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A94421 The hidden treasures of the art of physick; fully discovered: in four books. 1 Containing a physical description of man. 2 The causes, signes, and cures of all diseases, incident to the body. 3 The general cure of wounds, tumours, and ulcers. 4 A general rule, for making all kind of medicines; with the use and nature of distilled waters, juyces, decoctions, conserves, powders, elestuaries, plaisters, &c. To which is added three necessary tables, 1 sheweth the contents of the four books. 2 Explaineth all the terms of art which are used in physick and chirurgery. 3 Explaining the nature and use of simples, what they are, and where they grow. A work whereby the diligent reader may, without the help of other authors, attain to the knowledge of the art above-named. / By John Tanner, student in physick, and astrology. Tanner, John, ca. 1636-1715. 1659 (1659) Wing T136; Thomason E1847_1; ESTC R203798 295,583 577

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moisture by the Liver the Microcosmicall Jupiter chasing and beating the right side of the Stomach The Stomach hath also a Latitudinall Muscle or will which makes the expulsive faculty It is naturally cold moist cold to compresse the superfluity moist to make the matter slippery and fit for ejection also to work a sutable disposition in the body It is a necessary operation by it after the seperation of the pure from the impure the Elements from the Caput Mortuum or rather foeces is removed and carried away all that is needlesse or prejudiciall to nature It is under the dominion of the Moon with whom you may joyne Venus being of the same nature whose Epitome or Microcosmicall substitute viz the braine sendeth a branch of Nerves to the Stomach and thereby furnisheth it with humours cold and moist fit for expulsion I shall now hasten to give you a short description of the Heart Liver Spleen and Kidneys c. CHAP. VI. Of the Heart I Now come to speak breifly of the Heart who is the principall of all other members and the beginning of life he is set in the mid'st of the Breast by himselfe as Lord and King of all the Members And as a Lord or King ought to be served of his subjects that have their living of him so are all the Members of the body subjects of the Heart they receive their living from him and in many wayes they do him service He is the same in the little world as the Sun that glorious Lampe of Heaven is in the great world It is called Sol Corporis as the Sun is called Cor Coeli because their operations are so like The vitall Spirit hath its residence here why then should antiquity with ignominy be brought to the Barr and condemned for saying the Heart lives first and dyes last he being the Fountaine and beginning of life it must needs follow that it is the first thing in man that lives and the last that dyes Here is to be noted that the heart hath blood in his substance whereas all other members have it in their Veines and Arteries It is bound to the back part of the breast by certaine Ligaments which Ligaments though they touch not the substance of the Heart yet in the over part they spring forth of him By which he appeares to be King of the members and Center of the Mocrocosmicall planetary Hiarchy Moreover the Heart hath two Ventricles or Concavities and the left is higher than the right the cause of its hollownesse ●s to keep the blood for his nourishing and ●…e to abate and temper the great heat which is included and shut up in the Concavityes As he is Sol Corporis and Center of the rest of the members and ruler of the family he communicates to them Life and Motion yet by his heat he attracts what is needfull for himselfe from the other members as a subsidy or tax imposed upon his subjects And therefore to the right Ventricle of the Heart cometh a Veine from the great Veine called Venakells which receiveth all the substance of the blood from the Liver this Veine I say passeth from Venakelis to the right ventricle of the Heart and bringeth a great portion of the thickest and purest blood to nourish the Heart The residue that is left of this is made more subtill through the virtue and heat of the Heart and then sent into a concavitie or pit in the midst of the Heart between the two Ventricles therein it is made more hot and pure and from thence it passeth to the best Ventricle and there is engendred in it a Spirit that is clearer brighter and subtiller then any Corporeall or bodily thing which is engendered of the four Elements for it is a mean between the Body and the Soul Wherefore of the Philosophers it is likned more to heavenly than earthly things And here I shall taket leave to digresse and tell you of some things wonderfull touching the Heart If we credit Avicenna Some have wanted a Heart and to this purpose I could recite other mens opinions but I shall not trouble the readers head with such things which seem to my selfe impossible Valerius Maximus speaketh of one Aristomanes Messenius who killed 300. Lacedemonians who had a hairy Heart Beneventus reports the same of a certaine thiefe Columbus observed a young man that wanted the pericardium which is a thin skin involving the Heart as in a purse and he was much troubled with swoonding fits It hath been the opinion that a man cannot live a moment scarsely who hath received a wound in the Heart And good reason too seeing the life depends upon the safety of the Spirits the Heart being the shop and making thereof when the Heart is wounded it is necessary that the generation of the Spirits cease Yet Nicol. Malerius relates a History of one Andreas Hasevanger who was one of the Lifeguard of Count William of Nassaw governour of Frisia c. who received a wound in the Breast by his fellow Souldier Anno 1607. on the 22 of August in the evening and died the 8th of Septemper following one houre after Sunrising his body being opened to search for the wound by the aforenamed Nicol. Malerius and two other Chirurgions in the presence of severall Souldiers of note they found that the wound had entered the right cavity of the Heart and that part of the Heart was almost consumed the left part remaining entire which is the cheife habitation of the vitall spirits By this meanes he lived 16 dayes which had been impossible if the left ventricle had been wounded But to proceed from the left Ventricle of the Heart springeth two Arteries the one having but one Coat and therefore is called Arteria Venalis which carryeth blood from the Heart to the Lungs which blood is vaporous and fit for its nourishment and carrieth back aire from the Lungs to refresh the Heart See here the Harmony and freindly Agreement between the Microcosmicall Sun and Mercury the first affordeth of his own nutriment to nourish the other whilst the other rewards him with aire to refresh him The other Arterie hath two Coats it is called Vena Arterialis or the great Arterie of which springeth all the other Arteries that spread to every member of the body which carieth the Spirits which are the treasures of the Souls virtue Thus it passeth till it come to the braine and be made an animall Spirit as you have heard before in the third Chapter at the Liver it is made nutrimentall and at the Testicles generative Thus by the Heart is made a Spirit of every kind and like the Sun in the Heavens by his royall presence he doth conferre life and liberty to his suppliants I might here tell you why these Arteries have two coats namely because one is not sufficient to withhold the vitall Spirits carried in them their motion being so violent Againe the thing carried about being so precious a treasure
Sanders It helps hot infirmities of the Liver Stomach and other parts FINIS A Table explaining the Terms of Art and other Words which are not in the reach of Vulgar Capacities A. ABdomen the Belly or Paunch Absurdity Unreasonableness Abstergent Cleansing Actual heat Is a heat that can be felt with the hand as in the fire or things heated by it or in the body of one in a Feaver Actual cold Understand it as the former Accidentally By hap or chance Acrimony Sharpness Accident Is a symptome or something happening in a Disease Access Addition joyning to Acute Sharp violent a Disease that soon ends Adventitious Not natural springing from external causes Adstriction Binding together shutting up Adust Burned Adjacent Lying near Adverse Contrary to Adjunct causes of a Disease Are such qualities are joyned with it Adjuvant causes are such as assist the principal cause Aduata The outmost panicle of the Eye Affected Diseased troubled disordered Afflux Flowing to Agglutinative Joyning glewing souldering together Aliment All kind of Nourishment Alexipharmacal Medicines are such as resist the Plague and all venemous Diseases Albugo The White of the Eye Alteratives Are such Medicines as alter the quality of the Body and the Humours by heating or cooling moistning or drying Animal Faculties Are Imagination Judgment Memory the Senses Hearing Seeing Smelling Tasting Feeling Going Standing and all voluntary Motion Antecedent cause Is the cause afore-going of any Discase The antecedent cause of an Erysipelas or Cholerick Tumour is Choler abounding in the Body The conjunct cause is Choler gathered in the part Anodines Medicines which asswage pain Aneurism Is when the internal coat of an Artery is broken and the external coat swelled A●tepileptical Medicines Are such as are good against the Falling-Sickness Anus The Fundament Analogically Proportionably conveniently equally Apophlegmatisms Medicines which draw Flegm from the Head Apozeme A Medicine made of the decoction of divers Hearbs altering and purging sometimes Syrups mixed therewith to prepare and gently to purge the Humours Apoplectick Medicines Are such as are to be administred in the Apoplexy Apply Lay on Aquae Acidulae The Spaw Waters they are of the nature of Tunbridge Epsome and Barnet Aranea Tunica The sixth Tunicle of the Eye which is like a Cobweb Articulate Voice Is Human Voice or Speech Aromatized Spiced perfumed sented Artery Is a Sinew or Vein wherein passeth the Spirit of Life with the Blood or Vital Blood Arteria Venosa Is an Artery or rather a Vein which from the right and left Region of the Lungs carries Blood and Air to the left Ventricle of the Heart Arteriosa is a Vein from the right Ventricle of the Heart administers blood to the right and left part of the Lungs Aspera Arteria The rough Artery or Wind-pipe Ascent Going up Astringents Medicines that bind together and straiten the pores and passages of the body Astriction Straitening or binding together Asthmatical Trouble for want of Breath Atracting Drawing together Attest Witness declare Atrophya When the body pines away for want of nonrishment Attenuating Making thin Augment Is when a Disease encreaseth and is not at the height Autumn Harvest or Fall of the Leaf Axiome An undoubted Truth B. BAlneum Mariae Is when a Still standeth in warm water Bolus Signifieth a Morsel it is a Medicine to be taken upon the point of a knife Bellilucanae Thermae Hot Bathes in France Bituminous Bathes come from a fat Clay of the nature of Brimstone Bronchia The Branches of the Wezand and Wind-pipe which spread themselves through the Lungs C. CAruncle is a piece of flesh growing upon any part Catarrh is a defluxion or distillation of Humours upon the Lungs or other parts from the Brain Cataphora Dead sleep Catalepsis Congelation or stiffness of the body Causticks are Medicines which burn the Skin and Flesh to make Issues Cautery actual is burning with a red hot iron Cataplasm A Pultiss Cavity Hollowness Carus Foulness Corruption Rottenness Caleine To burn to ashes in a Crucible Cacochymical Abounding with evil humours Cardialgia Pain at Heart Heart-griefs Cardiogmos Heart-burning Carminative are such medicines as break-Wind Catheter A hollow Instrument to open the passage of the Urine to draw Urine from the Bladder or to remove the Stone Cartilages are Gristles Cataract is a Disease of the Eye See the 11th Chap. Book 2. Callous The skin or flesh grown hard or unsensible Cerates are Medicines made of Wax softer then a Plaister and stiffer then an Ointment Cephalick Capital of or belonging to the Head Chalybeated Water Milk or Wine as when red hot Steel is quenched therein also when a tincture of Steel is drawn by Wine c. Chylus a certain white substance wrought by the digestive faculty of the Stomach and is carryed to the Liver Chirurgeon Surgeon Cicatrize To bring to a scar to skin a Wound or Ulcer Circumvolution Turned round Condense To make thick Congelation Freezing or joyning with cold Chorion The skin that covers the child in the Womb. Constipation Stopping up Collyries Eye-salves Contraction Drawing together Cornea a coat of the Eye like a horn Compression Thrusting together Contusion Bruising bruise Cold Seeds The greater are the Seeds of Citrul Cucumber Gourd Molone The other are the Seeds of Endive Succory Lettice Purslane Confirmed is when a Disease is perfect Couched is when any film is pressed down or taken out of the Eye with a Needle Continuity Joyning together Compact Firmly united Concoct is when the blood is separated and made pure or when Flegm or other Humours are separated from the blood or other mixtures Connatural infirmity is that which is born with a Man as to be born with one hand is a connatural Disease Convex Bunching out Conjunct cause See antecedent cause Constriction a drawing together Congestion a gathering together Conjoyned matter See conjunct cause Corroding Eating knawing biting Consolidation closing of a wound Commissura The Mold of the Head where the Skull is united Consistence a Body or Substance Complication of Diseases is a mixture of divers Diseases in the body Coalition Healing up of a wound Coincide That happeneth together Co-indicants are divers considerations in a sick body which call for one and the same Remedy Contra-indicants are such as disswade a Remedy Coction of Humours See concoct Commemorative Remembring what is past Contumacy Rebellious stubborn Corroborate To strengthen Gostiveness Is when the body is hard bound and seldom goeth to stool Columella is a loose spungie piece of flesh it sticks to the roof of the mouth just at the swallow Coagulate is to thicken any thing by heat Coronal Suture is the Seam where the two sides of the Skull close running through the Crown Crude Humours are such as are not well digested in the Stomach Critical Evacuation is when by bleeding at the Nose Mouth by Vomit c. the humours offending are sent forth by the strength of Nature Crystalline Humour is that part of the Eye which is like Crystal Chronical
I have somewhat altered and that for two Reasons First some I have altered to make them more strong and efficacious Secondly others I altered when I was enforced to use for want of one Ingredient another of the same nature This Book swelled to such a bigness that I was forced to contract my self in the two last and to be somewhat briefer then I intended Thus courteous Reader I have for thy sake exposed my self to the dangerous and sharp Teeth of the envious Detractors which is a great hazard especially in this polished Age among so many fine and curious Wits who scarcely can approve of any thing though never so judiciously composed Yet if it find acceptation with thee I have my end and shall receive sufficient encouragement to undertake somewhat more for thy benefit which I shall suddainly do if I find this give content If any fault committed by my Pen or the Press pass uncorrected excuse it Accept it with a chearful heart and as I freely impart so do thou what ever profit or knowledge thou gainest thereby freely for the good of thy Neighbour to the honour of God and praise of this Laudable Science and for the further encouraging of him who now is farther to be Thine in all Offices of Love J. TANNER From my Lodging at Mr. Cambridge's house next door to the Sign of the Kings-Arms in Kings-street Westmin A general Table of all the principal Contents of this Book The Table of the First Book CHap. 1. A Physical Description of Man Page 1 Chap. 2. A more particular Description of Man p. 4 Chap. 3. A Description of the Head p. 6 Chap. 4. Of the parts belonging to the Head p. 11 Chap. 5. Of the Stomach and its faculties p. 19 Chap. 6. Of the Heart p. 21 Chap. 7. Of the Lungs Liver c. p. 25 Chap. 8. Of the Reins and Kidneys p. 29 Chap. 9. Of the Generative Parts p. 32 Chap. 10. The Conclusion p. 36 The Table of the Second Book CHap. 1. Of the nature of Physick and Office of a Physitian Page 39 Chap. 2. Of Diseases of the Head Cephalaea and Megrim pag. 42 Chap. 3. Of the Frensie pag. 48 Chap 4. Of Madness pag. 52 Chap. 5. Of the Apoplexie Lethargie and Sleepy Disease pag. 56 Chap. 6. Of the Vertigo page 62 Chap. 7. Of the Palsie page 67 Chap. 8. Of the Convulsion page 71 Chap. 9. Of a Catarrh or Defluxion page 75 Chap. 10. Of Diseases of the Eyes proceeding from obstruction of the Optick Nerves page 83 Chap. 11. Of a Cataract page 88 Chap. 12. Of the enlarging or straitening of the Pupilla page 94 Chap. 13. Of the Pin and Web page 107 Chap. 14. Of the Inflammation of the Eyes p. 108 Chap. 15. Of the Cancer and Rupture of the Cornea page 116 Chap. 16. Of Diseases of the corners of the Eyes and Eye-lids page 118 Chap. 17. Of Diseases of the Ears page 124 Chap. 18. Of Diseases of the Nostrils page 134 Chap. 19. Of bleeding at the Nose page 142 Chap. 20. Of the Diseases of the Tongue page 146 Chap. 21. Of the Diseases of the Teeth page 150 Chap. 22. Of Diseases of the Gums page 165 Chap. 23. Of the Ulcers of the Mouth page 167 Chap. 24. Of a loose and inflamed Columella and Diseases of the Tonsils page 169 Chap. 25. Of the Quinzie page 171 Chap. 26. Of the Asthma page 175 Chap. 27. Of the Pleurifie and inflammation of the Lungs page 179 Chap. 28. Of Empyema page 183 Chap. 29. Of spitting of blood page 185 Chap. 31. Of the Consumption or Ptisick page 189 Chap. 32. Of the Palpitation of the Heart page 194 Chap. 33. Of Swooning or Syncope page 197 Chap. 34. Of want of Appetite page 201 Chap. 35. Of a depraved Appetite page 205 Chap. 36. Of the Thirsty Disease page 208 Chap. 37. Of Evil Digestion page 210 Chap. 38. Of the Hiccough page 213 Chap. 39. Of Vomiting page 215 Chap. 40. Of Cholera page 218 Chap. 41. Of pain in the Stomach pag. 220 Chap. 42. Of the Inflammation Ulcer and Imposthume of the Stomach pag. 229 Chap. 43. Of the Chollick page 223 Chap. 44. Of the Illiack Passion page 230 Chap. 45. Of the Lientery and Caeliack Passion p. 233 Chap. 46. Of the Flux Diarrhaea p. 235 Chap. 47. Of the Dysentery or Bloody Flux p. 238 Chap. 48. Of the Tenasmus p. 243 Chap. 49. Of the Flux of the Live● p. 244 Chap. 50. Of the Worms p. 247 Chap. 51. Of the immoderate Flux of the Hemorrhoids p. 251 Chap. 52. Of the pain of the Hemorrhoids p. 254 Chap. 53. Of a hot distemper of the Liver p. 257 Chap. 54. Of the inflammation of the Liver p. 259 Chap. 55. Of the obstruction of the Liver p. 264 Chap. 56. Of the Schirrhus of the Liver p. 268 Chap. 57. Of the Jaundise p. 269 Chap. 58. Of the Dropsie p. 272 Chap. 59. Of the obstruction inflammation and tumour of the Spleen p. 279 Chap. 60. Of Hypochondriack Melancholy p. 281 Chap. 61. Of the Scurvey p. 285 Chap. 62. Of the Stone in the Kidneys p. 288 Chap. 63. Of the Stone in the Bladder p. 294 Chap. 64. Of the inflammation of the Reins and Bladder p. 296 Chap. 65. Of the Ulcer of the Reins and Bladder p. 299 Chap. 66. Of extraordinary pissing p. 302 Chap. 67. Of involuntary pissing p. 304 Chap. 68. Of the stoppage of Urine and Strangury p. 306 Chap. 69. Of the scalding of the Urine p. 309 Chap. 70. Of pissing of blood p. 311 Chap. 71. Of the Green-sickness p. 314 Chap. 72. Of the stoppage of the Terms p. 317 Chap. 73. Of the immoderate Menstrual Flux p. 320 Chap. 74. Of the Whites p. 323 Chap. 75. Of the Mother p. 326 Chap. 76. Of the inflammation ulcer and hard swelling of the Womb p. 333 Chap. 77. Of the swelling of the Womb by wind or water p. 337 Chap. 78. Of the falling down of the Womb p. 341 Chap. 79. Of Barrenness p. 343 Chap. 80. Of Miscarriage p. 349 Chap. 81. Of hard Travel in child-birth p. 351 Chap. 82. Of the Gout and Sciatica p 356 Chap. 83. Of the one day Feaver p. 363 Chap. 84. Of the Feaver Synochus non putrida p. 365 Chap. 85. Of continual putrid Feavers p. 366 Chap. 86. Of the Hectick Feaver p. 375 Chap. 87. Of the Tertian Ague p. 377 Chap. 88. Of the Quotidian Ague p. 380 Chap. 89. Of the Quartan Ague p. 381 Chap. 90. Of the Pestilence p. 386 Chap. 91. Of the Small Pox and Measles p. 394 The Contents of the Third Book CHap. 1. Of a green Wound p. 398 chap. 2. Of a contused wound and a Bruise p. 404. chap. 3. Of Wounds by biting or stinging of any creature venemous or not p. 407 chap. 4. Of a Wound in the Nerves Tendons Ligaments Veins and Arteries p. 409 chap. 5. Of Luxations and Fractures p. 413 chap. 6. Of accidents happening to wounded persons p. 417 chap. 7. Of
it had need of the better keeping This Arterie is called the pulsative Veine I might here frame a large discourse of the pellicles of the Heart which open and shut to receive the blood Also the two little eares by whom commeth in and passeth out the aire I might say much of the pannicles which as some think have their originall from dura mater as namely pericardium called of some Capsula Cordis which springeth of the upper pannicle of the Midriffe and covereth the Heart of the which springeth another called Mediastinum which parteth the breast in the mid'st and keepeth that the Lungs fall not over the Heart such a rule hath the Architect Spirit given to each part as Starrs to move in their severall Orbs There is another pannicle that covereth the ribs of whom the Midriffe taketh its beginning But this being beyond my intended scope I will put an end to this Chapter of the Heart CHAP. VII Of the Lungs Liver c. THe Lungs is made of a substance very soft and spongeous supple to draw and to inforce from like a paire of bellows it is an instrument of respiration whereby the heart is refreshed drawing unto it the blood the Spirits and the aire and disburthening it selfe of those fumes and excrements which oppresse it It is naturally cold and dry accidentally cold and moist naturally cold and dry waying about the Heart abateing his beat by its refreshing blast it is accidentally moist by reason of Catarhs and Rhewmes which it receiveth from the Braine There are three principall parts in the Lungs considerable one is a Veine coming from the Liver which bringeth with it the crude and undigested part of the Chile to feed the Lungs Another is Arteria Venialis coming from the Heart bringing the Spirit of life to nourish the Lungs The third is Trachia Arteria that bringeth aire to the Lungs and it passeth through all the left part of them to do its office The Lungs is divided into the five portions or pellicles three on the right side and two on the left side if in case any impediment or hurt should happen any in one part the other should be ready to supply the office But I forbeare any further description of the Lungs and come to the Liver which is a principall member in the little world representing the Planet Jupiter Quasi juvans pater hot and moist inclining towards the right side under the short ribs The forme of the Liver is Gibbous or Bunchy on the back side on the other side hollow like the inside of an hand that it might be pliable to the stomach as a mans hand is to an apple or any thing that is round to further its digestion for his heat is to the Stomach as the heat of a fire is to the pot which hangeth over it It is the Store-house of the blood the Fountaine of the Veines the seat of the naturall nourishing faculty or vegetative soul ingendred of the Blood of that Chile which it draweth from the Meseraique Veins and receiveth by the Vena porta which entereth into the concavities thereof and afterwards is sent and distributed through the whole body by the help of Vena Cava which ariseth from the bunch or branches thereof which are in great numbers as the Rivers from the Ocean The naturall and nutrimentall faculty hath its residence in the Liver and is dispersed through the whole body with the Veins from which are bred four perticular humours viz Blood Choller Flegme and Melancholly It is so excellent and necessary a member that I dare not give credit to their opinions who say it may be wanting in a man as some say it was in one Mathias Ortelius a Merchant in Antwerp Blood is made of meat perfectly concocted in quality hot and moist Jupiters darling the most perfect and necessary humour the other three being superfluities yet necessary too The blood thus concocted is drawn out by the Vena cava whose branches ramefying upwards and downwards carrieth and conveigheth it to all other members of the body for their nourishment where by a third digestion it is transmuted into the flesh Choller is made of meat more then perfectly concocted it is the spume or froth of blood it clarifieth all the humours heats the body nourisheth the apprehension It is in quality hot and dry it fortifieth the attractive faculty as blood doth the digestive it moveth man to activity and valour it is under the planet Mars whose residence is in the Gall which is an officiall member a purse or pannicular vesicle placed in the hollownesse of the Liver whose office is to receive the Cholerick superfluities which are engendered in the Liver as aforesaid Which Purse or Bagge hath three holes or necks by the first it draweth to it selfe the choler from the Liver that so the blood be not hurt by the choller By the second it sendeth choller to the bottome of the Stomach to fortifie the attractive faculty And lastly it sendeth choller regularly to every gut from one gut to another to clense them from supersluities and drosse Flegme is made of meat not perfectly digested it fortifieth the virtue expulsive what it is and what tho other faculties are you have heard in the fifth Chapter and maketh the body fit for ejection it is kind to and fortifieth the Braine by its consimilitude with it it is antipatheticall to the apprehension and doth much injure it therefore flegmatick persons have but weak apprehensions It is cold and moist in quality its receptacle is in the Lungs it is governed by the Moon and Venus Therefore it qualifies choller cooles and moisteneth the Heart as you heard before in the description of the Lungs thereby sustaining it and the whole body from the fiery effects which continuall motion would produce Melancholly is the sedement of blood it is cold and dry inquality it maketh men sober solid and staid fit for study or any serious emploiment It curbs the unbridled toys and fooleries incident to the sanguine complexion it stayeth wandering and idle thoughts and reduceth them home to the Centre It is like a grave Counseller to the whole body It is governed by the Planet Saturn it strengtheneth the retentive faculty and its receptacle is in the spleen which in the body is placed on the best side transversly linked to the Stomach Hollerius reports that a woman at Paris was found without a Spleen And Pliny in his naturall History saith that in Cawnus men are born without it and hence the common people thought that it might be safely cut out of Footmen and Horses and as it hath been wanting in some so it hath abounded in others Fallopius observed three that lay one upon another One was seen so great that it weighed above 20 pounds Colum. Anatom Another had a Milt weighed 23 pound Where it increaseth the body decreaseth because it sucks away too much Chilus from the Liver Therefore fitly did Trdjan liken the Spleen
swallow it by which it may be known as also by looking into the mouth You must make use of such Evacuations Revulsions Derivers Repellers as are prescribed in the ninth Chapter of a Catarrh And you must make use of Gargarisms which restrain and dry Take of Plantane Purslane and Shepheards purse of each one handful Cyprus nuts Pomegranate flowers and Red roses of each one ounce Galls and Allum of each one drachm boile them in a quart of Spring water to the consumption of half strain it out and add to it Bolearmenick a drachm Sirrup of Mulberys and Hony of Roses of each one ounce gargarise the mouth therewith Powders are better which have an astringent and drying property Take the Roots of Bistort flowerdeluce and Tormentil the Flowers of Pomegranates and Red Roses of each half an ounce Burnt Allum and long Pepper of each one scruple make them into fine powder and depressing the tongue blow it upon the Uvula If this doth not perfect the cure the superfluity must be cut off this operation must be performed very warily for if you cut too much it will be prejudicial to the speech if there be an inflammation in the Columella you must extenuate such accidents before you cut it lest a greater inflamation follow or a flux of blood if the Uvula be greater at the bottome then it is at the top then it is fitter and safer to cut If the Uvula be onely inflammed you must make use of such medicines as are prescribed for the cure of the inflammation of the tongue There are other distempers of the throat viz. the inflammation and Ulcers of the Tonsills or Almonds of the throat occasioned by a defluxion of crude Phlegmatick and Viscid humors mixed with blood or by excessive drinking of wine or strong liquors or by a greedy devouring of meat they who are thus afflicted swallow with much difficulty and pain and many times have a Feaver For the cure administer a cooling Clister open the Vein under the tongue and if blood abound open the Cephalick-Vein in the arme use all other convenient revulsions Then make a Cataplasme of Barly meal the Seed of Flax and Fenugreek and the Leaves of Mallows bruised with new Milke sufficient and apply it to the throat Then use astringent Gangarisms you have examples enough in the foregoing Chapters If the inflammation increaseth and the pain be sharp and vehement in the Evening then expect suppuration then you must surther it by gargarising with a decoction made of Hysop Figs and the Seeds of Marsh mallows or with aquamulla When it is perfectly rotten squeez it gently that the matter may run forth or else open it with a sharp instrument and let the Patient hold his head down that the matter may the better run out then wash it again with aquamulsa till it be healed For the cure of the Ulcers of the Tonsils you must observe the same rules prescribed for the cure of the Ulcers of the mouth CHAP. XXV Of the Quinzie ANgina or the Quinzie is a disease of the Jaws and Throat by which breathing and Swallowing are hindred withour defect of the breast and Lungs there are two sorts of Quinzyes Legitimate and Bastard Legitimate Quinzy is accompanied with a feaver and inflammation of the part which Galen and the antient Greekes have divided into four sorts the first they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when the inflammation is in the inward proper Muscles of the Larynx the second they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the outward Muscles of the Larynx are in flammed the third they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the interiour muscles of the pharynx are inflamed the last they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the exerior muscels of the Jaws are inflamed a Bastard Angina or Quinzy cometh without a feaver The cause of the first is blood either pure or mixed with Choler flegm or melancholly flowing from the head to the jugular veins the cause of the Bastard Angina is caused by much flegme falling into the jugular veins and by its glewinesse obstructing the passage of the spirits or by a Tumor in the Vertebrae of the neck caused by a deflux of cold flegm removing the Vertebrae from its proper seat or causing a luxation thereof by loosening their Nerves and making them slippery between the joynts or lastly this may happen by some fall or stroak or some external cause The Legitimate Quinzy may be known by the difficult swallowing and breathing without fault of the breast or Lungs pain about the Jaws and threat red nesse heat and a feaver their sorts may be distinguished by their proper signes In the first there is great hinderance of respiration the patient is almost strangled cannot breathe except he open his mouth and hold his neck streight In the second there is lesse difficulty of breathing but greater of swallowing especially of drink which flyeth out at the nose In the third there is some red tumor about the Jaws less difiulty of brething then in the first but more then in the second The last doth hinder the breath but little or not at all the outward parts of the neck are red and painfull The bastard Angina may be known by the abundance of flegm and humors flowing to the mouth If it comes by Luxation the motion of the head and neck is hurt and a preternatural cavity appeareth in the neck I shall not need to spend time to shew the signes of every distinct humor predominating reason or other parts of this book will informe you A Legitimate Quinzy is an acute disease and very dangerous for want of freedome in respiration therefore the first is worst and the patient in most danger of strangling the other are more or lesse dangerous as they more or lesse hinder respiration If the matter fall upon the Lungs or the swelling vanish away without critical or artificial Evacuation it is very dangerous and for the most part deadly If the patient foame at the mouth it is a signe of death saith Hippocrates in his 43 Aphorism because it is a signe of streightnesse and violent heat about the heart which squeezeth the moisture out of the Lungs and sendeth it to the mouth in a foame Every Quinzy requireth a hasty and speedy cure for it sometimes killeth in one day read Fernelius Lib 5 pag. 284. Let the physitian open the Cephalick Vein and if the body be naturally plethorick and blood the cause of the disease draw as much as the Patients strength will bear and reiterate Phlebotomy according as necessity requireth give a Glister first or after or both or as often as need requireth you must speedily make use of other revulsions as cupping glasses with scarification to the shoulders vesicatories frictions and ligatures to the lower parts purges must be administred and if you find the case desperate you need not Question the time of the day Trallianus reporteth that he was forced to open a
Pint and an half strain it out and dissolve Sirrup of Jujubes two ounces Sirrup of Violets one ounce make an Emulsion for three doses give it Morning and Evening If his Cough be violent let him alwayes have in his mouth Sugar of Roses Sugar Candy or penids or the Tablets of Diatraganthum Frigidum or with Sirrup of Violets and Jujubes you may make it into the form of an Celegma or Lohock If his spittle be thick and tough adde Oxymel Simplex or the Sirrups of Liquoris or Coltsfoot Let his constant drink be Barly water boile it in Currans Borrage and Bugloss Flowers Hartshorne Maidenhaire Coltsfoot Liquoris and such like give it warm You must not purge in this disease till the declination thereof and then use a gentle potion Many medicines there are proper and special for a Pleurisie as Stone-horse dung or White-hens dung soaked in Carduus water and strained give a quarter of a pint this hath a peircing and discussing quality by reason of the volatile salt in it and doth wonderfully disperse the humors in the Pleurisie An Apple made hollow and a dram of Frankincense put therein and rosted given to the sick drinking three ounces of Carduus Water after it and laid to sweat is good saith Quercetan Goats Blood also is good If the Sick fall into a loosness in the height of this Disease it is very dangerous in the declination it is good but if it so happen give him the Sirrup of Myrtles and do as you are taught in the Cure of Diarrhaea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or The inflammation of the Lungs is a disease not much different in the causes or signes from a Pleurisie but only in the part affected Sometimes this Peripneumonia commeth alone and sometimes followeth another Disease as the Quinzy or Pleurisit which is a dangerous Symptome on the contrary if a Pleurisie follow the inflammation of the Lungs it is a hopeful Symptome This Disease is more dangerous then a Pleurisie and for the most part deadly by reason of want of respiration and the nearness of the heart The cure is the same with the Pleurisie therefore I shall say no more of it CHAP. XXVIII Of Empyema EMpyema 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a Collection of matter in the Cavity of the Thorax is a Disease which for the most part followeth a Pleurisie and Peripneumonia and sometimes a Quinzy when they are not carefully cured and the inflammation commeth to Suppuration and when the Imposthume breaketh the matter falleth into the cavity of the breast Sometimes blood falling into the Thorax by the breaking or wounding of a Vein may come to Suppuration or rather Corruption Sometimes flegm falleth from the head and other parts into the breast and there putrifying begetteth matter like quitter The signes of Suppuration beginning according to Hippocrates are these First the Pleurisie being not purged the Feaver increaseth while the matter is turning into Pus Secondly the sharpness of the matter touching the Membranes causeth quaking the Third is weight and sense of heaviness in the part To these we may adde the difficulty of breathing for although when the Imposthume is broken the Diaphragma and the Muscles of the Thorax move more freely yet the Lungs are oppressed by the matter lying about them But an old and confirmed Empyema is known by a lingring putrid and partly Hectick Feaver more violent towards night and much sweating a constant troublesome Cough the Cheeks grow Red the Eyes hollow the legs swell Pustles break out on the breast If the Suppuration break and the Feaver continueth are thirsty want appetite the pus green livid or frothy brought up with much difficulty and a loose belly all these are signes of Death or of long sickness the contrary are the signes of recovery They who in this condition doe lift up the whole breast when they breathe by reason of the matter contained are quickly choaked If the matter be not spit forth in forty dayes it turneth to a Consumption and death followeth The Supuration on both sides is more dangerous then that of one that on the left side the worst by reason of the left Ventricle of the heart If the matter flow plentifully by Stoole and Urine and the Patient strong and hearty it is a signe of recovery For the Cure you must endeavour to help nature in Suppurating the humors if Suppuration cannot be hindred by this or the like Cataplasme Take of Chamomel Melilot and Mallows of each one handful the Roors of Althaea one handful Figs and Raisons stoned of each four ounces after due boiling beat and strain them adding to the Liquor the Oyles of sweet Almonds Lilies and Fresh Butter of each one ounce with the Meal of Wheat Fenugreek and Flax Seed sufficient make a Cataplasm and apply it In the mean time let the Patient take of this Lohock Take of the Conserve of the Flower of Bugless Violets and Roses of each one ounce Maidenhaire Liquorish and Coltsfoot of each one ounce Oyle of Sweet Almonds newly drawn one ounce Sugar Candy one ounce Powder what is to be Powdered and with Sirrup of Liquorish or Colts foot sufficient make a Lohock and let the Patient take thereof often Venice Turpentine washed and with Liquorish powder made up into Pills are good to maturate discuss and cleanse give three drachms in the Morning But if the matter will not be spit up you must open it between the fourth and fifth Rib and apply a Plaister to draw out the matter giving the Patient a Wound-drink in the mean time If you desire particular direction herein read Hieronymus Fabricius ab aqua pendente in Libro de operationibus Chirurgicis CHAP. XXIX Of spitting of Bloud Sputum Sanguinis or spitting of Blood called in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an unnatural Flux of Blood from the vital parts viz. the breast Lungs and Aspera Arteria The Immediate cause is Organical or common the Organical twofold either the opening of the Vessels called in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Rarefaction called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The common Disease is twofold also as the breaking of the Vessels called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Erosion of them called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blood offending in quantity or quality may be the cause of opening rarifying breaking or Corroding of the Vessels To be further satisfyed therein Ipray you have recourse to the nineteenth Chapter of Bleeding at the nose Some external cause as Fall Wound or the like may be the cause of Haemoptysis Immoderate Cold may be the cause by hardening the Tunicles that they cannot be extended It is very difficult to judge of the part from whence it commeth If it comes from the head it is cast forth by Coughing hawking and there is a tickling in the Palat as in a Catarrh That which comes from the breast and Lungs causeth Coughing that which comes from the Lungs is Frothy that which comes from the breast is Blackish
and commeth up with pain That which comes from the Gullet and Stomack is known by Vomitting from the Jaws and Wezand by Hawking from the Mouth by simple spetting Sometimes the Blood is sent from some other part to the Lungs and spet forth but this may be known by pain or some hurt happened there You must judge of the signes from the quantity or quality of the Blood the Nineteenth Chapter will instruct you To the Prognostick Hippocrates saith that what kind of Blood soever is spit from any of the inferiour parts is evil for every opening of a Vessel which letteth out Blood is dangerous especially in the Lungs But sometimes it happeneth without hurt when nature critically doth evacuate superfluous Blood that way as it is seen sometimes in women who have their courses stopt You must begin the cure with Blood-letting open a Vein on the same side you judge the distemper to be If there be obstruction of the Termes open the Saphaena If your Patient is subject to the Hemorrhoids Bleed with Leeches Cupping or other Revulsions you may use if occasion be Then purge Choller which causeth the Blood to be thin and fluid with Rubarb Mirabolans and the like Then give Medicines a stringent to close the Orifice of the Vessels but at the first give such things with them which have an expectorating quality lest Blood in the breast or other parts out of the proper Vessels should be coagulated Take of Conserve of Roses and the juice of Purslane of each two ounces Sugar of Roses one ounce Red Coral Blood-stone Bolearmenick and Terra Sigillata of each half a dram Troches of Amber a scruple the Oyle of Vitriol six drops with the Whites of eggs beaten to Water make a Lohock of which let the Patient lick often especially Night and Morning Quercetan prescribeth a Water excellent against spitting of Blood see the fourth part of this Treatise among Distilled Waters The Chymical Oyle of Amber two or three drops hath an excellent astringing quality take it in the Distilled Water of Knorgrass or Plantane or the like so you may take or give half a drachm of Sanguis Draconis or the Blood stone alone finely powdered out two scruples Opium Laudanum Philonium Romanum and Persicum These and such like may be given provided the dose be regulated by an able brain the juice of Nettles drunk four or five ounces in the Morning hath prevailed when all other have failed saith Amatus Lucitanus If by the use of Astringent medicines your Patient be costive give a Clister or purge that leaves an Astringency behind it and if the use of Astringents hinder spitting mix those things which doe not only stop Blood but mollifie the breast also such are the juyces of Plantane Purslane the Sirrups of dryed Roses Quinces Myrtles and of jujubes Gum Arabick Traganth and Starch and such like If Blood be congealed in the breast indeavour to dissolve it by administring six ounces of Oxycrate three times a day if it cause Coughing sweeten it with Sugar or Sugar Candy Apply this cooling Epithem to allay the heat of the Liver if you see occasion Take of the Water of Rose Plantane and Succory of each four ounces Vinegar of Roses two ounces of the powder called Diatrion Santalen a drachm and an half Camphire one scruple make an Epitheme apply it warme to the Liver afterwards anoint with unguentum Rosarum and Rose Vinegar Anoint the reins with Oyle of Roses and Water Lillys and the Testicles with Oxycrate If a Defluxion of sharp humors from the head unto the Lungs be the cause of the Disease seek the cure in the ninth Chapter When the Blood is stanched let your Patient avoid all things that may cause a returne thereof as Salt and spiced meats rich Wines great heat anger and violent exercise If you judge him inclinable to the Distemper by reason of thin Cholerick humors mixed with the Blood purge those humors at the Spring and Fall CHAP. XXXI Of the Consumption or Ptisick This Disease is called in Latine Tabes and in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which although it signifieth every Consumption yet is most properly taken for the extenuation of the whole Body caused by an Ulcer in the Lungs An Ulcer in the Lungs by reason of its nearnesse to the heart afflicts it with putrid vapours the heart disperseth it into all parts hence commeth a Feaver hectick joyned with a putrid and by its unnatural heat does hinder the well concocting of nourishment hence the whole Body decayeth Sometimes sharp corroding and Salt humors falling from the head or the Suppurated humors from the Pleurisie or Empyema which humors putrifying upon the Lungs may Ulcerate them Many times the cause is in the Lungs themselves which have a vitious hereditary constitution naturally tender and disposed to corruption Sometimes a Pustule is bred in the Lungs and never breaketh but groweth till it stop the passage of the breath and killeth the Patient Sometimes it commeth to Suppuration and is called the Imposthume of the Lungs which being broken and flowing to the Bronchia or passages in the Lungs it may be spit up if the body be strong and the matter little in quantity but many times an Ulcer remaineth which causeth a Consumption If the Impostumated matter flow into the Ventricle of the heart the sick dye sudainly and many times insensible of any pain or sicknesse take examples from Fernelius lib. 5. de partium morbis et Sympt Chapter 10 Pag. 288. To the causes of this Disease here mentioned you may adde all the causes mentioned in the ninth Chapter of Defluxions Hippocrates mentioneth many more kinds of Consumptions too tedious for me to insert in this Volume as those proceeding from nocturnal pollutions the running of the Reins also the obstruction of the Nerves or the flowing of Choler to the Back so of nourishment or drying causeth a Consumption likewise a Distillation from the head to the Marrow on the back may be the cause as Hippocrates faith when a Defluxion falleth upon the Spinal Marrow there is a secret and undisernable Consumption Sometimes it hath its original from hunger and want of nourishment Sometimes when the Meseraick Veins are obstructed that the Chylus Concocted in the stomach cannot passe to the Liver In the Diagnostick we must observe the signes of a Consumption beginning begun or confirmed Signes of a Consumption beginning are a small Defluxion the Lungs not much hurt thereby the Cough but small the spittle Sweet Salt or Bitter the body a little Feverish The signes of a Consumption begun the Distillation is stronger the Lungs pierced by which the Lungs are exasperated and the Cough violent The matter contained in the Lungs maketh the stomach weighty a sharp pain before and behind from the humors suppurating sharp and hearing humors fall into the body and sometimes into the Veins causing a hective Feaver sometimes joyned with a Putrid The Lungs by contracted Filth grow hot
by which heat flegme and other humors good and bad are drawn from the brain which the brain fetcheth from all the body hence comes its decay and extenuation The Patient spetteth thick rotten Flegm and doth sweat at night as soon as he sleepeth A Consumption confirmed is known by these signes the Patient spitteth matter it self the Feaver stronger the Cough more violent with more provocation and lesse Evacuation the Cough is attended with a hollow sounding he ineth and wanteth appetite for the mouth of the stomach is weakened by the Defluxion The belly is loose for the Flegm falling from the head weakeneth the stomach and Bowells and the retentive Faculty is destroyed The Patient breatheth difficult ly for the faculty is weak and the Bronchia stopped with Putrid Matter the haire falleth off the cheeks waxe Blue and his feet swell the nailes of the fingers are crooked because the flesh on the tops of the singers which held them up is decayed Let the Patient spit in a Bason of Faire Water if he spit Matter it sinketh if Flegm it swimmeth Thus have I briefly touched upon the causes and signes of a Consumption a word or two of the Prognostick If the Consumption hath not long continued and the Ulcer but newly begun it may be cured otherwise not for those things which dry the Ulcer doe hinder spitting and encrease the Feaver and maketh the body leaner Those things which are moist good against leannesse and Feavers doe make the Ulcer fouler Those that have narrow and streight breasts and their shoulder blades stick our like wings are inclinable to Consumptions to whom it is natural for want of natural heat If the Consumption came with an acute Disease or the sick fall into an acute Disease it killeth speedily If the Patient spitteth stinking matter or cannot spit at all his belly loose he is very near Death It would take up a great deal more room then I have to spare to set down the cure of a Consumption I mean when it is only begun and the Patient strong I shall only Epitomise it Let the sick drink Milke warm either Asses Goars or Red Cows but above all the Milke of a sound woman is the best Let him use a coole and moist diet and make use of such things which may correct the Blood make a decoction of China Sanders and Guajacum You must purge the humors offending but be sure you make use of such purges as work very gently as Manna Rhubarb Cassia Sirrup of Roses and the like To allay the Feaver it is lawful to let Blood if your Patient be not too lean You must divert the Defluxion have recourse to the ninth Chapter Then you must give such things which have a healing quality to cure the Ulcer of which the Milk spoken of before is very good and if Sugar of Roses be given with it it will be much more available Conserve of Roses is good if it astringe too much and the breath fail and the sick cannot spit make use of Expectorating medicines as the Sirrup of Hysop Coltsfoot or Lohocks the last Chapter will enforme you If hear be procured by the same means give coolers as the Sirrups of Violets and Jujubes the Musilage of Flealand Quinces and the cold seeds The Sirrup of the juice of Ground Ivy is much commended by Quercetan see the fourth Book of Sirrups This Sirrup hath admirable virtues Take of the juice of Grounding Veronica and Carduus Benedictus clarifyed of each eight ounces in which boile of all the sorts of Maidenhaire Scabious and Lettice of each half a handful very gently then dissolve in the Liquor streined a pound an half of White Sugar and boile it to the heighth of a Sirrup adde in the end of the extract of Juniper three drams of the juyce of Liquorish and the Extract of Carduus of each four scruples Let the Patient take a spoonful before every meal and as much when he goeth to bed Forrestus commendeth this powder following Take of White Poppy Seed ten drachms Starch Gum Arabick and Tragacanth of each three drachms Purslane and Mallows Seed of each five drachms the four great Cold Seeds of each six drachms Quince Seeds the like quantity Spodium and juyce of Liquorish of each three drachms the Penids the weight of all the rest make it into fine powder and give two drachms in a morning with the Sirrups of Poppyes or Jujubes or you may give it in Barly Creame Almond Milk or in any other convenient liquor Or this Lohock is very good Take of Lohocke pulmone Vulpis and Sanum et Expertum of each one ounce Conserve of Roses Dimargariton Frigidum and Diapenidion of each half an ounce Manus Christi and Lac Sulphuris of each three drams with the Sirrup of Comfry make a Lohock of which let the Patient take the quantity of a Hazel-nut often and twice as much night and morning The oyle of Vitriol is good to dry the Ulcer if two or three drops be given in a morning with the juyce of Plantane or Rose Water and Sugar saith Claudinas The Balsom of Peru is not without its virtues for the healing of the Ulcers of the Lungs if a drop or two be made into a Pill with Sugar or the Powde of Liquorish and taken every morning so you may take the Balsome of Sulphur Fumigations may be made of Frakincense Mirrh Mastich Benjamin Yellow Sanders Amber Storax and the like and taken in the mouth or nose the roome sented therewith Or you may make a moist Fumigation of such hearbs which are freindly to the Lungs Take of Coltsfoot Hyssop Horehound Alehoofe of each two handfulls bruise them and put them in a Pipkin with a cover close Luted on with water sufficient put it into the Oven when the Bread is half Baked the Bread being Baked draw out the Pipkin and put a funnel into a hole which it must have at the top and draw the fumes into the mouth and put it out at the nose Many other medicines and precepts I might here prescribe which I must omitt for brevityes sake only remember that all the medicines against spitting of Blood are profitable for the Ulcer of the Lungs CHAP. XXXII Of the Palpitation of the heart The Palpitation of the heart is an immoderate and preternatural shaking of the part with a great diastole or vehement Systole which sometimes hath bin so great that the adjoyning ribs have bin displaced sometimes broken and sometimes an Artery hath bin much dilated so saith Fernelius lib. 5. Chap. 12 Pag 292. The Greeks call this Disease 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Latines Palpitato Cordis The causes of it may be referred to three heads the first is a molestation of the heart sometimes a troublesome vapor arising from cold and thick humors lodged near the heart especially the Pericardium and conveighed to the Ventricles of the heart or sent from the stomach Spleen womb or the like or caused by the
Plague poison worms putrified or the Mestrues stopped and conveighed as before may be the cause of Palpitation To these adde excesse in quantity or quality of bloody Cholerick or watry humors oppressing the Veins Arteryes or Ventricles of the heart Likewise Inflammation Imposthumation or Tumors happening in the Arteries of the Lungs near the heart or in the Pericardium may be the cause of Palpitation A Second cause is a preternatural heat by which the Spirits are inflamed and the motion of the heart and Arteries is encreased and this sometimes though seldome ariseth from an inward cause often from an outward as anger violent excercise and the like The third cause is the defect of Spirits caused by hunger watching anger joy fear shame or great Diseases or any thing which dissipateth the Spirits which the heart labouring to recover encreaseth its motion and causeth Palpitation The Diagnosis or knowledge of this Disease is easie for it may be felt heard or seen The causes must be distinguished by their proper signes A hot distemper is known by often breathing by a Feaver and heat of the breast and a desire of cold things If wind be the cause it is subject to Variation and raised by a small motion the breath is difficult a mist before the eyes and a noise in the eares c. If the Disease commeth from humors in the heart or Pericardium it comes not suddainly nor goeth away quickly The nature of the humor you may gather from their Symptomes Water in the Peticardium is hard to be known but we may conjecture it by the weaknesse of the Pulse the heart seems to be almost suffocated in water If Malignant and Pestilent humors cause it the Patient fainteth a losse of the pulse and strength c. If it come by consent from other parts their proper signes declare it If a Tumor be the cause the motion of the heart is different from the natural and the pulse is various if the Tumor be in the pericardium and hard the disease is constant and the Patient decays without manifest cause To the Prognostick I say it is a dangerous Symptome because the motion of the heart by which life is preserved is hindered and Galen saith that they who are thus affected in youth or middle age live not to be old because the Vitalls are weak in them Alpho 41 de loco aff Sect 2 et 5 Chap. 2. If it come from a Tumor it is incurable if it be peculiar to the heart or pericardium it is incurable If it come by consent from other parts the cure must be sought out of their proper Chapters but seeing not only the cause ought to be removed but also the Symptomes asswaged by refreshing the heart you must administer Cordial medicines which have power to strengthen the heart If a hot distemper vex the heart Take of the Conserve of Violets Water-lillys Borrage or Buglosse flowers of each one ounce Diamargariton frigidum Diarrhodon Abbatis of each two drachms Red Sanders Coral and Camphire of each a drachm with the Sirrups of Coral Balme or Citron peels make an Opiate of which let him take often If cold humors cause the Palpitation Take of the Conserve of Roses and Rosemary flowers of each one ounce Aromaticum Rosarum Dianthus and Diambra of each one drachm Cinamon Cloves and Mace of each half a drachm Confection of Alchermes two scruples Amber Muske and Saffron of each one scruple with Sirrup of Clove-Gilly-flowers make an Opiat and give it as before With these and the like ingredients the Ingenious may form medicines of all sorts whether the disease be hot or cold likewise may Liniments Unguents Epithemas and Sacculibe prepared and applyed to the Region of the heart to strengthen and abate the hot or cold distempers thereof If an humor gathered near the heart cause the Palpitation extenuating medicines must be mixed with your Cordialls and if nothing prohibite open the inner Vein of the arme called Basilica if that appear not open the middle Vein which course Galen commendeth also if you see occasion administer purging and Carminative Clisters CHAP. XXXIII Of Swooning or Syncope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Swooning is a sudden and swift failing of all strength for all parts having a continual necessary influence upon the heart and vital spirits when they fail all the rest must suffer This Disease is distinguished from the Epilepsy which hath a Convulsion and this not from an Apoplexy in which the breath is much stopped and the pulse not much abated till near death but here the pulse faileth and the breath is free In Fits of the Mother the breath is most obstructed the pulse not much altered nor the colour of the face except it be higher the contrary happeneth in a Syncope The immediate cause of this Disease is the defect of the Vital Spirits in which nature is constrained lest the heart should totally fail to fetch the spirits from other parts to the heart by which means they lose their functions This defect happeneth four ways principally First they are naturally few by fault in the faculty making of the Vital Spirits or the matter which fault commeth by diseases proper to the heart or by consent from other parts Proper to the heart are too much constriction dilation and Solutions happening to the Ventricles of the heart or such as destroy the natural temper as Sharp Malignant Fainting Pestilential and Hectick Feavers and the like The faculty may be hurt by diseases in those parts which have a Sympathy with the heart as the Brain Liver Stomach and Womb. The matter is faulty when the Aire or Blood by which the Vital spirits are generated is defective or corrupted The aire is defective when respiration and transpiration is hindered But the hinderance of nutrition causeth a defect of the Blood They are both corrupted when their qualityes are changed Secondly this Disease is caused when the Spirits are dissipated and spent by too great evacuations which may be done sensibly or insensibly Sensibly by inordinate Phlebotomy Bleeding of wounds or at the Mouth Nose Womb Belly or Hemorrhoids or an extraordinary discharging of other excrementitious humours by Vomit Stool Urine or Sweat the breaking of an inward Impostume or by Empyema or by tapping the Nave lin the Dropsy Insensible evacuations are caused by sharp or thin humours which rarifie the skin or the immoderate heat of Bathes or Hot-Houses To these add long Watchings Fastings Lechery Anger Joy long continuing and violent pain or sickness c. may cause a dissipation of the spirits Thirdly this disease is caused by things which alter and corrupt the Spirits as venemous and pestilential aire and stincks or an evill disposition of the Bowels and other parts in a word all things which are averse to the heart may corrupt the spirits Or Lastly the spirits may be suffocated or destroyed which may come to pass by a vehement returning of Blood and Spirits to the Heart as also corrupt
Citrons These Powders are pood of Corall Pearls Ivory Harts-horn Diamargaritum frigidum Diatriasantalon Diarrhodon Abbatis Confectio Alchermes and de Hyacintho with these may the Ingenious make Electuaryes or other Compositions according to Art CHAP. LXXXVI Of the Hectick Feaver AN hectick Feaver occupies the solid parts of the Body as well as the Spirits it is an unnaturall Heat of which the Patient is scarce sensible This Feaver is either primary and begins of it self or secundary and followeth some other Feaver Some begin at the Heart and some at other parts as the Lungs Liver Spleen Kidneys Womb or other parts inflamed The causes of this Feaver are externall or internall Externall causes are all that may occasion any of the other Feavers The Internall Causes are burning and pestilentiall Feavers which do speedily consume the Moisture of the Heart or some lingring Feaver An Inflammation Ulcer Putrefaction of any of the inward parts may cause an hectick Heaver An hectick Feaver is known easily because it is continuall without encreasing or decreasing saving a little after Meat the Pulse is little frequent and quick the Arteryes are hotter then the other parts the Urine appeareth as of a healthy man but after long continuance there is an Oyl swims on the top and a Sediment like to Meal which signifieth the Wasting of the Body An hectick Feaver may be cured unlesse it be neglected till it come to the height that is when the Eyes are hollow dry with dry Excrements the Bones stick out and the Colour of the Face is gone the Skin is dry and the Midriff so contracted as if the Patient had no Guts then it is incurable If the hectick Feaver depend upon the Disease of any other part the Cure must be directed to that Discase and if it be joyned with any other Disease respect must be had to that Disease The Cure of the hectick consisteth more in a due observance of Diet then in Medicines His Diet must be cool moisten and soon nourish as Chicken Broths or Broth made of Hens Capons Veal Kid Mutton in which boil French Barly Lettice Endive Succory Sorrell Burrage Purslane and such like The Flesh of young Hares Pheasants and young Partridges are good Panados Water Gruell Barly cream Rice pottage with Almonds or the cold Seeds Boiled Meat is better then rosted and if the Patient eateth rosted Meat let Oranges and Lemmons be his Sauce For his Diet likewise may be prepared Gellyes made of Capons Knuckles of Veal and Mutton Calves Feet Sheeps Feet and such like adding Herbs or other Ingredients that are cooling moistning and cordiall New laid Egs boiled rear are good and of Fruit Apples are much commended especially Pippins because they breed cold Blood For his drink let him use Barly Water with cooling Sirrups Galen approveth of cold Water with which he saith he hath saved many from the Marasmos which is the Consumption of the radicall Moisture of the Body which commonly followeth this Disease Great care is to be used in the giving of cold Water to decayed people lest the heat of the Patient should be wholly extinguished Motion and much Stirring and Labour is not good yet a little Exercise before Meat may be allowed of But above all Excrcises let him beware of the Under-sheet Let his Sleep be moderated if he be costive provoke a Stool by a Suppository or gentle Clisters Purges are not to be allowed of because the Body hath more need of repairing then weakning yet if the Body be full of Excrements you may venture to give gentle Purgers as Cassia Manna c. Cooling and altering Juleps such as are prescribed in the Chapter before going the Patient make use of but let him beware of the too frequent use of them lest they diminish his Heat too much Such Epithems Unguents or Oyles mentioned in the aforegoing Chapter are good to temper the Heat of the Lover Lastly such Medicines mentioned in the former Chapter as strengthen Nature and revive the Spirits may be used and there is need enough thereof The worst Symptome that can attend this Disease is a Loosenesse if it so happen give Goats or Cows Milk wherein Steel hath been quenched or Rice boild in it or Sirrup of Quinces given with the Decoction of French Barly parched or such like CHAP. LXXXVII Of the Tertian Ague THis Disease is divided into an Exquisite and Bastard Tertian the exquisite is terminated in 12 hours but a bastard lasteth lenger if it exceed twenty four hours it is called Tertiana extensa a Tertian extended The Tertian Ague is Simple Double or Triple the Simple is that which cometh every other day the Double Tertian cometh every day and shall be distinguished from the Quotidian in its proper place and sometimes the Patient hath two Fits in one day The Triple Tertian is when the Patient hath three Fits in two dayes Choller and such things as engender it are the cause of this Disease viz. a hot and dry Distemper of the Spleen youthfull Age hot Air Watchings Cares Anger Fastings use of hot Meats and overmuch Exercise Those that have hot Livers that eat and drink liberally and such things as breed Crudityes Phlegm and melancholy Humours are subject to bastard Tertians by reason of the Mixture of Choller with the Crudityes The exquisite Tertian doth alwayes begin with shaking the Quotidian begins with a light Shivering or Coldnesse After the cold Fit followeth great Heat sharp biting and intolerable Thirst and sometimes all the Symptomes of a putrid Tertian Feaver In the bastard Tertian all the foregoing Signes appear but more remisse and more vehement then a Quotidian according as more or lesse Phlegm is mingled with the Choller this Disease cometh nearer to a Quotidian or exquisite Tertian A Legitimate Tertian seldom lasteth above seven dayes and is not dangerous unlesse some Malignity be joyned with it and the Patient be of a healthy constitution and temperate in eating and drinking judg the contrary if the Patient is otherwise qualifyed If the Patient's Lips break out with Scabs or if he fall into a Loosenesse these are good Signes for Nature is turning out the Enemy To work the Cure a cooling Diet must be appointed and withall moistning such as hath been prescribed in the Cure of continuall Feavers the same you must observe in the double Tertian But in the bastard and Single Tertian a fuller Diet is to be observed What ever the Patient ●ateth let him eat nothing before the Fit two or three hours that there may be a digesture but it is good if he go to Stool before the Fit to help the same give a Clister Clisters in an exquisite Tertian must be made of emollient and cooling Decoctions adding Cassia Catholicon Diaprunum lenitive and solutive c. In a bastard Tertian let the Decoction be emollient and cutting and dissolve in it Diaphaenicon Hony of Roses c. Purgatives ought to be the same for the exquisite Tertian as for the continuall
is from half an Ounce to an Ounce Aqua Gentianae Composita Gentian Water Compound It is a good Preservative against the Pestilence caseth pains in the Stomach and helpeth Digestion and drives out old Colds openeth Obstructions of the Liver easeth the pricking pains in the sides and is good against the yellow Jaundies it provokes the Terms and expelleth a dead Child or After-Birth The Dose is from three drachms to half an ounce Aqua Gilberti Gilberts Water This Water is a very great Cordial it strengtheneth the Heart and reviveth languishing Nature it may be taken from half a drachm to a drachm it is so costly that it is almost out of the reach of ordinary people Aqua Cordialis frigida Saxoniae It is a very cooling Water and profitable in Feavers and to allay the heat of bloud it giveth rest by sleep You may take from two drachms to half an ounce Aqua Theriacalis Or Treacle Water This Water is of excellent vertue against the Pestilence and other Feavers it is a very good counter-poyson and good for those that have been bit by any venemous Creature or such as have the French Pox for it driveth forth all vitulent Humours from the Heart and is a great Cordial The Dose is from half an ounce to an ounce Aqua Brioniae Composita Or Briony Water Compound This Water is Hysterical easeth the Fits of the Mother it expelleth the After-Birth and provoketh Womens Courses Let Women with Child forbear it Let those that have occasion take from half an ounce to an ounce in the Morning fasting Aqua Caponis Or Capon-Water It is good for such whose strength is decayed by Feavers or other Sicknesses it is an excellent Medicine for those that are in Consumptions or wasted by a Feaver Hectick or Marasmus Take from half an ounce to an ounce Aqua Limacum Magistralis Or the Magistral Water of Snails It openeth Obstructions of the Lungs and purgeth them of Flegm and is very good for the Consumption of the Lungs Take half an ounce or an ounce Aqua Scordii composita Or Compound Water of Scordium This is a good Preservative against the Pestilence gives rest in Feavers and is friendly to the Stomach and Womb. Take it from two drachms to half an ounce Aqua Imperialis and Aqua Mariae It strengtheneth and corroborateth the Heart and is therefore good for such as are subject to Faintings Swoonings and Palpitations of the Heart and is a Preservative against Apoplexies The Dose is from one drachm to three Aqua Mirabilis This is of admirable force and virtue to preserve the Body from the Apoplexy and all Diseases of the Nerves It is very good against the Palsie Convulsion and Cramp and is good for cold Stomachs From two drachms to half an ounce is the Dose Aqua Papaveris composita Or Poppy Water compound It is good against Surfets and Feavers there●from arising it provoketh sleep cooleth the bloud and concocteth the Humours Take from half an ounce to an ounce Aqua Cinnamomi Cinnamon Water It strengtheneth the Stomach Liver Spleen Lungs Heart Brain and Nerves It cleareth the sight is an Antidote against Poyson and biting by venemous creatures and is good against a stinking Breath and nauseousness of the Stomach It is very friendly to the Womb and is of an attenuating opening digesting and strengthning virtue From two drachms to six is the usual Dose in cold Diseases you may take more Aqua Caelestis This also prevaileth against Malignant and Pestilential Feavers restoreth such as are in Consumptions comforteth the Heart and reviveth drooping Spirits It is very hot in operation You must scarcely exceed half a drachm for the outmost Dose without the advise of a Physitian In Feavers mix it with cooling Juleps Aqua Melissae Bawm Water It restoreth Memory lost it maketh all the Senses acute it strengtheneth the Heart Brain and Stomach and for those who are troubled with cold Stomachs and Brain it is a Jewel It maketh the Heart glad the Tongue nimble in those who are subject to the Palsie in that Member the Teeth white and the Breath sweet The Dose is from two drachms to half an ounce Aqua Menthae Mint Water It cools and strengtheneth the Stomach Liver and Spleen helps Concoction breaketh Wind and stays Vomiting The Dose is from one drachm to three Ordinary Aqua Vitae Annise-seed water Usquebath and such like are commonly used and most people know they comfort a cold Stomach and is good against hurt of Digestion coming from a cold cause It breaks Wind and the like Tinctures are made of any Hearb or other Simple by first bruising them and putting to them as much Spirit of Wine as will cover them three or four fingers cork it up or seal it and let it digest in a Bath as long as you see good If you know the virtue of the Simples you cannot be ignorant of the Tincture To make Physical Wines is easie Take this one for an Example Take a handful of dryed Wormwood for every Gallon of Wine stop it in a Vessel close and let it remain in steep So you may prepare a Physical Wine of any Hearb Flower or Seed whatsoever either simple or compound Physical Vinegars are prepared thus Take of Red-Rose Buds gathered in a dry time the Whites being cut off and dryed in the shadow three or four days one pound Vinegar eight Sextaries set them in the Sun fourty days then strain out the Roses and repeat the infusion as often as you please Thus may you prepare Physical-Vinegars of any Flower As the Hot Waters and Spirits are best for cold Bodies and hot Diseases so on the contrary are Vinegars best in hot Diseases and may be externally used These I thought good to add the Treatise of Distilled Waters For the preparation of Distilled Waters of this nature read Quercetanus his Dispensatory one of which I shall here insert having prescribed it in the afore going Books which is his Distilled Water against spitting of bloud Take of the Roots of Bistort Comphry and Tormentil of each one ounce the Leaves of Knotgross Yarrow Speedwel Winter Green Sanicle Shepherds Purse with its Root of each one handful of the tops of the Blackberry Bush and Mastick Tree of each half a handful the Seeds of Sumach Myrrles Plantane Barberies and white Poppy of each 6 drachms the Flowers of Water-Lillies Gourds Quinces and Red Roses of each two Pugils let them be mixed and beaten then macerated in Balneo for the space of four days in the Juyces following viz. Plantane Purslane Sorrel and Agrimony of each two pound Let them be afterwards strongly pressed out then add of the Juyce of Acatia Hypocistis of each two Ounces Terra Sigillata and Bolearmenick of each half an ounce Electuarium Diatraganthum frigidum of each two drachms Macerate them for four dayes and distil it in Ashes till it be dry Let them who are troubled with spitting of bloud or any inward Wound or Bruise take
two or three Choclearies either by it self or mixed with Syrup of Myrtles dryed Roses or Syrup of Comphry and if the Flux of Bloud be very violent give a scruple of the Tincture of Corral with it CHAP. II. Of Syrups OF syrups there are three sorts syrrups made by infusion juyce and decoction syrrups made by infusion are made of flowers and such flowers as soon loose both colour and strength by boyling as Violets Roses Clove-gilly-flowers Peach-flowers c. and they are thus made Having picked your flowers to every pound add three pints of water made boyling hot put them into a Pewter-pot with a close cover and keep it hot twelve hours If you would make your syrrup very strong put in more fresh flowers as often as you please having strained it out put the liquor into a Pewter-Bason and to every pint add two pound of fine Sugar put it upon a Chaffin-dish of Coales and melt it stirring and scumming it till the Sugar be perfectly melted without boyling Secondly to make a syrrup of the juyce of an hearb you must make choice of such hearbs as are full of juyce then beat it in a stone Morter presse out the juyce put it over the fire and clarifie it that is scum it as long as any scum arise then boyle it till a quarter of it be consumed to a pint of this add a pound of Sugar boyling it to a syrrup and scumming of it You may know when it is enough if you coole a little in a spoon After this manner you may make syrrup of Wormwood simple of Betony Buglosse Borrage Chamomell Carduus Endive Succory Strawberryes Funtitory ground Jvy St. Johns-wort Mercury Mous-care Plantane Purslane Apples Raspberies Sage Scabius Scordium Housleek Colts-foot and such-like and when you have done so and would know what they are good for see the virtue of the Simples Thirdly Syrrups made by decoction for the most part are compounds though you may make Syrrups of Simples by decoction the operation is thus Take of what hearb root flower or seed you please and bruise it a little if you make a Syrrup of roots or wherein there are many roots let the roots macerate in the water twenty four houres then add the hearbs and the rest and boyle it till half the water he consumed then let it stand and when it is almost cold strain it through an hypoeras-bag without pressing to every pint of the decoction add one pound of Sugar and boyle it till it comes to the thicknesse of a Syrrup or new hony After this manner the most part of the Syrrups following are made except they be made of flowers or juyces Take this for an example Take of common Worm-wood meanly dry half a pound red Roses two ounces Indian spicknard three drachms old White-wine and juyce of Quinces of each two pound and an half steep them a whole day in an Earthen Vessell then boyle them gently strain it and adding two pound of Sugar boyle it into a Syrrup according to art This Syrup is very good for cold and Flegmatick Stomachs it helpeth concoction strengtheneth the Stomach and Liver provokes an Appetite breaks wind and is good against the Jaundise the dose is from one ounce to three Syrupus Acetousus simplex vel compositus Syrup of Vinegar simple or compound These Syrups cut Flegme and tough Humors they coole the body quench thirst and ease any stuffing in the Stomach and are good to prepare the body for a Vomit especially the first if you use it so take from one ounce to two or three in other cases take it with a Liquorish stick Syrupus de Agno Casto Or Syrup of Agnus Castus I conceive by its composition it was intended to prevent immoderate Letchery and nocturnall pollutions for without doubt it dryeth and cooleth the naturall seed thereby restraining venereall thoughts for my part I can say nothing of it by experience Syrupus de althaea Syrup of Marsh mallows This is a fine cooling opening slippery syrup good against the paines of the Stone Gravell or Chollick You may give an ounce or two it is so safe and harmlesse you cannot err in the giving of it Syrupus de Ammoniaco Syrup of Ammoniacum It opens Obstructions of the Liver and Spleen and cooles the parts and helps all diseases arising from their Obstructions and heat as Scabs Itch Leprosie and such like You may take an ounce or more if you see occasion Syrupus de Artemisia Syrup of Mugwort It helps the coldnesse wind paines and all other diseases of the Womb it strengthens the Nerves corrects the blood opens the pores and provokes the Termes You may take an ounce at a time or from half an ounce to two Syrupus de Betonica compositus The compound Syrup of Betony It is good against diseases in the Head and Stomach proceeding of Cold and Wind Vertigoes and Madnesse it concocteth Melancholly and provokes the Termes The dose is from half an ounce to two Syrupus Bizantius Simple and compound It strengtheneth and freeth the Liver from Obstructions and diseases thence proceeding cures the Yellow-Jaundise cuts tough Flegm and is good against the Rickets Take it with a Liquorish stick or from half an ounce to two Syrupus Botryos Syrup of Oake of Jerusalem This Syrup is commended in the Asthma and cold diseases of the breast Coughs and shortnesse of breath Take it with a Liquoris stick Syrupus Capillorum Veneris Syrup of Maidenhaire This strengthens the Stomach and Lungs and helps their infirmities it also cleanseth the Reins of Gravel for the first take it with a Liquoris stick for the last give an ounce or two Syrupus Cardiacus a Cordial Syrup It comforts the Heart and revives drooping Spirits it is good for people in Consumptions it is of an opening quality and expels those Vapours which offend the Brain Take it from one ounce to three Syrupus infusionis Caryophillorum Syrup of Clove Gilly-flowers This Syrup is good in any Feaver Pestilential or not it strengtheneth the Heart Liver and Stomach and refresheth the Vital Parts The Dose is from half an ounce to an ounce and an half It is so harmless you cannot err in the taking of it Syrupus de Cinnamomo Syrup of Cinamon It strengtheneth the whole Body and helpeth Digestion and comforteth the Stomach and Womb and cheareth the Spirits Take one ounce in a Cordial Syrupus aceto sitatis Citriorum Syrup of the Juyce of Citrons This Syrup hath a refrigerating cutting attenuating penetrating faculty it allays Choller and tempers the heat of the Heart cools the bloud and is therefore good against Feavers Pestilential or not small Pox or Measils it resisteth Poyson The Dose is from one ounce to four Syrupus corticum citriorum Syrup of Citron Pills It is of a most grateful savour and most pleasant odour it strengtheneth the Stomach Liver and Heart amends the heat of them and resisteth Palpitations Faintings Swoonings it strengtheneth the Vitals is profitable in
white Poppy heads meanly ripe and newly gathered in number twenty steep them in three pints of warm Spring-water the next day boyle them till the virtue is our then strain out the Liquor and with a sufficient quantity of good Sugar boyle it according to art that you may make it into Lozenges They are good against thin humors distilling from the head upon the Lungs Stomach and Throat they provoke sleep and coole the body in Feavers Saccharum Tabulatum simplex periatum Lozenges of Sugar simple and pearled commonly called manus Christi It is cooling and very Cordiall and therefore is good in Feavers and for weak people who are subject to Hectick Feavets and Consumptions Saccharum Tabulatum Compositum Lozenges of Sugar compound Is is very good for cold Stomachs and it frees the Stomach of Choller and Flegm and is good against Wormes Saccharum Penidium Sugar Penies For the most part they are used in other Compositions of themselves they are good against Coughs Saccharum Rosatum Sugar of Roses They strengthen weak Stomachs easeth pains in the Head restoreth loft strength they cherish a weak Brain and comfort drooping Spirits stay vomiting and pissing of bloud they are convenient for people in Consumptions to carry them in their pockets and now and then cat a bit of them In like manner are all the rest to be taken CHAP. VI. Of Troches THey are also called Placentule or little Cakes they were invented principally to keep Pouders from losing their virtue by the intromission of the air which this Form doth resist and keep it pure the longer Besides they are convenient for a man to carry about him when he travelleth their form for the most part is little round and flat The general way of making them is thus Take what quantity of Gum Tragacanth you please the like quantity of Rose-water or any other fuitable to the Distemper you aim at put it in a Galley pot and cover it in six or seven hours the Gum will be turned into Musilage with which you may make any fine Powder into Paste with the Paste you may make Troches or little Cakes and print what you please upon them Then dry them in the shaddow and keep them for your use Trochisci de absynthio Troches of Wormwood are thus made Take of the Leaves of Red-Roses Wormwood and Annis-seeds of each two drachms Juyce of Maudlin made thick the Roots of Asarabacca Rhubarb Spicknard Smallage seeds Bitter Almonds Mastich Mace of each one drachm Juyce of Succory as much as is sufficient to make Troches They strengthen the Stomach and provoketh an appetite open Obstructions of the Liver and Bowels and carry away Watry and Chollerick Humours The frequent use of these Troches will be beneficial to such as are inclinable to the Jaundise or Dropsie The Dose is from half a drachm to a drachm and an half Agaricus Trochiscatus Agarick Trochiscated They purge Phlegm and Choller mixed and free the Head and Brain thereof purge gross and viscous Humours from the Stomach They are seldome or never used alone therefore I forbear the Dose Trochisci Albi the white Troches They are cooling and drying and of great virtue if a drachm of them be finely poudered and mixed with an Injection for the Yard ulcerated Trochisci Alexiterii Troches against Poyson They are good against all Pestilential and Epidemical Diseases and a good Preservative in Pestilential Times and they strengthen the Heart Take a little now and then Trochisci Alhandal It powerfully purgeth gross Humours from the exterior parts it is good in the Palsie sleepy Disease Apoplexie and Convulsion coming from a cold cause The Dose is from two grains to four It is violent and best mixed with other milder Medicines or given in a Clister Trochisci Aliptae Moschatae They are commended for Children that cannot swallow their Milk well The Dose is from two grains to six given in Breast-milk Others say it is very good for Barren Women taken inwardly and outwardly mixed with a Plaister for the Womb. It is very dear and good for Ladies Trochisci Alchelengi Troches of Winter Cherries They are a good Medicine to allay the heat of Urine and give ease in Ulcers of the Reins Bladder and passage of the Urine and is good against the Stone The Dose is from half a drachm to two drachms Trochisci Bechici Albi Nigri Pectoral Rouls white and black They are very good for a Cough and Hoarsness The Dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Trochisci de Berberis Troches of Barberies They are very good in any Flux cooling in Feavers and allay unnatural heat in any part The Dose is from half a drachm to two Trochisci de Camphora Troches of Camphire They are good in Burning Feavers against the heat of Bloud and Choller and against the hot distemper of the Stomach and Liver or any other part against the Jaundice Hectick Feavers c. The best way is to take a little often Trochisci de Capparibus Troches of Capers They are very profitable against schirrhous Tumors in the Spleen and openeth Obstructions of the Liver and are good against the Hypochondriack Melancholy The Dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Trochisci de Carabe Or Troches of Amber They are good to stop fluxes of bloud in any part of body The Dose is from one scruple to four Trochisci Cypheos It is used in Treacle and Methridate It is good against Ulcers in the Lungs and other parts of the body Trochisci de Eupaterio Troches of Maudlin These Troches are good against the Jaundice and the Dropsie and is good in any Tumor in the Liver or Splean Trochisci Galliae Moschatae They strengthen the Womb the Brain Heart Animal and Vital Spirit Trochisci Gordonii They are good against any inward Ulcers or Ulcers of the Yard and to cool the body in Feavers Take half a drachm with Syrup of Marshmallows Trochisci Hedichroi They strengthen the Heart and Brain they are of a heating quality therefore good for such as have cold Stomachs they are seldome used alone Trochisci Hysterici Troches against the Mother They serve principally against Fits of the Mother expels the Birth and After-Birth cleanseth a Woman after her Labour The Dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Trochisci de Ligni Aloes Troches of Wood of Aloes It chears the Heart and Vital Spirits it is good against Heart-qualms and Faintings and against the Dropsie and is a pretty Medicine for a Stinking-breath The Dose is half a drachm Trochisci è Myrrha Troches of Myrrh They powerfully provoke the dead Child after Birth and Womens Monethly Purgations The Dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Trochisci de Plumbo Troches of Lead It is good to cure Ulcers in the Eyes Trochisci Polyidae It is good in green Wounds and Ulcers Trochiscide Rhabarbare Troches of Rhubarb They have a cutting attenuating strengthening and Choller-purging quality by Urine and otherwise they are
Dialacca It strengthneth the Stomach and Liver and opens Obstructions mollifieth schirrhous Tumors and is of great virtue to remove the effects thereof viz. Cachexia and the Dropsie It provokes Urine and breaks the Stone in the Reins and Bladder The dose is from half a drachm to four scruples Pulvis Cardiacus Magistralis This Powder hath not its name for nothing it is a very great Cordial and strengthneth the Heart and Vitals The dose is from one grain to ten the Gentry may use it often Diamargariton Frigidum It is a great Cordial good against Syncopes Asthmahs Coughs and Distillations of sharp Humors Consumptions and Hectick Feavers Half a drachm is an indifferent dose if it be not too dear Diambra It effectually strengthneth all the bowels and inward ●arts weakned by cold it cheareth the Spirits and gives the Patient a good colour it profiteth the Womb and is friendly to antient men and women The dose from half a drachm to two drachms Diamoshu dulce Amarum It is good against cold afflictions of the Brain and all Diseases thence arising against Melancholly and all Melancholly Diseases The last besides the former hath a purging Faculty and cleanseth the Stomacle The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Species Dianthus It maketh a light heart a chearful mind a good Stomach and a sound body The dose is the same with the former Diapenidion It prevaileth against all Diseases of the Breast Cough Hoarseness loss of Voice Take half a drachm or mix it with some Pectoral Syrup Diarrhodon Abbatis It strengthneth the Liver Heart Stomach c. and quencheth unnatural heat in any of those parts The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Diaspoliticum It is good to discuss wind in the Stomach and removes the Diseases of the part and helps digesture The dose is from one drachm to two Diatraganthum Frigidum It cures all Diseases of the Breast and Lungs which proceed from a hot and dry cause or from putrefaction in the parts for the most part it is mixed with other Medicines Or it may be made into an Electuary with the Syrup of Violets and you may take a drachm Diatrion Piperion This Pouder discusseth Wind from the Stomach and Bowels it heats the Stomach helps Digestion and frees it of Flegm The dose is from a scruple to half a drachm Diatrion Santelion It is a very good Medicine to correct the hot Distemper of the Liver and is good against a Diarrhaea caused by Cholerick Humours it helps Obstructions of the Liver also The dose is from four scruples to two drachms Pulvis Haly. It is a good Medicine against Peripneumonia or Inflammation of the Lungs Phrisicks and Pleurisies Take half a drachm of the Powder Pulvis Laetificans It revives the Heart and chears the Spirits helps digestion and preserves a good Colour The dose is from one scruple to four Or of it you may make a Sacculus to be applyed to the Region of the Heart Stomach and Head against Palpitation and cold Diseases of the Head and Stomach Pulvis Bezoardicus Magistralis A Bezoartick Powder Magisterial It is a great Cordial and very good in Feavers and in all Diseases where the Vitals suffer The dose is from a grain to twelve If you take too much your purse will soon complain Species confectionis Liberantis It is a good preservative in Pestilential Times and a good Medicine in Pestilential Feavers The dose is from half a drachm to two drachms It is a good Cordial for the Gentry Pulvis Saxonicus It is a great preservative against Poyson and the Pestilence and powerfully expels all poyson and malignant humours out of the body Take half a drachm or a drachm Pulvis Antilyssus This Powder is good against the biting of a Mad-Dog or any other venemous Creature for it fortifyeth the heart against poyson The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Rosatae Novellae It helpeth hot and dry Stomachs and is good against distempers of the Heart Liver c. or of any other part caused by heat and dryeth it strengthneth the Vital Spirits and provokes Sweat The dose is the same with the former Pulvis Thuraloes It is good to stanch bloud in any Wound If you mix it with the White of an Egg and with the Wool of an Hare dipped in it apply it to the bleeding part Species Electuarii de gemmis frigidi It strengtheneth the Heart and Vital Spirits and relieveth languishing Nature Half a drachm is the utmost dose and that too much for a poor man Pulvis contra casum A Powder for those that are bruised by a Fall It is good to strengthen the internal parts of one bruised by Fall or otherwise The dose is from two drachms to three sweat after it Diacymini It is good to discuss Wind warms the Stomach and easeth the pains of the Chollick and helps digestion The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Diagalanga It discusseth Wind and cold Humours in the Stomach it corrects the cold and moist distemper of the Liver and Brain and doth somewhat provoke Urine The dose is from half a drachm to two Species Electuarii Diamargariton calidi It is a great Cordial heats the Stomach and the Womb and removeth cold Distempers thereof The dose is half a drachm Lithontribon It heats the Stomach and helpeth want of Digestion it is good against the Hiack Passion and Cholick breaks the Stone in the Reins and Bladder Strangury and Dysury The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Pleres Arconicon It is good in Syncopes and Palpitations and cherisheth those who have been weekned by Sicknesses it strengthneth Memory and quickneth the Senses good against the Falling-Sickness and cold afflictions of the Lungs and is exceeding good for sad and melancholly people The dose is the same Pulvis contra Pestem A Powder against the Pestilence The little tells you the virtue of it besides it chears the Heart and Vital Spirits The dose is the same Pulvis contra Vermes A Powder against the Worms And is a good one for the purpose The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm Purging Powders Pulvis Hermodactylorum compositus Powder of Hermodactyls compound It purgeth Choller Flegm and Melancholy but with such violence that it is the safest course not to meddle with it Or let it be first corrected by an able Brain Pulvis Senae compositus major The Powder of Sene the greater composition some call it Holland Powder or Ralph Holland's Powder it discusseth Wind and helps the Chollick opens the Obstructions of the Reins and Bowels The Dose is from one drachm to two Pulvis Senae compositus minor Or the Powder of Sene the lesser composition It purgeth Melancholy from the head and other parts The dose is a drachm Diasenae Or Pulvis Sanctus The Holy Powder It purgeth the same humour but is very violent The dose is the same for strong bodies Diaturbith cum sine