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A14401 The most excellent workes of chirurgerye, made and set forth by maister John Vigon, heed chirurgie[n] of our tyme in Italie, translated into english. Whereunto is added an exposition of straunge termes [and] vnknowen symples, belongyng to the arte Vigo, Giovanni da, 1450?-1525.; Traheron, Bartholomew, 1510?-1558? 1543 (1543) STC 24720; ESTC S105827 667,948 594

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the euyl complexiō of the vlcered perticule Hote cōplexiō For an hote euyl cōplexiō of the vlcered place is knowen by the rednes inflāmation and outward heate of the place and of the partes there about and by the runnyng out of thyn quytture hauinge a redde yelowe or grene coloure A colde complexion is knowen Colde by the blewnes or palenes of the membre wyth whytenes softnes coldnes of the place by grosse slymye and vndigested quytture and wyth watry substance wythout all bytynge and burnyng The signes of an euyl moyst complextion are these The membre is sorte and loose Moyst and full of superfluous moysture These thynges declare a drye complexion drynes Drye hardnes roughnes and thinnes of quytture As touching putrefaction we say that some putrefaction is done alredy some is to be done That whych is done is ambulatyue or walkynge that whyche is to be done continueth styll in hys owne kynde The signes of putrefaction that shall ensue are knowen by alteration of the membres by chaunginge the colour of the sayd vlcers that is to saye by the blacke blewe or grenyshe coloure of the vlcered membre The signes of putrefaction alredy done Signes of putrefaction is euyll colour of the vlcered place and whan the sayde place is depriued vtterly of al felyng though the place shuld be cut or haue bytynge thynges applied therupon An vlcere ambulatiue is sone knowē by enlargynge of the place Further a rounde and fistulare figure resisteth true curinge bycause that the quytture can not issue out but is constrayned to tary in the botome of the vlcers and bycause it remayneth in the botome of the vlcers more thē reason is it receaueth venemenes whych produceth holownes in the vlcers and weakneth the said partes through the weakenes of the mēber the superfluities of the hole membre ben ariued to the vlcered place In like maner the subtilenes of the quytture hyndreth curation for towchyng the partes of the vlcers it maketh a depe holownes throughe hys percyng and through hys moysture it maketh the fleshe softe readye to receaue putrefaction For thynges that come to putrefaction haue parte of moystnes whyche maketh them soft Item the grossenes of the quytture hyndreth curation of vlcers bycause that throughe hys slymynes it cleaueth to the poores and bicause it tarieth to longe in the sayde vlcers it receaueth an euyll qualitie for that that is touched of a rotten thynge rotteth Item the sharpnes of quytture bytynge corosion of the same hyndreth consolidation bycause it consumeth the natural moysture of the mēbre whych shuld be the cause to ioyne together the sondred partes The bloode that is not in due quātitie hindreth curation for the abūdans therof choketh natural heate the wante therof causeth that the vlcered member hathe not hys nouryshmente and nature is deceaued of her purpose bicause it hath not mattier to engender newe fleshe Item the euyll complexiō of the vlcered place letteth curation as well by heate as by coldnes as well by moysture as by drynes whether it be simple or cōpoūde material or not material The reason is bicause that when the complexion of the membre is hurte it must nedes be that the other naturall vertues of the membre be diminished or corrupted for the complexiō of the membre is the hande maide of the natural vertues and helpeth to turne the nourishment in to the substance of the mēbres and conueyeth awaye the noysome superfluities Itē there be some accidētes which hynder curation amonge whyche is immoderate fluxe of blood by which the mattier whereof the newe fleshe shulde be engendred and the spirites is taken awaye or diminished Furthermore paynfulnes weakeneth the hole body the vlcered membres and causeth that the humours arryue to the vlcered place in greate abundans whyche hindreth the cure Also an aposteme whych is a disease compounde of thre thynges namely of euyl complexion euyl compositiō and solution of continuitie hyndreth the cure for sondrye dyseases vexe and greue nature more then one In lyke maner the superfluitie of harde and skalye fleshe gendred in the borders of the vlceres lette the matter to be sente of nature for the generation of fleshe in the same for it can not passe by the poores nor accomplyshe hys naturall operation The addition also of fleshe resysteth curation Moreouer softe fleshe corrosion and putrefaction hyndreth curation bycause that thorough those thynges the matter sente of nature to engender fleshe is altered and so can not do hys kyndelye operation and thus the substaunce of the member is corrupted These thynges before alleged are the causes whyche hyndre the curation of vlceres Nowe we wyll brieflye speake of thynges Remotion of the sayd causes whyche haue vertue to take awaye the forsayde causes Fyrste yf the fygure be fystulare or holowe it muste be destroyed as it shal be declared here after in the chapiter of the cure of fystules and yf it can not be then ye muste fynde a meane to purge the matter before it receaue euyll qualitie in the botome of the vlceres Yf the sayde quytture be subtyle and moyste for rottynge mollifyenge the substaunce of the member ye muste procede to the curation wyth thynges desiccatiue accordynge to the great or small moysture of the sayde vlcere that putrefaction maye be resysted and the straunge moysture consumed Yf the quytture be grosse and slymye cleuynge to the botome of the vlceres and hyndrynge the nouryshmente of the place ye muste remoue it from the vlcered partes as well from the botome as from the borders therof Yf the quytture be sharpe and corrosiue ye muste rectifye the same by thynges whyche haue power to resyste sharpenes and corrosion And when the bloode is in to greate quantitie ye shall diminishe it by cuttynge a veyne yf it be in to smal quātitie ye shal gyue the patient meates of great nouryshement that engendre good bloode Yf the bloode be euyl in qualitie ye muste rectifye it by thynges contrarye to the sayde qualitie as yf it be to hote by colde thynges yf it be to moyst by drye thynges Yf there chaunce fluxe of bloode in the vlceres ye shall drawe the same to the contrarye partes by the cuttyng of a veyne by ventoūs and lyke thynges Yf ther be great paynfulnes ye shall take awaye the cause therof and comforte the vlcered place Yf the fleshe of the vlceres be to soft ye muste take away the straunge or vnnaturall moysture Yf there be superfluous fleshe the same muste be remoued and yf it be harde and shelly ye shall applye there vnto thynges resolutiue and linitiue and yf it resysteth resolution ye muste cut it awaye Yf ther be apostemation ye muste consume the matter by resolution yf it be vndigest ye must prepare it to digestion yf the cause come by corrosion ye shall turne awaye the matter antecedente and remoue the matter conioyncte Yf the
vi mengle them and make as it were an electuarye with honye of roses and a syrupe of vyolettes the receyte of it is from .vi. ʒ to ℥ i. Celedony is hoote and drye in the thyrde degree the vertue thereof is put in colliries to sharpinne the sighte The iuce of it put into the teeth causeth them fal within a certayn space as some reaporte The roote is of lesse exiccation or drying and it hath vertue to drawe and to resolue and therfore the sayde roote brayed and sprynkled with vynegre and holden in the teeth healeth the toth ache cōmynge of a colde cause Catapucia or spurge is hote in the thyrde and moyst in the seconde and it hath vertu to purge fleme melācholy choler therfore the decoctiō therof with mercury polipody doder borage reisins damaske prunes soddē in the broth of an henne and spyced wyth a lytle cinamome purgeth al rawe slymye flegmatyke and melancholycke humours chefely if it be takē fasting wyth syrupe and honye of Roses Furthermore the poudre of spurge taken with a lytle cynamome in a rere egge or in the broth of an henne purgeth grosse fleame myghtely and wythoute payne wherfore the vse thereof is good for the conseruacyon of the health of the bodye Canabus or hempe is hote and drye in the seconde and the seede is dryer and therfore it hath vertue to breake wynde Coperose is hoote and drye in the fourth and therfore it is corosyue Consolida or comfery is hote and drye with temperate heate and slymy moysture and therfore being chewed it taketh awaye the drynesse of the mouth and both the consolidaes that is to saye comferye and dasies haue vertue to consounde woundes Some say that comferye brayed bytwene two stones by a diuyne myracle kylleth anthrax Howbeit they ar both of one vertue Cantharides are lyke the greater flyes but that theyr bodyes be longer of grene colour and they ben hoote and drye in the thyrde degree and haue vertue to burne and to blyster Castoreum is hoote and drye in the seconde it hathe vertue to comforte synnowye places and therfore his oyle is good for the crampe Capitellum whiche is made of lye of Frenche sope is hote and drye in the fourth it burneth and cauteriseth as it were fyre Item capitelle made thycke at the fyre in a brasse banne wyth a lytle vitrioll romayne breaketh all Apostemes in cauterysynge Cinis or asshes is of hoote and drye complexion but of more or lesse excesse accordynge to the nature of the woode wherewyth it is made it hath vertue to drye and to scoure Chese beinge fresshe hath vertue to consounde but olde chese is cōtrarye Crassula is colde in the thyrde and moyste in the seconde and therfore it quencheth inflāmations and is very repercussiue and the iuce thereof with the iuce of lettuse oyle of roses and the whyte of an egge beaten all togyther easeth Herisipelas and healeth the chafynges of the priuye mēbres and is good agaynst scaldynge Cressoni or water cresses ben hote and drye in the second they open and perce and when they bene eaten with oyle and vinegre they prouoke vrine and they are agreable to some mennes taste Cumyn is hote in the thyrde and drye in the seconde It hath vertue to resolue and to breake grosse wyndynesse and when it is mengled wyth waxe with oyle of camomyll and of myrte with the iuce of radyshe and a lytle iuyce of wormewoode it resolueth deed blood that remayneth vnder the skynne throughe a bruse and it healeth easelye the blacknesse and blewnesse of the eye lyddes whē they come of a primitiue cause Carduus benedictus hath vertues that coole and bynde The leaues and floures sodden in swete wyne wyth sapa resolue the swellynge of the stones and the sayde carduus benedictus healeth all vlcers of the fūdament Item the iuce of it is conuenyentlye putte into oyntmentes agaynst woundes Galene sayth that carduus benedictus hathe vertue inflatiue or puffynge vp and that it is moderately percynge Dytany is hote and drye in the thyrd and it is good gaynst the stingyng of venemous thynges howe soeuer it be admynystred and therfore Virgil sayth that deere being wounded by venimous arowes naturallye seke out dytanye whiche they eate rubbe the wounded place therewith and so recouer health The decoction folowyng taken in drynke hath gret vertue in all percyng woundes in the brest and fystles ℞ sufficient quantitie of the rootes of dytany of auens of mugwort of mouseare of ielosioures of red coolewortes of threleafed grasse seth thē with the wyne of pomgranades and let thē be made swete with a syrupe de duabus radicibus Daucus or frenche persnepes or as some thynke yelow carattes bē hote and drye in the thyrde degre Theyr vertue is to drawe to loose to consume and to prouoke vryne ELeborus albus or whyte elebore is hote and drye in the thyrde hath vertue to purge fleme but the blacke purgeth melancholy and in old tyme they were vsed in purgatiōs bycause the bodyes were then stronger and myght sustayne stronger purgatiōs But nowe in stede therof we vse scamonie neyther can the other be vsed wythout euydent daunger The iuce of elebore mēgled with swynes grese and oyle of mastyke and laurell with a lytle quycksyluer quenched and a lytle litarge which all must be incorporate after the fourme of a liniment healeth all scabbes of harde curatiō chefely after a bathe of the decoction of mallowes vyolettes barly brāne fumyterrye and apples Item the sayde linimente mengled with terebentine is good agaynst all morphewes and scalles Enula campana is hoote and drye in the seconde degree the roote thereof sodden wyth holyhocke and Salomons seale and a lytle wormwod which all afterwarde must be stamped and strayned and ye must make a styffe playster with sapa beane floure branne and melilote addyng of oyle of roses camomyll and myrt an̄ ℥ ii The roote I saye thus ordeyned resolueth marueylouslye contusyons and attritions of muscles and lacertes and wrestynge of synowes after the fyrst dayes ben passed and it swageth payne Item it may be admynistred in goutes of the feete and of the iointes Fynally the vertue of it how so euer it be admynystred easeth the passyons of the herte and of the stomacke Esula or rounde spurge is hote and drye in the thyrde hys vertue is to purge melancholie and fleme and it draweth vp the rootes of wartes and dryeth them Epatica or lyuer worte is colde and drye in the fyrst The leues of it stamped and sodden in the wyne of pomegranades wyth barlye floure wyth whyte saunders and with oile of roses omphacyne disperse dryue backe and resolue a hote aposteme of the lyuer And a decoctiō of the same made with garden endyue and wild endyue and a lytle maydenheer and a lytle cicorie sodden in water and suger and a lytle wyne of pomegranades healeth the lyuer when it is distempered in heate Ebulus or walwurte is hote and drye it
medicyne Ipericon or saynt Iohns worte is hote and drye in the thyrde Galene sayeth moreouer that it is subtiliatyue And Dioscorides sayth that it hathe greate prerogatyue to heale woūdes of the synnowes wythout mordication or bytynge Item the iuyce of it in the fourme of a cataplasma is good agaynste greate woūdes and it mundifieth and incarneth Moreouer the oyle of it made as it foloweth is a great medicyne in vlcers woundes of synnowes R. of oyle omphacine ℥ vi of oyle of mastike ℥ i. of oyle of terebentine ʒ vi of oyle of roses complete of moste clere terebentyne ana ℥ ii of mastyke of frankynsence ana ʒ ii of myrrhe of aloes hepatike ana ʒ iii. of gūme elimi of colophonia ana ʒ iii. of the iuyce of saynt Iohns wort plātayne centaurye and horsetayle ana ℥ i. of yarowe ʒ ii of the rotes of tormentil of ditany of carduus benedictus an̄ ʒ i. of mader of fyne graine ʒ ii ss of saffran ʒ ss of earthe wormes washed wyth wyne ℥ ii of the leaues and rotes of an ashe tree ana m̄ ss of odoriferous wine li. ii stāpe the thinges that are to be stamped then seeth them tyl the wine and the iuyce be cōsumed and then streyn them through a thycke clothe and putte them into a glasse wyth the seedes and floures of saynt Iohns worte and a fewe floures of rosemary and sette them in the sunne in May the space of .xv. dayes renewynge the sayd floures twyse so ye shall haue a moost precious oyle to heale all woūdes except they came of a bruse and be altered by the ayre It is moreouer good agaynste olde peynes of the ioynctes in the frenche pockes and for synnowes that moue vneaselye and finallye for vlcers and woundes that induce tremblynges crampes Iarus or aaron that is the lesse dragone hathe vertue to heate moderatelye and when it is sodden wyth the rotes of mallowes violettes tapsus barbatus and lynsede and apples it resolueth the swellynges of the emoroydes Isopus humida or the sweate and fatte of shepes wolle is moderatelye hote and mollifieth al hardnes with mitigation of peyne LActuca or lettuse is colde and moyst it hath vertue to quenche all euyll and hote cōplexions as well wythin as without and therfore it is a good remedye agaynst Herisipelas Lettuse as Auicēne sayeth engendreth good bloode but yf it be often vsed it dimmeth the syght Lapacium acutū or dockes is hote dry in the thyrde it is good in bathes oyntmentes for the lepry scabbes ryngwormes tetters the frenche pockes and mormal Lupuleis or hoppes is hote drye in the fyrst declinynge to coldnes it hath vertue to swage burnyng peyne soupplynge and mundifienge bloude and choler Leuisticus or louage is hote drye in the seconde and it prouoketh vryne and is of temparate heate and conforteth the synnowes by hys aromatyke qualitie A baine of his decoctiō with sage rosemarye mugwort nepte camomylle mellilote sticados squinantum sodden in wyne is a good remedye for the crampe comynge of replecion and for the palsye Lanciola or sperewort is hote and drye in the fourth it hath vertue to purge fleume and cholere and is corrected with the iuyce of wormewood Lac or mylke is of temperate heat and Serapon sayth it is compounde of thre substāces that is buttire chefe and water and it is resolutyue wyth mollificatiō Yf ye mēgle sowre milk wyth the leaues of plantaine wormewood rybworte oyle of roses and of myrte wyth barlye and beane floure and egges it is a singler remedye for wrestynges of the ligamētes ioynctes and for attrition of muscules at the begynnyng And yf ye put therunto a lytle oyle of camomille spike and mastyke it healeth the sayde diseases in the ende wyth confortation of the place Item mylke wyth a syrupe of roses and a lytle wyne of pomegranades healeth the quynce Mylke also put into the eyes swageth the payne of them Licium is compounde of sondrye substaunces and it is desiccatyue subtiliatyue and percynge Moreouer it is of erthye substaunce colde and stiptyke Lentilles are temperate inclinyng to dryenes and bene partelye restrictyue and stiptyke and therfore they are good in eatynge and deceytful vlcers Lignum aloes is hote and drye in the seconde it conforteth the brayne distempered by a colde cause through hys aromatyke qualitie and the decoction therof wyth mader barlye and sugre healeth all woundes vlcers of the entrayles The pouder of it with cloues and the bone of a stagges herte and oyle shal make a cocke to crowe day and nyght yf ye rubbe hys combe herwyth And therfore the fume therof receyued at the nose conforteth the colde brayne Limacis caro or snayles fleshe is hote and moyste and is good for the straytnes of the brest and shortnes of wynde and yf ye boyle snayles in an ouen and stampe them and dry them wyth theyr shelles they haue vertue to scowre But rawe snayles stamped wythout theyr shelles wyth leuen the rotes of a cane or reede drawe out peces of bones and peces of wood Item the fleshe of lytle snayles that lyue in trees beinge rosted in an ouen and brayed as fyne as maye be healeth the vlcers spottes and other diseases of the eyes Snayles of the see are of like operation but that they are more drye and abstersyue bycause of theyr saltnes Licorice is hote and moyste wyth temperate heate and whē it is sodden wyth raysons horsetayle barlye alkechingi cōueyed in wyth a syryng it remedyeth vlcerations and chafinges of the bladder Lupynes are hote in the fyrste and dry in the seconde Galeyne sayth they are desiccatyue and abstersyue wythout mordication or bytynge A decoction of lupines healeth cancrena and doth make the face fayre and is good to heale the morphewe Litarge is colde and dry and is cōuenientlye ministred in linimentes of hote vlcers Laudanum is hote and moyste in the seconde and it is good for colde catarres and comforteth the matryce when it is applyed wyth a pessarye And whē it is poudred with mastike and incorporate wyth licium it fasteneth loosed teeth Lilly rootes are hote and moyst in the seconde they ripe apostemes and swage peyne Lapis lazuli is colde and moyste good for al kyndes of diseases that come of melancholye MErcurialis or the herbe mercurye is hote and drye in the fyrst and beynge sodde with the broth of an henne and sufficient suger souppleth and purgeth a stiptyke bound belly Lykewyse in clysters it is a singuler remedy for the peines of the ioynetes of the crampe The clyster may be made after this sorte ℞ of the leaues of mercuriall and holihocke ana m̄ i. of the leaues of beetes and coleworte ana m̄ ss of the floures of rosemarye of nepte and camomylle and polipodye and of the coddes of sene epithimū ana a lytle of the rootes of brionia ʒ x. of the rotes of flourdeluyce ℥
therefore they are colde and drye very hurtful to the sinnowes Ripe apples rosted swage the peyne of the eyes and of the fundament whē they ben mengled with mylke and yolkes of egges and so applyed in the fourme of a playster Matrisilua is hote and drye and it cutteth and thynneth as Galene sayeth and is conuenientlye administred in oyntmētes of the legges and the leaues of it healeth the vlcers of the legges Margaryte or perles are temperate and when they be poudred and mengled wyth honye of Roses they are good for passions of the hert Manna is hote and moyst temperatlye it hathe vertue to mundifye choleryke bloode and it quencheth the boylynge heate of cholere Millium is a grayne colde in the fyrste and drye in the seconde and it is conuenientlye putte into lytle bagges and applyed in sondrye partes of the bodye to drye And when it is dried in a brasse panne wyth branne and well stamped it apeaseth the peyne of the ioynctes If ye rubbe the heade therwyth the heere beinge shauen of it stoppeth reumes hauynge added a lytle of calamus aromaticus and a lytle sandrake Mastyke is hote and drye in the seconde and hys vertue is to conforte synnowye places wyth incarnation and stypticitie and yf mastyke be chewed wyth a lytle of staphisagre they prouoke humours from the brayne to the mouth Myrrhe is hote and drye in the seconde it hath vertu to cōfort defend putrefaction it cōsoundeth and therfore it is vsed in freshe woundes to glew them together it is also good in rotten vlcers Mespiles or meddlers are colde drye in the third be very restrictyue the vnrype are more byndynge then the rype NVttes are hote and dry of euyl nouryshmēt of hard digestiō they cause heed ache whē they ben mēgled with hony figges salte a litle triacle they heale the byting of men dogges serpentes other venomous beastes Auicenne sayth that hasyll nuttes encrease the brayne Nutmygges cōforte by the aromatike nature dissolue Sōtime theyr vertue is necessarye for the dymnes weaknes of the eyes Nuttes of cypresse are hoote drye temperately they cōfort and dry with notable stipticitie Nasturcium or cresses are hote dry in the thirde haue vertue to rype colde apostemes The sede of it soddē wyth vinegre brayed dissolue scrophules Nigella is hote dry in the thyrde whē it is stāped with hony oxe gal aloes caballine and applied vpon the nauell in the fourme of a playster it kylleth wormes in chyldren Nenupher is cold moist in the seconde the flour soddē with oyle of violettes oyle of roses omphacine and a litle wine of pomegranades vnto the cōsumption of the wine quēcheth the inflamation of herisipelas and phlegmon OYle made of rype Olyues is hote moyst wyth temperate heate and it hath vertue to receyue into it selfe al the vertues of simples Yf it be made of vnripe oliues it is cold and dry and therfore it is stiptike is called oyle omphacine And whē it is made according to art wyth roses it quencheth al hote mattiers conforteth the cōplexion of the mēber Oua gallinarū or hēnes egges are tēperat Their yolkes ben moderatly hote and moyste the oile therof as Auenzoar saith is an excellent remedye to swage the peyne of the eares The whyte is colde and moyst Organy is hote dry in the thyrd it hath vertue to dissolue and to consume with attraction whē it is mengled with camomyll mellilote dylle mugwort and put in a bagge it swageth peyn of the belly coming of a colde cause chieflye if it be first heated vpon a tile sprincled with wine Itē whē the arsegutte issueth out of the fundament stāped organy with roses calomus aromaticus and wormewoode and layed hote therunto reduceth the gutte vnto hys place Opoponax is a gūme of hoote and drye complexion and it is resolutyue wyth mollification Opiū is colde drye in the fourth and therfore it is stupefactyue Os sepie that is the bone of a fyshe called a cuttle is colde and drye and mundifieth gentlye Ordeum or barlye is colde and dry in the seconde and dryueth backe hote apostemes and when it is mengled wyth thynges resolutyue it resolueth the sayde apostemes And when it is sodden in the decoction of malowes the yolkes of egges oyle of violettes and a litle buttyre it ripeth cholerike and sāguine apostemes beynge applyed after the maner of a playster and hauynge added a lytle saffran Orobus is hote in the fyrste and drye in the seconde and beynge chewed with almondes of a fastyng stomake and layed vpon tetters ryngwormes and morphewes it helpeth the sayde diseases And yf ye rubbe youre handes and face therewyth it clarifieth the skynne It scoureth and purgeth fylthye and rooten vlceres beynge mengled wyth floure of lupines honye of roses and terebentine And it is of lyke efficacitie in woundes of synnowes after that the daunger of apostemation is paste Item the floure of orobus put in playsters is good for synnowye woundes and apostemes Olyues vnrype are colde and dry and therfore theyr oyle is stiptyke And whē they be seasoned wyth salt Fenell water or veriuce and eaten in small quantitie they confort the stomake and prouoke appetite Rype olyues be temperatelye hote and moyst but they ben of euyl digestion and nouryshment Oleum muscelinum is hote hath vertue to resolue Guydo sayeth it is drawen out of a certeyne grayne as oyle is drawen out of behen PEares are of sondrye kyndes and their substaunce is watrye and earthye some of them be swete some harryshe some sower The swete are lesse colde than the sower howebeit they haue all some stipticitie but beynge rosted they are of lesse stipticitie than whē they be raw Peares and apples rosted are conuenientlye vsed in playsters for hote apostemes at the begynnynge And some saye that the iuyce of them incarneth and consoundeth woundes and vlceres But it shall be better and surer yf ye put to a dramme of the sayd iuyce two drammes of syrupe of roses and ʒ x. of clere terebentyne ʒ i. of frankinsence and ℥ ss of beane floure Lette them seeth together besyde the floure and the frankynsence and thā incorporate the reste and vse them after the maner of an oyntment Porrum or a leke is hote and drye in the thyrde degre wherfore the water therof dronken wyth honye and water or meth is a presente remedye for venomous styngynges If ye rost leekes and make a playster of them wyth a lytle triacle terebentyne and oyle of rue they heale the wound that cometh by bytynge Item yf ye mengle the iuyce of a rosted leeke wyth a lytle olibane oyle of roses and a litle womans mylke and a litle oyle of the yolkes of egges it hath vertue to take awaye the payne and sowndynge of the eares comynge of a colde cause Pix naualis or shyp pytche is hote and drye it hath vertue to consume dissolue liquide pytch shippe pitch are conuenientlye put into oyntmentes for colde vlcers Purcelane is colde in the thyrde and moyste in
ceruse ℥ i. of lytarge of golde syluer ana ℥ i. myngell them and make a linimente in a mortar of leade anoynt the ytchyng place therwyth ¶ A chapter of the cure of a bruse without a wounde wherin the bones of the heade are depressed chiefly in chyldren REsolutiue medicines that remoue blood caused by cōtusion in childrēs heades are of .iij. sortes wherof the fyrste is thys ℞ the whytes and yolkes of .iij. egges of oyle of roses and myrte ana ℥ ij of the floure of beanes barlye ana ℥ i. ss Incorporat them altogether Thys remedye must be applyed vpon the bruse the .iij. fyrst dayes and ye muste chaunge it ones a daye And ye shall laye it on wyth stoupes moysted in the wyne of pomegranades or in vinegre and water and afterwarde presse them and dyppe them in the sayd myxture The secōde whych muste be applyed from the .iiij. daye vnto the tenthe is in thys fourme The frenche sayeth br●●● ℞ of beanfloure ℥ iiij of barly floure ℥ ij of brymstone ✚ brayed .li. ss of camomil mellilote stamped or the graynes ▪ leaues of myrte of roses and wormewood ana m̄ i. of corianders cumyne swete fenell ana ʒ vi of calamus aromaticus ʒ iij. braye the thynges that are to be brayed and seeth them al together wyth sufficient sapa tyll they be thycke and styffe addynge of oyle of myrte roses and camomill ana ℥ i. ss of whyte waxe ℥ ij myngle them together and styrre them aboute when ye take them fro the fyer tyll they be luke warme and procede herewith vnto the thyrde daye The thyrde is the application of a sponge dypped in the decoction folowynge ℞ of camomill mellilote roses wormewood mirtilles of the graynes and leaues therof of euery one m̄ i. calamynt nepte of euery one m̄ ss of coryanders cumyne fenell ana ʒ vi nuttes of cipres brayed n̄ x. of honye ℥ iii. of salte of roche alume ana ʒ x. seeth them all togyther with a quarte of redde wyne and as much lye tylle the thyrde parte be consumed thenne streyne them all and vse this decoction with a sponge well bound pressed vnder which sponge ye shall laye thinne plates of lead bored thorough in sundrye places by this meane I haue healed many at rome whan the bones were depressed withoute openynge the place ¶ A chapiter of compound woundes A Wound compound is that wherin ther is losse of substaunce and therfore the good practicioners say that in the cure therof two ententions are requyred wherof one consisteth in the restauration of the lost substaunce the others offyce is to cicatrise the substaunce beyng restored Wherefore in this case ye must procede with dygestiues and not with incarnatiues as ignoraunt chyrurgiens doo for Rasys sayeth a depe wounde or vlcere commeth not to regeneration of flesshe but after rotennes that is to say after digestion An other reason is why dygestion is conueniente in this case at the begynnyng bycause in these woundes ther is alwayes alteration of the ayer Howebeit all digestiues are not conuenient but such as are small for the long digestiues are daungerous except the wound be vpon a great ioint with great losse of substance A conueniēt digestiue in this case must be made after this fourme ℞ of clere terrebentyne ℥ ii the yolke of an egge of saffron ℈ i. fyll the wound with lynt weted in this digestiue And afterwarde laye vppon the wounde a leaffe of blacke colewoortes And aboute the partes of the wounde ye shal lay the remedies wrytten in the chapyter of flesshye woundes too defende theym from apostemation and peyn When good quitture shal appere ye shal apply no more digestiues as ignorante chirurgiens do putryfyeng the mēber with long digestions But ye shal apply this mundificatyue folowyng ℞ of clere terbentyne ℥ iii. hony of roses sirupe of roses ana ʒ vi seeth them al togyther whan ye take them from the fyer adde there vnto the yolke of an egge of saffron ℈ i. of barly floure ℈ x. After mundification whiche is knowen by good flesshe for incarnation ye shal put to this mundificatiue of sarcocolle myrre aloes ana ℥ i. ss myngle theym The second intention is accomplysshed by thinges cicatrisatiue wherfore ye shall washe the place with water of alum and ye shal applye the pouder of mirobalane citrine and vnguentum de minio Altered woundes are lyke vnto theym whiche are withe losse of substance therfore theyr cure differeth not excepte the altered woundes be with great contusion for then ye shal procede withe vnguentum egiptiatū to remoue the putrefaction For the other intentions ye shall procede no otherwyse then is aforesayde ¶ A chapter of great contusion and attrition of lacertes without a wounde THe vniuersal rules noted in the chapter of hurted synowes presupposed ye shall vse at the begynning that whites and yolkes of three egges beaten wyth oyle of myrre and oyle of roses to stoppe the course of the mattyer to the sore place After the fourthe daye ye shalle applye a playster of beanes husked sodden in water with malowes roses wormwood bran crōmes of broun bred wherw t afterward ye shall make a stiffe playster with as moch oyle of roses camomyll myrte and barlye floure as shal suffyce and for this purpose the playster foloweyng is of singuler efficacitie ℞ mallowes wormewood branne husked beanes ana m̄ ij of mugwort weybread roses ana m̄ i. sethe them all together with the broth of a wethers head tylle the barlye be perfectly sodden than stampe them well and put to that that is stamped of barlye floure .li. i. ss of fenugreke floure ℥ ij of camomyl mellilot and dyll stamped a na m̄ i. of the graines of myrt wel brayed ℥ iij. of beaten cumyn ʒ ii ss of hony ℥ iiij seeth them all togyther with sufficient sapa a litle odoriferous wyne tyl they be thicke stiffe and than putte thervnto of oyle of camomille roses dille myrte and of whyte waxe ana ℥ ij of saffron ʒ iij. This playster is of gret efficacitie in al brufynges of lacertes and falles vppon the dely for it resolueth the blod whiche is wythout the veynes swageth peyne and comforteth the members ¶ A chapter of the accidentes of woundes and synowes THe accidentes of woundes as are a spasme peyn and aposteme hinder the cure of woūdes And therfore thei must be diligently remoued and whan they be distempered in heate and dryenesse they engender heri●●pelas Matter hote and moyst causeth phlegmon matter colde moyst engendreth vnd●●ia The remedies that swage peyne in a hote and drye cause are of .iii. kyndes whereof the fyrst is in this forme ℞ the whytes yolkes of .iij. egges of the iuce of lettuce and plantayne ana ℥ ss of oyle of roses odoriferous ℥ iii. beate them all togyther and vse them with cloutes vpon the member infected with heriūpelas The forme of the seconde is
lv Alopetia Fol. ccliiij cxxx Alexanders liniment Fol. cliij Amigdals Fol. v. Anatomie Fol. i. Anatomye the order of it eodem Anatomie .ix. thynges to be consydered therin eodem Anthrax Fol. xxviii Aposteme Fol. xiii xcl Aposteme hath foure tymes eodem Aposteme hath foure maner healynges eodem Aposteme is opened Fol. xv Aposteme simple colde Fol. xxxiiii Apostemes wyndy Fol. xlv Aposteme of the eyes Fol. xlix Aposteme of the browes and eye lyddes Fol. lv Aposteme vnder the eares Fol. lvii Apost of the iawes amigdals Fol. lx Apost of the throte necke Fol. lxiiii Apost hote in the brestes Fol. lxv Apost through flebotomye Fol. 233. Apost colde of the brestes Fol. lxvi Apost of brest rybbes c. Fol. lxvii Aposteme in the backe Fol. lxviii Aposteme of the flankes Fol. lxix Aposteme of the flanke commyng of a longe fieuer or of congeled blood in the bellye Fol. lxx Aposteme of the yarde Fol. lxxi Apost of the fundament Fol. lxxv Aposteme of the shulders eodem Aposteme of the arme Fol. lxxvii Apost of the handes fyngers eodē Aposteme sclirotike Fol. lxxviii Aposteme of the fynger called panaritium Fol. lxxix Aposteme of the hyppes eodem Aposteme of the knees thyghes and legges eodem Aposteme of the feete Fol. lxxx Aposteme of the stomake Fol. lxxxi Aposteme of the lyuer eodem Apostemation to let it Fol. lxxxv Apoplexie Fol. iiii Armes woundes of them Fol. xcv Arme broken Fol. clxxvii Aroes the drawing out of thē Fol. cx Aroe cure of a venemed aroe eodem Arterie Fol. ii Arteria trachea Fol. v. Aschachillos Fol. xxvi Aspes his styngyng Fol. cxvii Attractyue medicines whye they be vsed Fol. ciiij. cvi Auripigmentum howe for to calcinate it Fol. ccvii Aeyre rectifieng of it Fol. xxx B Backe aposteme of the backe Fol. lxviii Backbone peine therin eodē ccxxxix Basillare Fol. iii. Bellye Fol. viii Bellye apost of the belly Fol. lxix Belly woūdes ꝑcing throgh it Fol. c. Byndyng or lygature Fol. cxi Bytynge and the cure Fol. cxvi Blader wounde therin Fol. cii Bladers the cure therof Fol. xxiiij Blood when it ought to be stopped in what cause Fol. lxxxiii Blood fluxe of blood Fol. lxxxv Blood signe of arterial blood eodem Blood stāchyng of blood Fol. xciiii Blood staunchynge of blood at the nose Fol. clxxxjjjj clxxxvii Blood the abundaunce of it in vlcers Fol. cxx Blood diminutiō of it in vlcers eodē Boci●● Fol. xxxix ccxxxvij Bodyes tender moyst Fol. lxxxiij bolster Fol. cxiij Bone Fol. ij Bones are nombred Fol. xi Bones broken in generall Fol. clxxij Bones broken dysplased Fol. clxxv Bone of the nose broken eodem Bones chawbones broken eodem Bone canel bone or brest bone broken Fol. clxxvi Bones of the necke brused eodem Bone ●umpe bone broken Fol. clxxvij Bones of the hādes brokē Fo. clxxviij Bone roūd bone of the kne bro. fo clxxix Bonchines Fol. c●xxxiij Boxynge Fol. xxix Breakynge of the skulle Fol. lxxx●ij Breyne panne Fol. iij Breyne Fol. iiij Breyne of the cōmotion of the brey fo xci brest Fol. vij Brest woūdes of it Fol. x●vij Brest fystula therin Fol. xcix Brestes hote apostemes in bre fo lxv Brest aposteme in it Fol. lxvij Browe aposteme therin Fol. lv Bruse and cure therof Fol. xciiij Brused woundes Fol. ●xiiij Bub● a maturatiue for it Fol. ●xxii Burning blerednes of the eyes fo liiij B●r●ynge by fyre Fo. ccxxx●●iij C Cancrena hys cure Fol. xxvi Canker the forme diuisiō of it fo xliij Can●●● Fol. vi Capsula cordis Fol. viij Carbunculus hys cure Fol. xxviij Carb●●culus pustules Fol. lxxi Carolles betwene the foreskinne and heade of the yarde Fol. lxxij Catarattes in the eyes Fol xxxv Cause primitiue antecedēt Fol. xiij Causes of corruption eodem Cauteries Fol. ccviij Cerote for hardnes of the liuer fo lxxxij Cerote of minium Fol. x●● Cerote for the heade Fol. cxxxvi Cerote for the goute Fol. clxviij Ce●●●es in generall Fol. ccix Chappes of the lyppes Fol. cxlij Chafynge betwene the thyghes fo clvi Chyldren of the preffynge downe of the bone in theyr heades Fol. xci ccxlvij Chylde deade howe to drawe it out of the wombe Fol. ccxxxij Chilus Fol. ix Chorde Fol. ij Chordes woundes of them Fol. ciiij Cicatrizatiues Fol. ccv Cicatrice Fol. xvi Clisters Fol. ccvi Cistis fellis Colon Fol. ix Complexion is good to be knowen Fol. lxxxiiij Cōplexiō of medicines incarnati eodē Complexions the iudgement of them in all vlcers Fol. cxx C●●craua chilis Fol. ix Cōfideratiōs .iiij. in al cures fol. xlix Con●usion Fol. cxiij ccxlvi Cordial confection Fol. xxxi Coronale Fol. iij Cornea Fol. vij Cornea and coniunctiua Apostemes in them Fol. liij Corrosiues Fol. ccvi Cough short breth Fol. cxci cxcvij Crabbe lyce Fol. cxl Curynge in generall Fol. ccxxiij Enttynge of a cataratte Fol. cxxxvi D Decoctiō helpyng breathing fo xcviij Decoction pectoral Fol. xcix Decoction to breake wynde Fol. ci Deffenes is cured Fol. cxlvi Delatation of the apple of the eye Fol. cxxvii Derbia Fol. cxxxix Di●●●●s Fol. x Diet● stiptike Fol. c Digestiues of choler Fol. liiij l Digestiues of sanguine eodem Digestiue of fleume and melancholye eodem Digest of salt grosse fleume Fo. liiij Digestiue of hote cause Fo. lxxxi Digestiue of colde cause eodem Digestiue must fyrst be vsed in woūdes Fol. lxxxiij Disease of diuerse ꝓperties must haue diuerse curations Fo. xlvi Dislocation Fol. c. lxxix Diuersion of humours Fo. li drawyng out of arowes f. cx ccxlix Dugges cold aposteme of thē Fo. lxvi Dugges hardnes of dugges not cancrous Fol. lxvij Dura mater causes of apostemation of it Fol. xc E. Eare peyne wtin the eare Fo. lviij Eare apo vnder the eares f. lvij lviij Eares peyne in them Fo. cxlv Eares wormes in them Fo. cxlvij Elbowe woundes of it Fo. xcvi Elbowe displaced Fo. clxxxij Electuary to resolue blood Fo. cxiiij Electuaries lenitiue and resolutiue theyr properties Fo. ccxiiij Electuary to purge fleume Fo. cxliij Emoroydes Fo. cli cclx Epiglotte Fo. v Epitheme cōfortati of the hart F. xxxj Eschare and the cure Fo. xxv Eschare to remoue it Fo. xxij xxvij xxx xxxi xliiij Estiomenos Fo. xxvi Estiomenos the cure f xxviij ccli Excrescentes Fo. xxxix Exiture Fo. xxxiij Experience of vigo Fo. xxvij Eyes Fo. vij Eyes itchynge burnyng blerednes of them Fo. liiij cclix Eyelyddes aposteme therin Fo. lv Eye wounde in the eye Fo. xciij Eyes vlceres spottes and webbes in them Fo. x. xxxij Eyes pani cicatrizes in thē f. cxxxiij F. Face rubies in the face Fo. xxl Fantasie Fo. iiij Fatnes cured Fo. ccxxxiiij Feuers of maryners Fo. ccxxvij Feuer cureth a spasme Fo. cix Feuer flegmatyke Fo. ccxxx Flebotomy Fo. xxix ccxxij ccxliij Flegmon Fo. xij Flegmon herisipelades Fo. xiij Flegmon the cause therof eodem Flegmon of a primitiue cause fo xiiij Fleg of an antecedent cause Fo.
Pruna and sygnes therof fo xxiiij Purgation howe it maye be gyuen wythout digestiue fo xxix Purgatiōs of choler fo liiij lxij xcv Purga of sanguine fo liiij l. lxij Purgation of melancholy ibidem Purgation of flegme ibidem Pur. of salt grosse flegme fo liiij Purg. of a myxte cause fo lxij Purgation of hote cause fo lxxxi Purgation of colde cause eodem Purgers of the head fo xcij Purse of the stones hardenes therein fo lxxiij Pustules carbunculous fo lxxi Pustles in the eye lyddes fo cxxxviij Putrefactiō in vlcers is knowē f. cxx R. Ragadie vulue Fo. cliiij Retifyeng of the ayre fo xxx xxxi Regiment of health fo ccxxi Rhethe mirabile fo v Reynes fo ix Reynes payne of them fo ccxxviij Repercussiues perilous in eyght cases fo xvi Repercussiues are not to be ministred in the heed fo xlvij Repercussiues how to vse thē fo xvij Repercussiues maye not be ministred in the emunctories fo lix Repercus symple cōpounde fo cxcix Resolution sygnes of it fo xiij Resolutiue with repercussiō f. lxxviij Resolutiues symple fo CC Resolutiues compounde fo cci Rybbes fo vij Rybbes brokē displaced fo clxxviij Ryftes in the fundament fo cl Rotten nayles and the cure fo lxxx Rubies in the face fo cxl Rupture and the causes fo lxxiiij Ruptorie of capitell fo ccviij S. Sanguine feuer fo ccxxx Saphati fo cxxxi Scaldynge fo ccxxxix scabbes of the heed causes f. cxxix cclv Scabbes of the eye lyddes fo cxxxiij Scabbes and hys cure fo clxv Scipions pouder fo cxlviij Sciatica and hys cure fo clxix Sclerosis fo vij Sclirotyke aposteme fo lxxviij Scourged and hys cure fo ccxxxi Scrophula glādula differ fo xxxix Scrophules fo lxxxii ccli Sebell in the eyes fo cxxxv Secundiue fo vij Sense comune sense fo iiij Sephiros fo xiij Sephiros and hys cure fo xli Sephiros cancer differ eodem Sephiros cacrous in a womans brest fo lxvi Serpigo fo cxxxix Shulders apostemes therof fo lxxvi Shulders the woūdes therof fo xcv Shulder broken fo clxxvi Shulder displaced Fol. clxxxi Syde bones Fol. iii. Signes of sharpe matter fol. lxx Signes of mortificatiō of pust f. lxxi Signes of resolution Fol. xiii Signes of maturation Fol. xxxiii Signes of hote exitures and colde eo Signes that be good in vlcers Fo. cxix Signes that be euel Eo Sight weaknes of it Fol. cxxxvij Simples folow in order Fo. clxxxiiij Sinnowe Fol. i. Sinnowes Fol. xij Sinnowes woūdes in thē F. ciiii ccxlvi Sinowes the peyn of thē F. clxvi Sirupes their properties Fo. ccxiii Skin roughnes therof Fol. ccxxxv Skynne Fol. ij Skull breakynge of it Fol. lxxxvij Skul howe to know breking of it Fo. lxxxviij Slepe Fol. ccxxix Slepynge Fol. xxxi Smellyng diminished Fol. ccxxxiij Solution of continuitie Fol. lxxxij Sowyng of a woūde Fo. xciij cxiij Sowynge two maner of it Fol. cxiii Sowynge of guttes Fol. ci Spasme and the cure fol. cviii Spasme prohibition of it fol. xciiii Spondiles Fol. vi Squinātie of four kindes Fo. lxi cclviij Stomake Fol. ix Stomake hurt the signes Fol. c. Stomake weaknes therof Fo. ccxxx Stones Fol. x. Stone for the stone Fol. cxcv Stones wounde of thē Fol. ciij. Subtiliatiue medicines why they be vsed Fol. cvi Suffumigation to resolue windines of the eares Fol. cxlv Suppositories Fol. ccxvi Swellynge in the knee Fol. lxxx Swellynge or loosenes of the eyes Fol. cxxxviij Sweate superfluous Fol. ccxxxv Syrsen Fol. iiii Siphac Fol. viij Siphac Fol. x. T. Table of medicines for a chirurgien Fol. ccxij Talpa topinaria Fo. xxxiii xxxix Talpa is cured Fol. xlviii Tela aranea Fol. vii Tela vnea Eo Tentes fol. cxiii Tenasmō fo cliii Terminus comunis Fol. xii Tertian pure Fol. ccxxviii Tertian not pure Fol. ccxxix Testudo Fol. xlviii xxxix Tessilus oyntment Fol. cclxiiii Thighes wounde in them Fol. ciii Thighes chafynge betwene the thyghes Fol. clvi thighe bone broken Fol. clxxviii Thryst Fol. ccxxix Throte Fol. v. Throte Apostemes of it fo lxiiii Tonge Fol. vi Toth ache Fol. clxx cxciii Trachea arteria Fol. v. Transuersales Fol. iii. Tremblynge of the herte Fol. xxxi Trociskes of affodilles Fol. ccvii Trociskes restrictiue Fol. Eo V. Verrices or swelling veines Fo. clvii Ventricles of the brayne Fol. iiii Vētoses application therof Fo. ccix Vētoses in thre causes Fol. lix Ventoses when they oughte not to be ministred Fol. Eo Ventoses Fol. ccxxii Vertue imaginatiue Fol. iiii Vertigo Fo. Eo Verualia Fol. vi Veyne Fol. ii Veyne the maner of byndynge it Fol. lxxxvi Vesicatorie Fol. l. Vesicatorie medicines Fo. ccviii Vlcers in generall Fol. cxvii Vlcer what it is causes and kyndes of it Fol. cxviii Vlcers in general cured Fol. cxxi Vlcers virulent corosiue Fo. cxxiii cclii Vlcers rottē filthie Fol. cxxv cclii Vlcers holow the cure Fo. Eo cclii Vlcers of the heade Fo. cxxix Vlcers of harde curation Fol. cxxvi Vlcers of the nose Fol. cxli. cclviij Vlcers of the face Fol. cxlii Vlcers of the mouth Fol. Eo Vlcers of the throte Fol. cxliii Vlcers of the backe Fol. Eo Vlcers of the brest Fol. Eo Vlcers of the arme Fol. cxliiii Vlcers of womans brestes Fol. Eo Vlcers of the eares Fol. Eo Vlcers of the bellie Fol. cxlviii Vlcers of the stanckes Fol. Eo Vlcers of the yarde Fol. Eo Vlcers of the fundamēt not percinge Fol. cl Vlcers of the matrice Fol. clv. Vlcers of the hanches Fol. clvi Vlcers virulente of the thighes legges Fol. clvii Vlcers moyst of the head Fol. cxxix Vlcers in the eyes Fol. cxxxii Vndimia Fol. xiii cclxii Vndimia and hys cure Fol. xxxv Vnguentum mixtum Fol. xv Vng. egip Fol. xv xxvii ccvi cclxiiii Vnguentum basilicū magistrale Fol. xvi ciiii cclxvii cxlvi Vnguētum magistrale for vlcers and cankers Fol. xlv Vnguentum apostolorum Fol. ccvi Vngm̄ basilicū capitale Fo. lxxxviii Vnguētū de minio Fol. cxxix cxlviii Vngula in the eyes Fol. cxxxiiii Vomitynge Fol. ccxxxii Vrine reteyned Fol. ccxxxv Vuula Fol. vi Vuula the fallynge therof Fol. lx W. wakynge Fol. xxxi wartes in the eye lyddes Fol. cxxxviii wartes growing in the eares Fol. cxlv water ryght excellent for the eyes Fol. cxxxvi waters magistral Fol. ccxx waters simple Fol. ccxxi wyndye apostemes Fol. xlv wynde places apte to receaue wynde Fol. xlvi windie the cause of windy apostemes Fol. Eo wynde medicines breakynge wynde Fol. ccii wyndines in the eares Fol. cxlvii wine of pomgranades is made Fol. cxliiii wine to a woūde fo lxxxiiii wormes called sirones in the flesh Fo. cxl wormes and other thynges in the eares Fol. cxlvii woundes Fol. lxxxii ccxlv wounde of the heade Fol. lxxxvii woundes of the face Fol. xcii wounde sowynge of a wounde Fol. Eo cxiii woundes of the nose eares Fol. Eo wounde in the eye Fol. Eo woundes of the necke fol. xciiii woundes of the shulders fol. xcv woūdes of armes ioyntes
holyhocke and lyneseede l. ss melt them all at the fire and lette them boyle with the sayde muscilage and than strayne them and make a softe cerote wyth suffyent whyte waxe Item we haue proued a playstre made of ryse sodden til it be thycke wyth the brothe of a shepes heed or of an henne and incorporated wyth suffycient buttyre oyle of camomylle and haue founde it good which I dyd boyle in a pos●et addynge in the ende the yolkes of .iii. egges and of saffran ℈ i. It mollifyeth the hardenesse of the mamilles merueylouslye Lykewyse crommes of breed steped in a decoction of holyhocke and afterwarde stamped with oyle of roses camomyll and dyl and set on the fyre with a lytle of the forsayde decoction and an ounce of duckes grese and boyled togyther and hauyng added in the ende the yolkes of thre egges and of saffran ℈ ss is of good effect Thus endeth this present Cha. for which the name of God be blessed ¶ Here endeth the fourth treatyse of Apostemes and the the fyfth begynneth ¶ The fyrst Chaptre Of apostemes of the brest and of the rybbes and that chaunce vpon the pānicle called diaphragma or midriffe IN the regyon of the breest Of apost of the brest eybbes c. and ribbes there are engendred hote and colde Apostemes as in other partes of the bodye And they come sometymes of a primityue cause but for the moost parte of a cause antecedent Yf they come of a primitiue cause than the cure may be after the cure of flegmō engēdred of a primitiue cause For mooste commenly these apostemes are of an hote nature and bene engendred of bloude or cholers wherfore I wyll recite the ordre of a mattier that chaunced at Genua whan I was in that cytie An experiēce There was a labourer whyche satte vpon a wall And he had a sōne of thre or foure yeres of age whyche came vnto him vpō the wall whom as the father saw he rose vp to mete hym and by an euyll chaunce they fell downe bothe And the sayde labourer was sore hurte in the rybbes so that it came to a greate apostemation And whan the Aposteme beganne to enclyne towarde maturation he was vexed wyth a sharpe fieuer wherfore it was necessarye to open the Aposteme acccordynge to the length of the rybbes The incision was made very greate and depe for the Aposteme was greate and there issued oute greate quantitie of matter And one daye at the tyme of his dressynge nature voyded at ones in one instante a greate quantitie of matter by the opened place of the Aposteme by the Patientes mouthe and hys bellye we seinge thys chaunce ordeyned conuenyente potions wasshynges incarnations and mundifycations whereof we wyll speake in the chapitre of a wounde that pearceth into the breest so that by the ayde of God we restored the labourer being an olde man vnto his health agayn At whyche curation the excellent Phisition Iames Baroia a Geneuoye greatlye meruayled Yf the Aposteme be engendred of a cause antecedent we muste consydre howe we proceade to the curation of it eyther by resolution or by an other meane For yf the sayde Aposteme come by the waye of termination ad crisim as we haue often sene after longe fieuers than the wyse Chirurgyen ought to consydre whether the Aposteme be come to maturation Yf it so be he maye conuenyently make incision after the length of the rybbes as we haue sayde But yf the place be not yet come to maturation lette it be ryped wyth a playstre of colewortes made with buttyre and the brothe of flesshe vnsalted or wyth a Playstre of holyhockes and other wrytten in the Chapitre of the cure of Flegmon And bycause this aposteme sheweth no exiture nor swellynge outwardlye so that vnconnynge Chyrurgyens perceyue not the collection of the sayde aposteme ther is greate nede of an experte and learned Chyrurgyen wherfore for the verifycation of thys Aposteme whan it is growen in the sayde place and that there is gatherynge of corruptyon in it it is necessarye to knowe the sygnes that are wonte to come before maturation that is to saye Signes of maturatiō heuynes and ponderositie of the place wythout swellynge chefely whan it is percynge and for the moost parte without rednesse of the place And it hath alwaye a lytle fieuer And the patient eateth wyth greate dyfficultye and can not slepe And yf the Chirurgyen presse the place with hys fynger where the matter is gathered togyther there remayneth in the pressed place a concauitye or holownesse and moreouer ye maye feale a pulsation or beatyng Lykewyse ye maye haue knowlege by the relacyon of the Patient for thys Aposteme bryngethe greate payne To conclude whan the foresayde sygnes be obserued by a wyse Chyrurgyen and whan the Aposteme is come to maturation let depe incision be made after the length of the rybbes and after the quantitye of the mattier For whan the mattier is in greate abundaunce the openynge must be the greater At the fyrst ye shal not suffre moch fylth to yssue out that nature be not to moche feabled Therfore the quytture must be retayned in laying tow and hurdes vpon it wyth the whyte and yolke of an egge mengled togyther The next daye lettte it issue out in good quantitie And bycause thys Aposteme is penetrant or persynge we ought to procede as it shal be declared in the Chapitre of a persynge wounde Yf ye perceyue that the aposteme perceth not than must the place be digested with a dygestyue of terebentine by the space of thre or foure dayes After digestion let the place be mundifyed wyth hony of Roses and terebentyne and with a mundificatyue of smallage And ye shall consydre yf the Aposteme haue manye hollowe places that before the incarnation the sayd hollowe places muste be mundifyed wyth vnguentum apostolorum layed vpon a tente or wyth vnguentum Egiptiacum or wyth vnguentum mixtum or wyth a lotion of lye or pouldre of Minium of oure descryption whyche taketh awaye superfluous flesshe Afterwarde for the incarnation and sigillation ye shall vse the remedyes wrytten in the former Chapytres Yf the Aposteme chaunce in the fore partes of the breastes ye muste procede as it is declared afore of an Aposteme in the rybbes Thus endeth thys Chapitre For the whyche God be praysed c. ¶ The .ii. Chaptre Of an Aposteme in the backe as well hotte as colde THe Aposteme the chaunceth in the backe Aposteme in the backe bycause of the nobilitie of the place where the nuke is situated and by reason of the multitude of synnowes is daungerous as the doctours saye The curation of it is this If the Aposteme be hote the vniuersall rules presupposed ye shall annoynt the place wyth oyle of camomyll oyle of Roses and oyle of vyolettes by the space of two or thre dayes And yf ye perceyue that the Aposteme bendeth to the waye of resolution than it is conuenyent to
abstersyue made of honye of roses of terebentyne of sarcocolle ordeyned in manye places After mundification for incarnation and sigillatiō ye shal procede accordyng to the doctrine geuen for the same in the vniuersal chapiter of vlcers Lykewise yf ye wolde purge the bodie and orden a conuenient diete ye shal resorte to the seconde chapiter of vlcers in general c. ¶ The seconde chapter of vlcers of the brest THe cure of Vlcers of the brest Vlcers of the brest differeth not frō the comune cure of other vlcers whē they perce not into the inward partes wherfore yf they be holow corosiue ye shall resort to the chapter of holow and corosiue vlcers c. If the sayd vlcers ben with corruption of the bone and not percynge ye must warely remoue the corruptiō of the bone wyth an actual or potenciall cautery discouerynge fyrst the corruption of all the rotten fleshe and afterwarde remouyng the rotten bones wyth raspatories vnto the hole parte And after that the corruption is remoued ye muste cauteryse the hole parte gentlye and superficially if it be possible for the rest of the cure ye must procede as we haue declared in the chapter of the cure of vlcers wherin the bones be rotten And if the saide vlcers be percyng ye shall procede wyth a cure palliatiue wythoute application of sharpe thynges for the noble mēbres might be hurted through the sharpnes therof wherfore the remedies that are declared in the chapiter of percyng woūdes are cōuenient in thys case which I councel you to peruse ¶ The .iii. chapter of the vlcers of the arme Vlcers of the arme THe Vlcers of the arme differ not from the comune cure of vlcers wherfore accordynge to theyr kyndes ye shal resorte to theyr proper chapters Howbeit ye shall note thys one thing that as the vlcers of the legges require lienge in a bedde lykewyse the vlcers of the armes wolde be bounde vp towarde the brest c. ¶ The .iiii. chapter of the chappynges of the nypples of the dugges of women and vlcers of the same THe vlcers of womens brestes are comunelye holowe Vlcers of womens brest bycause that the flesh therof is rare and spōgious and for the moost part are engendred of hote apostemes proceding of kurded mylke sometyme of colde humours and are harde to be cured For they that procede of kurded mylke bycause of the continuall deriuation of mylke to the dugges resist resolution and they also whyche procede of colde humours cause greate holownes through theyr grossenes and are not easelye cured Moreouer bycause that conuenient byndyng can not be vsed in the brestes they sayde vlcers be therfore of harder curation The cure of the sayd vlcers Cure is accomplished by the application of sondrye local remedies And fyrste ordenaunce of diete and purgation accordynge to the humours presupposed for mūdification we haue found our poudre of mercury to be of good operation leynge vpon the same vngm̄ de minio of our description ye may also laye ouer the brest thys playster R. of beane floure of the floure of lentilles Playster de●●ccatiue and barlye an̄ li. ss lette them seeth wyth sufficient sodden wyne tyl they be thycke Thys playster dryeth and resolueth and swageth payne And yf the sayde vlcers be very paynfull ye shall applye a playster of the crommes of breade the leaues of malowes in the broth of a henne sodden with a litle buttyre oyle of roses and the yolke of an egge a lytle saffran Here ye shal note that the tent ought not to be longe but must be holowe made of the rote of ditany or of a drie gourde after the maner of a latchet or of the leaues of blacke Coleworte somwhat dryed in the shadowe The dugge must be tyed vpward toward the necke that the humours rēne not down to the place we haue described sondrye remedies conuenient in thys case in the chapter of remedies of the dugges Also the dryeng vp of mylke helpeth muche to the curation of thys vlcere And therfore it is good to geue the woman a pille of rubarbe To dry vp mylke in the quantitie of a pease wyth an ounce of water of plantayn and myntes Vlcers caused of colde and grosse humours may be cured with the foresaid ordinaūce and for the other ententions that is to saye for mundification incarnation and sigillation ye shal procede after the chapiter of vlcers in generall And bicause that often the teates are ful of chappynges through the superfluitie and the sharpnes of the mylke we wyll ordeyne a cōuenient linimēt for the cure therof R. of an oyntment of roses of oyle omphacine an̄ ℥ .i. ss of the iuyce of plantayne ℥ ss of calues suet ʒ.x of litarge of golde and syluer an̄ ʒ.vi of burned leade of ceruse of tutia an̄ ʒ.iii of antimonium ʒ.ii of frankynsence ʒ.ss of terra sigillata of bole armenye ana ʒ.i.ss mengle these thinges together in a mortar of lead the space of two houres and make it a liniment For sigillation ye shal apply vngm̄ de minio in a styffe fourme or vngm̄ de cerusa a fomentation of water of alume goyng before ¶ The .v. chapter of the vlcers that growe in the inner partes of the eares THere are oftētimes engendred within the eares Vlcers of the eares apostemes of reumatyke mattier wherof vlcers come of hard curation The reason is bycause the place is vnmete to haue medicines applyed vpon it bycause the superfluities of the brayne do easely arriue to the said place Likewise bicause the place cā not endure sharpe medicines which are requisite for the cure of vlcers wherefore the gentler the curatiō of the fore sayd vlcers is the better it is The cure of these vlcers is accōplished by the administratiō of local remedies that ben of familier mundification Fyrst purgatiō of the humours of the heade wyth pilles of agaryke and of assagereth and ordinaunce of diete presupposed yf the vlcers be newe ye maye heale them wyth hony of roses with oyle of the yolkes of egges and a lytle sarcocolle stilled into the vlcere Item it is a good remedie to distil into the eares vpon the vlcers the wyne of swete pomegranades for it healeth in mundifienge and purgynge the mattier The maner to make the said wine is thys The maner to make wine of pomegranades Ye muste take a good swete pomegranade and seeth it in whyte wine and afterwarde stampe it finely and then streyn it presse it strōglye and adde therunto of mooste fyne hony of roses ℥ ii.ss and seeth them agayne vnto the thycknes of hony and apply this often vpon the vlcers And yf ye wyl that it be more abstersiue attractyue ye shal adde therunto ℥ .i. of terebentine wyth an ounce a half of the forsayde liquor And bycause that the sayd vlcers are comunely paynfull ye must not applye thynges very desiccatiue wherfore the oyle of
preparate wyth oyle of swete almans and oyle of elders wyth a lytle vynegre wyne of granates and butter wyth .xij. earth wormes and snaylles and as many chest wormes boyled altogether wyth .ij. ounces of oynyōs rosted in an ouen somewhat cut and stamped these thinges muste sethe tyll the wyne and vynegre be cōsumed wyth a lytle saffrā then ye shall strayne them and powre of the straynynge into the eare for it hath the forsayd vertue Item to this intention it is conuenient to applye a playster made of sapa sodden wyth butter oyle of elders a lytle saffran whyte waxe brayed branne barlye floure Also the oyle of lynsede the oyle of bytter almandes soddē wyth erth wormes may cōueniētly be vsed Furthermore a playster of sapa sodden wyth branne and wyth oyle of camomill and dille and wyth a lytle camomill and mellilote and applied vppon the eares hath a great prerogatiue Besydes thys the suffumigation folowing helpeth to swage payn caused of hote humours A suffumigation in a hote cause ℞ of malowes violettes camomill mellilote dille of euery one m̄ i. of barlye chaffe small cutte of cleane barlye of branne ana m̄ ij of licorice of raysons of euerye one ℥ .i. seeth the forsayd thynges together tyll halfe of the water be consumed then let the smoke be receyued into the eare and afterwarde vse in a hote cause the forsayde remedyes Here foloweth another suffumigation conuenient to release the payne procedynge of a colde cause ℞ of the rootes of holihocke A remedy for a colde cause li. ss of camomill mellilote dille of the leaues of horehounde ana m̄ i. of sticados of squinātum of maiorum of euery one a lytel seeth them wyth water and a lytel odoriferous wyne tyl halfe be cōsumed and receyue the smoke into the payned eare and afterward let the remedyes afore wrytten for paynes procedynge of a colde cause be poured into the eare accordynge to necessitie ¶ The .ix. chapter of impedimētes of hearynge or of defnesse NAture is wonte to be vexed with sondry dyseases Impediment of hearynge about the vertue of hearyng whych is very necessary to euery man as wel to optaine knowlege as to conducte other affayres of thys present lyfe Wherfore it is diligently to be conserued when any euyl chaunceth it muste be wysely remoued The accidētes Causes of defnes that hynder sometyme destroy the vertue of hearyng are these griefes apostemes wyndynesse vlceres superfluous fleshe deafnes wormes and suche lyke wherof we wyll make a proper chapter by the helpe of god Wherfore yf the cause of defnes of the eares be an aposteme for the remotiō therof ye shal resorte to the proper chapters of the apostemes of the eares lykewyse in al other We entēde in thys present chap. only to entreat of deafnes in general Fyrst before ye come to locall medicines ye must purge the humours of the heade with pylles of hiera agregatiue or cochie or of assagereth with agaryk accordyng to the euyl humours Also ye must order a dyete whych ought not be to moyst in thys case And therfore the patiēt may wel vse tyme maiorum percelye myntes nept organy nutmegges cynamon in hys meates he may drynke wyne of good odoure delaied with water sodē with coriāder Itē it is good to vse water sodē with hony coriāder and a lytle cynamon and he shall receyue therof halfe a glasse full in the mornynge as muche at nyght As touchynge locall remedyes we saye that the medicines wrytten in the chapter of the soundynge of the eares are conuenient in thys case Of the remedyes praysed of learned men thys is one ℞ of oyle of bytter almondes ℥ i.ss of oxegalle ʒ.i of black elebore stamped graynes .ij. of castorium of vynegre of euery one ʒ.v let them seeth all together tyll the vyne egre be consumed then strayne them and poure therof into the eare warme Item thys remedye folowynge is profytable to recouer hearynge ℞ of hares galle ℥ .i. of oyle of castorium oyle of elders of oyle of nardus of euerye one ʒ.vi of odoriferous wyne of vyneegre of euery one ℥ .i. of the floures of rosemarye of the leaues of rue of eche a litle of foxe grese of the fatte of an ele of euery one ʒ.iij or of blacke eleborus brayed ℈ .i. let them seeth all together tyll the wyne and the vyneegre be consumed then strayne them and vse them as is aforesayde Also the oyle of balsami and the oyle of castor hath a greate prerogatiue in this case Lykewyse the vnderwrytten suffumigation restoreth hearynge maruelouslye Suffumigation ℞ of camomille of mellilote of dille of stycados of squinant of rosemary of euery one m̄ ss of whit oynions nombre .iij. of the rootes of affodilles ℥ .iiij. of blacke ellebor brayed ʒ.i of horehounde of maioram of serpillum whych some call our ladyes bedstraw of organy of wormewood of euery one m̄ i. of honye li.i of bytter almanse somewhat stamped ℥ .iij. of oxegalle ℥ iij.ss seeth these forsayde thynges wyth sufficient quantitie of water and a lytle vynegre and vse them after the maner of a suffumigation Another remedye for the same purpose A synguler remedye ℞ of iuniper seede ℥ ss of blacke elebore ℈ .i. of oyle sysamyne of oyle of lynseede of oyle of elders and rue of euery one ℥ ss of oyle of castorium of oile of a foxe of euery one ʒ.ii of vynegre ʒ.x of odoriferous wyne ℥ .i. Lette them seeth all together tyll the wyne vynegre be consumed strayne them put therof into the eare warme Item an other ℞ of the beryes of laurell of the seede of iuniper of euerye one ʒ.ijij of oyle of bytter almans ʒ.x of oyle of dille and of lynseede of euery one ℥ ss of oyle of castorium oyle of elders of euery one ʒ.ij.ss of the iuyce of purslane of the iuyce of ciclamine ana ʒ.v of maioram of rue of eche a lytle of vynegre ʒ.ij of the galle of an hare ʒ.vi seeth them all together tyll the iuyces and vynegre be consumed then strayne them and vse them as is aforesayde Another suffumigation good for deafnes ℞ of the leaues of elders of the leaues of walwort and mugwort of euery one m̄ i. of the beries of iuneper and laurell ana m̄ ss of the rootes of ciclaminie of the rootes of affodilles of euerye one m̄ i. of maiorā of wormewood of myrrhe of euerye one ℥ i.ss of honye ℥ .iij. of oxe pysse li.i of vynegre li.ij of water as muche as shal suffyce adding of nept calamynte betonye rue ysope sticados cētaurie spykenarde of euery one a lytle let thē seth tyl the thyrd parte be consumed and vse them after the maner of a suffumigation for the operation is maruelous Item the oile of elders soddē wyth oyle of dille and rootes of affodilles is a synguler remedy for deafnes Item some saye that it is
veyne And yf the emoroydes be in fourme of lytle outgrowynges of fleshe the payne beynge somewhat remoued it is a good remedye to laye blood suckers theron and thē for the full mundification and resolution of them ye shall administer the forsayd cerote There chaunceth often in thys disease a swellynge rounde and large after the figure of a chestenut which causeth greate peyne and must be cured with the forsaid remedies namelye by resolution and mitigation of payne After the payne is swaged I was wonte to minister the foresayde cerote for perfit resolution Finally if the emoroydes growe to a hote aposteme for the cure therof ye shal resort to the chapter of flegmon The fourth entention whych is to correcte accidentes shal be accomplished by the administratiō of locall remedyes The accidentes of these diseases are these vehement payne gret fluxe of bloode apostemes cākerous putrefaction of the places Concernyng swagyng of payne staunchyng bloode and curation of aposteme we haue spoken in thys present chapter But for as muche as the payne is very vehement for the remotion therof ye maye applye some thynge wherin opium shall enter as thys that foloweth whyche is of the description of Alexander and we haue proued it in thys case in Tenasmō R. of mirre of frankynsence of licium of saffran ana one parte Alexanders liniment of opium two partes braye them and make a linimēt with the muscillage of psilium and oyle of roses wherewyth ye shall annoynte lyut and putte it both wythin with out Here foloweth an other sure and excellent remedye for the same purpose An excellent remedy R. of the leaues of henbane and of malowes and of colewortes ana m̄ i. wrappe them all in peces wete them and rost them vnder coles then stampe them and laboure them in a mortar of leade wyth a lytle oyle of roses the yolke of an egge and a lytle saffran and the meate of rosted apples ℥ ii applye thys medicyne after the maner of a playster And yf the emoroydes growe to blacknes cankerdnes ye shall resorte for the cure therof to the chapter of a canker And thus we ende c. ¶ The fyfth chapter of tenasmon Of tenasmon TEnasmos is a passiō of the gutte called intestinum rectū wherin the patiente hathe great desire to the siege but vttereth nothyng sauyng a lytle flymy mattier as is the gelye of fysh mengled wyth droppes of bloode And thys passion for the more part is caused of grosse and slymie mattier cleuing to the arse gutte whyche louseth the sayde gutte thorow hys slymynes byteth the same thorowe the sharpenes and saltnes styrreth vp the vertue expulsyue and causeth desyre of a siege thys kynde is euer wyth ponderositie or heuines of the place Somtime the sayde passion is engendred through cold of the fete or by the receyuyng of a medicine made wtoute scamony or elebore It chaūceth also sōtime through grosse choleryke and brente bloode and causeth greate payne and the patient vtreth more bloode then fleume And moreouer there happeneth in thys case vlceration in the ende of the muscule which prycketh the vertue expulsiue and prouoketh to siege The cure of tenasmon Cure shal be accomplyshed as it foloweth Fyrste a conuenient purgation muste be vsed that is to saye yf the mattier be hote that the bodye be purged wyth a linityue lectuarye or wyth cassia diacatholicon wyth manna If the matter be colde the patient shall be purged with cassia and diafinicon and diacatholicon Howebeit ye shall note thys one thynge before the administration of a medicine by mouthe ye shall vse a clister linityue to mollifye the dregges of the guttes A linityue clister conuenient for tenasmō in a hote and drye cause maye be thus ordeyned R. of the brothe of hennes or of other fleshe A linitiue clister thre pound of Violettes Malowes camomyll melilote ana m̄ ss of lyneseed ℥ .i. let them seeeh all togyther alytle and make a clyster with oyle of violettes oyle of camomyll and the yolkes of egges a lytle red suger But yf the forsayd passion be caused of a colde mattier the clystre folowyng is to be vsed which mollifieth and purgeth salt and slymy matter and breaketh wynde ℞ of camomil melilote and dyll ana m̄ i. of the leaues of holyhocke m̄ ss of bran m̄ ii of the rootes of tapsus barbatus m̄ i of lyneseed ℥ ii of swete fenelle of anise ana ℥ ss of cumyne a lytle of licoryce ʒ.x the heed of a wether somewhat broken seeth them all to gither with sufficient water tyl half of it be consumed than strayne them and presse them strongly and take of the strayning li. i ss of oile of camomil dyll an̄ ℥ .ii. of oyle of rue ℥ ss of hony of Roses ℥ .iii. the yolkes of ii egges and so vse the clystre Item it is good to bath the place with the decoction of the sayde clyster and to receyue the smoke therof Lykewyse it is a synguler remedye to take the same decoction and oyle of lyneseed in euen quantitye and a litle red sugre the yolke of an egge and to clysteryze the sore place therewith Item oyle of lyneseed rubbed with the roote of tapsus barbatus the leaues thereof and with a lytle mugwort and camomyll and than clystered warme swageth payne effecteouslye Item we haue founde it good to vse a suffumigation of frankensence terebentine a lytle myrre it swageth payne Lykewyse to syt vpon a warme table of a pynapple maketh to the same purpose Item a suffumigation and syttyng vpon the sayde decoction maye conuenyentlye be vsed Colliries also put in to the fundamente passe other remedyes Yea and linimentes brought into the fourme of lyquide oyntmes are of great efficacitie in this disease And therfore the liniment of Alexander noted in the former chapiter is of a maruelous excellēcye for it swageth payne in prouokyng slepe which is a synguler remedye in this case c. ¶ The .vi. Chapter Of the relaxation or loosynge of the gutte called intestinū rectum IT chaūceth often that the arse gutte is molified softened lowsyng of the greit gutte through sondrye causes so that it cometh out of the foūdament of the length of thre fingers and thys passion happeneth mooste in chyldren though it chaunce also in other ages And the cause therof is grosse and slymy fleume cleuynge to the gutte and molifienge the same pryckynge vp the vertue expulsyue wherefore there foloweth greate ytchynge and mollification of the fundamente whereby the gutte issueth out of his acustomed place this passion cometh ofte with tenasmon and happeneth to children by takynge colde in their feete The cure of thys desease The cure shal be accomplished with administratiō of locall medicines First cōuenient purgation and good diet presupposed ye must foment the place with rasyn of pyne apple terebentyne frankynsens and mastik afterwarde sprincle
that it shal be of greter exiccation or drying put to the forsayd oyntment of lyme thryse washed with rayne water ℥ i. ss of liquide storax ℥ ss and so vse thē Forthermore all meates that engendre grosse brente and colerycke bloode muste be auoyded as grosse flesh pepered and salted meates garlyke mustarde drye fygges c. Somtyme yf the age and strength of the patient wolde suffre it is conuenient to draw blood out of the veyne basilica most often in this case ventoses are to be vsed vpon the shulders armes buttockes and thyghes chefely whā the scab is spred through oute all the body And therefore Auicen aloweth wel the application of ventoses vpō the thighes with scarificatiōs we haue proued moreouer that laying of blood-suckers vpon the emorroidal veines is verye profytable to drawe oute gros melancholy and burned blood Pylles also in this case are greatlye praysed of Auicenne so that one onelye be taken at one tyme. But I was wonte to admynistre the pylles vnderwrytten ℞ of wasshed aloes ℥ i. of pylles of mastik ℥ ii make pylles lyke peason with the iuce of celydonye The receyte of them in hole parsōs is ʒ ss vnto .iii. ℈ Yf ye wyll haue it of a stronger purgation put therunto of pylles of fumiterry ℈ .i. c. ¶ The .v. Chapter Of the paynes of the ioyntes that is of artetik goute in the handes and feete and kneees ¶ To the moost reuerende lorde my lorde Sixtus prest of the Romayne church vicechaunceler of the titule of saynt Peter ad vincula A Passion arthetyke as the aunciente and later wrytters declare is an outwarde payne of the ioynctes caused of abūdaunce of fleume Of the peyne in the ioynctes and sometymes of colerike humours rennyng to the sayd ioynctes And according to the places wherunto the mattier floweth it receyueth sondrye names wherfore when it floweth to the fete it is called podagra when it floweth to the handes it is called chiragra and when it renneth to the knees it is called genugra and when the sayd humours be arriued into the hyppes it causeth the gout called sciatica The payne wherof is extended from the hippe to the lytle too In the goute called Podagra the peyne begynneth about the great too In chiragra about the fore finger or thōbe they whyche haue thys disease lyue in reste and pleasure a riotous lyfe wtout excersice of the body whiche also eate grosse and melancholike meates and pulses as beanes peason Cycers c. wherfore Ypocrates sayeth that the grecians called Helenes were troubled wyth the gout bycause they vsed to eate beanes and peason and other pulse Thys passion moreouer is founde in prelates of the churche in those whych were poore men and afterwarde came to some hye dignitie wherefore they gaue them selfe to slouthfulnes delicate lyuyng wherwyth the ioynctes are wont to be troubled wyth grosse slymye humours thorow euyl digestion wherfore moderate excercise is verye good to auoide this disease idelnes doth the cōtrarye For as yron cankreth when it is not exercised so mannes body thorowe rest is corrupted with euyl humours Neuerthelesse immoderate exercise chiefly vehement walkynge prouoketh the goute in the fete as Arnolde de noua villa doth witnesse sayeng of muche drynkynge of wyne of greate walkynge of often vse of women and by forbearynge of accustomed purgatiōs innumerable persōs become goutie And thys passion cometh by inheritaunce and it is merueylouse peynful chiefly yf it be engendred of a hote cause so that it bryngeth the patiente in despiratiō to a palsy to apoplexia to difficultie of breathyng perturbation of the sences and sodeyne death But the peynes of a goute caused of a colde grosse and slymye mattier be not very greate Howbeit they contynewe longe and therfore Hipocrates sayth that sometyme they are not ended in .xl. dayes But when the mattier is hote they ende in .xiiii. dayes as I haue sene in Iulio secundo I haue often sene that this disease hath proceded of a grosse slymye and chalkye mattier so that the mēbers haue euer remayned croked and knobbye And this kind of the gout receyueth no cure but a palliatyue cure as Ouide sayth Soluere nodosam nescit medicina podagram that is no medicyne can heale the knobbie gout And marueale not yf the peynes of ioynctes procedyng of a hote cause ben greate for as Galene sayeth that humours whyche cause peyne in the handes fete knees or haunches fyl the concauitie or holownes whych is betwene the ioynctes and stretche out the ligamētes muscules and synnowes and thorow that stretchyng a great peyn is caused and no crampe which peynes chaunce for the moost part in the spryng of the yere and in the heruest chiefly in the ioynctes of the fyngers and the toes Cornelius Celsus sayth to thys purpose that the peynes of ioynctes come soner to the toes and fyngers thā to other partes And the thys disease chaunceth not to gelded men nether to yong mē that haue not had copulation with womē nether to women that haue not theyr accustomed purgations reteyned To come to our purpose we ought to consider the cause and the accedentes of the disease And we must know that one kynde of the goute cometh of a colde cause an other of hote And of those the procede of hote mattier some are with great peyne as those which come of pure choler and some ar not of so great peyne they come of choler mēgled with fleume The peynes of the ioynctes procedyng of cold mattier are small moderate but they are hard to heale and dure longer as we haue said and the place where the peyne is is swollen and whyte But if the mattier be hote the place is red and in thys passion there chaunceth often a lytle fieuer whych is wont to ende whē the mattier leaueth his sinnowie places and cometh to the outwarde partes And therfore Galene sayth that in the peynes of the teeth and of the ioynctes it is a good signe For when swellyng chaunceth in the outwarde partes it is a greate token that the mattier hath left his synnewe and is come to the fleshye particule Further we saye that thys disease maye be nombred amonge colde and hote apostemes and therfore there be thre causes therof as antecedent primityue and conioyncte as we haue declared in the treatyse of apostemes The members from whence the mattier of the said peynes procede are diuers for when the mattier is flegma tyke and slymye it cometh from the stomake or from the brayne And yf the mattier be hote that is to say choleryke or sanguine those humours procede alwaye from the lyuer And so sayeth Anicenne declarynge that thys disease procedeth of the superfluitie of the seconde and thyrde digestion And the mēbers that receiue this mattier are the ioynctes But Anicēne deuideth these causes .iii. maner waies Fyrste into a cause efficient which hath humours Secōdly into a cause instrumētall and
the fyer and styrre them al aboute let them seeth agayne a lytle and vse thys ordinaūce wyth a brode cloth after the maner of a cerote An other cerote ℞ of the rootes of enula campana soddē in water stamped and strayned .li. i. of salomōs seale of the rootes of walworte of euery one ℥ iiij of oyle myrtyne of oyle of camomill of ꝑcely of euery one ℥ i of oyle of terrebētyne ℥ i. ss of colophonia of clere terrebētyne of euery one ℥ ij of the oyle of a foxe spike of lylies of laurell of elders of euery one ʒ x. of whyte waxe ℥ i. ss make a softe cerote at the fyer addyng of beanefloure and floure of cycers of euerye one ℥ iiij ss of liquide storax ʒ v. of frankensence ʒ iij. vse thys cerote as it is aforesayde Some chirurgiens allowe that the place be rubbed wyth aqua vite before the application of the cerote whych thynge assuredly we haue perceyued to be of great effecte for it perceth and dryeth straunge moysture whych two thynges are necessary in thys curation Lykewyse other men in the steade of aqua vite prayse fomentacion and bathynge of the place wyth a spōge dypped in the decoction vnderwryttē ℞ of camomille wormewoode rosemarye sage nepte of the herbe called our ladyes bedstrawe or serpillum of organye of maioram of euery one m̄ i. ss of roses sticados myrtilles squinantum of euery one m̄ i. of yua muscata of saynt Ihons worte of euerye one m̄ ij of the rootes of paucedinis of dytamye of aristologia of cētaury of policaria of euery one m̄ ss of hony li. i. ss of the nuttes of cypresse brayed nombre twenty of cloues of nutmegges of myrrhe of euery one ʒ v. of salt of roche alume of euery one ℥ i. ss of branne grownde ℥ iij seeth them all together wyth a sufficiente quantitie of barbours lye odoriferous wyne tyll the thyrde parte be consumed vse thys fomentation as it is aforesayd I haue founde moreouer that the oyle of ypericon or saint Ihons wort is of singuler efficacitie in all paynes of the huckelbones and of the knee Item the leaues of yuye boūde vpon the soore membre swageth the payne of all artetyke passions chyefly yf they be colde Nowe we muste speake somewhat of the remotion of the accidentes of the goute that is to saye the hardnes and knobbes whych remayne wythin the ioyntes for the cure wherof ye shall vse thys mollifycatiue folowynge ℞ of oyle of camomill dille roses whyt lylies of euerye one ℥ ij of the oyle of floure de luyce ℥ i. of oyle mastyke of oyle of spike of euerye one ʒ vi of hennes grese and duckes grese of the oile of swete almondes of euerye one ʒ x. of the marye of the legges of a calfe and of a cowe of freshe butter ana ℥ vi of liquide storax ʒ ix of calues suet ℥ ij of the sweate of shepes woll called isopꝰ humida ℥ iij. Sometyme it chaūceth that the hardnes groweth to an aposteme for the maturation digestion mundifycation and incarnation therof ye shal resorte to the chapter of the cure of flegmon c. ¶ The syxte chapter of the tothe ache The toth ache THe teethe are wont to be vexed throughe a reumatyke matter distillinge frō the brayne and thorough the faut of the stomake with sondrye passions but seynge that the teeth serue for comelynes for chewynge of meate and for pronunciation therfore they muste be cured wyth all diligence Aliabbas nombreth .vi. dyseases of the teeth payne corosion congelation dormitation fylthynes loosenes They suffer not an aposteme bycause of theyr hardnes but a thynge lyke to aposteme nether haue they felynge by themselues but by the reason of synowes whych come frō the thyrde payre of synowes of the brayne to theyr rootes and to the gommes whyche thyng Galien affyrmeth also in the boke of vtilitie of the partes thus we maye conclude that they are not apostemed nether fele but by reason of the gommes and the synowes afore sayd whyche thynge is euidēt for when one lytle pece of the tothe is broken the man is not payned and therfore he addeth moreouer sayeng The payne of the teeth chaunceth of the euyll complexion of the synowes or of an hote or colde aposteme wherfore sometyme the payne is swaged when the roote is pulled vp and the matter whych causeth the payne issueth by the holownes of the place where the tothe was and also the synowe is not extended or strayned out where the place is enlarged Fynallye it is a cause why the medicine maye enter in more easelye and ease the paynefull place wherfore Galien sayeth that yf medicines preuayle not for the swagynge of the tothe ache we must descende to the laste remedye that is to saye we must drawe them out by the rootes Corrosion Corrosion chaunceth in the great teeth through rotēnes sharpe and euyll moysture whyche groweth and byteth them ye maye remoue the sayd corrosion wyth trepanes fyles and other conuenient instrumentes fyllynge the concauities afterwarde wyth leaues of golde to preserue the place from putrefaction Congelation Congelation chaunceth to the teeth of outward or inwarde thynges Of outwarde when a man eateth soure thynges of inwarde whē sower vapours ascēde from the stomacke Also ther is yelow fylthe styckynge to the teeth and the rootes therof whych cometh of grosse vapours ascendynge from the stomacke and maye be remoued by scrapynge and rubbynge wyth conuenient instrumentes Here foloweth the description of a pouder whych mundifyeth the teeth preserueth the gommes maketh the teeth whyt Pouder for tethe remedyeth the stynkyng of the mouth ℞ roche alume brent ʒ ij of sarcocolle of terra sigillata of mirabolā citrine ana ʒ i. ss myngle them together make a pouder and rubbe the teeth therwyth in the mornynge fastynge thryse a weeke Sometyme there chaunceth a certeyn dormitatiō in the teeth by holding cold thinges in the mouth stupefacti medicines in the mouth for the remotion wherof ye shal vse the medicine vnder wrytten cōmaundyng it to be holdē in the mouth warme ℞ of odoriferous wyne .li. ss of aqua vite ℥ i. of rosemarye sage camomill ana m̄ ss of cloues of nutmegges ana ℈ i. of sandrake ʒ i. ss let them seeth all together tyl the thyrde part be consumed then straine them vse them as is aforesayd Item aqua vite applyed to the teathe with cotton taketh away the dormytation and congelation of the same Loo●enes Laxation or loosenes of the teath chaūceth through the loosenes of the gommes or through debilitation or weakenynge of the rootes or partes that bynde the tethe al which thynges happen throughe rewmes humours descedyng from the brayne and sometyme by corrupte vapours mountynge frō the stomacke For the curatiō wherof ye shal vse the medicine folowynge ℞ of syrupe of liciū ʒ x. of roche alume ʒ iij. of the water of
the seconde The iuyce therof hathe vertue and proprietye to plucke vp wartes being rubbed therwythall And moreouer it stoppeth the flowynge of hote humours And whan it is put into playsters for flegmon and herisipelas it defendeth putrefaction and finallye it healeth the congelation of the teeth Pinguedo anatis or duckes grese is hoote and moyste and excedeth all other in swagynge peyne wyth mollification Peper is hote in the fourth and dry in the seconde it draweth notablye in dissoluynge and consumeth through hys drynes Prunes be colde and drye and the meate of them sodden in a brothe of fleshe wyth a quynce or a warden or buttyre is good for hote apostemes of the fundament and of the yarde And yf ye put therunto barlye floure wyth the yolkes of egges and a lytle saffrā it wyl be a singuler remedy Pomegranades are sondrye some be swete some other sower The sower are colde and drye in the seconde The sweete are colde and moyste in the fyrst The iuyce of them both stamped wyth theyr ryndes and sodden wyth as much honie of roses and the leaues of wylde olyues somwhat brused cureth perfytlye the vlceres of the nosethrylles and of the mouthe The graynes of them confort the stomake vsed moderatelye Otherwyse they hurt the same The wyne of pomegranades takē after repast kepeth meate from corruption Item when they be sodden in the ryndes stamped and made after the fourme of a playster they are excellent remedies at the begynnynge for al hote apostemes Populus or the popler tree is cold and drye in the thyrde It is repercussyue and stupefactyue yf ye rubbe the nosethrilles and temples wyth the iuyce therof And the oyntment called populeon mengled wyth the whyte of an egge oyle of violettes and oyle of popie abateth the heate of a chafed yarde and swageth the peyne Popye is colde and drye in the second and therfore it astonyeth moderatelye Psilium is colde and moyste in the seconde and hathe vertue to represse choleryke apostemes and therfore in the begynning augmentation of the same it is a good reꝑcussiue ministred in the fourme of a muscillage Item the muscilage of psilium beaten wyth oyle of Roses omphacyne wyth an oyntmente of roses and the iuyce of lettuce made after a playster or linimente healeth herisipelas The inner parte of thys sede is hote and drye in the thyrde and therfore hathe vertue to burne to chafe the outwarde part cooleth and souppleth Papirus is colde and drye wyth familier repercussion therfore when it is weted wyth water of roses oyle of Roses and aplyed vpon the legges it reteyneth deriuation of humours Psidia is colde in the seconde and dry in the thyrd it hath vertue to dry cicatrise and restrayne Polium montauum is hote in the seconde drye in the thyrde it hath vertue to sesolue cōsume and to prouoke vryne Petroleum is hote and drye in the thyrde and more beynge sodden with philosophers oyle terebentyne earth wormes and the iuyce of walworte it is a merueylous medicyne agaynst the peynes of sciatica and other goutes Pinguedo or grese is hote moist more or lesse accordyng to the nature of beastes and it hathe vertue to rype and mollifye and swageth peyne Palma is hote and colde in the seconde Pentaphillon or cynkefoyle drieth vehemently howbeit it hath no manifest hotnes Pineole or the kernelles of a pinaple are hote and moyste and bene of greate nouryshmente The ryndes of them bene colde drye and stiptike Plumbum is colde and moyste in the seconde and it is good agaynste maligne and cankerouse vlcers and hathe a meruelouse prerogatyue to resolue the hardnes and lyppes of the said vlcers through a certeyn vnknowē vertue Plates of lead bound fast vpon knobbes resolue them maruelouslye Peaches bene colde in the seconde and drie in the fyrst Dioscorides sayeth that they conforte the stomake Serapion saith that the leaues of peches are abstersyue and resolutyue and thorowe theyr bytternes haue strengthe to kylle wormes Peches be of harde digestion and yf they be eaten afore meate they prepare awaye for other thynges to passe out but yf they be eaten after meate they are easely corrupted howebe it they are rectifyed wyth good wyne Pellis castrati or the skynne of a wether newely flaine is good for strypes and brusing of the entrayles and of the bellye procedynge by a fal and sometyme it restoreth the patiente in one daye resoluynge and consuming the bloode that is out of the veynes Piretrum is hote and drye in the thyrde it hathe vertue to drawe and to heate and therfore holdē vnder the teeth it healeth the toeth ache procedynge of a colde cause yf it be fyrste mollified wyth vinaygre Pionye is hote and drye in the seconde the seede of it caried about the necke wyth the roote preserueth enfantes from the epilepsia or fallynge sycknes Item when it is poudred wyth sage rosemarye and maierum and geuen to drynke with hydromell or methe it healeth the epilepsia or at the lest swageth it Percelye is hote and drye in the seconde it prouoketh vryne The roote of it is of harde digestion howebeit it styrreth vp appetite and the leaues confort the stomake And yf it be mēgled with fenell water cresses bawme Myrte Rue in lytle quantitie wyth floures of rosemarye pympernell borage lettuse in equal portiō making a salet of it wyth swete oyle and vinaygre it styrreth vp appetyte effectuouslye Paritarye is hote and drye in the thyrde and the seed is colde and drye wyth stipticitye and when it is fryed wyth buttyre and eaten it maketh the stone to come oute of the raynes the blader Item parietarye heated in a panne wyth a lytle wine and percelye leaues and water cresses and applyed vpon the bone ouer the priuy members prouoketh vryne And yf ye seeth it wyth malowes Roses mugworte branne husked beanes and stamped sodden agayne wyth sapa tyll they be thycke It shulde be a good playster for attrition and brusynge of the lacertes and muscules REsina pini or rosin of pynaple tree and almoost all other rosins haue vertue to heate and bene mundyficatiue and dissolutyue and mynystred in oyntmentes they heate and drye colde vlcers and produce flesh in woundes of stronge bodyes Roses ben colde in the fyrst and drye in the seconde and are moche vsed in oyntmentes syrupes other confections Rosemarye is hote and drye in the thyrde it resolueth and mundifieth with cōfortation the floure is called authos which hath vertue to clarifye the syghte Item it hathe vertue to resolue and mundifye with cōfortation Rue is hoote and drye in the thyrde and hathe vertue to consume wynde and the iuce of it is put in coliryes to helpe the dymnesse of the syght Radysh is hote and drye in the seconde the rymme of it taken in a lytle quantitie aydeth
retayneth the meate so longe tyll by the alteratiue power it is turned into good iuyce Thā the stomake reserueth the beste for hys owne noryshment dryueth downe the rest vnto the guttes and frō thēce that that is best is returned to the liuer by the veynes called meseraicae Howbeit that the lyuer shulde not tarye to longe for hys meate the stomake sendeth vnto hym in the meane season by lytle short veynes whyche growe to the lyuer and to the stomake the fyneste and purest parte of his prepared iuce Pessarie Pessus is woll toosed and made rounde after the fassyon of a fynger wherewith medicines are receyued and conueyed into the matrice Phlegmon Phlegmone besyde boylyng heate sygnifyeth a paynefull redde harde swellynge Petrolium Petroliū is vsed for naphtha which droppeth out of a babilonyke lyme hath power to drawe fyre vnto hym though it be somewhat remoued Pilosella Pilosella is founde in no lerned auctour Howbeit the later wryters descrybe it to be an herbe that groweth in stonie and drye places with a red floure and with leaues spredde vpon the grounde in which leaues ther bē as it were heere 's and therfore they haue barbarously called it pilosella of pilus an heere The description agreeth with mouseeare sauīg in the flour It is Englysshed in an olde wrytten boke hertwort Where this herbe is not found some thinke it good to vse mouseeare Philomū Philomū is a confection so called of Philon the inuentoure of it or as some saye of philos which sygnifyeth a frende bycause it is frendlye to hym that receyueth it Policariam The auctour of the pādectes sayth that they vse policaria for conyza which is that that the latines cal pulicaris which may be called fleiwort For pulex signifieth a fley Ieronimꝰ Tragꝰ thynketh that one kynde of pulicaris is arsmerte This herbe dryueth awaye fleys Polium montanū Poliū montanū is a lytle shrubbe of whyte colour an handfull hyghe full of seede In the top it hath a lytle heed lyke the hoore heere 's of a man smellynge strongly wyth some pleasauntnesse Polypodie Some call polipodiū oke ferne It draweth out fleame and cholere but chefely melancholye Pori vritides Vreteres ben passages by whyche brine sondred from blood is cōueyed to the bladder Psidia They vse psidia for sydia whiche signifyeth the ryndes of a pomegranade Psillium Psillium hath his name of psille which signifyeth a fley For the seede of this herbe is like a fley and is vsed in medicines to coole The latines also call this herbe pulicaris of fleys It groweth nygh the see and also in other vntylled and baren places Pthisis Phthisis in Greke signifyeth wastyng a consumynge sycknesse a consumption as we call it Pulsatiue Pulsatiue Beatynge Pruna Pruna a fyrye coole Resort to anthrax Pustles There ben two kyndes of pustles or pusches For some pusches are hygh some brode The hygher are engendred of hote and subtyle humoures and cause ytchyng and are called of some morbilli The brode ar lower and come of grosse and cold humoures neither cause ytchynge and bene called variolae of barbarous wryters Putrefactiue That that hath power to rotte is called putrefactiuum Pyretrum Pyrethron is called in latyn herba fauliaris bycause it prouoketh spettel merueilously it groweth in the moūtaynes of Italye called Alpes Howbeit that that commeth out of grecelāde is hoote It hath his name of fyrye heate For pyr in greke signifyeth fyre And our worde fyre is borowed of the grecians by addition of this lettre H as the custome of the hyghe Almaynes is whose speache we vse make of pyr phyr whereunto we haue put of our owne letter E and pronounce it phyre Rasceta RAsceta the barbarous doctours call the wrest of the hande vnto the knoccles Rascetam Radicall Radical belongyng to the roote Realgar Realgar is made of brymstone vnsleked lyme and orpigment It kylleth rattes Refrigeration Refrigeration coolynge Repletion Repletion fyllyng Restauration Restauration renuynge repayryng restorynge Repercussiue Repercussiue that that hath power to dryue backe Resolutiue Resolutiue loosynge Retentiue Retentiue retaynyng holdynge backe Ribes Serapion sayeth that ribes is a plante hauyng great and grene leaues redde clusters of swete taste Io. Agricola sayeth that for Ribes we maye vse the iuyce of an orenge or of sorell Rob. Rob or robub is vsed for a purifyed iuce thycked by the heate of fyre or of the sunne vnto the forme of honye Fuchsius calleth it Succum medicatum Ruptorie Ruptorie that that hath strength to breake Salis gemme SAl gemmae In the Mountaynes of Germanie and Pannonie ther is a salt dygged out whereof the whitest is called Sal gemmae bycause it shyneth lyke a precyous stone Sanamunda Sanamunda Auens Sanious Sanious full of matture fylthe corruption Sandarache There ben two kyndes of Sandarach one is of the nature of metalles dygged out of the grounde about hypanis a ryuer of Schythia the other is counterfayte made of ceruse boyled in a fornace Sanguis draconis Sanguis dra soundeth dragons blood for Plinie thought it to be a cōmixtion of dragons and Elephantes bloode when they fyght togyther the dragon being oppressed by the fall of the elephant Other think that which we cōmenly vse in medicines to bethe lyquoure of a tree And Cadamustus sayeth that he sawe the tree in one of the newe found ylandes Sarcocoll Sarcocoll is the lyquour of a tree growynge in Persia Sarcocides The Grecians call that Sarcocides that hath the resemblaunce of flesshe Sapa Sapa is newe wyne sodden vnto the thyrde parte Saphatum Runnynge sores whiche perce the skynne of chyldrens heedes with sondry lytle holes wherout there cōmeth a gluysh matture and filth ben called of the later barbarous wryters Saphata in Greke achores Sebesten Sebestae bene frutes lyke prunes which in Siria they strayne and gather out a slymye liquour wherwith they make lyme And for this cause the later wryters call them myxas For myxa signifyeth grosse and slymye liquoure These frutes are vsed to quenche thyrste and represse cholere Scarification Scarification scorchynge raysynge of the skynne Sclirotike Sclirotike The fyrst skynne of the eye which conteyneth vnder hym all the other skinnes couereth in the hinder parte the glassye and cristalline humour is called in Greke Scleros and barbarouslye sclirotike that is to saye harde Sclirosis Sclerosis hardnesse Scāmonie Scāmonia is an vnknowen herbe the iuce of it is vsed to purge choler and they call it diagredium or diacrydion It is of a stronge sauour vnplesaunt in taste and payneth the herte And therfore some wish that it were vsed nomore Scotomia They shoulde saye Scotoma and it is a disease when darkenesse ryseth before the eyes and whē all thynges seme to go round about Scotos in greke signifyeth darknes This disease is called vertigo in latyne of●n●nyng about though some go about to make a foolysh difference of scotoma and vertigo Semen macedonicum Semen macedonicum is the
of this oyntment ye muste putte the mineralles that is to saye the Litarge of golde and syluer the Tutia and the cerusse in a mortare ofleadde and stampe them well and putte in the oyles and the Iuyce one wyth an other a droppe of oyle and a droppe of the Iuyce so that all be well incorporated and ye shall putte therevnto in the ende of Camfore ʒ i. Thys oyntment is very good for Vlceres of Formica and Herisipelas and also for virulente and venemous vlceres and harde to cure There chaunceth ofte greate and vehement payne in this Aposteme and chefely in Herisipelas Flegmonides FOr the curation we must haue recourse to the Chapter of the cure of Flegmon In whyche certayne aydes appaysynge greifes ben descrybed but to the accomplishmente of oure fourthe intention we wyll descrybe one onely succoure appaysynge griefe Alerityue of payne and it is in thys fourme ℞ of the leaues of Mallowes vyolettes and barlye Ana. m̄ .i of the seede of quynces of the seede of Psillium Ana ℥ ss seeth these thinges in suffycyent quantitie of water vnto the wastynge of the thyrd parte excepte the Psillium And whan they haue boyled well ye muste take the Psillium and lette it boyle alone a whyle Than stampe them togyther excepte the Psillium bycause of his venimnesse whiche he hath in hym whan they haue bene well beaten togyther ye must putte therevnto of Oyle of Vyolettes of Oyle of Roses of Vnguentum Rosarum Ana ℥ i. and. ss of womannes mylke ℥ ii and seeth them a whyle vpon the fyre agayne and styre them aboute tyll they be dewlye mengled and laye them vpon the paynefull place as an Epitheme This medicyne is of a ryght good operation to take awaye the payne of Herisipelas and also to take awaye the inflammation and pryckynge of the same And yf the Herisipelas waxe harde A molificatyue cerote as it chaunceth often through the application of thynges that resolue the subtyle humoure and leaue the grosse or by thynges that engros the subtyle humoure Thys hardenesse must be taken awaye with thinges mollificatyue and resolutyue togyther in layinge to this playstre ℞ of the oyle of Roses and vyolettes of hennes grece and butyre Ana ℥ ii of gootes and calues tallowe Ana ℥ i. and. ss of the mary of calues legges ℥ i. of the muscilage of psilliū of mallowes of holyhocke Ana ℥ vi Lette them boyle all vnto the consumption of the muscilage thā put to of litarge of golde ℥ iii. of whyte waxe asmoch as shall suffyce and make a softe cerote This cerote is of ryght good operation to resolue the hardenesse of this Aposteme It is here to be noted that there is a greate discorde amonge the doctours in the curation of a choleryke Aposteme Auicenne commaundeth to applye at the begynnynge thynges that coole hauynge great stipticitie so that the stipticitie surmounte the coldenesse And in the state the coldenesse must be more than the stipticitie Rasis holdeth a contrarye opynyon and sayeth that in the cure of herisipelas repercussiue medicines muste be mynystred at the begynnynge of colde and moyste complection and not of drye after Auicēne The repercussiues of a choleryke Aposteme muste be colde and moyste after the wytnesse of Rasis excepte the Aposteme be vlcerated than it is conuenyente to vse Repercussyues colde and drye And therfore we haue ordeyned in this presente Chapter The experience of Vigo herin a syngular remedye to heale Herisipelas vlcerated And we haue often proued the two opynyons abouesayde of Rasis and Auicenna and we haue founde it better to vse repercussyues colde and moyste than colde and drye wherfore in oure ordynaunce the ingredyences bene colde hauynge moystnesse and a lytle resolution And therfore we must consydre that the resolutyues of this aposteme must not be of hote and drye qualitie but contrarye wyse they muste be colde and moyste with some exiccation or dryinge qualitie as is the floure of barlye Lentyles roses mallowes oyle of Roses makynge a playster of these thynges accordynge to arte vpon the fyre A playstre of these thynges appayseth the greife resolueth the mater and taketh awaye the inflāmation of the Aposteme And we haue seen this Aposteme oftentymes to be enflamed and to become vneasye to heale onelye thorowe the application of oyle of Camomyll thoughe Auycenne call it Oleum benedictum that is blessed oyle resoluynge wythout attraction wherfore we ought wyselye to consydre the wrytynges of the elders Nota. Otherwyse we shall be disceyued as I was oftentymes whan I was a yonge student And it is to be noted that the doctours speakyng of the cure of a true and pure Herisipelas haue made no mention but of the curation of the begynnyng and of the state The cause is for that that Herisipelas is of so subtyle matter that for the resolution and Repercussyon of the same thynges colde and moyste wyth some drynesse ben suffycyent Thus moche we haue wrytten for the curation of a cholericke Aposteme called Herisipelas ¶ The .vi. Chapter of Formica WE haue sufficyentlye spoken in the former Chapiter of Herisipelas In thys Chapter we wyll brefelye treate of an Aposteme called Formica and of hys kyndes Formica is a lytle pustle Formica or many pustles that come vpon the skynne Of whyche oftentymes a pure Aposteme is engendred that is to saye inflammation or Herisipelas And there bene two kyndes namely Formica Ambulatiua and Formica Corrosiua Formica Ambulatiua is that Ambulatiua that spreadeth it selfe vpon the body wythout Corrosion or gnawynge Formica Corrosiua is that Corrrosia● that spreadeth it selfe wyth Corrosyon Hereby it appeareth that euery Formica is ambulatiue and not euerye one Corrosyue whan the humoure causynge Formica is pure cholericke the sayde Formica spreadeth hym selfe vpon the bodye wythoute Corrosyon But whan it commeth of burnt cholere it maketh corrosyon in spreding it selfe into sondrye partes of the body whan the matter is pure and subtyle it maye be resolued without vlceracyon The signes of Formica The sygnes of suche a lytle pustle ben these the fyrste sygne is taken of the colour the seconde of the fygure the thyrde of pryckynge The fyrst sygne is of coloure declynynge to citrine or yelowe The seconde sygne is that the fygure is large and the heed sharpe as a nedle The thyrde is pryckynge and it is a sodayn bytyng as it were of an ante wherof it hath hys name And Auicenne saeyth that euerye Aposteme walkynge in the skynne not hauyng brodenesse is a Formica ¶ The .vii. Chapter of the cure of Formica 〈◊〉 Formica WE haue declared what formica is the kyndes and al the sygnes of the same Nowe we wyll treate of the cure of Formica And we saye that foure intentions ben requyred to the cure of Formica The fyrst is the gouernaunce of lyfe The seconde is the digestion of the matter antecedent The thyrde purgation of the same The fourthe remotion of
maye chaūce thorough sondrye causes Some tymes through a cause primitiue and some tymes thorough a cause antecedent It commeth of the cause primitiue thoroughe brusynge or breakyng In brusyng it chaūseth bycause the chirurgiē procedeth with thynges to colde whyche engrosse the matter and so cause putrefaction Sometymes the pores or passages ben stopped by whych nature sendeth the nourishement and lyfe to the membre And by reason of that stoppynge the vytale spirites can not come to the mēbres So the membres beynge destitute of the vytale spirites do corrupte and rotte It chaunseth moreouer some tymes to them that go in the snowe Some tymes thoroughe to strayte tyenge of the membre For by reason there of the spirites can not come to the membre As we haue sene often thoroughe the strayte tyenge of a broken bone of the thyghe the legges or the armes We haue sene also Esthiomenos to haue chaunsed throughe vndiscrete application of sharpe medicines in whych arsenike realgar lyke entre And lykewyse thorough applicatiō of thynges stupefactiue and coolynge Of the cause antecedent Esthiomenos chaunseth often as of some venimous pustle not wel cured at the fyrst of the chirurgiē as we haue oftē sene to haue chaūsed in Anthrax carbo We haue sene moreouer thys prohibition of spirites to haue chaunsed through the corruption of some particuler mēbre procedynge of greate Apostemes flegmonike froncles Forune●● In whiche oftentymes grosse and harde matter is engendred lyke a synnowe halfe rottē In whyche apostemes the wayes and pores bene shutte oftentymes and by reason there of nouryshement and lyfe can not come to the membre and so the membre rotteth and dyeth We haue sene thys putrefaction in the handes and fete of them whyche haue ben longe in sharpe fieuers so that theyr bodies beyng destitute of natural heat became leane drye the extremitees of theyr bodyes cheflye theyr legges were reduced to suche colde and congelation or stupefaction cheflye in the wynter that it semed that the membres were altogether depriued of naturall heate Neuertheles though the membres semed colde the patient complayned of great payne and heate and inflammation as yf actuall fyer hadde bene there Also we haue sene it chaunse wythout payne goynge before wythout inflammation wythout inflatiō wythout liuidite or bleunes wythout blacke coloure of the place as it chaūsed in Cancrena ☞ in a noble woman of the cytie of Genue called Saluagina de Grimaldis whyche fell in to thys corruption after a lōge dysease Thus it is euidente to euerye bodye what esthiomenos is Of the cause antecedent Estiomenos chaunseth not often but by the corruption and putrefactiō aboue named And it maye come by one of these thre causes as Auicenne sayeth that is to saye thoroughe the cause that corrupteth the complection of the membre and the spirite animall whyche is in the same membre or by some other cause defendynge the vitall spirite to come to the membre or by some thinge that gathereth together the two intentions as we haue declared in thys present chapitre and as it chaūseth often by applyenge some locall medicine that is not conuenient and lykewyse by some venimous pustle corrumping the naturall complextion of the membre and dystroyenge the animall spirite whyche is in the membre so that the vytall spirites sente of nature to conserue the naturall heate of the mēbre can not come to the membre bycause the place is mortifyed and eschared And thus necessarelye foloweth prohibition of the vytall spirites that they can not come to the places and also there foloweth mortifycation and corruption of the complection of the membres and of the vytall spirite remaygnynge therin Yf Esthiomenos maye come by one of the three causes aforesayde it maye much more come by two knytte together c. ¶ The seuententh chapitre of the cure of Cancrena Ascachilos and Esthiomenos AFter that we haue sufficientlye declared what Cancrena Ascachilos The ●ure of Cancrena and Esthiomenos is and the dyfferēce of the same in thys presente chapitre we wyll make mention of the cure of them The curation of these three dyseases dyfferre not but in the greater or smaller corruption for the one is a waye to the other We wyl declare after oure power the cure of these three dyseases whych is accomplyshed by three intentions The fyrste is the ordynaunce of lyfe The seconde to purge the mater antecedent The thyrde is to take awaye the matter conioyncte and corrupte and to kepe the hole partes from corruption The fyrste intention that is to saye the dyaete is accomplyshed accordynge to that that is spoken in the chapitre of Herisipelas Thys one thynge I saye that in thys case the brothe of a chekyn wyth herbes as beetes laictuce borage buglosse cicoree is verye good The seconde intention shal be accomplyshed wyth cut tynge a veyne called commune or the lyuer vayne or some part ouer against the hurted place so that the strength and the age of the patient be consydered Digestiue Afterwarde the mater shal be digested wyth this syrupe taken warme in the mornynge ℞ of syrupe of vyneaygre called acetosus symplex of syrupe of the iuyce of endiuiae and of fumiterre ana ℥ ss of water of fumiterre buglosse and hoppes ana ℥ i. when the patient hath vsed this syrupe the space of foure dayes Purgation let hym take thys purgation minoratiue ℞ of cassia of diacatholichon ana ℥ i. make a smale potion wyth a decoction of cordiall floures and frutes and put there vnto syrupe of violettes ℥ i. and. ss Thys I I saye yf the dysease make truce wyth the patiēt giue time to euacuat the mater After that he hath takē the sayd minoratiue two dayes after it shall be good to euacuate the naughtye matter wyth thys potion ℞ of cassia fistula of diacatholicon ana ʒ vi of an electuarye of roses after Mesue ʒ ij make a small potion wyth the cōmune decoction adde of tamarindes ℥ i. ss of syrupe of violettes ℥ i. The thyrde intētion whych is to take awaye the matter antecedente and to kepe the place from rottynge is accomplyshed in this maner At the begynnynge when the place waxeth blacke then there is no better remedy then to scarifie the blacke place Leeches wyth sondrye scarifications and depe layenge leeches or bloodsuckers aboute the place corrupted And then to washe the place wyth lye wherin Lupines haue ben soddē in good quārite For as Galene Auicenne saye the vertue of them taketh away rooteth vp all cancrous vlceres And we haue often proued thys decoction in thys case and haue founde it good for the patientes wyth the application of vnguētū Egyptiacum of our description washynge the vlceres wyth the sayd decoctiō The descriptiō of vnguentū Egyptiacū is after this sort ℞ of verde griece of roche alume of honye ana ℥ .ij. of whyte vinaygre Vnguentum Egyptiacum of the
done in the decoction of holyhocke wyth the floure of wheate fenugreke lynsede make a playster at the fyer adding in the ende the yolkes of .ij. egges These thynges wel incorporated helpe meruaylously to the maturation of scrophules Ye muste vse thys playster a great whyle before ye open the scrophules that all the matter may be turned into quitture and be purged by the openynge When they ben rype ye muste open them with a caustique medicine made of capitell after the doctrine wrytten in the chapitre of nodes Or ye maye open them with a croked laūcette called gāmauth or wyth fyer so that it be done wtout hurte of the synnowes or veynes After the openyng for the mūdifycation the dygestion incarnation cicatrisation of the place it is conuenient to do accordynge to that that is declared in the chapitre of the cure of nodes The fourth intention whych is to take away the matter cōioynct by hādy operatiō is accōplished as it foloweth Yf ye perceyue that scrophules or glādules can not be healed by the waye of resolution nor by thinges maturatiue come to maturation ye muste vse handy operatiō to attayne to the true cure But ye muste beware that ye cutte not the greate vaynes Cutte the scrophules wysely accordinge to the lēgthe Incision begynnynge at one ende and goyng to the other and cutte the skynne aboue tyll ye come to the carnosite of the sayd scrophules and glandules Thē draw them out with your nailes or with some conuenient instrument rootes and all To whych busynes there nedeth an expert chirurgien Furthermore ye must know that when the scrophules ben in places nygh to greate veynes that they ben fixed in them as in the necke vndre the iawes it is beste not to meddle wyth them For it is a diuine thynge not of man to heale them as the French kynge in touchyng only dyd heale thē Thys is in the Frenche onely For after that he hadde touched them they dryed came to good cicatrisatiō After that ye haue plucked them vp by the rootes ioyne the partes together in a lowe place euer leauynge a lytle conduycte or hole beneth then heale them vp after the cure of freshe woūdes Thus we haue healed many to our worshyppe and profyte of the patiētes The curation is after thys forme we dyd laye to a dygestiue foure dayes then we mundifyed it after mundification we vsed an abstersiue of honye of roses fynally we fylled it vp wyth vnguentum de minio Yf it chaunced that there remayned in the place any part of the scrophules then we vsed for the extirpation of the same our pouldre precipitate or vnguētum Egyptiacum of our dyscription or we dyd put in the place a grayne of arsnike or of sublimate betwene the superfluous fleshe The maner to applye thys remedye is thys cutte the scrophule well nyghe to the mydle or els vnto the roote wyth a sharpe instrumēt as wyth a laūcette or a prouuet and in the hole put the quātite of a wheate graine of arsnike or of sublimate or of a trocisque of minium and renue the sayd remedyes as nede shall requyre These ben the remedyes that we wolde wryte for the cure of scrophules and glandules ¶ The .viij. of an Aposteme sclirotike or harde called Sephiros Aposteme sclirotyke IN the former chapitre we haue declared the cure of scrophules glandules lyke eminences now we speke of an aposteme called Sephiros Sephiros as Auicēne sayeth is an harde aposteme wythout payne chefly when he is pure He is pure as the sayd doctour testifyeth when there is nether payne nor felynge adioyned to hym But when it is wyth felynge Sephiros vnpure or payne it is called Sephiros vnpure So then there ben two kindes namely pure not pure A Sephiros not pure is of two kyndes cankreous and not cankreous Not cācrous Sephiros not cākreous is double that is to say that it is some tymes mēgled wyth some other kynde of an aposteme as Herisipelas or flegmon and then necessarely it causeth payne And it is more easely cured by the waye of resolution then the other And it hath felynge and causeth grefe when it is touched and when it is not touched and it is not cankreous whyche is agaynst the opinion of Dinus sayenge that an aposteme that hath payne and felynge by hym selfe or by accident is cankreous There is yet another kinde of an aposteme not pure and not cankreous hauynge felynge when it is touched And thys kynde of Sephiros receaueth curation by the waye of resolution and neuertheles it is wyth dyfficultie Moreouer ther is another not pure and cankreous of whych these ben the sygnes pryckynge beatynge and enflamynge payne Sygnes and it hath roūde about it certayne lytle veynes full of melancholyke bloode To verifye that that we haue sayde Auicenne sayeth some tymes Sephiros is cankered c. The approchynge of Sephiros wyth a canker is knowen by the inflāmation and pulsation and by the appearaūce of veines that ben about Rasis testifyeth thys thynge sayenge as ofte as ye fynde the accidentes of an hote aposteme as payne inflammation and pulsation then ye maye iudge that the aposteme is of the kynde of cākers Thus it appeareth that Sephiros called cankreous muste haue the forsayde accidentes as inflammation c. Auicenne sayeth that Cancer Sephiros ben so lyke together that they dyfferre not but onely in the accidētes and they are caused of one matter There ben fyue thynges Cancer and Sephiros dyfferre in whych Cancer dyffereth from Sephiros namelye pulsation inflammation pryckynge sharpe payne and appearaunce of veynes And therfore when Sephiros is not wel cured it commeth easely to a canker For as Aristotle sayeth thynges that ben of suche affinite passe easelye the one to thother Thys aposteme is engendred of grosse fleame it is of a whytyshe coloure Sometymes it is engendred of naturall melancholye and then the coloure is palyshe or blewysh Sometymes of two colde humours that is of fleame and melācholy and then the coloure is betwene whyte and blewe We haue sufficientlye shewed howe apostemes ben compounde There are thre causes that induce sephiros primitiue antecedent conioyncte The primitiue is a dyete that engendreth fleame and melancholye The cause antecedent is a multitude of euyl humours gathered in the body The conioynt is the sayde humour melancholyke or flegmatyke gathered in the place of the aposteme Thus we ende thys chapitre concernynge the cōtemplation of Sephiros for whyche the name of god be praysed ¶ The .ix. chapitre of the cure of Sephiros The cure of Sephiros IN the former chapitre we haue declared what an aposteme sclyrotyke is and what bene the kindes of the same In thys presēt chapitre we wyll speake of the cure of Sephiros whych hath foure intentions The fyrst is to ordre dyete The secōde is to dygeste the matter antecedente
endeth c. ¶ The .v. chapiter of an Aposteme of the fyngers called Panaritium PAnaritium is an Aposteme of a very hote nature Apostemes of the finger called Panaritium it is venomous so that thorow his veninositie heate it corrupteth the synnowes and sometimes the bones causynge greate and sharpe payne Also somtymes it engendreth a sharpe fieuer And sometymes as wyllyam Placentinus sayeth it bryngethe the patient to deathe whyche thynge we haue sene also It is a rule in thys cure that we vse at the begynnynge styptyke thynges the cuttynge of the veyne called basilica in the cōtrary syde and a purgation with the iuyce of roses or cassia or Diacatholicon presupposed The fyrste playster muste be in thys forme Playster R. the two kyndes of hole pomegranades sodden in a decoction of barley Roses balaustyes and sumach than stampe them and strayne them and wyth the floure of lentiles barley and beanes wyth a lytle quantitie of the foresaid decoction and the sayde straynynge make a styffe playster addynge of oyle of roses omphacine and oyle myrtyne ana ℥ i. ss of saffran ℈ i. or make it thus R. of the floure of Lentiles barley and beanes ana ℥ i. of myrobalane citrine ʒ i. of diers gaules ℥ ss lette them all be boyled with the wyne of granades a lytle vinegre of roses vnto styffe thycknes addynge of oyle of roses of oyle omphacine ℥ ii Note that if these two plaisters swage paine ye may procede with them but yf after the applicatiō of the same the payne dayly encrease than ye shal vse a maturatyue of mallowes violettes the floure of barley soddē in the foresayde decoction made wyth buttire and yolkes of egges This must be applied the space of two dayes Afterward there is no greater remedy than to open the place wyth an hote yron in the toppe of the fynger This cauterizatiō though it be done before perfecte maturation saueth the fynger from corruption of the bones and sinowes oftentimes appaiseth griefe But bicause many wyl not suffre cauterization it is necessarye to vse a stronger maturatyue And whan it is rype you muste open the place wyth a sharpe instrumente or wyth a caustyke of capitell whan the mattier is aboute the skynne Than afterwarde lette the place be mundifyed with Vnguentum egyptiacum mengled wyth Vnguentū apostolorum or wyth oure poudre of mercurye or wyth a trocisque of minium And than lette the place be purified wyth honie of roses and wyth a mūdificatyue of Smalage and incarned wyth oure poudre incarnatyue Poudre incarnatiue the description wherof is after thys sorte R. of Aloes Hepatike ʒ iii. of myrrhe of frankencense of Sarcocolle ana ʒ i. mengle them And yf you adde of cleare Terebentyne ʒ v. of honye of roses strayned ʒ ii it shall be verye profitable Lette the place be sealed vp and cicatrised wyth our poudre cicatrisatyue and wyth water of Alume wyth vnguentum of miniū whyche ben written in our antidotarie whervnto resorte ¶ The .viii. treatise speaketh of the apostemes of the hyppes thighes legges And of the apostemes of the liuer and scrophules and fugilles whyche chaunce vnder the arme holes ¶ The fyrst cha treateth of apostemes of the hyppes hote and colde saniouse and not saniouse Apostemes of the flanckes c. OF Apostemes of these partes som are engendred in the outward partes as in the stones the flanckes the fondement of whyche we haue spoken we wyl here speake of an Aposteme that is engendred in the inner partes The curation of thys aposteme differeth not frō the comune cure of other Apostemes wherof we haue spokē in the former chapiters wherefore yf it be a colde aposteme for the resolution and mollificatiō and other intentions ye shal procede as in the cure of colde apostemes And likewise if it be hote come to maturatiō let it be opened mūdified incarned and sigilled c. as is declared in the former chapitres Neuertheles thys is to be noted the it requireth a discret chirurgien whā there is mattier or corruption in the place or not bycause of the thycknesse of the muscles and of the fleshe wherfore good wylliam Placentine in his tyme resisting chirurgiens that said that this aposteme was not sanious obtayned greate worshyppe and profite For he made incision in the presence of chirurgiens and found great quantitie of mattier or corruption in the aposteme Thus endeth c. ¶ The .ii. chapi of hotte and colde Apostemes of the knees thyghes and legges THe Apostemes of the thyghes Apostemes 〈◊〉 the thyghe● knees and legges knees legges haue no differēce touchynge the curation from apostemes of the shulders elbowe of the bone of the arme called adiutoriū wherfore for all the intentions of the cure of the same ye shal resorte to the former chapitres Neuertheles they differre in one thing that is that the patientes must not excercise them selues in going cominge as muche as shal be possible Thus. c. ¶ The .iii. cha of the swellyng of the knee THere ben often Apostemes engendred in the knees Swelling of the knee hote and colde sanious and not saniouse wyndy humorall or full of water If the aposteme be hote it must be cured after the curation of an Aposteme of the elbowe hotte or colde wherefore ye shall peruse that chapiter Of the curation of this Aposteme whan it is colde we wyll here speake accordynge to the truth Fyrste a conuenient purgation presupposed if the swellyng be olde and not very harde it is profitable Playster of gotes dunge to applye a playster of gotes dunge made wyth new grape shales or huskes water and barley floure The auctoure of the pandectes merueyleth in the chapiter de stercore caprino how he healed a mā so quyckly with thys playster which had longe tyme bene vexed with the swellynge of the knee Howebeit we haue founde a more excellente remedye in thys playster folowynge for an olde swellynge of the knee Plaister for an olde swellynge R. of beane floure and barley floure ana ℥ iiii of branne well grounde ana m̄ ii of goates dunge brayed li. ss of Camomylle Melilote stamped ana m̄ .i. make a styffe playster wyth lye and sufficiente sodden wyne addynge of oyle of Camomyl and dylle ana ℥ ii Thys playster resolueth easelye al wyndie swyllynge wyth resolution of the humoral mattier and mitigation of the payne And yf thys swellynge be caused by colde humorall mattier with commixtion of hotte mattier it is verye profitable to vse in the stede of lye the muscilage of Holihocke Also a sponge dypped in a decoction resolutyue and breakynge of wynde layed and bounden vpon the knee hathe a merueylous vertue And yf this aposteme be watry for the cure therof ye shall resorte to the chap. of the cure of hernia aquosa Thus. c. ¶ The .iiii. chapi of apostemes of the fete hote and colde
the outwarde wherfore we wyll ordre the purgation accordynge to the euyl humours Fyrste after that we perceaued what mattier it was Digestiue of hote cause we were wonte to vse thys digestyue whan the mattier was hotte R. of syrupe of roses by infution syrupe of Violettes syrupe of hoppes ana ℥ ss of the water of buglosse of hoppes ℥ i. and ss mengle them whan the patiente hathe vsed this syrupe the space of thre dayes Purgation twyse a daye he shal take thys purgation R. of chosen manna of Diacatholicon an̄ ʒ v. make a small potion wyth the decoction of cordiall floures and frutes addynge of syrupe of Violettes ℥ i. and. ss If the Aposteme be colde that is to saye Digestiue of a colde cause yf it be engendredde of colde mattier lette the sayd mattier be digested wythe thys syrupe Take syrupe de duabus radicibus syrupe of the iuyce of endyue of honye of roses an̄ ʒ iiii of the water of maidē heare of buglosse of worwood an̄ ℥ i. mengle them whan the patient hathe vsed thys syrupe a weke Purgation lette him be purged with thys purgation R. of cassia of diacatholicō ana ʒ vi of Diafinicō ʒ i. ss Make a small potion wyth decoctiō of cordiall floures frutes addynge of syrupe of violettes ℥ i. It is expedient to applie vpon the outwarde part vnctions and linimētes confortinge the place Oyntment as these folowyng R. of oyle of camomille and dylle ana ℥ i. of spike oyle of oyle of quinces of laudanum an̄ ʒ iii. of oyle of terebentyne ʒ i. make a Linimente wyth sufficient whyte waxe addyng of saffran ℈ i. of frankencense of mastyke an̄ ʒ i. Item to the same intention thys linimente folowynge is good wyth more resolutiō A nother more resolutiue and mollification R. of oyle of camomyll of oyle of wormwoode of oyle of nardus or spike an̄ ʒ x. of oyle of quynces and roses ana ʒ vi of hennes grese of duckes grese of oyle of lillyes ana ℥ ss of muggewurt m̄ ss of the floures of rosmarie of squinātum of eche a lytle Of calamus aromaticus of cinnamome an̄ ʒ i. of romayne myntes a litle Let thē seeth all wyth a cyathe of odoryferous wyne vnto the consumption of the wyne than strayne them wyth sufficient white waxe make a cerote addynge of saffran ʒ ss Annoynte the stomake wyth thys oyntmente for it conforteth and resolueth colde mattier of the stomake swageth payne But for asmuche as these Apostemes for the most parte haue not their termination by the waye of resolution Maturatiue and wyl come to maturation ye shall further the maturation wyth thys plaister R. of the rootes of holihocke of whyte Lyllyes ana li. ss of cleane raisines ℥ iiii of muggewurt of wormwoode ana m̄ ss of squinantum a lytle Seeth them all in the brothe of fatte flesshe stampe them and strayne them and than in the decoction wyth wheate floure make a styffe playster addynge of buttyre ℥ ii of hennes grese ℥ i. the yolkes of two egges of saffran ℈ i. Thys plaister is maturatiue and confortatiue bycause of squynantum wurmwood and mugworte whan the sayde Aposteme is come to maturation Incision ye shall make incision accordynge to that that is sayde afore in the chapiter of hotte Apostemes And for the other intentions namely digestion mundification c. Ye shall vse the remedyes of the alleged cha Thus. c. ¶ The .vi. cha of Apostemes of the liuer bothe hote and colde and of the hardnesse therof THe liuer is a principal mēbre whiche nature hathe produced Of the liuer hote and colde for the necessity of al the bodie wherfore the diseases therof muste be diligently and discretlye cured For euery disease of the lyuer is to be feared bycause of hys necessarye office of digestion The sygnes of apostemes of the lyuer bene knowen to be hotte or colde as the sygnes of other Apostemes in the vniuersall chap. Howbeit somtymes there chaūceth in the liuer a singuler aposteme that is to say an aposteme engendred of one onlye humour but for the most part they are all engendred of mengled humours The cure of this Aposteme differeth not from the cure of other declared in the former Chaptre of apostemes in the stomake wherfore let it be cured after the same Neuertheles I wyll speake somewhat of purgation and diete Flebotomie Lette the veyne of the liuer be cutte in the contrarye syde yf the strengthe and age of the patient wyll suffre it and let the patient be purged with conuenyent purgatiōs accordyng to the qualitie of humoures Diete As touchynge diete yf the patient haue a fieuer he muste forbeare wyne and flesshe and must eate a sup or shewe made with grated breed almandes and a lytle sugre and cōmune seedes Yf he be weake he must eate of a broth of a chickyn sodden with laictuce and confyte raysines with cleane barlye Also ye may gyue hym a brothe of redde cicers sodden wyth raisines and mengled with the brothe of a chyckyn hauyng added suffyciēt quantitie of sugre The sayde brothe boyled with laicture spynache and hoppes is verye profytable in thys case As concernynge locall medicines we wyll make no longe oration bycause the remedies declared in the former Chaptres be conuenient in this present cure Some doctours saye that this composition folowynge is very good whiche we also haue proued to be true Oyntment ℞ of oyle of roses omphacin● of oyle of camomyll of quinces mirtilles wormewod ana ℥ i. let them all boyle with the iuce of nightshade alkekengi and laictuce tyll the iuyce be consumed than adde of red saunders and white ℥ i. a lytle saffrā and with suffyciēt whyte wax make a liniment And bycause the liuer and the milt oftentymes weaxe verye harde we wyll declare conuenyent remedyes for the mollification and resolution of the same Fyrst to mollifye and resolue the hardnesse of the liuer it is a synguler remedye to apply this cerot vpon the place ℞ of the rootes of holyhocke sodden in water and strayned li. ss of raisines sodden in the broth of a chyckyn and strayned A cerote for the natiues of the liuer ℥ iii. of the substaunce of quynces rosted or in the stede therof of wardens and peres ℥ iiii of oyle of camomyll and dyll ℥ ii of oyle of wormewood of quynces of swete almādes ana ʒ vi of oyle of roses of vyolettes of duckes grese of hennes grese ana ℥ i. Lette them boyle all togyther in a decoction of camomylle melilote mugworte holyhocke vnto the consumption of the decoction than strayne them adde to the straynyng of diaquilon gummed ℥ iii. and ss of Galenes cerote of ysope ℥ i. ss mengle them togyther and make a cerote wyth suffycyente whyte waxe addynge of saffran ℈ i. of white and red Saunders ana ʒ i. This cerote mollifyeth and resolueth the hardenesse of
dayes you muste set the forsayd thynges vpō the fyer agayne boyle them vntyll the wyne be cōsumed thē strayne them through a thycke clouth with stronge pressynge set them on the fyer agayne addynge a sufficient quantitie of whyte waxe make a cerote in a good forme And when you wyl vse it you shall malaxe or softē it wyth gotes mylke or cowes mylke wyth the iuyce of the forsayde herbes last of al wyth aqua vite After that you haue vsed these thynges the space of fouretene dayes it is profytable to applye stouppes dypped in thys decoctiō folowyng ℞ of redde wyne Decoction li. iij. of roses of myrtilles of wurmwoode ana m̄ i. of the floures of pomegranades called balaustie m̄ ss of squinātū a lytle of the nuttes of cypres in nōbre .xij. of rosemarie of saynt Iohns wurte of madder of fyne graine ana m̄ ss of hony ℥ ij let thynges that are to be brayed be braied grossely thē boyle them vnto the cōsūptiō of the thyrde parte and strayne them Thys decoction muste be applyed actually hote after the maner aforesayd Note thys that a piece of syndall muste be put betwene the sculle dura mater as it is sayd before after the daye that the bone is remoued vntil the bloode or quytture whych was vndre the bone be clearely mūdifyed and vntyl the said pānicle be incarned with the sculle The application of a syndall betwene the sculle The cause of applicatiō of the syndall dura mater is profytable for two thynges Fyrste for purgation of bloode and quytture whych was vnder the bone and that easely depressyng dura mater from the bone wythout any hurte of the same Secondly it kepeth the ryme dura mater that it be not hurt through the roughnes of the bone when the sayd ryme moueth maketh pulsation or beatynge After that the fouretene dayes bene passed Incarnatiue ye shall fyll the woūde with thys incarnatiue for sufficient incarnation of the ryme dura mater with the sculle ℞ of clere terebentyne ℥ ij of hony of roses ℥ i. of odoriferous wyne ℥ iij. of saynt Iohns wurt of betonie of pimpernel of centauree the greater ana m̄ ss stampe the foresayd herbes mēgle them al together boyle them vnto the wyne be consumed then strayne them through a thycke cloth and adde to the straynyng agayne of cleare terebentin ℥ ss of hony of roses ʒ iij. of myrrhe ʒ ij of sarcocolle of aloes hepatike ana ʒ i. of saffran ℈ i. of sersed barley floure ʒ ij ss Yf it chaūce that in the wounde superfluous fleshe be engendred as we haue sene in many then ye shal laye vppon it vnguētū mixtū or roche alume burnt or our poudre of mercurie And yf any vnctuous fleshe be engēdred vpon dura mater the applicatiō of the poudre of hermodactyles is a sure remedy amōge al other And a spōge somwhat burnt hath the same effecte After incarnatiō let the place be sealed vp with vnguētū de minio A poudre sicar●izatine whych is wrytten in the ende of thys present chapitre puttynge thys poudre folowynge into the woūde ℞ of bole armenie ℥ ss of roche alume burnte ʒ ij of the floures of pomegranades called balaustie of mirtilles of myrobalanes citrine ana ʒ i. ss Lykewyse to thys intētion it is conuenient to washe the wounde with redde wyne in whyche roses mirtilles floures of pomegranades a lytle alume haue ben boiled we haue euer vsed these forsayd remedyes with our owne honour profyte of the patientes Auncient doctours haue declared the forme of sondry instrumentes of yron as trepanes hāmers molinels c. whych are perillous But it is our custome to describe those meanes of healynge patiētes that ben lest daungerous Auicēne also sayeth that many haue reproued the vse of trepanes and other instrumentes of yron Seynge nowe that we haue declared the cure of a broken sculle aswell by handye operation as by locall medicines we wyll speake hereafter of thynges concernynge dyete and conuenient purgation to defende apostemation and sondrye accidentes with other obseruations whych muste be kepte in the procedynge of handy operation The dyete of a woūde with a cracke in the sculle muste be slendre Diete The patiēt shal eate grated breade sodden in water with almandes a lytle suggre And yf the patient be weake he maye eate of the brothe of a chycken altered wyth barley he may also haue a potage made with wheat floure or grated bread Further more it is good that the patient eate after meat a confection of quinces that vapours ascende not into the brayne Likewyse whē the patiēt is weake at the begynnynge he muste abstayne from drynkynge of wyne and he must drinke water of barley with suggre or with a iuleb of violets chiefly whē he hath a fieuer yf he be very weake ye may gyue hym wyne of pomegranades After that eleuē dayes ben passed ye may gyue the patient a chycken to eate and to drynke wyne moderatly delayed And after fourtene dayes ye maye ordeyne hys dyete somewhat grosser that the incarnation of dura mater wyth the sculle may come to passe more easely Thē ye may gyue hym the extreme partes inwardes of beastes of good nouryshment as the trypes of an heyfare the heade the fete of the same Also he may eate ryse sodden in the forsayd brothe of laudable fleshe How be it he muste not eate to saturitie or fulnes for there is nothing wurse in this dysease thē the superfluitie of meates and drynkes Causes of Apost●mation of dura mater Wherfore Auicenne sayeth that an aposteme of dura mater cōmeth through fyue causes namely by multitude of wyne and meates by the ayer wherfore he sayeth beware of colde euen in the sommer by aggrauation of tentes or other thynges put in to the wounde or by the bone whyche is sharpe and roughe and hurteth the ryme called dura mater and by some pryuie cause When the cause of the aposteme is manyfest then cure the aposteme with hys contrary Yf the cause be hyd study in the remouinge of it to serche out the secrete cause as yf it came of drinkyng wyne you muste forbyd wyne to the patient Yf it came of to muche eatynge of fumous meates ye shall forbydde the same and cause hym to kepe a slender dyete Yf a pryckyng sharpe bone stāde out ye shall laboure to remoue it And yf it procede by aggrauation of tentes you muste take them awaye and also the medecynes that aggreue the sayde pannicle Yf the colde ayer be the cause of the apostemation the patient muste be kepte in a warme chambre and you muste often laye vpon the heade of the patient hote cloutes To take awaye the aposteme of dura mater Playstes it is very expedient to applie thys playster ℞ of the rootes of holyhocke .li. ss of camomill melilote ana
make a cerote in good forme This oyntmēt is excellēt for the woundes in whych the synnowes ben hurt Finallye the remedies that shal be wrytten in the nexte chapiter maye be administred in this case Thus. c. ¶ The .xv. cha of solution of continuite of synnowes and chordes THe woūdes of the synnowes as the doctours testifye cause euyll accidentes woundes of sinnowes and chordes and daūgerous diseases bycause of their great sensibitie or feling and bicause of the greate coniunction whyche they haue wyth the brayne wherfore they must be diligentlye cured and by a discrete chirurgien The accidentes and diseases that ensue thereby are these spasmes the palsy vehement payne colde fieuers apostemations perturbatiō of reasō watchynges greate alterations and great loethsomnesse of meate And oftentymes the woundes of the synnowes are apostemed by the way of deriuation of matteir and do cause of spasme without greate payne goyng before as Auicenne teacheth The cause of solution of continuite of sinnowes maye chaūce sōdry waies namely by brusynge thinges as by a stone a staffe c. or by cuttynge thynges as by a swerde a kniffe c. And likewise by poītedthīges as by a dagger a nedle a nayle an arow c. And some ben after the breadth with a totale incision of the sinnow Some with the incision of halfe the synnowe The woūdes that ben made after the lēgth of the membre sinnowes are not so daungerous as they that ben made after the breadth But whā the sinnowes ben halfe cut the woūd is more daungerous than whan the sinnowes ben holy cut For Auicēne sayeth that the hole parte of the synnow is hurt by the sore parte thorow the vehement payne there often ensueth spasmes palsies other accidētes And therfore it is necessary sōtimes for the auoydaunce of the sayd accidētes holly to cutte the hurted synnow For Auicenne so teacheth by the auctoritie of Galene The hurtyng of sinnowes of contusiō or brusinge is harder to be healed thā the other aforesayde The reason is bycause the maturation digestion resolution can not be finished in short tyme by reasō of the quitture which cometh of the contusion Ye shal cure solution of continuitie caused by incision or cuttyng by thinges desiccatyue In that that is caused by contusion ye shal procede with cōuenient digestyues that ye may seperate and sondre the quitture frō the hole partes that is to say the part of the hurt sinnow frō that that is not hurt Further we say that solution of cōtinuitie of the sinowes caused by pūction prickynge or foynynge is more daūgerous thā the other caused of a cuttynge thynge But amonge other the punction which breatheth not out that is to saye in whych the wounde is closed that the hurt mēbre can not digest the humours deriued to the sore place is moost daungerous whyche thing Mesue testifieth by the auctoritie of Galene sayenge a spasme foloweth the punction of the sinnowes chordes chiefly whā it breatheth not out And of the same punction oftentymes there is produced a venomous aposteme which by reasō of the cōtinuitie of the synnowe is conueyed to the brayn causeth a spasme epilepsia Somtymes in the place of the pūction there is engendred a rotten aposteme For the auoydaunce of the said accidentes Galene comaundeth to open the sayde aposteme and to administer a medicine attractiue of subtile substaunce and desiccatyue whereof we wyll speake more playnly in thys present chapiter To conclude touchynge pronostication we say that al woūdes about the ioynctures brynge greate daunger of deathe For bycause that the synnowie chordes ben made bare vpon the ioyntes they cause the foresayd accidentes And they are sone made bare bycause they ben in the ouerparte of the ioynctures whyche thynge maye be proued by Galene and Auicenne saynge the synnowe is a single membre and a right precious instrument procreated of nature from the brayne and the nuke the braynes vicarye to giue felyng and mouyng to the other partes of the hole bodye To come to the cure of thys solution of continuite of synnowes The cure we say that there are foure intentions required therunto The fyrst apperteyneth to diete The seconde to euacuation of humours The thyrde to prohibition remotion of accidentes which empesche the true cure The fourth shal be accomplished by the administratiō of diuerse remedyes accordyng to the diuersitie of accidentes whych cōmunely chaunce whan the synnowes bene hurte Concernyng the first intention we say that the diete must be subtile and slender at the begynnynge bycause of the sayd accidentes For it is the doctrine of Auicenne sayenge Dieta c. Furthermore bycause of the accidentes the disease maye be called Peracuta passio that is to say a sharpe disease And yf the disease be sharpe the diete must be slender wherfore it sufficeth at the beginning to giue the patient breade sodden in water or almādes with a litle sugre His drincke maye be a simple ptisane or water boyled wyth fyne sugre or wyth a iuleb of violettes And whan the daunger of apostemation is passed that is to say seuen daies after the hurte ye may giue the patient more nourishinge meates as chickynnes soddē with Laictuce and other conueniente herbes Also for hys dryncke ye maye gyue him wyne of good odoure with sufficient quantitie of sodden water Thys diete is cōuenient to make good incarnation of the hurt sinnowes And in processe of tyme by lytle and lytle the patient maye come to his accustomed maner of eatynge and drynckynge Concerning the seconde intention whyche is conuenient purgation after the disposition of the body we haue sufficiently treated in the chap. of the cure of flegmon by the ayde of god we wil speake more largely therof in the .ix. boke in a cha appoynted for laxatyue medicines wherunto ye shall resorte But the sayd intētion is moreouer accōplished by flebotomye diuersiue whan the age and strength consente therunto and whan the patient is of sanguine cōplexion and also by rubbynges ventoses In the meane season it is good to kepe the bellye loose with clisters we haue founde it profitable also to plūge the patientes legges in a decoctiō of thinges anodine that is to saye whyche take awaye payne chiefly whan the hurt is in the superiour partes whan the said hurt is in the nether part namely in the legge it is conuenient to washe the armes wyth that decoctiō wherof we haue spokē in the cha of the quynce For the sayde decoction turneth away mattier and resolueth gentlely The thyrde intention shal be accomplished as it foloweth Firste ye shall note that the accidētes which happē by pūction or hurt of the sinnowes bene thre namelye vehement payne a spasme and perturbatiō of reason And with these many other ensue as fieuers c To auoyde the sayde accidentes it is necessarye to begynne by medicines that swage payne and kepe of putrefaction wyth gentle attraction as we
bycause it hath lytle felyng bytynge medicines layed theron shal cause lytle payne And note that euyll fleshe is more sensible and felynge then good by accidens and that those bodyes are more apte to receaue curation of vlcers whych haue lytle superfluitie with good complexion and good bloode But in moyste bodyes as are the bodyes of women wyth chylde of them that haue the dropsy and of children vlcers are not easely cured bicause of their moystnes Also vlcers whyche succede some disease are of hard curatiō bicause nature enforseth her selfe to sende the water of the first disease to the seconde as we se daylye in the vlcers caused of the french pockes of whyche we wyll make a treatyse by the grace of god that shal be profitable to the studiouse reader Further concernynge vlcers in sinnowye places when the quytture is good and the vlcere swelleth a lytle about it is a good signe And the sayde vlcere is not redye to cause a spasme nor perturbation of reason nor other euyl accidentes Howebeit yf the said vlcers swell beyonde reason it is no good signe Some vlcers be of euyll complexion whyche must be reduced and rectifyed by their contraryes for the rectification of them Euyll signes in vlcers is the cause of theyr curation Euyll signes of vlcers are when they become drie with out quytture for no reasonable cause and when the vlcers bene swollen a aboute and the same swellynge conueyeth it selfe away without any resonable cause Thys is a signe of death bicause the mattier is drawen into the inwarde parte and by sinnowes mounteth vnto the brayne and causeth a spasme and other euyl accidentes Also Galene sayth that whē swellyng hydeth it selfe in vlcers and apostemes the man dyeth Hipocrates affirmeth the same sayeng yf swelling apeare in woundes and vlcers and sodenly vanyshe awaye without reasonable cause it is mortall whan he sayeth wythout reasonable cause he meaneth excepte it be remoued wyth a resolutiue medicine than it is to be feared lest a spasme shal be caused by that mattier For Hypocrates sayeth that a spasme in a wounde or vlcere is mortal And he sayeth moreouer in the same place when swellynges apeare in woundes the patientes suffer not spasme nether waxe madde but whē they vanysh awaye the sayd accidentes chaunce to some men Nowe seyng that we haue declared the kyndes of vlcers according to the diuersity of causes and accidentes it is cōuenient that we declare the thynges which hynder the curation of the same And fyrst ye shall knowe that there be two maner causes whyche hynder the saide cure that is to saye causes conioyncte and causes anticedent The causes conioyncte be these that folowe paynefulnes euyll complexion aposteme a corrupted bone the hardnes of the lyppes suꝑfluous fleshe softnes distemperatnes of the vlcere as well in heate as in colde a rounde figure of the vlcere a superficiall and fistulare figure or some other figure The causes antecedētes haue euyll humoures in quantitie or qualitie Further we saye that thynges that hyndre consoundyng are of double difference that is to say other they be of the parte of the vlcere or of the part of thynges annexed and ioyned to the same Yf they be of the part of the vlcere they procede of solution of continuite or of quytture as it appeareth by the diffinition of an vlcere The hyndrans caused by solution of continuitie cometh of the figure as roundnes holownesse c. The hyndrance caused by quytture cometh of the substaunce or of the qualitie whē it cometh of the substance it is by reason of the subtilenes grossenes slymynes or runninge mattier Yf the hindrance come of the qualitie it is bycause of hys sharpenes his corosion or substance by it selfe or by accidēt and the foresaid causes are nombred with the mattier conioynct The hindrance that cometh by thinges annexed to the vlcers procedeth of a cause materiall or efficiente the materiall is bloode sent to the member for hys nouryshment whyche cannot be chaunged in to good nouryshmente therefore hurtethe the vlcered place as well through hys euyl qualitie as throughe hys quantitie whē it hyndreth through hys quantitie it is by abundaunce or insufficient quātitie and when it hurteth by qualitie it is through euil cōplexion as coldenes heate moystnes drynesse simple or compounde material or not materiall Lykewyse the efficient cause whyche hindreth healynge of vlcers is euil complexion of the vlcered mēbre whyche is contrarye to the natural complexion of the sayd membre And it is called efficient bycause of the actiue qualities which are heate and moystnes the sayd causes ben simple or cōpounde material or not materiall Further if the hyndrance procedeth by thynges contrary to the vlcers whych brynge euyll disposition vnto them eyther they be accidentes or maladyes yf they be accidentes they are paynfulnes c. yf they be maladies they be purgynge of the belly aposteme shelly flesh additiō of flesh corosion putrefaction and such other maladyes whyche ben annexed to vlcers These are they whyche hynder the ryght curation of vlcers as well by thynges annexed to vlcers as by causes material and efficient The signes of the sayde thnges shal be knowen as it foloweth Fyrste ye shall knowe Signes of abundans of bloode that the bloode is to muche abundaunt in quantitie by the nature of the patient whiche is stronge and fleshye of reddyshe coloure and hath full and large and great veynes and whē the quytture of the vlcers is bloodyshe Ye shall knowe that the bloode is diminished in quātitie by thynges contrarye to the aforesayde that is to saye Sigges of diminition of bloode when the bodie of the patient is leane and thynne when the veynes ben small emptie and than the mattier whyche shulde engender fleshe is not deriued to the vlcered place and the quyture is in small quantitie Further ye shall knowe that the bloode of humours fayle in qualitie by the signes folowing First in heat Qualitie whyche is knowen by the yelowe colour of the body of the face of the eyes and when the bodie is leane and choleryke then the quytture whyche issueth oute of the vlcers is for the most parte yelowe and yf the heate be to muche so that it burneth the humours the quytture is of a duskyshe coloure somwhat blacke And yf the humours be colde ye may know it by that Colde that the patient is flegmatike pale whē the vlcered membre is whyte and the quytture is slimy and grosse whyte in coloure And yf they bene drye Drye the mēbre vlcered is of a duskyshe colour and the bodye of the patient is drye leane and the quytture is thycke like ashes and derte and of blacke colour After that we haue declared the signes whyche procede of sondrye maters accordynge to the diuersitie of the cōplexion of the bodye we must serch out the cause that hyndreth the curation of an vlcere after the diuersity of
the chapter of apostemed woundes but yf the payne be very vehemēt ye muste procede wyth mollifycatiue thynges and that swage payne as Auicenne sayeth that ye muste chiefly be occupied in swagynge payne when the vlceres be verye paynfull The payne can not be swaged by thynges desiccatiue but by mollifycatiue and thoughe they be somwhat contrarye to vlceres neuertheles when the grefe is not appeased the place is not prepared to receyue any curation and therfore the vlcere can not be healed excepte the payne be swaged As touchynge holowe vlceres it is necessarye to procede to the cure therof wyth medicines of stronge abstersyon and desiccation accordynge as the vlceres shal be very holowe or not For Auicenne sayeth that when the vlceres bene depe they nede more abstersyon and desiccation and the reason is because that greate quantitie of humours is drawen to the place whyche muste be cōsumed wyth great exiccation And for as moche as in greate holow vlceres there nedeth regeneration of fleshe by reason of loste substaunce to fyll the holes it is necessarye to obserue one rule that is to saye that ye muste in no wyse applye an incarnatiue medicine bycause that when incarnatiue thynges be applyed before mundifycation they produce superfluous fleshe whych hyndreth true incarnation Furthermore Auicenne sayeth that holowe vlceres be sone turned into fystules wherfore the chirurgien muste be diligent in the cure thereof And he sayeth moreouer that vlceres whyche be nyghe to synnowes and be in places full of vaynes and arteries bene apte to engendre apostemes in fleshye partes nyghe the sayde places as are the eniunctories and the stones and moste chieflye when the bodye is fylled wyth euyll humours And therfore it is good to purge the bodye accordynge to the euyll matter And afterwarde ye muste procede wyth thynges mollifycatiue and that swage paynefulnes whyche is comunely greate in thys case by reason of the nyghnes of synnowes When the payne is seased then ye shall procede to the cure of the sayd vlceres and amonge the conuenient remedyes vnguentum Basilicon of oure description is good Furthermore ye muste holde this for a generall rule that when the vlceres be in a verye sensyble place ye muste procede wyth lyghte medicines as moche as it is possyble And when they be in membres not sensyble ye shall procede wyth stronge medecines whyche is the doctrine of Auicenne whyche sayeth that as a synnowe discouered hathe nede of an easye medicine because of hys greate felynge so lygamentes that growe from the bones whyche are insensyble maye suffre stronger medicines Wherfore we maye more surelye worke in membres of smal felynge then in mēbres that bene verye sensyble And ye maye saye that preciouse membres and moost necessarye are sonest hurte bycause of theyr greate sensibilitie And therfore vlceres and sores in synnowie places and in inwarde mēbres can not endure a stronge medicine as is verdegrese and soch lyke yf they be not corrected by the admixtion of pleasaunt and glutynous thynges as dragagantū c. The lyquores that shal be putte in holowe and fystulous vlceres muste be of meane desiccation for you muste auoyde all vnctuose medicines yf it be not to take awaye the sharpenes of the medicines and to swage payne For as Galene sayeth vlceres can not be healed by moysture but by desiccation Also ye muste beware that ye cause not paynefulnes chiefelye when the vlceres be wyth apostemation and wyth euyll complection We haue declared in the former chapitre as concernynge speculation howe the sayde vlceres ioyned wyth accidentes ought to be healed and wyll speake more in the chapter folowynge Furthermore a good chirurgien must cōsyder what maner of byndyng is cōueniēt for in some vlcers the byndynge called incarnatiue is necessarie and in some the byndynge named expulsiue and sometyme ye shall nede the byndynge called retentiue and therfore ye muste not strayne the byndynge to moche for it myght cause apostemation of the vlceres The byndynge incarnatiue is conueniente in the armes and in the legges and defēdeth the humours that they aryue not to the vlcered place and as we haue sayde often it is not possible to heale an vlcere tyll the aposteme be remoued and of the sayde lygatures we haue spoken sufficientlye in the boke of woundes in a chapter properly of the same Furthermore there be certayne vlceres in whyche ye muste applye lyquide medicines that they maye more easelye enter vnto the botome of whyche we wyll speake in a peculier chapter of holowe vlceres Here ye shall obserue that the vlcers that bene olde and holowe are harde to be healed and for the moste parte they be wyth corruption of the bone For Hypocrates sayeth that in olde vlceres the bone muste be taken oute c. Thys Aphorisme is trewe in holowe vlceres and in vlcers caused of colde exitures One of the principall remedyes in the cure of vlceres is to take awaye the causes whyche engender the vlceres and to comfort the place from whēce the humours come and the vlcered place Whyche thynge maye be done by purgation of the euyll humours digestion of the same presupposed For a laxatiue medicine is not conuenient for it excepte the humours bene dygested as Hypocrates sayeth we muste heale dygested thynges and not moue rawe thynges In lyke maner cuttynge of a vayne some tyme auayleth to the curation of vlceres chyeflye when the bodye is full of humours Ye maye applye leches or bloodsuckers vpon the vaynes called Hemorroydales principallye when the vlceres ben in places nyghe to them Finallye we haue proued that the vse of vomytynge is good in those whych do easely vomyte in the somer tyme thus we ende thys present chapter ¶ The fourth chapter of virulent corosyue and malygne vlceres VIrulent corosyue and maligne vlceres differ not but in the qualitie excedynge for they ben al engēdred of hote burned matter and therfore Auicenne sayeth that the causes of maligne vlceres are superfluities procedynge of bodyes full of vicious humours and of euyll dyete and of euyll pustules and at the begynnynge these vlceres vtter subtyle and sharpe quytture called Virulentia and when theyr malyce is augmented by corosyon of humours they are called corosyue vlceres and when they encrease greatlye in shorte tyme they are called ambulatiue and yf the malyce be greate so that it confirmeth the membre they are called Lupi or eatynge vlceres or rankers as we haue declared in the chapter of melancolyke apostemes The cure of these vlceres shal be accomplyshed by foure intentions the fyrste is purgation of the bodye The seconde ordynaunce of dyete The thyrde remotion of the virulent and venimous matter and of the corrosyon The fourthe is administration of sondrye remedyes accordynge to the places and accordynge to the tymes of the foresayde vlceres The fyrste entention whyche consystethe in purgation of humours shal be accomplyshed as it foloweth Fyrst ye
vlceres Fyrst bycause we haue often spoken of the accidentes of all euyll vlceres we wil now onely speake of paynfulnes for in some vlceres ther is vehement gryefe so that it causethe euyll accidentes and sometymes bryngeth the patiente to deathe wherfore yf there be vehement gryef than ye shall applye thynges aboute the vlcere that be stupefactiue as a playster made of the leaues of whyte popie and of henbane wrapped in wete cloutes and putte vnder hote ymbres Playster stupefactiue and afterwarde stampe them and strayne them and adde oyle of Roses Omphacyne and vnguentum Populeon and make a playstere wyth a lytle waxe Item to thys intentiō vse the oyntmente folowynge ℞ the leaues of mallowes and of henbane Ana. m̄ ij sethe them in water and afterwarde stampe them and strayne them and adde vnto them of oyle of Nenuphar oyle of popye as muche as shall suffyce set them on the fyer agayne and make an oyntmente addynge of Philonium Persicum ʒ vj. Item vse this recepte ℞ oyle of Popie oyle of Camomylle oyle of Violettes Ana ℥ j. of whyte waxe ʒ vj. make a lyniment at the fyere addynge of womans mylke ℥ ss of opium ℈ j. of Saffran ʒ j. the yolke of an Egge and styrre them aboute in a morter of leade the space of an houre If the dyfficultie of healynge seame to procede thoroughe the euyll complexion of the vlcered parte ye muste consyder whether the sayde complexion be hote or colde materiall or ymateriall yf it be hote lette it be cured wyth local medi●ynes and that haue vertue to cole as vnguetū de cerusa A colliry made with water of roses plātayne and with whyte sief wythoute opium is of good operation Further the difficultie of healynge chaunceth of the quantitie or qualitie of bloode if it be in quantitie it is other superfluous or diminished yf it be in qualitie it is in complexion hote or colde moist or drye c. If the bloode be superfluous the cure is accomplyshed with slender diete and wyth cuttyng of a veyne by administration of bloodsuckers If the bloode be diminished ye shall remedye it wyth grosse diete of good iuyce and by drawyng nouryshment to the vlcered place by rubbynges vnctions and fomentations and suche fomentations that swage payne so continuynge tyll the member waxe redde and begynne to swelle If the blood be of an yl qualitie as of a hote materiall cōplexion let the hote mattier be purged yf it be thinne with rubarbe Myrobalanes Tamarindes pulpe cassie wyth water or wyne of pomegranades made after the maner of iuleb c. And yf nede be let the mattier be purged wyth the iuyce of roses psilio or sebestē c. Yf the mattier be grosse throughe adustion let it be purged with a lectuary lenitiue of hamech diasene cassia strengthened with sene pillulis indis c. Note that hote mattier beyng subtile must be digested before purgation with sirupe of roses endyue vinaygre simple occisaccarū syrupe of violets with the waters of endyue violets sorell or other like If the mattier be grosse through adustion it must be digested wyth a sirupe of apples of buglosse of hoppes with a iulep of violettes of fumiterre or other suche Here ye shal note thys one thing that in eating drinkinge in other thynges not naturall ye kepe a proportiō according to the defaut in these other cōplexions which are found with an vlcere If there chaunce a fieuer in the vlcers so much more ye shal encrease the forsayde thinges in the degre of coldnes or diminish the same as the fieuer shal seme stronger or weaker If the blood be of a hote cōplexiō simple or cōpounde wtout mattier thē the foresayde digestiues shal onely suffice wtout purgation If it be of a colde complexion material thē let the mattier be purged If it be flegmatike with aloes agarike polipody turbith electuary de dactilis pillule de hiera pillule cochie or other like alway directyng the mattier with syrupe de bisantiis with oximel sirupe of vinaygre cōpoūde with hony of roses with waters of fenell borage smallage maiorū mint worwood or other such These thynges one after another are good in an euel colde cōplexion not material wythout purgation Lyke curation shal be in colde mattier moyste materiall but if the cōplexion be moyst wtout mattier onelye digestyues are conuenient but if the cōplexiō be drie material the mattier muste be purged the mēbers that engendre the same rectified If it be not materiall the cure shal be wyth hote moyst thinges Hitherto we haue spokē of the cure of euil blood Furthermore we saide that the roundnes of vlcers hindreth curatiō wherefore the chirurgien shal reduce it frō a roūde vlcere to alonge vlcere with an hote yron or with a caustike medicine briefly it is a generall rule in the cure of these vlcers that if the difficultie of their curation do cōsist in yl blood that then ye minister meate whiche engendreth good bloode contrary to that that hyndreth the cure If the cause be in slender nouryshmente the bloode shall be multiplyed by dilatynge the waye wyth good meates But yf the cause be mollifitation thorowe fylthye mattier than it shall be healed wyth the cure of a fylthye and softe vlcere If superfluous dryeng be the cause so that it be not a fistulous vlcere it shall be cured wyth moyst thynges and herin it auayleth muche as Auicēne sayeth to perfume the vlcered place wyth some thynge of gentle moysture and by administrynge medicines of lytle exiccation or drieng and therfore Auicēne saith perchaunce it is good to administer cloutes dypped in warme water If some cankerouse corruptiō be the cause of difficultie then cure that accidente as it is sayde in the cure of a canker Lykewyse yf a fistula be the cause resorte to the cure of a fistula For the remouynge of other causes that letteth the curation of vlcers resort to the second chapiter of thys presente boke Nowe I wyll begynne to declare certayne remedyes as I promised afore Oyntment And to speake generally of oyntmentes whyche helpe vlcers that ben harde to cure these ben they Fyrst R. of oyle myrtyne oyle of roses omphacine an̄ ℥ iii. of goates suet of calues suet an̄ ℥ ii of Plantayne leaues of woodbynde of the tender partes of bramles of the leaues and graynes of myrtilles of the leaues of wylde olyues of the herbe called Horsetayle ana m̄ i. of Hypocistidos ʒ x. two sower pomegranades of the herbe called alleluya of sorell an̄ m̄ i. ss of vnguentum populeon oyle of roses complete ana li. ss stampe all these foresayde thynges together and let them seeth wyth a cyathe of water of plantayne and as muche of water of Roses tyll the waters be consumed thē strayn them set the liquor vpon the fyre agayne put thervnto of ceruse ℥ ii of Litarge of gold and syluer an̄ ℥ i.
causes of these skalles are grosse and corrupt and slymy humours Causes of skalles hauynge begynnynge sometyme of the mothers wōbe or of euyl diete This euyl disposition we haue also sene to haue chaunced of the negligence of the parentes The curation hereof maye be reduced to two kyndes as wilhelmus Placentinus sayeth that is to say to a moyst and a drye skall That whyche is moyst is alwaies vlcered and that whyche is drye is alwayes skaly whyte wyth superfluitie lyke meale The cure shal be accōplyshed wyth thre ententions the fyrst ordenaunce of diete the seconde purgation of the mattier antecedēt the thyrde is to take awaye the mattier conioynct and accidens whyche ensue after the application of bytynge medicines For the fyrste and seconde entention ye shall resorte to the cure of vndimia and zephiros But for a more certayne doctrine we wyll wryte some conuenient purgations Fyrst ye shal vse pilles of fumiterre pylles cochie pilles de Hiera cū Agarico pilles aggregatyue for they draw the humours from the heade Also ye maye vse an electuary of Roses confection of hamech electuary of dates geuen with a sufficient quantitie of Cassia The thyrde entention is thus accomplyshed fyrst yf the place be drie ye shall moysten it thre or foure dayes wyth thys lotion A good lotion ℞ of fumiterry of dockes of the rotes of holyhocke ana m̄ ii of branne of camomyll ana m̄ i. of lyneseed ℥ i. of beanes ℥ iiii of lupynes li. ss seeth these thynges in suffycient quantitie of lye made with asshes of vine braūches and wash he heed with thys decoction twyse or thryse a daye as hote as the patient can endure and after the lotion ye must annoynt the place wyth thys linnnent ℞ of swynes grese l. i. of fumiterrie of dockrootes ana m̄ i. of yuy leues oyle of laurel an̄ ℥ ii of terebentine ℥ i. ss of oyle mastike ℥ i. of the iuce of black colewortes ℥ iiii stāpe these thynges togyther and so leaue them the space of a daye and afterwarde seeth them tyll the iuce be consumed than strayne them and anoynte the heed concernynge the same with the leaues of blacke colewortes after it is anoynted And when ye haue vsed these thynges the space of .iii. or .iiii. dayes ye must scarify the sore places with a depe scarificatiō that the matter conioinct and the euyl blood may be purged and after scarification ye shall vse agayne the forsayde lotion and often shaue the heed And yf ye perceyue that the place be mundifyed by the forsayd thinges which is knowen by the clerenesse of the skyn and remouyng of the brannye and cruste ye matter than ye shall wash thrise a weke the heed with the forsayde decoction applying this liniment folowing which mundifieth the skynne and healeth the rawnesse and vlceration of the heed ℞ of oyle of the yolkes of egges ʒ x. of the oyle of lyneseed ℥ i. ss of oyle of mastike of oyle of laurel an̄ ℥ ss of swynes larde melted of calues tallowe ana ℥ iii. of clere terebentine ℥ i. ss of the leaues of plantayne of the leaues of wylde olyues of fumiterie of dockes of sour pōgranades of horsetayle an̄ m̄ i. of the leaues of ydye m̄ ss stampe that shulde be stamped with the forsayde oyles and fatte and seethe them tyll the iuces be consumed than strayne them and put to the straynyng of litarge of golde and syluer ana ℥ ii of ceruse ʒ x. of tyme ten tymes washed of roche alum burned an̄ ʒ vi of quik syluer quenched with fastyng spittel ʒ v. mengle them togyther and make a liniment with sufficyēt white wax This forsayde liniment is very commendable in al kyndes of scalles and of great efficacitie Note here that in all kyndes of scalles wherin the rootes of the heere 's ben corrupt it is a synguler remedye after ye haue washed the heed with the forsayde lotion to make a cap of fustian couered with pytche to draw oute the rootes of the heere that be roten or in the stede therof vse small tenacles or pynsones and than procede with the forsayd vnction tyl the flesh be hole and clensed from all crustye and brannye scurffe But yf the place can not be mundifyed wyth the forsayd remedyes thē ye shall vse stronger mundificatiues with corrosion as is this ordinaūce folowyng Take of white elebore ℥ ss of apiū risus ℥ vi of dockes ℥ i. ss of cātarides takyng away the hedes and the winges ʒ v. of honye of terebentine ana ℥ i. of orpyment ʒ iii. of verdigrese ʒ iii. ss of larde ℥ i. ss of butter ʒ x. of alume zuccaryne ʒ v. of leuen ℥ iiii of branne ʒ vi ss poudre the cantarides the orpyment and the verdigrese and the alume and mengle thē all togyther and applye them in the sore places for through theyr blysterynge and corrosion they purge the watrye and superfluous humours And ye must apply them so long tyll ye perceyue that the place is cleane and nette whiche thyng is knowen by that that the euyl cruste and super fluitie is remoued by the growyng of good flesh and good skynne Afterwarde ye shall mundifye the place with butter and the yolkes of egges and terebentine makyng a digestyue of them all whiche done annoynt the heed therwith and than couer the same with the leaues of black colewortes for this medicyne deuideth the euyl flesh from the good and swageth payne for the incarnation and cicatrization ye shal vse the lyniment vnderwrytten into the whych the oyle of yolkes of egges entreth And for asmoch as after the application of the sayd blystryng medicyne there remayneth in the vlcered place great inflāmation and payne for the remouyng thereof we haue ordeined this remedye ℞ of oyle of roses omphacine ℥ iii. of oyle of roses cōplete of oyle mirtine ana ℥ ii of litarge of of golde and syluer ana ℥ i. ss of tutia ʒ i. ss of ceruse ʒ x. of the iuce of amidūʒ vi of the iuce of nyghtshade plantayne and lettues ana ʒ ss stampe the sayde thynges in a mortare of leade puttyng in now a droppe of oyle and now a droppe of the iuces tyl they be consumed and perfectly mengled togyther and vse them afeer the maner of a liniment The cure of a moyst scalle For the accomplysshmente of thys cure we wyll declare certayne remedyes conuenyent for a moyste skalle though the forsayde remedyes maye conuenyently be adminystred in this case also Fyrst vnguentū egiptiacū is good to mundify vlcers proceding of moyste skalles and in lyke maner our poudre of mercurye and vnguen de minio causeth good sigillation in this case A cappe of pitche And bycause we made mention afore of the vse of a pitched cappe to pull oute the rotten heere 's we wil declare the maner of applyinge the same Fyrst set pitche on the fyre and take peces of fustian after the bredth
is in the ouer part engendred of grosse and reumatike matter discending frō the heade The definition of Auicenne agreth here wythall Sebell is a pannicle lyfted vp vpon the pānicles coniunctiua and cornea through the swellynge of the vaynes of the pannicle coniunctiua caused of grosse flegmatik mater Thys dysease causeth a smoky myst in the pānicles cōiunctiua and cornea and it is with aboundaunce of teares and ytchynge and rednesse enclynynge to a duskyshe coloure and some time the eye ledes bene hard and scabbye with vlceration and troublynge of the sight The cure of Sebell The cure of thys dysease hath two entencyons of whych one concerneth the admynistracion of vnyuersal thynges the other of particuler As touchynge the fyrste we saye that the remedies written in the chapter of ophtalmia are conuenient in this case The seconde ententyon shal be accomplyshed as foloweth Fyrste ye muste shewe afore hande that when thys dysease is confyrmed it can neuer or verye seldome be healed And thoughe it be newe yet it is of harde curatyon Auycēne nombreth thys disease amonge them that come by enherytaunce for often tymes it passeth frome one eye to another Here foloweth a collyrye of ryght excellente operacion An excellent collerie ℞ of the iuce of ashtree leaues of the iuce of celedonie ana ʒ iij. of the shelles of newe layde egges dissolued in vynegre the space of a weke nomber iiij of myrobalās citryne ʒ j. of tucia preparat of antimony ana ʒ i. ss of water of rooses ʒ vi of sarcocolle ℈ ij stampe al these thynges together and afterwarde seethe them in a lytle posnet of brasse till the halfe of the iuces and all the waters be consumed and putte thereunto of the sayd grene water ℥ ij sethe them agayne vntyll the water be cōsumed and afterward adde thereunto of the syef of sarcocol of whyte syef without opium ana ℈ ij make a fyne poudre to be putte into the eye Thys poudre is desiccatiue mundyfycatyue and resolutyue wyth a lytle bytynge Item for the same entencyon thys water folowynge is conuenyente ℞ of the foresayde grene water ℥ i. ss of the syrupe of rooses ʒ ij of the foresayde poudre ʒ iii. of aloes epatike wel poudred ʒ i. mingle them and puryfye them and applye them ofte in the eye wyth a lytle cotton for it is a synguler remedye And moreouer it is good for the scabbes of the eye liddes for vngula c. thus we ende thys presente chapiter The .vii. chapter of cataractes and of thynges whereof catarattes shulde come OFten tymes Of the cataractes in the eyes ther descende frome the heade certayne grosse and flegmatyke humoures coueringe the apple of the eye and there remaynynge are ingrossed and made thycke whyche is named of the doctours cataract Thys dysease is caused through the communion of the stomacke replenyshed wyth euell slymy humours wherof certayne vapoures ascende to the head cause colde slimy matter to droppe downe and taryeth longe vpon the pannycles of the eyes and semeth to couer the apple of the eye Item thys cataracte is sometyme engendred by the qualitie of the eye that is to saye whan the eyes ben very moyste and fylled wyth bloode and whan the white of the eye is to aboundaunt At the begynnyng of this dysease the pacyente semeth to see before him lytle flyes flying and he thinketh one thynge to be two the lyghte semeth smaller to hym than it was wonte for because the vysyble vertue is diminished thinges seme to be smaler Therefore the doctours saye that a cataracte hyndreth the vertue of seeinge as cloudes darckene the lyghte of the sunne The sygnes of the confyrmacyon and perfecte maturacion of a cataract is when it suffereth it selfe to be remoued by manuall operacion and when the sight is dyminished and the apple of the eye dilated and yf ye laye youre fynger vpon the apple of the eye it dilateth it selfe and returneth incontinently afterwarde into hys owne colour the colour is whyte or whytish A blacke or duskyshe cataracte enclynynge to grenesse or redenesse and that whyche dylateth not it selfe whan it is touched is incurable that which is not cōfyrmed can not be healed by handy operacyon wherfore ye must procure the confyrmacyon therof geuyng the paciēte meates that engrosse the blood as are chessenuttes beef and porke and other grosse flesh and thys thynge must be doone whā ye fere not that the cataract wyl come frome one eye to another Cure The cure of a cataract not cōfyrmed is accomplysshed by .iiij. entencyons The fyrste is ordinaunce of diete the second is partly to purge and partly to turne asyde the matter antecedent the thyrde is confortacyon of the mēbre frome whence the matter is deryued the fourthe is remotion of the mater conioynt by euaporation and confortacion of the vertue visiue As touchynge the fyrste entencyon ye muste geue the pacyente good meates that engendre good bloode and thynne and whyche are of easye dygestion as are veale lambe kydde capons chyckens partryches wood byrdes and hylle byrdes hys wyne must be of good odoure and of meane strength Item ye maye geue wyth the foresayde flesshe maiorum mynte nepte penyriall parcelye borage bawme whyte betes fenell absteynynge from lettuse for of theyr property they hurt the syghte In lyke maner ye maye g●ue the pacient rape rotes and na●●ewes and percely rootes soden wy●● the foresayde fleshe Also ye muste avoyde all thynges that gender grosse troublous and vaporous bloode as are radyshe rootes garlyke oynyons mustard colewortes lettuse beanes c. And also al maner of pulse excepte redde cycers Item ye shall avoyde all falte and hote thynges as peper and other stronge spyces The bread must be of pure wheate well leuened and well baken and if the sayde breade be made wyth fenell it shal be the more conuenyente in thys case as Democritus wytnesseth saiynge Crepynge wormes beinge blynded in theyr holes in wynter come forthe in the springe time and seke for fenel which they eate and rubbe theyr eyes therewith so recouer theyr sight Wherfore fenel is ryght conuenyent in this case for of hys nature it clarifieth the syghte and remoueth the vapours whyche wolde ascende to the brayne and do muche harme The seconde entencyon whych concerneth partly purgacion partly puttyng a syde of the matter antecedente is accomplyshed as foloweth Fyrste the matter muste be degested with syrupe de duabus radicibus wythoute vynegre and wyth syrupe of stycados and honye of rooses wyth waters of buglosse mayden heere and fumiterre or make it thus ℞ of oximel squillitike Digestiue of a syrupe of the iuce of endyue of honye of roses ana ℥ ss of the waters of fenel betony fumitere an̄ ℥ j. let the pacyente vse thys the space of a weke twyse a daye purgacion and then let hym take this purgacion two houres before daye ℞ of pylles cochye ʒ
the yolkes of egges laboured in a mortar of leade a great whyle is a singuler remedy in thys case as Auenzoar testifyeth for it mundifieth and swageth payne prepareth the mattier to issue out easely Item it is a singuler remedy to applye vpon newe vlcers the wyne of a swete pomegranade wyth the iuyce of the herbe called centinodia some called it weygras or knotgrasse or lingua passerina and the iuyce of wylde tasyll soddē wyth a lytle of the roote of lyllies tyl it be thycke Lykewyse a siefe of memyte wyth licium and a lytle frankensence sarcocolle and honye is conueniente in thys case for it mundifyeth and incarneth parfytlye and dryeth a lytle Yf the said vlceres ben olde rotten or venemous then it is conuenient to applye vnguentum egiptiacū of oure description whych remoueth the putrefaction and the quytture of the sayd vlceres And in lyke maner thys oyntment ℞ of honye ℥ .i. of verdegrece ʒ iij. of roche alume ℥ ss of the iuyce of smallage of the iuyce of knotgrasse of the wyne of swete and sower pomegranades of euerye one ℥ i.ss strayne fyrste the iuyces and thē seth all the forsayd thynges at a soft fyer vnto the thycknes of honye Thys oyntment mundifyeth the vlceres of the eares that ben rotten and mattry wythout great payne and yf it be to bytynge ye may put thervnto asmuch of vnguentum apostolorum or ceraseos as of thys forsayd oyntment After mundifycation it is conuenient to applye an oyntment made of the refuse of yron washed thre tymes in the wyne of pomegranades after well poudred and laboured in a morter wyth a lytle aloes and sarcocolle and incense Thys playster is desyccatiue and incarnatiue and healeth perfytlye the sayd vlceres Yf the vlceres be virulent and venemous and corrosiue ye shall vse vnguentum egiptiacum Item it is a good operation in thys case to vse our pouder of mercurye myngled wyth vnguentum albū camphoratum And when the malignitie is remoued ye shall applye vnguentum album camphoratum with so muche of the forsayde oyntmente made of the refuse of yron Item if the matter be hote lotiōs made wyth the decoction of roses lentilles barlye knotgrasse and suger conueyed in with a syrynge auayleth verye muche And yf the matter be colde grosse ye may vse a lotion made wyth the decoction of honye and of wyne and of lye and of sarcocolle And for as muche as whē stiptyke or bytyng thynges are applyed great paynes and apostemation ensue therfore to swage the payne ye shall vse thys suffumigation folowynge ℞ of the leaues of mallowes and violettes of camomill mellilote and dille of euery one m̄ i. of redde wormes ℥ .i. ss of redde suger ℥ ss clene licorice of reysons of euerye one ℥ .i. myngle these thynges together and sethe them in sufficient quantitie of hennes brothe wythout salt tyll halfe be consumed ℞ the smoke all hote wythin the eares and after suffumigation put into the eares oyle of the yolkes of egges wyth butter ¶ The .vi. chapter of wartes growynge in the eares THe superfluous fleshe and wartes that groweth in the eares let the healynge For the cure wherof ye shall rote them out and to that entente ye shall procede after the doctrine wrytten in the chapter of polipus not cancrouse in whych the maner is declared of rotyng vp wartes before they growe to the producynge of a canker Wherfore ye shall resorte to the sayd chapter ¶ The .vij. chapter of the soūde and wyndynes in the eares Soundynge in the eares THys dysposition is engendred of grosse and slymye matter wherof wyndynes procedeth and causeth soundyng For the cure therof ye shall purge the matter antecedent gyuynge the patient pilles of hiera with agaryke or pylles cochie And after purgation we founde good to vse a suffumigation made of maioram sodden in water and wyne wyth camomill dille and a lytle honye after suffumigation ye muste applye oyle of bytter almans and oyle of dille and hony of roses To the same entention the suffumigation folowynge is conuenient A suffumigation to resolue wyndynes in the eares ℞ of the leaues of horehoūd of camomil and dille of euery one m̄ i. of maiorum of organye of eche a lytell let them sethe wyth wyne and see water tyll the thyrde parte be consumed and then put thervnto of honye ℥ .iiij. of castorie ℈ .i. let thē seth agayne a lytle After thys suffumigation ye shall put into the eare oyle of elders warme wyth oyle of bytter almans and oyle of nardus wyth a lytle oyle of rue or of radyshe whych Auicenne prayseth syngulerly Item to thys entention after suffumigation we haue founde it good to put into the eares this oyle folowynge whyche taketh awaye all wyndynes of the eares ℞ of oyle of dille of oyle of elders oyle of bytter almans Ana ℥ .i. of the iuyce of horehounde of the iuyce of radyshe ana ʒ ss of the leaues of rue of cumyn maioram of cynamon of euery one a lytle of castorium graynes .ij. of vynegre ʒ ss seth these forsayde thinges a lytle together tyll the vynegre be consumed and then strayne it through a clothe put therof warme into the eares for it taketh away wyndynes maruelouslye and restoreth the hearynge Some men saye that goates galle or calues galle sodden wyth the iuyce of horehounde and radyshe and oyle of dille taketh awaye the hyssynge of the eares wonderfully ¶ The .viij. chapter of the payne of the eares THe payne of the eares Payne of the eares procede sometyme of a colde cause and sometyme of a hote Fyrste for the cure therof a purgatiō of the heade according to the humours presupposed yf the matter be caused of heate oyle of roses omphacyne boyled in an apple wyth a lytle saffran swageth payne maruelouslye Also goates mylke cowes mylke or womans mylke serueth for the same purpose Item oyle of violettes swete almans sodden wyth wyne of sower pomegranades and a lytle saffran wyth chestwormes nombre .xxx. in .ij. ℥ of the forsayde oyles vntyll the wyne be consumed is a synguler remedye in thys case Furthermore a rosted apple stamped and strayned and myngled wyth oyle of roses and oyle of violettes a lytle saffran and the yolkes of two egges sodden together a lytle layed vpon the eares lyke a playster easeth payne greatly Also soddē wyne with barlye floure and beane floure oyle of roses camomill a lytell stāped branne is a good remedye to swage the payne of the eares it resolueth somewhat Yf the matter be colde The cure in a colde cause auncient wryters say that oyle of dille soddē wyth butter the iuyce of affodilles tyll the iuyce be cōsumed thē poured warme into the eares hath vertue to swage griefe caused of a cold matter Furthermore oyle of the yolks egges as Auensoer sayeth is a synguler remedye to appease any grefe of the eares Item oyle
excepte they be vlcered and ioyned wyth some hote humoure Theyr colour is betwene blewnes and rednes If they be caused of melancholyke and flegmatyke bloode mixt together they ar like lytle peces of flesh of blacke colour called Condilomata and yf they be caused of brente choleryke bloode wyth melancholye they are in coloure and figure lyke to a mulberye and verye paynefull Item ye shal note that some be naturall and some accidental the naturall are those whiche in some dodies euerye moneth or euery yere foure tymes purge grosse and melancholyke bloode The accidentall are those whyche procede of the foresayde causes throughe euyll diete and other thynges not naturall wherfore the pacient muste auoyde all sharpe salt tarte thynges and the engender melancholyke bloode as all pulses the heade and the inwardes of beastes and grosse fleshe as of kyne swyne goates hares and byrdes of the ryuer Further more the emoroydes are caused inwardly and outwardelye Those that are engendred inwardly are natural they are wōt to sende forth grosse bloode those that apere outwardelye sende forth watry bloode somewhat reddyshe The cure of emoroydes shal be accomplishid by an vniuersal and particuler regiment Cure of emoroydes The vniuersall regiment hath two intenciones namelye ordinaunce of diete and purgation of the cause antecedent Particuler regiment is accomplished by the administration of locall medicines As touchyng the fyrst intention we say that when they droppe inordinatly they muste be restrayned thoughe it be a generall rule that the flowynge of bloode by certayne tymes courses shulde not be restrayned leste the pacient fall into a dropsye throughe the weaknes of the lyuer and of the stomake For the restraynynge of the same the remedyes whyche be administred to stoppe the floures are conuenient in thys case applyed as well within as without lykewise in prouokynge the same Yf the fluxe come of a colde cause let the pacient be purged with diacatholicon cassia with the decoction of myrobalanes called kebuli equally proportioned accordynge to the strength age of the patient Yf they procede of hote mattier ye shall purge the body wyth diaprunis not solutiue reubarbe wyth the decoction of myrobalane citrine The doctours say that the solutiues must purge in pressing together leauyng some stipticitie in the mēbre that sendeth and receaueth the humours After purgation ii dayes ye shal administer a bathe of thinges the restreyne as sumach roses myrtilles plātayn boyled in water wherein hote steele hath bē quēched It it is good to take trifera magna cū sāguine draconis with a litle mumia a lytle reubarbe wyth wyne of aygre pomegranades Rasis prayseth trosciskes of karabe Playsters for the emoroydes with sumach to restrayne the fluxe of the emoroydes he prayseth the application of a playster of spica written in the chapter of the weaknes of the liuer Item a sirupe of myrte of roses is of great excellencie in this cause Furthermore it is very good to laye vpō the rennyng place in the somer a plaister of lentilles roses beanes made wyth water wherin a hote yron hath ben quenched for it stauncheth blood marueylously Item this playster folowing serueth for the same purpose R. of roses of myrtilles of the leaues of plātaine of the herbe called lingua passerina or knotgresse ana m̄ i sethe them all in water wherein hote yron hath ben quenched then stampe them streyne them put therunto a lytle wyne of pomegranades a litle vinaygre of roses shake them together brynge them in the maner of a plaister vse the same If the fluxe of emoroydes chaūceth in wynter ye must take wormewood with oyle of roses omphacine a lytle sage and mugwort and seeth them in a pot and afterwardes stampe them applye them vpon the place Ye shal put also wtin the fundament this oyntment folowing R. of roses myrtilles knotgrasse an̄ ℥ ss of frākensence ʒ.i of sāguis draconis of myldust of ●eane floure an̄ ʒ.ii of hares heare cut in smal peces ʒ.ii.ss of bole armeny terre sigill an̄ ʒ.iii.ss of tutia of litarge of golde syluer an̄ ʒ.i.ss of the iuyce of tapsus barbatus of the iuyce of horsetayle plantayne and comferye ana ʒ.iii the whytes of two egges shake them all together put them into the fundamēt with cotton or wyth lynte for it is a presente remedye to staunche bloode Also byndynge of the armes and shulders and ventoses is verye good to tourne awaye the mattier Also it is profitable to laye a ventose vpon the liuer Item it helppeth muche that the patient eate before his meate some stypstyke thynge as rosted peares or quinces or mynes made of the same medlers wyldynges c. Also ye muste auoyde anger immoderate vse of women and greate exercise Thys doctrine shall suffice for particuler purgation of emoroydes Vniuersall cure of emoroydes Nowe we wyll come to the vniuersall cure whyche shall be accomplyshed by foure intentions The fyrste consisteth in the ordinaunce of diete the seconde in purgation of the mattier antecedente the thyrde in remouinge the matter conioynt the fourth in correction of the accidentes As towchyng the fyrste the patient must vse suche meates as maye engendre good blood and destroy euyl as chickyns hennes partryches fesauntes motton veale sodden wyth herbes that engēder good blood as borage buglosse lettuse spinache c. He must auoyde all fishe excepte perches and fyshes that lyue amonge stones Also he must auoyde al sharpe thynges that engender melancholyke blood For the seconde intention whiche is to purge the mattier antecedente you shall vse Diacatholicon or Cassia or Diacassia and ye shal forbeare solutyues into whyche Aloes and scamonye enter wherfore it shall suffice to loose the bellye with one of the sayd lenitiues The thyrde intention shall be accomplyshed wyth the administration of locall remedyes And fyrste yf the emoroydes be like mulberies though they be of lytle aperaunce yet they cause great payn which if you swage not spedelye an apostemous or fistulous vlcere maye be engendred in the place Wherefore Lanfranke a lerned man comaundeth at the begynnynge to cutte the veyne called Basilica of the same syde the next daye the veyne saphena of the same syde And if the patient were wont to haue purgation by the veynes emoroydal ye shall prouoke the same and yf he were not acustomed he shal forbeare And herein the chirurgiens erre often tymes applyenge in the begynnynge of emoroydes bloode suckers and thynges that prouoke bloode wherby they haue broughte the place to an aposteme or to a fistula wherfore it is better to studye to swage the payne and to resolue the emoroydes wherunto a suffumigation and fomentation of the place by this decoction folowynge is profitable in all kyndes of emoroydes whyche we haue proued in Iulye the seconde A pope full of pyles R. of the leaues of Malowes and Violettes of
tyme maye be well vsed in these vlceres The lynemente also vnderwritten is conuenyente in thys case wherewyth ye shall anoynte all the legge ℞ of the iuce of plantayne of nyghte shade or the sede therof housekele ana ʒ.vi of oyle of rooses odoriferous of vnguentum populeon ana ℥ iii. of lytarge of golde and syluer ana ℥ .ii. of vyneger of rooses ʒ.ii of camphore ʒ ss make a lynemente of all these in a mortar of leade for thys lynemente dilateth sharpenesse of humoures and suffereth not the matter antetedente to passe to the matter conioynte Abande also wette in vineger and water of rooses and strayned is necessarye to defende the matter antecedente and cole the place c. The .vii. chapter of a member corrupte and rotten throughe incision ⸫ AS we haue sayde in the chapter of cancrena Of a putryfyed member a member putryfyeth .iii maner of wayes Fyrst by a thing that corrupteth the naturall complexion of the member as by venyme hote or colde Secondelye a member is corrupted throughe the prohibicion of vytal spirites whyche were wonte to come to the member Thyrdelye by a thynge that causeth the two foresayd impedimentes as by a venemose pustule and by a medycyne putrefactiue vndiscretelye administred as arsenyke and realgar As we haue seene The cardinalles muste be gloryously tytled in the mooste reuerente Lorde my Lorde the Lord Facio of the tytle of Saynte Sabyne Cardinall whiche had the apostemes called herpes and Estiomenus in his ryghte foote throughe the defaute of naturall heate and wekenesse of the member and also throughe hys long ague and by reason of the vehemente wynter that was that yeare Wherefore we beganne fyrste to cure the corrupte member wyth the cure of cancrena and askachillos and that wyth sondrye scarifycations and lykewyse we washed the place wyth salte water and wyth the decoction of lupynes soden in lye and some tyme wyth myxte vineger and salte And after the lotion we administred vpon the rotten boone twyse a daye vnguentum egyptiatum after the descrption of Auycenne that the partes adioynynge myghte be kepte from putrefaction And because as Celsus sayth the remedyes profytelytle in thys most cruell dysease and the canker seaseth not to crepe yet one remedye there is to cutte the corrupte member away that the hole parte of the body be not enfected Wherefore I seynge that the forsayde remedyes ware not conuenyent and that they coulde not defende the putrefactiō but that it crept ouer the knee dayly more and more I councelled to cutte the legge of aboue the ancle betwene the hole and the corupte parte and than to cauteryse the same howbeit certayne greate Phisicians of the Romayne courte resisted myne opinion wythoute reason and auctoritie though I had astablished it with other of the sayde auctorytyes and also wyth the auctoritie of master Iohn Marcerathensis So they wolde not suffer that the member shulde be cutte of yee one of them promysed that he woulde kylle the dysease wyth the onelye applycation of arsenycke but the sayde arsenycke through the wekenesse of the member and naturall heate coulde notte worcke accordynge to the mynd of the Phisicion but rather gnawed and rotted the membre And albeit that the sayde physition that worse is affyrmed that he woulde mayntayne the corrupte mē ber with the hole the space of tenne yeares yet the sayde cardynall was constreyned to dye through that enterpryse And because this chaūce is rare I haue declared the processe thereof that the phisitions maye not in suche be deceyued In the yere of our lorde M.D. and .ix. at syxe a clocke of the nyghte the fyrste daye of Februarye there chaunced a vehemente peyne withe inwarde pryckynges in the lyfte foote of the sayde cardynall insomoche that he cryed that his foote was burned And yet in touchynge the membre was as colde as yse vnto the knee and yet it felte not naturally nor perfectlye but after the maner of a false felyng Moreouer there apered no chaungyng of the membre in coloure no rednes nor swellynge vntylle the .vii. daye In the nyghte tyme he was vexed a certeyne space with the foresayde peyne and it swaged some what in the day tyme. And when he arose frome his bedde he semed to carye a great weyght of leade in his foote whiche peyne continued vntylle the seuenth daye euery nyght as we haue sayd In the seuenth day the membre was mortified welnygh from the ancle dounwarde Of whyche mortification we douted fyrste afterward we ware certified in the seuenth day that the membre was plainly mortified Foundyng our pronostication vppon Willelmus Placentinus a man of gret auctority in chirurgerye whose woordes be these The sygnes sayethe he of peynes whiche proocede of a colde cause in the extremyties of members are theese Losse of heate and readnes benommynge styfenesse and heuynesse and pryckyng of the place whych thinges signifie that the palsey shall ensue or that the member is mortified In the same daye the forsayd cardinall was vexed wyth a vehemente feuer and sounded ofte and was vtterlye oute of quiet in al his bodye so that al the phisicians thought that he wold dye the same daye by the reasone of the crueltie of the accidentes wherfore there assembled the hole college of phisicions in the mornyng to dispute of the qualitie of the desese and of the cure therof and there was greate discorde amonge them concernynge the same for some of thē sayde it was the frenche pockes some sayde the gout some that the membre was benommed some that it was mortified and cankerd I and mayster Iohn Macerathensis alowed the laste opynyon and I declared to the foresayde Phisycyons the effecte of the matter by experyence and mooste weyghtye argumentes For though the membre semed not corrupted nother in swellinge nor in coloure sauynge that it was somewhat blewyshe yet in the presence of them all I scarified vpon the place vnto the bone and caused no paine to the cardinall and the bloode that issued oute was grosse and thicke as it ware congeled and of a very blacke coloure lyke ynke which thinge done the phisiciōs chaunged theyr myndes and consentyd to our opinion though they resisted vs concernynge the cure of the desease Hitherto we haue declared the storie nowe we wyll returne to our purpose Fyrst purgacion of the bodye by a lenitiue clister or some other lenitiue medecyne presupposed there is no better remedye than to cutte the corrupted member nygh the hole part so that some of the corrupted membre remayne and that for thre causes Fyrste that insicion maye be wythout payne Secondlye that fluxe of blood maye be aduoyded Thyrdelye that a cauterisation maye be vsed wythoute payne The maner to cutte the corrupte member is thys Fyrst ye must proue wyth a prouet howe the mortificacyon of the membre gooethe and afterwarde ye muste cutte the membre syrcle wyse in the fleshye and musculose parte and ye must dyseuer
with waxe and rosen whych ye shal washe thre or foure tymes wyth mylke for mylke delayeth the heate of it and causeth it to swage peyne the better We coude haue declared here manye other oyntementes and cerotes but our custome is to setforth them whiche we haue founde to be good ¶ The .xvij. Chapter ¶ Here foloweth a table of medicines compounde and symple wherwyth Chirurgiens ought to be furnysshed that dwell in villages and townes wher no potycaries be also such as go to the see FYrste we wyll begyn wyth symples which be these Camomylle melilote dylle wormwoode corianders anyse branne milium fenugreke lynseed the floure therof the floure of beanes of barley of orobus of wheate honye suger bole armenye terra sigillata aloes Epatyke myrrhe frankensence gypsum sarcocolle saffran Saunders redde and yelowe camphore tucia litarge of golde and syluer ceruse burnt lead plates of leade vitrioll brent and not brent To staunche bledynge ye must haue oure pouder restrictyue the heares of a leueret quenched lyme roche alume verdegrese our pouder of mercury Also terebētyne mastyke gōme elimi rasin of pyne colophonia ship pitche hēnes grese duckes grese gose grese swynes grese butter sanguis draconis mumia myrt licorice lytle rotes clene barly the rotes of march malowes the seed of malowes comon seedes psillium quynce seedes reysons fygges dates iuiubes sebesten prunes sumach floures of pomegranades nuttes of cypresse squinantum sticabos arsenyke orpyment sublimate minium dragagantū braied whyte waxe and redde These be the symples wherwyth a good Chirurgen maye make manye remedies to the vse of Chirurgerie It shal be sufficient that he haue a lytle quantitie of these wyth hym and he muste not forgete to haue wyth hym leches or bloodsuckers Nowe we will come to cōpoundes Electuarye of the iuyce of roses hony of roses diafinicon the confection of hamech diaprunis symple and solutyue diacassia triacle benedicta diacatholicon hiera symple of Galien ¶ Pilles Pilles of Hiera wyth agarike Pilles of Hermodactiles greater and lesse Pilles sine quibus esse nolo Pilles of mastyke Pilles called Bechechie Pilles agregatiue Pilles of Reubarbe ¶ Syrupes Syrupe of Roses Of the iuyce of Endiue Syrupe Acetosus symplex Syrupe the duabus radicibus wyth vineg●● and without honye of roses honye of violettes oximell symplex Syrupe of violettes Syrupus de acetositate citri Syrupe of fumytery the greater and the lesse Syrupe of Epithimum Oyntmentes and cerotes VNguentum albū camphoratū vnguentum basilicum magistrale of our descriptiō vnguentū de minio of our description cerotum capitale of oure description diaquilon magistrale of our description cerotum isopi of our description cerote for broken bones of oure description vnguentum egiptiacum of oure description a ruptorye of capitell a trociske of minium agrippa dialthea whyte sief sief of frankynsence These suffyce for the necessitie of chyrurgyens Waters WAter of roses of fenell of fumytorye of plantayne of mayeden heare of endyue of buglosse of nyghtshade of vyolettes of melissa or bawme aqua vitae Oyles OYle of roses omphacine complete oyle of mastike oyle of camomyl of vyolettes of lyllyes of ipericon of euphorbium of elders And that the same remedies maye be the better administred of chyrurgyens I wyl describe the properties of them Fyrste we wyll begynne of syrupe of vynegre Sirupus acetosus simplex is common for the digestion of all humors and therfore it is conueniently geuen to theym that haue tertian feuers for by reasone of the vinegre it thinneth grosse humoures and cuttethe slymye humours it openeth oppilations and amendeth rottnes of humours wherfore it is good for pestilentiall feuers and by reson of his gentle coldnes it thicketh somewhat subtyle partes it cooleth choler and swageth thirst Sirupus acetosus cum radicibus hath temperat vertue and digestethe through his propertie grosse colour and resisteth rotten putrefaction correctyng euyll qualyties of humours and it openeth opilatiōs and cutteth fleume prouoketh vryne sweate The phisitions vse it often in the begynnyng of a tertian comyng of cholere myngled with grosse fleume and it muste be vsed with honye of roses waters of endyue fumitorie buglosse sorel fenell c. Oximel simplex hath vertue to digest to thinne and to cut euyl humors chieflye fleume and those that are in the stomack in that ioyntes the liuer And therfore it is good for thē that haue had lōg feuers caused of gros fleume beyng mēgled with water of fenell Oximell composytum is verye digestyue and peculier to digest thynne and cut grosse slymye flegmatyke melancholyke humours in longe fyeuers and pourgeth theym by swettes and vrynes And therefore it is gyuen to theym that haue a quartayne in declination For the same entention the sirupe de quinque radicibus is conuenient and is of greater temperaunce Sirupus de bisantiis is good for compounde and longe feuers of hard curation commynge of cholere mengled with grosse fleume for it dygestethe the same and openeth opilations and therfore it remedyeth the yelowe iaundees or Ycteritia Moreouer it is good in choleryke fevers beynge prolonged after the .x. day with water of wormwood maydenheare and endyue Sirupus de endiuio simplex hath vertue to digeste subtyle and sharpe cholere And it cooleth the boylynge heate thereof and represseth the sharnes of it Moreouer it openeth the opilacion of the lyuer Lykewyse sirupus de endiuia compositus hathe the same vertues Sirupus violatus dygesteth subsubtyle choler and quēcheth and cooleth the heate therof Also it quēcheth thyrst and soupleth the breste and is good for a drye cough and shortnes of wynde Sirupus de iuiubes clarifyeth the horsnes of the voyce swageth thyrst and thycketh thynne spytle And more ouer it easeth the cough in pleuresye is vsed in burnynge feuers Sirupus de liquiricia is temperat in heate and hys vertue is to take away the coughe and to clense the longes from grosse flemme Sirupus de hissopo is somewhat hye in heate and it openeth cureth a lōge and a harde cough and digesteth grosse flēme whych stoppe the wayes of the breathe Moreouer it prepareth reumatyke matter to yssue out therfore it helpeth short breathynge paynes of the heade and of the sydes commynge of a colde cause wyth wyndynes Sirupus de prassio or of horehoūd is good for the longes for the brest and it dygesteth flegmatyke grosse slymye humours and purgeth reumatyke matter beynge in the brest and in the longes And therfore it is vsed for the remedye of an olde coughe Sirupus de granatis or of pomegranades dygesteth cholere represseth the sharpenes of the same it mundifyeth bloode and swageth thyrst therfore is gyuen in coleryke feuers Sirupe of the iuyce of orenges or cytrous is a good remedy for sharpe vehement and pestilentiall feuers it represseth the sharpenes of cholere of venemous matter and quencheth thyrst and resysteth putrefaction of humours
and therfore it is chyefly vsed in the somer for the pestilence Sirupe of popye prouoketh slepe stoppeth reumatyke fluxes thyckyng the subtyle mater therof it is good for a drye cough chieflye in them that begynne to haue a pthisik Sirupe of the iuyce of sorell is good for a pestilētiall feuer it swageth heat and thyrst and preserueth humours from putrefaction it delaieth heate of cholere and mūdifyeth bloode cutteth grosse humours and comforteth the harte Sirupe of myrte byndeth myghtely and therfore it is good for the fluxe of the belye and of the floures and it stoppeth sharpe reumes Miua citoniorum or of quynces thorough hys stypticitie is very good for the fluxe of the belye Moreouer it styrreth vp appetyte and comforteth the stomacke and strengthneth the entrayles and causeth vomyte to cease Sirupe of myntes is of temperat heate and it comforteth natural heat and dygestion of the stomacke and repayreth the weakenes of the same Sirupe of wormewood cōforteth the stomacke and the lyuer restoreth apetite loste and easeth paynes of the stomacke of the lyuer c. Sirupe of fumiterrye dygesteth al grosse salt corrupte burnt humors and therfore it is good for scabbes tetters ryngwormes salte flemmes lepryes malmort cākers and the frēche pockes Sirupe of epithimum is good for the frenche pockes leprye cākers malmort salt flemme olde scabbes it healeth also pushes cōmyng of salt sharpe and burnt humours it prouoketh vryne and suppleth the bellye Sirupe de sticados is good for colde dyseases of the synowes for the palseye the crampe the epileptia it is good also for reumatyke olde men The comon decoction The comon decoction to coole is thus ordeyned ℞ of the .iiij. comon seedes of the .iij. lesse seedes of euery one a lytle of clene barlye of raysons an̄ ℥ i. of licoryce ℥ ss of annes ʒ ii of iuiubes of damaske prunes ana number ten of sebesten number .vi. seeth them all together wyth water of endyue buglosse and rayne water in equall portion tyll the thyrde parte be consumed it is vsed in medicines against sharpe and choleryke fieuers and it is good for the brest A peculier decoction for the breste and agaynste the coughe and shorte brethe R. of branne of scabiouse of maydenheere of ysope of horehound ana m̄ i. of floures of violettes of borage and buglosse ana m̄ ss of the rootes of langdebefe ℥ ii of damaske prunes of iuiubes ana ℥ i. ss of sebesten of barlye of dates of drye figges an̄ ℥ i. of licoryce ʒ x. of pennydies ℥ ii ss of fenell ʒ iiii of good honye .li. ss seethe them all with sufficient water tyll halfe be consumed than strayne the decoction and vse it for it is of merueylous operation A loche to ease the coughe and the streytnes of the breaste R. of sugger candye of a sirupe of vyolettes ʒ ten of penidies ℥ i. and. ss of syrupe of violettes ʒ ii of diadragantum ℥ iii. of iuyce of liquyryce ʒ vi of the comune seedes pycked of kernelles of Pynaple ana ℥ i. mengle them and make a loche wyth a lytle water of Scabious Diameron and Dianucum are good for the squynce from the begynnynge to the augmentation Item it remedyeth inwarde swellynges of the throte and losynge of the vuula and stoppeth catarres clensynge grosse fleume yf it be gargarised wyth water of pomegranades and water of plantayne ¶ Of electuaryes lenityue and solutyue FYrst diamāna purgeth-subtyle cholere soupieth the bellye healeth the diseases therof Diacatholicon purgeth indyfferentlye all humours and louseth wythout trouble and is pleasaunt in taste and it is gyuen to them that haue a sharpe feuer and to them whiche haue dyseases in the lyuer and in the mylte Diaprunis non solutinus louseth the bellye wythout violence it is of pleasaunt taste it swageth thyrst and quencheth the heat of feuers and therfore is conuenientlye vsed in hote and brennynge feuers Item it soupleth the guttes and comforteth them and yf ye put vnto it a lytle of diagridium it shal be very solutiue and shal purge all kyndes of cholere Diacassia is lenitiue and good agaynst coleryke sharpe burnyng feuers It mundifyeth bloode louseth the belly without violēce Some adde to thys cōfection ij ʒ of diagridiū and then it is of stronger solution Electuarium de psilio is of ryghte good operation for it helpeth coleryk feuers myghtely Item it remedyeth yelowe iaundes and stoppynges of the lyuer It cooleth brennynge heates is conueniently gyuen to them that haue malygne corrosyue virulēt vlceres Electuary of the iuyce of roses is solutiue purgeth al kyndes of cholere remedyeth al tercians paynes of ioyntes cōming of a hote cause it emptyeth all hote furious humours and therfore it is conuenientlye gyuen to them that haue a furiouse herisipelas carbuncle c. wyth diacatholicon to purge the residence of humours in thē that begynne to recouer of any syckenesse and is as the quyckenynge of other medicines Diafinicon is a medicine wythout daunger of easye solution purgeth grosse cholere and flemme and it is conueniently gyuen in the ende of coleryke feuers myngled wyth grosse flemme it easeth the paynes of the bellye and of the guttes caused of grosse flemme and therfore it is good for the colyke Electuarium indum is a great medicine to purge grosse and flegmatyke humours in the stomacke in the ioyntes And therfore it is gyuen to them that haue colde ioyntes Moreouer it taketh awaye all payne commynge of wyndy matter and therfore it is vsed in the frenche pockes Cōfectio hamech purgeth al choleryke salt and burnt humours therfore it is gyuen to them that haue virulent maligne vlceres by reason of the frenche pockes Item it is good for skabbes salt flēme the cāker leprye malmort tetters ryngwormes c. Benedicta receyued by the mouthe or mynistred in clysters is a good medicine agaynst all paynes of the ioyntes mynistred of colde matter and also against the dyseases of the reynes and of the blader cōmynge of lyke cause Item vsed in clysteres it easeth the paynes of the frenche pockes The confection of turbyth purgeth grosse flegmatyke humours therfore is good for scrophules wennes knobbes it is conueniently gyuē to olde men womē chyldren flegmatyk ydle delicate persones The ordynaunce of it is after thys sorte Confection of turbyth ℞ of turbyth preparate of agaryke in trociskes of blacke elebore an̄ ʒ i. ss of ginger polipody of myrte ana ʒ iij. of diagridium ʒ i. of cinamome of cloues of euery one ℈ ij of galangale longe peper of nutmygges maces quybebes ana ʒ ss of whyte suggre .li. ij of spyke ℈ i. myngle them make a styffe myxture wyth syrupe of roses The receyt of it is the quantitie of a chestnutte A solutiue of the dropsy whyche is good to purge the matter of the dysease called hernia aquosa ℞ of the iuyce of comferye ℥ i.
steped in the brothe of fleshe .li. i. of oyle of camomill and dille of euery one ℥ ij the yolkes of two egges of saffran ʒ ij of opium ʒ i. Item the ordinaunce of Alexāder rehersed in the chapter of emoroides is good agaynst all paynes of the fundament As concernynge inwarde payne trifera opiata is verye conuenient and so is trifera romana and persica whych induce slepe Trifera persica was inuented to retayne floures and the fluxe of emorroydes and vomitynge and spyttyng of bloode chieflye when it is gyuen wyth the iuyce of plantayne and whē it is put in the wombe it stauncheth fluxe of the floures and in clysters it cureth the fluxe of bloode and excoriacion of the guttes it closeth the mouthes of the veynes ¶ Of clysters supposytories and pessaryes A Clyster is a noble remedye to dryue out superfluitees of the guttes and of all the bodye And it was founde by a byrde called a storke whych to ease the payne of her bellye was sene to put salte water wyth her becke into her hynder hole The operation of a clyster is to purge the guttes the reynes and the bladder wythout hurte of the principall membres Wherfore there be many kyndes of clysters some supple some breake wynde some restrayne some cōforte synowye mēbres through theyr heate And those be good for a crampe that cōmeth by a replection A clyster agaynst the sayde crampe may thus be ordeyned ℞ of camomill Clyster for the crampe yua muscata mellilote dille of euery one m̄ ij of the rootes of enula campana m̄ ij of the rootes of walwort ℥ ij of maioram gentle of hoorehounde of sage of nept of mugwort of rue of euerye one m̄ ss of annys of comyn of euerye one ʒ ij of castorium of triacle of euerye one ℈ ij of honye .li. i. of the fatte of a foxe ʒ x. of oyle of camomill dille lillies of euery one ℥ iiij of the oyle of a foxe of laurell of terebentyne castorium of euerye one ʒ vi the heade of a wether somewhat brused lette them sethe all together wyth sufficient water tyl halfe be consumed then streyne them and put to the straynyng of odoriferous wyne about the thyrde part of the decoction and let them sethe agayne and mynistre it for a clyster Let the quantitie of thys decoction be to ordeine a clyster .li. j. ss with an oūce and a halfe of oyle of camomill and as muche of the other forsayd thynges ℥ i. ss of the syrupe of sticcados An other lynitiue clyster Linitiue clyster ℞ of the brothe of a chycken sodden wyth barlye .li. ij of oyle of vyolettes ℥ iij. the yolkes of two egges of redde sugger ℥ ij myngle them and make a clyster A clyster restrictiue is made after this sorte ℞ of a decoction of barlye made wyth smythes water .li. ij of oyle of roses omphacyne of oyle of myrte of euerye one ℥ i. ss of myua of quinces ℥ ij ss the yolke of an egge of redde sugger ℥ i. thys clyster is good against the fluxe of the emorroides and of the guttes Here foloweth a clyster to breake wyndines ℞ of a decoction of camomille dille mellilote anyse colewortes fenell corianders cumyne of euerye one ℥ i. of oyle of rue and dille of euery one ℥ i. of diafinicon ʒ x. of hony of roses ℥ ij a lytle salte myngle them and make a clyster Yf ye wyll haue it of lesse heate make it wyth a decoction of camomille mellilote dille and wyth the forsayd oyles leauynge oute cumyn and other hote symples ¶ Of suppositories OF suppositoryes some bene gentle some meane and some stronge Gentell suppositories be made with swynes larde or wyth the stalke of the leaues of colewortes wrapped in womēs heere and anoynted wyth larde or butter Meanelye stronge suppositories are made wyth honye sodden vnto thycknes wherunto yf ye put a lytle sall gēme they shall be of stronger operation A suppositorie made wyth frenche redde sope is of lyke effecte and so is a suppositorie made of the freshe rootes of floure deluyce Item a suppositorie made in the fourme of pilles called suppositorium succarinū whych is muche vsed at Genuaye is of good operation The ordinaunce wherof is after thys sorte ℞ of agaryk ℥ i. ss of blacke elebore ℥ ss salis gemme ʒ x. of ireos ℥ i. sethe them all together wyth foure pounde of reyne water tyll halfe be consumed then make pylles at the fyer wyth sufficient sugger wyth the forsayd decoction strayned and corianders wherof ye shall put fyue into the fundament A suppositarye of greater strēgth is thus made ℞ of hony sodden tyl it be thycke ℥ iij. of benedicta ʒ vi salis gemme of oxe galle of euerye one ʒ ij myngle them and make a suppositarye ¶ Of Pessaries PEssaries are made to prouoke the floures ℞ of mugworte sauyne sothernwood marigoldes ana m̄ ss of safron ʒ ss of hony ℥ ii lett thē boyle all together in sufficient water tyll the thyrde part be consumed than streyne them and with the streynyng make a pessary of cloutes The pessari folowyng is to be vsed in lyke case ℞ of honye sodden tyll it be thycke and styffe ℥ iiii of nigella brayed of mugwort poudred of euery one ℥ ss of safrōʒ i. myngle them and make a pessarye The xix chapter of oyles FYrst we wyll speake of magistrall oiles Oleū benedictū is good for the cure of many deseases of the bodye as for the crampe caused by repletion or the palsye for paynes of the iointes comyng of mingled mater conuenient purgacion presupposed It is also good for the brayne distempered thorough colde Furthermore it is of good operacion against the falling sycknes if ye anoynt the coronal commissure there wyth It dryeth also fystules A mundifycation wyth a stronge medicyne premysed it cureth great freshe woūdes colde catarres it conforteth the spirites openeth veynes stopped through colde humours and yf one droppe of it be put into the eare with cotton it amēdeth hearing chieflye when the impediment is caused of a colde cause Item a rose cake moystened in the sayd oyle and layed to the temples easeth the mygryme and taketh awaye the swymmyng of the heade And if half an ounce of the sayd oyle be dronken with alytle odoriferous wyne in the morning .iii. dayes together it conforteth and reneweth the hert longes Item yf it be taken wyth a lytle odoriferous wyne it is good in quarteyne fieuers The receyt of it muste be almoste a sponeful and that order muste be be kepte four dayes takynge euery daye the forsaid oyle an houre before daye vpon suche dayes as no paroxisme is loked for Item taken the space of .xxx. dayes wyth a lytle wyne and a lytle pionye it healeth the fallyng sycknes and the peynes of the frenche pockes Item it is a greate medicyne for the styngynges of venomous beastes for weaknes of the synnowes and thys
oyle maye be compared to the balsamum The ordynaunce of it is after thys sorte R. of oyle omphacyne two pound of storax calamita O●●um benedictum of laudanum of olibanum of saffranne of gumme arabyk of mader of gumme of the yuye tree of aloes succatryne of mastyke of cloues of galingale of cynamome of nutmigges of cubebes of euerye one two ounces of gumme elimi li. i. of myrrhe of bdelium of euerye one ℥ i. ss of galbanū sixe ounces of spike of lignum aloes of euerye one ℥ i. rasyn of the pyne of armonyke of opoponax of euery one ten drāmes poudre the thynges that bene toke poudered and mengle them wyth the sayde oyle and then put them in a lembike wyth hys heade and receyuoure and stille them accordynge to arte and let all the vesselles be stopped wyth luto sapiencie Fyrste put the lembike vpon a softe fyre the space of xii houres encreasinge the same from .vi. to .vi. houres tyl all be stilled whyche done pouder the residue of the spices agayne and wyth the forsayd oyle beyng stilled as is aforsayd let them be stilled againe and so at the laste ye shal haue an oyle lyke vnto bawme Here foloweth an artificiall oyle of bawme Bawme artificial which is a great and a noble secrete to conserue health R. of cynamome cloues nutmigges ginger zedoar longe blacke peper of the graynes of iuneper of the ryndes of limons and orenges of laurel beryes of the leaues of sage basille rosemarye rounde mintes of penyrial gēcian calamint of the floures of elders of the floures of rosemary of spike narde of lignum aloes of wild cubebes of cardomomū of calamus aromaticus of stichados of saint Iohns wort of germāder of mirre of mastike of olibanū of aloes epatike of the sedes leaues of dylle of the seede of motherworte ana ℥ i. of fatte drye figges of raysons of the meate of dates of swete almons of kernelles of a pyneaple of euerye one ten drammes of white hony ℥ vi whyte suger asmuch stampe them all and stille them renewe them thries at the lest wyth the spices remayning in the botom Another oyle of bawme of oure inuention whyche is of the same effecte that the other is and healeth greate and freshe woundes R. of moost clere terebentyne li. ii of oyle omphacyne li. ss of gūme elimi ℥ vi of newe rasyn of the pyne of colophonia of euerye one ℥ iii. of myrrhe aloes epatike frākynsence of sarcocolle mastyke armonyake dissolued with vinagre of euerye one ℥ i. ss of cloues nutmigges cubebes cynamome of euery one thre drāmes of the seede of saynte Iohns worte of mader of fine grayne wherwyth scarlet is died of euerye one ten drammes of earth wormes washed wyth wyne ℥ viii poudre the thinges that be to be poudred and mengle thē all together addynge of maluesye li. i. ss stille them in a glasse as it is aforesayde ☞ Note that the water which shall come out of thys composicion is verye good for the woundes of the heade thoughe the sculle be broken wythoute discouerynge of the boone and administred wyth cerotes and the poudre wrytten in the chapter for the breakynge of the sculle Thys oyle maye wel be compared wyth bawme and hathe all the vertues requisite to heale woundes perfytlye and chieflye those whyche are in synnowy places For as Auicenne sayeth a medicyne apte to heale woundes of synnowes must be hote and dry of fine partes and temperate heat wythout mordication Oyle of yolkes of egges Oyle of yolkes of egges is good to smoth the roughnes of the skynne and also to remoue tetters and ryngwormes and chappes Item it swageth payne of colde vlceres in synnowye places and of vlcers of the eares and it is made as it foloweth Take the yolkes of twenty egges wyth the shelles soddē with water then stāpe thē in a mortar and sette the yolkes only on the fyre in a lytle brasse panne and styrre them aboute tyll they begynne to heaue vp frō the botome of the panne wyth fome then putte them in a weted thycke clothe and presse them strōglye in a presse and vse thys oyle for it is a present remedye in all the forsaid passions Here foloweth the ordinaunce of an oyle magistrale of our description whyche we haue proued to be verye good Oyle magistrale agaynste all colde passions of the sinnowes and ioynctes for it heateth moderatelye and dryeth and resolueth straung humidities of the synnowes of ioynctes and therfore it cureth the palsye and crampe comynge of a moyste cause Item it remedyeth swymmynge in the heade epilepsia and apoplexia yf ye annoynte the coronall comissure therwyth And it is thus made R. of oyle of nardus of costus of oyle of a foxe mastyke flouredeluyce lillies of euery one two ounces of oyle of roses odoriferous li. iii. of newe brycke li. iii. Then burne the brycke and putte it hote into the sayde oyles and afterwarde stampe them and braye them and stylle them with the oyles in a lembicke and kepe the distillation for the sayde infirmities The oyle of yperycon or saynte Iohns worte is wrytten in the boke of simples whereunto ye shal resorte An artificial oyle of bawme Oyle of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is singuler for woundes of the synnowes and for diseases coming by colde humours and to remedie the crampe the palseye the epilepsye beynge layed vpon the coronall seame is thus ordeyned R. of terebentyne a pound of whyte frankynsence of laudanum of euery one foure ounces of mastike of galingale of cloues of cinamome of zedoar of nutmigges cubebes of lingnum aloes of euery one two ounces of gumme elimi sixe drammes of oyle of roses omphacyne li. ss of oile of mastyke ℥ ii ss of earthe wormes washed wyth wine thre ounces mengle them all together and stille them in a glasse as is aforesayde Oyle of swete almons smotheth the brest and the longes and suppleth the hardnes dryenes of the ioyntes and swageth thyrst and therfore it is good for them that haue the ptisike and peynes of the eares caused of mixt matter The oyle of bitter almons easeth the paine of the eares caused of colde matter for it driueth awaye the wyndynes and hissynge of the same and amendeth defenes Moreouer it remoueth spottes of the face and softeneth hardnes of the synowes kylleth wormes through his bitternes Oyle of peches is of lyke effecte Oyle of lynseed hath greate vertue ageynst all passions of the fundament and it is conuenientlye administred in medecynes ordeyned for the crampe Item it is a goode medecyne for the roughnes of the synnowes paynes of the ioyntes Oyle of laurell by reson of his aromatick nature is good for the colik caused of colde matter it comforteth cooled and weakened synnowes and also the crampe and fynallye all colde synnowy diseases Oyle of roses complete that is to saye made of roses and olyues perfitlye
foure iuce of an orenge howebeit the apothecaries make this syrupe with the iuce of a citron as they haue shewed me Natheles Fuchsius techeth that they ben both of lyke vertue and effect And Io. Agricola sayth the citrō signifyeth an orenge and also a limō And bycause this name is doutfull I leue it to thy iudgemēt good reader whether thou wylt when thou fyndest the ryndes of a cytron or the iuce vnderstand an orēge or a pome citrō Acorus Brūfelsius calleth acorū wild flour delyse Mainarde sayth that he was wont to vse calamus aromaticus in the stede of acorus Some take it for galingale Adiutorie They call the two bones which extende from the shulders vnto the elbowes ossa adiutoria Aematites Haematites is a precious stone and hath his name of bloody colour For Haema in Greke signifyeth bloode It hath strength to heate to thynne and to scoure and it is vsyd in medicines for the eyes Agarike Some say that Agaricū is a rote and some affirme that it growtth to trees lyke to destooles It is founde in wylde places of Sarmatia and also in Galatia and Cilitia and it dryueth out fleame and cholere but not spedely Agrippa Agrippa is an oyntment descrybed in Galenes antidotari Albugineus Albugineus is that that pertayheth to the whyte of the eye Alchohol The barbarous auctours vse alchohol or as I fynde it sometymes wryten alcofoll for moost fyne poudre Alchachinga Alchachinga is taken for the secōd kynde of nyghtshade Plinnie calleth it halicacabum Alleluya They vse thys worde Alleluya for a kynde of thre leaued grasse which is soure in taste Almocatim The barbarous wryters calle the nether bones of the heed Almocatim Aloes Aloe is the liquour of an herbe brought vnto vs out of India Som affirme that the maner of makyng it is this They stāpe the herbe draw out the slymye iuyce and lay it to the fyre tyll it boyle and than they set i● a sunnynge tyll it be drye And that that is purest they call succotrine or succocitrine that which is in the middell beinge lesse pure hepaticke and fynally that which synketh to the botome and is as it were the dregges they call Cabaline Aloe is bytter in taste and of an hote and drye complexion It purgeth choler and comforteth the stomacke and is moreouer of greate effect in woundes Althea Dioscorides wrytteth that Althea is a kynde of wylde mallowes hauynge rounde leaues and floures lyke roses it is commenlye taken for holyhocke and so I haue euer translated it Howbeit the chirurgyens beyonde the see vse marche mallowes for Althea Alumen zuccarinū There bene manye kyndes of Alumes But thre bene mooste knowen which they cōmunely call Iamenū zuccharinum or rotundum and roch alume Alume hath vertue to bynde and therfore it is called Stipteria in Greke and it is moreouer abstersyue or scourynge Ambrosine Ambrosia is communelye taken for wylde sage Ameos Ameos Ammi in the genetiue case Ammeos is a whyte seede hote and drye in the thyrde degre It groweth by the cytie of Egypte called Alexandria In stede of this herbe some vse the seed of cheruel Amygdalae At the roote of the tonge there bene as it were two flesshye kernelles lyke sponges called in Greke paris●●mia in latyne tonsillae and of the 〈◊〉 doctours amygdalae that is almondes Amydum They corruptly vse this worde Amydū for that that is called in greke Amylon and it is the iuyce or mylke of wheate steeped in water certayne dayes and afterwarde pressed Anthera Though Vigon thynketh Antheram to be the yollowe in the myddest of a rose yet Cornelius Celsus sayeth that it is a composition for the diseases of the mouthe wherein roses entre Anotamie Anotamie is a Greke worde and sygnifyeth the cuttynge vp of a mans bodye or of some other thing Anacardinum mel They call the iuyce of anacardus honye anacardine And whan they saye that anacardus is the frute of a tree called Pediculus Eliphantis whych groweth in Sicilia and Apulia The honye or iuyce of this frute burneth bloode and rooteth vp wartes Animall spirites Resorte to vitall spirites Anodine Thynges whiche are wythout grefe are caled in Greke anodina Howbeit Vigon vseth the word for thynges that remoue payne Antecedent Antecedent Goyng before Antidota Antidota are medicines to be receyued within the bodye whereof there bene thre dyfferences For some are gyuen agaynst poyson some agaynst the styngyng of venemous beastes or serpentes and some heale diseases gathered of corrupt meates and drinkes They call a boke wherein suche medicynes are descrybed an antidotarie Anthos Anthos in Greke sygnifyeth a floure howbeit it is cōmunely vsed for the floures of rosemarye Antimonium Antimoniū is a veyne of the earth lyke leade howbeit it hath this difference from a metal A metal melteth Antimonium is brayed and wyll be burnt rather than molten it is colde and drye in the thyrde degree And it is put in colliries for the eyes c. Anthrax Anthrax is engendred when grosse and boylyng blood leanyng to some part of the body burneth the skynne For Anthrax in Greke sygnifyeth a coole and for the same cause it is called carbunculus in latyne which is a diminitiue of carbo a coole Apium risus Apium risus is taken for Batrochion whiche is thought to be crowfote it is called Betrachiō or ranūculus bicause frogges delite therin And therfore the later auctours cal it apiū raninū And they say that it is called apium risus bycause the man that eateth therof dyeth laughynge For risus signifieth laughing which auctours assigne to that that groweth in Sardinia Aphorisme Aphorismus signifieth a distinctiō Aposteme Aposteme is a passion wherein the thynges are sondred whiche before were ioyned togyther wherfore ther remayneth an emptye space whyche receyueth a wyndye or moyste substaunce or bothe And the sayde substaunce fretteth the partes about makynge roume for hym selfe In latyne it is called abscessus Aqua gariofilata Aqua gariofilata is the water of cloues as it appeareth in the fourthe boke of abridgementes Howbeit bycause gariofilata is commenly taken for ieloflours for that that they haue the odour of cloues called gariophili I thynke I dyd translate it ones the water of iellyflours Here ye shal note that though gariofillata be commenlye taken for iellofloures yet other well lerned men thinke it to be Auēs and so perchaunce I haue translated it sometymes Armoniake Dioscorides calleth that that Vigon calleth armoniake ammoniacum of ammos whyche sygnifyeth sande For it is the lyquour of a shrub in Aphrica called agafyllis whyche falleth vpon sande and so is found in clottes Ammoniacum also is a kinde of salte founde vnder sande Arcula puerorum Arcula puerorū The later wryters of chirurgeri vsing an arabike terme call the blysterynges which through corrupt mylke happen in the roofe of chylderens mouthes Alcolā Yf this be not the disease whiche Vigon calleth arculā I can lerne of nomā what it shulde be
and of the medicines that cause rotten nayles to falle and of the superfluous flesh growyng in the lyfte and the right syde of the nayles and of the incision of the same THe cure of the apostemes of the fete Apostemes of the fete differreth not from the cure of other apostemes aswell hotte as colde declared in the chap. of the handes of the fete wherfore ye shall resorte to the sayd cha It chaunceth ofte that the nayles of the handes Corruption of the nayles and of the fete come to corrupcyon cheffye in the lower partes and cause great payne wherfore it is necessary to gyue some remedye For if it be in the toes it hyndreth the goynge And yf it be in the fyngers it distroyeth handye workyng wherfore yf the nayle be greatly corrupted in the croune or in the sydes wyth olde vlceration ther is no surer ayde than to attenuate or make thinne the nayle with raspatories And than ye muste pearce it in sondrye places wyth a sharpe instrumente Afterwarde let the place be softened wyth thys mollificatyue the space of three dayes Plaister mollificatiue R. of the leaues of Violettes and Mallowes an̄ m̄ i. Seeth them in water stampe them and strayne them in the decoction wyth wheate floure and the foresayde straynynge make a styffe playster at the fyre addynge of the substaunce of rosted apples ℥ iii. of hennes grese and duckes grese of oyle of violettes of buttyre ana ʒ vi mengle them Thys plaister mollifieth the nayle and prepareth it to falle Afterwarde ye shall applye thys playster Plaister R. of Apium risus fynelye brayed ℥ i. of cantarydes theyr heades and winges beyng taken away ʒ i. of wheate leauen ℥ ii mengle thē and braye them together and make them after the manere of a playster Applye thys playster vpon the nayle vntyl ye perceaue the fleshe vnder the nayle to be corrupted Than procure the nayle to fal with playsters of Mallowes ordeyned before or wyth hotte buttyre whan the nayle is remoued lette the place be wasshed wyth water of barley and Sugre and applye a playster of miniū the space of four dayes Thā a lytle new waxe and oyle of roses with a lytle terebentyne after the bygnesse of the nayle maye conuenientlye be layed on to make the nayle to growe agayne But yf the nayle be corrupted only in one syde or in bothe wyth superfluouse fleshe ye shall cutte it awaye or roote it oute wyth a caustyke medicyne or wyth oure poudre of mercury or wyth a spōge somwhat burnt And yf these bene not sufficiente ye maye vse a ruptorye of Capitell or a trocyske of minium after oure discription After that the deede flesshe is cutten away or remoued cutte the nayle also vnto the hole parte wyth lytle cizars sharpelye poynted After incision ye shall wasshe the place wyth a decoction of roses Myrtyles Alume and stiptyke wyne and seale vp the place with oure poudre cicatrisatiue and a playster of Minium whyche thynges we haue proued often with worshyppe Thus. c ¶ The .v. chappi of an Aposteme colde and hotte in the stomake aswell in the outwarde parte as in the inner THe Apostemes of the stomake bene verye daungerous Aposteme in the stomake chieflye those that bene engendred in the inner part but they that are in the outwarde parte bene not so daungerous Ye shall knowe whan the Apoemes of the stomake are colde or hote by the sygnes declared in the chap. of apostemes vniuersally The cure shal be accomplyshed as it foloweth If the aposteme be hote and in the outwarde parte the obseruation of the vniuersall rules of purgation and diete presupposed it is conueniente to procede wyth resolutyues hauynge somme vertue to conforte the place as is this description R. of oyle of Camomylle ℥ i. and ss of oyle of roses cōplete odoriferous of oyle of Quynces ana ℥ vi Mengle them and at the fyre make a liniment wyth whyte waxe adding of all the Coralles ana ʒ i. and ss of Alabastre of Saunders whyte and redde ana ʒ i. mengle them Thys linimente is of greate efficacitie in thys case for it cōfortethe the stomake and resolueth gentelye Note that in thys place medicines muche repercussyue are not to be applyed bycause of the nobylytye of the stomake and of the lyuer Thys composition folowynge is good also and more resolutyue R. of Camomylle of Dylle ana ℥ i. of oyle of Roses complete of oyle of wormoode ana ʒ vi make a lynymente at the fyre wyth sufficient whyte waxe addyng of saffranne ℈ i. of Cynnamome ℈ ss Annoynte the Aposteme herewyth And yf you wyl that it be more resolutyue with some mollification ye shall adde to the foresayde thynges of the rootes of holihocke sodden and stamped ℥ ii of raisines brused ℥ i. If the sayde aposteme can not be resolued Maturatiue wyth the foresayd thinges than ye shal vse thys maturatyue R. of the leaues of mallowes and violettes ana m̄ i. of the meate of wardens or greate peris or of swete apples or of quynces rosted ℥ iii. of raysynes ℥ ii of wormwoode m̄ ss Seeth the thynges that bene to be sodden in water than stampe them and strayne them and with barley floure make a styffe playster in the decoction at the fyre addynge of oyle of violettes ℥ i. of oyle of swete Almandes of hennes grese ana ʒ vi the yolkes of two egges of saffranne ℈ i. of buttyre ʒ x. make a playster wyth the foresayde straynynge the substaūce of apples menglyng thē al together whan the Aposteme is rype cutte it after the length and neuer after the bredth Incision Than digeste the place wyth a digestyue of terebentyne the yolke of an egge and a lytle saffranne And yf the place be paynful bycause of the sensibilytye therof ye shal adde to the sayd digestyue oyle of roses omphacyne hotte for it digesteth and appayseth griefe mūdificatiue After digestion lette the place be mundifyed wyth thys mūdifycatiue R. of syrupe of Roses of honye of roses ana ʒ vi of cleare Terebentyne ℥ ii and ss of the iuyce of Smalage wormwoode playntayne horsetaile ana ʒ ii boile them a lytle with a soft fyre than adde the yolke of an egge of barley floure well cersed ʒ x. of saffran ℈ i. of sarcocolle ʒ iii. Lette this mundificatyue be applyed wyth a tente and yf ye putte too of frankencense drammes thre of myrre of mastyke ana ʒ ii it wyll be a good incarnatyue Finallye lette the vlcere be sealed vp wyth Vnguentum de Minio of oure description wasshynge it wyth water of alume or vse oure poudre cicatrisatyue If thys Aposteme be ingendred in the inner parte the cure differeth not The cure of an aposteme in the inner parte from the cure of the outwarde Aposteme touchyng resolution maturation and cōfortation of the place but the inner Aposteme can not suffer so stronge a laxatyue medicyne as
addynge in the ende of oyle of Camomyll roses and dille ana ℥ ij thys playster is a diuyne medicine for phlegmon wyth the admixtion of grosse matter An other wyth greater mollification ℞ of the rootes of holyhock sodden and strayned .li. j. of whyte lillie rotes sodden lykewyse .li. ss of oyle of roses ℥ ij of oyle of Camomylle lynseed and dille ana ℥ j. of oyle of swete almondes and violettes of butter duckes grese hennes grese and goes grese ana ʒ vi of calues suet melted ℥ ij ss make a softe cerote with sufficiēt whyte waxe addynge saffran ʒ j. ss Resolutyue of myxte matter Here folowe cōpounde medicynes to resolue Apostemes mēgled of hote and colde humours And fyrst we wil speake of oiles Oyle of elders and of lilies with hennes grese is of greate strength and so is oyle of nardus of dylle and camomylle Item the grese of a hēne of a ducke and a gose with oyles of Camomylle dylle nardus elders and lilies made lyke a linimēt wyth sufficient whyte waxe and applyed vpon the member with vnwasshed wolle resolueth vnmyxt matter Item a playster of melylote wyth asmuche sodden and strayned Holyhoc made lyke a playster wyth oyle of camomyll dille lillies and sufficient whyte waxe makethe for the same purpose For the same intention ye may vse thys remedye ℞ of whyte diaquilon wythout gummes .li. ss of Holyhocke sodden and strayned ℥ iiij of oyle of Camomylle Dylle and Lillies ana ℥ ij of oyle of lynseed of butter ana ʒ x. of clere terebentyne ʒ vj. of litarge of golde ℥ ss of muscilage of the seed of Holyhocke of mallowes of Violettes of the seed of Quynces of Psillium li. j. of calues and cowes suet Ana ℥ iiij sethe thē all besyde the straynynge wyth a softe fyere tyll the muscilage be consumed than make a softe cerote with sufficient whyte waxe and the foresayde straynynge Item the playster folowynge resoluethe the sayde matter ℞ of the rootes of Holyhocke and of enula campana ana .li. ss seeth them all in water stampe them and strayne them and make a styffe plaister in the decoction with equal portion of sapa of beane floure and whete floure of branne of Camomylle and of melylote stamped addynge of oyle of Roses Camomylle dille and Lillies ana ℥ ij Medecynes that resolue grosse matter onelye ben these For grosse matters Oyle of elders of lillies wyth Agrippa Dialthea and vnwasshed wolle resolue colde mater Diaquilon album soddē wyth gummes and an ounce of oyle of lillies and as muche of oyle of elders wyth ten drammes of the iuyce of flourdeluyce and an ounce and an halfe of duckes grese made in a softe cerote with additiō of sufficient white waxe is a synguler remedye to resolue colde matter In this case diaquilon magnum is lykewyse praysed of the doctours and lykewyse the remedye vnder wrytten ℞ of the rootes of Holyhockes .li. ss of whyte Lillie rootes of the rootes of floure deluyce Ana ℥ ij sethe them in water stampe them and strayne them addynge of oyle of Camomylle dylle and lillies of euery one ʒ j. ss of whyt diaquilon gummed ℥ iij. of galienes cerote of ysope ℥ ij ss of serapyne galbanū bdelliū opoponax ana ʒ ss of duckes grese ʒ x. dyssolue the gūmes wythe vynegre make a softe cerote of al these thynges wyth the forsayd streinyng and sufficient newe waxe ¶ The .v. chapter of medicines that breake wynde and resolue dead blood vnder the skynne MEdicines that break wynde resolue deade bloode are these Dille rue mellilot camomil fenell annyse percely commyn carewayes floures of rosemary sticados laurell beries c. Compoūdes are these oyle of dil rue of laurel of carewayes camomill of elders of lyllies of spike For of these symples many remedyes maye be made to breake wynde as thys that foloweth Medicine to breake wynd ℞ of redde wyne of barbours lye ana .li. ss of camomill mellilote dille corianders ana m̄ i. of cummyne swete fenell organy nept horehounde ana m̄ i. ss of honye ℥ iij. of salte ℥ i. sethe them tyll the thyrd part be consumed and vse thys ordynaūce with a sponge for it breaketh wynde and is good ageynst vndimia Another fomētacion for the same purpose ℞ of melilote camomill dill branne ana m̄ ii of the rootes of persely of enula campana of fenell of bruscus ana m̄ i. of the seede of sisylios of coriander annys ameos cumyn ana ℥ ss of maioram of organy of calamynt ana m̄ ss parietarye m̄ i. ss of hony of millium ana ℥ iij. of laurel beries of frenche sope ana ʒ x. seeth them all with sufficient barbours lye a lytle odoriferous wyne tyll the thirde part be consumed Another to resolue wynde ℞ of oyle of lyllies and of dille ana ʒ ij of oyle of rue of laurel ana ℥ i. myngle them and make a softe oyntmente wyth sufficient whyte waxe Here foloweth a plaister to resolue wyndynes ℞ of milium somewhat dryed .li. ss of beane floure .li. i. of groūden branne ℥ viij of camomille mellilote dille stamped ana m̄ i. of coriander of cumyn ana ʒ vi make a styffe playster wyth sufficient sapa addyng of oyle of camomill and dille ana ℥ iij. of oyle of laurell and of rue ana ʒ vi myngle them and vse them Another ℞ of beane floure of branne ana .li. ss of goates donge ℥ viij of camomill mellilote dille ana m̄ ss a lytle cumyn make a styffe playster of them al with sufficient sapa and barbours lye addynge of oyle of camomill dille and wormewood ana ℥ ij Thys playster resolueth wyndynes chiefly in the kne Another to resolue deade blood ℞ of dille oyle ℥ i. of wormewood myrte oyle of the iuyce of a radyshe an̄ ʒ iij. of brayed cumyne ʒ i. of odoriferous wyne ℥ i. Let them sethe all together tyll the wyne and the iuyce be consumed so strayne them and make a cerote wyth sufficient whyte waxe ¶ The .vi. chapter of maturatiue medicines IT chaunceth often that apostemes can not be ended by repercussiues and resolutiues wherfore it is necessary to come to maturatiues Fyrst ye must vnderstande that a medicine maturatiue of hote matter thorough hys moderate heate and the naturall heate of the member and thorough his slymynesse and vnctuositie hath vertue to stoppe the poores and to retayne the grosse and subtyle matter and to dygest it by lytle and lytle and so bryng it to suppuration More ouer it is founde that a medicine maturatiue of colde and moyst complexion is necessary for the maturation of collerike apostemes for Auicēne sayeth thus A hote aposteme that wanteth quytture muste haue hys heade playstred wyth psilium for by quenchynge outwarde heate of the aposteme and retaynynge naturall heate in the member the matter cōmeth to suppuration Furthermore in rypynge it is necessary to passe the seconde degre of heate eyther bycause the matter is grosse colde slymye
or els bycause the member is depriued of naturall heate other bycause it is weake For these causes I saye it is necessarye to put to the maturatiue medicine an oynyon the roote of cyclamyn garlyke rosted vnder cooles Maturatiue medicines are these that folowe whyte lyllie rootes the rotes and leues of marche malowes branca vrsina the rootes of bryony passenep rootes drye fygges barlye floure resyns dates rosted apples fenugreke lynseede crommes of bread wheate floure beane floure the rotes of langdebeefe c. wherof .iij. kyndes of playsters shal be ordeyned hereafter The fyrst shal be of weake operation and it shal be to rype hote matter The seconde shal be also of moderate maturation and it shal be to rype myxte matter The last shal be of stronge maturation Here foloweth an example of the fyrst ℞ of the leaues of malowes and violettes ana m̄ i. of the rotes of langdebeefe ℥ iiij sethe them all in water stampe them straine them and make a styffe playster in the decoction wyth barlye floure and the foresayd straynynge addynge of oyle of violettes ℥ iij. of butter ℥ i. the yolkes of .iij. egges myngle them ℞ of the leaues of malowes and violettes ana m̄ i. ss of the leaues of lettuse m̄ i. of the seede of quynces ʒ ij of cleane barlye m̄ ij sethe them all together wyth the brothe of fleshe tyll the barlye breake then stampe them and strayne them and put to the straynynge sufficient quantitie of barlye floure and make a styffe playster wyth the forsayd straynynge and adde of oyle of violetes ℥ iiij of cumyn oyle of swete freshe butter ana ℥ i. and the yolkes of .ij. egges Another ℞ of the meate of rosted apples of the leaues of malowes violettes ana m̄ ij of barly floure of crōmes of whyte bread steped in the broth of a henne a chycken or of veale .li. ss roste the leaues of malowes and violettes in weted cloutes vnder hote ymbers then stampe them all together wyth the forsayd thynges and make a styffe playster wyth butter and oyle of violettes addyng the yolkes of .iiij. egges in the ende of the decoction Maturatiue medicines of the secōd order are these ℞ of the rootes of holihockes of whyte lillies ana .li. ss of the leaues of malowes and violettes an̄ m̄ i. sethe them altogether in fleshe brothe stampe them and streine them and make a styffe playster addynge of butter ℥ ij of swynes grese ℥ iij. the yolkes of two egges Another ℞ of the rootes of whyte lyllies and holihock ana ℥ viij of drye fatte fygges in nōbre ten seeth them al in sufficient water and make a styffe playster at the fyer wyth the floure of wheate lynseed and fenugreke stamped wyth the reste of the ingredience addynge of freshe swynes grese .li. ss of butter ℥ ii the yolkes of two egges myngle them and yf ye wyll haue it stronger wyth subtiliation and attraction put to the forsayd playster of newe leuen ℥ iiij of snayles stamped wyth theyr shelles ℥ i. ss Maturatiue medicines of the thyrde order ben these ℞ of the rootes of holihock of lillies of beres breche ana one parte of the rootes of cyclamyne of passeneppes of rapes yf they maye be gotten ana part halfe of drye fygges in nombre ten seeth them al in sufficient watter stampe them strayne them and make a sufficient playster in the decoction with the floure of wheate fenugreke and lynseede addyng of swynes grese .li. ss of butter ℥ iij. Another ℞ of rosted oyniōs and garlyke nombre .iiij. stampe and make a styffe playster wyth the floure of fenugreke and lynseede and wyth the decoction of holihocke addynge of swynes grese .li. ss Yf ye wyll that the playster shal be more mollifycatiue put thervnto of the rootes of holihock ℥ viij and yf ye wyll that it shall haue more attraction maturation and subtiliation adde of drye fygges nombre .viij. of leuen ℥ ij of snayles nombre .x. and thys is the last maturatiue ¶ The .vij. Chapter of embrocations to rype apostemes FYrste for hote apostemes ℞ of the decoction of malowes violettes barlye of the seede of quynces of langdebiefe li. iij. of barly floure ℥ i. ss of oyle of violettes ℥ iii. of butter ʒ i. ss let thē seeth together make a iuyce lyke the brothe of an henne addynge in the ende the yolkes of .iij. egges and leye the lycour vpon the apostemes wyth hote cloutes chaungyng them often for thys embrocation helpeth resolution and maturatiō of hote apostemes swagynge payne and bryngynge the matter to the skynne Afterwarde ye muste applye a maturatiue in the fyrst order of hote matters Another embrocation to rype myxte matter ℞ of the rootes of holihocke and lillies of euery one .li. i. of drye fygges in nombre ten of malowes of violettes of euerye one m̄ i. of hole fenugreke and lynseed of euery one ℥ i. seth them in sufficient water and make a iuyce at the fyer in the decoction wyth a lytle wheate floure and butter and oyle of swete almandes whyche ye shall laye on as is aforesayde wyth cloutes and afterwarde vse a playster ordeyned for thys purpose ¶ The .viij. Chapter of medicines that mollifye all hardnes of synowes and hard apostemes fractures of bones and ioyntes euell restored ALbeit that we haue sufficiētlye spoken of mollifycatiue medicines in the chapter of harde apostemes neuerthelesse for a more ample doctrine we wyll speake some what of them in thys place for a mollifycatiue medicyne is necessarye for sondrye causes Fyrste to mollifye the hardnes whyche remayne ofte in apostemes after the vse of resolutiues Secondlye to mollifye a ioynt whych hath taryed long wythout restauration Thyrdlye to mollifye a dyslocation or fracture euyl restored that afterwarde it maye be brought into his place more easely by handye operation Fynally to mollifye the hardenes of synowes and ioyntes whych is caused by a wounde or by bruse Fyrste we wyll declare a fomentacion to mollifye al hardnes A bathe ℞ the heade of a wether somewhat cutte and brused and the feete of the same and the rootes of holihocke .li. ij of camomille mellilote and dille of euery one m̄ ij of hole fenugreke and lynseede of euery one .li. ss sethe them altogether wyth sufficiēt water tyll the fleshe be separate from the bones then remoue the bones and bathe and suffumygate the place greued and washe and rubbe it therwyth Afterwarde laye the playster folowyng vppon the harde place the space of a weeke ℞ of the floure of fenugreke lynseede of euerye one .li. ss of wheate floure ℥ iiii make a styffe playster in the foresayd decoction and wyth a roote of holihock stamped and strained addynge of butter of swynes grese melted of euerye one ℥ iiij of hēnes grese duckes grese and gose grese of euerye one ℥ i. ss myngle them When the ioynt and broken bones bene mollifyed the mayster muste reduce the same into theyr