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A81875 A treasure of health By Castor Durante Da Gualdo, physician and citizen of Rome. Wherein is shewn how to preserve health, and prolong life. Also the nature of all sorts of meats and drinks, with the way to prevent all hurt that attends the use of either of them. Translated out of Italian into English, by John Chamberlayne, Gent. Imprimatur, April 5. 1686. Rob. Midgley.; De bonitate et vitio alimentorum centuria. English Durante, Castore, 1529-1590.; Chamberlayne, John, 1666-1723. 1686 (1686) Wing D2682B; ESTC R202251 103,967 242

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care that none come into the Chambers th● strewed for if there be a great many with the● Breath they re-heat the Room Besides this l● the Chamber be full of odoriferous Fruits as swe●● smelling Apples Pears Quinces Citrons and Li●mons But if the Air should be too cold yo● must avoid the Wind chiefly the Northern a● not go out of the House before Sun-rising a● strew your Chamber with hot Herbs as Mint Peniroyal Sage Hysop Laurel Rosemary Marjora●● or else make a decoction of these Herbs with Clove● Cinamon Mace and such like and sprinkle t● Chamber therewith and perfume it also wi●● some aromatical Smells as Incense Mastick ●●namon Ladanum a Gum made of the fat D●● that is gathered from the Leaves of Lada N●●megs rine of Citrons Myrrh Amber Lignum ●loes Musk and the sweet smelling Gum call'd St●rax putting these things on lighted Charcoal 〈◊〉 else mix these Perfumes with liquid Storax setti●● it a little while over the Coals These aromati●● Odours have the vertue to open the Pores wh●● they are stopt attenuate the gross Humours a●● is good against the cold and moist Vapours of t●● Body This Perfume may be made another w●● if you take of all these things to wit Half ounce or six drams of Roses one dram of A●ber of Musk half a scruple of Behen Album Sparling Poppy or red Behen ana two scrupl● of the Flowers of Nymphea or River-Lillies thr● drams of Ladanum one dram of Mastick Incen●● ana two Drams pound these not too small and set them over t●● Coals Besides this to correct the bad quality of the Air and to attenuate and dissolve the gross and slimy Humours of the Body let there be always burning in the Chamber a good Fire of some Odoriferous Wood as Lawrel Rosemary Cypress Juniper Oak Pine Firr the Latrix or Larch-Tree Turpentine and Tamarisk Moreover Night and Day smell to a Ball of Pomander composed of these following several Ingredients Take of Saffron one Dram and a half of the Oriental Amber half a Scruple of Musk half a Dram of Storax Calamita the Gum which proceeds from a sweet Cane in the Indies and of Lawrel ana one Scruple these are altogether dissolved in Malmsey and thereof is made a round Ball. One thing is worthy your Observation and Remembrance that is that the Air in hot and moist Countries as for Example in Rome c. is very destructive to the Health the Air of the Vineyards is also little wholesom unless when the Northern or Western Wind blows Of Seasons those are the best which keeping their proper temperature are equally either cold or hot but the changeable and incertain Weather is the worst of all I must not likewise omit to tell you that in the Summer when the South Wind blows as in those places which stand towards the North are the least wholsome as in the Winter the Northern Wind blowing those which look towards the South If you desire to know the quality of the Air and disposition of the Weather at Night in the open Air put a dry Sponge and if in the Morning you find it dry you may assure your self the Air is dry if wet then conclude the Air is moist and damp The like Experiment may be tryed ●ith new Bread which being exposed to the Nocturnal Air as the former if in the Morning you find it mouldy the Air is corrupted and putrefied but if the Air be hot and dry the Bread will remain withou● any change The malignity of the Cold may b● corrected by artificially causing a good and swee● Breath viz. by keeping in your Mouth Treacle Mithridate also the Confection called Alcarmes a term of the Arabian Physicians whereby they meant a Cordial made of certain little Scarle● Worms of which also is Crimson made rubbing the Teeth with this Antidote which yet becomes better by the addition of Zedoary a Roo● like Ginger growing in the East-Indies an● chewing therewith Angelica and this Dentifrice or Medicine to cleanse the Teeth may be made if you take of Rosemary one Dram of Myrrh Mastick Bole-armoniack Dragons-Blood Burnt-Allom ana half a Dram of Cinnamon one Dram and a half Rose Vinegar Mastick-water ana three Ounces half a pound of Rain-water of Honey three Ounces boyl these together over a gentle fire to the end that they may be well scummed afterwards add thereto Bezoar a kind of Precious Stone very Cordial being an excellent Antidote to expel Poyson by the Arabick Doctors it is called Badzahar i. e. Alexipharmacon a Remedy for Poison and as a● Unguent keep it in a glass Bottle Of this take a spoonful every Morning fasting holding it in your Mouth and rubbing your Gums therewith the which must b● afterwards w●ll washed and cleansed with Wa●●● distilled in a hot Bath of white Salt and Roch-Allom ana three Ounces and thereto may be added a little ●●stick-water With this wash the Teeth for these things cleanse the Mouth cause good Breath f●sten loose Teeth flesh the Gums heal the putrefied Flesh and make the Teeth white Besides all this there is great heed to be taken in the choice of a House see whether the Place and the Air be good or bad wholesom or unwholsom to dwell in The House therefore which you take let it be seated in the highest place of the City therein chuse your Apartment at least one pair of stairs high and let it be very light and so placed that it may always receive the Wind in the Summer and the Sun in the Winter and have Windows on all sides that is East West North and South if it may be to the end that no one Air may remain there long which otherwise would putrefie and corrupt and furthermore you ought to avoid not only lying in a Ground-Chamber but also tarrying there long for the highest are the most wholsom where you breath the thinnest and purest Air then you receive this benefit that dwelling in the highest and most open place of the House preserves and repairs the radical Moisture of the Body and hinders Old Age but to be in a dark lower Room or under the Ground is very naught for Life is maintained by the open Air and by Light but in the shade a Man grows mouldy and corrupted I must furthermore advertise you that of Animals Herbs Fruit Corn and Wine those are to be chosen that grow in high Ground free from ill smells putrefied by the Wind and receive a temperate and sufficient warm●h of the Sun where there be no stinking Lakes and Dung-hills to molest them for there the Fruits remain a long while uncorrupted and this is ●he only place whereon a man may securely fix to dwell in 'T is also commodious to have a Country House whereto you may sometimes repair for as the Country provides Food and Victuals for the City and the City consumes it so humane Life by sometimes dwelling in the Country is prolonged but by the Idleness of the
for the Stomach The China-Oranges are good at all times for Old Men and the sour in hot Weather for Young Cholerick and Sanguine Men and especially in Pestilential Fevers CHAP. LXXVII Of Chestnuts Name IN Latine Castaneae in English Chestnuts and Marroons Choice The best Chestnuts are the biggest and therefore the Marroons are the best and after they are gathered they are to be kept a long while whereby they become more savoury and wholsom Qualities Garden-Chestnuts as well as wild are hot in the first degree and dry in the second they are also very astringent Commodity Being windy they provoke Copulation they afford large and wholsom Nourishment they cure the Flux and mingled with Honey and Salt they heal the bitings of Mad Dogs when they are roasted under the Ashes they stop Vomiting In places where there is but little Corn they dry them and smoak them in the Chimney afterwards they cleanse them which thus prepared serve instead of Bread Chestnuts lightly roasted under the Ashes afterwards boyled in a little Skillet with Oyl and Salt adding thereto Pepper and the Juice of Oranges And they are used for Tartufoli or Testiculi Terrae much eaten in Italy and Spain Hurt Being eaten over-much in Food they cause the Head-ach bind the Body are hard of Digestion cause windiness especially if eaten raw Remedy They are less hurtful if roasted on the Coals and cover'd a little while under hot Ashes and afterwards eaten with Pepper and Salt or Sugar which is good for cholerick as with Honey for flegmatick men The boyl'd are better than the roasted for they acquire a suffocant quality from the smoak they are good in cold weather for all Ages and Complexions provided they be well boyled and taken in a small quantity drinking good Wine after them CHAP. LXXVIII Of Lemmons Name IN Latin Mala Limonia in English Limons Choice The best are such as have the smell of a Citron that are very ripe and of a good colour having been Stazati of the Trees Qualities The little as well as the great are cold and dry in the second degree but the biggest excel the rest both in Juyce Peel and Substance Commodity They have the same vertue as the Citrons but more weak Their juyce excites the Appetite stops Vomiting cuts the gross Humours and resists malignant Fevers and kills the Worms the juyce of the sowr Lemmons taken to the quantity of an ounce and mixt with Malmsey sends out the Gravel of the Kidneys the little ones have the same effects but more strongly If they be cut in pieces and eaten with Rose-water and Sugar they cause a good Stomach and give a pleasant relish to the Drink and also break the Stone in the Bladder They are also eaten instead of a Sallad cut in pieces with Water Honey and Vinegar having the same Effects as is said before Hurt They are a great cooler of the Stomach beget cholick Pains and cause Leanness breed melancholick Humours for with their sharpness they bite the Stomach nourish little and strongly bind the Body Remedy They are to be used in a small quantity without the Peel steept a little while in Water then eaten with Sugar and Cinamon they are not good for cold Stomachs they are good in hot weather for young and cholerick and are naught for old and flegmatick men CHAP. LXXIX Of Pomegranats Name IN Latin Punica mala in English Pomegranats from the many Grains which are therein contained Choice The best are such as are large ripe and easie to be peeled and the sowr for they have juyce enough Qualities The sweet are hot and moist temperately and pleasant to the Stomach the strong and sowr are cold in the second degree and those of a middling taste and indifferent nature are very dry Commodity The sweet are good for the Stomach the Breast and the Cough and increase venereal Desires the sharp and sowr are good for the Liver and burning Fever refresh and cool the dryness of the Mouth extinguish the Thirst and moderate the i●●at of the Stomach Their Wine and Syrup is good for the same purpose strongly quenches the Choler and hinders the Superfluities from dispersing themselves through the Bowels keeps down the Vapours from the Head and provokes Urine The Peel of Pomegranats dryed is very good to be put in a Trunk amongst Linnen and Cloaths for it gives them a sweet smell and preserves them from Moths Hurt The sweet Pomegranats cause Heat and Windiness and therefore their use is forbidden in Fevers the sowr are enemies to the Breast and offend the Teeth and the Gums Remedy The one sort of Pomegranats qualifie the malignity of the other and therefore the grains of the one and of the other are to be mixed together whereby of two such Contrarieties is made one excellent Temperament or else eating a little Sugar with the sowr but after you have well suckt all the grains you must spit them forth The sweet are good in Winter for every one but the sowr only in Summer and then too for young cholerick men but they are naught for old men because they contract their Breasts Their juyce is not to be eaten alone but as sawce with Food the middling sort are eaten after Meals with Sugar or Salt whereby are represt the Vapours which would ascend into the Head CHAP. LXXX Of Filberds Name IN Latin Nux Avellana ab Avello a Town in Campania in English Filberd Choice The Garden-Filberds are better than the wild also the red big and not much covered full of moisture which are not rotten nor worm-eaten the long ones are more pleasant to the taste than the round Filberds Qualities The fresh are temperate in the first degree but the dry are hot and dry almost in the beginning of the second degree Commodity They are more nourishing than Nuts increase the Brain and two or three of them eaten at the beginning of the Dinner are good against the Pains and Gravel of the Kidneys being eaten with Rue and dry Figs to Breakfast they preserve the Body from the Plague The round are covered as the Corianders are most pleasant and grateful to the Stomach Hurt They are very hardly digested yet are not at all disagreeing with the Liver they cause Windiness beget much Choler and Pains in the Head especially if you eat too great a quantity of them and too often Remedy You must eat such as are very fresh and in the Summer steept in Water with a little Sugar on them and the dry only in Winter young men and such as labour or have a strong Stomach may eat them often The sugred Filberds are least hurtful CHAP. LXXXI Of Walnuts Name IN Latin Nux Juglans in English Nuts or Walnuts Choice The best Nuts are the big long ripe and which are fresh not old nor corrupted within Qualities The fresh and green are hot and dry in the first degree the dry are hot in the third degree and dry in the second but