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A28326 Blagrave's supplement or enlargement to Mr. Nich. Culpeppers English physitian containing a description of the form, names, place, time, coelestial government, and virtues, all such medicinal plants as grow in England, and are omitted in his book, called, The English-physitian, and supplying the additional virtues of such plants wherein he is defective : also the description, kinds, names, place, time, nature, planetary regiment, temperature, and physical virtues of all such trees, herbs, roots, flowers, fruits, excrescencies of plants, gums, ceres, and condensate juices, as are found in any part of the world, and brought to be sold in our druggist and apothecaries shops, with their dangers and corrections / by Joseph Blagrave ... ; to which is annexed, a new tract for the cure of wounds made by gun-shot or otherways, and remedies for the help of seamen troubled with the scurvy and other distempers ... Blagrave, Joseph, 1610-1682.; Culpeper, Nicholas, 1616-1654. English physician. 1674 (1674) Wing B3121; ESTC R15907 274,441 310

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by cutting and extenuating and digesting the grosse and tough Flegm therein all the properties before-said of the Elder the Walwort doth perform more strongly and is more effectual in opening and purging Choler Flegm Choler Flegm and Water in helping the Gout Water Gout the Piles Piles and Womens diseases coloureth the Hair black helpeth the Inflamations of the Eyes and pains in the Eares Womens courses hair Eyes ears the stinging or biting of Serpents Serpents Mad-dog Burning or a Mad-dog the Burnings or Scaldings Scaldings by Fire or Water Wind Cholick Wind Cholick and Stone and Stone the cure of all old sores and fistulous Ulcers Vlcers and all other the griefs and maladies before of the Elder specified Thus in general Terms I have given the species nature and vertues of the Elder and Dwarff-Elder with their excellent operations deducted from the Testimony of the best Authors and late admired experience I shall now lay down some more particular and late experienced medicaments composed of some parts of the Elder and appropriated to several diseases in several parts of Mans body For pain in the Head Take the Cake of the flowers of Elder left in the Still after the distillation and sprinkle upon it the Vinegar of the flowers and apply it to the Temples renewing it with sprinkling on fresh Vinegar or you may use Rose cakes be sprinkled with the Vinegar of Elder which is far better for the brain where the heat is more vehement and the brain more sensible Or Take of fresh Elder leaves two handfuls of Roses and waterlilly-flowers of each one handful being cut and pounded pour upon them of Elder Vinegar the water distilled out of the flowers of each a like quantity presse the juice out strongly and mix with it two whites of Eggs well beaten in which dip a double Linnen cloth and apply it to the Head repeating it often This decoction is excellent to dispell the Vapours of the brain and make one sleep soundly if the Legs and Arms be soundly rubbed therewith when you go to bed Take six Umbells of the Elder flowers when they are full of Annise Umbells four of Roman Camomil flowers one handful six poppy Heads with their seeds being cut together beat them in rain water and so apply them The Elder 's remedies again Hypochondriack and flatulent Melancholy In these diseases if the Patient be subject to Vomit it is expedient first of all to provoke it by the oyl of the infusion of the flowers and bark of the Elder lest by preparing and purging medecines those crude and Excrementitious humours which often are gathered in the Stomack be carried to the more principal parts of the body and augment the obstructions Or give of the syrrup made of the juice of the buds and berries an ounce with some grains of the extract of Scammony and three drops of the oyl of Elder-flowers distilled in the distilled water of the flowers thereof Or use this clyster following which will mitigate pain expell wind and loosen the belly Take of Elder leaves two handfulls of Elder flowers and Roman Cammomil-flowers of each an handful of the stones of Elder-berries dryed two drams which being cut and pounded boyl them in good Wine or Wine of the Elder till the colature come to eight ounces add the oyl of the infused flowers three ounces of Elder-honey two ounces the yolk of one egg mix them and make a clyster and inject it hot After this the Wine which is drawn out of the berries and flowers is very profitable for it opens obstructions cuts grosse humors and by degrees carries them off It doth likewise refresh the vital and animal Spirits drink a cupful thereof each morning for a Month taking before a spoonful or two of flesh broth or a soft Egg with these you may also mix once or twice a week the powder of the buds of Elder which is thus prepared Take of Elder-buds dryed in the shade half an ounce of Elder-kernels trochiscated of Sene leaves of Crystalized Elder Salt of each three dams of the extract of Scammony two drams of Galingale and Mace each half a dram being all subtilly powdered distill upon them of the oyl of Cloves and Fennel of each six drops of Cinnamon and Caraway of each three drops let them be mixed exactly in a marble Morter for a powder whose dose is from a scruple to a dram The Trochiscation or preparation of the seeds of Elder is thus Take one ounce of the lesser Esula prepared in infusion in Vinegar and pulverized grossly put it into Spanish Wine and let them macerate eight daies in the Sun or in the Winter in the Chimney-corner the mouth of the glass being well stopt after strain them through gray Paper and purifie them take the clean Arilla's of the Elder-berries dry them pulverize them and with a sufficient quantity of the powder of Esula make them in paste dry it and then sprinkle them with the same infusion and again work it into paste of which form your Troches dry them and keep them for your use The specifick cure of the Epilepsie or Falling sickness from the Elder The Cure of Children To Infants new born before you give them any thing to swallow you may give them with great profit a spoonful of the syrrup of the flowers or juice of the Elder-berries to carry off that putrid yellowish and sometimes blackish water gathered in the Stomack and parts about while the Infant is in the Mothers womb for these syrrups do not only change and evacuate but they also preserve from and resist malignities Macerate a handfull of Elder-flowers well dryed in Wine with which wash the new born babe it consumes the humors gathered about the joints and comforts the members this also is profitable Take of the powder of the buds one dram of the berries of herb Paris Numb 6. powder them very finely of which give half a scruple for 9 daies together in the water of Elder-flowers or in any other convenient Liquor In the Fit the least spoonful of the spirit of the flowers given with three or five of the seeds of Peony excorticated is much commended or of Peony-seeds excorticated of the best Water of Elder-flowers one ounce and an half of the flowers of Linden half an ounce The cure of those that are of age and grieved with the Falling-sickness In the cure of such persons first purge the body very well In the Spring time macerate the bark of the roots of Elder in the Whey of Cows milk which being sweetned with Sugar let him each morning drink an hearty draught thereof or take of the compound powder of the buds two scruples or a dram or take of the new rob of the Elder well thickned with Sugar asmuch as will make a Bolus The Spirit of the flowers and berries of the Elder in and out of the fit is very effectual but it may be made more efficacious in this
manner Take of the middle bark of the Elder of Peony-roots each 6 drams of dried Elder-leaves and buds of Linden tree-flowers of each one handful of the seeds of Rue two drams of the berries of herb Paris Number 20. of Jews-Ears numb 6. This being cut and pounded put asmuch of the Spirit of Elder-flowers thereon as will be a hand broad high above them let them stand eight days in a hot place and in a vessel close stopped distill them in glasse Vessels in Balneo Mariae till they be dry with them mix the distilled Spirits the salt drawn out of its dregs and keep it for the Anti-Epileptick Spirit of the Elder whereof you may give a spoonful to the patient in the time of his fit afterwards using it every quarter of the Moon to dissipate the Epileptick corruption by sweating or insensible transpiration and to strengthen the brain with this same in the time of the fit rub the nostrills Gums and Palate adding thereto a grain or two of Castor The Water of the flowers drawn up into the Nose prevails much against the Epilepsie and Vertigo in the same affects the Eyes and Face are to be washed often with this water in the time of the Fit anoint gently the contracted members with the oyle of the flowers of the first description the oyl of the second sort is much commended to anoint the palms of the Hands and Soles of Feet the Temples and nape of the Neck Of the Apoplexy and Palsie The salt of the Spirit of Elder is much commended as a preservative against these grievous diseases if it be mixed with a third part of the volatile Spirit of Amber and given in the time of the new Moon or full Moon in a convenient liquor in the weight of a scruple or half a dram the salt of the Elder must be first excellently crystaliz'd in the water of Sage Oximel Sambuci is likewise useful in these cold distempers of the Brain whereof give often in Sage water a little before purging for the cutting and preparing that grosse matter The Spirit likewise distilled from the Berries is excellent if once a week or at least each Quarter of the Moon a spoonfull thereof be taken mixt with crums of Wheat-bread and a little Sugar or you may prepare it new in what quantity you please Thus. Take Sage Marjoram Ivy of each two drams Cowslip-flowers Lilly of the Valley-flowers of each one dram and an half of Rocket-seeds two drams which being cut and grossely powdered infuse them in a sufficient quantity of the Spirit of Elder and after eight dayes distil them in Balneo dissolve a little Castoreum in it and strain it of this give the Patient a spoonful in the time of the Fit and with the same rub the Crown of the Head Temples Nape of the Neck and Nostrills But if the Apoplexy end in a Palsey of the sides or other Members as usually it doth or in death 't is necessary to provoke sweat which may be done with two drams of the spirit before mentioned or two drams of the Rob of the berries in Sage water or of the extract of the rob of the Elder five drams and an half of which every morning give to the patient being exactly mixed one dram in two or three ounces of the decoction of the great Burdock and keep him warm to sweat in his bed for half an hour Of Catharrs In this the Wine prepared of the flowers and berries is much commended drink a cupful in the morning after you have taken a litle broth For diseases of the Eares and Hearing For to ease and mitigate pains of the Eares use Fomentations of Elder and Camomile-flowers and anoint the place with the oyl of the infusion of the flowers of Elder To take away the tingling sounding and other noises of the Eares drop in a drop or two of the oyl of the flowers and stop the Eares with Bombace dipped therein and with the decoction of the roots and leaves of the Elder with some Originanum let the Eares be often washed therein and receive the hot sume thereof Of the defects of the Nose and Smelling Water of Elder-flowers often snuffed up into the Nose helpeth the Smelling when it is lost or diminished by any great Cold or sickness and if you wash the Face often with the distilled water of the leaves and flower of the Elder it cleanseth and dryeth up all pimples and pustules of the Face For diseases of the Throat and Mouth The expressed juice of the leaves mixed with Simple or Elder hony doth cleanse and dry very much all the Ulcers of the Gums and Throat they being gargled therewith and outwardly anoint them with the oyl of Elder-flowers by infusion For Hoarseness The new Rob of the Elder-berries which is liquid is with good successe given to Coughing and unquiet Children for older people a Lohoch of the oyl of Elder-Sugar is profitable but where there is much matter and corruption feared this medicament following is profitable Take of fresh Elder-leaves a little dryed in the shadow one handful boyl them in a quart of Fountain water to the Consumption of a third part strain it and sweeten it with Sugar-Candy or clarified hony of which every day morning and evening drink a draught warm To make the Voice clear Take of Elder-flowers dryed in the Sun and pulverized of which drink a little every morning in white Wine fasting if the Cough and Hoarseness proceed from heat in Feavers the syrrup made of the juice of Elder-berries with equal parts of the syrrup of violets is an excellent remedy Or you may make Elder-Sugar in imitation of violet Sugar-Candy Cinnamon or Rose Sugar of which in these pectorall diseases hold some still to be dissolved in your mouth that it may gradatim descend into the Wind-pipe 't is thus made Take of the best Sugar 6 pound let it dissolve and boyle in the fragrant water of the flowers till it come to a fit thickness to be made into tablets then infuse the fresh juice made from the berries well clarified or the frequent infusion of the flowers as you please to have the colour on a soft fire boyl to the consistency of a syrrup then in a glasse or earthen pot put sticks in order two fingers breadth as●under and pour the Liquor hot thereon and in a warmed shop the vessel being bound up in a thick Cotton-cloth let it stand to congeal For Swooning and Faintness The Vinegar of Elder-berries imbibed in a Sponge recovers those as it were from death that are subject to Swoonings and Faintings it excellently refresheth the vital Spirits in this also dip Linnen cloaths and apply them to the pulses of the Temples Wrists and near the Ankles Of Agues and Feavers As soon as any one finds a Feaver at first begin to approach let them take of the Rob of the Elder in the Vinegar Spirit or water of the flowers thereof and so in their beds being well covered
Disease and so may either be said to Preserve or Cure therefore you are to adminster them before evacuating Medicines for a Cordial take this for an example made of one scruple of Mithridate half a dram of London-Treacle or that called Diatessaron one ounce of Syrup of Lemons three ounces Of Plantane or Rose-water and six drops of Spirit of Vi●riol for one dose about three hours after give an other dose Or this following Take of Confectio Alchermes burnt Harts-horn of each two scruples syrup of Lemons one ounce as much spirit of Vitriol as will give it a sharp taste after this first administer a Suppositer or Glister of which you have several examples before then after they have done working let him blood plentifully if he be of a strong and gross body as you see occasion his dyet is to be but thin broth water-grewel ponadoes or such like two or three dayes together for purges give him about a scruple of Mercurius dulcis or else this Take six drams or an ounce of Lenitive Electuary two scruples of the Cream of Tarter and one scruple of Confectio Alchermes with Sugar make it into a boll for a dose if it should be convenient to give them a Vomit then give him six drams one ounce or ten drams more or less as you see occasion of the infusion of Crocus Metallorum if sweating be to be procured give him from a scruple to half a dram of Antimonium Di afreticum in a little London or Venice Treacle or Mithridate if he want rest give him from two grains to four of Laudanum Opiatum or else Syrup of wild Poppy six drams of Frogs-spawn and poppy-water of each one ounce and a half with three drams of Treacle make a potion and give the Patient at night to cause him to rest let his ordinary drink be either a decoction of Barley with Liquorish or else this following Take three quarts of fountain-water put an ounce of Harts-horn burnt and prepared into it let it boyl to the consumption of the third part then take it from the fire and put to it four ounces of Rose-water two ounces of syrup of Lemons as much Sugar as will serve to sweeten it and as much sp●rit of Vitriol as will make it sharp this is an excellent drink in all feavors and for all sorts of persons Remember too much purging bleeding and thin dyet is dangerous in all diseases at Sea and will bring your Patient into the Scurvy which is usually the end of most diseases at Sea and then if your Patient be too much weakned the Scurvy discharging it self by a flux is often mortal If you shall have occasion to be concerned with Armies by Land or in Garrisons there will sometimes a continual malign and contagious Fever called the Camp-Disease seize upon the Souldiers which will be seconded by a great pain in the head and his stomach will be clogged with many foul humours sometimes there will follow swooning and often faintings the Patient grows very weak without manifest cause his pulse will be sometimes weak but quick and sometimes strong there will appear oftentimes many large spots of several colours he complains of a pain in his stomach and joints little or no appetite oft-times troubled with vomiting and sometimes difficulty of breathing and singing in the ears all which proceeds from putrefaction or corruption of the humours in the veins or from contagion the corruption or putrefaction of the humours comes from ill dyet ill vapours arising from the earth corrupted naughty air dirty foul apparrel and such like for the cure if there be an inclination to vomit which you may perceive by pain and fulness of the stomach then provoke it with this made of six drams of the infusion of the glass of Antimony two ounces of Barly-water Oxymel of squils and syrup of the 5 opening-Roots of each six drams mix it and give the Patient The manner of infusing your Antimony is this Take two drams of the glass of Antimony put it into a pint of white-wine Cloves and Ginger of each one dram infuse all these together when you have occasion administer it from two drams to an ounce after that you have used all the wine you may put more to the ingredients adding to them the same quantity of fresh ingredients as before after you may bleed if the Patient be not very weak or if you see your Patient of a strong constitution you may begin with blood-letting not forgetting glysters or suppositories with cordials made of the Carduus benedictus Scabious Sorrel Angelica-waters with Venice or London Treacle and burnt Harts-horn Mithridate Dioscordium confection of Alchermes bezoar root of contrayervae as for example Take of the wild Poppies and Sorrel-water of each one ounce and a half London Treacle and burnt Harts-horn of each two scruples one scruple of Mithridate one dram of Dioscordium and three drams of Treacle-water with some syrup of Lemons and as many drops of the spirit of Vitriol as will give it a sharp taste make a potion and give it at one dose or take two scruples of Dioscordium and one scruple of burnt Harts-horn mix them and dissolve them in Mace-ale a little Sack or in Beer and Ale wherein Harts-horn and Marigold flowers have been boyled to cause him to sleep Take syrup of Dioscordium and syrup of wild-poppies of each half an ounce of Angelica and wild-poppy-water of each one ounce and an half and a dram of Diascordium mix them and give it going to sleep Take notice that Cordials are to be given often For purges they must be somewhat strong as one dram of Pulvis astrictionis one ounce of syrup of Roses solutive Diaphrenicon Electuarii three drams dissolve all in three ounces of Endive-water For bleeding in this Disease if the veins be full and stretching out and be burthensom to nature let it then be plentiful for the blood is corrupted in all putrid Feavers it is very safe to let blood which may be done til the fourth day and if your occasion require till the seventh day though spots appear As for vomiting that removes nauseousness pain bitterness and sadness by freeing the stomach from the abundance of naughty humors Vesicatories or blisters may be good applyed to the wrists any time but on a Critical day The form of a blister-plaister may be this Take half an ounce of Cantharides call'd Spanish-flies two drams of Turpentine Olibanum Myrrhe Mastick and Camphire of each half a dram oyl of Roses and Bees-wax as much as will be sufficient to make it to the consistence of a Plaister The Patient is to keep a spare dyet not to eat any flesh but brothes wherein is boyled the shavings of Harts-horn the opening roots with Sorrel and Borrage and Panadoes water-grewel c. And posset-drink with Harts-horn boyld in it dropping a little spirit of Vitriol into it and burnt Harts-horn boild in the Calenture is good to which you may add the syrup
seventh or ninth some think it may be prolonged till the fourteenth day but the sooner the better The Instruments for this purpose first are Raspatories the next is the Trepan or Trasin in the use of which when you are come to the second table take out the Pin and moisten the Trafine with oyl and cold water then wipe away the blood to see if it be cut equal when it begins to shake lift it up with a levatory then smooth it with a Scalper the Gimlet or Terebra serves to raise the depressed part first making way in the skul with the pin of the Trafin after screw it in and draw up the depression the Head-sawe is used either to give vent in fractures or to take off some ragged peece of the skul While you are using the Trafine you are to stop the Patients ear close with cottons having a good fire by you all the while his head being held firmly After you have done your work apply a peece of Sarsenet or Taffety dipped in honey of Roses or oyl of Roses Spirit of wine conveying it betwixt the membrane called dura mater and the skul then fill the whole wound with Arceus his Liniment or else with this medicine Take one ounce of Turpentine wash'd in Sage or Betony-water one ounce and half of oyl of Roses two ounces of the oyl of yolks of eggs Gum-elemy and Mastich dissolved over a gentle fire in the aforesaid oyls of each half an ounce Saffron in powder one scruple the yolks of two eggs make of them an oyntment upon them apply Emplast de Janua Gratia Dei or the Betony-plaister you may use the honey of Roses and Spirit of wine till the seventh day after dressing anoynt the parts adjoyning with oyl of Roses and in the neck where the veins of the throat are whereby pain is asswaged and heat of bloud mitigated if there happen flux of bloud in applying the Trafin use some of the astringent powders beforementioned If you have a simple fracture called a fissure if it be apparent it is either to or through the second table which are to be enlarged or widened as far as they will go with a Raspatory leaving a way for the matter and bloud in the depending part That which is not apparent if you cannot find it by the Patients holding his breath or a multiplying glass apply Ink to the respective part if it leave any print the next day being made clean then follow it as far as it goes with the abovenamed Instrument afterwards dress it as after Trafining If you meet with a fracture in the skul called Sedes or seat which is when the weapon so falls upon the skul that the fracture retaining the print thereof is neither stretched forth nor contracted thereby if this pass through both the tables and the membrans not hurt by any splinter the matter may be made to be discharged dressing it as before will suffice But if the membran called dura mater be offended or the passage be too narrow to discharge the matter remove what offends and enlarge the other with the Raspatory For a Contusion or Bruise on the skul if it shall be so great that the skin be separated from the skul you shall make Incision whereby the bloud may be emptied and so by depressing of the part and drying medicines with Emplastrum Opodoldock may be perfectly cured The Fracture called depression hath the shivers either quite separated or cleaving to the rest or both if the last happen remove the loose shivers and with a levatory raise the rest after dress it with honey of Roses and Spirit of wine and if the levatory fail you use the Trafine as near the fracture as you can When you shall happen to see the skul pulled upward leaving a cavity beneath like a vault if it go only to the second table smooth the skul and cure the wound as before according to art if it pass through the second table open the skul with the Trafine in the depending part then cure it according to art When the part of the skul wounded is altogether separated from the whole which is double First when the first table is parted from the second and cleaves to the Masculous skin then take it away and cure the wound either by medicines that close the lips of the wounds and bring them to perfect union such as before mentioned or the powders of the roots of Lung-wort Tormentil Cinquefoyl leavs of hounds tongue Karrow Vervin Mouse-ear Sanicle Scabious Myrrhe Frankincense Aloes c. Or such medicines which procure the generation of flesh wanting in any wound such as Frankincense Turpentine Pitch Aloes myrrhe Burnt Lead Cerus which may be most fit remember you must use no unctuous or oily medicines to the bones The second is when a portion of the whole skul is divided so that the dura mater is seen this is to be put in its proper place and there kept by bringing the brims of the wound together with as many strong and deep stitches as suffice first washing the wound well with wine or Spirit of wine Sometimes the skul is broken in the part near or opposite to that which received the blow as if the right side be struck the left is cloven if it be nigh the wound the sides of the wound near the fracture will not cicatrize although the other doth there will slow a thin waterish matter more than the wound can seem to afford rhe flesh near to the part is spongy you may find the skin separated from the skul with your Probe and you will perceive some swelling above the fracture if it be opposite it is either in the opposite part or when the second table being broken the other is whole These are hard to find but by conjecture or these signs If the Patient vomit choler have a Feaver with other symptoms belonging to a fracture the Patient will put his hands to it often if there appear a Swelling there is assuredly a fracture if no swelling appear in the opposite part shave it and apply this viz. Take Ship-puchand wax of each three ounces one ounce of Turpentine Mastick and Powder of Orrice-root of each two drams make a Plaister of them spread it upon leather and being applyed let it lie twenty four hours if after you have taken it away the flesh appear in any place more moist soft and swelled then the rest its probable the fracture is there In these fractures the skul must be opened with the Trafine and cured according to art if such Patients die the Chirurgeon is not to be blamed The skul being broken without a wound if in children having shaven the head apply oyl of Roses the white of an egg and a little vinegar apply it cold in Summer but warm in winter with a cloath four double let it lie for twenty four hours afterwards till the eleventh day apply this Take of red Roses and Myrtle berries of each
Seamen or others is chiefly or almost the very same used to those troubled with Hypochondriack melancholy so that you are first to begin the Cure with general evacuations as Bloud-letting Purging and sutable to the nature of the disease strength and constitution of the Patient for Bloud-letting you must do it in the Liver-vein little and often that you cool not the body too much at once the next thing to be looked after is good dyet which because often wanting at Sea in long Voyages they are to carry with them some such comfortable things as may be useful as Wine Sugar c. Then you are to administer Glisters or Suppositories such as formerly has been spoken of in the Cure of Wounds and afterwards such a Bolus or Morsel as this following Take of Diacatholicon and lenitive Electuary of each half an ounce Cream of Tartar half a dram with three or four drops of Spirit of Viteral make a Bolus to be taken in the morning fasting you may if you see the Patient weak open the Hemrod-veins with Leeches you may repeat Bloud-letting in the Arm if you see occasion the gentle purges are the best often given such as common Pills of Ruffus called Pillulae Ruffi communes Pillulae Macri Mercurii dulcis one scruple two scruples or a dram are enough for a dose Barley-water is good the juice or syrrup of Lemmons to which you may if you will add some few drops of Cinnamon-water or Oyl of Viteral and Sugar then you may make use of specifical medicines which are such as have a peculiar faculty against the Scurvy such as Dutch or Sea-scurvy-grass Brook-lime and Water-Cresses Worm-wood Fumitory Turnips Lemmons juice or syrrup of Oranges Limes Tamarinds those which have not so great force against the Scurvy are these that follow viz. Agrimony Maiden-hair Betony Borrage Bugloss Ceterach Elecampane Germander Hysop Polypody of the Oak the Bark of Ash Capers and Tamarisk the flowers of Alder dodder of Time and Tamarisks but alwayes observe that if the Patient be feaverish or inclining to a Feaver you must be sparing of the hotter things and give them in a smaller quantity adding to them Endive Succory Sorrel c. with some few drops of Spirit of Sulphur or Vitriol Of all which you may make several sorts of medicines as Decoctions Apozems Syrrups c. Or else this following Take the juice of Scurvey-grass and Brook-lime of each three pound two pound of powdered Sugar boyl them together till they come to the consistence of a Syrrup Or thus Take two pound of the juice of Scurvy-grass one pound and three quarters of the juice of Lemons and three-quarters of a pint of the spirit of Wine or Brandy to which adding a sufficient quantity of Sugar is made a syrup of which you may take three or four spoonfulls fasting two hours after To your juice of Lemmons alone you may add a spoonful of Aquavitae As much spirit of Vitriol as will sharpen a cup of Beer water or wine is very good also Diatrium piperium taken from a scruple to half a dram in some convenient liquor as Wine Beer or Ale first and last is good Theriaca Diatessaron from half a dram to two and Theriaca Londinensis two drams taken in the morning are good so are conserve of Roses Conserve of Wormwood with a few drops of the spirit of Viteral Likewise green Ginger Rosa-Solis and Wormwood water also it will not be amiss to sweat after purging which you may do by giving him a dram of Venice Treacle or Mithridate or half a dram of Antimonium diafreticum more or less as you find the constitution of your Patient There is commonly accompanying the Scurvy swellings and putrefaction of the gums for which you may take Bistert and Tormentil-roots boyled in a sufficient quantity of water to the consumption of half to which add some drops of Vitriol to make it sharp or else take this following of Roman or white Viteral two ounces one pint of water and two spoonfuls of Honey being boyled to the consumption of the third part add to it half an ounce of Sal●prunella for your use To conclude when you come to any place on shore you may make use of these following Receipts Take a pint of the decoction of Barley four ounces of white-wine Horse-raddish root but thin and bruised two ounces three handfuls of Scurvy-grass leaves strain them through a Cloth mingle them and take a spoonful of this morning and evening Or else take of Wormwood and Juniper-Berries bruised of each one handful Goats-milk if to be had or in want of it Cows-milk or Sheeps-milk two quarts Boyl them till the third part be consumed strain them and to the straining put one dram of Saffron in powder let them boyle a walm or two then strain it again give of this morning noon and evening Or Take three pints of white-wine a quart of small Ale four ounces of the juice of Scabies Brook-lime and water-Cresses of each two ounces half a handfull of Rosa solis boyl them to the Consumption of one pint to which add half a pint of the juice of Scurvy-grass let them boyl a little in a pint of this steep three spoonfuls of Horse-dung let them stand all night strain them in the morning and let the Patient take half a pint thereof being sweetned with Sugar-Candy For a Beer to drink constantly of Take a pound of Scurvy-grass a little dryed Brooklime and water-Cresses of each four handfuls a handful of Sage an ounce of Saxifrage six ounces of Sarsaparilla six drams of Nutmegs Let the Herbs Roots and Spice be bruised a part then mix them hang them in a bag in four gallons of beer after it hath stood nine days the Patient may drink thereof Half a pint of this following-drink every morning for fourteen dayes hath been often tryed and approved and hath cured divers Take Scurvy-grass stamp it and strain it with posset-drink made of thin skim-milk turned with just as much white-wine Vinegar as will serve to turn it during all the time of your cure you must forbear salt meat strong-drink fruits and old Cheese drinking whey at your Meals if you can get it if not instead thereof small Ale and you must chew Brook-lime for three mornings together if your teeth be loose In Voyages at Sea there happen to Sea-men the disease Called the Callenture It is a kind of contagious Fever sometimes with fits sometimes without the Patients being often possessed with a Frenzy for they oft think the Sea to be a Meddow and so make an offer to go into it on some the fits are very violent which are hot and cold in some This Disease happens through great obstructions caused by ill dyet and intemperature of the Climate which aire being somewhat Contagious causeth an ill habit of the Body For the Cure of this Distemper you are first to begin with Cordials which strengthen and defend the faculties from the venemous quality of the
which together with the Bark and Rinde is to be eaten like an Apple the rynde not being tough nor bitter as the rest Descript 4. The Orange without seeds Malus Aurantia unico grano This only differeth from that Orange with the best sowr juice in having but one grain or seed in the whole juice lying within it Descript 5. The Dwarf-Orange-tree Malus Aurantia pumilio The stock of this Dwarf-tree is low and the branches grow thick well stored with leaves but they are lesser and narrower than the other the flowers also are many and thick set on the branches which bear fruit more plentifully than the former but is lesser than the greater sorts yet as well coloured Place and Time All these sorts of Oranges aswell as the Lemons and Citrons are brought unto us from Spain Portugal Biscany and places adjacent they hold time with the Lemons having their leaves ever green and have on them blossomes green and ripe fruit altogether continually Government and Virtues All these trees and fruits are governed by Jupiter the fruit is of differing parts and qualities the rynde of the Oranges are bitterer and hotter than those of the Lemons or Citrons and do warm a cold Stomach the more breaking away the wind therein and the Flegm and after that the bitterness is taken from them Stomach Wind Flegm Heart Spirits by steeping them in water for sundry dayes and then preserved either wet or dry besides their use in Banquets they are very effectual for the strengthening of the heart and spirits and other vitals the juice is inferiour to those of the Citron and Lemon and fitter for meat than medicine yet four or five ounces of the juice taken at a time in wine or Ale will drive forth putrid humours from the inward parts by sweat and strengthen and comfort the heart the distilled water of the flowers besides the odoriferous scent it hath fit for any perfume Pestilence Feavers moist womb Cough Flegm is good against Contagious Diseases and pestilential Feavers to drink thereof at sundry times it helpeth also the moist and cold infirmities of the Womb the oyntment that is made of the flowers is good to anoint the Stomach to help the Cough and expectorate cold raw flegm and to warm and comfort the other parts of the body Yellow Oranges of Malabar Names Descript and Vertues THis is called Carcapuli and is a great Tree growing in Malabar in the Indies the fruit is like an Orange when the outer pill is taken away which consisteth of sundry lumps of pulp not to be separated as they may be in the Orange whose rynde is thin smooth and shining as gold when they are ripe of a sharp taste and binding quality yet pleasant to the taste and are good to stay Fluxes of all sorts and to refresh the stomach and restore a dejected appetite taken with sowr milk or boyled Rice Stomach Hard labour Mists and Rheums in the eyes The Midwives give it women in hard labour to cause a speedy Delivery as also to expell the After-birth the juice is profitably used to clear the stomach and Mists and Rheums in the Eyes Pepper Kinds and Names THere are several sorts of Pepper as black white and long Pepper called Piper nigrum album longum The black and white Pepper differeth not either in manner of growing or in form of leaf or fruit the long pepper also doth grow after the same manner but differeth in the fruit All these sorts do grow each on a several climing bush in the East-Indies but after one manner that is as Hops do grow with us so that if they be not sustained by some tree or Pole on which they may climb spread they will lye down on the ground thereon run and shoot forth small fibers at every joynt But the usual manner is to Plant a branch taken from the Bush near to some tall tree great Cane or Pole and so it will quickly by winding it self about it get to the top thereof being full of joynts and shooting forth fair large leaves one at a joynt being almost round but ending in a point green above and paler underneath with a great middle rib and four other ribs somewhat lesser spreading from it two on each side and smaller veins therein also unto the edges which are smooth and plain somewhat thin and set on a pretty long footstalk the fruit or pepper it self whether black white or long groweth at the same joynt but on the contrary side opposite to the leaf and not between the stalk and the leaf as some have falsly described it round about a long stalk somewhat thinly set all along thereon or not so thick as a bunch of grapes the root hath sundry joynts creeping in the ground with sibres at the joynts the white pepper is hardly distinguished from the black by the very plants thereof until it come to ripeness for the white and black Pepper do grow on several bushes but that the leaves are of a little paler green colour the grains or berries are white solid firm without wrinkles and more aromatical The long Pepper hath leaves very near to the same form and bigness but a little longer-pointed of a paler green colour thinner also and with a shorter footstalk and not having four so eminent ribs passing from the middle-one as in the other but four or five or more sometimes on each side according to the largeness of the leaf with other smaller veins therein and with lesser acrimony and hot taste than the black the fruit of this also groweth in like manner at the joynts opposite to each leaf which are closer set together than in the black being some greater or lesser shorter or longer than others consisting of many small grains as it were set close together in rowes and not open and separate as in the black and white pepper of an Ash-colour when it is ripe Government and Vertues All the Peppers are under the dominion of Mars and of temperature hot and dry almost in the fourth degree but the white Pepper is the hottest which sort is of much use both with the Indians and other nations The Indians use to chew the leaves spitting it out again as some amongst us do Tobacco and the pepper it self they also chew and from the branch take every grain one after another while they are fresh Pepper is much used with us in meats and sawces which it very well doth if not taken too much at once and comforteth and warmeth a cold stomach consumeth crude and moist humours therein Stomach Wind Bowels Cough Breast Serpents Poisons and stirreth up the appetite It helpeth to break or dissolve wind in the stomach or bowels to provoke Urine to help the Cough and other diseases of the breast and is effectual against the bitings of Serpents and other poisons and to that purpose it is an ingredient in the great Antidotes but the white pepper as being more white
either of them is good for the heat and redness of the Eyes and to dry up the Rheums and watering of them Lask Spitting of blood Heart Stomach Liver Retentive-faculties pains of heat Inflamations Sleep Rest Womens Courses Gonorrhaea Fluxes Heat and redness of the eyes Rheumes and watering Of the red Roses are made several Compositions as Electuary of Roses Conserve Sugar of Roses Syrup of dryed Roses and honey of Roses The Cordial powder called Diarrhodon Abbatis and Aromaticum rosatum The distilled water of Roses Vinegar of Roses oyntment and oyle of Roses and the Rose-leaves dryed The Electuary is purging whereof two or three drams may be taken for one of a weak constitution but six drams for stronger bodies This purgeth Choler and is good in hot Feavers in pains of the head arising from hot and Cholerick humors and heat in the Eyes The Jaundies also and Joynt-Aches proceeding from hot humours The moist Conserve is both binding and Cordial some of the younger Conserve taken with Mithridate is good for those that are troubled with Rheums and defluxions of Rheums into the eyes And for Fluxes and Lasks of the Belly and being mixed with some powder of Mastich it is good for the running of the Reins Choler hot feavers heat in the eyes Jaundies Joint-aches rheums Defluxions Eyes Lasks Running of the Reins and for looseness of humours in the Body The old Conserve mixed with Diarrhodon Abbatis or Aromaticum rosarum is a very good Cordial against Faintings Swoonings and weakness and tremblings of the heart it strengtheneth also both them nd a weak Stomach Faintings Swoonings Trembling of the heart Weak Stomach helpeth digestion stayeth Casting and is a very good preservative in time of Infection Digestion Casting Infection The Sugar of Roses is a very good Cordial to strengthen the heart and Spirits as also to stay defluxions The Syrup of dryed red Roses strengtheneth a relaxed stomach given to Casting cooleth an over-heated Liver relaxed Stomach-Casting Liver-heated and the blood in Agues comforteth the heart and resisteth putrefaction and Infection and helpeth to stay Lasks and Fluxes Agues Infection Lasks and Fluxes honey of Roses is much used in gargles and Lotions to wash sores either in the mouth throat or other parts both to cleanse and heal them and stay the Fluxes of humours falling upon them hindring their healing It is used also in Glisters to cool and cleanse The Cordial powders called Diarrhodon Abbatis and Aromaticum rosarum doth comfort and strengthen the heart and stomach causeth an Appetite helpeth digestion stayeth vomiting and is good for those that have slippery bowels to strengthen and confirm them Red Rose-water is cooling and Cordial and of better use than Damask Rose-water it refresheth and quickneth faint and weak Spirits Mouth Throat Fluxes of humours strengthens the heart and Stomach Appetite Vomiting Bowels Faint weak Spirits either used in meats or broaths to wash the temples or to smell to at the nose or else by the sweet vapours thereof out of a perfuming-pot or cast on a hot fire-shovel It is also of much use against the redness and Inflamations of the eyes to bathe them therewith and the Temples of the head against pains and ach thereof Vinegar of Roses is of much use for the same purposes and to procure rest and sleep Inflamations of the eyes Head-ach Rest and sleep if the nose and temples be moistned therewith but rather if a peece of red rose Cake made fit for the purpose be moistned thereon and heated between a double-folded cloth with a little beaten nutmeg and poppy-seed strewed on that side shall lie next the forehead and temples and so bound thereto for all night The oyntment of Roses is much used against heat and inflamations in the head to anoynt the forehead and temples and being mixed with some Populeon to procure rest It is also used for heat of the Liver Back and Reins to cool Inflamations pushes wheals or other red pimples Heat and Inflamations in the head Heat of the Liver Back Reins pushes wheals Pimples rising in the Back and other parts Oyl of roses is also used by it self for the same purposes and is likewise put into many Compositions both oyntments and plaisters to cool and bind and restrain the flux of humours The dryed leaves of the red roses are cooling binding and cordial Rose-leaves and Mynts heated and applyed outwardly to the stomach stayeth vomiting and strengtheneth a weak stomach Vomiting weak stomach very much And applyed as an Epitheme or fomentation to the Region of the Liver and heart Liver and heart doth much cool and temper the distemperature in them Of the Damask roses are not made so many medicines and Compositions but onely the Conserve and Preserve the Syrup and honey of those roses both which are called solutive the water and the distilled oyl or spirit which serveth more for outward perfumes than inward physick the Syrup of Damask-Roses is both simple and Compound and made with Agarick the simple solutive Syrup is a familiar safe and gentle easie medicine purging Choler taken from one ounce to three or four The Syrup of roses with Agarick is more strong and effectual in working than the simple Syrup and worketh asmuch on phlegm as Choler The compound Syrup is more forceable in working on melancholy humours and available against the Leprosie Itch Tetters and the French disease Honey of roses solutive is made of the same Infusion that the Syrup is made of and worketh the same effect in opening and purging but because the honey is not so convenient to be given to hot and Aguish bodies it is oftner given to phlegmatick than Cholerick persons and is more used in Glisters than potions as the Syrup made with sugar is The Conserve and Preserved leaves of these roses are operative to the same effect in gently opening the belly the dryed Damask rose leaves powdered and drunk in Whay gently purgeth The Musk Roses both single and double do purge more forceably than the Damask and the single is held more forceable than the double the wild roses are few or none of them used in physick but are generally held to come near to the nature of the manured roses both in the earthy and binding quality Pliny lib. 8. Cap. 4. saith that the root of the wild-Rose is singular good to cure the biting of a mad dog the fruit of the wild Bryar which are called Heppes and in some Countreys Canker-berries being thorow-ripe and made into a Conserve doth gently bind the belly and is very pleasant to the taste and stayeth defluxions Bind the belly Defluxions from the head upon the stomach and dryeth up the moisture thereof and helpeth digestion the pulp of the Heppes dryed into an hard consistence like to the juice of Liquorish or so dryed that it may be made into powder and taken in drink stayeth speedily the Whites in women the
of the juice of Citrons For preservative you may drink Wormwood-beer or a small quantity of the former Cordials or eat mince and sage with bread and butter and smell to the herbs or you may steep those herbs with Wormwood in white-wine Vinegar which is excellent good in the Plague-time also Seamen and Soldiers are often troubled with Fluxes therefore it will not here be amiss to lay down some convenient remedies for the Cure of the same but being there are several kinds of Fluxes I shall begin first with that which is called Lientery which is when the food received into the body is cast forth in the same substance colour and smell as it was received This proceeds from a weakness of the retaining faculty of the stomach when it cannot keep the meat long enough therein till it be concocted likewise from a cold distemper of the stomach and liver begetting cold and raw humours which fill up the wrinkles of the stomach that it cannot keep the food it receives or else from ●harp humours pricking and twitching the parts by which the stomach and guts are provoked to send forth their meat too soon If this comes from a cold cause you may know it from the sowr belching that follows and phlegmatick excrements that are voided If the humors come from the head the excrements are frothy and after sleep the flux is greater if it come by provocation caused by sharp and pricking humors he will have a great thirst heat in his flanks gnawing in his stomach voiding sharp and chollerick excrements If this disease come from tough phlegmatick humors covering the wrinkles of the stomach you must cut them with honey of Roses Oxymel simplex and Oxymel-squils and the like Then you must give him gentle Purges for which purpose Pills are the best because they stay longest in the stomach of which you may take these for an example Take of Pillulae Cochiae and Pill Ruffi of each half a dram mix them and make them into six Pills of which let him take three at night going to bed and the other three the next morning or night according as you see occasion or else Pills of Hiera with Agrick or Pillulae Alephenginae the same Dose of either a part for Glisters they are here of no great force except the flux be violent and then they must be binding such as shall be spoken of hereafter In a Bloudy-flux after you have purged the humors offending you must then strengthen the stomach wi●h cooling Syrrups and Julips if it come from a hot cause mixing therewith some few drops of the Spirit of Viteral or Sulphur also some Marmalet of Quinces will be good or this following Take of the Conserve of Sorrel and Wormwood of each one ounce Conserve of Roses Suckery and Buglas of each half an ounce Diamargariton frigidum and Diarrhodon Abbatis of each one dram one scruple of Troches of Spodium with as much Syrrup of Lemmons as will serve to make them up to the form of an Electuary mix them and let the Patient take the quantity of a Chesnut morning noon and night or this following Take six ounces of old Conserve of Roses six drams of London or Venice Treakle with as much Marmalet of Quinces as will make it into an Electuary mix them and let the Patient take about the quantity of half an ounce in the morning drinking nothing after for the space of three or four hours if from a cold cause let the Patient boyl some Guaiacum or Sassafras in his drink of which take this for a pattern Take of guaiacum Sassafras Sarsaparilla of each two ounces English Liquorice and Cinnamon of each one ounce Coriander-seed an ounce Infuse them in four quarts of spring or running-water twenty four hours afterwards boyl it gently to the consumption of half of this Let the Patient drink half a pinte at a time about the quantity of a quart in a day here Mithridate Nutmeg Diatessaron and Diatrion pipirion is good if he wants rest and the flux continue give him three grains of Laudanum Opiatum where note in the taking of all which things if the Flux heing stayed break out again it is a sign ill humours are to be purged away to which purpose Rubarb prepared Infused often in Indiff-water is very excellent The next sort of Fluxes is called Diarrhaea which is a Flux in which excremental cholerick or phlegmatick humours are cast forth without either blood or food and these come either from the whole body or from the brain or stomach Guts Liver Spleen Mesentery and if in women from the womb and the like If the Patient hath had or have at present a feaver or be dropsical or of an ill habit of body or have eaten excessively and not digested his food it is a sign that it comes from the whole body If the excrements be frothy and he void more by night than day and he have some manifest disease in his head as a Catarrh Lethargy Deafness c. then it proceeds from the head If the fault be in the stomach the Patient hath eaten food apt to corrupt and there appear signs that the concoction is injured either from a hot or cold cause if from the first the humours will be sharp cholerick stinking and nature labours to throw it out if from the last then the excrements will be crude and phlegmatick If the Flux proceed from the Liver the excrements are cholerick and you will perceive some distemper of the Liver if from the Spleen they will be blackish and you have signs of a distempered Spleen If from the Dysentery you will have an extension of the humours but they come from the Liver and Spleen if from the Guts there 's worms if from the womb there hath been obstructions of the Courses and now some symptom that vexes and increases the Flux at that time the Courses are wont to flow For to help this Disease first of all open a vein if the body be full of bloud and if it be not it is good to let bloud if the Patient hath a feaver then purge with such things as leave a binding quality behind them such as Rubarb dryed and given in Plantane-water with syrrup of Quinces or take a dram of Rubarb and half a dram of the yellow Mirobolans and half a scruple of yellow Saunders infuse them in Plantane-water strain it and to the straining add half a dram of Rubarb in powder and one ounce of Syrrup of Roses a potion for one dose or you may add the lenitive Electuary or Catholicon according to the strength and condition of the Patient and humours vomiting is good if the body be strong before and after purging give this or the like glyster Take Wheat-bran and red Rose leaves of each one pugil whole Barley two pugils Liquorice sliced and Raisins of the Sun of each one ounce boyl these in a sufficient quantity of water till they come to a pinte in the straining