Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n body_n die_v time_n 4,973 5 3.6216 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A61146 Observations on fevers and febrifuges. Written in French by Monsieur Spon, one of the most eminent physicians of Lyons; upon occasion of reading a book entituled, The discovery of the admirable English remedy. Now made English, by J. Berrie Spon, Issac, 1647-1685.; Berrie, J. 1682 (1682) Wing S5019; ESTC R219131 25,424 122

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

then the Waters which abound in Niter meeting with a mass of Bloud very sulphurous and inflamed will not fail to raise very impetuous motions and to change an Intermitting Fever into a most acute Continual and so reduce the Patient to the last extremity as may be seen every day in those who neglect the Advice of an able Physician 16. Whether Theriaca Orvietan and such-like cure Fevers It may happen that Bodies that have been well prepared by bleeding purging and other means wanting strength and vigour have been holpen by a dose of Theriaca or other hot Compositions which subtilize the humours But as People give these Remedies without indication or method it happens oftentimes that the Bloud is thereby rendred more apt to serment which increases Thirst Head-ach and the Fever it self There are some who cure a Quartain when it is inveterate by rubling the back-bone with Theriaca and Aquâ Vitae which subtilizes the Bloud and helps to dissipate the Ferment by Transspiration But for the most part stronger Machines are required to subdue an Enemy so pertinatious 17. How can Fear cure a Quartain Some have been known to be cured of a Quartain by a sudden fear even when they were shivering in their cold Fit 'T is reported that Henry the Fourth cured one on this manner He had taken a Castle wherein he found a Gentleman in a Fit of a Quartain Ague the King made as if he had been in great anger and looking upon him told him he 'd dispatch his Fever presently and call'd for a Paper and wrote thus Quartain Ague I conjure thee By the long Beard of Mercurie Out of this Body thou dislodge As from hence has done Desloges The poor Gentleman who thought the King was writing the Sentence of his Death was seized with so great a fear that the Fever left him 'T is the effect of the extraordinary agitation of the Spirits which subtilizes the gross bloud of Quartains Nevertheless this is a Remedy not to be used for if the Fear be but ordinary it is not capable of producing the desired effects and if it be great it may cause Death for there are many that die of Fear either suddenly or some small time after by the disorder which it raises in the whole Oeconomy of the Body 18. Why are Fenny Morish and Moist places most subject to Fevers Because out of these places there is a perpetual Exhalation of acid Corpuscules which by respiration mix themselves with the Bloud and so communicate their Acidity to the Lympha which produces different sorts of Fevers according to the disposition of the Body This may be seen in Iron which in all moist places contracts Rust in a very short time and every body knows that Rust is caused by all Acids And further if in moist grounds there be vaults which may stop those Atomes they become considerably furnished therewith and afford us Saltpeter which is so acid that out of it they make Aqua Fortis Hence it is that going by Water especially fresh water is not good for those People who have Agues as for the Sea-water so far is it from being prejudicial to them that many lose their Agues after their going to Sea because the Marine Air abounds with Saline Particles contrary to the acid ones There are notwithstanding some Sea-ports which are very subject to Agues by reason of the standing Waters about them and the Vapours which arises from thence mixed with those that arise out of the Earth infect the Neighbouring Air. So there is no place more subject to Agues than Alexandretta where almost all that arrive catch Agues and no wonder for the place being very Morish by reason of the breaking down the Harbour and a very high Mountain on the Eeast which hinders the Sun from shining upon it before the day be far spent The most certain and ready Remedy and that which is most practised there is to depart quickly from thence that they may breathe a better Air. So likewise Smyrna which is seated at the bottom of an Arm of the Archipelago having the unwholsome neighbourhood of Marshes is subject to Agues in the Autumn And so the Inhabitants of Lyons seldom fail to catch Agues when they go into the Dombe which is a Country full of Ponds and standing Waters From all this may be drawn practical consequences which may be of good use As for Example it may be good for the sick of Fevers or Agues to be removed out of Ground-rooms and Apartments which stand upon or adjoyn to Rivers and to cause those who by an ill Air have taken an Ague to change the Air. 19. Whether the skin within the shell of an Egg tyed to the end of the Finger or a live Tench applied to the Back-bone or to the soal of the Feet can cure an Ague These are the Remedies of the Country-people which having perhaps cured one of a hundred are ever after employed as if they had some specifick quality yet how often do we see their inutility If they have cured any 't was either by the force of the imagination of the Sick or by the pain which their coldness and binding them upon the heated nervous parts caused The pain causing an extraordinary agitation of the Bloud even to that degree that we have seen a person die here of the violent Symptoms caused by the application of a live Tench to the soals of his feet the Tench becomes sometimes black and then the People straight imagine that it is the malignity of the Disease which passes out of the body of the Sick into that of the Fish though it be no more than an effect of the heat and moisture which corrupt the Fish The Antients according to the report of Pliny had some Febrifuges a great deal more ridiculous and superstitious which he himself laughs at as the paring of Nails which they were to seek for before the rising of the Sun and apply them with Wax to another mans door and into this mans body the Ague was to transmigrate For Quartains they took three drops of Bloud out of the vein of an Asses Ear which they drank in about a gallon of Water the Liver of a Cat kill'd in the wane of the Moon and salted and drank with Wine before the Fit For all Intermitting Fevers they took the Eye-tooth of a Crocodile and filled it with Incense and tyed it to the right arm of the Sick Diascorides saith also that three Spiders pounded and put in a linnen cloath being applied to the Forehead and the Temples cure the Tertian Ague 20. How do Vesicatories cure Fevers and particularly malignant Fevers In Holland they apply Vesicatories to the arms thighs and legs not onely in malignant Fevers but also in simple Tertians The French who are more delicate will scarcely suffer them to be applied unless it be in case of a Delirium Lethargy or Convulsions 'T is true the Remedy is somewhat cruel but yet it produces great
and tamed is thereby rendered more fierce and wild or that they pass but onely into the Veins and Arteries Nay it often happens that the Agitation which they make in the several parts of the Body pervert their Action and do extremely weaken the Patient and carry off too much Bile which is the balm of the Chyle and Bloud when it is not irritated 13. Whether Vomitives be Febrifuges Vomitives are sometimes necessary for the sick of Fevers but especially when the sick person finds in himself a disposition to vomit because they discharge the Stomach of those impurities which hinder it from doing its office and evacuate the matter which would augment the Ferment so that they are not Febrifuges but by accident Nay they are very often dangerous because they do much fatigate the Patient weaken the Stomach and sometimes open the vessels of the Lungs In a Quartain particularly you must make no use of them when it hath continued too long because the Ferment being glutinous and infilterated into the first Region cannot be dislodged without violent efforts if they are mild they do but cause an emotion or disturbance and if they are violent they put the Patient in danger of his life unless he be of a very robust Constitution And herein I think my self obliged to give the Publick this Advertisement That they be very cautious how they commit themselves to those Barbers Empericks and Mountebanks who promise to cure all Diseases with a little Powder or a little clear insipid Water because these Medicines are for the most part Antimonial and of the most violent which are put up in a little room or Water wherein they have boiled Vitriol or Arsenic or Reagale which never operate without causing a furious Irritation or Convulsion of the Stomach And if they do carry off the Fever yet do they leave behind them impressions of heat in the Visera pains in the Stomach and spitting of Bloud It were but just that the Judges of the Court established for the punishment of Poysoners should take cognizance of such as kill the sick by these Poysons Though they may say that a small quantity of these Drugs is not capable of poysoning yet I will maintain that when they give them to persons of delicate Constitutions who die of it one may justly say that they have given them Poyson Besides that under pretence of these dangerous Remedies it would be easie for a Poysoner to augment the quantity of his Dose and then say he gave it onely for a Vomit 14. Whether the making ones self drunk with Wine or Aquâ Vitae will cure a Fever Wine drank to an excess causes a great ebullition in the Bloud and often drives out by different ways the cause of the Fever and some have been so cured but this is not an Example to be imitated for one ought to be very well assured of his own strength and the resistance which a body already grown feeble with the effects of the Disease can make against the effects of Drunkenness as it may be either a Lethargie Pleurisie or Death it self so that he must neither have common Sense nor any the least tincture of Christianity that would preserve the health of his Body by a dangerous Remedy to the prejudice of that of his Soul I leave it to others to think whether a man dying drunk die in a good condition As for Brandy we shall leave it to the Hollanders who have accustomed themselves to drink it and so can better support the effects they drink it commonly before the cold Fit which it may possibly lessen but must needs render the succeeding hot Fit more intense and violent And when they would quite rid themselves of it they drink whole pints which has sometimes good success upon Seamen and other robust bodies 15. Whether are Mineral Waters Febrifuges 'T is certain that Mineral Waters are a great help towards the cure of Intermitting Chronical Fevers but you must observe that 't is those Waters particularly which are hot and impregnated with a niterous salt like that of the Antients and with some sulphur as those of Bourbon l'Archambaud and Vichy This I observed in them in the Journey I made last Spring with Monsieur Garnier the Son and Monsieur de Ville my Collegue In this Journey I say we throughly informed our selves of all that ought to be believed of these great Piscines from which indeed many sick people return very much relieved but we found that they were not universal Remedies as several Historians have written who have rather applied themselves to the making a description of the magnificence of the Bathes Vases and Buildings that belong to them than to perswade us by repeated Experiments of the Salt and of the Mineral wherewith they are impregnated And when they undertake this whether it be that they understand not how to make the Analysis or that they believed that one single Salt could not be capable of producing so many effects one while they tell us that they are impregnated with Niter Sulphur and Vitriol altogether another while they tell us that 't is with Sulphur Vitriol and Alum After all this they tell us that they are impregnated with Iron Niter and Vitriol whereof they are pleased to give us no other proofs than the pretended Cures done by those Waters But if happily for us they had set about it as did the learned Monsieur du Clos and after him Monsieur Fouet a Physician of Vichy they had spared us the trouble of a Journey of six or seven weeks to examine the Waters of about thirty Mineral Springs arising thereabouts of which one cannot rightly make use without first having taken the pains to visit them and anatomize them by several Experiments Hereby may one avoid the confusion of seeing his Patients return from the Waters in a worse condition than they went thither And had not the most part of our Physicians been herein so often deceived the wittiest Comedian of our Age would never have made it the subject of his publick Raillery But to return I say that the Waters of Bourbon l' Archambaud and those of Vichy provided one know how to use them and that great care be taken of the state and condition of the sick are often Febrifuges by reason of their niterous Salt wherewith they are impregnated and the sulphurous and balsamick parts wherewith they are inriched By this Composition I say the Acidity of the Lympha is very much sweetned the nutritive parts are fortified and the natural heat restored to its former state the obstructions of the first Region opened and in fine what remains of surcharge and sediment in the whole mass of Bloud is thrust out from the centre to the circumference by Transpiration Sweats and Urine Yet nevertheless if before the use of these Waters the sick be not duly prepared or be subject to a defluxion of sharp Serosities upon his Breast or to Obstructions of the Hypochondres