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A40451 The York-shire spaw, or, A treatise of foure famous medicinal wells viz. the spaw, or vitrioline-well, the stinking, or sulphur-well, the dropping, or petrifying-well, and S. Mugnus-well, near Knare borow in York-shire : together with the causes, vertues and use thereof : for farther information read the contents / composed by J. French, Dr. of Physick. French, John, 1616-1657. 1654 (1654) Wing F2176; ESTC R42037 61,290 136

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substance Maginus makes mention of a Lake in Ireland in the bottone whereof if you put a staff it will being pulled out some moneths after be turned into Iron viz. that part which stuck in the mud and that part which was in the water into a whetstone Aristotle mentions a certain Fountain in Sicilia into which if living creatures being before killed were put they would become alive again Athenaeus saith that the fish of the River Clitoris have a certain voyce Solinus speaks of a Fountain that is in Boeotia which helpeth the memory Isidorus saith the like of the River Lethe which causeth forgetfulnes Scaliger saith that the River of Juverna is of that nature that the leaves of a certain tree hanging over falling into it become living fishes Pliny reports that in Agro Carrinensi in Spain is a certain Fountain which makes all the fish that live in the water of it seem to be of a golden colour Agricola affirmes that fishes live in the hot Sulphur-waters of the lower Pannonia neer Buda Varro and Solinus affirm that there is a Fountain in Arabia which if the sheep drink thereof changeth the colour of their fleeces and maketh the white to become black Pliny reports that the water in Falisco maketh the Cattle that drink thereof to become white He also saith that in Pontus the River Astaces watering the fields makes the Mares that feed therein to yield a black milk which feeds the Countrey It is reported that in Ulcester in Ireland there is a Fountain in which he that washeth himself shall never become gray I could recken up many more waters of very strange natures but whether they or these already mentioned be all certainly true I will not undertake to affirm onely thus much I will say that some of them I my self have seen other some I am assured of from those whose unquestionable worth may justly command mine and other mens faith to their indeniable testimony and for the rest we may believe them according to the reputation of the Historian These here I mentioned that it might not seeme strange to us how capable waters are of receiving diversity of qualifications from the earth and although some of them may seem magical and supernatural yet may they upon a profound enquiry be made to appear truely natural CHAP. IV. Of the nature and vertues of simple Waters I It will be necessary for the better conceiveing of the nature and vertue of mineral waters in particular to speak something of the nature and virtues of water in generall or of simple water which is an element as saith Sendivogius most heavy full of unctuous flegme and is more worthy in its kind than the earth it is without volatile but within fixed cold and moist attempered by air It is the Sperm of the world in which the seed of all things is preserved and it is the keeper of every thing It is called by the ancients {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Thales as saith Aristotle called one and the same water the beginning of all things Empedocles also believed that of water were all things made Hippon also saith Aristotle called it the soul of things as if it were the life of them which made Hippocrates say that water and fire were the principles of life and especially water for saith he many animals may want fire but none can well live without water Theophrastus affirms that water is the matter of all things And indeed if water were accurately anotamized you should clearly see that both vegetables minerals and animals are generated of water but of this I have treated more largely elss where I shall not now stand to repeat especially since my purpose here is chiefly to speak of the medicinal virtues of water Now we must know that water is twofold for either it is simple or mineral which we more usually call medicinal Water is called simple not according to its own nature but to our sense or being compared with that which is mineral and of this there are five kinds viz. rain fountain pit river and standing water I shall not here stand to prove whether or no water be nutritive or be onely a vehiculum of aliments as Galen would have it because in another treatise I have cleerly shewed how vegetables animals and minerals are generated of and increased by water which hath such strange dissimilary or heterogeneal parts as can scarce be believed by those who never saw the spagyrical anatomy thereof or curiously examined the production of all natural things I shall insist onely upon the medicinal use thereof as being administred either to prevent or cure the distempers of the body Simple water which cooles and moistens is either taken inwardly or used outwardly It is taken inwardly either warm or cold The vertues of warme-water taken inwardly are these which follow viz. 1. It doth by reason of its warmth cause nauseouseness and it is drank in a greater quantity to cause vomiting in head-ach proceeding from drunkenness and in any other ilness of stomack but with this caution that they that have very cold weak and laxated stomacks must abstain from this kind of vomit because warm water doth moisten very much and so by consequence would laxate tht stomack more than it was before Also it is not to be administred to those that are accustomed to drinking of water for them it will not move to vomit but remain in the body and weaken the vessels upon the aforesaid account of its extream moistening 2. It allayes sharp acid and gnawing humours and cureth such symptoms as proceed from thence as saith Galen also it represseth the ebullition of choller and helps the inflammations of the throat and mouth caused thereby as saith Aetius 3. It cures the inflammation of the reins by altering of them if it be taken before meals Note that if warm water be given to cause vomiting it must be administered to the quantity of a pint or two or of as much as will be sufficient thereunto But if it be used for qualification it must be taken to the quantity of a cup onely which may not cause nauseousnes The use and vertues of cold water are these viz. 1. It conduceth to long life in regard it condenseth the spirits saith the Lord Virulam And indeed water was the usual drink of the ancients who lived long 2. It repels by reason of its coldness and is thefore effectual against divers distempers it forceth crudities out of the stomack and as saith Aetius promotes the operation of any medicine that is taken and works not besides it suppresseth the fuming of vapours to the head as saith Dioscorides and Mesues and being drunk at bed-time causeth quiet rest as saith the Lord Virulam in his learned treatise de vita et morte by suppressing the ascent of vapours to the head 3. It allayes extream hot distempers whether they be in any particular part as in the stomack liver c. or in the
to the better understanding of them to premise something concerning the original of them in general and the rather because there have been great controversies betwixt the Stoicks and Peripatetickes about the causes of them Now the several opinions concerning the original of lasting Springs which are called Fontes perennes may be reduced to three heads for either they proceed from rain-water or they are generated in the bowels of the earth or else they must of necessity flow from the Sea through subterraneal channels If any shall object as some have done and say they may come from subterraneal lakes let me demand of them whether those sakes proceed not from some of the three former and whether they would not in time be exhausted if otherwise Arguments for the first opinion alleadgedand answered Arg. They that contend for the first opinion such as are Albertus Magnus Georgius Agricola c. Affirme that in those Countreys where there falls but little rain the Springs are few and small and that in winter time all Springs flow more plentifully than in summer and that by reason of the wetnes of the Season and what becomes say they of all the rain if it sinks not into the earth and there maintains Springs Sol 1. The Assertion concerning the increasing of Springs in winter is not universally true for St. Mugnus Well in York-shire as I was most credibly informed by the Woman that hath looked to it and been the keeper of it for these many years last past begins to rise high about May and to fall low about October besides divers more Springs which in several counties of this Nation are dryed up all the Winter and flow a new towards the Summer And Pliny makes mention of a certain Spring in Cydonia before Lesbon that flows onely at the Spring many more of this nature might be produced if there were occasion 2. If that were granted to be true which they say yet it doth not follow that rain is the material cause of Springs although at that time they break forth which were before dryed up for their drying up was not occasioned for want of rain to supply them but by reason of the dryness of the earth towards its superficies which attracts to it self and drinks in for the satisfaction of its drought the water of the Springs which it doth again let go when it hath drunk plentifully of the showers from Heaven Now that the dry earth will drink a great quantity of water you may see by the drying up of Rivers in a long drougth by the drynes of the earth although the Fountains which are the heads of those Rivers flow plentifully at the same time as some do although others some be dryed up And as for those Springs which break forth onely after great rain they are caused from the rain which is drunk up by some boggie spongious earth and is drained from thence or which is sunk into some caverne or hollow place near the superficies of the earth through some secret passage thither and there being collected in some considerable quantity imitates a Spring as long as it lasts 3. The gratest part of showers of rain falling upon high places run down from thence into plains and from plains through small channels or trenchs into Rivers and that rain which falls upon any place from whence it cannot in some such manner be conveyed away remains upon the superficies of the earth till it be exhaled by the Sun as we see in divers places besides it cannot be imagined that rain sinks so far into the earth as to supply Springs and that because it is generally observed by all that dig in the earth that rain wetts not the earth above ten feet deep And the reason hereof Seneca the Philosopher gives in his third Book Naturalium quaestionum chap. 7. Where he saith that when the earth is satiated with showers it then receives in no more and this we see by dayly experience Besides when wee dig a Well although it be in a soft place wee dig sometimes one two or three hundred feet deep before wee come at quick Springs and that the rain should sink so deep it is no way probable nay although there were hallow veins and chinks in the earth through which many would have it passe to a great depth for who cannot easily conceive that those veins and crannies which yet are not granted to be in every place where there are Springs are easily stopt with dust or dirt which the rain carryes with it when it is fallen on the earth or swelled up and contracted as we see they are in Summer time with rain after a long drougth Arguments for the second opinion Alleadged and answered Arg. They that contend for the second opinion such as Seneca c. affirme that Springs are generated cheifly of earth changed into water and that because all Elements are mutually transmutable into one the other And some as Aristotle and H. ab Heer 's that Springs are generated of the aire shut up in the earth and by the coldnes thereof condensed into water Sol 1. It is more probable according to reason and experience that by reason of the density of the earth water should more easily be converted into earth than the earth into water 2. It is to be wondred at that seeing that ten parts of air if not many more serve for the making of one part of water conteinable in the same space there should be so much space in the earth for the containing of so much air as serves for the making of such a quantity of water as springs dayly out of the earth Besides so much air being spent there would of necessity follow a vacuum for where should there be so many and great crannies or holes to let the air into the earth fast enough But if there were yet how is it possible that so much air can be corrupted in such a moment the whole Elementary air being of its owne nature most subtile and not being sufficient to make such abundance of water as all the Springs of the earth will amount to Now although this answer be according to the sence of common Philosophers and sufficient for the satisfaction of this objection yet Helmont will not admit of any such supposition viz. That air and water can at all be mutually transmuted into one the other It is true saith he that water can easily be turned into a vapour and the said vapour into water again but this vapour is nothing els materially and formally but a congeries of atomes of water sublimed air will not in cold or heat yeild water any more then it contains in it the vapour viz. of rarefied water For saith he if those two Elements were so mutually convertible one species must be transmuted into another and the air that is made out of water may be again reduced into the same numerical waterwhich it was before its rarefaction but this cannot be
the other and after this manner is the nativity of nitre 2. The process of making artificial Vitrial is manifold I shall speak of onely two and they are these 1. Cast Sulphur into melted Copper and there let it burn till it cease to burn any more then presently cast the melted Copper into rain-water which will thereby become green This do so often till all the Copper be dissolved in the water then evaporate the water and you shall have a good Vitrial Note that it is an acid spirit in the sulphur which opens and resolves the esurine Salt in the Copper whereby the Copper it self is corroded and fit for dissolution in the water 2. Take Copperas stone which is a certain Sulphurious glittering Marcasite break to pieces a good quantity of them and lay them in air and rain upon sticks over wooden vessels and in a certain time the stones will be resolved by an acid spirit in the air and water and washed down into the said vessel with the rain-water which will thereby become green and yield upon evaporation a good green Vitrial and after this manner do we make our Vitrial or Copperas in England Now let it not seem strange to any one that there is such an acidity in water and air for whence else doth Iron and Copper being put into water or standing long in the air especially in a cold Cellar contract such a rust as they do Is not this rust from the aforesaid acid spirit viz. of the air and water resolving the erusine Salt in those metals and making it thereby more corrosive and more powerfull to corrode part of the metals themselves with which it is mixed per Minima And will not this rust being boiled in rain-water yield a Vitrial Ob. But some will object and say that this rust is caused not from the acidity but onely from the humidity of the air and water resolving thereby the said esurine Salt Sol. This I will solve with a relation of two experiments viz. 1. Take the above named Copperas stones broken to pieces weigh them exactly and lay them in a cold moist place but so that no rain come at them to wash away the Salt thereof as it is resolved by the acidity of the air and after some moneths they will by a certain magnetical power attract a certain saline humidity and fall into a black pouder which being well dried and then weighed will prove far more ponderous than before which implies that there is an addition of something else than a meer quality viz. the humidity of air and water 2. Take a pound of Salt of tartar make it red hot and weigh it exactly then put upon it two pints of rain-water distilled and evaporate it then put on more and evaporate that also and then make the Salt red hot again and weigh it and you shall find it far heavier than before which is caused by the said Salts attracting to it self that occult acid saline spirit which was in the water and fixing of it into its own nature and not by assimilating the water it self which will never be converted into Salt any otherwise than as it contains a saline acid spirit which is the onely thing coagulable in it Ob. Some again will object although they do admit of this acid spirit in air and water say that in case the said acid spirit do corrode and dissolve the metals it doth not follow that there is any such esurine Salt in those metals as distinct from the pure mercurial or other Sulphureous part of them but say that it corrodes onely the said mercurial and Sulphureous part thereof as we see aqua fortis doth silver and mercury and aqua regia doth gold and so becomes coagulated into a saline nature and consistency Sol. The said acid spirit of the air and water can not corrode or putrifie the pure metalline part of metals for we see that mercurie is not corroded and reduced into a saline nature thereby and that gold doth never rust and that because it is purified from all the said acid saline principle and is not at all corroded but by an aqua regia and silver contracts but little rust and that according to the small quantity there is in it of the said Salt And for the superfluous embrionated Sulphur that neither can be corroded by the said acid spirit any otherwise than it contains in it that esurine Salt for if we put pure Sulphur extracted from Sulpbur vivum into aqua fortis it will not be corroded thereby much less then by the aciditie of air and water nay Theophrastus saith that if woods and cords be smeered over with an unctuous oyl which he prescribes to be made out of Sulphur they will be preserved from putrifaction for ever though they continue in the air water or earth and the truth is nothing can open and resolve Sulphur but oyl being of a like unctuous nature with ' it as I have oftentimes tried There must therefore be another corporeal Principle viz. of a consentaneous suitable and saline nature that is apt for to be corroded and resolved and to coagulate the said spirit 3. Vitrial is made artificial after this manner viz. Take an ounce of spirit of Sulphur or vitrial and put it into a gallon of rain-water stir them well together then put into this acid water half a pound of the filings of Iron or Copper and within a few hours the metal will attract the said acid spirit to it self be dissolved it self thereby and coagulate that This being done decant the water and calcine the said mixture in a crucible and being poudered put it into rain-water seething hot stirring them together and then all that being settled to the bottom that will settle powr off the clear green water and evaporate it and you will have a pure Vitrial Like unto this is the making of Vitrial by sprinkling a considerable quantity of distilled Vinegar upon the pouder of Steel or Copper and letting of them stand till the mixture grow very hot by fermentation and be again cooled and then putting it into rain-water seething hot and proceeding as in the foregoing process Almost after the same manner is Verdigrease made viz. by hanging plates of Copper or Brass over the hot vapours of Vinegar Now these three processes of making artificial vitrial being seriously considered will clearly illustrate the nativity of natural vitrial which is as I conceive after this manner viz by an acid subterraneal spirit whereof there is great quantity in some mines corroding the veins of Iron or rathe Copper which being thus resolved and opened are by the water that passeth through them dissolved after which this liquor is boyled to a Vitrial and thus is made the Vitrial in Dansick Hungarie c. Note that any of the said Vitrials if they be made out of Copper whether natural or artificial being distilled in a forceing furnace yield oyle and spirit and the Caput Mortuum
of air in the earth nay there is such a plenty of it there that many learned Philosophers were nay Aristotle himself of opinion that all Springs were generated of subterraneal air 2. Air is not the aliment of fire for saith the Lord Bacon in his Treatise De vita morte Flamma non est aer accensus flame is not kindled air nay but unctuous vapours which arise from the matter that is burnt so that whereas without air fire goeth out and is extinguished the reason is because the fuliginous vapours wanting evaporation do recoil upon the fire and choak it Now this Bituminous fire is not being of a sulphureous nature very fuliginous and besides what smoak or sumes or vapours there come from it are subtile and penetrating and either evaporate through the superficies of the earth insensibly or incorporate themselves with some sutable subject that is in the earth or els are of themselves condensed into some unctuous matter adhearing to the sides of the caverns into which they are elevated So that according to the fuliginousness of vapours more or less recoiling the fire is more or less choaked Nay if we will believe Historians there have been burning Lamps closely shut up in glasses for fiftheen hundred years together in old sepulchres Now they burnt without air were not extinguished by reason the aliment of it was a Naphtha or Bituminous matter which was so pure that it bred no fuliginous vapours to choake the fire thereof 3. Where this fire is very great there is a great vent and exhalation but where but little little is the vent and insensible And in most places the fire is not great extensively but intensively because it is kept within a narrow compass as in small caverns and veins of the earth Q. How comes this Bitumen to be kindled in the earth Sol. It is agreed by all that are of the opinion that Bitumen is the matter of the subterraneal fire that hot and dry exhalations in the bowels of the earth being shut up and not finding any place to break forth are agitated attenuated rarified and so inflamed and being inflamed kindle the Bitumen Now lastly let no man wonder that there should be so great a force of fire conteined in the earth as to be sufficient for the generation of so many Springs that flow from thence daylie seeing Pliny and many other Philosophers wonder so much on the other side when they considered of the subterraneal fire and brake forth into an exclamation saying it is the greatest of all miracles that all things are not every day burnt up And cannot the burnings of the Aetnean Visuvian Nymphean mountains convince us a little of this But for the further confirmation of this opinion let us a little consider whence the winds proceed and what they are And are they not a hot and dry exhalation Now that this proceeds from and out of the earth most agree and that it entered not first into the earth is very probable For how can a hot dry light exhalation whose nature and property is to ascend descend into the earth in such a quantity as to cause such great and lasting winds as many times happen It must therefore be in the earth originally and be stirred up by some great heat in the same And what shall we think of the dry exhalation or spirit which is shut up in the caverns of the earth in great quantities and endeavouring to break forth through obstructed passages causeth great earth-quakes whereby Cities Towns and Countries have been overthrown to say nothing of those dreadfull noyses sometimes in the bowels of the earth Whence I say these great exhalations I say great because I confess that some little quantity of them may be caused by certain fermentations in the earth should be raised if not from some great heat of fire within the earth never any one yet could rationally determine And Caesius affirms that at a certain village called Tripergulus about an hundred and twenty years since after fiftteen dayes earthquake the earth opened and winds smoak and very great fires brake forth out of the same also pumice-stones and abundance of ashes in so much as they made a mountain and about that place were many hot Springs Also in Apulia is a hot bath called Tribulus where there is abundance of ashes and calcined stones and about the lake Lucrinus and Avernus are the same But if any should yet doubt that winds proceed from the earth or from the occult fires of the earth I shall make it yet further to appear by propounding to their consideration some observations concerning the Sea For it is observed that wind doth proceed from the Sea after a more apparent and violent manner than from the land and that more certain signes of an ensueing wind are taken from the Sea than from the land For when a calme Sea makes a murmuring noyse within it self it signifies that then the exhalations which is the matter of the wind are rising out of the earth and bottom of the Sea and this the fishes perceiving and being affraid of it especially Dolphins play above the water and the Sea-urchins fasten themselves to rocks the Sea a little swelling sheweth that the exhalation is endeavouring a vent then boyling sheweth that it hath penetrated to the superficies but as yet in a little quantity but then the eruptious of the exhalations following upon the waters mounted up aloft make wind and a tempest such as Marriners have often experience of when as they perceive that the wind blows from no other place but ariseth at themselves Now why waves or billows should preceed wind let any man if he can give any other reason Also I have been informed by some Marriners that a little before a great tempest there is seen a great quantity of an unctuous shineing matter floating on the top of the Sea and that this is an infallible signe of an ensuing storme The reason of this is because wind breaking forth out of the earth forceth up with it self that Bituminous matter from the place where it self was generated But now why winds should arise from the Sea more apparently than from the land is because there is more plenty of fire in the gulfes of the Sea for there it hath more aliment or fewel viz. Water which as I said before is the aliment of that Bituminous fire And whence are those great mountains of stones and minerals and those Islands which do sometimes arise up anew from the Sea but from a subterraneal fire which forceth them up from thence according to the judgement of learned Sendivogius and experienced Erker and those chasmes and gapings of the Sea Much more might be alleadged for the confirmation of this opinion as the manner of the generation of minerals and metals and many such like subterraneal operations which can not rationally be ascribed to any other cause than fire within the earth but all the premises being seriously
weighed impartially considered I suppose there are but few but will conclude that as all Springs proceed from the Sea through subterraneal channels and caverns so also are distilled up to the heads of Fountains by a subterraneal bituminous fire And as for those that are not yet satisfied let them consult with the treatise of our late and learned Countryman Mr. Thomas Lydyat entituled Disquisitio physiologica de origine fontium and there they shall find this opinion rationally discussed and solidly confirmed but if yet they shall be left vnsatisfied let them produce a more rational account of any other opinion that will hold water in all respects better than this of mine doth and I shall thanke him and embrace it And thus much for the original of Fountaines in general I shall now proceed to treat of the nature of Springs in particular CHAP. III Of the strange variety of Fountains and other Waters NAture hath not discovered her selfe so variously wonderful in any thing as in the Waters of Fountains Rivers c. Some of which strange waters I shall reckon up hat it may be the better conceived how variously subterranealls communicate their vertues to this Element Now the wonderfulnes of waters that I shall mention consists either in the strangeness of their colours tasts odours sounds weight observation of time effects 1. Srange Colours Athenaeus makes mention of a Lake of Babylonia that in Summer-time for some few dayes is red He also saith that the water of Borysthenes is blew in Summer-time Pausanus mentions a certain water at the Town Joppe and in Astyris that is yellow Cardanus speakes of a white water in the River Radera of Misena He also sayes there is a green water in the Mountain Carpatus He makes report of a black water in Allera a River of Saxonia Scaliger reports that the Fountain Job in Idumea changeth colours four times in a year 2. Srange Tasts Agricola makes mention of sweet water in Cardia neer Dascylus and Puteolana neer the cave called Syhill Aristotle relates of a water in Sicania of Sicilia which is used insteed of vinegar and pickle Rulandus also makes a report of a soure water in Mendick and Ponterbon Caesius speakes of a bitter and salt water in Palastina in which Fish can not live of the same tast is the sulphur Well in York-shire Caussinus saith that the River Hyspanis is as sweet as Honey in the beginning and acide at the end Pliny relates that in the country of the Troglodytae there is a Spring called Fons Solis i. e. the Fountaine of the Sun which alters its tast according to the rising and setting of the Sun Mutianus saith that the Fountain Diotecnosia in the Isle Andros hath the tast of Wine Salt waters in York-shire Spain Italy Sicilia and divers other places Nitrous water in L●ti● of Macedonia and at Epsome and Scarborow c. Astringing waters as Alluminous and Vitrioline almost every where Corroding water is in the River Styx the water whereof being put into a Silver Copper or Iron vessell corrodes its way through the same Fat waters as they are tastable may be mentioned in this place and many of this sort saith Caesius are in Germany Italy Macedonia and other places 3. Strange Odours Pausanus saith that in Peloponnesus is a water that hath a very fragrant smell He also saith that in the Town of Elis the water of the River Aniger is of such a horrid smell that it kills both man and beast Aristotle makes mention of a water not far from the River Aridanus which is hot and sendeth forth such a stanch the nothing can drink of it and kills all birds that fly over it Caesius reports of Arethusa a River of Sicilia that it smells like dung at certain seasons The Sulphur-Well in York-shire smells like the scouring of a Gun that is very fowl 4 Strange Sounds Pliny makes mention of a Fountain of Zama in Affrica that makes mellodious sounds Vitruvins reports that a Fountain in Maguesia hath a tunable sound 5. Strange Weight and that either in relation to themselves as being heavy or light or to other things put into them Plutarch makes mention of a River called Pangeus a vessel of the water whereof weighs twice as heavy in Winter as in Summer Strabo saith that the water of the River Euleus is fifteen times lighter than any other water Seneca writes that in Syria there was a Lake called Asphalites in which no heavy thing could sink Caesius saith that the Lake Alcigonius in Lerna is of that nature that if any go into it to swim he should certainly be drowned Strabo writes that amongst the Indians in a mountainous Countrey there was a River called Silia on which nothing could swim which River saith Caussinus is an emblem of ambition because it will suffer nothing to be above it Some Rivers run over Lakes and will not mix with them as Marcie over Fucinus Addua over Larus and divers other there are of this nature Some Rivers run under the bottom of the Sea and will not mix with it as Lycus in Asia Erasinas in Argolica Atheneus saith that in Teno is a Fountain that will not mix with Wine but will fall alwayes beneath it 6. Strange observations of times Cardanus mentions a Spring called Fons Sabbaticus that flowes all the six dayes of the week but is dryed up the Sabbath day Caussinus relates that the Fountain Vmbria flowes onely against a time of famine Ovid writes that the water of Pheneus is unwholsome by night but wholsome by day Solinus reports that in Helesinâ Regione a Fountain otherwise still and quiet doth at the sound of a pipe rejoycingly exult and leap up Ovid saith that the Fountain of Jupiter Hammon is cold by day and hot by night 7. Strange effects The River Styx kills all them that drink of it as is agreed by all Historians Strabo writes that in Palestina the Lake Gardarenus makes the nails horns hair fall off from those beasts that drink thereof Pomponius Mela saith in Insula Fortunata is a water that makes them that drink of it to laugh to death Pompeius Festus reports that the Fountain Salmacis inclines men to venery Vitruvius relates that the Fountain Clitorius makes them that drink of it to abhor wine Ovid saith that the Fountain Lyncestis makes men drunk Pliny makes mention of a Fountain that makes men mad Pliny reports that the Dodonean Fountain will quench lighted torches but kindle those that are extinguished Heurnius saith that he saw amongst the Eugeneans a certain Fountain that would turn divers things to stone that were cast into it H. ab Heer 's and Doctor Jorden reckon up many of this nature whereof some will couvert things into stone in a short time and some in a longer and some onely crust over things as that dropping Well at Knaresborow unles it sinks into things as leaves mosse and all those it converts to a stoney
body to be wrought upon In cold dull bodies more may be taken than otherwise may In general let the proportion to be taken be such as may cause four six or seven stools without auy manifest inconveniency of the fewness or multiplicity thereof Note that in many bodies this water works very quickly and indeed too soon and in such a case my advise is that two or three glasses of the Spaw-water be first drunk for that will somewhat impede the sudden operations thereof cause it to continue longer in the body for the better performing of its operation therein before it pass through it Note also that after the full proportion is taken and in a good measure passed through the body four or six glasses of the Spaw-water may be drunk for the prevention of the excoriation of the bowels and fundament especially in hot cholerick bodies They that cannot drink this water by reason of its stinking odour and yet stand in great need of the effects thereof may boil it a little while till it hath lost its odour and then drink of it for although some vertue vanisheth with the odour thereof yet the greatest and most effectual vertues which are in the Salt and aforesaid subtile acidity thereof do yet continue as I have often tried or if they please put some Salt thereof into the Spaw-water and so drink it for indeed as I said before the chiefest vertue lies in the Salt The Salt also thereof being rightly made put into any common Spring-water doth in good measure perform the same effects The spirit of this salt is of excellent vertue if a drop or two thereof be put into every glass of the Spaw-water for it makes it far more penetrative and indeed far more effecutal against all distempers and diseases as the Dropsie Gravel Stone and suppression of Urine c. I advise that they that have any inflammation or excoriation in their bowels abstain altogether from the taking of this water because it will inflame them more also they that have Ulcers and inflammations in their kidnies and bladder and are troubled with a sharpness of Urine Such directions for exercise and diet as I have prescribed for the Spaw drinkers I prescribe also to Sulphur-water-drinkers for the general onely this liberty I grant them viz. that these may exercise less and feed a little more liberally than Spaw-drinkers This water used outwardly dissolves hard tumours cures old Ulcers the Scab the Itch the Scurff Leprosie and all such breakings out whatsoever if the parts ill affected be washed and bathed therewith for it dries consumes all corrupt humours in the habit of the body and prevents all putrefaction of humours in the same It being used by way of a warm Bath for the whole body is of the same efficacy as Paracelsus saith that his liquamen salis i. e. brine is of and that is to consume all humid distempers whether hot or cold as the Dropsy Gout hard tumours swellings of the legs Leprosy and the like also it makes the falean and reduceth them into a natural dry firm healthy habit of body but it must cautiously be done with the observing of such rules and directions as I prescribed for bathing in warm water as in Chapter the 4. I wish there were more conveniencies as fit vessels for bathing at this Well than are for I believe that after a time Baths with this water would grow more in use and become as famous as those hot Baths in Sommersetshire for many uses The spirit of the Salt rubbed into any parts swelled or pained onely cures them presently And as the waters themselves are outwardly used for cleansing and healing so also there is a kind of slimy bituminous mud below the Sulphur-well which will burn like Sulphur and is of great efficacy for mollifying digesting and resolving hard tumours and for corroborating weak infirm parts and allaying of pains and aches in the limbs of what nature so ever being outwardly applied As I am silent in particularizing cures yet one strange cure I cannot but mention viz. A certain youth came the last year to these waters from the more remore Northern parts having on each finger a horn covering the top thereof and also a horny substance on his wrests and face which with the inward and outward use of this Sulphur-water did in a little time being loosed thereby all fall off If such excrescenices may be loosened and made to fall off thereby then Attendite Cornigeri En vobis medelam CHAP. XVI Of the Dropping or Petrifying-well OVer against the Castle of Knaresborow the River Nide running betwixt ariseth a certain Spring in the manner of other Springs in a high ground which running a little way in an entire stream is at the brow of a descent by a dam of ragged stones divided into several trickling branches whereof some drop and some stream down partly over and partly through a jetting Rock and this Spring is of a petrifying nature for of it was the Rock from which it distils wholly made and is by it daily increased notwithstanding the cutting off great pieces from it This water also generates stones where it fals and likewise where it runs but not all the way it runs but near the place onely where it fell the reason of which I shall presently shew If any stick or piece of woodlye in it some weeks it will be can died over with a stony whitish crust the inward part of the wood continuing of the same nature as before But any soft spongie substance as moss leaves of trees c. into the which the water can enter will thereby in time become seemingly to be of a perfect stony nature and hardness Now the cause of this petrifying property is as Philosophers call it succus lapidescens i. e. a stony matter which is in its principiis solutis for indeed the principia soluta of all things whether animals vegetables metals or minerals are in a liquid form and are concreted by degrees by a natural heat separating from them all accidental humidities and fixing them into their proper species When the water with which this succus lapidescens is mixed is in part wasted by the Sun and air it doth then deposite it as being too heavy for it any longer to bear it And when that is deposited or fallen down it doth by a continued addition and concretion in time amount to a considerable stony mass For the better understanding the true nature and causes of this water I made these three experiments 1. I evaporated away the water and in the bottom was left a stony pouder very like to the pouder of the stones of the Rock 2. A pint of it weighs ten grains heavier than a pint of common Spring water 3. It coagulates milk if it be boiled therewith and the reason of this is because for the principiis solutis of all minerals nature hath provided some Sulphurious acidity for the better fermentation and