it seems to fall rather then be expelled and the bones of the privities must needs be divided That which follows the birth is above humane capaâity namely the transmutation of the navel vessels and lungs and heart in the infant and why Nature ordered it of which Galen elegantlâ in the 15. Book of the Use of Parts and 6. Chapter There is also a legitimate birth when it is accoâding to the Law of Nature and an illegitimate when it is before or after the time Hippocraâes saith that a birth in the seventh month is vital and legitimate And it is sooner fâom the strength of the faculty and matter âit for formation yet it is commonly weak except the âeventh month be compleat Of the eighth month Hippocrates âaith thus None liveâ that is born in the eighth month because iâ cannot bear the two afflictionâ to follow but the reason of the Arithmeticians is better that say an even month is imperâect The ninth and tenth month are the best as Hiâpâcrateâ âaith A child is born in ten months at tâe fârthest and so âaies the wisest Salomon Some say that a child may âe born in the eleventh month and Peter Apponensis was so born and some say they have been born in the fourteenth and fifteenth month but rare things are not to be counted the Law of Nature Generally Physitians agree with Hippocrates though some dissent Chap. 2. Of Abortion IT is the exclusion of a child not perfect nor living before legitimate time This time is defined by Hippocraâes Whosoever conceiveth doth it within seven daies but they are properly abortions that come before the seventh day and though some are in the fifth and sixth month that have lived yât that must not dârogate from the common Law of Nature Some differences of Abortion are from the time and bigness of the child For that which is cast out is little and round without distinction of members at first like a Grape Somtimes as long as a âinger and members may be distinguished And somtimes the child is almost perfect The immediate Cause is the expulsive faculty stiâred up and that is done by three means from Galen from the weight bigneâs and pain There are more causes which we shal place in two Ranks The first is of the manner of the causes that provoke the expulsive faculty The other is that which âindeth out these waies by all the causes The expulsive fâculty is first provoked by the child being weak either from evil seed or being dead The child is weak for want of food and from the mothers diseases either in her whole body or in the womb or parts adjacent that consent as Feavers Inflammations Fainting Convulsions Pain Vomiting Neesing Cough that move the Spirits and humorsâ and shake the child and stir up Nature to expel it Also straitness of the womb causeth Abortion by which means it cannot contain a great child Alâo shortness of the navel-vessels which Fabricius first observed The outward Causes are cold air after hot and moist which gets into the womb and provokes it and huâts the child The Astrologers add the malignant aspects of the Stars also too much or too little meat Great watchings purging and flux of blood by the womb and Haemorrhoids Also violent motion as leaping carrying of burdens strokes on the belly or baâk Also passions as anger fear sorrow Also bleeding purging fasting âmel of brimsâone or ashes hoofs burnt or stink of the snuââ of a candle If the breasts be less or much milk flow from them or she feel much and often pain about thâ belly or loyns that go to the Pubes and Os sacâum with a deâire of thrusting forth in the womb If the child change its place and if it fâl lower when it was in the middle of the belly there is fear of miscarrâing It is dangerous alwaââs because it is with violence there are also great Symptoms they are in lââs danger that have already brought forth a âhild ââârefore the âirst is most dangerâus and ãâã mouââs of the vessels arâ toân and they commonlâ become barren Abortion is moât dangeâoâs in the sixth seventh and eighth month beâââse thâ inâant being ââeater ââuseth greater pain and breaks the Ligaments worse To preserve from Abortion Consider the constitution before she is with child and prevent every cause If it be like to come from Plethory before Conception open a vein and after Conception in the fourth or âiâth month in the arm Iâ it be from Cacochymy purge the whole body and purge the womb with Pessaries and strengâhen it of which in the cold and moist distemper of the Womb If she have conceived open a vein before the time she used to abort iâ there Cacochymy purge gently at times If there be a cold distemper of body by flegm that hurts the womb give the dâcoction of China or Sarâa with strengtheners of the child Avoid the external Causes of Abortion and if they have done hurâ help it presently Lât nât the belly be bound if the child be weak ââmove the causes of weakness and strengthen iââ Use things that strengthen the womb and child as Coral as Kermes-berries Or Take Magistery of Coral a dram Pearl pââpared half a dram Ivory shaved a dram Maââiââ half a dram grains of Kermes a dram Manus ââristi with Pearl two drams make a Pouder Iâ thâ Abortion be at hand and the pains increase give this Pouder with a rear Eg Or Take Conâârââ of red Roses two drams red Coral aââ Maââiâh âââh a scruple give iâ presently Use the âounteââes Oyâtment outwardly to the Loyns Râins Pâcâân and Perinaeum Or Take Oyl of Roses Mirtâes Maââiâh Qâinces eaââ two ounces Oyl of Mints an ounce Bdellium ãâã in Vinegar liquid Storax each two ounces Oyl of Nutmegs by expression a dram with Wax make an Oyntment Of the same with Pitch Rosin Colophony you may make Pâaisters Let her hold a Loadstone in her hand or tie it to her navel or wear an Eagle stone under her arm-pits or Coral Jaspar Smaragds Diamonds If these will not keep the child up you must give over Aââringents and use Leniâives Question Whether the straitness of the Womb is the Cause of Abortion Hippocrates 1. de morb saith That the Womb may cause Abortion if they be windy thicâ great ãâã little and he shews in another place that Abortion may be from the straitnâss of the womb And in another place he saith Iâ a woman in the third âourth or fifth mânth miââarry often aââ at the sâme time it is because the womb wil not stretch And Galen confirms the same and iâ stânds to reason for natural birth is when the womb cannot contain the child for its growth Thârâforâ iâ it be ââeternaturally too little it iâ the cause oâ Morââon And though Nâture hath made the womb âo hold the child yet iâ iâ be not made large enough it cannot âântain
feaver with horror all over the body then the colour changeth in the part it is black and blew without pulse or sense when iâ is cut or pricked it stinks and the strength decayes and the heart faints It is very dangerous and worse when it goes to the womb then outwards Some have had the womb fall out and have lived which besides grave Histories We saw at Avinion in an old Noble woman Anno 1635. Stop the puâreâaction take away that which is rotten by sâarifying if you can then wash with the Deââction of Wormwood Lupinâs and with Aegyptiacum and apply this Cataplasm Take Oââbus and Beanflower âach two âunâes Oâymââ a pint boyl them add Lupineâ Wormwood and Mirrh Cut off the dead flesh strengthen the principal parts the heart leâst the Spirits be infected with evil vapors that ââie up by the arteries Give Conserve of Borage Bugloss Gilliflowers Diamargariton ârigid Electuary of Gems frigid Confection of Hyacinthsâ Syrup of Sorrel âomegranates Borage and applâ Epithems to the heart Vuierus cured a Noble woman aged twenty five she had a pustle in her privities in the Dog-daies from violent Lechery with her Husband and she used a Cataplasm from a sillâ Chirurgion and in a few daies it rotted grew black and mortified and went towards the fundament very fast THE FOURTH BOOK THE SECOND SECTION Of the Diseases of the Womb. Chap. 1. Of the Knowledg of the Temper of the Womb. MARK Anthony Vlmus Physitian of Bononia shews the temper of the womb he saith that a beard in women shews that they have a hot womb and hot stones it comes with the beginning of the terms and when the breasts swell and is hard to be seen Aristotle saith That some women have hairs in their chin when their courses stop and when they have a hot womb and stones But there are more certain signs of heat 1. When hard hair comes âorth suddenly thick black and long and large about if they come forth slow thin soft yellowish and but few not spreading the womb is cold Also when the terâs come forth at twelve years of age it is a âign of a hot womb and when they last long the blood is red hot but not very much In an old constitution they come later and the blood is cold and waterish and they end sooner If it be hot and moist they flow plentifully and last till after fifty If it be hot and dry the blood is yellow thin and sharp and pricks the privities If it be cold and moist the blood comes late forth with difficulty and it is whitish and thin If it be cold and dry the terms come forth very late and with difficulty and seldom continue till forty and the blood is thick and little The third sign is from Lechery for they who have hot wombs desire copulation âooner and more vehemently and are much delighted thârwith They who are cold do the contrary The hot and moist are not tired with much Venery The hot and dry have great lust and a Frenzie if they want it but they are quickly âired because there are but few Spirits If it be cold and moist they are not soon lecherous and are âasily satisfied and if they miscarry often the womb is made colder and they delight not in the sport but copulation doth them good and makes them more youthful If it be cold and dry they desire not a man in a long time and take no delight because the Spirits are few The fourth sign is from often conception for the hot conceive often and bring forth males or Viragoe's if the seed of the man agree with it The cold doth the contrary A hot and moist womb is very fruitful if the man be wel tempered and though he be old and weak yet she will conceive by him sometimes they have twins or over do and have a mole Hot and dry are fruitful but not so much as the former Cold and moist are hard to conceive especially when they are in years when they are yong and the seed of the man is hot and dry they conceive males but seldom wel shaped or healthful and the woman while she is with child is sickly A cold and dry womb is commonly barren and if they conceive the mans seed is hot and moist they bring forth âemales and if males they are tall and quickly look old Chap. 2. Of the hot Distemper of the Womb. HEat of the womb is necessary for conception but if it be too much it nourisheth not the seed of the man but disperseth its heat and hinders the conception This preternatural heat is from the birth somtimes and makes them barren if afterwards it is from hot causes that bring the heat and the blood to the womb from internal and external Medicines too much hot meats and drinks and exercise They are prone to luât have few courses yellow or black or burnt or sharp they have hairs betimes upon their privities they are subject to the headach and there are signs of much choler their lips are dry When this distemper is strong they have few terms and out of order they are âad and hard to flow and in time they are Hâpâââondriaâks and for the most part barren and âhere is somtimes a Frenzie of the womb Use Coolers so that they offend not the vessels that must be open for the flux of the terms Therefore Use inwardly Succory Endive Violets Waterlillies Sorrel Lettice Sanders and Syrups and Conserves made thereof As Take Conserve of Succory Violets Waterlillies Borage each an ounce Conserve of Roses half an ounce Diamargariton frigid Diatrionsantalon each half a dram with Syrup of Violeâs or juyce of Citrons make an Electuary Outwardly use Oyntment of Galens Cooler Oyntment of Rosesâ Cerot of Sanders Oyl of Roses Violets Waterlillies Gourds Venus navel to the back and loyns or make Cataplasâs of Barley meal Roses poudered Violets Water-lillies Sanders with juyce or water of Plantane Waterlillies Succory Lettice Oyl of Roses Violets Waterlillies Baths are good to sit in and cooling âomentations and after let her take some of the Coolers mentioned In great heat use this cooling Pessary Take Opium a sâruple Goose grease two scruples Wax and Honey each four scruples Oyl an ounce whites of two Eggs. This was from an opinion the Ancients had that Opium was cold but take heed of the using it too much least the narcotiâk quality hurt Let the air be cool her garments thin let her meat be with Lettice Endive Succory Barley give no hot meaâs nor strong Wine except it be watââish and thiâ rest is good both in body and mind she mâst not coâulate but she may sleep much Chap. 3. Of the cold Distemper of the Womb. THis causeth many evils and barrenness They are contrary to those of a hot distemper cold air rest and idleness and cooling Medicinesâ It is known by their not desire of leâhery noâ
receiving pleasure in the time of copulaâion when they spend their âeed The terâs are fleâmatick thiâk and ââimâ and flow not righâlyâ there is wind in the womb the seed is crude waterishâ with a Gonorâhaea It is the cause of obstructions and barrenness and is hard to be cured Use things proper to heal the womb as this Wâteâ Tâke Galangaâ Ciânamonâ Nutmeg Mace Cloves each twâ ãâã Gingâr Cubebâ Zedoary âardamoâs eâch ân ounce grains of Paradise long Pâpper each half an ounce beat them and put them iâ six quârtâ of âine for eiâht daies then add Saâe Minâs Balm Motherwârt eacâ three handfâls lât them stand âight daies more then pour âff the âine and beât the herbs and the Spiâes and thân pour on the Wineâ and distil them Another Take Cinnamon Nutmegs Clâvâs Mace Gingerâ Cubebâ Cardamomsâ grains of Pâradise âach an ounâe and halâ Galânâal six drams long âepper haâf an ounâe Zedoary five drams bruise them and add six quarts of Wine put them in a Cellar nine daiâs daily stirring them then add Mints two hândâuls then let them stand fourteen daies pour off the Wine and bruisâ them and then pour on the Wine againâ and distil them Querceâan hath an Hâsterick Exâract a âreater and a less use outwardly Fomentations Bathsâ Baggs of hot Roots as Birthwort Lovage Valeâian Angelica Burnet Mâsterwort Calamus Mâdder Elicampane Orâis and Herbs as Mugwort Balm Motherwort Savin Pennyroyal Calamints Organ Dittany Maâjoram Rue Bettony Rosemary Lâvender Sage Stoechasâlowers Seeds of Smallage Parsley Rueâ Carrots Anise Fennel Cummin Lovage Parsley Anoint with Oyl oâ Lillieââ Rueâ Aâgelica Bays Cinnamon Cloves Mâce Nutmeg Or Take Labdaââm twâ ounces Frankinceâse Mastich âiquid Storax âach half an ounââ Oyl of Cloves Nuâmegs each halâ a scruple Oâl of Lillies Rue âach an ounce with Wax make a Plaister A Fâme Take Frânkincense Mirrh Mastich âach a dram Bayberries a dram and half Labdaâum two dramsâ Sâârax Clovesâ eacâ a dram Gum Arâbick and Wine make Troches or Pessaries of âhe same Let the diet be warming and the air the meat âf easie concoâtion seasoned with Anise Fenâel Thyme Avoid Milk-meats and raw fruits Chap. 4. Of the moist Distemper of the Womb. THis is âommoâly joâned with a coâd distemper aâd causeth bârrenness aâd ãâ¦ã the same causes as a cold distemper for commonly cold things do moisten It is commonly in women âhat are idle They that have moist wombs abound in courses but they are waterish and thin the privities are wet they have the Whites and desire not copulation much and delight not in it they retâin not the seed and if they conceive when the child is big they aborte or miscarry If it last long it is hard to be cured if it be much they conceive not It is by Dryers and things that cure the cold distemper are good againââ the moist because all Healers have a drying power Use sulphur Baths and in Injections beware of astâingents least the evil humors be stopâ and the disease iâcreased Chap. 5. Of the dry Distemper of the Womb. IN this the womb is hardened of it self it is fleshy and soft and moistned by blood foâ conception It is somtimes from the birth or old age when they are past childbearing if it be from drâing causes they are barren before they are old Diseases and Medicines dry the womb as inflammations feavers and when blood flows noâ to it nor goes to the bottom of it by reason ãâã the straitness of the veins or obstructions as iâ Viragoe's and such as never conceived and iâ they void any blood it is fâom the neck of thâ womb and not from the bottom They void little âeed and are âlow in Veneryâ the terms are few the mouth of the womb is dry and they are slender of a dry constitution their lower lip is alwaies chapt and blackish red This disâemper is hard to be cured in any part especially if it be old Use moistners as Borage Bugloss Mercury Mallows Althaea Violets sweet Almonds Pistâchaes Pine nuts Jujubes Dates Figs Raisons Of which are made Syrups Conserves Emulsions Candies c. Outward Remedies are made of the same adding Time Faenugreek seeds Lillies Branckurlin Pellitory c. Fomentations are made with Milk and after bathing anoynt the region of the womb and the belly to the privities with oyl of sweet Almonds Lilliâs Lineseed Jesamin fresh Butter Hens and Goose grease Let the Diet be moistning the Air moist the Meât fatning of much nourishment and small excâement let sleep be a little longer then usual great labour anger sadness fasting do hurt Chap. 6. Of compound distempers and first of cold and moist THere is seldom a simple distemper in the pârt and commonly there is matter which âeeds itâ it is usually cold and moist which gaâheâs excâements of that sort either in the wholâââdy or in the womb after the terms Are all things that breed cold and flegmatick humors in the whole body or the womb They conceive not and are of an ill habit of body the terms seldom flow right and they have somtimes the whites It is harder to cuâe then a simple distemper The cold humor is in fault therefore prepare it with syrup of Mugwort Mints Bettony Hysop with a decoction proper As Take Fennel roots an ounce Valerian Elicampane Masterwort each half an ounce Penny-royal Mugwort Motherwort Nep Marjoram each a handful Rosemary and Sage flowers each two pugils Siler Montane Fennel Aniseed Parsnep seed each a dram boyl them to ten ounces strained add Sugar syrup of Mugwort two or three ounces Cinnamon water half an ounce make a potion for three doses Then purge it with Agarick Mechoacan Turbith and if other humots be mixed with flegm add Senna and the like or use Pills de tribus Aloephanginae Mastich of Hiera with Agarick Sine quibus Or Take Agarick a dram and half Senna two drams infuse them in Mugwort water to three ounces strained add Diaphaenicon or Diacarthaemum twâ drams strain and add syrup of Mugwort half an ounce Cinnamon water half a dram After universal evacuations use Pessaries As Take Mercury bruise it and put it in a bag of white Silk anoynt it with Butter or Honey of Roses Or Take Benedicta laxativa three drams Agarick two drams Giâh seed a dram Pease meal six drams with juyce of Mercury make Pessaries in a Sarsnet Bag. Or Take Hiera a dram Agarick âalf a dram âdellium a dram with Honey make a Pessary or make it with pouder of Agarickâ and Troches of Coloquintida or give sweats of Cuajaâum China and Sarsa As Take Guajacum a pound and eighteen ounces inâaâe them in twelve pints of water twenty four hours âhen boyl them to the consumption of the third part âive six or eight ounces âot in the morning and leââer sweat Pour water to the reliques and boyl them to âhe consumption of the third
or thrice rather then the arm once Therefore Galen commends Hippocrates that he opened a vein in the ankle in the Servant of Schimarg though she had a Plâthoryâ But in other diseasâs of the womb as inflamâation dropping or too many Terms it is good to open a vein in the arm The Saphena is opened by putting the foot in warm water before and after Question 3. At what time must a Vein be opened against the sââppage of the Terms Galen saith It must âe when Nature may be helped be the blood moved that is three or four daies before the usual time of their coming as if she had them alwaiâs in the ful of tâe Moon and they have been stopt some monthsâ bleed three or four dâies before the full to puâ nâture in mind of her duty and to make the blood run again Chap. 4. Of fewness of the Terms IT is when they flow less then they use or ought to âlow It is either from the blood or in the expulsive faculty in the passages As if blood âe little the Terms are few and slow if the retentive faculty is weak and the expulsive strong they come at due time but in small quantity If the Terms are slow the fault is in the quality of the blood being too thick Also straitness of the passages may be a cause for if they be not wide enough the blood cannot flow fâeely The patient will tell the disease but the cauâe of it is to be found in the Chapter aâoregoing Few Terms from little blood is not dangerous if they be stopt from thick blood there follow diseases as Erysipelas Scirrhus or Cancer See the Chapter aforegoing for the Cure and and if it be from thickness of blood it is often cured by a general Purge for the whole body Chap. 5. Of Dropping of the Terms THis is a flux and lasts long and there is pain The blood flows not conveniently at the due time and manner and the privities are alwaies wet as when the urin drops Are from the blood and the passages of it and the retentive faculty as when the blood is too thiâk and sharp which stir up Nature to let it out and because it stretcheth the membranes theâe is pain Also the weakness of the retentive faculty is a cause The women declare it but if it be from thick blood and sharp and strait passages there is a sââetching pain about the womb If it be from câudity of blood and weakness of the retentive âaculty the blood flows without pain and is not much âelt It is troublesom to women and if it last long âauseth ulcers and inflammations It is all in mending of the thick and sharp âlood and in opening the passages which are âhe two chief causes of it of which we spake at ârge If blood be superfluous loose it not nor open the ankle-vein lest you draw it more to the womb but take away the Cacochymy If it be from weakness of the retentive faculty strengthen the womb with dryers and ash ingents Chap. 6. Of the overflowin of the Terms IT is when it is too much or too long and hurâs any woman and brings diseases but a certain proportion of bleeding is not to be deâined but too much is lost when the actions are hurt The immediate Cause is the opening of the vessels and the mediate cause is the blood in quantity or quality offending or by its force or disorderly motion Vessels are opened by Anastomosis Diapedesis Diaeresis or ruption or by Diaurosis or coârosion Anastomosis is from a moist distemper of the vesselsâ which loosneth the orifices or from external causes as Baths hot and moist or usâ of Aloes The flux is seldom too great from a Diapedesis for it is but a sweating through Ruption is from plethory when the Terms have long been stopped and then break out and when the blooâ is hot by air baths c. The outward causes are falls strokes hard travel great burdens lifted Erosion is from sharp blood or humor or from Medicines that corrode as Pessaries long kept For this great flux is chiefly from the veins in the bottom of the womb The flux of blood is too great when the strength abateth and Cachexy âollows with paleness swollân feet and the blood that comes from the bottom of the womb is blacker and âlottedâ That from the neck is redder and thinner The signs of the causes If it be from muâlr blood there are signs of plethory and it easily âlotteth together If the blood be sharp and cholârick it is putreâied in the womb you shal know waterish blood by its colour and the signs of that humor abounding and if you dip a clout in it and dry it in the shade you may see it If the womb be too moist such causes went before If it be from breaking of veins they will tell you of violence If it be from corrosion it is little and slow somtimes pure somtimes âerous It weaânâth the whole body the liver and bowels there is swounding the Whites and paleness and Dropsie somtimes That which hath been longâ is hard to be cured and causeth death and in an old woman it is deadly If there be fulness abate the blood and keep it from flowing to the womb revel it râpâl cool and astringe it that it may not flow so faââ and then amend the blood If it is from plenty of blood open the Liver-vein in the right arm bleed little and often because it makes better revulsion and weakens not open the Salvatella if there be weakness and cup âhe Back and Breast aâainst the Liver beneath âhe papps where are veins from the womb cup âot beneath but in the shoulders or back and ârms with scarification but scaâiâie not under âhe breaâts Bind and rub the aââs and shouldeâs and temâer and thicken the sharp thin humors with Deââctiâns and Waters of Plantane Purslane Sorrelâ Knotgrass Shepherds-purse Pomegranate-Syrup and of dried Roses Sorrel Puâslane Coral Conserve of Roses Bole sealed Earth If it be urgent use Naâcoticks Syrup of Poppies Treacle Philonium Laudanum If it still continue it is fed with choler thereâ fore purge it with Syrup of Roses Manna Rhubarb Senna If it be fed with serous blood help the âeins that do not their duty and the Liver and sweat with China You must not provoke urin but use astringents As Take the juyce of Ass-dung Syrup of Mirâlâs each half an ounce Plantane water an ounce Give it her and let her not know what it is Decoctions Take Comfrey roots Tormenâil âach two drams Purslune Plantane each a handful boyl themâ add to six ounces Syrup of Curranâ Quinces Mirtles each six drams giveâ it at twice Or Take Syrup of Purslane juyce of Neââles each two ounces Purslane water four ounces Troches of Amber of sealed Earth each a dramâ Bloodstone half a dram give two spoonfuls every day
with proper things as we shewed in the distempers of the Womb. But take heed that you move not the Terms when you attenuate for that wil melt the âerous humors and fix them more in the vessels use neither Vinegar noâ sharp things After purging consume the reliques by sweat if choler be in fault that must not be sweated out discuss it with warm Baths and do so in melancholy Use Pessaries Fomentations and Fumes to the womb Give Treacle Mithridate or the Decoction of Anâelica roots if cold humors are the cause Chap. 9. Of Terms coming before their time THese shew an ill constitution And it is a depraved excretion of the Terms that comes for the time often fâr somtimes they flâw sooner or twice in a month The immediate Cause is hurt of the retentive and expulâive faculty so that the blood flows not or sooner or lateâ or oftner the cause why they come sooner is in the blood that stirsâup the expulsive faculty in the whole body or in the womb somtimes all causes meet the blood is too much or too sharp and hot and if the retentive faculty in the womb be weak and the expulsive strongâ and of quick sense it is sooner A fall stroke or passion are the evident Causes They will relate it and the signs of the causes are these If it be from much blood there are the signs of plethory heat thinness and sharp humors are known by the distemper of the whole The weakness of the retentive faculty and loosness of the vessels is known from a loose and moist habit of body It is not dangerous but troublesom and hinders conception Iâ they come too soon from hurt in the faculty provoked by too much plethory Let blood use a spare diet and much exercise If it be from sharp blood temper it by good diet and Medicines as in the choleriâk distemper of the womb Use Baths of Iron-water that corrects the distempers of the bowels then evacuate If it come from the retentive faculty and loosness of the vessels correct the cold and moist distemâer with gentle astringents Iâ it be from a stroke or fall cuâe it as the vessels opened are cured of which before Chap. 10. Of Terms that come after their usual time VVHen they stay longer then ordinary and return without order at no set time the causes are little and thick blood straitness of the passages weakness of the expulsive faculty and dulness Either of these causes may stop the Terms buâ if all meet the disease is worse For if blood be not bred in such a quantity that it may prick Nature forward to expel it the purging of it is diââered till there be enough to stir up Nature to expel it If thiâk humors are in the blood the passages stopt and the faculty weak the Terms muât needs be disordered and the purging of them differed longer If it be from want of blood she hath either lived poor in diet or exercised too much and she âinds no inconvenience by the want of her Terms If it be from gross slimy blood there are signs of Cacochymy The weakness of the faculty is known by the cold distemper of the womb It is not so dangerous as stoppage of the terms but it is bad enough in a plethorick or cacochymical body If little blood be use a âuller diet and exercise not If blood be gross and foul make it thin and cut it and after Preparatives let the humors mixed therewith be evacuated It is good to purge presently after the Terms and to use Calamints and to purge often Also four or five daies before the Terms scaâiââe the ankles and hold the feet in warm waâââ âub the legs apply Cuppâng-glasses without Sâââification to the inside of the thighs and use Fumes and Pessaries Anoinâ the bottom of the belly with things to provoke the Terms If there be a numness use things against the Palsie Chap. 11. Of the Terms voided another way SOmetimes they come out at the nose or are vomited up or flow out by the Haemorrhoid veins Hence Hippocrates saith that a woman that vomits blood is cured by having her târms or by a bloody flux Somtimes they are pissed âorth Dodonâeus saies that they come out at the eyes like tears somtimes Amaâus Lusitanus saith they will come forth at the Teats of the breasts and at the navel at the little finger or ring-âinger every month as Mercatâs observed thrice Are stoppage of the Terms from straitness of the vessels in the womb or evil conformation of the womb It is more troublesom then dangerous and hinders conception It is best when they come out at the nose for it is a part that Nature useth to disburden her self by First bring the blood to the womb again and abate it Open the ankle-vein three daies before she begins to bleed Or cup the thighs or rub them Or use Baths Fomentations Oyntments Womb-clysters Pessaries and the like mentioned in Suppression of the Terms Chap. 12. Of the Whites IT is a âoul excretion from the womb white and somtimes blew or green or reddish no at a set time nor every month but disorderly longer or shorter Before or after the Terms and when they are stopt Virgins seldom have this disease and women with child have it somtimes It differs from the running of the reins for it is in less quantity whiter and thicker and at a greater distance It differs from night pollution which is onely in sleep with imagination of Venery The immediate Cause is an excrementitious humor flegm choler or melancholy Somtimes it is like waterish blood It is gathered in the whole body or in the stomach liver or spleen For they who have crudities in the stomach are subject to this disease Somtimes the womb alone is distempered after often mischances or when the womb is very cold and moist This matter flows through the veins of the womb or of the neck of it which use to carry blood and Nature abuseth them to carry excrements especially if they are bred in the womb The remote causes are whatsoever doth breed âad humors some have it after strong purges or long bathing Somtimes they are pale somtimes blew red waterish and green somtimes slimy or cold or sharp or stinking In young people it is reddish The face is discoloured the urin thick there is loathing and heartach If the humor be sharp and corrupt there is a Feaver If it be flegmatick and much the ligaments of the womb are loose and it falls out thus Hippocrates and there are saith he swelled eyes evil colour and short breathing If it be not bred in the womb the humor is from a Cacochymy If it be from a fault in another part the signs of that wil appear If it come only from the womb there will be but little if from the whole body there will be more It is often long
hot blood and their terms flowed not orderly iâ their youth are splenitick and Hypochondriaââ in their age It is known by a pain in the left side and bâeââ to the throat there is short breath often ãâã the belly is bound they are sad and solââ When thin blood grows hot there is inââamation over all the body and chiefly the âace which suddenly vanisheth and there are otheâ signs of Hypochondriacks These cannot enduââ sweet scents to their nose If it be not speedily cured it turns to worââ diseases as the Scirrhus of the spleen The blood is commonly too hot therefore open a vein especially when it is from the terms stopt You may also open the Haemorrhoidsâ and then purge gently and often with Pills oâ Tartar by Quercetan of Ammoniacum of ãâã or Birthwort by Fernel or give Steel and things as in the Hypochondriack diseases lib. 3. par 5. and in the Chapter of Terms stopt and Melancholy from the Womb. Chap. 11. Of the Distemper of the Liver from the Womb and of a Bâard growing by consânt from the Womb. THe womb hath many and great veins moâe then other parts If then there be too much blââd in them it easily goes back to the hollow âein and choaks the heat of the Liver and so the Liver is distempered according to the humor It ââeeds crude and flâgmatick blood which sânt ovââ the body causeth a Cachexy and what disââses come by the Liver are by consent fâom the ââmb as in stoppage of the Terms and Greenâââkness Hippocrates speaks of a womans Beard in Phaâuâa the Wiâe of Pythius for haiâs have their beâinning and growth from the reliques of the ãâã of the noble parts that is from the exâââmentitious part of the blood And if terms be âââpt and the vitious humors that use to be âvaâuated with them are sent over the body they ââuse divers diseases and Symptoms and among âhe ââst the body of a woman is made hairy and ââe hath a Beârd which is rare Chap. 12. Of the Diseases of the Stomach that come from the Womb. Sâmetimes from consent with the womb the appâtite ãâã lost diminished increased or depraved or there is Hictets or vomiting belching pain or heart-ach This is when malignant vapors the way beiââ large rise from the arteries of the womb and gâ to the coâliack artery and through the Hypogastrick And if they are hot they cause thiâst ãâã cold they hurt concoction and many times caâââ strong Symptoms from their malignity and ãâã qualities whose causes are not known Hence it is that women desire absurd things as these vâpors get into divers parts of the stomach You may know when the stomach is affected by consent from the womb because the Symptoms abate and return again when the vapââ comes to the stomach there are also other signs of the womb distempered and of the Spleen and Mesentery by the vessels of which the matteâ is sent from the womb to the stomach The Symptomes are worse when they come from the womb then when they come from the stomach first nor are they curable except the womb be first cured It is to be directed to the womb and stomachâ For if it come onely by consent and there is nâ disease by propriety when you have cured the womb the stomach-disease vanisheth of it âelâ if you do but strengthen the stomach If the stomach be first affâcted look onely to thatâ Therfore first evacuate the humors that ãâã in the stomach as we shewed in its ãâã with matter or the humors will be infected ãâã the malignant vapors A Vomit is here pââper To âelp the Womb see for the ãâã and Suââocation and for the Chapter of the Dâstemper of the Womb with matter then strengthen the Stomach thus Take Aromaticum ãâã a dram Extract of Angelica half a scruple Oâl of Cloves Cinnamon eaâh fivâ drops with Sugar two ounces make Roules Or give Pills of Aloes and Mastich often THE FOURTH BOOK THE FOURTH SECTION Of the Symptoms which are in Conception Chap. 1. Of the desire of Vânery hurt THERE are two Symptomeâ in women about copulation The first lâchery lost when ãâã doth not willingly entertain â man or cannot long enduâe him or if she endures she finds little or no pleasure no more then if she were outwardly handled The other is too great lust as in Frenzie of the womb when they cannot be satisââââ by many mââ The defect of apâetite in lust is fââm ãâã âeed or when it is cold or there wants ãâã the seed-vessels The causes of want of âeed ãâã lib. 3. pâr 9. sâct 2. c. 1. Somtimâs it is ãâã âââl conformation of the âeed-vessels Women discover this to their Husbands that gâ to the Physitians for counsel These women have not fruitful âeed and therâââe are barren For that see lib. 3. of Barrenness of men where ãâã Liniments and Oyntments for the loyns and pâvities of women but that ââe may take mâre pleasure let the man anoint the head of his yard âith Civet or Hens gall or the gall of a Pickâd Too much Lechery not of it self hinders conâeption but wandering lust that follows lechery doth The Causes are the same with those of womb ââenzie as plenty of seed sharpness and commotion sharpness of seed from hot meat and Medicines that provoke lust and sharp humors in the womb and seed Thus lust or lechery is abated by Medicines that extinguish the plenty of seed and allay its sâârpness Chap. 2. Of Barrenness and want of Conception MAn or woman may be lustful and copulate and yet there may be no conception or ãâã may concâive too many as Twins or more ãâã have one âonception after another which is ãâã Suâerâââtâtion or ãâã conceives a Mole or ãâã Conâeption is of fruitful seed spent by a man ând miâed with a womans sââd to perâection for ãâã making of a child by the retentive and altering faculty of the womb hence it is necessary that both seeds be fruitful that is hot âul of Spirits and well tempered and a fit subject for a Soul and that both spend at a time and there be mixed and retained together to produce a child Also the sucking of the womb is necessary and that it should lay it up and embrace it so that there be no space between the seed and the womb Somtimes the womb greedily snatcheth and embâaceth the seed but doth not keep it buâ lets it come forth two or three daies after or keeps it to no purpose and brings it not to action as in a false conception or mole Moreover there must be blood in readiness to get the child or be sprinkle it when it is first âormed and to nourish it after Therefore if teâms be wanting as in girls oâ be stopt or gone as in old âolk expect no conception If they flow not by reason of labor and too much exercise the conception is not
hindered if there be but blood enough to form the child Hence it is that women that are brought in bed conceive again before they have their terms If all these be right there is conception otherwise she is barren which is an impotency of the womb that keeps it from sucking in of the seed or from retaining or from nourishing iâ and bringing it into act The first is impotency in copulation from the closing of the womb of which before or othââ evil conformation of the privities or and ulâeâ or tumor in the neâk of the womb The secoâd is the breeding of unfruitful seed from disteâp of the vessels and stones or too tender and delicate a constitution In men at eighteen in women at fourteen and men seldom get children âfter sixty and women seldom bear them after ââfty As for evil conformation to breed seed some have wanted seed-vessels or they were not in their places Some women are barren by the first Husband and have children by the second because there must be a certain proportion between both seeds and if they be wanting they are barren which proportion is hard to be explained and almost impossible for we must not stay in the first qualities for there are occult qualities in seed by which they agree or disagree The third cause is when the womb suâks not in the seed nor receives it in a right manner as when the attractive faculty is hurt or hindered by divers distempers of the womb or when a woman hates her Husband Attraction is hindered by tumors or ulcers in the womb or by its being displaced as Hippocrateâ They who being too fat and conceive not the mouth of their womb is stopt up with the Cawl and they conceive not till they are lean But the more probable reason of not conceiving is the matter of the seed turning into fat The fourth cause is the retention of the seed hurt by a moist distemper then the womb is weak and the fibres are loose so that it cannot contract it self to retain and the seed by reason of its sliminess cannot stick there Also if the woâb be too thick not fleshy and âoât and be not spâinkled with blood as it iâ in some by birth whiââ makes them barren and in some after they ceâse to conceive If the orifice of the womb gape aââââ ãâã ãâã and aboâtion by which the fibres are loosned and weakned and the retention of the seed hurâ And if a woman after copulation cough neese cry out dance or be angry or frighted the samâ may be The fifth cause of barrenness is the hurt of the altering faculty which brings in the form and act into seed for if there be not a due proportion between the womb and the seed there is barrenness as seeds are choaked in marshââ ground or die or are burnt in dry and sandâ ground so mans seed is suffocated in a moist womb and dried up in a hot Hippocrates speaks oâ the ãâã proportion of the womb as is âit to cherish this or thât seed thus Women that hââe thick and cold wombs conceive not and they whââ womb is too moist ââr they quench the seed norââ they conceive that have dry and burning wombs for the seed is corrupted in them for want of nourishmerâ they who are of a mean temper between these are fâââfull The last cause of barrenness is want of menstrual blood which is necessary for the first formation of the child Therefore Nurses that have much milk conceive because the blood is carried to the breasts Therefore all these causes are reduced either to impotency in copulation or distemper of the stones and seed-vessels or evil conformation or â cold and moist distemper of the womb which cannot attract detain and alter the seed somtimes â hot and dry distemper that cannot nourish the âeedâ or from the enlarging of the orifice after childbeaâing or from humors or being displaced or the straitness of the vessels or want ãâã termâ or too many Hence we may gather that barrenness is oftââ from a fault in the women then the men for iâ men there is nothing required but fruitful ââed spent into a fruitful womb But women besides the meeting of their own seed must receive ââiâ and nourish the maâs and afford mattâr ãâã the forming of the child ãâã which divers accidents happen and any of these will cause barânâess Mark also in these kinds of causes that some do not properly cause barrenness but only hinâânder conception for a time as the closing of thâ womb smalness of the privities these do not âââply cause barrenness Some bring other external causes as eating ãâã heart of a Deer or if she wear Jet about her ãâã if Harts-tongue be hanged about her bed if ãâã walk over the terms of another or tread upoâ them unawares or anoint with them or put ãâã jayâe of Mints into her womb Some are born so from a fault in the womb âââers are not simply bâââen but in respect of the âân and when they have another Husband arâ fâuitful Some are barren till the constitution of thâ womb be changed some bring forth at first and then by somâ fault gâoâ barren Hââ shâll we know that a woman is barren âiâst see if the fault be in the man or woman Lib. 3. of Sterility in men For women see if ââây are apt to Vânery or not or receive the yard âââly 2. Search if she hath good seed answerââââ to the man or whether she hath used quenâheâs of seed You may know that she spendeth ãâã or no seed if she hâth litâle or no pleasurâ ãâã the âct Unââuitâul seed is ânown by a ãâã in the womb a cold and moist âist ãâã the signs whereof are mentioned a soul body shews the same for good seed cannot be made of bad blood It is hard to find whether the two seeds have the right proportion or the womb agree with the mans seed Yet temperate with temperate are very fruitful because they are both of a good constitution But intemperate couples are barren but if one tempeâ be good it may mend the other and she may conceive If it come from a Medicine that destroys the seed she will tell If inchantment be the cause though they love yet they cannot copulate or whereas they loved each other now they fal out without a cause Ask the woman how her womb doth attract retain and cherish the seed if it have a tumor or have matter or not Whether there be a natural hereditary imperâection Enquire concerning her family if many were barren whether she hath had hard travel or abortion Whether the seed comes away presently after or at a distance after some daies if so then the womans âeed is unfruitful or there is a distemper in the womb that keeps it from cherishing the seed If the terms be wantingâ they are Viragoes and have hair on their chins or they are âat and
Then use Tarr and Wax for a Cerot Orâ Take Salâ-pâter an ounce Oxymel an ounce and half Or Take quick Brimstone an ounce whiââ Hâllebore Staphisacre each two drams with Hogs grease It is not safe to use Arsenick or Oâpiment or Mercury or other poysâns that corroâe because it is so neer the brain Chap. 5. Of Ptiriasis or breeding of Lice LIce are creatures which breed in clothes that are constantly worn but they are chiefly in children from the excrements of the head All say that filth and nastiness alone is the cause of lice but I think not so for filth alone cannot do it without heat for besides the first qualities there is a hidden force in the matter by which it is disposed to produce a particular species for fleas and worms wil not breed of that matter which breeds lice so it is in Plants Heat is the helping cause which raiseth the seminal force and brings it into act and though the matter be putrid it doth not woâk upon it but as it is somwhat natural Excrements are not presently putrid but there is in them a heat that can raise forming force and though there is some putrefaction yet is it not so great as to hinder the action hence it is that children and women that are hot and moist have many excrements that are fit to breed lice Some meats breed lice as Figs by their fat juyce which doth naturally tend to the skin and varieties of meats and not clensing nor combeing The plâce where lice breed in children is the skin of the head where they stick fast with the hair especially if there be scabs The Signs are needless they are manifest It is a filthy troublesom disease many have them âreed all over the body and some have died by them Somtimes the lice leave them when they are about to die To prevent breeding lice let children eat no food of evil juyce especially Figs let the head be often combed and washed and the matter purged that breeds them with hot dry thin medicines that draw the matter out and consume superfluous moisture Take heed of Mercury and Arsnick in children but make this Lotion Take round Birthwort Lupines Pine and Cypress leaves each equal parts boyl them Or Take Elicampane roots two ounces Briony half an ounce Beets Mercury Soap-wort each a handful Lupines a dram Niter half an ounce boyl them for a Lotion then use this oyntment Take pouder of Staphisacre three drams of Lupins half an ounce Agarick two drams quick Sâlphur a dram and half Ox gall half an ounce with âyl of Wormwood there are stronger as white Hellebore and Mecrury which are not safe Chap. 6. Of Hydrocephalus or swelling of the Head WE spake of this in the water wiâhout the Skull but Hydrocephalus is from watâr gathered within the skull or in the ventricleâ of the brain as when the childs head in the womb hangs down or when the brain is verâ moist A tumor from water contained in the brain is less and harder then when it is out of the skull It is harder to be cured then when it is gathered without the skull and is often deadly There are many medicines mentioned that are good here to be used outwardly and to the nose and ears As Take Snails in their shells thirty Marjoram Mugwârt each a handful stamp add Camphire a scruple Saffron half a dram with Oyl of Chamomil make a Pultis Snuff this Water often Take Nutmeg Cloves Câbebs each â sâruple Calamus Frankincense bark each half â dram Marjoram water three ounces drop hot Oyls into the earâ If in twenty daies the water be not gone open the skull and let out the water by degrees and take heed of cold The tumor of wind in the skin of the head or membranes of the brain is seldom without water which breeds wind Use Discussers that make thin as Chamomil Rue Organ c. Chap. 7. Of Siriasis IT is from Aetius a diâease with a âeaver or an inflammation of the membraneâ and the brain so that there is a hollowness of the eyes and forhead It is from flegmatick blood that grows hot by putrefaction and so becomes like choler The remote causes are hot weather and milk full of wind from the evil diet of the Nurse Such milk will make the child drunk and cause this inflamation Heat of the forehead and hollowness there redness of face a âeaver driness no appetite watching The hollowness in the âore-part of the head is where the Sagital and Coronal âutures meet for there the bones are membranous and grow at last hard It is dangerous and counted deadly among women and as often as this bone oâ membrane âals there is a pit and the brain fals down they commonly die in three daies First give a Clyster of syrup of Roses or Violets then Coolers of the juyce and water of Lettice Gourds Melons or apply a Pumpion split in two But cool not the brain too much anoint with Oyl of Roses Or Take Oyl of Roses half an ounce Populeon an ounce the white of an Eg and of the Emulsion of cold Seeds drawn with Rose water two drams After the flux is stopt and the inflammation abated use Discussers As Take Oyl of Chamomil an ounce and half of Dill half an ounce with the yolk of an Eg. Let the Nurses diet be cooling or the milk be changed let it not be vexed Chap. 8. Of Frights in the Sleep HIppocrates saith this is often the cause is unclean vapors mixed with the animal spirits that disturbe them and present horrible objects to the fancy They arise from the depraved concoction of the stomach in full feeding children that eat more then they can digest These vapors ascend not onely by the weaâand but by the veins to the head It comes often from worâs also or corrupt humors that knaw the mouth oâ the stomach They groan in their sleepâ and twitch and bâing frighted out of sleep they cry their breath is hot and often sâinking âure it presenâly for iâ is the âore-runâer of an Epilepâââ Give good Milk and leâs thât the stomach be not over charged Let it not sleep presently after food but carry it about till it is in the bottom of the stomach Use Oyl of sweet Almonds or Honey of Roses two spoonfuls to clense the stomach Then strengthen it with Magistery of Coral or Conâection of Hyacinths with Milk Or Take Magistery of Coral a dram Diapleres a scruple with Sugar dissolved in Rose water an ounce mâke Rouâs Anoint the stomach with Oyl of Nard Wormwood Mints Mastich Nâtmegs If it be from a feaver look to that If from woâms I shal after speak of it Some hang Coral and Wolves teeth about the childs neck Chap. 9. Of great Watâhing A Child new born sleeps more then he wakes because his brain is very moist and he used to sleep in
the sharp bones whence is great pain watching and inflamation of gums feaver loosness and convulsions especially when they breed their eye-teeth First it is known by the usual time as the âeginning of the seventh month Also they put their âingers in their mouths to allay pain 3. They hold the nipple faster then before 4. The gum is white where the tooth begins to come and there are divers Symptomes mentioned before The feaver that follows breeding of teeth comes from cholerick humors inflamed by watching pain and heat The longer teeth are breeding the greater the danger so that many die of feavers or convulsions They are best that have their belly loose These have no convuision a feaver consumes the humoâs Hard breeding of teeth is from thickness of the gums therefore molliâie and loosen them rub them with the finger dipt in Butter and Honey or a Virgin Wax Candle is to be chewed upon Or anoint with âucilage of Quinces made with Mallow water or with the brains of a Hare Foment the cheek with the Decoction of Althaea and Chamomil flowers and Dill or with juyce of Mallows and fâesh Butter If the guâs are inflamed add juyce of Nightshade and Lettice Let the Nurse keep a temperate diet inclining to cold as Barley broaths or Watergrewel rear Eggs Prunes Lettice Endive Avoid salâ sharp biting and peppered meats and Wine Chap. 15. Of Loosing of the Tongue and of the Frog WHen the tongue is tied they cannot freely suck This must be done by skilful Artists or use this Liniment Take clarified Honey and boyl it gently till it may be poudered Then Take yolks of hard Eggs dried in a glass in an Oven till they may be poudered a dram ârankincense and Mastich each a scruple burnt Allum six grains with Honey of Roses make a Liniment The Frog is when the veins under the tongue are filled with bad blood and if flegm sweat out and stick in the passages there is a tumor like Mushrooms which causeth stamering It is cured thus Take Cuttlebone Sal gem Pepper each a dram burnt Spunge three drams make a Pouder or with Honey a Liniment rub under the tongue Lay under the chin a Plaister of goose dung and Honey boyled in Wine till the Wine be consumed Chap. 16. Of Catarrh Cough and difficult Breathing WEE have spoken of these before but because Hippocrates reckons them in Childrens diseases I shall touch upon them The general Cause of a Catarrh in a child is a moist brain and much milk that burdens the stomach from whence many vapors fil the brain and if the brain be full of excrements it is easily dissolved or melted either by heat or cold and goes to the nose ââws or lungs which cause a cough or Asthma Moreover much food makes crudities in the first passages and flegmatick blood is bred of crudity and thick chyle in the liver This is sent by the arâerial vein into the lungs and prâssing the Bronchia or pipes of the lungs causeth difficult breathing and Asthma It is known to be from a hot humor if it be thin they often neese the face is red and the jaws the breath is short and the Nurse âinds it in her nipples If difficulty of breathing come from the head there will be a cough and snorting in breathing and a noise in the lungs when the air passeth not freely through them If it come from the parts below there is neither Câtarrh nor cough but hardness about the Liver and a tumor In children a great Catarrh with short breath is hard to be cured because they cannot take Physick First let it and the Nurse keep a good diet fil not the stomach with milk nor other diet but let the Nurse forbear sharp salt peppered âour things and things that fill the head with vapors And give her a Pectoral Decoction Take Figs âujubes each ten Sebestens thirty Raisons stoned âen drams Liquorish two drams Maidenhair Hysop Violets each half an ounce boyl them in three pints of Water to the consumption of the third part Let her take six ounces every morning Keep the belly open with Syrup of Roses or Cassia or a Clyster with oyl of sweet Almonds with Sugar candy or juyce of Fennel with Milk or hold down the tongue and provoke Vomiting Give Syrup of Jujubes Maidenhair If the matter be thick give Syrup of Hysop or Horehound or an Emulsion of oyl of sweet Almonds Pine-nuts Scabious water Or give a Lohoch of Diaireos Diatragacanth frigid Peâidies with Syrup of Jujubes If it be hot give Emulsions of the âour great cold Seeds with Mallows Pellitory with Diatragacanth frigid To dry up the matter lay outwardly a stuph of Hemp hot and sprinkled with pouder of red Roses and Frankincense Apply Basil and Marjoram to the nose to make it sneese Chap. 17. Of the Hickets IT comes from corruption of the food in the stomach or from milk âilling it or from cold ãâã these hurt the expulsive faculty and it is ââârred up to expel what is hurtful If iâ come from reâletion of milk the belly swells and there is vomiting after If from corruption of milk the Nurse hath bad milk the child cries and is pained and the excrements sânââl of stinking milk Hiâkets is commonly not dangerous in children and cease when the cause is taken away Iâ it be from a vehement cause and goes to the nerves there follows a Convulsion or Epilepsie and death That from corruption of nourishment is cured by vomit with a feather dipt in Oyl to tickle the throat then strengthen the stomach with hot things As Syrup of Mints Bettony and soment it with Decoction of Mints Organ Woâmwood then anoint with Oyl of Mints Mastich Dill. Or Take Mastich an ounce Frankincense Dill seed each two drams Cummin seed a dram with juyce of Mints and Flax apply them to the stomach There is a disease like the Hiâkets in children from anger or grief when the Spirits are much stiâred and run from the heart to the Diaphragma forceably and hinder or stop the breath Somtimes they have a shril voice the Spirits suddenly breaking forth but when the passion ceaseth this Symptom ceaseth Chap. 18. Of Vomiting IT is from too much milk or bad milk or fâom flâgm that fals from the head to the stomach but this is seldom in children It is ofâen from a moist loose stomach for as driness retains so loosness le ts go If it be from much milk they are better after vomiting If it be from corruption of milk that which is vomited is yellow green or otherwise ill coloured and stinking worms are known by their signs It is for the most part without danger in children and they that vomit from their birth are the lustiest for the stomach being not used to meat and milk being taken too much oftentimes crudities are easily bred or the milk is corrupted and it is
better to vomit these up then keep them in If Vomiting last long it causeth Aârophy When it is from too much milkâ give it less if it be from corrupt milk amend it as I shewed Clense the child with Honey of Roses and strengthen the stomach with Syrup of Mints Quinces Or Take Wood-aloes Coral Mastich each half a dram Galangal half a scruple with Syrup of Quinces make a Lincâus If the humor be sharp and hot give Syrup of Pomegranates Currans Coral Apply to the belly the Plaister of Bread the Stomach-cerot or Bread dipt in Wine hot Or Take Oyl of Mastich Quinces Mints Wormwood each half an ounce of Nutmegs by expression half a dram Chymical Oyl of Mints three drops Coral hath an occult propriety therefore it is hung about their necks Chap. 19. Of the torments or pains of the Belly IT is often with the flux of the belly and from milk alone that breeds wind and sharp humors When it is corrupted it gets to the guts and causeth a gnawing pain worms staying in the guts do the same They cry continually hate the breast and toss to and fro If it be from wind it ceaseth somtimes the belly swells and they break wind If it be from humors it is constant if it be tough flegm the belly is bound and the dung is slimy If it be sharp there is a flux yellow and green If from worms there are signs of them and of crudities and wind If this pain lasts long they are weak or have Convulsions or Epilepsie it is worse when ârom corrupt milk and worms and is dangerous If it be from crude humors and wind give a Clyster Take Pellitory Chamomil flowers each a handful boyl them in Chicken broath to three or four ounces add Honey of Roses an ounce with the yolk of an Eg make a Clyster This may be given safely to a child of two monthâ old Or give oyl of sweet Almonds with Sugar candy and a scruple of Aniseeds it purgeth new born Babes from green choler and stinking flegm If it be given with Sugar Pap it allays the crying pains of the belly Anoint the belly with Oyl of Dill or lay Pellitory stampt with Oâl of Chamomil to the belly Or Take Chamomil flowers Dill tops each a handful Faenugreek and Lineseed each half an ounce boyl them in Wine foment the belly twice a day before meat If pain be from corrupt milk âhat is sharp give Syrup of Roses or Honey of Roses or Syrup of Succory with Rhubarb or a Clyster of the Decoction of Bran Pellitory with Sârup of Roses And use outwardly Oyl of Roses Dill and Chamomil Chap. 20. Of puffing up of the Belly and Hypochondria WHen they suck too much the belly is swelled under the ribs for want of concoction and there are crudities in the stomach and wind and also in the parts adjacent The Hypochondria are hard and pussed up and there is straitness in the mouth of the stomach and short breath It is easily cured with good diet Give a thinner diet that the crudities may be coâcocted Give no fresh nourishment til thâ first be digested then give Honey of Roses to purge Or the Decoction of Cardiaca which is good for the heart and mouth of the stomach it opens obstructions and clenseth flegm Or pouder of Piony roots Cummin seed Jesamine or make it up with Honey Oyl of sweet Almonds or Sugar for a Liniment Foment the sides with the Decoction of Cardiaca Chamomil flowers and Cununin seed Chap. 21. Of the Flux of the Belly IT is 1. From breeding of teeth with a feaveâ commonly and the concoction is hindered and the nourishment corrupted 2. From much watching 3. From pain 4. From stirring of the humors by a feaver 5. When they suck or drink too much in a feaver Somtimes they have a flux without breeding of teeth from outward cold in the guts or stomach that hinders concoction If it be from teeth it is known by the signs in breeding of teeth if from external cold there are signs of no other causes If from a humor flowing from the head there are signs of a Câtarrh and the excrements are âroathy If crude humors are voided there is wind belching and flegmatick excrements If they be yellow green and stink the ââux is from a hot and sharp humor It is best in breeding of teeth when the belly is loose but if it be too greatâ and you fear Atrophy it must be stopt if black excrements are voided with a feaver it is bad A sucking child needs not cure so much as the Nurse you must chiefly observe the condition of the milk and mend it if not change the Nurse let her not eat green fruit and things of hard co-coction If the child suck not take away the causes of the flux with purges that bind after as Syrup or Honey of Roses or a Clyster Take the decoction of Milium My robalans each two or three ounces with an ounce or two of Syrup of Roses make a Clyster After clensing if the cause be hot give Syrup of dried Roses Quinces Mirtles Coral Currâns or the pouder of Diamarâariton Coral Mastich Harts-horn red Roses or pouder of Miâtles with a little Sanguis Draconis Anoint with Oyl of Roses Mirtles Masâich Or Take red Roses an ounce Mirtles Masâich each two drams with Oyl of Mirtles and Wax make an Oyntment Orâ Take red Roses Moulin each a handful Cypress roots two drams make a Bag boyl it in red Wine apply it to the belly or use the Plaister of Bread or Stomach oyntment If the cause be cold and excrements white give Syrup of Mastich and Quinces with Mint-water Use outwardly Mints Mastich Cummin As Take Rose seeds an ounce Cumminâ Aniseeds each two drams with Oyl of Mastichâ Wormmood and Wax make an Oynâmenâ Chap. 22. Of binding of the Belly IT is from a cold and dry distemper of the guts from birth in some 2. From slimy flegm that wraps the dung which sticks in the guts This is from bad milk when the Nurse eats gross food slimy and astringent or drinks little 3. It is from a hot distemper of the kidnies or liver that dries the excrements 4. It is when choler doth not stir up the guts to expel If it be from a dry distemper of the guts it is hard to be cured if it be from slimy flegm the dung is wrapt in it If choler comes not to the guts to provoke them to stool the dung is white and the body yellow It is best in children to have a loose belly and they are more healthful for if it be bound the belly is pained and there is headach First take away the cause if it be from a hot distemper of any bowel or dry wash the child often to moisten and cool it in a Bath of Succory and Leââice boyled In a cold distemper use hot for
for the desire of Venery is increased in that and the rubbing of the cloaths upon it cause lust but in an excrescence of flesh they cannot for pain enduââ copulation but you may cut off this better then a Clitoris because it is all superfluous Chap. 3. Of Atretae or Closures and straitness of the neck and mouth of the Womb. THey are threeâold it is either in the oriâice or the neck or in the middle it is alwaies huttful either to copulation or the terms or to conception and childbearing I saw one that had the first the oriâice was very little onely fit to purge the terms and receive seed she conceived and the Midwives discovered in time of childbearing and the Chirurgion opened it and she was happily delivered but how the seed was spent into it is not to be understood Flesh or a membrane is from evil conformation or a wound or ulcer of which Benivenius ãâã and Hildanuâ The âleât also may be closed by a wound oâ ulcer as in a woman who with the French âox had all eaten off and it grew together after only there was a little passaâe for urin This is either when the sides grow togethââ fââm aâ uâcer or âhen proud âleâh ââops it uââ âhich is somtimes in the French pox When it is in the privities it is to be seen but âhen in the neck or oriâice of the womb it is not ânown but when the terms are to âlow or when âhey copulate and it is either broken by the âorce of blood or there is pain and being virâins they are taken to be with child for iâ it âast long the womb swells and the whole body is âlewish These either hinder the termâ from the neck âf the womb or from the veins of it If inâlamâation or ulcer was before this disease may be âuspected to be if there the closing be by the membrane the place is white if by âleâh it is red ând it is known by the touch for the membrane âs âarder then flesh The inconveniences are great either in copulation conception or child bearing especially for the child cannot get forth without hazard of it self or mother It is easier cured when it is from a membrane only because it is easily cut or broken that in âhe orifice of the womb is not to be cured because the instruments cannot reach it Take away that which stops the passage a membrane that is outward is easily cut but iâ it be in the neck of the womb or be flesh it is hard for if the cut be large there is pain and bâeâding and the wound is hard to be cured because the neâk of the bladder is easily hurt thereby ãâ¦ã teacheth this operation in his Observations And Hippocrates in his Book of Sterility shâws how a membrane may be taken away without cutting Iâââeâh grow frâm an ulââr aâtâr purging use dââers and discussers to dimiâiââ it âith Frânkincense Birthwort Roses Pomegranate floweâs ãâã Myârâ Aloes c. as in Chap. 2. Somâ think this disease may come from driââss but it is incredible Iâ it come stom a hard tun or soften and dissolve it with Butter Oyl of sweeâ Almonds Lillies c. Chap. 4. Of Pustles and Roughness of the Privities ROughnâss and Itching come from Pustles in the nâck of the womb and privities âith scurff and swellings which iâch and pain They are ârom an adust humor maliânant and sharp which abounding evacuate themselves by thâse looâe and moist parts and there stiâking exasperate the flesh this is in the French pox They ââcâare it themselves It is stubborn long and inâeâtious to men and hard to be cured Iâ the adust sharp humors come from the wholâ body prepare with Boraâe Fumitory Succory Endive and the likâ then evacuate tââm wiâh Sennaâ Epithymum syrâp of Apples Violâââ Roses Catholicon Consectio hâmeâh âilâs of Fumitory Tartar Lât âlood iâ there be âulness first in the Arm then in the Ankle but if it be from the Frenâh pox first uâe Guajacum and Sâââa and the like Foment the âaât often with a hot decâction oâ ãâ¦ã Fââiâory Hâps Pâlliââây oâ uâe this Oyntmânt Take ãâã and Rose ãâã ââch ãâã âânceâ Sâl gem Nâââr Allum âach thrââ drâms Subâiââââ a ãâã ând half boyâ tââm âo the third part strain them and add Verdigrease a ââruple then use gentler means two daies after till the Pustles fall off and new flesh appear and then use the Oyntment again Let the diet be to resist evil humors of good âuyââ avoid salt sharp and âour things Chap. 5. Of Condyloma in the neck of the Womb. COndyloma is a tubercle or excrescens with heat and pain for these parts are wrinkled and when the wrinkles swell there is a Condyloma somtimes it is without inflammation and sâât or with inflammation and hard It is usual n the privities and fundament of such as have the French pox They are from a sharp malignant humor which is alwaies in the Pox and somtimes they follow hard clefts or chaps They are pain and burning the skin is wrinkled and when they are many they are like a bunch of Grapes They are hard to be cured if they are from tâe Pox first cure that and then they often vanish of themselves Aâter general evacuations proper against the Pox use Topicks first see if there be inflammation and then abate painâ As Take oyl of Lineseed and Rosâs âach an ounce oyl of Eggs half an ounce mix âhem in a Leaden mortar Or Take Pâllâtorâ Mallows Althaea each half a handful Chamomil flowers two pugils Lineseed and âaeâugreek each half an ounce boyl them to a pânââdd oyl of Rosâs three âunces inâect it wâth a Syâing If there be no inflammation use driers and repellers as Vervain Ivy Acacia Pomegranate peels and slowers for Baths and Fomentations and after add Discussers as Chamomile and Thyme If it be old and hard first soften it with the same and after thrice using them âse digesters and driers that are strong as a pouder Take round Birthwort a dram Savine Hermodacts burnt âach two drams burnt Allum two drams red Lead a dram Chalcitis half a dram sprinkle it upon the loose flesh Or Take Aloes Frankincense Mirrh each a dram Ammoniacum dissolved in Vinegar a dram and half Allum two drams rea Lead two drams Galls half a dram Turpentine Oyl of Tarâar each a dram with Oyl of Roses and Wax make an Oyntment This is very strong Take Turpcmine an ouncâ Oyl of Nutmegs two ounces red Lead two drams Allum Vitriol each a dram Verdigreece half ãâã dram Sublimate a scruple with Wax make an Oyntment or of Balsom of Mercury If Medicines will not do the Ancients advise burning of which see Aetius Chap. 6. Of Warts in the neck of the Privities and Womb. THey are from a gross seculent and malâgnant humor sent to the skin and turned to a node They are known by
their shape the malignant are known by their hardness and heat and blewness filâh and pain They are often hard to be cured because the pox is with them and they are in a place to which Medicines are hard to be applied and to continue The Myrmeciae are not cut off but they leave a great ulcer the Thymi and Clavi grow again Acrochordones once cut leave no root After Universals and order of diet either use Medicines or cut or burn them to discuss then use Sage dried with Figs Organ Rue burnt dry Savin Frankincense with Wine and Vinegar or Snakes skins with Figs these also dry These corrode eat and burn as juyce of wild Cowcumbers with Salt Milk of Figgs Sheeps dung Goats gall with Niter Aqua fortis Spirit of Vitriol Sulphur Butter of Antimony Take heed that you hurt not the parts adjacent but defend them with Bole sealed Earth Rosewater and Vinegar if you put the Corrosives into Nut-shells change them twice or thrice in a day and wash the part with a clensing Decoction and then cut or burn Chap. 7. Of the Haemorrhoids of the Womb. THe veins that end in the neck of the womb often swel like the Haemorrhoids it is from gross blood that comes to these veins out of the time of the terms Inordinate flux of terms may occasion it when tâây slow out of the usual time they grow thick and cannot get out of the veins but swel them They are to be touched and with a Speculum matricis to be seen There is pain and bleeding without order she is pale and lazy Correct the blood purge and bleed in the arm to derive and revel of which in the diseases of the womb If pain be abate it by sitting in a Decoction of Mallows Althaea Chamomil Mâlilot flowers Moulin Lineseed Foenugreek of which also make Fomentations and Oyntments with Butter Populeon and Opium if there be pain Take Populeon Oyl of Roses and sweet Almonds fresh Butter each half an ounce Saffron a sâââple with the yolk of an Egg make an Oyntment Or Take Muâilage of Quinces Althaea eaâh half an ounce Oyl of Roses and Hens greâse each a dram the yolk of an Eg and Saffron half a dram mix them in a leaden Mortar If pain be gone or abated and they bleed not use Dryers of Bole Earth of Lemnos Acacia Ceruss froath of Silver Lead burnt and washed long Birthwort Allum Verdigreece If they swell with blood evaporate it or âoment with the Decoction of Mallows Althaea Pellitory Chamomil flowers Moulin Melilot seeds of Line and Foenugreâk If they do not good open them by Fig leaves rub'd upon them or by Horsleeches of which Chap. 2. If there be proud flesh take it oât as is shewed If they bleed gently lât Nature alone to the work for it is good and ârees from other diseases If the flux be gâeat and abate the strength open a vein in the arm divers times and do as in over slowing of the terms Question How do the Haemorrhoids differ from the Terms flowing or stopt Mercurialis saith That though a flux of terms be immodârate yet it hath its periods and is without pain and makes not the body lean but it is contrary in the Haemorrhoids But this is not true for the body is not made lean alwaies by the Haemorrhoids nor do the courses keep their periods alwaiâs Besides the pain which is almost alwaies in the Haemorrhoids they differ in that the terms flow from the veins of the womb and its neck but the Haemorrhoids are when the blood flows too much to the veins that nourish the privities and there either sticks or is evacuated Chap. 8. Of Ulcers in the Neck of the Womb. THey are seldome cured in the body of the womb and they are simple and clean or âordid and malignant Are a flux of sharp humors that lasts long in the Pox and Gonorrhaea Corrupt afterbirths and courses after childâearing detained inflammations turned to imposthuiâesâ these are the internal The external are sharp Medicines hard travail a reat child taken out by âorce violent leâhery wounds falls strokes Are pain and constant biting that increaseth ââââcially in coâulation or when Wine or Hydrâmel is injected You may also see it with a Speculum also there is matter gentle or âilthy if the ulcer go towards the bladder they piss hot and often there is pain in the roots of the eyes to the hands and fingers fainting and a little âever somtimes The external Causes are to be related by the patient If it be from the pox or Gonorrhaea the signs of them will appear of which Hippocrates They are hard to be cured because they are in a part fit to receive humors soft and moist and that hath consent with many parts Hence are divers Symptoms the great old and foul are worst when they corrode and are hollow they are seldome cured they that may easily have Medicines applied to them are easieât cured First stop the flux of humors to the part if it be either from the whole body or any part And amend the distemper of the womb that it may neither breed nor receive bad humors If the French pox be with it resist that first If there be pain first abate that with Milk steeled or with three whites of Eggs and Mucilage of Fleabane or an Emulsion of Poppy seeds Or Take Althaea roots an ounce Dill seed two drams Barley a pugil Faenugreek and Lineseed each an ounce Fleabane and Poppy seed each half an ounce boyl them in Milk Of which in pain of the womb In a foul ulcer first use Clensers as Whey Barley water Honey Wormwood Smallage Orobus Orris Birthwort Mirrh Turpentine Allum As Take new Milk boyled a pint Honey half a pint Orris pouder half an ounce Use it hot often every day When that which was injected is voided wash with the decoction of Mallows and put up this Pessary Take Eruum and Lentils in pouder and Orris each two drams with Honey Or Take Diapompholigos with Frankincense Mastich Mirrh Aloes as the ulcer requires Or use Fumes As Take Frankincense Mastich Mirrh Storax Calamite Gum of Juniper Labdanum each an ounce make a Pouder or Troches with Turpentine If there be suspicion of the French pox add a little Cinnabar In a very foul ulcer and Aegyptiacum or Apostolorum or a little Spirit of Wine In a creeping corroding ulcer with clenâers mix cold drying and astringent Medicines Allum water Plantane and Rose-water with Pomegranate flowers boyled and Pomegranate peels and Cypress-nuts is also good and with Aloes After clensing fill it with flesh and heal it up As Take Tutty washed half an ounce Litharge Ceruss Sarcocol each two drams with Oyl of Roses and Wax make an Oyntment Or smoak the privities with Mirrh Frankincense Gum or Juniper Labdanum two drams in pouder with Turpentine make Troches Or use Sulphur or Allum Baths and Plaisters
part for an ordinaây drink You may use China and Sarsa the same way ând because in a decoction some strength is lost ând so great a quantity is tedious for womân âou may distill them and give a less quantity âith things proper for the womb As Take Guajacum a pound or Sarsa eight âunces Angelica Elicampane each an ounce âugwort two handfuls Diâtany half a handful ad âx pints of water or wine steep them two daies then âistill them and give two ounces of the water Let her meat be roasted birds hens capons âartridges mutton sweet Almonds Raisons ât her abstain from âalt and sharp things If these sweats are unpleasant give them in âe third and fourth Chapter internal and exterâal As Take conserve of Marjoram Rosemary âettony each two ounces of Balm an ounce Diaâoschu dulcis Diamârgarion calid each a dram ândied Eryngus and Citrons each half an ounce âith sârup of Mugwort make an Elâctuary and use âaths to ãâã in mentioned Drying Spaw-waters are good to drink or to ãâã in Let the diet be as in Chap. 3. and 4. give the flesh of wild Mountain âowl Pigeons Hens Capons Mutton roasted and spiced and old wine and let her exercise Of the hot and dry distemper of the womb with Choler Do as in Chap. 5. purge the Choler whetheâ it be from the whole body or from the Liver with syrup of Roses Manna Tamarinds Rhubarb Senna c. Chap. 7. Of the ill shape of the womb and first of the straitness of it and its vessels THis is a disease of evil conformation from nature when it can be stretched out no further this makes an abortion in the fourth or fifth month But it is wonderful in its natural shape when it wil stretch according to the proportion of the child and after childbearing be as small as aâ first Of straitness of the vessels of the Womb. This is usual and hinders the flux of the terms and conception it is in the vessels of the womb and of the neck thereof Are thick tough humors that stop the mouthâ of the veins and arteries these are bred of groââ or much nourishment when the heat of thâ womb is so weak that it cannot attenuate the humors these either âlow from the whole body oâ are gathered in the womb Somtimes vessels are closed by inflammatioâ or Sâirrhus oâ other tumor 3. They are stopt by astringenâ Medicines 4. By compression 5. From a Scar or flesh or a membrane that gâows after a wound Stoppage of the terms shews straitness which hiâders conception and this stoppage is known by crudities abounding in the body which are known by their signs Sometimes thick flegm comes from the womb if there was a wound before or the Secundine was pulled out by force Stoppage of terms from an old obstruction by humors is hard to be cured if it be from disorderly use of astringents it is more curable if it be from a Scirrhus or other tumor that compresseth or closeth the vessels that cannot be cured the disease is incurable Obstructions are taken away by the means mentioned in the cold and moist Distemper of the Womb âleâm must be purged and she must be let blood as in stoppage of the terms After Universals come to the obstruction with Medicines that move the terms these take away the cause as in the Chapter of the cold distemper of the Womb. Or Take Asparagus roots Parsley roots each an ounce Madder roots half an ounce red Pease half a handful Pennyroyal Calamints each a handful Wall-flowers Dill flowers each two pugils boyl strain and add syrup of Mugwort an ounce and half Or Take Birthwort and white Dittany roots âach ân ounce Cosâus Cinnamon Galangal each half ân ounce Rosemary Pânnyroyal Calamints Bâtâony âââwers each a handful Anise and Fennelâeââ each a dram Saffron half a dram with âiâe Oâ use Topiâks as Take Mugwort Marâoram Calamints Mercury Pennyroyal each twâ handâuls Sâge Râsemary Bays âhamomil flowers eaâh a handââl boyl them in water fomenâ the groyns and the bottom of thâ belly or let her âit in a Bath up to the navel and then anoint about the groyns with Oyl of Rue Lillies Dill c. Or use Pessaries and Fumes mentioned If straitness be from other diseases cure them first Chap. 8. Of the opening of the Vessels of the Womb besides Nature THis is when there is great bleeding The vessels are opened preternaturally three waies by Anastomosis Diaeresis and by Diapedesis as in the lungs Anastomosis is from much blood which the liver doth produce and send out by the womb as in some by the nose For the blood being thin hot cholerick and sharp opens the mouths of the vessels and causeth a flux Diaeresis is from much blood when there is great motion as when there is long copulation with a strong man that hath a great tool or a hard travel or abortion a âall or stroke also when sharp humors corrode or sharp pessaries Diapedâsis is from the thinness of the vessels and loosness and the thinness of the blood or from much moisture or use of Baths Mâch blood is a âign the vessels are open you shall know the causes that open them thus In Anastomosis the blood drops and is thân and there are signs of much blood or sharp and thin If there be a Diâerâsis the blood flows more and there are cloddeâs and there were causes that broke the vessels as sharp Suppositories Diapedesis is known when the woman is of a thin and loose habit of body the blood thin or she hath used âuch bathing If the vessels open from much blood in a sound body there is less danger and it is easier cured then in a Cacoâhymy In an Aâasiomosis give things that thicken without slime as Roses Mirtles Medlars Services Pomegranate peels and flâwers Sanders âoral Harts horn Cypress-nuâs In Diaeresis give things that thicken with slime ' as Comfrey Plantane Gum Traganth whites of Eggs Troches of Amber Bole Starch Rice Quinces Sanguis Draconis Sarcocol and Izing glass But because there are divers causes and these diseâes are not cured but by taking them away â we shall speak of them in the Chapter of immoderate Terms Chap. 9. Of a double Womb the wanting of a Womb and evil shape of the Womb and strange things found in it Julius Obsequens saiâs that one woman had two wâmbs and ãâã saith that a Maid had her womb in two parts as in Bitches Câlâmbus saith that one wanted a womb but âeâ privities were as in other women and part âf the neck of it hung out Worms in the Womb. Hippocrates writes that worms are found in the womb And Gynaecea writes it is a sign thaâ Nature is wanton c. And John de Tornamira writes that he saw a Woman that had an intollerable itching in her womb from the Ascarides he gave a Womb clyster of the Decoction of Wormwood and Hiera and
she voided many small worms and was cured An Addition * Wheresoever foul humors stop in any part it is no wonder if it breed worms if other things agree which are required for the breeding of thâm Fat and hair found in a Womb. William Fabricius mentions that in a dead woman the womb was taken out and it weighed eighty seven pounds and was full of divers humors in the middle there were hairs like yellow wool An Addition * This was by Magick or a humor lay there fit to breed this strange matter by preternatural heat Stones bred in the Womb. Mercurialis doubts of stones being bred in itâ but thinks it is clotted blood like stones But it cannot be denied which many worthy Authors write First Hippâcraâes wâitâs that a Woman of sixty after noon alwaâes was painâd as one in travel after she had eaten many leeks she had one âit worse then the rest and she arose and found somthing rough in the orifice of her womb and she fainted and another woman tâââst in her hand and took out a great stone and the woman recovered Eâius also saith Hard stones are bred in the womb sâmtimes c. Niâolas Floreâtine and Marââlâus Donatus say the same Chap. 10. Of the magnitude of the Womb increased and first of the inflation of the Womb. INâlation is a stretching of the womb with wind it called by some a windy Mole See Mathew de gradibus And Thadeus Dun lib. misâel c. 8. This wind is from a cold matter either thick or thin contained in the veins of the womb which overcomâs the weak heat of the womb it is gatherâd there by cold meats and drinks or flows from other parts Cold air may be the cause also if women that lie in expose themselves to it This wind is contained either in the cavity of the vessels of the womb or between the tuniclââ There is a swelling in the region of the womb somtimes reaching to the navel loyns and Diaphragma as wind increaseth or decreaseth it aâiseth or abateth it is different from a Dropsie because it is never ââollen so high And least a Phyâitian be deceived and take it for a conception observe the signs of women with child for if one sign be wanting you may suspect an inâlation also in inâlation the tumor inâreaseth and decreaseth but in conception it still increaseth Moreover if you strike upon ãâã belly there is a noise but not in conception It differs from a dropsie in the womb for theâ is not such heaviness they move more easily arâ the belly is not so swelled there were causes thââ bred wind and things against wind do good It differs from a mole for there is in that ãâã weight and hardness in the belly and when theâ move from one side to aâother they feel a weiââ that moveth which is not in this of which Hippocrates The feet and the face swells in the hoâlow parts the âolor is bad the terms stopt theââ is short wind c. If âhe wind is without the cavity of the wombâ there is more pain and larger nor is there a noiââ because the wind is in a straighter place It is neither a lasting nor a deadly disease iâ well loâkâ after if it be in the cavity of the womb it is eaâier discussed Give Hiera Diaphoenicon with a little Castorâ sharp Clysters that also expel wind if it bâ in travel purge not till she be delivered Bleed not because it is from a cold matter iâ it come after childbearing and the terms were not sufficient after and there is fulness of blood open the Saphena After these give things mentioned in Tympany that respect the womb As Take Conserââ of Bettony Rosâmary each an ounce and half candied Eryngus Câtron pââls candied ââch half ãâã ouâcâ Diââyminum âDiagalangal âaâh a dââm Oyl oâ Anisâeds six dââps with Syrup of Citrons maâe an Elâcââary Or Take Conserve of Rosâmary âalm each three ounââs candied Citâons and Oranges each an ounce Diacyminum a dramâ with Syrup oâ Citrâââ make an Elâcâuâry Or give the Womans Aqua vitae or this Take Angelica roots two ounces Masterwort Elicampane Orange peels each six drams Calamints Pennyroyal Râe Sage Rosâmary each a handful Cummin Fennel Aniseed each half an ounce Juniper berries a handful Zedâary âalangal Cubebs each half an ounce with good wine distit them give a spoonful or two Apply outwardly a Cataplasm oâ Râeâ Mugwort ãâã Dill Calamints Nip Pennârâyal ãâã with Oyl of Rueâ Cheir Chamoâil aâd make Baâhs of the same and baggs of Milium Sâltâ Chamomil âââwers Melilot Bayberriâs Cumâân Fennel seed or lay on a Plaister of Bayberries Let âlâsters to expel wind be put into the womâ Asâ Take Calamints Agnus castus Rue each hâlâ a handful Aniseeds Costus Cinnamon each two drams boyl them in wine for hâlf a pinâ Apply a Cupping-glass with much flame to the breast and over against the womb Use Sulphur-baths and Spaw-waters inward and outward for they expel wind If it come from cold after childbearing and she is not well purged by her terms heat the womb and purge and give strong wine Let the diet be hot cutting and attenuating with things that expel wind and little at a time Questionâ Whether the wind is in the cavityâ when there is inââation of the Womb It is so by experience though some deny it nor is there any cause why wind should not bâ bred in the womb as well as in any other part both by reason of the excrements that come thither and the natural heat that turns them into wind these also stretch the womb though it be thick as in dropsies and conception also the retentive and altering faculty of the womb is never idlâ so that when it receives diseased and unâruitful âeed it suffers it not to corrupt but turns it into wind As Hippocrates writes When the wââb is streââhed by wind from the belly women thiâk they havâ conceived Chap. 11. Of the Dropsie of the Womb. THey are also deceived and think they are with child when there is water that swelâ the womb this is a Dâopsie of the womb This water is either in the cavity oâ between the coâts of thâ womb oâ in its vessels ââsalius Marcellus Donatus shew that water is in the cavity for it doth not preâently by its plenty or quality force its passage out because the oriâice is not alwaies open and Nature gathers it by degrees and is used to it Aâtius âaies There are somtimes bladders of water in the womb And Christopher Vega âaith that Leonora thought that she had gone six months and then voided sixty bladders of water and seven pieces of âlesh like that of the sâleen in membranes There is sometimes a Dropsie of the womb wiâh conception as Schenkiâs and William Fabriâius âaith of his own Wiâe Aâe gathering of water from moistness mixed with the târmâ
and from an evil sangâifiâation in the liver and ââleen fâom âhâir weakness oâ fâom errors in diet or from weakness of the womb from hard travel or often mischances cold air or water or whatsoever hurts the heaâ of the womb Also stoppage of the terms doth cause gathering of water for the water useth to be evacuated with them Many take this for the only cause Somtimes the tunicles of the womb may be divided in some place and water may be gathered between them Hippocrates saith The terms are âewer and cease before the time the bottom of the belly swells and the papps are soât without milk and she thinks she is with child by these you may know it is a Dropsie But because Doctors and Midwives are often deceived you must distinguish this from other swellings When a woman is sound and useth a sound man the womb by degrees swells and the child moves in its time but often there is a Dropsiâ with conception before or after therefore in a Dropsie the tumor is equal according to the largeness of the womb and âelly and noâ pointed as in a woman with child Secondly iâ the woman be in years and hath not conceived before and hath a good colour it is a sign of a Dropsie rather then conception If the tenth month be past and the child moves not nor the breasts swell but are soft say there is a Dâopsie of the womb Thirdly in a true conception women are bâtter after some months and the Symptoms abate but in a Dropsie they increase still It is distinguished from a mole by the weight in the bottom of the belly From an inflationâ because the belly is stâetched in that and sounds being striken but is soât in a Dropsie It differs from the Dropsie of the belly because the face is pale or wane in that from the distemper of the liver there is thirst but in the won bâdropsie she is of a good colour except the liver be also bad It differs from inflammation of the womb for that is âith a constant feaver and the Symptoms oâ it and ârom other tumors which are harder but in a Dâopsie of the womb if the belly be preââedâ it yiâldâ You shal know whether it be from the fault in the woâb ârincipally or ââom some other part thus Iâ tâe woman be of a good colour and there were onely some diseases and causes that might hurt the wombâ as abortion hard travel stoppage of terms or too many of them then the womb is chiefly affected but if there be signs of a distemâer in the whole body or in the liver or spleen aâd the colour is bad it is by consent from other parts You shall knâw whether the water be in bladdeâs or in the cavity of the womb thus If you find the oriâice oâ the womb closed and there is little pain it is in the cavity but if the oriâice be open and there is great pain it is in bladders or without the cavâây If the humor in the womb be not corrupt this disease is of long continuance but may be easily cured it is eaâier cured in the cavity then when it is in bladders and between the âunicles A woman after conception having a Dropsie of the womb her child diâth and she is in danger When it is froâ stâppage of terms and new and the stâength âirm open a vein in the legs otherwise bleed not Purge according to the humor with respect to the womb as in Chap. 6. of a cold Distemper Then purge Water Take Angelica and Madder roots each half ân ounce Calamintsâ Penny-royal Mugwort Lovage eâch a handful Savin a pugil boyl them in wine sweeten it with Sugar Or make Broaths with the same Take Dianisum Diagalangal each half a dram Oyl of Aniseeds Cloves each five drops Sugar three ounces make Rouls Inject into the Womb as in Dropsies Take Asarum roots târee drams Pennyroyal Calamints eaâh halâ a handful Savin a pugil Mechoacan a dâam Aniseed Cummin each half a dram boyl taâe six ounces strained Oyl of Elder and Orris each an ounce make a Clyster Or use Peââaries Take Agarick a dram Coloquintida half a dram Gniâium ten grains with Honey and Wool make a Peââary Make Fomentations and Baths of Danewort Me cury Elder Pennyroyal Organ Chamomil-flowers Baâberries wild Cowcumbers Broom Carrot Rue seeds And anoint after with Oyl of Elder Danewort Orris with drops of Oyl of Angâlica Anise Caraway Sâlphur Baths are good and those of Niter oâ the Plaister of Bayberries or Snails to the bottâm of the belly Vomiting and neesing break the bladders Give Clysters at the fundament as in Dropsies Take Mercury leaves Danewort Soldanella Mugwortâ Motherwort each a handful Chamomil Elder Broom flowârs each a dram boyl and to ten ounces strained add juyce of Beets Mercury Danewort ea h six drams Boys urine an ounce and half Hiera six drams Honey half an ounce make a Clyster Let the Diet be drying as in Chap. 5. Chap. 12. Of a Tumor in the Womb from blood in its Veins THis disease makes Women think they are with child also for blood long detained in the vâins about the womb stretcheth them outwardly and twisteth them and the veins in the substance of the womb are ful and stretched and make it larger but when the terms flow it falleth again except there be a Cachexy or Dropsie This is onely from stoppage of terms and is cured by provoking them Chap. 13. Of Inflammation of the Womb. IF the blood that comes to the womb get out of the vessels into its substance and grow hot and putresie it causeth inflammation either all over or in paât before or behind above or below on the right or left side Blood is the immediate Cause which is pure or mixed therefore the inflammation is either an Erysipelas Oedema or Scirrhus as flegm melancholy or blood abound Blood is either sent to or drawn by the womb by heat or painâ it is sent to it when it aboundeth or is hot or thin and when the blood is moved by hot air exercise passions as anger or hot diet There is a tumor with heat and pain in the râgion of the womb with stretching and heaviness in the privities and if you put in your âinger you 'l feel the heat and the more pain there is a feaver somtimes called Lipyria when there is cold without and heat within The tongue is dry and blâck with watching doting toââing to and fro the breasts are pufft up and pained There is headach to the roots of the eyes and a pain in the groyns hips midrif pleura and shoulders short wind and like a Pleurisie with loathing vomitinâ hickets The belly is bound the pulse is small and often and weak but at first darting and quick And Hippocrates âaith If the womb be inâlamed the terms are stopt and the neck of it is liââ a Spiderâ web with many small veinâ c. Iâ
the body and it could not form the child ãâã would Nature make milk of it Therefore menstrual blood onely offends quantity and not in any maniâeât or hidden qâlity But it hath strange qualities when it is ãâã with bad humors or is kept too long in body to be corrupted and cause great Syâtoms but this is when it is mixââ with bad mors or is out of its vessels and so corrupts Question 3. Of the âext of Aristotle 7. de hist Animalium câpââ and how it is to be understâod Aristotle writes thus Constantly every month âome have their Terms but most in the third as âf he should say Few women have their courses âvery month but many have them every third âonth This is against Galen and against expeâience for it is certain that among six hundred women scarce one hath them every third month Therefore there is either an errour in the Greek Text or in the Translation or great Men do often ãâã which is probable and so did Arist tle in this of Physick Therefore it is in vain to defend their ârrour Chap. 2. Of the Terms flowing too soon ORdinarily they begin at fourteen but many have had them sooner A child of eleâen daies old had a bloody humor flowing from ãâã privities Another of five years old had eveây month a moderate flux Fernel reports that Girl of eight years old had the Terms but these ãâã rare and for the most part very lecherous ãâã short lived Chap. 3. Of want and stopping of the Terms SOme Women have them not till eighteen or twenty Some before and then they stop for a time without either giving suck or being with child Some have been without them three five or seven months and then they came agaiâ This is an evil constitution or suppression of thââ which it ought to flow from the fault of the blood and stoppage of the passages When Terms are wanting either blood is wanting oâ stopt It is wanting either beâause it iâ not made or dispersed or turned to other useâ for nature being more sollicitoâs to preserve the individual person then to propagate the speciâs spends ãâã in preserving of the person Blood is not made from divers causes as aâe cold constitution of âiver Heart or a disease which distempers the ââwels Or often bleeding from great vessels or ââom having many issues which take from the blood It is spent other waies as before ripe age anâ when women are with child or give suck or iâ hot Natures and fat women in whom it is tuâned to fat It is in vain to provoke Terms iâ these There are other external evident causes of sâââping of the Terms as too great labour troubleââadness fear but these last do not only wast ãâã blood but cool and corrupt it and cause obsââctions as Hippocrates speaks of Phatusa the ãâã of Pytheus The proper causes are the straitness of ãâã passages or evil conformation of the ãâã through which it should slow Or the closinâ the womb of which we spake but I speak ãâã of the veâsels The usual cause of obsââuction is thick ãâã humors fâom the blood too thiâk or mixed ãâã melancholy which comes with it to the veiââ the womb and stops them This thick blood comes from a cold distemper of the stomach liver and spleen from thick and gross food and drinking cold water when the Terms flow So thought Galen in his time of the Roman women that drank Snow-waterâ and had few or no coursesâ Straitness is when the body of the womb is made thicker either by Nature or other causes as a cold and dry or hot and dry disteâper Thirdly straitness is from compression of the vessels by a Scirrhus or hardness of the parts adjacent as the straight gut or by the stone in the bladder and the womb displaced Fourthly the flesh may grow together by a membrane that grows to the vessels or a ââar after a wound Or after a mischance when the veins annexed to the Secundine grow so together that they cannot be opened of which in the first Question They are not the same in women and Virgins for blood stopt in Virgins goes to and âro changeth the colour and brings Feavers especially the white Feaver or Green-sickness But in women it goes more to the womb and brings Symptomes as loathing vomiting and Pica Galen hath other signs as heaviness a lazy pain in the loyns neck and behind in the head that reacheth to the roots of the eyes from the spâeading of the blood stopt through the whole body This laziness is chieâly in the thighs and leggs by reason of the veins there consenting with the womb And are of a green complexion and hairy with a beard and shrill voice You may know women with child from such aâ want their Terms only by pââper signs First the women with child keep their colour but the other are pale and ill-câloured they are merry the other sad 2. Their Symptoms daily grow milder but in the other they daily grow worse 3. You may feel the child move 4. It is perceived in a month You shall know from what causes the Terms are stopt thus If the Liver be cold there is no blood made that is superfluous and there are signs of a âold Liver and you may know that blood is not sent to the womb when there is no heaviness pain or tumor about the womb the liver or spleen are stopt If it be ârom flegm or melancholy which is oâten there are signs of their abounding as lazâness paleness seldom pulse crude urin Hippocrates saith That if the Terms stop therâ are diseases in the womb tumors imposthumes ulcers and barrenness and diseases in the whole body Green-sickness Leucophlegmacy Dropsie Vomiting of blood Heart-ach Cough And the longer they have been stopt the haâder they are to be opened If the blood stopâ go out at the nose it is good If it have great Symptomes there is fear of death You must not give Medicines to move the Terms to extenuate lean persons nor to such as want blood and have a weak Liver but they must be sed high First see iâ bloâd abound and then aâter a Leniâive open a veinâ and lât that blood which is in the veins be drawn to the womb Galââ took thâee âints of blood at three times fâom ãâã leân womân and cured her of an old stopping ãâã the Terms You must open the ankle veinâ the firât day the right the next the left four or five daies before the time Or you may cup and ââariâie the Leggs And bind the parts below and rub them after general evacuation opening of the Haemorrhoids doth hurt and so do Issues because they draw from the womb Hiera picra halâ an ounce or Pills de Tâibus oâ Hiera simple are good first Then prepare as Take water of Mugwort ãâã Maidenhair âaâh three âuâces Syrup oââhe five Roots and of Mugwort each two ounces maâe
with little inconvenience bââ it must be looked to lest it be worse for it oââââ brings ulcers Cachexy falling out of the womâ Consumption Fainting Convulsions when the matter is sent to the brain or nerves And the worse the humor is the greater is the disease It must not be suddenly stopt lest it go to thâ noble parts First see whether it be from the whole body or any paât or from the womb it self If froâ the whole body which is often make general evacuation and turn the humors from the womo and keep a good diet lest they come again I allow not bleeding in the arm if the Terms be stopt for they cause a Cacochymy which admits no bleeding Moreover the mass of blood may be made âoul by them therefore find oââ whether it comes from Cacochymy or Plethory And when it is most like to come from Cacochymy bleed not Therefore if flegm abound which is moââ usual after general purging consume the reliqueâ with Guajacum and Sarâa and a drying diet and by provoking urin of which hereafter If sharp and cholerick humors abound temper them with gentle astringents as Succory Endive Sorrel to prepare purge with Rhubatâ Triphera Perâica aggregative Pills and Pills ãâã Rhubarb If it be melancholy do as in melancholy If it be water cure it as Galen did the Wife oâ Boethâs c. 8. âib de prognost ad Pâsth If it be in the stomach liver or the like prevent it from increase and because it is most about the stomach give a Vomit but not too strong Then strengthen the stomach with hââ and dry Medicines If choler abound the distemper is hot and then cool it If it come from the womb do as I shewed fâom what cause soever it is Baths are good to ââacuate and divert and strengthen and take away a moist distemper provided they are proper for the constitution Use Dryers and Astringents As Take Consârâe of red Roses four ounces of Succory two ounces râd Coral Snakeweed Tormentil roots Ivory each ãâã dramsâ with Syrup of Mirtles make an Eleââuary Or Take red Coral Bole sealed Earth each an âunce Pearl prepared a sâruple Mastich half a dram Cypress roots two scruples Mace half a scriple with Sugar of Roses as much as all make a Pouder Or Take Diarrâodon a dram Sanderâ a âcrâple Câri'ander two drams Mastich Coral each a dram with Sugar make Troches But use not these Astringents till the body âe purged least the waterish humors be stopt and the belly swel but you may use hot Dryers safeây as Treaâle Mithridate with Conâerve of Roâes and Wormwood As Take Conserve of Rosemary flowers an ounce Diacorus two drams Diarrhodon Aromaâicum rââaâum each a dram red Coral prepared a dram and âalf Treacle two drams with Syrup of Citron peels ânal e an Electuary And least the womb be hurt with evil humors ânject the Dâcoction of Barley Honey of Roses ând Whey with Syrup of dried Roses Or of âormwood Mints Motherwort red Roses Alââm And then use a Fuâe of Fraâkincense ââbdanum Mastich Sanders Nutmeg red Roses Avoid crude and moist things and fish milâ and all sweet meats and âalt Forbear Suppeââ drink red Wine sleep and wake moderately ãâã not upon the back least the loyns be heated anâ the humors sent to the womb Question Whether are Diureticks good in the Whites Diureticks that provoke urin do also provokâ the terms therefore the reliques of the humoâs would be carried by them to the womb but these move the terms secondarily but if the body be well purged first they will not make the flux greater but bring it out by urin Chap. 13. Of a Gonorrhaea THe running of the Reins may be in all women that are fit for a man for it is the flux of natural seed It is in men and women from the French pox but when stinking humors do flow it is not properly called a Gonorrhaea The chief Cause is the weakness of the retentive faculty and the loosness and largeness of the seed-vessels the causes of these are shewed in the Gonorrhaea of men The women will declare it and the greatness and the colour for if it be white and little and thick and at distance it is a true Gonorrhaea If it continue it brings a Consumption and barrenness The Cure of Gonorrhaea and night pollution is Pâact 3. but I shall add this if it come from plenty of seed The Buds of the Salix oâ Willow ãâ¦ã called the Closing of the Womb. ãâ¦ã famous Physitians and Anatomists say ãâ¦ã is a Hymen which is the sign of Virginity ãâ¦ã they say a membrane wrinkled with ãâ¦ã like Miâtleberries like the bud of a Rose half ãâ¦ã hence came the word ãâã I think with the Ancients that ãâã is something in these parts that distinguisââân Virgins from women which is violated in the fiâââ copulâtion many say they have it and we may believe them For it is certain that âhâre is an alteration at first in Viâgins which causeth pain and bleeding which is a sign of Virginity But what this is it is not yet known maâiââââly Some say it is a nervous membrane with small veins which bleed at the first bout Some say there are âour Caruncles tied together with small membranes Some have observed a fleshy Circle about the Nymphae with obscure little veins which makes the membrane not to be nervous but fleshy To be short I suppose it to be certain that the part which receives the Yard is not in them that have used a man as in Virgins nor is it alike in all and this hath caused the diversity of opinions in Anatomists Moreover this is not found in all Virgins because some are very lustfulâ and when it itcheth they put in their finger oâ some other thing and break the membrane soâtimes the Midwives break it Question 2. Whether do all Virgins at the first bout or Copulation bleed The Africans had a custom to shut the Bride groom and the Bride up in a Chamber after they were married till they prepared the Wedding-dinner And an old woman stood at the door to receive a bloody sheet from the Bridegroom that she might shew it in triumph to all the guess and that then they might âeast with joy And if there was no blood to be seen the Bride was to be sent home âo her friends with disgrace and the guess went âadly home without their Dinners Some say from experience that some honest Virgins have lost their Maiden-heads without bleeding and that it is a certain sign of Virginity when they bleed and when they do not they arâ not to be censured as unchast I hold that young Virgins will bleed but when they are in years by reason of the long continuance of the terms the parts are harder and larger and if the mans Yard be small there is no necessity of bleeding Or if the girl was wanton asore and by long handling hath dilated the part
the orgâns of sense and motion with the liver spleen stomach belly mesentery bladder strait âut back hips arms and legs and causeth symâtoms As Galen âaith the mother or hysterical ââââion is one name but hath under it innumeââble Symptoms Chap. 4. Of Suffocation of the Womb. IN this they seem to be strangled And there are so many Symptoms at once that it is impossible to define it by one Sometimes there is only short breath sometimes the animal actions are hurt the whole body is cold from a malignant vapor sent up from the womb The immediate Cause is a vapor malignant and venemous sent up by the arteries veins and nerves that hurt the actions of the parts it goes to This vapor is like air or wind thin and little but very strong to get presently through the whole body it chieâly ascends to the gullet and causeth choaking as eating of Mushrooms Hellebore and other poysons There is often short difficult breathing with heart-ach vomiting and loathing If the vapor go first to the heart the motion of it ceaseth and there is swounding and she falls down If it go to the brain the animal actions are hurt When âeed and terms corrupt in the womb with other bad humors they breed this evil vapor because they are the best substance and the beginning of generation they are worst when corrupted especially seed to hurt the whole body Somtimes it is in women with child when they have not their after puâging but evil humors aâe leât and corrupt in the womb The chief cause of this humor is in the trumpet of the womb and stones the body of which is hollow and loose the stones being in bladders and have hollowness full of water which in hystârical women is yellow and thicker then ordinary This trumpet and the stones are often taken for the womb it selfâ when they are swollen with corrupt seed and humors and wind and reach to the navel of which in the Chapter of ascent of the Womb. This disease is breeding sooner or longer as the matter is more or less somtimes corrupt humoâs lie still and if they be stirred they send a venom or vapor to the whole body now in women subject to this disease sweet sâents to the nose or taken in or anger will move these huhumors and vapors They are according to the variety of the symptoms and efficient cause or venemous humors for corrupt blood especially seed puts on another Nature That Suffocation is at hand it appears by laziness weakness of the legs paleness sad countenance and the motion of somthing like a ball in the belly with noise like Froggs Snakes or Crows so that some think it devillish There is also belching yawning yexing short wind heart-beating loathing dulness laughture at the coming of the fit ârom the vapor gâtting into the membrâne of the breast that tickle them some cry some both laugh and cry These Symptoms increase when the fit comes and the jaws are closed that she seems to be choaked and sense and motion is gone or depraved Some have Convulsions some hâar what is done about them but cannot speak the âulâe iâ less the whole body is cold and the eyes ãâã as if they were dead When the âit declines humors sâow from the ârivââiâs the guâs rumble the eyes open the cheeks grow red and the body warm the animal actions return and the patient sighs and comes to her self It is known to be from corrupt seed if the terms are in order and short breath and low voice Suffocation and Convulsions and all Symptomes are then more vehement and at the end of the fit there flows a humor like seed out of the privities It is from the terms if they be stopt or flow not orderly and if there be a disâase in the womb it is neither from the seed noâ the terms 1. If there come swounding or a great Convulsion or quenching of natural heat it is deadly 2. Suffocation from corrupt seed is more dangerous then that which is from the terms mixt with melancholick humors 3. The longer it lasts and the worse the symptoms the more is the danger It ceaseth in yong women when they begin to bear children 4. The oftner the fit comes the more you may âear the quenching of the natural heat by weakning of the heart often and if she foam at the mouth she dies The Cure of the Fit In the fit you must discuss the malignant vapors that riseth from the womb and turn it fâom the principal parts and you must evacuate the matter that breeds it and prevent its return Cal upon her loud pluck the hairs of her privities and ears make strong Ligatures and Frictions cup the legs and thighs and gâoyns hold stinks to the nose as Partridg-feathers burnt hairs Leather Horn Castor Assa foetida Galbanum oyl of Amber Rue the warts on Horses legs dried and the pouder upon coals burnt makes a âume which if taken in the nose suddenly raised them Apply sweet Scenâs to the priviâies as Civeâ Musk Gallia and Alâpta mosâhata or pouder of Cloves Or Take Storax calamita Benzoin each a dram Gallia moschata half a sâruple make Troâhes with Gum Trâganth and let the Fume be taken into the womb by a Funnel A Liniment Take Storax Benzoin each a dram Gallia moschata half a scruple Civet four grains liquid Storax half a scruple with Cotton put it into the womb Clysters to discuss wind draw down the matter Take the Carminative Dâcoction a pint Electuary of Hiera six drams Benedicta laxativa an âââce Oyl of Rue and Bayberriâs each a dram Use Womb-clysters and Pessaries to women that have known man Take Electuary of Hiera and Diaphaenicon each two drams Turpentine half an ounce Honey of Mercury an âunce Castor halâ a dram ââth Wool make a Pessary Oyl of Tin applied to the navel doth remove the sit Or Rue Castor and sneesing Pouders As Take white Hellebore halâ a scruple long Pepper ând Ginger each half a dram or put Oyl of Amâââ into the Nose and Eârs Apply to the Womb this Take Oyl of Rue âaâs each two ounââs Cummin seed Câstâr dissolâââ in Vinâgar eâch two drams with Wax make a ãâã Or use a âlââsââr of ââlbânum Caâor and Aââa foetida A compound distilled Water Take Zedoary ââsmp sââds Lovage âââts each two ounââs Mirrh Castor each half an oânce Piony roots four ounâââ Misteto of the Oak gathered in the wain of the Moân three ounces ad water of Motherwort four pinâs anâ half Spirit of Wine a pint and half steep them eigââ daies distil and give a spoonful with Tile-flower or Mugwort water or Oyl of Amber some drops Or Take Castor Mirrh Assa faetida each a sâruplââ Pepper half a scruple with syrup of Mugwort mâlâ Pills give three The Cure out of the Fit First prevent the âeed from corrupting in the womb and if it be corrupt evacuate it presenâây
causes of ârrouâ ãâã Formation and imagination ââlps by ãâã up the appetite These are the common errors of formation Others are deteâminate errors not simply from the imagination by the pallions which have no determination to such a thing but no other cause can be besides the imagination but how she directs the forming faculty for the producing of such effects it is hard to be understood but there must be some imagination and the forming faculty that it may impart the species sent from the external senses to the forming faculty And this is the cause of the consent of the upper and lower faculties for the âoul is the same in the whole body and every where âitted with the same faculties but it doth not exercise all in all parts but by the proper determinate organs ââ instruments And though the child hath its âoul yet while it is in the womb it depends upon the âoul of the mother as the fruits partake of the life of the tree while they are upon it therefore it is probable that whatsoever moves the faculties of the âoul in the mother may move the same in the child Hence it is that while the forming operateth in the seed and womb of the mother if any species be sent to the imagination of the mother which she strongly receives it may make an impression upon the child yet every imagination cannot make this impression but that which makes a great admiration or terrour in the mother when the forming faculty is at work as when she beholds one with six fingers she brings forth the like or when shâ produâeth hair whââe it should noâ be or the lââeness of a beast in anâ limb or when she âeeth any thing cut or divided with a Cleaver she brinâs âorth a divided part oâ a Hare-lip Chap. 8. Of a Child turned into Stone JOhn Albosius Doctor at Senon and Simâon Provânchâr of Lingo Physitian of Senon writ of of this in French and Latin I shall give my opinion with others Two things are to be observed in this wonderful history first why the Child in the time of traâail being dead in the womb did not stink as is usual or kill the mother suddenly or was not âast out by degrees being rotten secondly by what force the child was turn'd into Stone For the first The mother lived twenty eight years after she had this Child therefore it is not credible that the womb was so cold that it might hinder putreâaction as some think It seems more probable to me that these questions explanation depend upon one principle for the cause that made the stones hardness kept the child from putreâaction but what that is it is obsâure Many fly to the efficienây of the fiâst qualities others to driness others to coldness others to both I acknowledg heat cold and driness to be helping causes for bâeeding of Stones in mans body but the chief cause is a Stone breeding juyce or spirit of which I have spoken at large The principles of generation were weak in this child and impure and this stone-breeding âââce was mixed with the blood in the humors hence it is that it was not born alive as in a wole bred in the womb which women have âiâl they aâe old and die with it and yet it sâiââs ãâã no more then stones bred in most parts But there is but this History of such a Birth Chap. 9. Of a Mole IT is âlesh and a mass without bones or bowels gotten of an imperfect conception instead of a child The Latins cal it a Mole from the weight because it is troublesom to women as a Milstone in Latin called Lapis molaris Somtimes it is unshapen flesh without bones only ful of veins with a skin over it and nothing within but like the Parenchyma of the bowels Somtimes it is membranous and âibâous without shape Somtimes it is long round or like a quary of glass or like a brute beast Some have brought forth three Moles like mens yaâds Some are like congealed blood or the Placenta of the womb into which the navel-vessels are inserted some grow and are nourished and some have an obscure sense Somtimes they are sent out alone somtimes withâ or before the child of which there are many Histories Some bring âorth Monsters for Moles It is from the error of the forming âaculty but the Cause of that is obscure I suppose it is from both seeds when the forming faculty is weak and the seed little and not good and overcome by much blood and can make onely veins and membranes and not a whole child Somtimes ãâã is in Widdows onely from their own seed and blood A Mole is sooner bred when the blood is impuâe and unfit to nourish and is made when they copuââte in the flowing of the terms that are unclean It is âeither from heat nor cold principally but from the error of the forming faculty They are hard to be known before the fourth month then they are known by such as can distinguish between the motion of wind and a child â If a woman turn from side to side it âalls like a stone to that side she lies on and is heavy If it have any motion it is trembling and beating with constriction and dilatation like a Spunge If after the time that the child should move there be no motion and the belly swells and there is no sign of a Dropsie it is a sign of a Mole Thirdly in women with child there is milk about the fourth month but in a Mole the breasts swel but there is no true milk 4. They are more pained and faint and have more pain in their back and groyns If it be with a quick child it is hard to be known but it is known by its weight in the womb which she perceives when she gets up to walk or moves from side to side some are then strong and well coloured It hurts the womb and whole body if it be divided it is less dangerous when it is soft it is cast out the third or fourth month Somtimes it ulcerates or tears the womb and causeth great bleeding Some have been cast out or drawn out without danger some grow old with them in ând find no inconvenience but the weight To prevent take heed of Venery in the terms oâ before the terms or when the body is foul or ââstâucted or the womb When it is take it away presently with thinâs ââât âând foâth a dead child Hippoârates shewâth the âââe in few woâdââ First âoment the whole Therefore if she be plethoriâk let blood largely in the foot at divers times Then purge often with strong Physick Takâ Althaea Lilly roots each half an ounce Althaea Mercury Pellitory Brankârsine each a handful Chamomil Melilot flowers each half a handful Fâânugreek and Lineseed eâch six drams boyl them in Broath to a pint add sweet Butter Oyl of sweet Almonds Lillies each an
of many diseases First endeavor to evaeuate the blood from the womb by Frictions Ligatures and Cupping iâ they will not do open a vein in the foot Then open the passâges with external and internal meansâ anoint the Belly with loosning Oyls or soment thus Take Lilly roots Birthworts Briony Angelâca each half an ounce Mercury Mugwort Pennyroyal Savin Calamints each a handful Tansey Chamomil and Elder flâwers each half a handful Faenugreek and Linseed each two drams bruise them grosly and put them in a bag and boyl them in Water and Wine lay it to the privities and bottom of the belly Give emollient Clysters and if some daies are paââ purge with Agarick Rhubarb Senna Or Take Lilly roots Alâhaea each half an ounce Birthworts two drams Pellitory Mercuryâ Althiea each a handful Calamints Chamomil Elder floâers each two pugils Faenugreek and Lineseed each two drams boyl them to ten ounces strained âdd Oâl of Dill Lillies each an ounce Hiera simple half an ounce Oyntment of Sowbread three drams make a Clyster Or give Pessaries that provoke the Terms Give things to melt and attenuate the blood As Take opening Roots three drams Bettony Maidenhair Endive Schaenanth each two pugils Anise Fennel seed each a scruple red Pease a spoonful boyl them to a pint and half add Cinnaâon water two drams Syrup of the five Roots three âânces give four ounces Chap. 4. Of too great a flux of blood after Childbearing THat is too much which makes weak It is blood abounding which haââ been gâthered nine months in the womb It is thick or spends the Spirits and weakens There is loathing of meat pain the Hypochondria belly-ach weak and often pulse dark sight noise in the ears fainting and Convulsion It is dangerous when long and with fainting and Convulsion Therefore observe the pulse least she die suddenly See what strength she hath and stopt it not ââddenly Iâ it be not very gââat order a diet of âoasâed Hens basted with red Wine or Pomegraââe of Staâch Almonds Rice Quinces Conâââve of Roses steeled Water and make Revulââns use gentle things and strengthen the loose ââââges Anoint the belly with oyl of Roses Mirtles cup under âhe breasts and sides without scariâication Apply a Cataplasm of red Roses Bole and Rosâ-water to the Liver Then use stronger and give a higher diet oâten in small quantity and give Syrups to stop blood As Take old Conserve of Roses two ounces of Tormentil an ounce of Quinces without speciââ half an ounce Bole red Coral each half a dram with syrup of Currans and Coral make an Electuaây Anoint the belly with the Oyntment of the Countess and other Astringents or use astringent Fomentations or let her take into the womb a Fume of Mastich Frankincense red Roses c. Then open a vein in the arm and let blood by degrees See Sect. 2. Chap. 6. of overflowing of the Terms Chap. 5. Of the Pains after Travel and torments in the Belly THese are not in the body and bottome of the womb but in the vessels and membranes by which the womb hangs and that goes to the sides and belly They are from a constant labor in travel when the bottom of the womb is pricked to send forth from cold air let into it or clotted blood detained or sharp blood sticking to the womb and pricking it They are in the womb it self you mây know iâ they came from cold by what hath been done clotted blood will manifest it self They weâken much and are very troublâsom therefore they must be abated First take away the cause or abate the pain and make that which hurts the womb fit to be evacuated by these Pills Take Cinnamon a dram Saffron a scruple Diaâymini Diagalangal Zedoary each half a dram make a Pouder give a dram in Pennyroyal or Cinnamon water Or Take of Cummin seed steept in Spirit of wine and dried again a dram Ameos sâeds and Ginger each half a dram Cinnamon a scruple Castor half a scruple make a Pouder If she faint ad Cordial Waters As Take Diacyminum a dram Diamargariton frigid Citron peâls Zedoary each half â dram make a Pouder If she be cholerick or the humor thin and sharp cure it as a Colick from Choler As Take Syrup of Violets Borage each an ounce Mucilage of Quince seeds made with Violet water half an ounce water of Borage Scorzonera each two ounces give it at twice Extenuate the humors and loosen the passages outwardly Take Bean flour Faenugreek and Linseed each an ounce Chamomil flowers and Cummin seeds each half an ounce boyl them in Oyl of Lillies for a Cataplasm You may sume the womb with Decoctions of Herbs Chap. 6. Of the tearing of the Vulva to the Arse and coming forth of the Womb Inflammation Ulcer Suffocation and falling out of the Fundament THe tearing iâ in hard travel when the motheâ is tendeâ and the child great of which ââforââ The womb comes forth from the violent extraction of the child or afterbirth when the ligaments are streâched The Cure is mentioned but you must not hinder the after flux by astringents let her therefore rest and lie one her back with her âeet drawn up with Sweets to her nose and stinks to the womb so the womb will be retained and the flux continued after this is past you may use Astringents If there be inflammation from hard travel hinder not the afâer-flux of blood by Coolers If it turn to an ulcer let the after-flux flow and then cure it Suffocation after childbearing is from the ââinking after-blood which sends up stinking vapors which kill many It is cured by Friction of the leggs Ligatures and Cupping with Scarification applying stinks to the nose as Castor Partridgâeathers burnt Rue And applying Sweets to the privities You must cure the âalling out of the Fundament from straining in Delivery as formerly shewed Chap. 7. Of Watching Doting and Epilepsie of Women in Child-bed THese are from the motion of the blood aâd huâorsâ when the after-blood flows nât kindlyâ and there is a âeaver of which in ââe ãâã Book And from vapors sent from the ãâã there is an Epilepsie which is cured by Râvââsion oâ vapors and humors downwaâdâ and âââfect Evacuation of the aâter-blood which done all these Symptoms cease Chap. 8. Of the Swelling of the Womb Belly and Feet after Childbearing IT is commonly from cold gottân into the womb and the belly sometimes swells as if there were another child It is cured by hysterical or mother Fomentations or with the skin of a new âlain sheep and hard wine if in travel they keep a bad diet or drink too much the humors go into wind and if they fall into the legs they swel then take heed of much drink and after the flux is past make Evacuation with things that expel wind As Take Câleworts and Chamomil each as you please boyl them in Wine and âomeât the parts Or Take
and dry distemper in the breasts that burns up the thin blood Give flesh of good juyce and easie concoction as Chickens Kid Veal abstain from gross food use moistners and attenuaters and if there be thick humors with the blood let them be evacuated Of the sharpness ill tast scent and colour of the Milk There are divers tasts scents and colours in milk from variety of diet Therefore let a Nurse take heed of fryed Onions and all four salt and spiced meats and let her eat Sallets and Rhadishes and the like Let her not be passionate Milk also is somtimes falt sharp cholerick and mâlancholick This breeds dangerous diseases as wringing in the belly flux watching leanness trush and falling-siâkness Correct the blood and keep a good diet beware of things that corrupt the milk as sharp âalt things avoid anger and other passions and Venery Good Wine moderately taken by such as have used it takes away the ill scent from milk If these will not do purge the Cacochymy or evil âuyces with Medicines proper for the humors offending Chap. 4. Of the Diet and Government of new-born Children THe best colour in a new-born child is redness all over the body that changeth by degrees to a Rose-colour they who are white are sââkly and short lived It must cry clear and loud which shews the strength of the breast Observe all the parts and âigure and passages diligently let the Midwise handle it gently Roul it up with soft cloaths and lay it in a cradle and wash it first with warm wine give it a little honey before it sucks or a little Oyl of sweet Almonds newly drawn that if there be any filth contracted in the stomach from the womb it may be clensed for there is a black matter yellowish in the guts which if not voided will cause an Epilepsie Keep it from cold air and not too hot nor in too great light set not a candle behind it at the head nor let it see the Sunâ least it be squint-ey'd Let it not be frighted nor left alone sleeping or waking least it receive hurt Let it sleep long carried in the arms often and give it the dug but âill not too much his stomach with milk After four months âoosân the arms but not the belly and breast and âeet but keep them rouled from cold above a year Let it be often clensed from the excrements of the belly and bladder least they cause itching oâ pain or excoriation A little crying empties the brain and ãâã the lungs and stiâs up naturâl ãâ¦ã it not cry too much for to prevent Catarrhs and Rupturesâ but it doâh least hurtâ befoâe sucking and aâteââoncoâtion Thââiâst months let it only suck as often as it will âo the stomach be not over âharged Give it change of breasts somtimes the right somtimes the leât Afterwards make Pap of Barley bread ââeâpt in water and boyled in Milk Let strong children have it bâtimes and not suck an houâ after thus it must be nourisht til it breeds teeth Chap. 5. Of the Diet of an Infant from breeding of Teeth til it be weaned WHen the teeth come forth by degrees give it more solid food and deny it âot milk such as are easily chewed When it is stâonger let it not stand too soon but be held by the Nurse or put into a go-chair that it may thrust foâward it self and not fall In plaâes where bathing of children is used ãâã it be washâd twice a week fâom the seventh âânth till it be weâned Chap. 6. Of Weaning of Children Wâân it nât till the teeth are bred lâât when ãâ¦ã âââth it ââuse feavers and ãâ¦ã ând âther Symptoms The ãâã châld ân muât be sooner weanâd ãâ¦ã somâ in the twelââh some in the ãâ¦ã Iâ is good to âean them aâ a year and half or two years old but give it not suddenly strange food but bring it to it by degrees while it sucks It is best to wean in the Spring or Fall in the increase of the Moon and give but very little Wine Chap. 7. Of Childrens Diet after Weaning FOr seven years the diet must be such as nourisheth and causeth growth for Hippocrates âaith They cannot endure to fast especially if they be witty Keep them from passions sorrow and fear and cocker them not but keep them to reason Let them play to temper the affection but so as not to hurt the body THE SECOND PART Of Diseases and Symptoms of Children Chap. 1. Of Infants Diseases in General HIPPOCRATES divides their diseases according to their ageâ In new born children there are alcers in the mouth vomiting coughs watchings fears inflammation of the navel âoistness of ears At breeding of teeth the gums itch and there are Feavers and Convulsions and a loose belly when they breed the eye-teeth When they are older the Tonâââs art inflamed the Vertebâe in the neck are luâaâed inwardly they breath short they have the stone or round worms or Asâarides Warts Satyrism or âtanding Yards Strangury Struma's and other Swâllings They have other diseases at other times as Meaâles small Pox the ligament of the âongue âs tooshort âhasing In the Cure use not strong Remedies nor bleeding not purging but Suppositories and Clysters As Take Violet leaves Mallows each a handful flowers of Chamomil and Violets each a pugil boyl them to four or five ounces strained ad Syrup of Roses half an ounce or six drams Oyl of Violets half an ounce make a Clyster If it need other Physick give it to the Nurse for the purging âorce is sent to the milk as Hippocrates âaith If a Woman take Elaterium or wild Cowcumbers the Child is purged but you must not give these to the Nurse but gentle things will purge the inâant if the Nurse take them Chap. 2. Of Feavers in Children Meazles and small Pox. THey aâe subject to all sorts of Feavers but they have chiefly a Feaver from milk which putriâies and turns to choler and inflames the humors And when the teeth break forth the gums are inflamed they have watching and itching pâin in the mouth and then feavers When feavers come from corrupt milk they expel no teeth and there are signs of corrupt milkâ bellyach many stools yellow and green A âeaver from breeding of teeth hath its proper sigâs These feavers cease when the cause is removed but if corrupt milk last long it is dangerous A âeaver from corrupt milk is commonly from choler therefore give cold moist things to the Nurse as Lettice Endive Emulsions of the four gâeat cold Seeds Barley cream Give no Wine while the child is in a feaver Purge the Nurse gently with Manna Cassia Lenitive Electuary and Syrup of Roses Give Alterers to the insant as Syrup of Violâts Sorrel Citrons Succory Endive water and of Vâolet with Sugar Anoint the Back-bone with Mucilage of Quinââs âleabane with Oyl of Violets and a little Wax lay Astringents to the Stomach As Take
neither heat nor rednessâ and it lasts longer then an inflammation If the navel was not wel cuâ there wil be too great a quantity if the Peritonaeum be not broken but loose the navel starts not much out and is not greater by crying if it be broken the tuâor scarce appears when he lies upon his back but it increaseth by crying or walking If the Midwiâe did not cut the navel wel it is more troublesom then dangerous If it be too large or ulcerated at first it is easily cured but afterwards it may cause a deadly iliaâk passion when the guts that fall in are inflamed When the Peritonaeum is loose wind stretcheth the navel then use a Cataplasm of Cummin Bayberries and Lupines poudered in âed Wine or a Bag of Cummin and Spike boyled iâ red Wine Then lay on an astringent and roul it If the Peritonaeum be broken first put in the gut then bind it close after you have laid on astringent Pouders Or Take pouder of âypressnuts Frankincensâ Miââlâ Mastich Sarcocol Allâm ââinglass each a drâm with the whites of Egs make a Pultis and give Mediâines against Ruptures Chap. 26. Of Inflammation of the Navel IT is from pain when it is hot well tied that draws blood to it There is redness hardness heat and beating If it turns to an impoâtâumâ and breaks the guâs come forth and the child usually dies First abate pain Take Maââows boyled and stampt two ounces Barley meal half an ounce Lupines Fenâgreeââ eaâh two dramââ with Oyl oâ Roseâââke a Cataplasm To repel Blood Takâ Fraâkincense a dram Acacia Fleabanâ seed eâch half a dram with the white of an Eg makâ a Cataplasm ãâã Suppuration as much as may be but iâ it doth suppurate Take Turpentiâe half an ounce the yolâ of an Egâ and Oyl of Roses two ounces Chap. 27. Of Falling out of the Fundament VVHen the muscle thaââhuts the Arsâ-holâ is loose the fundament comes fârth the cause is moisture of the muscles afteâ a flux or straining at stool in Tenesmus or Needing or when the belly is bound The âeople will tell you the causes and you may see it It is easily cured when it is from straning at stool if it have not been long out If it be from great store of moisture it is hard to be cured especially if there be a loosness of the belly for then Medicines cannot lie on First put it up if it be swollen foment it with the decoction of Mallows and Althaea or anoint with Oyl of Lilliesâ then keep it in with astringents As Take ââd Roses Pomegranaâe peels and flowers Cypress nuts each half an ounce Sumach Frankincense Mastich each two dramsâ boyl them in red Wine foment with a Spunge then sprinkle on this Pouder Take red Roses and Pomegranaâe flowers each half a dram Frankincense Mastich each a dram lay it upon a clout and put it to the Fundamentâ See Lib. 3. Part 2. Sect. 1. c. 6. Chap. 28. Of the Stone in the Bladder THe stone in the bladder is usual in infants as that of the kidnies is in elder people How it is cured we shewed beforeâ In infants it is from gross unclean milk made of tough meats this too much taken in causeth crudities sit to breed the stone âr pap of Barley meal and milk may cause it There is alâo a weakneâs in the liver and stomach when they do not separate unprofitable food but much earthy juyce remains in the chyle that breeds stones Also a hoâ distemper in the reins by which the chyle is drawn to the bladder and if there be a native hereditary disposition to breed the stone an earthy part is in the humor which makes the urine thickâ this is in bigger Boys more then in infants They piss by drops with itching and pain the Urin is stopt often and thaâ which is pissed is like cleer waâer white or like milk or whey somtimes blood is pissed and the yard often stands It increaseth dayly iâ it be not opposed and cannot be cured without cutting which is dangerous for yong or old Prevent the breeding of it when you see the least disposition to it Let the belly be alwaies kept loose and the Nurse eat no gross slimy food make a bath of the decoction of Althaea Mallows Pellitory Parsley Dill Faenugreek Lineseed then anoint the bladder with Althaea oyl of Lillies and Scorpions and apply a Cataplasm oâ Pellitory boyled with oyl of Lillies A Pouder Take Magistery of Crabs eyes white Amber Goats blood prepared each a scruple with Parsley water give it often Or give two drops of spirit oâ Vitriol with half a dram of Cypress Turpentine Chap. 29. Of Difficulty and Stoppage of Urin. THere are many causes in ripe age that are mentioned but in Infants they are chiefly two causes the thick humor that breeds the stone that makes a strangury and dysury and the Stone that stops the bladder It is voided by drops and the child cries and the urin is thick you may try with the Catheter if there be a Stone If it be not presently cured it turns to the Stone and all natural evacuation in Children being stopt is dangerous It is as in the Stone you must evacuate humors from the first passages with Honây of Roses Cassia Turpentine foment and anoint as before with Grass water Restharrow Dropwort watter and decoction of red Pease Or Take the blood of an Hare an ounce Saxiâââge roots six drams calâine them give from ãâã scruple to half a dram with white Wine or Saxiââage water Chap. 30. Of not holding the Urin. SOmââpiss noâ oâây in their sleep but alwaies because the muscle that should close the orifice of the bladder is weak and when much water pricks it it suffers it to come forth sometimes a Stone in the bladder hurts the Sphincter so that it cannot do its duty The cause of weakness is a cold humor and moist from gross âough meats from gluttony and the like It cannot bâ known iâ Infants but iâ may in elder children that ânow they ought not piss abed If it come by custome it turns to an habit or a disease and is hard to be cured in ripe years if it be from distemper it is easie to be cured Alter the cold and moist distemper dry and consume the flegm let the Nurse have a hot drying diet with Sage Hysop Marjoram let not the child drink much keep the belly Outwardly aâoâât the region of the bladder with oyl of Costus Orris and other driers make a bath oâ Sulphur Allum and Oak leaves oâluse Sulphur or Allâm baths give this pouder Take Hogs bladders burnt roasted stones of a Hare Cocks throats roastedâ each half a dram Acrons two scruples Nip Mace each a scruple give half a dram with Oak leaves water see Lib. 3. Part 8. Sect. 2. c. 6. Chap. 31. Of chaâing in the Hips called
Intertrigo IT is thâ separation of the scarf-skin from the true in the Hips that causeth pain and unquâetness It is from sharp piss when the clouts are not changed often in such as are fat to whom filth sticks easily The Skin is off and it looks red It is troublesom by reason of the pain and causeth want of sleep and ulcârateth if it be not cured Change the clouts often wash and clense the child often sprinkle on âhis fine pouder Of Litharge of Silver seeds and leaves of Roses burnt Allum and Frankincensâ or anoint with white oyntment and Diapompholigos Chap. 32. Of Leanness and Fascination SOmtimes children and men grow lean the elder from Feavers Consumptions and other diseases but children pine away and the cause is not known and though they eat and perform other actions they are not nourished noâ grow The causes of Consumption in Infants are little or bad milk by which no blood is bred fit to nourish the body so that they thrive not till they change the Nurse The second is worms that suck away the nourishment The third is worms about the body without âs in thâ Back Aimsââr Legâ and all parts these are very small aâd brâed inâââufculous parts and stick in the skin and never come wholly out but after rubbing in baths thây put forth their heads like black hairs and run in when they feel the cold air they breed of ââimy matter shut up in the capillar veins which turns to worms from transpiration hindered The fourth cause in the opinion of people is fascination or witchcraft either from the eyes of Witches or by vapors or by touch or by words from a Witch these are alleadged by many Authors I neither allow nor plainly deny all these waies of fascination though it is not credible that a child should suffer by words or looks only I deny not but diseases may be sent from sick bodies to others as the Leprosie the French Pox Consumption and the like and may infect Infants And I believe that they may be hurt by Witches and malicious persons by the help of the Devil and Gods permissioâ as Basil the great writeth for wicked people make a league with the Devil that they may hurt such as they look enviously and angerly upon And I add one thing a habit of body that is grown very excellent is in most danger as Hippocraââs âaith when children come to be very healthfull and fair they fall suddenly into a disease and the vulgar not knowing the cause of it impuâe it to Witchcraft The signs of the causes if they be lean from a feaver or other disease it is easily known If these causes be not view the Nurses milkâ whether little or her breasts âlag without milk and that is the cause of leanness in the child if she have milk see if it be not hot and dry and cholerick And consider her constitution If the milk be blameless see if it be not from worms either in the Guts or in the skin the woâms in the skin are known by putting the child into a bath and rubbing it especially on the back with the hands and with Honey and Bread and then you shall see little ash coloured or black hairs come out of the skin If there be no outward nor inward cause you may mistrust a venemous vapor or witchcraft If it be for want of milk change the Nurse If it be from worms in the skin it is not hard to be cured if it be from an occult quality or from Witchcrafâ it is hard to be cured because we know not the nature of the malignity If the Nurse have any Disease or be contrary to the constitution of the child change her kill and cast out the worms If it be from worms in the back rub it and anoint it with Honey and Wheat bread and when their heads come forth kil them with a Razor or crust of breadâ do this often There are many superstitious things carried about against witchcraft some hang Amber and Coral about the childs neck nor is it impossible that plants and Gemms should have power against witchcraft As Briony root and Elks hoof are âood against the Epilepsie also there are Amulets against other diseasesâ âf leanness be from a dry distâmper of the whole body there is no better Remedy theâ often bathing in a decoction of Mallows Althaea Branckursine Sheeps heads and the like and anoint after with the oyl of sweet Almonds If he be hot and dry add to the bath Lettice Endive Violets Poppy heads and anoint after with oyl of Roses and Violets FINIS Several Physick Books of Nich. Culpeper Physitian and Astrologer and Abdiah Cole Doctor of Physick commonly called The Physitian 's Library containing all the Works in English of Riverius Sennertus Platerus Riolanus Bartholinus Viz. 1. A GOLDEN Practice of Physick after a new easie and plain Method of knowing foretelling preventing and curing all Diseases incident to the body of Man Ful of proper Observations and Remedies both of Ancient and Modern Physitians Being the fruit of one and thirây years Travel and fifty âears Practice of Physick By Dr. Plater Dr. Cole and Nich. Culpeper 2. Bartholinus Anatomy with very many larger Brass Figures than any other Anatomy in English 3. Sennertus thirteen Books of Natural Philosophy Oâ the Nature of all things in the world 4. Sennertus Practical Phyââck the first Book in three Parts 1. Of the Head 2. Of the Hurt of the internal âânses 3. Of the external Senses in five Sections 5. Sennertus Practical Physick the second Book in four Parts 1. Of the Jaâs and Moâth 2. Of the Breast 3. Of the Lungs 4. Of the Heart 6. Sennertus Third Book of Practical Physick in fourteen Parts treating 1. Of the Stomach and Gullet 2. Of the Guââ 3. Of the Mesentery Sweetbread and Omentum 4. Of the Splâeâ 5. Of the Side 6. Of the Sâurvey 7 and 8. Of the Liver 9 Of the Ureters 10. Of the Kidnies 11. and 12. Of the Bladder 13. and 14. Of the Privities and Generation in men 7. âânnârtââ âourth Book of Practical Physick in three Parts Parâ â Of the Diseases in the Privities of women The first Section Of Diseases of the Privie Part and the Neck of the Womb. The second Section Of the Diseases of the Womb. Part 2. Of the Sâmptoms in the Womb and ââom the Womb. The second Section Of the Symptoms in the Teâââânâ other Fluâes of the Woâââ The third Section Of tââ Symptoms that bâââl al Viâgins and Women in their Wombs after they are ripe of Age. The fourth Section Of the Symptoms which aâe in Conception The fiâââ Section Of the Governmeââ of Women with Child and preternatural Distempers in Women with Child The sixth Section Of Sympââââ that happen in Childbearâââ The seventh Section Of the Government of Women iâ Child-bed and of the Diseases that come after Trâvâl The first
the stomach and in a dry use moist things as Oyl of Lillies Dialthaea Hens grease Butter Let the Nurse avoid astringent meâts as Qâinâes Medlars Beans and use Emollients If the chiâd be big give juyce or Decoction of red Colwoâts worts with a little Salt and Honey If it be from slimy flegm give Honey or Syrup of Roses Correct the hot distemper of the Liver and Reins with Syrup of Violets and Emulsions of the four great cold Seeds If choler come not from the Gall to the Guts give the Decoction of Grass-roots Fennel Sparagus Maidenhair Give Clysters to cut and clense tough flegm As Take Alâhaea roots Mallows Pellitory each half a handful Faenugreek and Lineseed each a dram Chamomil flowers a pugil boyl and to three or six ounces ad three drams of Cassia Oyl an ounce and the yolk of an Eg. To the Navel apply Hens grease and Ox gal Or Take Aloes two drams Ox gall a dram Scamony a scruple with Buttâr make an Oyntment Fill a Walnut shell with it and apply it to the Navel Anoint the belly with Emoillients Take fresh Butter Goose and Hens grease each half an ounce Oyl of sweet Almonds and Lineseed each two drams Veal marrow Dialthaea each two drams with Wax make an Oyntment Bran and juyce of Danewort make a loosning Cataplasm for the belly Only keep it from the stomach as you must do other Cataplasms Chap. 23. Of the Worms IT is observed that children have had worms in their mothers belly and voided them after they were born But they are chiefly bred by mixing milk with other meats in a hot and moist constitution and from sweet meats which woâms love and Summer-fruits they are round and long or broad and little Besides what is said in Lib. 3. Part 2. Sect. 2. Cap. 5. Worms are known to be in a body when there is much spittle and a stinking breath troublesom sleep gnashing of teeth crying and bawling a dry cough loathing vomiting hickets want of appetite or too much thirst a belly swelled or bound or too loose thick white urin with pain when the belly is empty and the worms want food There is a cold sweat over the face and a high colour with sudden paleness sometimes a feaver and convulsion which ceaseth presently These are the signs of round worms rather then of the flat Infants are often long troubled with worms without any great inconvenience sometimes there are great Symptomes The long round worms are worst and have eaten sometimes the guts and belly through with a feaver they are more dangerous few are better then many and small then great white are better then those of other colours The other Prognosticks are mentioned in other places Preservation It is better to prevent the breeding of worms then to expel them by eating of meats of good juyce with Oranges and Pomegranates and avoiding sweet fat and slimy meats fish milk and Summer-fruits and figs. Drink thin Wine and Grass and Sorrel water with it and with pouder of Harts horn Let the belly be kept loose with Clysters foâ children or give the Decoction of Sebestens before meat or of Wormwood and Scordium but children will not take bitter things therefore give Grass water and juyce of Lemons or Citâons or a drop or two of Spirit of Vitriol When you know by the signs that there are worms kill and expel them with pouder of Coralline Wormseed Harts horn or eight grains of Mercurius dulcis Infuse them a night in gâass water and cast away the substance oâ the Mercury and give the Water Or Take Woâmseed two drams Coralline Harts horn prepared each a dram roots of Piony Dittany Magistery of Coral each a scruple make a Pouder or give the Essence of Peach flowers or the Decoction of Fern-water half an ounce or an ounce If there be a feaver use colder as juyce of Lemons Pomegranates Oranges Vinegar Harts horn Bezoar Confection of Hyacinth or this Potion Take Grass water four ounces Syrup of juyce of Citrons an ounce of Violets half an ounce Spirit of Vitriol two drops give two spoonfuls Give bitter things at the mouth and sweet at the fundament as a Clyster of Milk Or Take Raisons ten Figs seven boyl them in water take of it four ounces add Sugar an ounce and half make a Clyster Use varieties that the worms may not be too familiar with one Apply Peach leaves to the Navel bruised or a Cataplasm of Ox gall Wormwood and St. Johns-wort Or Take pouder of Wormwood Gith Centaury Wormseed Lupines each half an ounce with Oyl of Wormwood and Wax half an ounce make an Oyntment Or Take Treacle half an ounce with juyce of Wormwood apply it to the navel or make a Bath of Peach leaves and Wormwood put the child into it up to the navel If there be a Feaver use colder things mentioned Chap. 24. Of the Rupture IT is from the Peritonaeum loose or broken when the sâall guts fall into the cods from crying cough straininâ at stoolâ and from vehement motion or a fall Sometimes the Peritonaeum is well and a water falls from the belly into the cods The tumor is visible if it be from a gut it is in one part only as the right or left and it may be felt and the hole also âhrough which it fel. If from water it is even all over and there was no cause of other Rupture It is easier cured in infants then in elder persons for it is safer but worse then that of water which goes away of it self when the water is consumed Let the belly be kept open let not the child cry Avoid vehement motion lay him upon his back and thrust it up gently and apply this Plaister Take Lambs tongue Sanicle each half an ounce Lentils and Lupines and red Roses in pouder each two drams Frankincense a dram Allum half a dram with the white of an Eg. Or Take Frankincense Cypress nuts Aloâs Acacia each two drams Mirrh a dram with Izinglass make a Plaster Or apply Gum Elemni steept in Vinegar till there be a Cream at the top and with oyl of Eggs make a Cerot Inwardly Take Sanicle Lambs tongue each half a handful Agrimony a handful Comfrey the greater half an ounce boyl them to a pint strained ad Sugar give it often Or give pouder of Mousear or Moonwort with Wine If it be from water anoint with Oyl of Elder Bayes Rue or apply a Cataplasm of pouder of Beans âoenugreek Lineseed Chanââmil flowers Cummin seeds with these Oyls Chap. 25. Of sticking out of the Navel IT is without inflammation 1. When it was not well tied and too much left that sticks out 2. When the Peritonaeum is loose and hath water or wind in it from crying or coughing 3. When the navel is ulcerated and the guts fall into it this is called properly Exomphalon The navel yeilds to the touch but in an inflamation it is hard there is