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cause_n pill_n powder_n purge_v 2,242 5 13.4373 5 true
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A19026 A prooued practise for all young chirurgians, concerning burnings with gunpowder, and woundes made with gunshot, sword, halbard, pyke, launce, or such other Wherein, is deliuered with all faithfulnesse, not onely the true receipts of such medicines as shall make them bolde, but also sundry familiar examples, such, as may leade them as it were by the hand, to the doyng of the lyke. Heereto is adioyned a treatise of the French or Spanish pockes, written by Iohn Almenar, a Spanish physition. Also, a commodious collection of aphorismes both English and Latin, taken out of an old written coppy. Published for the benefyte of his countrey, by Wylliam Clowes, mayster in chirurgery. Seene, and allowed, according to the order appoynted.; Prooved practise for all young chirurgians, concerning burnings with gunpowder Clowes, William, ca. 1540-1604.; Almenar, Juan de. De morbo Gallico. English. aut 1588 (1588) STC 5444; ESTC S108101 163,640 298

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Anodinum 15 Cataplasma Fallopii 22 Cataplasme for inflamations 55 Cataplasmes for bruses and ceasing of paine 56 Cataplasme for a Gangraena 59 Cataplasme for windy tumors 70 Cataplasme to suppurate impostumes 82 Cataplasme to cease paine 129 Cataplasme for a schi●●hous tumor ibid. Causes of Morbus Gallicus 100 Cautions to bee obserued to escape Morbus Gallicus 111 Cerotum resolutiuum 7● Cerotum mundificatiuum 74 Cerote for Morbus Gallicus 126 Cerote for paine in the ioynts 127 Cicatrizing water for Vlcers 81 Choller in Morbo Gallico 119 Clister to drawe backe paine of the head 129 Corrosiue powder 8 Corrosiue powder strong 14 Collirium for vlcers in the yard 130 Cure of two Gentlemen greeuously burnt with Gunpowder 1 Cure of a Merchant of London woūded with Gunshot 5 Cure of Andrewe Fones hurt with Gunshot 8 Cure of a Souldier that was wounded with gunshot which turned to a Fistula 12 Cure of Henry Rhodes of diuers wounds made by the breaking of a peece 17 Cure of Henry Battey hurt by the breaking of a Dagge 20 Cure of a Souldier shot into the leg which turned to a Gangrena 21 Cure of one that cut his own throat 49 Cure of Morbus Gallious 103 D Defensiues 7. 9. 17. 26. 49. 22 Defensatiuum Emplustrum 41 Declaration of the tree of signes 117 Decoction of Gu●icum 124 Digestiu to preserue a wounded part 9 Digestiues 19. 30 Digestiue vsed cōtused wounds 35 Digestiue to remoue escares 78 Dislocations 144 Doubts discussed concerning Morbus Gallicus 112 E Electuary to confirme the cure and preuent the comming againe of Morbus Gallicus 123 Electuary purging for Morbus Gallicus 128 Emplastrum nigrum 24 Emplastrum de Peto 30 Emplastrum defensatiuum 41 Emplastrum Paracelsi 52 Emplastrum Stipticum 53 Emplastrum resoluendum 54 Emplastrum consoliditiuum ibid. Emplast to be vsed for a dry stitch 55 Emplast to keepe open issues ibid. Emplast Epispatices 60 Emplast meliloti 73 Emplast Aromatizatum Keb●● 72 Emplast mucilaginum album ibid. Emplast for inveterate vlcers 74 Emplast to resolue nodes 75 Emplast for hard swellings in Womens breasts 76 Emplast Arcaei for woundes in the head 79 Emplast Betony for the same ibid. Emplast Vigonis ad Idem 80 E●●●pelas 218 F Fistulaes 149 Flos v●g●entorum 69 Fomentation for the ripening of a Bubo 128 Fractures in generall 150 Fume for drying of Vlcers 128 G Gangraena 154 Gargarisme 18 Gargarisme for vlcers in the mouth 125 H Hemorrhagia 155 Hemrhoydes 156 Hernia 157 I Iniectio mundificatiua 11 Iniection of Tagaltius 15 Iniection for hollow vlcers 59 Iniection to dry vp vlcers 139 L Liniment for windy tumors 71 Liniment to cease paine 74 Linimēt for wounds in the head 80 Lixiuium Ambrose Parey 21 Lixiuium for a Gangraena 60 Lixiuium to take away warts 71 Londrad●es oyle for gunshot 35 Lues Venerea 159 M Maturatiue plaister 60 Measels and the iudgementes thereof 179 Medicine for the pinne and webbe in the eyes 72 Medicines and howe to Minister them 167 Mucilage plaister white 73 Mundisicatiues 7. 55 Mundificatiuum optimū Vigonis 24 Mundificatiuum vnguentum 30 Mundificatiuum Francisci Rasis 38. Mundificatiue for hollow and plaine vlcers 66 Mundificatiuum lipsium 70 O Obseruations for wounds in the belly 39 Obseruations for purging wounded persons 85 Obseruations to be notified in the opening of Apostumes 139 Oedema and the determination 169 Oleum Catellorum 36 Oleum Londrad● 35 Omentum wounded and the cure thereof 42 Opthalmia the times and the preceedings 170 Order of taking of a mortified member 25 Oyle most excellent for all inflamations to cause sleepe and cease paine in the Gout 75 Oyle for conuulsions proceeding of wounds in the nerues 76 Oyle necessarie for conuulsions 77 Oyntment for pustules in the face ex Morbo Gallico 124 P Phlebotomy and the vse therof 176 Pilles to purge in Morbo Gallico 129 Pouder to take away proud flesh 68 Potiō purging for Morbo Gallico 126 Pouder to take away wartes about Praeputium 71 Praecipitate white 123 Puluis corosiuus fortis 14 Puluis restrictiue 27 Puluis sine Pari. 69 Pus and the iudgement 193 R Rasuis plaister to be keep open issues 55 Remedies good for burning with powder 4 Resolutiue cerote 73 Restrictiue powder 57. 27 S Signs of choller in Morbo Galiico 119 Signes of flegme and melancholy in the same 120 Sinewes stitched 191 Sparadrap plaister 6● Sparadrap mollificatiuum ibid. Spiced plaister M. Keble 72 T Tinea or skales in the head 175 Turbith Minerale 122 Tumors the difference according to the humor 176 V Vlcers and their iudgements 192 Vlcers varicous 196 Vlcers filthy 200 Vnguent for burning with pouder 3. 4. 59 62 Vnguent de Peto 12 Vnguentum mundisicatiuum ibid. 81 Vnguent de minio 20 Vnguent Aegyptiacum 21 Vnguent Tetraphamacon 23 Vnguent Ceraseos paruum 24 Vnguent mundificatiuum 30 Vnguent Desiccatiuum 32 Vnguent to be vsed with tent or flamula 34 Vnguent consolidatiuum 49 Vnguent incarnatiuum 61 Vnguent for inflamations 62 Vnguent Neruorum 63 Vnguent Apii 65 Vnguent Populeon 66 Vng. mundisicatiuum magistrale 67 Vnguent mollificatiuum ibid. Vnguent Sanatiuum 68 Vnguent infrigidans Galeni 70 Vnguent Resinae ibid. Vnguent for the cramp 77 Vnguent for the Hemrhoyds 73 Vnguent Nutritum 78 Vnguent incarnatiuū regis Angliae 81 Vnguent Viride 82 Vnguent pro Morbo Gallico 125. 127 Vnguent to open a Bubo 128 Vnguent for Scabbe and itch 130 W Wounds and the iudgements thereof in particular members 182 Wounds in the ioynts 188 Wounds in the Sinewes 189 FINIS Infallible signes of their vild dispositions Too foule or impudent a fault in challengers or ●auillers This fellow is so wise in his owne conceit that he renounceth to follow the method and wayes of euring after Hipocrates and Galen because they were Heathen men I aunswere with the sayings of the godly wise and learned that he which 〈◊〉 a Christian will liue as a Christian and yet may take Physick and Surgery of a ●ew if he haue skill Such abuse is neuer wincked at but when idiots ruleth the rost there the iust may be oppressed and many a good cause troden vnder soote There is no friendship to be had with such honest men Not. 1. The greatest barkers are not the best biters Truth can neuer so well appeare as when it is compared with deceite and falsehood The more ignorant they are the more bolder they are and yet hate to be ●eproued The foolish perswasion of naked experience hath deceyued a great many Beware of hypocrisie shadowed vnder the cloke of frendship and amitie Note A signe of a good conscience M●● sap D. B. Iosephus Quirsitanus Jacobus We●kerus Cataplasma Clowes Arceus Apozema Iniectio Mundificatiua Vigon This iniection doth mundifie incarne consolidate Angeli Bolognini Restrictiui Pigesti●●m Francisci Rasij Mundificatiuum The cure of one Henry Battey a Cheesemonger of London Lixiuium Am. Parrei Mundificatiuum optimum Vigon Vnguentum Ceraseos
amisse With heart I craue reade viewe and see If better you haue impart it with me Nowe slaunderer say thy worst with malice and defame In God I onely trust all glory to his name A TREATISE OF THE FRENCH POCKS WRITTEN by Iohn Almenar a Spanish Phisition Chap. 1. Of the beginning and definition of this disease IT is concluded by certaine wise men that this disease which amongst the Italians is called Gallicus that is to say the French disease should now bée named Patursa which is by interpretation a disease filthie and Saturnall It is a filthie disease because it maketh women to bee estéemed vnchast and irreligious It is Saturnall because it tooke the beginning from Saturne when he entred into Aries hauing the rest of the heauenly aspects helping thereunto And albeit that influence haue ceassed it is not necessarie that the disease should ceasse because many infected bodies remayned whereby others haue bene infected Hereof it may be concluded that this disease shall continue many yeeres and therefore let men take heede that by other mens example it may bee sayd of them Happie is he whom others daunger make warie The disposition which proceeded of the celestiall influence making impression into the bodies did burne the humours in respect of Aries which signe is hot and drie and after this burning cold and drie humours were engendred on Saturnes part which signe is by nature colde and drie These colde and drie or melancholike humours caried to diuers places bring diuers paines and in the skinne bring forth diuers kinds of pustles or wheales It may be thus defined The French Pockes or Patursa is an vniuersall or popular ill disposition in the parts of the bodie consisting principally in the liuer and veynes and their humors whereof ensue these accidents to wit paynes and wheales in all the bodie The efficient cause is touched when it is called vniuersall or popular that is proceeding from the influence of the heauens the formall when it is called an euill disposition the materiall when it is sayd to be in the parts Also the difference is touched when it is sayd that paynes doe ensue it c. Concerning the ende the bodily Phisition intermedleth not but the spirituall Phisitions affirme them to bee sent for the punishment of sinne Wherefore they which would bee deliuered and escape this let them take heede of sinne and applye their mindes to God for only God cureth infirmities as Mesues sayth in his treatise de Appropriatis Of this definition doe followe many and profitable consequences First that this disease is one and not many as some haue insufficiently affirmed because there could not be giuen one definition of it neither had it alwaies one only efficient cause neither would one kinde of cure agree neither had it one name which is absurd as partly hath appeared alreadie and shall more plainly be shewed hereafter The second consequence is that they are deceiued which thinke they haue found the head or fountaines of this disease to bee the paine in the ioynts and pustles in the face because the former definition agreeth not vnto them Moreouer all the paynes are not in the ioynts neither are all the wheales like red pustles in the face Therefore neither this disease nor the cure of it can be referred vnto them as it shall be hereafter shewed The third consequence that they which cure onely wheales or onely looke to the paynes doe cure imperfectly For who can cure perfectly the h●ada●h or the drinesse of the tongue or thirst which come from a Feauer vnlesse he first ●●●e the Feauer For the accident followeth the disease as the shadow doth the bodie Gal. lib. 3. de accident And therefore the paynes cannot bee cured as the pustles except the disease be first cured because these are either accidents or conioyned sicknesses which follow the principall and doe presuppose it must be first cured as Auicen testifieth tract 1. sen 3. and in many places The fourth consequent if any doe ioyne the cure of the Empiricks with those which thinke they cure orderly as the annoynting of the Empiricks and the purging of the Phisitions yet the cure is insufficient because by those medicines the il complexion which is fixed in the parts cannot be remoued And this was the cause that many haue thought themselues cured when they were not And if any haue bene cared it was by reason that the humors were throughly purged by solutiue medicines and vnctions which auoyded nature was stronger and superiour to the disease and that euill complexion and expelled it This had not so fallen out except the nature had bin strong and the impression little but where the strength was weake and the impression strong this disease could not be expelled This difference in the strength of nature and the impression hath bene the cause that some haue bene cured without medicines some with medicines others could not by any meanes be cured Now wee will shewe that way which both reason and experience hath taught to heale all not onely by remouing with medicines the humor which procureth actuall payne and pustles and hath abilitie prepared to the same but also that euill complexion which infecteth the humors they being first purged as order requireth wherin the treasure of this cure consisteth I could inferre many other consequences but because it is tedious to vse many words in things not auaileable to the cure as Galen sayth 1. de regim acut This shal be sufficient It remayneth to determine of the causes Of the causes of the french Pockes Chap. 2. THere is a twofold kinde of causes because some are first some corporall and those of two sorts partly antecedent partly conioyned That which is first or originall in this disease is twofold whereof the first is the onely influence or corruption of the aire from whence we must charitably thinke that it infected those which were religious The second is conuersation as by kissing and sucking as appeareth in children or by carnall copulation as it hath happened to many very often but by other meanes and chiefly by the influence or corruption of the aire very seldome It may be also caused by other meanes of conuersatiō which I leaue to thy consideration It is sufficient to knowe by experience that this disease is contagious and by probabilitie of reason wherin it is like to other contagious diseases it may be so accōpted Hereupon Auicen saith in the 2. of his 1. concluding his treatise of the dispositions of sicknesses Some there are which passe from one to another as the Leprosye Seabs Pocks pestilent Feuers rotten apostemes Now of the autecedent causes there are foure kindes as there are foure humors which may be the matter of this disease through their ill disposition whereby they are apt to receiue the impression heereof to wit blood choler fleame melancholy The conioyned cause is double one is the cause of the disease and it is the humor which