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A25287 The sick-mans rare jewel wherein is discovered a speedy way how every man may recover lost health, and prolong life, how he may know what disease he hath, and how he himself may apply proper remedies to every disease, with the description, definition, signs and syptoms [sic] of those diseases. (Viz.) The scurvy, leues venerea, gonorrhea, dropsies, catarrhs, chollick, gouts, madness, frensies of all sorts, fever, jaundise, consumptions, ptisick, swoundings, histerick passions, pleurisies, cachexia's, worms, vapours, hypochondriack melancholly, stone, strangury, with the whole troop of diseases most afflicting the bodies of men, women and children; with a supply of suitable medicines; ... a piece profitable for every person and family, and all that travel by sea or land. By B.A. A. B. 1674 (1674) Wing A2B; ESTC R222542 90,076 270

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and preserved by the use of their like and co●traries are destroyed by their contr●ries and weary his body by viole● Exercises and continual labour An● if there be a suppression of choleri● Excrements which before did freel● flow either by Nature Will or Art b● whosoever seeds upon meats gener●ting gross blood as Beef Veniso● Hare old Cheese and all salt meats without all doubt sliding from his N●ture will fall into a melancholy te●per especially if to that manner Diet he shall have avocation full cares turmoils miseries strong a● much study carefull thoughts and fea● and also if he sit much wanting Ex●cise for so the inward heat as it w● defrauded of its nourishments fai● and growes dull whereupon gross a● drossie humours abound is gone out of the belly shall stuffe his panch with more Who presently after meat runs into violent Exercises who inhabit cold and moist places who lead their life at ease in all idleness and lastly who suffer a suppression of the phlegmatick humour accustomely evacuated by Vomit Cough or blowing the Nose or any other way either by Nature or Art Certainly it is very convenient to know these things that we may discern if we at the present be phlegmatick melancholick or of any other temper whether he be such by Nature or Necessity Of Spirits IN order of Nature that that offers it self to the next hand is concerning Spirits A Spirit consider as a part of a man and that which enters our Constitution is defined to be an aiery thin and clear substance the seat of the native heat the Vehiculum of the Faculties and Instrument of the out-going Functions and of these there be two sorts one is the In-nate and the other is the In-flowing Spirit The In-nate Spirit is that which is put into every Similar part by the Principles of Generation and that which of the Greeks is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is the Foundation of the Humidum radicale The In-flowing Spirit is that which breaks forth from elsewhere and nourisheth and preserveth the Faculty and innate heat carrying it every where to the acting the Functions Of this In-flowing Spirit there be three kinds Animal Vital and Natural The first is the Animal Spirit an● that which is begotten from the Vital Spirit and the inspired Aire int● the Ventricle of the Brain and distributed by the motive and sensitiv● Nerves giving sence and motion to th● whole Body The Vital Spirit is that which is begotten in the left bosome of the heart and the prepared Aire in the Lungs whence it is distributed to all the part● by the Arteries The Natural Spirit which goes forth from the Liver by the Veins with the Blood is poured forth into the Extream parts of the Body the Author of Generation Nutrition and Increase Of the Faculties A Faculty it is the Innate power of the Soul used to the performance of Actions and it is defined by Galen to be the Effecting Cause of Actions and therefore is call'd a Faculty Quod quae facit facere possit So that is understood by the Name of a Faculty which hath a power to doe and these Faculties are stated to be Animal Vital and Natural And that is the Animal Faculty which is onely proper to the Animal and for that cause it is so called That is Vital which the Vital begets in the heart and is sent forth from thence by the Arteries for the preservation of Life whence also it receives the Name of Vital The Natural Faculty is that which is in the Liver and sends Aliment to all the parts of the Body by the Veins Of Actions AN Action proceeds from a Faculty call'd in Latine a Function and therefore also they call it an Operation And as an Action so also a Function is three-fold Animal Vital and Natural But Action is defined by Galen to be of two sorts Animal and Natural From the Animal they are call'd Anamae Actiones but from the Animale Actiones Animi CHAP. V. Of Things not Natural THese Res non Naturales are s● call'd because they are not o● the number of those which enter into the Constitution or Composu● of mans Body as the Elements Humors and the rest which have been briefly mentioned already There are six thing which are Res non Naturales The ambient Aire Meat and Drink Sleep and Watching Motion and Quiet Excretion and Retention and Perturbation of the Mind in the right use of which doth consist the pr●●ervation of Health And to this purpose that Aire is to be Aire chosen which is neither thick nor rimy nor cloudy neither neer to standing Pools or Rivers but thin and serene neither too hot nor too cold neither too dry nor too moist neither infected with the ill Gales of Lakes common Sewers Sinks nor the filthy breath that is exhaled from dead Carkases nor corrupted by putrifying Dungs or any thing that sends forth filthy fumes neither that which is sent forth by windes out of the Mountains into the Vales and Caves and shut up in other hollow places but pure and thin Of Meats THat Food is to be chosen which is Of Meat of good Juice easie of Concoction that hath not much Excrementitious matter but Food of an ill Juice is to be rejected the particulars of which you will hear more hereafter upon treating of the Scurvy Those are call'd Foods of good Juice which are neither too hot nor too cold dry or moist but ●emperate neither too glutinous nor too thin but of a Medium because they beget good Blood that is neither too thick nor too thin The Quantity of Food must be measured Quantity by the Ability of the Concoctive Faculty and of whole Natures Ability to distribute that which is requisite to the nourishment to every part and therefore the quantity must not abound the power of the native heat and to this end it must be well chewed and ground by the teeth that being swallowed into the stomach the first shop of Nature it may be the easier concocted The Time of taking Food must not Time be before the fore-received Food be cast out by the power of the Expulsive Faculty into the Guts out of the Stomach The Drink must be Beer well boy'ld The drink made of Barley-malt or mixed with Oats it must not be red nor white neither sharp or soure but well boyl'd if Beer and clear and pure of good odour The Quantity of Drink must answer Quantity of drink the Quality of the received Food for if the Food be more solid and dry the Drink may be more liberal where the meats are more moist the Drink must be the less Much swashing of the stomach with The Time drink at Meals is disapproved as unwholsom and yet it must not be too sparing because that will not quench the thirst which is to be regarded As to the Time of Drink as Hunger doth admonish us when to eat so Thirst
Veins that passes down by the back but chiefly the spots do bud and put forth themselves in the feet and leggs 4. When the Fountain and Fuel of this Disease is circumscribed in the Bowels that neither much of it is powred forth into the veins then either the Veins it self or both do begin to swell in the Panch-belly and so they are rendered bigger but chiefly the Spleen which swelling or being puffed up with Afflatus and glutted with the muddy part of the blood it spreads to a greater magnitude 5. The fifth symptome of this disease is that from hence is produced an extenuation of the Body by reason of a defect of the more benign Aliment and nutritive Juice or from impure Food the blood being not sufficiently cleansed 6. The Appetite the Faculty of the stomack the desire of Food needfull and necessary to Life is dejected conflicting almost continually with a nauseating loathing and aversion to all food with some it is dulled but with others the natural habit of the stomack is well-nigh lost and truely all these things are wont to happen by reason of the disparity of the humour flowing as from the Liver so also from the Spleen into the Center of the stomack 7. The Seventh symptom is this that sometimes one sometimes another of the Hypocondra● are afflicted with pain and as it were with an obscure deadness wherefore they are vehemently distended by winds or Flatus that hides and are shut up in these places from whence the power of Rising up and going doth arise 8. Eightly The pain of this place is not perpetually circumscribed and abiding here but every where now here now there according to its wandring disposition now in the sides and anon in the lower parts of the Body and by and by through the whole Body and thus it very imperiously maintains its own bounds 9. In the first which is extended to the Loyns the Loyns seem as though they were broke and in these there is perceived too much blood abounding in the great Veins of the Loyns before the arising of marks Buboes the Haemorrhoids being stopt in men and the monthly Courses in Women and other pains running over the whole Body but chiefly the Joynts sometimes with and sometimes without a tumour sometimes with a certain quivering and discovering its self of its own accord and often times it resembles the Gout 10. The tenth symptome is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or swounding which doth assault many the heat and spirit being wearied even as it is wont in the Hypochondraick affection in which often times there is certain Respits or Intervals as it were the Spirits leading themselves to the Castle of the heart as to its strong hold 11. If the humour pass downward because Nature with its own Gravity maketh it to travel into the Veins there is pain with a Flatus and vexes their extream parts abundantly 12. Some are Costive or more sparingly go to stool by reason of the driness of their bodies but others are attended with fluxes 13. The Urin appears muddy and yet it neither resideth to the bottom nor hath any troubled Sediment at the bottome 14. There is such pulsation of the quivering Arteries as there is in them that are afflicted with a Quartan Ague which is weak hard and frequent 15. And if the Praecordia's by reason of ill Living have been inflamed by heat because of the straitness of the place the matter having been shut in as in a hot Oven a Fever will arise gentle to the touch of the hand neither having any period or time of Endings 16. The Scurvy hath frequently its own periods with which by little and little it is dissolved and returns as it were again per Circulatum vel circuitum 17. When the flesh of the Gums by its nature being softer because of its Texture and being moistened with vapours from the impure Bowels scorching by the power of the heat from below truly they then are most apt to be fill'd and then it ariseth into a less and fluid humour 18. The Gummes do begin to itch at their roots because of a scorched putrid salt humor moistened by its Ichor with which by its nature is acrid and sharp propagated either by contagion being stopt no longer and by taking another course and afterward it hath by staying in the place acquired an Acrimonia 19. The Scurvy is alwayes accompapanyed with the stinking foetor in the mouth 20. Another Infirmity that attends the Scurvy is a weakness and feebleness in the knees for which cause the sick can walk but slowly though he endeavour much by reason that the Muscles and nervous parts are over-charged with gross and melancholy humours as also a Contraction of the Nervous parts that many cannot set their feet plain upon the Ground 21. To some there happens an obstinate stifness of the Jawes that they cannot well gape or yawn by reason of the stubborn stifness of the Joynt of the Cheek 22. In some there happens a convulsive motion of the Muscles and Nerves in others a paralytick distemper in some a swelling in their legges in some the Scurvy and Dropsie are complicated together in others there is an Atrophy viz. a Consumption of some one part whiles the rest are in good plight by reason of undue attraction of Aliment 23. There often happens a trembling and palpitation and great Assaults of the Heart and these Passions are meerly convulsive from the Cardiacous Nerves to wit of the Praecardium and Heart it self by reason of the spasmodical matter that besieges it 24. Some annoyed with wandring Fevers and also sudden suffusions of heat and also Cold in several parts of the Body now hot and anon cold flushing heats in their faces especially after meals untill the Concoction be over 25. Also Scorbuticks are wont to be molested with copious sweats and specially in the night because the nutritive Juice every day brought into the Mass of blood by reason of the intemperature impurity and foulness of it is very little assimilated being rejected of the blood breaks forth under the form of sweat but because that Nutritive Liquor whiles it is assimulating is made worse being sick it produceth not a Fever in its own manner the saltish intemperature of the blood which being less apt therefore abideth in the burning Fits these immoderate kinds of Sweats continual Fevers with other Chronical Diseases doe often happen to scorbutick persons where the Nutritive Liquor by fault of the assimulating Blood is perverted more than the concocting Bowels 26. In Scorbuticks the Urine appears red like a Lie made of Wood-ashes and this we pronounce as an undoubte● sign of this Disease for whiles the serou● Latex dissolved with the saltish and sulphurous uncocted particles some do● impart and communicate to it the highly saturated and as it were the Lixivial tincture and also such a Urin abounde● much with Contents which when it ● cold doth praecipitate to the bottom 27. To this