Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n
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A65256
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Flamma sine fumo, or, Poems without fictions hereunto are annexed the causes, symptoms, or signes of several diseases with their cures, and also the diversity of urines, with their causes in poeticl measures / by R.W.
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R. W. (Rowland Watkins)
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1662
(1662)
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Wing W1076; ESTC R9085
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61,985
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160
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the Paps and grievous pains Take Mallows stampâ and hot if breasts dâ swelâ With common oyle this plaister makes them well If there be hollâw ulcers in the breast Goats dung with honey I esteem the best Use Brimstone stampt with Wine a plaister make All hardness will the painful breasts forsake The Consumption Foul humors do descend thin and sharp rume Fall from the head and doth the Lungs consume Short cough short breath and faintness never cease To be companions of this sad disease Use for thy constant drink strong pleasant Aâe Warm'd by the fire which shall thy strength recâll Resort to merry men that love thee well And pray to God all discontents t' expâll I know more cures for it but I protest Amongst them all I censure this the best Warts All Warts as I have rightly understood Proceed from gross and melancholick blood Arsnick on Warts with vinegar apply'd Consume them all this hath been often try'd The rind of Sallow burnt and temper'd well With Vinegar all waâts and Scabs expell For the Bleeding at the Nose The bleeding of the Nose from heat doth flow From too much blood and sometimes from a blow The Herb of Grace put to the nose is good To stâp and safely to restrain the blood Blood burnt to powder blown into the nose Doth stanâh the flowing blood and wounds doth ââesâ Burn Fâog or Toad the ashes then apply Unâo the place which bleeds This veâtue try Of the Pains in the Lights Rheume heat and dryness on salt meats to feâd Or drinking too much wine this pain doth breed Pains in the left side shortness of the wind And cough to follow this disease we find Take gum Arabick Dragant Fraâk ãâ¦ã Mâkâ pills with Honey and with thâsââiâpense Against great desire to Fleshly lust The use of active wine delicious meat Inflames the mind with Cupidineous heat Camphire dissolve in oil this ointment may Rubb'd on the yard all lustful actions stay Against spitting of Blood This from some bruise or from a broken vein Proceeds as best Physitians do maintain Seeth some dry Figs fill'd up with Mustard seed In White wine and at night on those sigs feed And drink the Wine for this will mândifie And from the stoppage of the Liver fâee To draw out Thorns or Splinters or any thing which sticketh in the body Some Sâthern-wood compound with wholsom grease To draw out thorns or iâon if you please The pain in Child-birth Give Mirrh to drink in wine a little warm Big as a nut this will prevent much harm The juyce of Parsley in some drink is good To cleanse the Matrix and to purge the blood Certain Rules to know the disposition of the Body by the Vrine or Complexion THe sight of Urine and Complexion shews Where each Disease is seated whence it flows Into four parts the the Urine we divide Which do our reason and our judgment guide The first the Circle is which floats above By this what pains lie in the Head we prove The second part under this Circle lies The pain of Breast and Lungs which signifies And the third part the middle doth possess Which doth the Stomach Liver Milt express The fourth part is the bottom which doth tâll What pains in Kidnies Guts and Bladder dwell When any of these four parts mixed be With other matters by contingencie We then perceive wherein the chiefest harm Or grief consists We use the Urine warm Oâ fresh the morning 'T is a rule for all Safely to close or stop the Urinal The Urine else will thicken and divide And must again by sire be rectifi'd When th'Urine's red and thick ' tâs understood The patiânt's body's hoâ and full of blood The best Physitians wisely do relate And his complexion Sanguine nomânate When th'Urines red and thin seems to the eye The Patient's body is both hot and dry We Cholerick do this complexion call Whose foul disease preceedeth from the gall When th'Urine's white and thick I truly hold The Patient is by nature moist and cold He 's Flâgmatick for we by reason know From waâry humors his diseases flow But when the Urine is both thin and white The Patient 's cold and dry and takes delight In no companion but his constant folly Doth make him subject unto Melancholy His blood by nature like the earth is dull His face is pale his heart of sadness full When the Urine yellow like the purest gold Digestion's good and perfect then we hold If th'Urine doth like watry blood appear Or else lâke Saffâon or the flames of fire These colours in sick bodies do foretell Heat in the Liver and hot Fevers dwell But that burnt moisture shews which like âed wine Or red earth doth to heaviness incline When th'Urine looks like Ashes or like Lead Some grievous sickness in the body 's bred A deadly sickness I did oft foresee By Urine which is black as coal may be Black Urine doth proceed as I presume From burning heat which nature doth consume Black Urine shews the Milt is stopt and then The Yellow-Jaundise will endanger mân The Urine pale wherein white sands we spy Doth in the Bladder the Sâone signifie When th'Uâines thick and fat but red the sand The cruel Stone the Kidnies doth command When th' Urine 's pale with scum and fome we find The head is moist the belly full of wind Urine like milk which comes but little out Foreshews the fickness which we call the gout When th'Urine's subtile or like water thin Pains in the Milt or Dropsie may begin The Urine red with pibbles or with bells Upon the breast some foul Imposthume tells The Urine which is in hot Fevers green Deadly by reason of too much heat hath been âf th'Urine looks like Lead when that a dry Consumption holds the Patient he will die When that a swimming cloud is found or known In womans Urine driving up and down And mixt with shells this symptom ne'r beguil'd But plainly shews that woman is with child FINIS Books Printed or sold by William Leake at the sign of the Crown in Fleetstreet between the two Temple-Gates YOrks Heraldry Fol. A Bible of a very fair large Roman Letter 4. Orlando Furiosa fol. Wilkinsons Office of Sheriffs Mirror of Justice 8. Parsons Law 8. Delamans use of the Horizontal Qâadrant Wilbeys second set of Musick 3 4 5. and 6. Paris 4. Corderius in English 8. Dr. Fuâks Meteors with Observations 8. Malthus Artificial Fireworks Nâes Gunneây and Fireworks Cââo Major with Annotations by William Austin Esq Mel Heliconâum by Alex. Ross 8. Nosââ te ãâ¦ã sum by Sir John Davis 8. Animadversions on Lilliâs Grammer 8. The History of Vienna and Paris The History of Lazarillo de Tormes Hero and Leander by George Chapman Mayer's Catechism 8. Exercitatio Scholastica Posing of the Accidence Herberts Travels fol. Man become guilty by John Francis Senalâ and Englished by Henry Earl of Monmouth The Idiot in four books The Life and Reign of Hen. 8. by the Lord Herbert fol. Aula Lucis or the house of Light The Fort-Royal of holy Scripture or a new Concordance of the chief heads of Scripture by J. H. A Tragoedy written by the most learned Hugo Grotâus called CHRISTUS PATIENS and translated into English by George Sandy The Mount of Olives or Solitary Devotions by Henry Vaughan Syâââst with an excellent Discourse of the blessed estate of Men in Glory written by the most Reverend and holy Father dâsâââ Arch bishop of Canterbury The description and use of the double Horizontal Dyal by W. O. whereunâo is added the description of the General Horological Ring The Rights of the People concerning Impositions stated in a learned Argument by a late eminent Judge of this Nation France painted out to the life the second Edition The Garden of Eden both parts An exact Abridgement of the Records in the Tower of London from the Reign of K. Edward the second to K. Richard the third of all the Parliaments holden in each Kings reign and the several Acts in every Parliament by Sir Robert Cotton Knight and Baronet An Apology for the Discipline of the antient Church intended especially for that of our Mother the Church of England in Answer to the Admonitory Letter lately published by William Nicolson Arch-Deacon of Brecon and now Lord Bishop of Glovcester âe Princed ' Amour or the Prince of Love with a collection of several Ingenious Poems and Songs by the Wits of the Age. 8. âhe Solemn League and Covenant Aâraigned and Condemnâd by the sentence of the Divines of London and Cheshire c. by Lawrence Womack now D. D. and Arch Deacon of Suffolk The Repairer of the Breach a Sermon by Dr. Washbourn An Adieu to the Duke of Gloucester a Sermon by Dr. Philpot. The Result of False Principles or Error convicted by its own evidence with Dâoârephes his Dialogues by the Author of the Examination of Tylenus before the Tryers whereunto is added a learned Disputarion of Dr. Goads sent by King James to the Synod at Dort PLAYES The Wedding Philaster The Hollander The Merchant of Venice The Strange Discovery Maids Tragedy King and no King âthello the Moor of Venice The Grateful Servant