achores are moist ulcers in the head and body Tinea is a dry ulcer in the head only The immediate cause is a salt and sharp humor melancholick from the mothers blood or bad milk it infecteth others by the clouts or caps Some are like a bran or scurfe with scales some are slimy and when the scab is off there appears red quick nobs of flesh like the insides of sigs some are malignant some not some new some old There are dry scabs in the head yellow or ash coloured that run little and that which is voided stinketh It is hard to be cured If it be new or the matter yellow or the like it is easier An old Scald ash-coloured and black is stubborn a●t●r cure the hair will scarce grow there again because the skin is so hard if it will not grow red after rubbing there is no hopes of hair coming again First take off the Scab with ●lensers a little sharp and because the humors make the skin dry and thick moisten with Hogs grease upon Beet or Colewort leaves Or Take juyce of Fumitory Coleworts Docks Elicamp●ne each an ●unce and half Litharge half an ounce with Hogs grease oyl of Rue and Wax make a sof● Oymment When the Child is of age and strong make first universal ev●●uation with Senna Rhubarb Agarick then take off the Scab with Sulphur two drams Mustard half a drain Stavisacre Briony roots each a dram Vinegar an ounce Turpentine half an ounce and Bears grease Or beat Watercresses with Hogs g●ease and apply it the scab wil fall off in twenty four hours continue it After the scab is off pull the hair out by the roots with instruments or medicines commonly they use a pitched cap and pull it off violently which brings away the hair Or Take Starch or Wheat flour two ounces Rosin half an ounce boyl it in water for a Pultis lay it upon the several S●ald● and let it stick some daies then pluck it off suddenly Then use Emollients that correct the dry distemper Also use things to take the excrements out that lie deep in the skin As Take roots of Althaea Docks Lillies each an ounce Mallows Fumitory Sage each two handful boyl them in Li● add Vinegar wash the head with it every day Then● Take Ostratium Sulphur each half an ounce oyl of Eggs an ounce with Hogs grease After that Take Briony and Dock roots and Elicampan● roots each an ounce Fumitory Celandine Scabious each two handful Chamomil and Balm each a handful boyl them in Lie and wash the head twice a day therewith● or foment it then rub the head with a course cloth or with oyl of Staphesacre or of Raddish till it grow red to draw out the bad humors that lie deep
feaver with horror all over the body then the colour changeth in the part it is black and blew without pulse or sense when i● is cut or pricked it stinks and the strength decayes and the heart faints It is very dangerous and worse when it goes to the womb then outwards Some have had the womb fall out and have lived which besides grave Histories We saw at Avinion in an old Noble woman Anno 1635. Stop the pu●re●action take away that which is rotten by s●arifying if you can then wash with the De●●ction of Wormwood Lupin●s and with Aegyptiacum and apply this Cataplasm Take O●●bus and Beanflower ●ach two ●un●es O●ym●● a pint boyl them add Lupine● Wormwood and Mirrh Cut off the dead flesh strengthen the principal parts the heart le●st the Spirits be infected with evil vapors that ●●ie up by the arteries Give Conserve of Borage Bugloss Gilliflowers Diamargariton ●rigid Electuary of Gems frigid Confection of Hyacinths● Syrup of Sorrel ●omegranates Borage and appl● Epithems to the heart Vuierus cured a Noble woman aged twenty five she had a pustle in her privities in the Dog-daies from violent Lechery with her Husband and she used a Cataplasm from a sill● Chirurgion and in a few daies it rotted grew black and mortified and went towards the fundament very fast THE FOURTH BOOK THE SECOND SECTION Of the Diseases of the Womb. Chap. 1. Of the Knowledg of the Temper of the Womb. MARK Anthony Vlmus Physitian of Bononia shews the temper of the womb he saith that a beard in women shews that they have a hot womb and hot stones it comes with the beginning of the terms and when the breasts swell and is hard to be seen Aristotle saith That some women have hairs in their chin when their courses stop and when they have a hot womb and stones But there are more certain signs of heat 1. When hard hair comes ●orth suddenly thick black and long and large about if they come forth slow thin soft yellowish and but few not spreading the womb is cold Also when the ter●s come forth at twelve years of age it is a ●ign of a hot womb and when they last long the blood is red hot but not very much In an old constitution they come later and the blood is cold and waterish and they end sooner If it be hot and moist they flow plentifully and last till after fifty If it be hot and dry the blood is yellow thin and sharp and pricks the privities If it be cold and moist the blood comes late forth with difficulty and it is whitish and thin If it be cold and dry the terms come forth very late and with difficulty and seldom continue till forty and the blood is thick and little The third sign is from Lechery for they who have hot wombs desire copulation ●ooner and more vehemently and are much delighted th●rwith They who are cold do the contrary The hot and moist are not tired with much Venery The hot and dry have great lust and a Frenzie if they want it but they are quickly ●ired because there are but few Spirits If it be cold and moist they are not soon lecherous and are ●asily satisfied and if they miscarry often the womb is made colder and they delight not in the sport but copulation doth them good and makes them more youthful If it be cold and dry they desire not a man in a long time and take no delight because the Spirits are few The fourth sign is from often conception for the hot conceive often and bring forth males or Viragoe's if the seed of the man agree with it The cold doth the contrary A hot and moist womb is very fruitful if the man be wel tempered and though he be old and weak yet she will conceive by him sometimes they have twins or over do and have a mole Hot and dry are fruitful but not so much as the former Cold and moist are hard to conceive especially when they are in years when they are yong and the seed of the man is hot and dry they conceive males but seldom wel shaped or healthful and the woman while she is with child is sickly A cold and dry womb is commonly barren and if they conceive the mans seed is hot and moist they bring forth ●emales and if males they are tall and quickly look old Chap. 2. Of the hot Distemper of the Womb. HEat of the womb is necessary for conception but if it be too much it nourisheth not the seed of the man but disperseth its heat and hinders the conception This preternatural heat is from the birth somtimes and makes them barren if afterwards it is from hot causes that bring the heat and the blood to the womb from internal and external Medicines too much hot meats and drinks and exercise They are prone to lu●t have few courses yellow or black or burnt or sharp they have hairs betimes upon their privities they are subject to the headach and there are signs of much choler their lips are dry When this distemper is strong they have few terms and out of order they are ●ad and hard to flow and in time they are H●p●●●ondria●ks and for the most part barren and ●here is somtimes a Frenzie of the womb Use Coolers so that they offend not the vessels that must be open for the flux of the terms Therefore Use inwardly Succory Endive Violets Waterlillies Sorrel Lettice Sanders and Syrups and Conserves made thereof As Take Conserve of Succory Violets Waterlillies Borage each an ounce Conserve of Roses half an ounce Diamargariton frigid Diatrionsantalon each half a dram with Syrup of Viole●s or juyce of Citrons make an Electuary Outwardly use Oyntment of Galens Cooler Oyntment of Roses● Cerot of Sanders Oyl of Roses Violets Waterlillies Gourds Venus navel to the back and loyns or make Cataplas●s of Barley meal Roses poudered Violets Water-lillies Sanders with juyce or water of Plantane Waterlillies Succory Lettice Oyl of Roses Violets Waterlillies Baths are good to sit in and cooling ●omentations and after let her take some of the Coolers mentioned In great heat use this cooling Pessary Take Opium a s●ruple Goose grease two scruples Wax and Honey each four scruples Oyl an ounce whites of two Eggs. This was from an opinion the Ancients had that Opium was cold but take heed of the using it too much least the narcoti●k quality hurt Let the air be cool her garments thin let her meat be with Lettice Endive Succory Barley give no hot mea●s nor strong Wine except it be wat●●ish and thi● rest is good both in body and mind she m●st not co●ulate but she may sleep much Chap. 3. Of the cold Distemper of the Womb. THis causeth many evils and barrenness They are contrary to those of a hot distemper cold air rest and idleness and cooling Medicines● It is known by their not desire of le●hery no●
this is said before only a Cancer may seize upon the substance of the womb but it is more usually in the neck of it Chap. 15. Of the displacing of the Womb and first of the Ascent of it WHen the womb falls out of the privities it is called Procidentia uteri this is ordinary but the ascēt or going up of the womb is more unknown Many grave Anatomists hold tha● the womb doth ascend if sweet things are applied to the nose if to the privities that it descend● if stinking s●ents come the womb flies from th●● and it is to be seen by breathing altered and by some meats that the womb greedily desires and catcheth up Galen overthrows this opinion and saith that the womb doth move after a sort and ascend but it is very little and not to be demonstrated nor can it arise to the stomach it is tied with such strong ligaments to its place and when it falls out the ligaments are extended by moisture and falling of it down And there is no reason why the ligaments though loose or wet it should go up so speedily and come down again for● falling down is by degrees and it is not soon brought up again And though it be enlarged in conception it is by degrees and equally not suddenly in one side Nor are the ligaments made very loose in conception and the bottom of the womb is not tied the ligaments being onely on the sides But this cannot be denied which women affirm that they feel a body or ball moving about the navel and a Physitian or Midwife may feel it Therefo●e let us enquire what it is if it be not a womb That body which you may feel stir is the stones and that blind vessel which Fallopius found out which he compared to the great end of a Trumpet called F●llopius his Trumpet For the stones hang and the body of the T●umpet is l●ke a pipe loose and moving and when they are full and swell with corrupt seed and vapo●s they move to and fro and ascend as high as the navel And the stones with the Trumpet make this round tumor of the womb which is felt in women as Riolanus observes Whatsoeve● makes corrupt seed in the stones of a womā and fils them ●th evil ●apors or wind is the cause of which in suffocation of the womb for the cause is alike in both only in suffocation the Symptoms are worse● because the evil vapors are then more freely carried by the veins arteries and nerves and asilict the principal parts The woman and others may feel a round body and she ●indeth a pain at her heart and short breath without sleeping or doting or other symptoms and there we●e causes that disturbed the womb It is not dangerous yet not to be slighted for it may turn to the strangling of the womb when these evil vapors move to the noble parts Let the aim be at the corrupt seed and vapors which must be dis ussed and evacuated as in suffocation of the Womb. Chap. 16. Of falling out of the Womb. SOmtimes it falls to the middle of the thighs o● to the kne●s almost or hangs a little out The womb changeth its place when the ●igaments by which it is bound to the other parts ●re not in order There are four two above ●road and membranous that come from the Pe●iton●●um and two ●elow that are nervous ●ound and hollow ●●●ide● it is bound to the ●reat ves●els by veins and a●t●ri●s and to the ●ack by nerves Now the place is changed when it is down another way or when the ligaments are loose and it falls down by its own weight it is draw● on side when the terms are stopt and the vein● and arteries ●re full those namely which go to the womb if it be a mole on the one side th● liver or spleen ca●se it by the liv●● veins on the rig●t side or the spleen on the left as they are 〈◊〉 more or less I also falls down by the loosning of the par●● to which it is fastned but how that can be it is not clear Hippocrates saith It comes from external caus● as fr●m ●old of the ●ee● or loyns from leaping or fear cutting of wood● or r●●ning d●wn a ●ill and the lik● these make the lig●●ents moist and loos● Also it may be from cold after childbearing getting into the wom● when the ●●rms flow ●tting upon a cold stone and the like Others say it comes from the solution of th● conn●xion of the sibrous neck and the parts adj●●ent and that is fro● the weight of the wom● descending thi● we deny not But then the ligaments must be loose or broken But women in a d●op●e could not be said not to have the wo●● f●ll down if it came only from loosness B●● the ●ause in them is the ●●ltness of the water● which dries more then it moistneth I● there be ● little tumor within or without the pr●vities like a skin stretched or a weight ●elt about the p●ivities it is onely a descent of the womb but i● there be a tumor like a Goose eg● and a hole at the bottom there is at first a g●ea● pain in the parts to which the womb is ●astned● as the loyns the bottom of the b●lly an● the pr●viti●s and t●e os s●crum ●●om the stre●●hing 〈◊〉 breaking of the ligaments but a little after the pain abateth and there is an impediment in walking Somtimes blood comes forth from the breach of the vessels and the dung and urin are stopt and a F●aver and Convulsion When it is new it is easily cured when old it is ha●d to be cured but not deadly onely it is troublesom and nasty It hinde●s conception and keeps terms f●om flowing orderly If it be with ●ain Feaver or Convulsion it is deadly especially in women with child That which comes from corrosion of the ligaments● is dangerous First put it up before the air al●er it or it be in●●amed or swollen Therefore fir●t give a Clyster to remove the excrements Then lay her ●pon her ba●k wit● her l●gs abroad and thighs lift●d up her he●d down and take the tumor in your hands and thrust it in without violence I● it be swollen by alteration and cold soment it with the D●coction of Mallows Althaea Lin● Foenugreek seed Chamomil flowers Bayberries and anoint i● with oyl of Lilli●s and H●●s grease If th●re be an inflammation put it not up yet It may be ●righted in by shewing of a red hot iron and actin● as if you would burn it First sprinkle upon it the po●der of Mastich ●●●●kincense and the like As Take Frankin●●ns● M●st●●h each two drams Sarc●col steept in Milk ● dram Mummy Pomegranate ●●●wers Sang●i● Draconi● each half a d●am Wh●n it is put up let her lie with her leggs stretched and one upon the other for eight or ten dai●s and m●ke a Pe●●●●● like a P●ar● of Cork
By its publick action it serves for generation If the private faculty be hurt and the nourishm●nt not well made there is a super●luous moisture and then weakness without other fault of the organ or unity divided The first Cause is distemper when the manifest qualities are changed or when the natural heat is suffocated or dispersed or when the occult qualities are changed Heat in the womb makes a hot distemper if it be too much by which the womb sucks more then it can concoct this is not prope●ly weakness but that distemper i● weakness when the action is either not done or weakly done But cold rather makes weakness in the womb by which it cannot make the sufficient quantity of nourishment hence excremen●s are heaped up and it c●nnot perform its actions Also a moist distemper makes weakness by which it can neither keep seed nor child it is also weak from loosness Little desire of Venery and no pleasure therin argue weakness of the womb flux of seed often abortion pain in the loyns and pubes when the terms are coming ●arts from the womb head-ach and the like The signs of a cold and moist distemper with or without matter are already declared It is a great disease by reason of the diver● Symptoms in women that have conception hurt It is worst when it comes from dispersing and extinguishing of the natural heat We have shewed how distempers of the womb are cured but the dispersing of the Spirits and natural heat is cured by things that hinder th● loss of Spirits and strengthen the womb as Spices Cinnamon Cloves Nutmeg Mace Diacalaminth Aromaticum ros●tum Diaxilaloes ros●ta Novella Treacle Mithridate Outwardly by Oyl of Lillies Nard Lavender and Astringents when the womb is loose Things that help the womb in the whole subs●●n●e are in the Chapter of the cold and moist Di●●emper as Aqua vitae for Women Or this Take Castor three ounces Saffron two ounces extract th●m si●gular add to both Extract of Mugwort two o●nces of Angelica a dr●m Magistery of the mother of Pearl ● dram Oyl of Cloves a s●ruple of Angeli●● and of Amber and of Nutmegs each half a scruple Let her ea● meat of much nourishm●nt and drink good Wine Chap. 2. Of the Itch of the Womb. THis is more in old then young wome●● and must be distinguished from the Frenzie of the womb for here is only a desire to scrath the privities so that they cannot sleep Nor is it with desire of copulation as in the fury of the womb It is a salt humor that is serous and adust that causeth it that is sent to the neck of the womb and the privities How it comes there I shew●d in Ulcers of the privities It is known by her relation and often putting her hand to the privities It is more troublesom then dangerous becau●● it hinders sleep First purge the whole body and if there a●● signs of plethory and strength permits bleed i● the arm Then qualifie the sharp ●alt h●mors with cold and moist means and r●mov● them from the privities Foment with a D●coction of Lettice Plantane Willow Dock roo●s and then anoint with Galen● Cooler Or dip ● Pessary in this Oyntment and put it in O● T●ke Allum Nit●r Sulphur each six drams S●●phisager an oun●e with Rose-vinegar and fresh Butter make a Linimens If these wil not cure use stronger as the oyntment of Elicampane with Quick●ilver Or Take black Soap Staphisacre ●ach a dram qui●k Brimstone half an ounce Quick silver two drams wi●● Rose-vinegar and Hogs grease make an Oyntment Let the me●t be of good juy●e coolin● and moist●●ng Take heed of Spices sharp and salt meats Chap. 3. Of pain in the Womb. THere is pain in the body of the womb wit● other diseases sometimes as the Co●●ckpains woven in the bottom of the belly and in the loyns and hips and is called the Pain of th● Womb. It is often in women with child as the inflammation of the womb it is burning and beating it binds the belly and stops the urin Solution of unity is the Cause of all pains and this is from the stretching of the womb and its vessels or corrosion Stretching is from wind or clotted blood in the cavity o● it and when Nature cannot expel it by reason of the straitness of the pa●t there is pain Also pain is from stretching of the vessels be●ore the terms flow when they are close and the blood thick and this pain is increased by external cold especially after heat Somtimes there is a gathering o● humors about the womb when the terms ●●ow and are ●oul and they get into the membranes and stretch them The same may be from corrupt seed that stretcheth the vessels Or from sharpness and corrosion in the neck ●f the womb when sharp humors flow through it and tw●tch it The pain is manifest but let us look at the ●igns o●●he causes If it be from clotted blood there was a flux of the same and the pain is fixed about the ori●ice of the womb If there were external causes the patient will relate If it be from seed there is suffocation of the womb The greater the cause is and the more vehement it works the more is the danger If there be pain and fear of fainting look to that before the cause with Anodynes and Narco●icks if need be If it be from wind● see inflation of the womb If i● be from clotted blood di●●olve and eva●uate it with hot and attenuating Medicines made into Fomentations Baths and Oyntmen●s It is good to apply Treacle to the region of the womb or put it in with Rue and Honey Or give a Clyster to the womb of Ru● Foenugre●k s●ed and Oyl of Rue and Orris Or give 〈◊〉 and Cinnamon water If the vessels of the womb are not open enough for the terms See in the stoppage of the terms If there be wind make a Clyster thus Tak● Mer●ury Mugwort Cal●mints Pennyroyal ea●h 〈◊〉 hand●ul Chamomil and Melilot flowers each ha●● a hand●ul 〈◊〉 an● Line●eed each an oun●e boyl them in a pint strained dissolve Hiera Be●tdicta laxativa each half an ounce ●a●e a Cl●●●●r Give Mugwort Zedoary water Essence of Ca●●●r Treacle or ●omens Aqu● vit●e of whi●h before Make a Clyster for the Womb thus Tak● Mugwort Calamints Bettony each h●l● a hand●●● Gith Cummin Carrot Aniseed● ea●h a dram Spi●e Schoenanth Nutmeg Cinnamon e●●h 〈◊〉 dram boyl them in Wine Then fill an Ox bladder half full with Oyl of Lillies and Dill and apply it to the belly Or T●ke Oyl of Lillies Orris each an oun●e distilled Oyl of Angelic● a dram Goose and He●s g●e●se each half an ounce Muci●●g● of Lin● a●d Faenugreek seed made with Mu●w●rt w●●er ea●h three drams seeds of Cummin C●rr●ts Carawa● each a dram with W●x m●ke a soft Oyntment O● Take Pe●●itor● two hand●uls Mercury a handful beat them add Chamomil flowers Cummin Anise
or thrice rather then the arm once Therefore Galen commends Hippocrates that he opened a vein in the ankle in the Servant of Schimarg though she had a Pl●thory● But in other diseas●s of the womb as inflam●ation dropping or too many Terms it is good to open a vein in the arm The Saphena is opened by putting the foot in warm water before and after Question 3. At what time must a Vein be opened against the s●●ppage of the Terms Galen saith It must ●e when Nature may be helped be the blood moved that is three or four daies before the usual time of their coming as if she had them alwai●s in the ful of t●e Moon and they have been stopt some months● bleed three or four d●ies before the full to pu● n●ture in mind of her duty and to make the blood run again Chap. 4. Of fewness of the Terms IT is when they flow less then they use or ought to ●low It is either from the blood or in the expulsive faculty in the passages As if blood ●e little the Terms are few and slow if the retentive faculty is weak and the expulsive strong they come at due time but in small quantity If the Terms are slow the fault is in the quality of the blood being too thick Also straitness of the passages may be a cause for if they be not wide enough the blood cannot flow f●eely The patient will tell the disease but the cau●e of it is to be found in the Chapter a●oregoing Few Terms from little blood is not dangerous if they be stopt from thick blood there follow diseases as Erysipelas Scirrhus or Cancer See the Chapter aforegoing for the Cure and and if it be from thickness of blood it is often cured by a general Purge for the whole body Chap. 5. Of Dropping of the Terms THis is a flux and lasts long and there is pain The blood flows not conveniently at the due time and manner and the privities are alwaies wet as when the urin drops Are from the blood and the passages of it and the retentive faculty as when the blood is too thi●k and sharp which stir up Nature to let it out and because it stretcheth the membranes the●e is pain Also the weakness of the retentive faculty is a cause The women declare it but if it be from thick blood and sharp and strait passages there is a s●●etching pain about the womb If it be from c●udity of blood and weakness of the retentive ●aculty the blood flows without pain and is not much ●elt It is troublesom to women and if it last long ●auseth ulcers and inflammations It is all in mending of the thick and sharp ●lood and in opening the passages which are ●he two chief causes of it of which we spake at ●rge If blood be superfluous loose it not nor open the ankle-vein lest you draw it more to the womb but take away the Cacochymy If it be from weakness of the retentive faculty strengthen the womb with dryers and ash ingents Chap. 6. Of the overflowin of the Terms IT is when it is too much or too long and hur●s any woman and brings diseases but a certain proportion of bleeding is not to be de●ined but too much is lost when the actions are hurt The immediate Cause is the opening of the vessels and the mediate cause is the blood in quantity or quality offending or by its force or disorderly motion Vessels are opened by Anastomosis Diapedesis Diaeresis or ruption or by Diaurosis or co●rosion Anastomosis is from a moist distemper of the vessels● which loosneth the orifices or from external causes as Baths hot and moist or us● of Aloes The flux is seldom too great from a Diapedesis for it is but a sweating through Ruption is from plethory when the Terms have long been stopped and then break out and when the bloo● is hot by air baths c. The outward causes are falls strokes hard travel great burdens lifted Erosion is from sharp blood or humor or from Medicines that corrode as Pessaries long kept For this great flux is chiefly from the veins in the bottom of the womb The flux of blood is too great when the strength abateth and Cachexy ●ollows with paleness swoll●n feet and the blood that comes from the bottom of the womb is blacker and ●lotted● That from the neck is redder and thinner The signs of the causes If it be from mu●lr blood there are signs of plethory and it easily ●lotteth together If the blood be sharp and chol●rick it is putre●ied in the womb you shal know waterish blood by its colour and the signs of that humor abounding and if you dip a clout in it and dry it in the shade you may see it If the womb be too moist such causes went before If it be from breaking of veins they will tell you of violence If it be from corrosion it is little and slow somtimes pure somtimes ●erous It wea●n●th the whole body the liver and bowels there is swounding the Whites and paleness and Dropsie somtimes That which hath been long● is hard to be cured and causeth death and in an old woman it is deadly If there be fulness abate the blood and keep it from flowing to the womb revel it r●p●l cool and astringe it that it may not flow so fa●● and then amend the blood If it is from plenty of blood open the Liver-vein in the right arm bleed little and often because it makes better revulsion and weakens not open the Salvatella if there be weakness and cup ●he Back and Breast a●ainst the Liver beneath ●he papps where are veins from the womb cup ●ot beneath but in the shoulders or back and ●rms with scarification but sca●i●ie not under ●he brea●ts Bind and rub the a●●s and shoulde●s and tem●er and thicken the sharp thin humors with De●●cti●ns and Waters of Plantane Purslane Sorrel● Knotgrass Shepherds-purse Pomegranate-Syrup and of dried Roses Sorrel Pu●slane Coral Conserve of Roses Bole sealed Earth If it be urgent use Na●coticks Syrup of Poppies Treacle Philonium Laudanum If it still continue it is fed with choler there● fore purge it with Syrup of Roses Manna Rhubarb Senna If it be fed with serous blood help the ●eins that do not their duty and the Liver and sweat with China You must not provoke urin but use astringents As Take the juyce of Ass-dung Syrup of Mir●l●s each half an ounce Plantane water an ounce Give it her and let her not know what it is Decoctions Take Comfrey roots Tormen●il ●ach two drams Purslune Plantane each a handful boyl them● add to six ounces Syrup of Curran● Quinces Mirtles each six drams give● it at twice Or Take Syrup of Purslane juyce of Ne●●les each two ounces Purslane water four ounces Troches of Amber of sealed Earth each a dram● Bloodstone half a dram give two spoonfuls every day
or broke it there is no blood after copulation Therefore Deut. chap 22. the Law of Moses is taken for that which happeneth often and for the most part And there can be no more ga●hered f●om hence but bleeding is an undoubted sign of Virginity The same may be said of the African custom Question 3. Whether is the straitness of the privi●ies a sign of Virginity The privities are straiter in some according t● age habit of body and other circumstances and Virgins are straiter then women that have been at it But I deny that straitness is a certain argument of Virginity For after many acts of Venery it may be made so strait by astringent Medicines● that Whores may be taken for Virgins as we shewed concerning a Wench that was married and to appear a Virgin she used a Bath of Com●rey roots Question 4 Wh●●her is Mi●k i● the breasts a sig● o● Virginity lost Some say that there can be no milk in the b●easts ti●l a woman hath conceived and Virgins have neither the cause nor the end why milk is made And the terms sto●t do rather co●rupt then turn to milk And though there be alwaies in the breasts a faculty to make milk yet doth it not shew its power but upon an object and for some end Some say that Virgins may have milk and urge this Saying of Hippo●ra●es If any have milk wh●n she is neither with child nor breeding● th●ir ●erms are stopt Galen is of the same opinion and though it be seldom ●et he saith it is possible And Alexander Benedictus and Christopher de Vega saw it We shall not contradict Hippocrates and expe●ience but there is a two●old milk The one of Virgins The other of those that have brought forth or conceived The first is made of blood that cannot get out at the womb but goes to the breasts and this is nothing but a superfluous nourishment of the breasts that turns milk by ●he faculty of the breasts without the company ●f a man or conc●p●ion T●e other is only when ●here is a child of this milk it is true what Hip●●●rates writes It is a certain sign of a Mole when ●r●at b●ll●●d women ha●e no milk in their breasts ●nd true milk in the breasts is a sign of a live ●hild in the womb These milks differ in respect of the blood and diversity of the veins that bring it to the breasts and though both are white yet that of Virgins is thinnest no● is it so much nor so sweet this may breed in the veins according to Aristotle from the supers●uous nourishment of the breasts and if Virgins have it they are not to be termed ●nchast Chap. 2. Of the Green-sickness or white Feaver THis is in Virgins fit for a man it is call●d the Virgins disease and the white Feaver not that there is alwaies a feaver but because their face is like people in a feaver It is thus defined The Virgins disea●e is the changing of the natural colour into a pale and green with faintness heaviness of body loathing of meat palpitation of heart difficult breathing sadness swelling of the ●eet eyelids and face from depraved nourishment The first Cause is stoppage of terms The next is the gathering of bad humors for when the way to the womb is stopt the blood returns to the great vessels and bowels and choaks thei● heat and stops the vessels and spoils the making of blood and then there are crudities which being brought to the habit of the body cannot b● united perfectly to the parts● and cause a Cach●xy which is the way to a Dropsie and Leu●ophlegmac● and divers Symptoms The caus●● of the o●structions of the vessels of the womb are crude humors and ●legmatick ●limy blood● from evil diet and drinking o● vinegar or eating raw corn chalk ashes lime earth ●lay and the like There is a pale and green colour the face is s●ollen and the eye-brows in the morning after sleep especially the ankles swell and the whole body is loose and moist from much water the l●ggs are lazy the pulse is little and often in the neck temples and back The heart beats the breath is short when they go up stairs they loath meat Some have the Pica or desire to eat absurd things The terms are stopt the Hypocho●dria are swollen somtimes they vomit if vapors ●●ie to the head there is thirst and headach and if melancholy be mixed the animal actions are hurt These are not all in all people but most are in most and in some all It is often turned to a Dropsie Some after death have had a Scirrhus hard liver some die suddenly the heart being oppressed If the stomach be much afflicted it is dangerous and they loath meat much If it come from the womb alone it is easier cured It is best to begin in the Spring or Summer after a Clyster open a vein the ankle Then heat the thick cold humor and make it thin and●because it is too much to be purged at once prepare and purge often and mix atten●aters and cutters with your purges When the humors are above the stomach and Mesentery it is good to vomit those that can easily vomit and to give liver-physick or spleen or womb-physick even as in Leucophlegmacy ●ee the Chapter of Terms stopt But in this disease alwaies consider the liver spleen and Mesent●ry the obstructions of which are cu●ed with things mentioned At fir●● open the the obstructions of these pa●●s wi●h ●om●●ew things that provoke terms and ●●ter ●ive more Thus Take opening Roots an ounce Madd●r 〈◊〉 Orris E●●●ampane Citron p●els dried Sar●●●●●●h h●lf an ●un●e Mugwort Agrimony ●●rm●nder each a handful Savin two pugils C●r●ham●s seeds an ounce Senna two ounces Me●hoacan Agarick each half an ounce St●●chas 〈◊〉 two pugils Fennel Aniseed Galangal each two drams b●●l them to a pint and half sweeten it a●d ad● Cinnamon water three dram● Or infuse ●●em all with Sea-wormwood half a handful common ●●●mwood two pugils Or Take Agarick pills of R●uba●● ea●h a dram Quercet●n's Pills of Tartar and of Amm●niacum● each half a dram Spike a s●ruple Oyl of ●innamon th●ee drops Extract of Wormwood half a scruple make Pills give a scruple an hour before meat Or Take juyce of M●rcury clarified Honey or Sugar each an ounce add Gith seed Senna ●a●h two drams Mechoacan a dram make a Mass or give Conserve of Marigold flowers St●el is an excellent remedy after Preparatives with proper Drinks or Ingredients And i● the vessels of the stomach are stopt give a Vomit and then gross pouder of Steel If the Mesentery be stopt Take Diarrhodon Diacurcuma Agarick each a dram C●rthamus seeds two drams red Dock roots C●rrot seed each 〈◊〉 dram and half Cloves a dram Steel prepared two ounces with clarified Honey make an El●ctuary give two or four drams If she vomit stop it not If the Liv●r be chiefly sto●t● let the St●●l be ●inely poudere●
with Womb-clysters and Pessaries then dispe●se the reliques and strengthen the wom● But ●ir●● give a general Purge that is gentle often and use things that prevent the breeding of seed Strengthen with Plaisters and Oyntments to the region of the womb As Take liquid Storax two drams Avens Agnus castus seeds Angelica each half a dram Alipta moschata a scruple Oyl of Nard Lillies and white Wax make a● Oyntment Or Take Seeds of Agnus castus ● dram all Sanders each half a dram whit● Ros● pouder a dram Tacamahaca a scruple Amber t●● scruples Alipta moschata half an o●nce with Turpentine Labdanum and Wax make a Plaister I● she be a Virgin let her be married If it be from terms stopt see in the Chapt●● of that This disease is neither from seed nor blood● nor humors if they be not corrupted after a peculiar manner If it be from the womb diste●pered give the In●usion of an ounce of Brion● root in white Wine on●e in a week for a year 〈◊〉 bed time or this Hyste●i●k Water Take Lovage roots Piony Angelica Zedoar● each an ounce Mis●eto of the Oak gathered in the wane of the Moon two ounces Mints Balm Calamints Bettony each a handful Carrot Parsnep s●●d Castor each half an ounce distil them in white Wine and water of Motherwort after eight daies infuson Or Take Briony Valerian Spignel Ang●lica roots each half an ounce Balm Ca●amints Pennyroyal●●ettony each half a handful boyl them in Wine add Syrup of Mugwort an ounce give it a● thrice Vitriol of Iron one grain with two grains of Sugar given in Wine some weeks is excellent Or Take Cummin seed wild Parsnep seed each ● dram give a dram in pouder Or● Take Fae●●la Brioniae two drams Cummin seed Parsnep s●ed ●●ch a dram Amber half a dram Cloves two s●ru●les Cinnamon a scruple make a Pouder Pills Take Castor a scruple Assa faetida half ● scruple Mirrh Galbanum Sagapenum each a ●cruple with Honey of Mercury make ●ills take 〈◊〉 a s●●●ple or a scruple often Or take Treac●e 〈◊〉 ●●●hridate Apply Plaisters or Lin●ments to the region of 〈◊〉 Womb thus Take old Treacle half an ounce Agnu● castus seeds a dram Oyl of Angelica and ●ummin seeds each two drams with Plaister of ●●yberri●s ●r make Oyntments of the same Quest●●● 1. What preterna●ural diseases is the 〈◊〉 of the Womb properly ●●me say it is a cold distemper in quality chan● they say right but coldness is not the chief ●●●●om Others say it is respiration hurt Syn●●● or Convulsion But it canno● be defined by one Symptom Fo● somtimes the animal actions are hurt and there is a Megrim Delirium Convulsion and sense and motion are gone Nor is it strange that so small a vapor should bring such Symptomes for it hath an occult venom in it● which is strong for it goes many waies and to many parts Question 2. What is the true Caus● of the 〈◊〉 of the Mother I say it is the malignant vapors that flie up from the womb for it doth not work by a manifest quality but by a venom which Galen sait● is like that of a Torpedo or Phalanx or Scorpion which are little in bulk but do great mi●chief being enemies to the vital spirits and hea● by which there is a coldness all over and s●o● breath from the actions of the heart hurt Fo● when the heart is hurt or the vital Spirits eithe● suffocated or corrupted there are no good animal Spirits bred and they not flowing to th● nerves and muscles hinder the motion of th● breast Also this malignant vapor is an enemy 〈◊〉 the animal Spirits and makes doting and Co●vulsions when it gets to the brain The Cause of these vapors are corrupt se● and terms for while they are in th●ir proper vesels they change not their nature And the se● is not alwaies pure but mixed with 〈◊〉 hum●● and the seed-vessels are sometimes 〈◊〉 a● distempered Moreover the corruption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the womb in a p●culiar manner for as F●rr●● saith The place from whence com●● life is 〈◊〉 the breeder of the most deadly poyson Question 3. Is it good to give Wine in a ●it of the Mother Hippocrat●● and Avicen quarrel about this The fi●st allo●s wine because they are weak and nothing sooner re●resheth● But Avicen is for water and forbids flesh for they increase seed and ●lood But in the time of the ●it wine is proper and Avicen doth not speak of the ●it but of the diet out of the ●it when it comes from plenty of seed and blood nor will a little wine in the time of ●●e ●it get presently to the womb Chap. 5. Of the Frenzie of the Womb. IT is a great and foul Symptome of the womb● both in Virgins and Widdows and such as ●ave known man These are mad for lust and in●i●e men and lie down to them and it differs ●rom Salacity because in that there is no Deli●ium It is an immoderate desire of Venery that ●akes women almost mad or a Delirium from ●n iminoderate desire of Venery it is without a ●e●ve● and with heat and tends to madness ●here are degrees in it for modest women have 〈◊〉 but will not for shame declare it and die of ●onsumptions Others will not conceal it but ●eak their thoughts bawdily and follow men ●nd ●olli●i●e them shamelesly as Hippocrates 〈◊〉 in his Book of Virgins Diseases The immediate Cause is plenty of hot and sharp seed against Nature but next unto that ●hich is natural it is a little biting swelling and ●orcing Nature to let it out by leche●y The brain is only hurt by consent● and the animal actions by an external error or too vehement object The part first affected is the womb in the Nympha which grows hot and swells but the Nymphae are not properly the seat of Venery but the Clitoris which was called by the same name anciently The heat and sharpness of seed is from the heat of the womb that breeds it from hot humo●● in the womb and hot blood The outward Causes are hot meats spiced● strong wine and the like that heat the privities● idleness pleasure and dancing● and reading o● bawdy Histories They find their lust to boy● at first and so● shame will not declare it they are sad and silent and their eyes turn to and fro with lust an● if any speak of Venety they blush and the puls● changeth when th● brain consenteth reason i● perverted and modesty is overcome then the● prate are lustful and angry somtimes they cr● or laugh without a cause they follow men an● sollicite them for copulation Some will lie wi●● any one they meet It is a ●ordid disease curable at first but if neglected it turns to madness Let Virgins that have it before reason is subverted be in company with chast Maid●ns o● h● married And be let blood to abate heat of blco● and sharpness of seed very often there is no
better remedy Then temper and evacuate the humors if the● be adust and there be madness● use strong●● Then have a Bath of Lettice Willow Water-lillies Vine-leaves Purslane Venus navel red Roses Violets Waterlillies Let her sit twice ● day in it and not sweat To take away the sharpness of the seed use Lettice Violets Waterlillies and things that quen●h seed by a secret quality as Agnus castus ●eed Leaves and Flowers of Champhyre here●●●er As● Take leaves of Waterlillies Agnus castus Willow each three handfuls Lettice Purslane Ve●●● navel each a handful Lettice Poppy s●ed the 〈◊〉 great cold Seeds each half an ounce Dill seed 〈◊〉 drams Waterlillies a handful Violets half a ●●ndful beat them with juyce of Lemons distil them ●●er twenty four hour add to every pint a dram of ●mphire give an ounce Or Take Agnus ca●●●ieaves Rue Willow each two handfuls Mints 〈◊〉 of Dill each a handful and half Waterlillies ●●lf a handful Agnus castus seeds Hemp Cori●●der Lettice seed each half an ounce beat them ●nd distil them with water add a pint of juyce of Le●●ns rectifi● it to half An Emulsion Take Lettice and white Poppy 〈◊〉 and the four great cold Seeds each half an ounce 〈◊〉 of Lettice Waterlillies Willow each four oun●s Syrup of Violets two ounces Magistery of Co●●● dram An Electuary Take Conserve of Waterlillies ●●●lets of Agnus ca●tus top●● e●●h an ounce of Ro●● h●lf an ounce red C●ral Smaragds e●ch a dram 〈◊〉 and Lettice candied each an ounce with 〈◊〉 of Violets and Waterlillies make an Electuary Or make Baths of the same As Take tops A●nus castus Lettice Rue Waterlillies D●l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 them anoint with Oyl of Lillies ●ngu●nt of Rose● with Camphire af●●r that Or lay a Plaister of Mercury and Marsh-lentils to the breast and loyns L●y a Plate of Lead to the Back and give a Pessary of juyce of Plantane P●●slane Gourds These that work by an occult quality are fittest for numnesses that must not marry but they that will marry must forbear them because they cause bar●●nness Let diet be thin and of little nourishment no Eggs Beef is good and fresh fish Also Lettice Purslane Succo●y Sleep little● think not of Venery labour and avoid idleness Question Whether is Camphire cold or h●t or doth it quench Venery It is hot because it burns flames is thin pie●ceth is sharp and bitter But it hath cold effects as curing of burnes and inflammations and h●● headaches but this is from the likeness of th● substance because it draws hot vapors to it an● discusseth as Linseed oyl that cures burnes No● hath it a double substance cold and hot that ma● be separated Scaliger denies it by experience to quench V●nery but if it be taken often it doth he t●ie● it but once Chap. 6. Of the Melancholy o● Virgins and Widdows IT is a D●liri●● with sadness trouble and we●●ing s●●times laug●ing without a Feav●● It differs from others by the efficacy only of the efficient cause for it hath divers pains besides ●●dness especially on the left side near the heart in the pap● this is by occasion at a distance The Cause is a melancholick vapor from a melancholick blood in the vessels near the heart that infects the animal Spi●its hurts the Fancy and so the reason For melancholick blood abounding in the vessels of the womb comes back to the great arteries about the heart by the arte●ies of the womb and infects both vital and animal Spirits and causeth trouble of heart and de●●●ium while this blood is quiet in the arteries the●e is no vapor that riseth but when it is hea●ed or s●irred up by any cause the arteries about the back and spleen beat more then ordinary and the vapors arise and trouble the heart They a●e sad and ●ull of thoughts and trouble at the heart and cannot express their grief all things are tedious to them they weep and l●ugh without a cause they sleep little and with trouble and ●ear they have a pain on the left side and somtimes the left breast their jaws are d●y al which are the effects of a melaucholick vapor and when that is discussed all cease If it be old it turns to madness and then they are 〈◊〉 silent then p●●tlers and think they see G●o●●s At first it is easier cured but if it last long and ●●e ●esist not imagination and will not rejoyce ●ith her Gossips it is dangerous They often despair and desire death or hang themselves or d●own thems●lves If the manners are chan●ed 〈◊〉 tu●●s to madness Observe what progress the disease h●th made At first if blood be hot o●en a v●in o●ten i●●●e arm if the terms be not stopt if they be bleed in the ankle some daies before they use to flow Let her be merry and prepare and purge melancholy thus Take Borage and Balm water each three ounces Syrup of the juyce of Borage and Bugloss each an ounce and half Mix them for two Doses repeat them somtimes Then purge Mel●ncholy As Take Senna six drams Agarick a dram and half Borage flowers and Violets each a p●gil ●itron peels two drams infuse them in Rhenish wine for six hours strain them ad Syrup of Violets an ounce Or Take Scorzonera roots two ounces Borage ●n ounce Balm a handful Senna four ounces Agarick half an ounce Citron peels six drams Zedoary two drams Cordial stowers a handful add half a pint of the juyce of sweet-scented Apples and of Rorage and Bugloss steep them two daie● then strain them ad Sugar and half an ounce of Cinamon make a Syrup give two or three ounces Also give Cordials Confection of Hyacinths Species Exhilerants and Confection Alkermes to such as can bear it Cure it as Melancholy only the matter comes from the womb therefore still regard that it dry not the body too much but use a moistning Diet. Chap. 7. Of an Epilepsie from the Womb. THis Falling-sickness is worst then from other causes because there are greater symptoms for that malignant vapor doth not onely fall into the nerves but the veins and arteries The same malignant vapor that causeth suffocation causeth this for when it ascends by the veins or arteries it begets other diseases but when it gets to the nerves or to the fountain of them it causeth the Epilepsie In some the whole body hath a Convulsion in others some part only as the eyes head tongue● hand or leg and the outward senses are diversly taken Some see not some hear not some see and cannot speak some dote and think they see strange things some cry out and know not why All loose the sense o● feeling If the vapor be n●t very malignant they re●u●n to their work after the fit as if they had not ●een ill It is known by what hath been said for here 〈◊〉 not only a Convulsion as in other Epilepsies ●●t dive●s Symptomes as in Suffocation of the ●omb They seldom ●oam at the mouth
causes of ●rrou● 〈◊〉 Formation and imagination ●●lps by 〈◊〉 up the appetite These are the common errors of formation Others are dete●minate errors not simply from the imagination by the pallions which have no determination to such a thing but no other cause can be besides the imagination but how she directs the forming faculty for the producing of such effects it is hard to be understood but there must be some imagination and the forming faculty that it may impart the species sent from the external senses to the forming faculty And this is the cause of the consent of the upper and lower faculties for the ●oul is the same in the whole body and every where ●itted with the same faculties but it doth not exercise all in all parts but by the proper determinate organs ●● instruments And though the child hath its ●oul yet while it is in the womb it depends upon the ●oul of the mother as the fruits partake of the life of the tree while they are upon it therefore it is probable that whatsoever moves the faculties of the ●oul in the mother may move the same in the child Hence it is that while the forming operateth in the seed and womb of the mother if any species be sent to the imagination of the mother which she strongly receives it may make an impression upon the child yet every imagination cannot make this impression but that which makes a great admiration or terrour in the mother when the forming faculty is at work as when she beholds one with six fingers she brings forth the like or when sh● produ●eth hair wh●●e it should no● be or the l●●eness of a beast in an● limb or when she ●eeth any thing cut or divided with a Cleaver she brin●s ●orth a divided part o● a Hare-lip Chap. 8. Of a Child turned into Stone JOhn Albosius Doctor at Senon and Sim●on Prov●nch●r of Lingo Physitian of Senon writ of of this in French and Latin I shall give my opinion with others Two things are to be observed in this wonderful history first why the Child in the time of tra●ail being dead in the womb did not stink as is usual or kill the mother suddenly or was not ●ast out by degrees being rotten secondly by what force the child was turn'd into Stone For the first The mother lived twenty eight years after she had this Child therefore it is not credible that the womb was so cold that it might hinder putre●action as some think It seems more probable to me that these questions explanation depend upon one principle for the cause that made the stones hardness kept the child from putre●action but what that is it is obs●ure Many fly to the efficien●y of the fi●st qualities others to driness others to coldness others to both I acknowledg heat cold and driness to be helping causes for b●eeding of Stones in mans body but the chief cause is a Stone breeding juyce or spirit of which I have spoken at large The principles of generation were weak in this child and impure and this stone-breeding ●●●ce was mixed with the blood in the humors hence it is that it was not born alive as in a wole bred in the womb which women have ●i●l they a●e old and die with it and yet it s●i●●s 〈◊〉 no more then stones bred in most parts But there is but this History of such a Birth Chap. 9. Of a Mole IT is ●lesh and a mass without bones or bowels gotten of an imperfect conception instead of a child The Latins cal it a Mole from the weight because it is troublesom to women as a Milstone in Latin called Lapis molaris Somtimes it is unshapen flesh without bones only ful of veins with a skin over it and nothing within but like the Parenchyma of the bowels Somtimes it is membranous and ●ib●ous without shape Somtimes it is long round or like a quary of glass or like a brute beast Some have brought forth three Moles like mens ya●ds Some are like congealed blood or the Placenta of the womb into which the navel-vessels are inserted some grow and are nourished and some have an obscure sense Somtimes they are sent out alone somtimes with● or before the child of which there are many Histories Some bring ●orth Monsters for Moles It is from the error of the forming ●aculty but the Cause of that is obscure I suppose it is from both seeds when the forming faculty is weak and the seed little and not good and overcome by much blood and can make onely veins and membranes and not a whole child Somtimes 〈◊〉 is in Widdows onely from their own seed and blood A Mole is sooner bred when the blood is impu●e and unfit to nourish and is made when they copu●●te in the flowing of the terms that are unclean It is ●either from heat nor cold principally but from the error of the forming faculty They are hard to be known before the fourth month then they are known by such as can distinguish between the motion of wind and a child ● If a woman turn from side to side it ●alls like a stone to that side she lies on and is heavy If it have any motion it is trembling and beating with constriction and dilatation like a Spunge If after the time that the child should move there be no motion and the belly swells and there is no sign of a Dropsie it is a sign of a Mole Thirdly in women with child there is milk about the fourth month but in a Mole the breasts swel but there is no true milk 4. They are more pained and faint and have more pain in their back and groyns If it be with a quick child it is hard to be known but it is known by its weight in the womb which she perceives when she gets up to walk or moves from side to side some are then strong and well coloured It hurts the womb and whole body if it be divided it is less dangerous when it is soft it is cast out the third or fourth month Somtimes it ulcerates or tears the womb and causeth great bleeding Some have been cast out or drawn out without danger some grow old with them in ●nd find no inconvenience but the weight To prevent take heed of Venery in the terms o● before the terms or when the body is foul or ●●st●ucted or the womb When it is take it away presently with thin●s ●●●t ●●nd fo●th a dead child Hippo●rates shew●th the ●●●e in few wo●d●● First ●oment the whole Therefore if she be plethori●k let blood largely in the foot at divers times Then purge often with strong Physick Tak● Althaea Lilly roots each half an ounce Althaea Mercury Pellitory Brank●rsine each a handful Chamomil Melilot flowers each half a handful F●●nugreek and Lineseed e●ch six drams boyl them in Broath to a pint add sweet Butter Oyl of sweet Almonds Lillies each an
ounce make a Clyster repeat it often M●ke Baths Liniments Fomentations then move the terms with Dittany Birthwort Briony c. Take Briony Birthwort ea●h half an ounce Asarum two drams Rue Savin Mugw●rt Dittany Pennyroyal Motherwort each a h●ndful Elder and Chamomil flowers ●ach half a handful Line and Faenugreek seeds each half an ounce boyl them to a pint ad Hiera an ounce and half Troche● of Alkandal a dram Oyl of Ru● and Keir each an ounce and half make a Clyster of the residents mak● a Cataplasm for the belly Or this Pessary Take Troches of Mirrh G●lbanum Opopanax dissolved in wine each two drams Sowbread roots a dram white Hellebore half a dram with juyce of Rue If these wil not do let the Midwise take it out with her hand if it be half rotten Or leave it to Nature which doth it in time To s●op the flux of blood after a Mole is taken out use things against overflowing of the Terms As Take Plantane Shepheards-pu●s● Brambles Oa● leaves r●d Roses e●ch a hand●ul boyl them in steeled Water then take B●rley bran t●o ounces Pomegranate flowers Cypress-nuts P●megran●t● p●els red Ros●s Comfrey roots in p●uder ea●h an ounce Frogs burnt Bole● Sanguis Draconi● ●ach half an ounce with the Decoction aforesaid and a little Vinegar make a Cataplasm for the Region of the womb Take away pain with Anodynes mentioned in pain of the Womb keep up the strength with meat of good juyce Question Whether a Mole may be without the company of a man and without his seed To speak freely of this which many doubt I suppose that many are made of a weak mans seed mixed with the womans seed and much blood But Histories confirm that Widdows ha●e had them without mans seed but not of the shape with the others And being voided they melted being in the air into water I think Virgins cannot have them but from wantonness or in sleep they may spend their seed but because it is weak and the blood necessary for formation neither is drawn by the womb nor flows to it of its own accord as it doth in those that have had children and the vessels of the womb in Virgins are straiter then in Widdows and others that have had children Therefore though the seed of Virgins flow into the womb yet they cannot have a Mole for want of blood which is necessary for the forming of the same This is to be understood of Moles which are not vital for vital Moles that have some life cannot be got in Virgins or Widdows without the seed of a man Chap. 10. Of Monsters HIstories tell us of many Monsters brought forth by women We spake of worms S●ct 2. Chap. 8. They are like Toads or Mice or Fi●● Gordonius saith it is usual in Lumbardy Lycosthones saith and others also that Serpents Dogs and other Monsters with parts like brute beasts have ●een brought forth Gaspar ●auhin speaks of one Anne Troperim which 1575. brought forth two Serpents with her child in Harvest hot weather she had d●u●k water in a Brook in a Wood near Basil whe●e she thought she drank the Spawn of a Serpent for a little after that her belly swelled and three ●onths after she was big with child and the Serpents grew as the child did Her belly was so big that she carried it in a swathing Band. She was delivered at last of a lean male child and because they suspect Worms or Snaks from the knawing and strange motion she felt that year they put a bason of milk under her and when they expected an afterbirth out came a Serpen● which she saw and perceived another coming forth they were an ell long and as thick as a childs arm Thus Ba●●hin and he speaks of others if you please to peruse him A Monster is that which is either wholly or in part like a beast or that which is ill shaped extraordinary Histories witness that a Monster may be f●om humane seed and the seed of a beast It is seldom for the forming faculty doth not erre of itself but is seduced by the imagination or frustrated of its ends ●rom a fault of the Spirits the heat or matter Therefore imagination is the ●ause of Monsters For Histories mention that w●men with child by beholdin● men in viza●ds have brought forth Monst●rs with horns and ●eak● ●nd ●loven feet The s●me is when Spiri●s or heat seed or blood are weak or little And though Doctors cannot cure Monsters yet they are to admonish women with child not to look upon Monsters and to strengthen their Spirits and heat and to keep the seed and blood ●ight and not to allow copulation in time of their terms least any monstrous Birth should be f●om much and impu●e blood Chap. 11. Of false Conception and Swelling FAlse Conception or Gravidation is when the terms are stopt and the belly swells and there are signs like those of a true Conception then they think themselves with child and as Hippocrates saith They believe not to the contrary till ten months are past The causes are wind in the womb or water 〈◊〉 matter or thick ●●egm These are bred f●om sickly seed ret●ined u●on whi●h N●ture works in vain or from a fault in the terms tha●●or●upts the seed and breeds bad h●mor● The like appears in Virgins when they begin to have thei● terms but it is discovered by pain The terms flo● not as in a true Conception but in this there is pain of the head loyns belly ●nd groyns of which Hipp●crate● ●aith thus They ha●● a false Co●ception with●u● terms 〈◊〉 wit● a 〈◊〉 bell● ha●e the headach and th●re 〈◊〉 ●ill● in their breasts bu● what is ●●ke water and 〈◊〉 little Moreove● the belly swels sooner then 〈◊〉 t●ue Conc●ption their colour changeth 〈◊〉 fac●●nd ●eet s●ell● th●y loath meat ●ain●● and have a depraved appetite The surest sign is the time of childbearing being past They are commonly barren or have ulcers in their privities It is cured by evacuation of the matter in the womb with proper Medicines as in the Chapte● of the Distemper of the Womb with matter and of inflation of the Womb and Drop●ie THE FOURTH BOOK THE SECOND PART THE FIFTH SECTION Of the Government of Women with Child and preternatural Distempers in Women with Child Chap. 1. Of the signs of Conception IF she keeps the ●eed it is a sign she hath conceived and a man may know that the seed is kept If he find in Copulation that his Yard is is sucked and drawn by the womb and the privities are not moist And if she per●eives little or no ●eed ●o come forth again and grow chill and quiver 〈◊〉 perceive a ●witching in h●r womb from the ●reat delight and the mouth of the wo●b closeth ●nd the 〈◊〉 stop But they are deceived when they count or reckon from the stoppage of the terms For some have their terms twice or thrice after they have
of many diseases First endeavor to evaeuate the blood from the womb by Frictions Ligatures and Cupping i● they will not do open a vein in the foot Then open the pass●ges with external and internal means● anoint the Belly with loosning Oyls or soment thus Take Lilly roots Birthworts Briony Angel●ca each half an ounce Mercury Mugwort Pennyroyal Savin Calamints each a handful Tansey Chamomil and Elder fl●wers each half a handful Faenugreek and Linseed each two drams bruise them grosly and put them in a bag and boyl them in Water and Wine lay it to the privities and bottom of the belly Give emollient Clysters and if some daies are pa●● purge with Agarick Rhubarb Senna Or Take Lilly roots Al●haea each half an ounce Birthworts two drams Pellitory Mercury● Althiea each a handful Calamints Chamomil Elder flo●ers each two pugils Faenugreek and Lineseed each two drams boyl them to ten ounces strained ●dd O●l of Dill Lillies each an ounce Hiera simple half an ounce Oyntment of Sowbread three drams make a Clyster Or give Pessaries that provoke the Terms Give things to melt and attenuate the blood As Take opening Roots three drams Bettony Maidenhair Endive Schaenanth each two pugils Anise Fennel seed each a scruple red Pease a spoonful boyl them to a pint and half add Cinna●on water two drams Syrup of the five Roots three ●●nces give four ounces Chap. 4. Of too great a flux of blood after Childbearing THat is too much which makes weak It is blood abounding which ha●● been g●thered nine months in the womb It is thick or spends the Spirits and weakens There is loathing of meat pain the Hypochondria belly-ach weak and often pulse dark sight noise in the ears fainting and Convulsion It is dangerous when long and with fainting and Convulsion Therefore observe the pulse least she die suddenly See what strength she hath and stopt it not ●●ddenly I● it be not very g●●at order a diet of ●oas●ed Hens basted with red Wine or Pomegra●●e of Sta●ch Almonds Rice Quinces Con●●●ve of Roses steeled Water and make Revul●●ns use gentle things and strengthen the loose ●●●●ges Anoint the belly with oyl of Roses Mirtles cup under ●he breasts and sides without scari●ication Apply a Cataplasm of red Roses Bole and Ros●-water to the Liver Then use stronger and give a higher diet o●ten in small quantity and give Syrups to stop blood As Take old Conserve of Roses two ounces of Tormentil an ounce of Quinces without speci●● half an ounce Bole red Coral each half a dram with syrup of Currans and Coral make an Electua●y Anoint the belly with the Oyntment of the Countess and other Astringents or use astringent Fomentations or let her take into the womb a Fume of Mastich Frankincense red Roses c. Then open a vein in the arm and let blood by degrees See Sect. 2. Chap. 6. of overflowing of the Terms Chap. 5. Of the Pains after Travel and torments in the Belly THese are not in the body and bottome of the womb but in the vessels and membranes by which the womb hangs and that goes to the sides and belly They are from a constant labor in travel when the bottom of the womb is pricked to send forth from cold air let into it or clotted blood detained or sharp blood sticking to the womb and pricking it They are in the womb it self you m●y know i● they came from cold by what hath been done clotted blood will manifest it self They we●ken much and are very troubl●som therefore they must be abated First take away the cause or abate the pain and make that which hurts the womb fit to be evacuated by these Pills Take Cinnamon a dram Saffron a scruple Dia●ymini Diagalangal Zedoary each half a dram make a Pouder give a dram in Pennyroyal or Cinnamon water Or Take of Cummin seed steept in Spirit of wine and dried again a dram Ameos s●eds and Ginger each half a dram Cinnamon a scruple Castor half a scruple make a Pouder If she faint ad Cordial Waters As Take Diacyminum a dram Diamargariton frigid Citron pe●ls Zedoary each half ● dram make a Pouder If she be cholerick or the humor thin and sharp cure it as a Colick from Choler As Take Syrup of Violets Borage each an ounce Mucilage of Quince seeds made with Violet water half an ounce water of Borage Scorzonera each two ounces give it at twice Extenuate the humors and loosen the passages outwardly Take Bean flour Faenugreek and Linseed each an ounce Chamomil flowers and Cummin seeds each half an ounce boyl them in Oyl of Lillies for a Cataplasm You may sume the womb with Decoctions of Herbs Chap. 6. Of the tearing of the Vulva to the Arse and coming forth of the Womb Inflammation Ulcer Suffocation and falling out of the Fundament THe tearing i● in hard travel when the mothe● is tende● and the child great of which ●●for●● The womb comes forth from the violent extraction of the child or afterbirth when the ligaments are stre●ched The Cure is mentioned but you must not hinder the after flux by astringents let her therefore rest and lie one her back with her ●eet drawn up with Sweets to her nose and stinks to the womb so the womb will be retained and the flux continued after this is past you may use Astringents If there be inflammation from hard travel hinder not the af●er-flux of blood by Coolers If it turn to an ulcer let the after-flux flow and then cure it Suffocation after childbearing is from the ●●inking after-blood which sends up stinking vapors which kill many It is cured by Friction of the leggs Ligatures and Cupping with Scarification applying stinks to the nose as Castor Partridg●eathers burnt Rue And applying Sweets to the privities You must cure the ●alling out of the Fundament from straining in Delivery as formerly shewed Chap. 7. Of Watching Doting and Epilepsie of Women in Child-bed THese are from the motion of the blood a●d hu●ors● when the after-blood flows n●t kindly● and there is a ●eaver of which in ●●e 〈◊〉 Book And from vapors sent from the 〈◊〉 there is an Epilepsie which is cured by R●v●●sion o● vapors and humors downwa●d● and ●●●fect Evacuation of the a●ter-blood which done all these Symptoms cease Chap. 8. Of the Swelling of the Womb Belly and Feet after Childbearing IT is commonly from cold gott●n into the womb and the belly sometimes swells as if there were another child It is cured by hysterical or mother Fomentations or with the skin of a new ●lain sheep and hard wine if in travel they keep a bad diet or drink too much the humors go into wind and if they fall into the legs they swel then take heed of much drink and after the flux is past make Evacuation with things that expel wind As Take C●leworts and Chamomil each as you please boyl them in Wine and ●ome●t the parts Or Take
suck may use this Take Barley meal of Lentils Althaea roots Chamomil flowers and Mints each half an ounce Agnus castus seeds two s●ruples boyl them in Wine ad a little Vinegar Oyl of Dill two ounces make a Cataplasme Chap. 3. Of Inflamation and Erysipelas of the Breasts SOmtimes the tumor in the Breast is inflamed from blood for though plenty of milk cau●e an inflammation blood is the immediate cause for milk as it corrupts and grows hot increaseth pain and so the blood staying in the fmal capillar veins being out of the vessels is hot putrid and inflamed There are other causes as strokes● falls straitness of cloaths and other hurts of th● Breasts A hard and red swelling shews inflammation with beating pain and a Feaver These inflammations are commonly withou● danger but because the Breasts are so loose and have many kernels and little heat they turn to Cancers and Scirrhus If you fear a great flux of blood that will increase the inflammation let blood in a plethorick b●dy But if it come from stopping o● th●●●rms or after flux first open the vein in th● ankle and s●arifie the leggs then if need be ●pen the arm If bad humors coming to the Breasts nourish the inflammation give a gentle Purge of Manna Senna and the like If the blood be too hot or mixt with hot humors that help the motion o● the blood Use Alterers as Lettice Endive ●urslane Plantane Waterlillies and the like Use Repellers after these but such as are weak and not too cold as a clout dipt in Water and Honey with Oyl of Roses applied to the breasts Or● Take Lettice Purslane each a handful red R●s●s half a handful boyl them in Water add Vi●●gar two ounces make an Epithem Or● Take Nightsh●de Lettice each a handful b●yl them stamp them and ad B●rley meal two oun●s pouder of Chamomil flowers half an ounce Oxym●l Oyl of Roses each a dram make a Cataplasm When the beginning of the inflammation is past ad Discussers with your Repellers As Take white Bread crums Barley flour each an ounce and h●l● Bean and Foenugreek flower each half an ounce pouder of red Rose● and Chamomil flowers ●●ch two drams boyl them add Rose-vinegar an ●unce Oyl of Roses and of Chamomil each an ounce make a Cataplasm At length use only Dis●ussers A●● Take Bean 〈◊〉 and of Lupines and of Faenugreek and 〈◊〉 and pouder of Chamomil flowers each an ounce ma●e a Cataplasm If the matter grow hard use Emollients and 〈◊〉 As Take Mallow● a handful boyl 〈◊〉 till they are soft add pouder of Lineseed 〈◊〉 a●● Chamo●il flowers each an ounce● boyl them 〈◊〉 add O●l of J●sam●●e ●n ●unce ma●e a 〈…〉 I● it tend to Suppuration lay a Plaister of 〈…〉 Or Take Mallows and Althaea each half a handf●l boyl them till they are s●●t stamp them and ad pouder of Althaea roots two ounces pouder of Line and Faenugreek seeds each a● ounce Leaven half an ounce ad Oyntment of A●thaea two ounces make a Cataplasm When t●ere is matter and the imposthumes breaks of its own accord it is well otherwise open it with a Lancet or some sharp Medi●ine and let out the matter and then clense it thus T●ke Turpentine Honey of Roses each an ounce Mirrh a scruple The ulcer will be hard to be cured except you dry up the milk in the other Breast by reason of much blood that will flow thither to breed milk Question Whether the Inflammation of the Breasts be from blood alone or from milk also● The inflammation and swelling in women in Child-bed upon their Breasts is from the a●●lux of too much milk and it is with redness and pain and beating or pulsation and it is not only from blood for tumors as in other parts a●e seldom pure or unmixed but there are other humors with it Therefore it is certain that when blood is drawn by heat or pain or comes of i● self to the Breasts and begins to corrupt the milk also may be corrupted Of the Erysipelas of the Breasts This Erysipelas is from fright or ang●r and i● turns presently to a Phlegmon and is cured as the inflammation of the Breast Lay no cold astringent Repellers or f●t things● but things that sweat as Harts-horn seal●d Earth Carduus must be given with El●er water● to discuss the thin blood that causeth the inflammation Apply outwardly hot a Pledg●t dipt in Elder-water Chap. 4. Of the Ocdema of the Breasts THis flegmatick tumor is in cachectick women that hav● the white Feaver it is cold and white and pits because the part is loose and spungie Are a loose tumor almost insensible of pain and the ●inger laid on leaves a pit It is larger when the terms are at hand and abateth when they are past If it come from a Cachexy and a disease of the womb it is dangerous but it commonly ends by resolution or dissolved The Cure is by dry and hot means and if it is from a Cachexy or want of Terms they must first be removed then use Topicks that discuss and ●●solv● and strengthen let them be but temperately hot least you discuss the thin and leave the thick which will cause a Scirrhus Make therefore Fomentations of a Lixivium of Vine and Colewort ashes and Sulphur or a Decoction of Hysop Sage Organ Chamomil-flowers Then anoint with Oyl of Chamomil Lillies Bayes Or Take Barley flour four oun●●● of Lineseeds Faenugreek Dill Chamomil flo●●●s each half an ounce A●thaea root● an ounce with Oyl of Chamomil and Dill make a Cataplasm Chap. 5. Of the Scirrhus of the Breasts IT is a hard tumor without pain from mel●ncholy gathered in the veins that flows to the Breast or it is thick flegm dried Sometimes both humors are mixed together or more which makes a bastard Scirrhus And if burnt humors abound most it turns to a Cancer and if melancholy be most it is not a Scirrhus but a Cancer There are two signs of a true Scirrhus hardness and want of pain if it be fixed I● is somtimes white somtimes black or blew as the humor is If it be a bastard Scirrhus there is heat and pain and if they increase it turns to a Cancer and the veins grow blew about and begin to swell The bigger and the harder it is the more hard it is to be cured If hairs grow upon a Scirrhus it is incurable and it easily turns to a Cancer After Universals and the Cause is removed from the womb or the whole body let the containing cause be softned made thin and discussed But beware of two things First that the thin parts be not discussed by too hot medicines and the thick left for so it will be incurable and as hard as a stone Secondly that you ●erment not the matter by moistning Emollients so that it turn to a Cancer The Ancients either used none or a dry●ng or a moistning Medi●ine only You
better to vomit these up then keep them in If Vomiting last long it causeth A●rophy When it is from too much milk● give it less if it be from corrupt milk amend it as I shewed Clense the child with Honey of Roses and strengthen the stomach with Syrup of Mints Quinces Or Take Wood-aloes Coral Mastich each half a dram Galangal half a scruple with Syrup of Quinces make a Linc●us If the humor be sharp and hot give Syrup of Pomegranates Currans Coral Apply to the belly the Plaister of Bread the Stomach-cerot or Bread dipt in Wine hot Or Take Oyl of Mastich Quinces Mints Wormwood each half an ounce of Nutmegs by expression half a dram Chymical Oyl of Mints three drops Coral hath an occult propriety therefore it is hung about their necks Chap. 19. Of the torments or pains of the Belly IT is often with the flux of the belly and from milk alone that breeds wind and sharp humors When it is corrupted it gets to the guts and causeth a gnawing pain worms staying in the guts do the same They cry continually hate the breast and toss to and fro If it be from wind it ceaseth somtimes the belly swells and they break wind If it be from humors it is constant if it be tough flegm the belly is bound and the dung is slimy If it be sharp there is a flux yellow and green If from worms there are signs of them and of crudities and wind If this pain lasts long they are weak or have Convulsions or Epilepsie it is worse when ●rom corrupt milk and worms and is dangerous If it be from crude humors and wind give a Clyster Take Pellitory Chamomil flowers each a handful boyl them in Chicken broath to three or four ounces add Honey of Roses an ounce with the yolk of an Eg make a Clyster This may be given safely to a child of two month● old Or give oyl of sweet Almonds with Sugar candy and a scruple of Aniseeds it purgeth new born Babes from green choler and stinking flegm If it be given with Sugar Pap it allays the crying pains of the belly Anoint the belly with Oyl of Dill or lay Pellitory stampt with O●l of Chamomil to the belly Or Take Chamomil flowers Dill tops each a handful Faenugreek and Lineseed each half an ounce boyl them in Wine foment the belly twice a day before meat If pain be from corrupt milk ●hat is sharp give Syrup of Roses or Honey of Roses or Syrup of Succory with Rhubarb or a Clyster of the Decoction of Bran Pellitory with S●rup of Roses And use outwardly Oyl of Roses Dill and Chamomil Chap. 20. Of puffing up of the Belly and Hypochondria WHen they suck too much the belly is swelled under the ribs for want of concoction and there are crudities in the stomach and wind and also in the parts adjacent The Hypochondria are hard and pussed up and there is straitness in the mouth of the stomach and short breath It is easily cured with good diet Give a thinner diet that the crudities may be co●cocted Give no fresh nourishment til th● first be digested then give Honey of Roses to purge Or the Decoction of Cardiaca which is good for the heart and mouth of the stomach it opens obstructions and clenseth flegm Or pouder of Piony roots Cummin seed Jesamine or make it up with Honey Oyl of sweet Almonds or Sugar for a Liniment Foment the sides with the Decoction of Cardiaca Chamomil flowers and Cununin seed Chap. 21. Of the Flux of the Belly IT is 1. From breeding of teeth with a feave● commonly and the concoction is hindered and the nourishment corrupted 2. From much watching 3. From pain 4. From stirring of the humors by a feaver 5. When they suck or drink too much in a feaver Somtimes they have a flux without breeding of teeth from outward cold in the guts or stomach that hinders concoction If it be from teeth it is known by the signs in breeding of teeth if from external cold there are signs of no other causes If from a humor flowing from the head there are signs of a C●tarrh and the excrements are ●roathy If crude humors are voided there is wind belching and flegmatick excrements If they be yellow green and stink the ●●ux is from a hot and sharp humor It is best in breeding of teeth when the belly is loose but if it be too great● and you fear Atrophy it must be stopt if black excrements are voided with a feaver it is bad A sucking child needs not cure so much as the Nurse you must chiefly observe the condition of the milk and mend it if not change the Nurse let her not eat green fruit and things of hard co-coction If the child suck not take away the causes of the flux with purges that bind after as Syrup or Honey of Roses or a Clyster Take the decoction of Milium My robalans each two or three ounces with an ounce or two of Syrup of Roses make a Clyster After clensing if the cause be hot give Syrup of dried Roses Quinces Mirtles Coral Curr●ns or the pouder of Diamar●ariton Coral Mastich Harts-horn red Roses or pouder of Mi●tles with a little Sanguis Draconis Anoint with Oyl of Roses Mirtles Mas●ich Or Take red Roses an ounce Mirtles Mas●ich each two drams with Oyl of Mirtles and Wax make an Oyntment Or● Take red Roses Moulin each a handful Cypress roots two drams make a Bag boyl it in red Wine apply it to the belly or use the Plaister of Bread or Stomach oyntment If the cause be cold and excrements white give Syrup of Mastich and Quinces with Mint-water Use outwardly Mints Mastich Cummin As Take Rose seeds an ounce Cummin● Aniseeds each two drams with Oyl of Mastich● Wormmood and Wax make an Oyn●men● Chap. 22. Of binding of the Belly IT is from a cold and dry distemper of the guts from birth in some 2. From slimy flegm that wraps the dung which sticks in the guts This is from bad milk when the Nurse eats gross food slimy and astringent or drinks little 3. It is from a hot distemper of the kidnies or liver that dries the excrements 4. It is when choler doth not stir up the guts to expel If it be from a dry distemper of the guts it is hard to be cured if it be from slimy flegm the dung is wrapt in it If choler comes not to the guts to provoke them to stool the dung is white and the body yellow It is best in children to have a loose belly and they are more healthful for if it be bound the belly is pained and there is headach First take away the cause if it be from a hot distemper of any bowel or dry wash the child often to moisten and cool it in a Bath of Succory and Le●●ice boyled In a cold distemper use hot for
Intertrigo IT is th● separation of the scarf-skin from the true in the Hips that causeth pain and unqu●etness It is from sharp piss when the clouts are not changed often in such as are fat to whom filth sticks easily The Skin is off and it looks red It is troublesom by reason of the pain and causeth want of sleep and ulc●rateth if it be not cured Change the clouts often wash and clense the child often sprinkle on ●his fine pouder Of Litharge of Silver seeds and leaves of Roses burnt Allum and Frankincens● or anoint with white oyntment and Diapompholigos Chap. 32. Of Leanness and Fascination SOmtimes children and men grow lean the elder from Feavers Consumptions and other diseases but children pine away and the cause is not known and though they eat and perform other actions they are not nourished no● grow The causes of Consumption in Infants are little or bad milk by which no blood is bred fit to nourish the body so that they thrive not till they change the Nurse The second is worms that suck away the nourishment The third is worms about the body without ●s in th● Back Aims●●r Leg● and all parts these are very small a●d br●ed in●●●ufculous parts and stick in the skin and never come wholly out but after rubbing in baths th●y put forth their heads like black hairs and run in when they feel the cold air they breed of ●●imy matter shut up in the capillar veins which turns to worms from transpiration hindered The fourth cause in the opinion of people is fascination or witchcraft either from the eyes of Witches or by vapors or by touch or by words from a Witch these are alleadged by many Authors I neither allow nor plainly deny all these waies of fascination though it is not credible that a child should suffer by words or looks only I deny not but diseases may be sent from sick bodies to others as the Leprosie the French Pox Consumption and the like and may infect Infants And I believe that they may be hurt by Witches and malicious persons by the help of the Devil and Gods permissio● as Basil the great writeth for wicked people make a league with the Devil that they may hurt such as they look enviously and angerly upon And I add one thing a habit of body that is grown very excellent is in most danger as Hippocra●●s ●aith when children come to be very healthfull and fair they fall suddenly into a disease and the vulgar not knowing the cause of it impu●e it to Witchcraft The signs of the causes if they be lean from a feaver or other disease it is easily known If these causes be not view the Nurses milk● whether little or her breasts ●lag without milk and that is the cause of leanness in the child if she have milk see if it be not hot and dry and cholerick And consider her constitution If the milk be blameless see if it be not from worms either in the Guts or in the skin the wo●ms in the skin are known by putting the child into a bath and rubbing it especially on the back with the hands and with Honey and Bread and then you shall see little ash coloured or black hairs come out of the skin If there be no outward nor inward cause you may mistrust a venemous vapor or witchcraft If it be for want of milk change the Nurse If it be from worms in the skin it is not hard to be cured if it be from an occult quality or from Witchcraf● it is hard to be cured because we know not the nature of the malignity If the Nurse have any Disease or be contrary to the constitution of the child change her kill and cast out the worms If it be from worms in the back rub it and anoint it with Honey and Wheat bread and when their heads come forth kil them with a Razor or crust of bread● do this often There are many superstitious things carried about against witchcraft some hang Amber and Coral about the childs neck nor is it impossible that plants and Gemms should have power against witchcraft As Briony root and Elks hoof are ●ood against the Epilepsie also there are Amulets against other diseases● ●f leanness be from a dry dist●mper of the whole body there is no better Remedy the● often bathing in a decoction of Mallows Althaea Branckursine Sheeps heads and the like and anoint after with the oyl of sweet Almonds If he be hot and dry add to the bath Lettice Endive Violets Poppy heads and anoint after with oyl of Roses and Violets FINIS Several Physick Books of Nich. Culpeper Physitian and Astrologer and Abdiah Cole Doctor of Physick commonly called The Physitian 's Library containing all the Works in English of Riverius Sennertus Platerus Riolanus Bartholinus Viz. 1. A GOLDEN Practice of Physick after a new easie and plain Method of knowing foretelling preventing and curing all Diseases incident to the body of Man Ful of proper Observations and Remedies both of Ancient and Modern Physitians Being the fruit of one and thir●y years Travel and fifty ●ears Practice of Physick By Dr. Plater Dr. Cole and Nich. Culpeper 2. Bartholinus Anatomy with very many larger Brass Figures than any other Anatomy in English 3. Sennertus thirteen Books of Natural Philosophy O● the Nature of all things in the world 4. Sennertus Practical Phy●●ck the first Book in three Parts 1. Of the Head 2. Of the Hurt of the internal ●●nses 3. Of the external Senses in five Sections 5. Sennertus Practical Physick the second Book in four Parts 1. Of the Ja●s and Mo●th 2. Of the Breast 3. Of the Lungs 4. Of the Heart 6. Sennertus Third Book of Practical Physick in fourteen Parts treating 1. Of the Stomach and Gullet 2. Of the Gu●● 3. Of the Mesentery Sweetbread and Omentum 4. Of the Spl●e● 5. Of the Side 6. Of the S●urvey 7 and 8. Of the Liver 9 Of the Ureters 10. Of the Kidnies 11. and 12. Of the Bladder 13. and 14. Of the Privities and Generation in men 7. ●●nn●rt●● ●ourth Book of Practical Physick in three Parts Par● ● Of the Diseases in the Privities of women The first Section Of Diseases of the Privie Part and the Neck of the Womb. The second Section Of the Diseases of the Womb. Part 2. Of the S●mptoms in the Womb and ●●om the Womb. The second Section Of the Symptoms in the Te●●●●n● other Flu●es of the Wo●●● The third Section Of t●● Symptoms that b●●●l al Vi●gins and Women in their Wombs after they are ripe of Age. The fourth Section Of the Symptoms which a●e in Conception The fi●●● Section Of the Governme●● of Women with Child and preternatural Distempers in Women with Child The sixth Section Of Symp●●●● that happen in Childbear●●● The seventh Section Of the Government of Women i● Child-bed and of the Diseases that come after Tr●v●l The first
Section Of Diseases of the Brea●●s The ●●cond S●ction Of th● Symptoms of the Breasts To which is added a Tractate of the Cure of In●an●● Part 1. Of the Diet and Government of Infants The second Section Of Diseases and Symptoms in Children 8. Sennertus fif●h Book of Practical Physick Or th● Art of Chyrurgery in six Parts 1. Of Tumors 2. Of Ulcers 3. Of the Skin Hair ●nd Nails 4. Of Wounds ●ith an excellent Treatise of the Weapon Salve 5. Of Fractures 6. Of Luxations 9. Senn●r●us two Treatises 1. Of the Pox. 2. Of the Gout 10. Idea of Practical Physick in twelve Books 11. Twenty four Books of the Practice of Physick being the Works of that Learned ●nd Renowned Doctor La●●rus Riverius Physitian and Counsellor to the late King c. 12. Veslingus Anatomy of the Body of Man 13. A Translation of the New Dispensatory made by the Colledg of Physitians of London in Folio and in O●●avo Whereunto is added The Key of Galen's Method of Physick 14. A Directory for Mid●ives or a guide for women 15. Gal●ns Art of Physick 16. A new Method both of studying and practising Physick 17. A Treatise of the Rickets 1● Medicaments for the Poor Or Physick for the Common People 19. Health for the Rich and Poor by Diet without Physick 20. One thousand New Famous and Rare Cures in Folio and Octavo 21. A Treatise of Pulses and Urins 22. A T●eatise of Blood-letting and Cures performed thereby 23. A Treatise of Scarification and Cures performed thereby 24. Riolanus Anatomy 25. The English Physitian enlarged The London Dispensatory in Folio of a great Caracter in Latin Divinity Books Printed by Peter Cole All Mr. Bridge's Works All Mr. Hooker's Works And Seventeen several Books of Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs's FINIS The 〈…〉 The 〈…〉 〈…〉 10● Lib de abd sana morb cau c●p● 78. The Signs The Prognostick The Cure 〈…〉 The Causes The Sign● The P●●gnostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cure Tetrab 4 ●●rm l. 3. The Signs The Progn●s●●ck The Cure To be a skilful Physitian study my S●nnertus Platerus Riverius Bartholinus and Riolanus of the last Editions The Causes The Signs The Cure The Causes Th● Signs Lib. 1. de morb mulierum The Prognostick The Cure The Ca●ses The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Vng. stpol ●onij apud G●l The Causes The Signs The Prognosti●k The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cu●e he Causes The Signs The Prog●ostick● Aetius leth 1. c. 72. Nicol. Florent ser 6. tr● math de grad in 9 ●h●sis c. de e●i●● matri●● Aloes The Cure In obseruatio Lib. uterus muliebris Lib. 3. de lust ani c. 11. The Causes The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cure Eros de p●ss mulie c. 7. The Causes The Signs The Prognos●ick The Cure In phar doc restit cap. 25. The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognos●ick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cure Lib. 15. a●●●o Lib. de morb mul. Cent. obser 5. obser 49. Lib. 4. de morb m●lier ● 11. Lib. 5 ●pid Tetrab 4. ser 4. c. 98. Ma●h de grad in 9. Rhasis The Causes The Signs 2. de morb mulier The Prognostick The Cure The Diet. Lib. de n●● pueri Ves lib. 6. de corp hum Fab. Mar. Do. de hist me mira l. 4. c. 21. Tetra 6. 4. ser 4 c●p 79. Lib. 4. obser ●ent ● ob●●r 5● The 〈…〉 The Signs 1. De morb mulier The 〈…〉 The Cu●● The Causes The Signs 2. De mor● mulier The Prognostick The Cure Gal 2. ad glau c. ● Pa●●●us l. 23. c. 36. The Cause● The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Eustach rud lib. 2. pract c. 5. 6. De lo. aff c. 5. Antrop●g● lib. ● c. 34. The Causes The Signs● The Pr●gno●tick The Cure The Causes 1. 2. De morb m●lier Plate●us The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Roder. ● cas●o de morb m●l 1. 2. c. 17. Lib. de part●s caesar sec 6. cap. 3. 4. Lib. de pa●e ●es sec 4. ● 5. histo 6. Ibid. s●ct 4. ● 5. The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Li● d● pare ●es●● chir● c. 76. In append ad Roussetum 2. de par caesar The Causes The Si●●s Part. 1 ●ect cap. 2. 3. The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cur● Quomodo u●erus ben● olentia r●cipi●t Quomodo bene olentia hystericis noceant 5. Aphor. 7. De histo ani c. 2. Her saxoni● vidit venetiis ser 6. p●r● 5. c. 1●6 The Causes 6. Epid. s●● 8. in ●ine Lid de venae s●c alversus erasistrat The Signs 8. De loaff c. 5. The Prognostick Hippo. morb mulier Gal. 6. de lo. aff c. 5. Hippo. 5. apho 23. C●m in 6 ●p●● 3. ● ●9 Par. 1. sec 2. c. 2. L. de sang miss cap. 11. 18. 19. Lib. de sang mis adver ●r●sis The Causes The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes Gal. 3. de sympt causis ● 2. 5. aph com 57. The Signs The Prognostick Indications The Cure Gal. 5. aphor com 50. To Cure al diseases Read my Sennertus Platerus Riveri●s Bartholinus and Riol●nus of the last Edition L●b de rat m●●● c. 55. Ex p●●r●fores to The Causes The Sig●s ●he 〈◊〉 ●●e Cure The Caus●s 〈◊〉 Si●●● Lib. de morb mulier The Prognostick The Cure 5. Aphor. 36. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure 1. De morb mul. 5. apho 32. obser medic c. 15. Lib. 1 de affect mulc 7. The Causes The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Differences The Signs Lib. de natur mulierum The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Ex Leone Africano 5. Ap●or 39● Gal. in com Lib. 3. anat c. 4● 〈◊〉 aphor●●● ib. 5. 39 Cit. lo. de mor● mu●●er 1. De hist ani c. 12. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The C●re Ho● laudat Mercatus Mercatus The Diet. Hippocr lib. de morb virg Lib. 1. epist Lib. de morb virg Gal. 6. de lo. aff c. 5. Gal. de lo. aff c. 5. The Causes Gal. cit 1. Vesal de corp huma Fabr. lib. 5. c. 15. The Differences The Signs The Prognostick To be a skilful Physitian study my Sennertus Platerus Riverius Bartholinus and Riolanus of the last Editions Gal. 6. de lo. aff c. 5. 4. De lo. aff c. ● ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Causes The Signs The Prognostick Th● Cure Exercit. 104. s●● 8. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cur● The Causes The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cause● The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Cure The C●us●● The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Cause● The Signs The Prognostick The Cure 6. Epid. ●e● 8. aph 45. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Si●●
The Pr●gnostick The Causes Faelix Plate lib. 1. obser tit de vitalis motu● defect● 5. Ap●● 46. 5. Aphor. 52. ● Ioa. Anglicus c●pi de steril The Differences The Signs 5. Aphor. 59. The Prog●●stic● 2. Prognos 3. The Cure The Diet. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Lib. de genit Lib. de s●ptim parti● 3. De hist ani ● 3. The Caus●s The Sig●● The Prog●ostic● 5. Aphor. 15. The Causes The Differences The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes Author●● sent●ntia The Differences Pet. Salius diu in annot in altimarum The Causes The Signs The Prognostick Fabr. cent 2. obs 55. The Cure 1. De morb mulier To Conquer all In●irmities Study my Sennertus Platerus Riverius Bartholi●us and Riolanus of the last Editions F●b cent 2. obs 52. ●ar 7. cap. 12. l ij In appen Franc. Ros de par c●esa The Caus●s C●●s●e p. 1. 〈◊〉 2. c. 10. The Signs 2. Prorrhe● The Prognostick The Cure Aphor. ●2 ibi 4● Aphor. 12. 5. Aphor. 31. Valer. l. 1. obser ●ol com ad lib. 5. a●h 30. Gal. ●it lo. 5. Aphor. 50. Amat Lusit c. 5. cur 27. rod. á cast 3. de morb mul. Lib. 2● c. 10. 4. Aphor. 1. 5. Aphor. 45. Hippocr 5. Apho● 34. 5. Ap●● 60. 5. Ap●o 53. 5● Ap●●r 5● Hippocr 5. aph●r 56. Th●●auses Lib. de s●ptim p●rcu Lib. de natura pueri Lib. Sapient c. 8. Lib. de c●rnib The Causes 3. De natur● f●c ●ap 12. Cent 2. obs 50. The Signs The Pro●nos●i●k Lib. de super lib. de steril 〈◊〉 De nat ●ac c. ●2 The Causes 5. Aphor. 55. Fabric cent 3. obs 57. The Signs The Prognostick The Cure To Cure al diseases Read my Sennertus Platerus Riverius Bartholinus and Riolanus of the last Edition 5. Aphor. 35. Leui len● de oc nat mir lib. 4. c. 12. Aetius ●etra 4. cip 23. Th● Causes Lib. de nat pu The Signs The Prognostick The Cure ●pis●●l to 2 29 ●pis C●●sil 85. ad ch●ist 〈◊〉 The Causes Fabri cent 1. obs 64. 67. The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Lib. 6. c. 23. te●rab serm 4. cap. 23. Lib. 5. cap. 2. de disectpart corp●re huma Enchirid. consul modic pag. 188. Plin. lib. 7. hist nat c. 90. Rod. â castro lib. 4. de morbis mul. c. 1. A●gen lib. 5. epit 2. 11. Lib. ● de dis●●● par● co● ●●●m c 1. In 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Causes The Signs The Prognosti●k The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick Gal. 1. epid com 3. t● 21. The Cure●● The Causes The Signs The Prognostick Hippoc. 5. aphor 55. The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Par. secti● 1. c. 1. Par. 1. sect 2. cap. 15. Hipp. 1. de nat mulier Hip. 1. It is bad of what cause ●oever it comes for de morb mulier T●●rabi● 4 ●●rm 4. The Causes Hipp. 1. epid tex 21. The Signs The Prognostick The Cu●●● Valer. lib. 5. obs 10. merc 4 de morb m●l● c. 11. T●● Diet. Card. l. 8. c. 43. de r●rum variet Cabrol obs 7. The Cure The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure To be a skilful Physitian study my S●nnertus Platerus Riverius Bartholinus and Riolanus of the last Editions The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Insti● l. 50. p● 1 ●●c 1. c. 6. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure 6. Aphor. 38. 〈◊〉 3. obs 87. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Lib. 2. de cur vul●●r c. 3. Cent. 3. obs 87. Ant. Cha●maet●us Lib. 6. c. 30. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure ●ald Rons●eus miscel● 〈◊〉 10. Lib. de occult na mira c. 12. Amatus Lusit curmed cens 5. cur 31. The Signs The Pr●gnostick The Cure Ans Boetius delap gem l. 2. c. 229. The Prognostick Arist 7. de hist ani c. 12. The Cure Mercur. Plat. Dioscor dissentiunt The Signs The Prognostick The Cure 〈◊〉 obser● 〈◊〉 apellae 〈◊〉 L●●r 〈◊〉 l. 7. 11. Schenkius lib. 2. ex obs●rva● Bauhini Amat Lusit ●ent 2. cur 21. The Cure Lib. 12. c. 1. The Cure The Cure The Cure 1. Aphor. 13. 3. Aphor. 24. Apho. 25. Apho. 26. 6. Epid. c. 6. The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Lib. 4 de ●ebr c. 12. The Causes 1. De com po med sec lo. c. 8. The Prognostick Hipp. lib. de sacro morbo The Cure To Conquer all Infirmities Study my Sennertus Platerus Riverius Bartholinus and R●olanus of the last Editions The Causes The Differences The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Gal oriba Ausc The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Tetra ● serm 4. c. 13. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure 3. Aphor. 24. T●e Signs T●e 〈◊〉 The Cure The Causes The Signs The Cure 1. De tu●n c. 8. The Signs The Prognostick Hipp● 58. apho 7. The Cure Lib 3. 6. 25. 1. 3. c. 13. Sylvatic contro 87. Ex Paulo Aegine●a The Prognostick The Cure Lib. 1. par 3. c. 43. The Signs The Prognostick Hipp. 1. prog ● 16. The Cure 〈…〉 26. Lib. 2. par 1. cap. 22. The Signs The Pro●nostick Hipp lib. ●e demitio The Cure Lib. 1. par 2. c. 34. The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Sign● The Prognostick The C●re The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure Heur meth ad prax l. 2. c. 26. The Signs The Pr●gnostick The ●●re T●e Signs The Prognostick Hipp. lib. de dentitio The Cure Lib. 3. par 2. cap. 5. 6. The Signs The Prognostick Hipp. 2. aph 53. The Cure Ex authore lib. 4. de morb The Signs The Prognostick The Cur● The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Prognostick The Cure The Signs● The Prognostick The Cure Lib. 3. par 3. sec 1. c. 6. par 8 sec 1. c. 1. ●he Signs The Prognostick The Cure Lib. 3. pra decal ves The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes The Signs The Prognostick The Cure The Causes B●sin ho●e invidia The Sign● The Pr●gnostic●● The Cure To Cure al diseases Read my Sennertus Platerus Rive●●us Bartholinus and Ri●lanus of the last Edition