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A77803 A new discovery of the French disease and running of the reins their causes, signs, with plain and easie direction of perfect curing the same. By R. Bunworth, Bunworth, Richard. 1666 (1666) Wing B5477; ESTC R232652 21,111 96

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A new Discovery OF THE FRENCH DISEASE AND RUNNING of the REINS THEIR Causes Signs with plain and easie Direction of perfect curing the same By R. BUNWORTH The second Edition corrected with large Additionals LONDON Printed for Henry Marsh at the Princes-Arms in Chancery-lane 1666. The Book-seller to the Author SIR when you see wee have not Grav'd your face But put this Mountebanke into your Place T is from designe to make noe shewes of you As such as promise more then they can doe Your whole fac'd cures Refuse you should be shown By shaddows or by halves your art alone That can Preserve entire and save the frame Of others shall be praised in the same There 's Beauty in those Scars that you have cur'd And double Pleasure while they have endur'd Further this kindesse is diffusive too Like the Disease you curteously doe You cure the Pox as it did first begin By Prostitution of your Medicin Others their Patients belief betray Your Publication is the Secret'st way H. MARSH The PREFACE to the READER Courteous Reader HAving had continual and dayly experience for some years together in the cure of the French disease with as good success as my own heart could desire I thought it necessary to publish all those several ways which I have made use of in the cure of this disease in several constitutions that other people might receive the benefit also of our labours and studies that I might shew my self a profitable member of the Common-wealth wherein I lived and in that City wherein was my present abode but now having found that that which we then did only for a tryall hath bin so well received into the world we thought it our duty to make it publick again with additions being assured that only the benefit which it brought along with it gave it so free a welcom and entertainment in the world And certainly for the time of publishing it it never could have bin more seasonable in regard that besides the multitude of those that are infected with venereal distempers such is the dark ignorance of most in this City who publickly profess to cure the same by sticking their bills upon posts to catch ignorant Countrie people that scarce one in twentie can give cure of that disease which they profess to cure The patient tells them and then they tell the patient again that he hath got a clap which signifies just as much as if they had said nothing at all And then out of ignorance or deceit they ingage the patient into a long and tedious Course of Physick until the time of the year shall have cured the disease for the present which they wholly ascribe to the Physick he took but the next Spring the patient finds by wofull experience the contrary for as the year getts up so doth the disease dayly increase which these Empyricks pretend to have cured Then he goes to another such like Mountebank which deales no better with him then did the former And thus is he miserably deluded for two or three years together until at length he concludes that the disease is incurable and so he is inforced to make much of his disease untill it brings him into some other distemper which kills him T is a vain thing and I am sorry that poor people should be so far deluded to think their disease incurable because these Quacksalvers tell them so For I here publickly profess by Gods blessing to cure this disease within the space of forty days in any that have had it above a dozen years by such means as are here set down in this small treatise which we have once more by reason of the publick recommendations that have bin given it published for the comfort of all those that are distressed and for the benefit of the young Practitioner of whom now I am speaking I shall take leave to give him these few exhortations first to avoyd the common fault of all practitioners which is covetousness and not to exact upon the necessities of others that are in distress in the next place let him not be too inquisitive of any patient who he is or where he dwells especially if he have a mind to conceal himself thy business being only to cure him which ease speed and safety Thirdly if thou knowest the patient judge not rashly of him for as an Artist you must know that the French disease may be got by lying in a hot bed with another or by drinking with him or by setting on the Close stool after him and so the Running of the reins may be got by riding lifting or any manner of streining as using too frequent copulation with a mans own wife Fourthly so to contrive the business that not any one of thy patients may know that the other is thy patient that each patient may be with all possible privacy Fiftly neither flatter nor dally with any patient whatsoever Tell him not that the cure will not be troublesome when thou in thy conscience knowst that it will and on the contrary doe not affright him when thou knowst that he is in no danger The observation of those instructions will give a repute to the practise of whosoever shall have a care not to deviate from them which I wish to all honest and painfull practitioners and that the abuses of Mountebanks may be discovered and avoyded which as it will be profitable to the judicious practitioner so it will not be a little advantageous to the patient Farewel R. B. CHAP. I. Of the name causes and original of the French Disease THE French pox is certainly a new disease and not known in Europe till within this hundred years For when Charles the eight king of France beseig'd Naples which was in the year 1494. it first began to spread it self not only through his army but through all Italy being brought by the Spaniards from the American Islands into these parts of the world It hath been variously named some calling it the Spanish some the Italian some the French disease Others not willing to injure any nation have stil'd it the Venereal plague Now what it is whence it deduceth it's original and to what kind of disease it ought to be referr'd it is a great difficulty to determine Some will have it to be the effect of divine justice Others say it proceeds from a manifest distemper of the aire that is when it is very moist But this stands not with reason when we find that this disease is contracted as well in times of drowth as well as moisture Nor can the aire be the cause of it seeing that never any man was yet infected with the breath of the most distemper'd person Some blame the copulation of a leprous souldier with a noble courtesan in Spain to have been the original thereof for when other young men came and made the same use of her the Foulness of the former mixture dispers'd this contagion to their bodies and they to others The