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A02362 Child-birth or, The happy deliuerie of vvomen VVherein is set downe the gouernment of women. In the time of their breeding childe: of their trauaile, both naturall, and contrary to nature: and of their lying in. Together with the diseases, which happen to women in those times, and the meanes to helpe them. To which is added, a treatise of the diseases of infants, and young children: with the cure of them. Written in French by Iames Guillimeau the French Kings chirurgion.; De l'hereux accouchement des femmes. English Guillemeau, Jacques, 1550?-1613.; Guillemeau, Jacques, 1550?-1613. De la nourriture et gouvernement des enfants. 1612 (1612) STC 12496; ESTC S103545 201,032 403

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we see oftener then we would that the small Pocks do fall euen vpon the bones and corrupt them The signes to iudge of the euent of them are these If the Ague be but little and diminisheth as the Pocks come foorth if they be but few in number and those scattered here and there if they come foorth easily without much paine and that the child is not much disquieted if they grow white and ripen quickly these are signes of recouerie But if the Ague continue and increase at the comming foorth of them if they thrust foorth in great quantitie one vpon another and if they run as it were all into one scab not ripening speedily if the child be verie hoarse and not able to speake or fall into a bloudie flixe these are ill signes The first sheweth that it hath seized vpon the Lungs and the second that it fretteth the guts Againe the small Pocks is verie dangerous when it comes foorth with paine and griefe though they be white When they be small greene blewish or blacke and that they sinke downe and grow drie on the suddaine not comming to maturation and suppuration if the child pisse bloud and then by and by after his vrine turnes to be blacke it is signe of death Concerning the Measels if they be but reasonable red and haue no ill accidents ioined with them but go away suddainly they are not to be feared But when they are high colour'd or if they be blewish or greenish accompanied with vomiting paine of the heart weaknesse the bloudie Flixe and the like they are verie dangerous Of the cure of the Measels and small Pockes CHAP. XXXVI IN all diseases that happen vnto little Children and especiallie in the cure of this present sicknesse the Chirurgion must not be too hasty nor do any thing rashly For there be many oftentimes deceiued which think that the child will not haue the Pocks or Measels because at the first they haue but a little Ague or Head-ach or some other light signe of it seeing that this disease lyeth long in the bodie before it makes any shew And therefore not without good cause haue the ancient writers obserued that sometimes it is better to do nothing than to begin amisse oftentimes altering thereby natures course Neuerthelesse you cannot do amisse in giuing the child some little preseruatiues as Vnicornes horne Bezoard stone and Cordiall waters causing him to be kept quiet without taking the aire especially if it be cold weather But as soone as the Chirurgion perceiueth that the child is taken with an Ague and that he hath the signes heretofore mentioned he must proceed in this manner to the cure of them First he must haue a care in what place the child is laid seeing that this disease doth partly proceed of a maligne and contagious aire which after that it hath beene drawne and carried by the Lungs to the hart and other parts of the body it leaues there an impression of his bad quality in that part of the menstruall bloud wherewith the child was nourished in the mothers womb wherefore let the child be kept in good aire that is neither too hot nor too cold For being too hot it may cause the childe to haue faintings and swounings and being too cold as the Pockes or Measels are comming foorth it may keepe them backe and driue them in againe and so hinder nature from expelling and putting foorth the impurities that are in the body And therefore he must be kept warme in his bedde and reasonably well couered Such as are more nice and curious doe hang the bed round with red couerlets If it be winter it will be good to haue a fire in the Chamber to rectifie the Ayre which perhaps is of the coldest and also to correct some ill quality which it may haue as Rhasis and Auicen write If it bee in heate of Summer it will not bee needfull to make so much fire nor to keep the child couered so warme Concerning his meate and drinke if the childe sucke then must the Nurse keepe a good diet as wee haue heeretofore prescribed and as if she her selfe had an Ague If the child be weaned he must absteine from eating all manner of flesh no not so much as of a little Chicken till the pocks be whollie come foorth But as Auicen saith he may vse Broths made with Capons or Chickens wherein you must put good store of Sorrel Cichory Buglosse Borage and Lettuce Hee may also vse the strained broth of Pease Lentils and Barley waters made with Figs Dates Raysings of the sunne also Gelly Prunes and rosted apples well sugred For his drinke let him vse a Ptisane made of Barley and Licorise adding thereunto some Raysings of the sunne Figs and Dates but in small quantity If that drinke please him not then let him vse this drinke following An excellent Drinke Take of French Barley a handfull shauings of Iuory and Harts horne tied in a little linnen cloth of each two drammes Boyle them in a quart of water and when it is almost sodden put to it halfe an ounce of Licorise halfe a Citron peal'd and cut in slices then straine it and let him drinke of it at his Meales and when hee is thirsty When the Pockes are quite come foorth and begin to looke white and that the Ague grows lesse lesse then he may eate a little stronger meate and drinke a little water and Wine his meate and drinke must not be actually cold And because the pockes do come in the mouth tongue and throat as also all along the wind-pipe you may put to his drinke a little suger or sirup of Violets Iuiubes or Cherries and chiefly to that he drinketh betweene meales This drinke lenifieth suppleth the roughnesse and excoriations it is good for the Lungs and the hoarsenesse wherewith they are troubled and also it cleanseth gently For his sleepe that must be moderate if at the first hee bee very drowsie and heauie he must bee wakened forfeare least his head be filled with vapors But it is also fit if he cannot take his rest to giue him somwhat to make him sleepe For sleepe doth well concoct the humors and maketh the Pockes come foorth the better And for this purpose you may giue him some fine Barley waters and put into his Broths some Lettuce and the cold seeds and at night you may giue him a little spoonfull of sirup of Iuiubes Nenuphar and Violets mingled together absteining from all Narcoticall or stupifying medicines If he be bound and cannot go to the stoole you may giue him inwardly a little Oile of sweete Almonds newly drawne or a little Hony as Auicen appointeth which Auenzoar allows not of because he had taken some of it as he saith when hee had the Pockes where with he thought he should haue died It will not be amisse to giue him a spoonfull of Cassia and if his belly be
danger because the Medicines we vse in these dayes as Rubarbe Manna Cassia and Tamarinds are not so violent as those that were vsed by our Ancients which were Hellebor Scammony Turbith Coloquintida or the like and wee must take especiall care of giuing them any opening things which may either prouoke vrine or their naturall courses for as the same Author saith It is impossible for the child to be healthfull if the mother haue her naturall sicknes Bloud-letting is forbid them vnlesse it be very needefull especially if the child be growne any thing big because he hath more neede of foode and nourishment then at the beginning when he was little for take away his sustenance and he will waxe leane and feeble being oftentimes driuen for want thereof to seeke a passage forth Notwithstanding there are some women so sanguine and full of bloud that we are forced to take some of it away least the child be stifled with the ouer-great quantitie thereof or when they fall into diseases where it is necessary to open a veine The fittest time if it be not in case of necessitie is from the fourth to the seuenth moneth I haue seene a woman with child who for a Pleurisie was let bloud eleuen seuerall times and yet stayed her full terme and was well deliuered Now concerning the passions of the minde a woman with child must be pleasant and merrie shunning all melancholike and troublesome things that may vexe or molest her mind for as Aristotle saith A woman with child must haue a setled and quiet mind which Auicen also counselleth that those which haue conceiued ought to be preserued from all feare sadnesse and disquietnes of mind without speaking or doing any thing that may offend or vexe them so that discreet women and such as desire to haue children will not giue eare vnto lamentable and fearefull tales or storyes nor cast their eyes vpon pictures or persons which are vglie or deformed least the imagination imprint on the child the similitude of the said person or picture which doing women shall be sure to be well and happily deliuered and that With the help of God they shall beare their burthen to the full terme which shall be sent into the world without much paine promising them a happie and speedie deliuerie To conclude they must leaue off their Busks as soone as they perceiue themselues with child not lacing themselues too straight or crushing themselues together for feare least the child be mishapen and crooked or haue not his naturall growth and their garments must be rather light and thin then heauie and cumbersome How a woman must gouerne her selfe the nine moneths she goeth with child CHAP. VI. NOw I haue prescribed what manner of life a woman ought to leade while she is with child she may obserue if it please her this that followeth though not so necessary yet commodious and profitable both for the maintaining of her health and preseruation of her beauty To the end then that her breasts after her deliuery be neither too big and pust vp nor yet hanging downe like bags and to preuent the danger that might happen vnto her by the too great quantity of bloud that is turned into milke which may be curdled and so suppurate and putrifie As soone therefore as she knowes her selfe to be with child as in the second or third moneth let her weare a chaine of gold about her necke Some preferre a chaine of steele or else a little gad of steele put betweene the two breasts as likewise to put a piece of corke there and to weare vnder her arme-pits two little pieces more of the same This Fomentation also is very good Take of Periwinckle Sage and ground-Iuy of each a handfull Hemlocke halfe a small handfull boyle them in wine and water and when you haue taken it from the fire put thereto a little rose-vineger And with this decoction warme bath your breasts in the morning with a cloth or spung dipt therein a quarter of an houre wiping and drying them afterwards with reasonable warme clothes The like may be done with the waters of the same hearbs and about the third or fourth moneth when she feeles her selfe quicke about which time her belly begins to swell and grow big she must weare a Swathe made fit for the purpose to support her belly being first annointed with this Liniment or Pomade which she shall continue till the ninth moneth to keepe her belly from being full of knottie and broken vaines furrow'd and wrinckled making it grow deformed vnseemely and hanging downe lower then is fit which hapneth by reason of the great burthen and weight of the child that stretcheth and inlargeth the skinne thereof and causeth them to indure great paine in their belly and groine The Pomade or Liniment approued Take of Kids sewet and the fat of a Sow of each three ounces of Capons and Goose-grease of each an ounce and halfe cut them small and melt them in an earthen pot putting thereto as much water as will suffise then straine them through a cloth and wash them in water till they waxe very white and haue lost their sauour Afterward melt them againe in a double vessell adding thereto anounce of the marrow of a Hart or Stag then wash it againe with rose-Rose-water or other sweet smelling water mingling therewithall if you thinke fit or that it will not be hurtfull to the wombe two or three graines of Muske or Ciuet. Some vse this oyntment Take dogs grease and the fat about a sheepes kidney of each two ounces Spermaceti one ounce oyle of sweet Almonds an ounce and a halfe the fats must be melted prepared and washed as before then melted againe with the rest and washed with rose or sweet water Some take good store of Sheepes-feet well brused and broken in pieces to the number of thirty or forty and boyle them well in water then taking off the fat and marrow that swimmeth on the top which they wash well in common water and take therof two ounces of Ducks-grease as much Spermaceti one ounce white Waxe sixe drams melt them altogether in a double vessel and wash them in the aboue named waters Some Ladyes and Gentlewomen which loue not to rub their bellies euery morning with any of these liniments weare thereon a Dog-skin or some other wel prepared and dressed as followeth and change it euery fifteene dayes or according as it will last and continue not taking it off except it shriuell and grow wrinckled Take a Dog-skin or some other skin ready dressed to make gloues of wash it often in common water afterward in Rose-water and dry it in the shade and being thus drest and dryed lay it in soke in these oyles and fats following Take of Mesues oyntment of Roses an ounce and halfe oyle of Saint Iohns wort and of sweet Alamonds of each an ounce fresh Butter and Spermaceti of each halfe an
ounce melt all these together in a double vessel and let the skin lie and soke in it three or foure daies mouing stirring them together daily then take it foorth and spred it in the aire and let it lie there two or three daies till it haue sok't in all the oile become drie then cut it to the forme bignesse of the belly and so apply it The daintie and curious may vse the former liniments and skin they that haue not the meanes to do either let them Take of fresh Butter well wash't in common water and then in Rose-water three ounces oile of sweet Almonds one ounce Spermaceti halfe an ounce and with these melted together rub their belly These Ointments must be kept in a gally pot and couered with Rose water to keepe them from being mustie When the Woman is come to the ninth Moneth hauing been in good health all the time of her going with child she must continue the vse of the aforesaid Ointments and must begin to vse more exercise then she did before walking gently before meales the first twelue or fifteene daies and then afterward it will be good to vse stronger exercise It will be very profitable for her especially after the ten or twelue first daies of the ninth moneth be past to sit in the decoction following after the maner of a halfe Bath some quarter or halfe an hower in the morning and then being well dried and laid to bed let her be annointed behind all along the lower part of her backe and before from the Nauill downward and chiefly vpon Os Pubis and the groine with the ointment following Take of Mallowes Althaea with their roots Motherwort of each two handfull white Lilly roots three ounces Chamomill and Melilot flowers of each a good handfull Lin-seed Quince-seed and Foenigreeke of each an ounce Boyle them all in sufficient quantitie of running water for the Bath Take of Hensfat three ounces Duckes fat an ounce and a halfe fresh Butter two ounces Linseed oile an ounce and a halfe Melt them all together then wash them verie well in Parietarie and Mugwort water adding thereto two ounces of the Muccilage of Althaea Roots In which space let her take this drinke euery morning fasting Take of Oile of sweet Almonds newly drawen without fire an ounce white Wine halfe an ounce Parietarie water one ounce mingle them together Some haue found good by taking the yelke of an Egge and drinking a draught of Hypocras after it Others take a little Wine and water wherein Lin-seed hath been stieped Let this or the like order and gouernment be obserued for a Woman that is of a good habit of body and who in her going with Child hath not been subiect to any sicknesse or accident of moment bearing her Children well without much paine But because there be many which are troubled with diuers accidents which happen in their Child-bearing I thought good heere to treat thereof briefly before I speake of their Deliuerie Of many infirmities which trouble Women while they are great with Child CHAP. VII IT becomes a Woman well at all times and chiefly in her Child-bearing and after her Deliuerie to haue a care as much as she can possiblie of the preseruation of her Beautie since there is nothing that sooner decaies and spoileth it then the often bearing of Children But as Health is more precious and recommendable then Beautie and seeing that a woman with Child may be troubled and oppressed with many accidents and infirmities during the nine Moneths she beares her child it will be therefore verie necessary and profitable to seeke out the meanes to free and deliuer them thereof For in loosing the Mother the life of the Child is also hazarded Aristotle in his booke De generatione Animalium is of opinion That bruit beastes going with young are not subiect to any diseases and contrariwise that Women are verie often sicke Hippocrates saith That they be pale and wan to shew that they are subiect to many infirmities In times past when men and women were sold like slaues if there were any found that were with child she was not warranted for whole and sound by him that fold her as Vitruuius writes in his second book because they were troubled and subiect to so many diseases In the first three or foure Moneths such infirmities chiefly happen for many causes First because they liue as Aristotle saith for the most part in idlenesse and eate ill meates which are turned into excrements and breed many obstructions the fountaine and beginning of all diseases the second is the great suppression and stopping of bloud whereof they were wont to be purged euery Moneth before their being with Child which runs to the Matrice to be voided find that accustomed passage which it had woont to haue but being not able to get forth and much lesse to be spent and digested by the Child which is as yet but little it returnes backe into the vaines chiefly those which are neere the stomacke and through the long continuance is there corrupted and changed to be of a bad qualitie whereof proceeds this depraued and disordinate appetite which the Latins call Pica or Malacia Loathing of meat Hicket Vomiting Paines of the stomacke Flanckes and Belly Ache of the backe Hips and Groine difficultie of making water Panting and beating of the heart with Sounning the Cough binding and Fluxe of the belly swelling of the Thighs and Feet and sometimes Abortment not being able to beare their Children the full time together with many other accidents whereof we will speake hereafter beginning with the Pica which troubleth them oftnest and longest Of the disordinate longing called Pica CHAP. VIII WEe commonly say the appetite is depraued when beyond measure we couet to eate and drinke too much in respect of what hunger naturally requireth Or when we desire or long after meats which are vnusuall and offend in qualitie and are not drest and prepared as they ought Of this depraued Appetite there be diuers sorts The first is called Boulimos of the Greeks and of the Latins Fames vaccina appetētia immodica When they eate more then is requisite not being able to satisfie themselues And if hunger vrge them farther and grow greater then it is called of the Latins Appetitus caninus or Fames insatiabilis and the partie eates till he be full euen to the throat that he is constrained to vomit his stomacke being so ouercharged But then presently he is driuen to eat againe and then to vomit from whence the Prouerbe is taken He is returned like a Dog to his vomit The like hapneth for drinking as for eating which the Latins call Sitis immodica which is so great that the tongue cleaues to the roofe of the mouth not being able to eate or speake except the mouth be first moistned and the
dried in women with child through the great heate that is in the intrailes which makes them that they cannot easily flow The sedentary life also that women leade is cause that their excrements are stayed and gather themselues together by little and little and at the length stoppe vp the passage This accident brings vnto them flushing in the face headach beating of the Arteries yea and oftentimes an Ague For the curing of this disease a good order in dyet is verie needfull vsing meates that doe moisten and keepe the guts supple and slipperie and withall soften the excrements which must bee done with very great discretion for too much moysture may at length ouer much relaxe the ligaments of the the wombe and of the child and thereby hasten the deliuery Notwitstanding a woman with child being too costiue may vse tender meats as Veale wherewith they may make Brothes with Lettuce Purcelane Sorrell Spinach Beets Buglosse Violet leaues and sometime a little of the herbe called Mercurie Let them vse Prunes and bak't Apples Some take two or three gulps of fresh water before their meales but let them vse gentle exercise to make their excrement follow the more freely It is also verie fit for a woman with child in the morning when she riseth and at night when she goeth to bed to make proffer to vnburthen nature without straining her selfe but verie gently If for all this her belly will not be correspondent it will not be amisse to giue her Clysters Clyster ℞ Malu Bismal Parietar Matric an m. ij flor Chamoem Melilot an p. ij sem Anisi Foenicul an ʒ ij coquantur in iure pulli vel capit veruec aut vituli in colatur ad quart iij. dissolue Sacch albi olei Violat Butyr recent an ℥ j. ss vitell ouor numero ij fiat Clyster this may be giuen at twise She may also take some broth wherein is put a spoonfull or two of the water or wine of Seny which is made after this maner Seny wine Take halfe an ounce of Seny well cleansed sixe cloues brused put them into a dish and poure vpon them halfe a pint of wine or water redy to boyle and so let them soke all night and in the morning take two or three spoonfull which must be put into your broth keeping the rest to serue you afterward at your need Of the Fluxe or loosenesse of the Belly which troubleth women with child CHAP. XVI THe Laske in what maner soeuer it be doth put the woman in danger of comming before her time and that for diuers reasons First because thereby the meat they take for their nourishment is voided too soone which should haue staied and been turned into bloud for the nourishing and sustaining both of the Mother and the child And therefore they both remaine weake and feeble which compelleth the child to come foorth and seeke for food else where For as the Prouerbe saith Hunger makes the Wolfe come foorth of the wood Beside the Mother is so troubled with rising out of her bedde as also with much straining her selfe especially if it bee the bloudie Flixe that the wombe oftentimes is ouerturned and relaxed and causeth the childe to bee cast foorth of his place by reason of the moistnesse which runneth continually along the great gut vpon which the wombe is placed Women with great bellies are commonly subiect thereto because of the meats they eat which are of ill iuice whereby the stomacke being weakned and not able to concoct them the expulsiue faculty is compel'd to thrust them downward halfe concocted and indigested otherwise they are corrupted and turned into some maligne sharpe and biting humours as into fretting choller rotten flegme or melancholie which doe corrode and stir vp the bowels and so cause the fluxe of the belly Concerning the cure of it many considerations must be had And first it will be verie fit to know of what kind the fluxe is and what may be cause thereof Now all Fluxes of the belly must needs be one of these three either Diarrhaea Lienteria or Dysenteria which soeuer it be of these if it proceed of a maligne and putride humour it must not be suddainly stopped by astringent medicines least it happen vnto the woman with child as it did vnto Smyrnia as Hippocrat saith who hauing a fluxe of the belly suddainly stopt was deliuered in the the fourth moneth Now to know what kind of fluxe it may be the stooles will shew and testifie If it be not violent it may be suffered to flow gently and for a good while not omitting in the meane time the vse of some Clysters that may asswage the paine if there be any But if it continue that it bee bred of some sharpe and biting humours which knaw the guts and prouoke the expulsiue facultie of which kind are fretting and biting choller or salt flegme and that the Mother seeme to grow weake and faint then must it be remedied with as much speed and care as may be otherwise the woman hauing diuers pangs and prouocations is in danger to be deliuered Wherefore the humour offending must be purged with Rubarb compound sirup of Cichorie and the like which haue been alreadie prescribed in the former Chapters as also the like humours hindred from breeding And therefore she must abstaine from all vnholsome meats especially if the cause thereof proceed from thence Besides the said humors must be allaied and made more gentle that they may not any more prouoke or stir vp the expulssiue vertue the which may be easily done by a good dyet which shall breed as little choller or other bad humours as may be vsing broths made with Purcelance Sorrell Buglosse and the cold seeds adding thereto a little Rise or French Barley The vse of new laid Egges is much commended which must be poched in water Her meat must be rather rost then boiled All spices are to be eschewed Let her drinke be red Wine or steeled water wherein a piece of bread hath been soked This drinke is verie fit and pleasant Take of French Barly dried in a pan a handfull Fennill-seed Coriander-seed and Licorise of each two drams boile them in a quart of water adding thereto an ounce of Berberis or two ounces of the iuice of Pomgranats A little before meales let her eat a slice of Marmilade And seeing there often happens paine and gripings together with pangs and throwes because the guts are moued and prouoked therefore they must be washed and the paine mitigated with this Clyster Clister ℞ Hord. integ m.i. cham●mel melilot an m.s. Plantag Borag Buglos an m.i. Bulliant in iure cap●t veruec aut vituli de quo cape quart iij. in quibus dissolue ol violar ℥ iij. vitell duor ouor sachar rub ℥ is fiat clyster But if the woman bee further molested with gripings and that she haue great and often prouocations then this Clister will be very fit
of the belly and breasts so that it is very hard to distinguish the one from the other But these that follow are more proper to the false then the true birth for as Hippocrates saith In false conception or Mola the face is commonly puft vp their breasts which were swollen at the beginning doe fall and dayly wax soft limber and lanke and without milke In the end the face breasts armes thighes and legs grow leane and thin true it is that they swell towards night like those that haue the dropsie the belly riseth and groweth quickly and withall very hard for the most part of an equall roundnesse with diuers pricking paines in the bottome of the belly that neuer cease which makes them that they can hardly walke being hindred as it were with a heauie burthen and hauing oftentimes a windinesse in the wombe as Ahasis reporteth The said Hippocrates obserueth how that by the motion it may easily be knowne for in true conception the male child beginneth to stirre at the end of the third moneth or sooner and the female at the third or fourth moneth and where there is no such quickning we must obserue whether there be any milke in the brests if there be none found it is a signe that it is a Mole Beside the mother feeleth the child moue euery way both on the right side and on the left as much aboue as below and in the middle without any helpe But in false conception though there be some motion it is not animall but proceedeth rather from the expulsiue facultie of the Mother then of the Mole which hauing no liuing soule endeuoureth not of it selfe to come forth neither prouoketh the wombe as the child doth who hauing neede of aire to breath in seekes after it But this is a most euident signe when the woman lyes downe on either side for then she feeles it fall like a boule and is not able to vphold or stay it yea and being laid on her backe if her belly be pressed or crushed it will remaine in the place whither it is thrust without comming backe againe Now that which most assureth vs is when the nine moneths are past and the woman not deliuered but her belly growes bigger and swelleth more and more and all the other parts grow leane and lesse this is a sure signe of a Mole though there be some women that haue borne their children ten yea eleuen moneths The signes of the windy Mole are these the belly is equally swollen and stretched like a bladder softer then in the fleshy Mole and chiefely neere the groine and neather belly which being struck vpon soundeth like a Tabour sometime it decreaseth and otherwhile it swelleth more it is sooner bred and increased then the fleshy or watery and stretches the belly as though it would teare it which is not proper to the fleshy As for the watery and humorall the signes are almost alike the belly growes big and riseth by little and little If you touch it with your finger sometimes the print thereof will remaine behind it is euen without any hardnesse It is true that the woman lying on her backe her flancks are fuller and bigger then the middle and bottome of the belly which waxe flat the water and humor running frō one side to the other and in shaking the belly they feele a swimming and floting of water This difference may be also added that in the the watrish the flancks groine and sometime the thighes are more distended and swollen then in the humorall because the waterish substance stealeth thither soonest besides that which passeth forth and bloweth below is cleare like water without any ill smell but that which floweth in the humorall is reddish and like to the washing of flesh and of a bad sent This also is to be obserued that in the false conception the naturall courses flow not and that the Nauell doth shew it selfe but little or not at all as it commonly doth when the Mother is with child Concerning the cure thereof I meane god-willing to handle it hereafter What dyet and order a woman with child ought to keepe CHAP. V. THat a woman with child may enioy her perfect health she must diligently obserue that which consisteth in the vse of the sixe things not naturall which are the Aire Meate and Drinke Exercise and Rest Sleeping and Waking Fulnesse and Emptinesse and the Passions of the Minde First therefore she must dwell and liue in a good and well tempered Aire which is neither too hote nor too cold or waterish not subiect to any foggie mists or winds and especially the South-wind For as Hippocrates saith when those winds doe blow vpon euery light occasion women miscarrie The Northwind also is hurtfull vnto them for those winds breed thin rheumes distillations troublesome Coughs in great-bellyed women causing them oftentimes to abort or be deliuered before their due time Likewise such winds as bring with them ill smells and vapours which being drawne in together with the Aire we breathe into the Lungs do many times breed very dangerous and troublesome diseases Aristotle saith that the smell of a Candle put forth may cause a woman to abort or loose her fruite wherefore she must beware of all ill Aire and make her abode in houses well and pleasantly seated shunning as much as may be possible all bad sauours Concerning her Dyet she must vse meates which be of good nourishment and breede good iuice moderately drying The quantitie must be sufficient both for her selfe and for her child and therefore they are to be dispenced withall from fasting at any time for sometime too much abstinence makes the child weake and sickly and causeth him often to be borne before his time seeking after nourishment which he cannot find within his Mothers body As also the too great quantity of meate his Mother takes may often stifle him or else make him grow so big that he cannot keepe himselfe in his place which constraines him either to come forth or else makes him sickly seeing that those meates are corrupted wherewith he is nourished a fed Hippocrates writeth in Epidem that the Sister of Caius Duellius after she had eate her fill aborted All meates which are either too hote cold or too moist are to be auoided and chiefely in the beginning of meales as also those which are too salt or ouer-much spiced and likewise all baked meates are vtterly forbidden Aristotle and Plinie write that if a woman with child eate much salt meate her childe will be borne without nayles which shewes that he will not be long liued Her Bread must be of good Wheate well kneaded light and also well baked For her meate she may vse Henne Chicken Capon yong Pigeons Turtle Pheasants Larks Partridge Veale Mutton and for Herbs let her take Lettuse Endiue Borage Buglosse and Sorrell abstaining from all raw Sallads She may
of Annis seed added to it Of the paines of the Backe Hips and Groine with difficultie of making water that happens vnto Women with child CHAP. XII THere be some Women which beare their children high and as they say within their stomacke so that they are nimbler either in going or stirring without being let or hindred thereby at all Others carrie them verie low hauing their belly standing verie much out which brings them much inconuenience as paine of the Hips and Groine and then they complaine as if those parts and their belly were rent and torne in pieces Contrariwise there be others that hide their child within their raines and beare it verie backward which causeth them to haue exceeding great paine in their backs In the two latter cases we had need to helpe them for as Hippocrates saith When women with child are troubled with great paine in their backe and legs then are they in danger to be deliuered before their time The like may be also said of them that haue much paine in their belly and groine These paines commonly do rather proceed from the heauinesse of the child then of any quantitie of humors which abound in the bodie For at that time the wombe being great thicke and full by reason of the child which is big and large and of the bed or after-burthen and oftentimes filled with great store of water on which side soeuer the wombe resteth it drawes the ligaments and bonds with it that hold and fasten it to the foresaid parts and by the force of this dilation and stretching doth cause and prouoke paines in the backe hips and groine aswell by reason they are tyed thereto as likewise for the continuitie of those neighbouring parts which touch them For the remedying whereof the woman must keepe her selfe still and quiet without much stirring or shaking she must eat little and often and of meats that be light and easie of digestion for the stomake being full doth presse the body of the Matrice and thrusts it downward Therefore she must were Swathes which may helpe to support and keep vp her belly that by such a rest and swathing the ligaments which are lengthned and stretched may be somewhat brought backe to their proper places which must be confirmed and strengthned by these meanes All the bottome of her backe and raines must be annointed with Vnguentum Comitissae or else this ointment Oyntment ℞ Ol. Mastich Cidonior an ℥ j. ol Mirtill ℥ ss Corall rub terrae Sigillat an ʒ s Vnguent Comitiss ℥ s liquefiant omnia vt artis est fiat linimentum If the woman with child feel any coldnesse as it happens to some by reason of their cold temperature which makes them shiuer and quake let there be added to the former ointment Ol. Costin Aneth an ℥ ss But if she find any heat there or burning then applie some ointment that hath vertue to comfort and coole Another ointment ℞ Ol. Mirtill Rosar an ℥ j. ss vng Rosat Mes ℥ j. vng Refriger Galen ℥ s Puluer Corall rub Bol. Armen an ʒ j. succi Aurant ʒ ij misce fiat linimentum Likewise it may chance through the waightinesse of the wombe which resteth in the bottome that the woman with child cannot make water which hapning she herselfe with both hands must lift vp the bottome of her belly by meanes whereof she shall hinder the bodie of the wombe from pressing and crushing the bladder and especially the necke thereof which is loaded and oppressed with the said wombe You may applie below some bathing or fomentation made with the leaues of Mallowes Althaea Cresses and Parietarie with a little Lin-seed to make the passage more loose soft and easie to be inlarged or widened Of the panting and beating of the Heart As also of Swouning which happen vnto women with child CHAP. XIII AS there be diuers winds and vapours that are shut vp and inclosed in the neather belly of a woman with child which procure great paines in her hips backe and groine for the reasons before rehearsed So likewise are there the like vapours that arise from the wombe and other parts neere which are inclosed in the Arteries and by them are carried and imparted to the heart which cause a panting and beating and the heart feeling it selfe offended and oppressed by the said vapours endeuoureth by his motion to expell and driue them away far from itselfe Nature hauing giuen to euery part some particular meanes whereby to repell and thrust backe that which doth annoy or molest it As the Braine by sneesing the Lungs by coughing and the stomacke by vomiting But because this accident is oftentimes the forerunner of a Syncope or swouning therefore will it be needfull to haue care thereof it being easie to be knowne both by the relation of the party who finds her heart beate as also by feeling the breast vppon the region of the heart with ones hand with which this motion lifteth vp the ribs and the hand that is laide thereon yea some women haue such a beating that it makes euen the ribs stand out of their place For remedy whereof such vapors must be kept from seasing vpon the hart which may be done by well fensing of it both within and without If then you perceiue that the woman doe abound with any ill humors from whence these vapours may partly arise she must bee purged as before and let bloud according as the accidents doe require and the ancients doe appoint which must be done in small quantity and that not all at once but rather at mâny times by little and little For according to Galen There is no remedy that more hinders and altars the course of blood and noysome vapors from piercing and assailing the heart then letting of bloud doth Let her take euery morning one of these Lozenges which are very proper Lozenges ℞ puluer laetitiae Galeni de gemmis an ℈ i. pul lapid bezoard ossis de corde cerui an ℈ s. confect de hyacintho ʒ s. sacchari cum aqua scordij dissoluti ℥ ij fiant tabellae pond ʒ ij sumat vnam singulis diebus mane sero cubitura In steed thereof she may vse this opiate Opiate ℞ conseruae bugloss borag an ℥ s. conseruae radicis scorzonerae ʒ vi corti citriconditi ʒ iij. ther. veter ℈ i. pul electuar diamarg. frigidi ℈ s. fiat opiata capiat singulis diebus mane sero ʒ i. vt dictum est The Claret water before described is very excellent good some doe vse the water of Orringe flowers The heart must bee outwardly fortified with Quilts Fomentations Epithemes Cataplasmes applied to the region thereof made with the aforenamed ingredient Take for the Epitheme or fomentation the waters of Borage Buglosse Balme of Oringe flowers Cardus Benedictus Roses and of Scordium adding therto Saunders Angelica seed Cordiall flowers and the like And because that
good iuice Contrariwise she that is too leane must vse good meates and such as breed good iuice and that in good quantity If too much eating and drinking or the vse of bad meates that breed ill iuice be the cause then must she absteine from them And when it doth proceed from the fulnesse and aboundance of humors water as it happeneth in full bodied young women or which before their being with child were subiect to some euacuations as bleeding at the nose Hemorrodes or abundance of ordinary purgations and whites then will it also be very needful to purge and let them bloud and before their beeing with child to make them vse the dyet and especially those that haue the ligaments of the womb loose and soft and the vessels full of thicke and slimy matter to whome likewise may be administred cleansing strengthening iniections drying perfumes Baths with sulphur and emplasters for their backes which shall heereafter be set downe And when they shall be gone about foure moneths and a halfe it will be very fit to purge them gently let them bloud the which may be done more plentifully and boldly not all at once but at sundry times in those who before their being with child were vsed to more copious and frequent euacuations For experience doth shew that by this meanes those which were wont to be deliuered before their time haue not onely born their children to the ordinary time but thereby also haue beene brought a bed more easily and with lesse pain and trouble So that the child shall neither be in daunger to bee stifled by drawing more food then is needfull for his nourishment nor of growing too big by turning it into his owne sustenance which might bee a meanes through his exceeding greatnesse to breake and teare the ligaments that support him or else though he stay his ful time being thus big that he should not be able to come easily into the world To helpe the abortment whereof the child is cause being naturally either weake or sickly it will be very necessary that the mother put to her helping hand as much as she can possibly Wherefore she must be merry quiet as well in body as in mind not fretting or vexing her selfe and especially about the time she was wont to bee deliuered shee must keepe her bed vsing meates of easie digestion and distribution and drinke good claret wine let her take euery two houres a good space from her meate some of this opiate Opiate ℞ Cons. Borag Buglos an ℥ i. Cons. Rosar Anthos an ʒ vi Cort. Citri cond Myrobal condit an ℥ s. Margarit splendid Coral rub an ʒ i. ossis de corde cerui ʒ s. Cum syr Conser Citri fiat Opiata capiat ʒ i. vt dictum est If shee like not this Opiate let her vse these Lozenges Lozenges ℞ Sp. Diamarg frig ℈ ij Corall rub Corn. cerui vsti an ʒ s. priapitauri ℈ iiij Sacchar in aqua Buglos dissolut ℥ iij. fiat electuarium per tabellas ponderis ʒ s. vel ℈ ij pro dosi capiat vt dictū est Let her belly bee annointed with this ointment as well to comfort the Matrice as also to giue strength vnto the child ℞ Olei Mirtill Cydonior Mastich an ℥ s. Coral rub santal rub an ʒ i. maioran Absynth an ℈ iiij vng Rosat Mes. ℥ s. Cerae q. s fiat Linimentum Let there bee laide vpon her backe and os sacrum some such emplaster Some women haue found good by applying vpon their Nauell a tost dipt in good red wine strowing vpon it the powder of Roses Grana tinctorum Coral and a little Cinamon The Emplaster ℞ Gallar Nuc. Cupress sang Dracon Balaust mirtil Ros rub an ʒ i. s. Mastic Myrrhae an ʒ ij Thur. Hypocist acaciae gum Arabic Bol. armen an ʒ i. ladani ℥ i. Terebinth venet ℥ is picis Naualis ʒ v j. Cerae ol Mastich an q. s vt fiat secundum artem emplastrum The emplaster must be often taken off for feare of the itching and put on againe and if there happen any heate to the part annoint it with Mesues ointment of Roses If you perceiue that the child be too great and big to the end that he receiue not so much nourishment whereby he may grow bigger and larger the mother must absteine from all meates that are so iuicy and nourishing and keepe herselfe quiet hauing her belly stayed vp with a fit roler that it hang not downe and least the ligaments which hold the child might stretch and so by the waight be torne and broken a sunder The like may bee obserued and practized in the causes annexed ioined to the mother as if there bee any Scyrrhus Mole Dropsie Warts Impostums excrescence of flesh or other indisposition of the wombe The which must bee cured before the woman bee with childe according as the disease doth require it beeing very hard for a Woman to proue with child when she is troubled with any of the aforesaid accidents And in regard of outward causes wherin we did comprehend the Ague Laske Fluxe of bloud vomiting and the like These accidents must bee preuented according as the case doth require taking the aduice of the learned Phisitian as we haue said before But concerning medicines which must bee more particularly applied to outward causes as falls blowes and violent exercises let them haue recourse to the medicines described for the childe that is weake and sickly to which these following may be added as beeing profitable for both causes As if there appeare any bloud or red waters that begin to flow and come forth by then naturall passage this medicine is excellent ℞ Granor. tinct ʒ s. Coral rub margarit elect an gr vi germina duor ouor misce exhibeatur cum vitello vnius oui vel ℞ Mastich subtil pul ʒ s. seric subtiliter incisae ℈ s. germina duor ouor capiat cum vitello oui She may likewise take in the morning a Lozenge of Diarhodon of the waight of a French Crowne This powder also is very commendable ℞ Sp. Diamarg frigid ʒ s. Coral rub vst lot in aq Rosar pryap Tauri sic an ℈ ij Eboris Bol. Armen terrae sigillat an ℈ iiij Sachar rosat tabulat ℥ is Capiat mane sero ʒ ij pro vnaquaque dosi Of this powder also may bee made Lozenges Let there bee applied to her backe the former Emplaster or this that followeth Emplaster to retaine or keepe in the child ℞ Mastich Mirrh gum Arab. an ʒ ij Menth. sicc Absynth rad Bistort Nucum fol. Cupress an ʒ i s. Cortic. granat ʒ ij s. Styrac calam Colophon picis Naual an ʒ iij. Cerae Citrin ℥ j. Terebinth von ℥ s. Ol. Mirtill q. s fiat emplast extendat super alutam ad vsum If the emplaster breed any inconuenience let them vse this ointment Ointment ℞ Ol. Cydonior Mastich Mirtill an ℥ i s. Bol.
in feeling gently crosse the membrane that containes the waters she shall find either the roundnesse of the childs head or else some vneuennesse If in feeling she perceiue that there is any hard and equall roundnesse it is most likely to be the childs head and that he comes naturally but if she feele any vneuennesse the contrarie may be imagined When she perceiueth that all comes well and according to nature the throwes increasing vpon the woman and that the child doth striue and endeuour to come forth and the wombe doth straine it selfe to be freed of this burthen Then the Midwife must incourage the woman entreating her to hold in her breath by stopping her mouth and to straine downward as though she would go to the stoole Assuring her that she shall be quickly eased of her paine and that her child is euen ready to come into the world exhorting her to be patient and promising that she shall haue either a goodly sonne or a faire daughter according as she knoweth her affection inclined And the Midwiues greatest charge must be that she doe nothing hastily or rashly or by force to inlarge the passage of the child and much lesse to let foorth the water or to breake and teare the membranes that containe it but she must expect till it breake of it selfe Some Midwiues either through ignorance or impatience or else by being hastned to go to some other womans labour do teare the membranes with their nayles and let foorth the water to the great hurt and danger both of the poore woman and her child who remaines drie the water being issued and voided before the appointed time yea oftentimes before the child be well turned which hath been the death of many women and children But when the water both by the indeuour of the Mother and likewise of the child shall be newly broken then aswell the Midwife as the rest of the women present must more and more incourage the woman especially when her throwes increase beseeching her in the name of God that she would farther them as much as she can possibly In the meane time the Midwife must continually annoint the neather parts with butter or some other fats And when the head doth offer it selfe to come foorth she must receiue it gently with both her hands which being come soorth and the womans throwes increasing she must draw out the shoulders handsomely sliding downe her finger vnder the childs arme-pits taking the oportunitie and time when her throwes come fastest And it is to be noted that the throwes cease verie little or not at all after the head and shoulders be once come forth Neuerthelesse it will be very fit to giue the poore woman a little breathing intreating her that she would be of as good cheare as she can After this the Midwife hauing drawen out the shoulders may easily draw forth the rest of the body which must not be done either hastily or rashly But because the child naturally doth come into the world with the face downward therefore when he is quite taken foorth he must be turned vpon his backe for feare lest hee be stifled or chok't And if his nauell-string be woond about his necke as many times it happens then must it be vnwoond Oftentimes likewise the child is so feeble and faint that there can scarsely be perceiued any breath or life in him and therefore he must haue a little wine spirted into his mouth nose and eares in that quantitie as shall be needfull When he is come to himselfe and begins to crie then the Midwife must follow the string wagging and shaking it thereby to draw and bring foorth gently the after-birth to which it is tyed bidding the woman to cough and likewise to hold some salt in her hands fast shut together and then blow in them In the meane time the Midwife or some other woman must presse gently with her hand the top of the womans belly stroking it lightly downward the after-burthen being come it must be laid vpon the childs belly and the child together with the after-birth must be wrapp'd vp handsomely in a bed and a blanket to be carried nearer the fire couering the head with a linnen cloth fiue or sixe times double and yet not exposing him sodainly either to the fire-light day-light or candle-light lest by this sodaine change his sight might be hurt but his eies must be couered that by little and little he may open them and acquaint them with the light But as I said before the woman must be incouraged when the water doth issue foorth and caused to straine her selfe to be deliuered that the child may follow the foresaid water And they must likewise obserue diligently whether the paines be the paines of trauaile or no and whether the water be that wherein the child swimmeth For there be some women that haue these waters issue out and come away long before they are ready to lie downe Which I haue seen happen vnto diuers women and of late memorie to Mad. Arnault who hauing gone sixe or seuen moneths and troubled with a great Colique that had held her almost two moneths and tooke her euery day at certaine howres She being at her house in the Countrey intreated me that I would come and see her and to haue my aduise and counsell whether it were fit for her to come into the Citie which I adiused her to do both because of the great paines she had as also for her exceeding greatnesse being of opinion that she might haue two children as she had had not aboue a yeare before Being come to Paris her Colique was somewhat mitigated and a little while after she voided two or three gallons of water without any paine thinking verily then that she was not with child yet fiue daies after she was deliuered very happily and with little paine of a faire daughter there following very little water or none at all I saw another Ladie in whom these waters came away aboue ten daies before her deliuerie yet she kept not her bed but followed her ordinarie businesse And this is worth marking that they may be carefull not to hasten the deliuerie except the paines be proper for trauaile and such as I haue already described The Third time that must be obserued by the Midwife CHAP. VI. AS soone as the child is borne and that the Mother is deliuered of her after-birth the Midwife shall cause her legs to be gently laid downe taking away the peece of wood that lay at her feet and put a fine linnen cloth or rather a cleane spunge washed in warme water and wrung out betweene her thigh 's neare vnto her naturall parts that the cold ayre may not get therein and then must she take the child together with the after-burthen and carrie them to the fire as hath been said already And if it happen that the after-burthen be long ere it come or be drawen foorth and that the
by the Matrice The qualitie of the bloud is cause heerof when it is too sharpe piercing thin watrie putride or venimous so that Nature desires to be rid of it As for the Cure you must fit that according to the cause and yet there be some generall remedies which may serue for all immoderate euacuations and of this kind is Diet which must be cooling and moderately drying Let her feed vpon good meats not salt nor spiced nor of strong tast rather roast then boiled and of boiled meats let her chuse to eat of the heads feet She may vse french Barley new laid Egges and Gellies made with astringent herbes If she take any Broth 's let them be prepared with Borage Buglosse Le tuce Purcelaine Barley and the cold seeds Let her shun anger melancholie griefe and other such passions of the mind Let her keep her selfe quiet not much stirring or troubling her bodie Let her drinke Barley water or water wherein Steel hath been quenched You may giue her also if she haue not an Ague a little Wine allaied with the said waters Let her make her abode in a temperate place not too hote Let her lie vpon a Mattresse or straw bed and not vpon a feather-bed It will be good to bind her armes hard toward the shoulders but not the thigh 's although Auicen prescribe it Cupping glasses applied vnder the paps and vpon the region of the Liuer will be verie sit as Hippocrates teacheth and likewise vpon the arme-pits and shoulders as Auicen counsaileth The most singular and presentest remedie is to let bloud in the arme which I haue seen tried by the most learned Physitions of our age with very good successe For there is no meanes that makes better revulsion and drawes the bloud sooner from the place to which it floweth then opening of a veine You shall applie vpon the raines the Os sacrum and the parts thereabouts a cloth dip'd in Vineger and water and likewise betweene the legs but first vse this Cataplasme A Cataplasme ℞ Bol. Armen sang Dracon an ℥ j. Gummi Tragacanth ℥ ss pul Myrtill Rosar an ʒ vj. succ Plantag Taps barbat vrtic mort an q. s. ad formandum Cataplasma adde vnguent Comitiss ℥ j ss Vnguentum Comitissae of it selfe is verie good as likewise this Ointment following which is approued An Ointment ℞ Succor Lactuc Plantag an ℥ j ss Gum. Tragacanth in aq Rosar Macerat ℥ iij. Muccagin sem Cydonior extract in aq solani ℥ ss ol Rosar Myrtill an ℥ j ss Corall vtriusque Sumach an ʒ j. far Hordei ℥ ss Cerae parum fiat vng adde Aceti tantillum You shall giue her to drinke a dram of Trochisques of Spodium with Plantaine water or a decoction made with Horse-tayle Roses Knotgrasse and Balaustia Hollerius giues this as a singuler medicine Hollerius h● medicine ℞ Scoriae ferri crematae in aq Plantag sepius extinctae pul lapid aematitid triti an ℈ j. Terrae sigillat ℈ ss sirup Myrtillor Resar siccar an ℥ ss aq Plantag ℥ iij. fiat potus Another ℞ Sang. Dracon Corall rub vsti Terr sigillat an ℈ j. semin Rosar rub ℈ ss spodij Carab Citrin an gr xij aq Myrtillor vel Plantag ℥ iiij fiat potus Some in this case giue three or foure ounces of the iuice of Plantaine Galen affirmeth that he hath staid the immoderate flowing of the monthly sicknesse with the foresaid iuice of Plantaine when nothing else would do good Ludouicus Mercatus commends these two medicines aboue all other Mercatus his medicines ℞ far Hord. Oryz. Amili an q. s ad formandum panem ponderis ℥ vj. recent coct proijce in libr. viij aq Chaly beatae quibus adde Rosar rub siccar p. ij succi Plantag lb. j. Rad. consolid Maior ℥ ij Caudae equin m. j. carnis Prunor syluest Cidonior an ℥ ij Portulac m. ij Bol. Armen ℥ j. Balaust santal omnium an ℥ ss fiat omnium distilatio de qua cape mané ℥ ij addendo sirup Portulac aut Rosar siccar ℥ ss He likewise commendeth this medicine following as being verie certaine and approued and of great vertue to stay the sicknesse ℞ Rad. Filipendul ℥ ij fiat puluis cape ʒ j. cum vitello oui singulis diebus An Electuarie ℞ Cons Rosar antiq ℥ j. carnis Cydon cond cons Rad. symphit an ℥ ss pul Diamargar frig Trochis é Carab an ℈ j. Bol. Armen ʒ j. sang Dracon ℈ ij cum sirup Rosar siccar fiat opiata exhibenda ad ʒ j. per se vel cum aqua Plantag Galen teacheth vs this medicine which may be both iniected and also taken inwardly ℞ Mucag. gummi Tragacanth Arabic in aq Plantag extract ℥ iij. succi Plantag ℥ iiij fiat iniectio inijciatur in vterum ℥ j. potui praebe This iniection following may also be verie good Another ℞ Succ. Polygan ℥ iiij Mucilag gummi Tragacanth extract in aqua Centinod Chalybeat ℥ iij. Amyl ℥ j. misce fiat iniectio You shall also make vse of this pessarie if there be need An Astringent Pessarie ℞ Bol. Armen Terrae sigillat an ℥ j. Litargir ℥ ss cum albumine oui fiat astringens pessarium With this you may annoint your Pessarie made fit for the purpose either of cotton or linnen cloth Of the Retention and stopping of the After-purgings in Women newly deliuered CHAP. VIII AS a Woman newly deliuer'd is subiect to many accidents by the ouermuch flowing of her naturall courses So is she likewise subiect to more dangerous and deadly chances if they be suppressed and staid Galen saith that these after-purgings which he calleth Lechia are purgings of ill humors which haue been gathered in the bodie all the time that the woman went with child For the child drawing to it selfe the sweetest and most familiar part of the bloud leaues the worst which otherwise if the woman were not with child should be voided out euery Moneth And if the monthly sicknesse stai'd doth bring manie inconueniences to a woman then much more these Lochia being suppressed must breed much more danger Hippocrates in his first booke De morbis Mulier witnesseth this plainly saying That when the After-purgings come in lesse quantitie then is fit then the woman in child-bed fals into a sharpe Ague she is troubled with a paine in her stomacke she finds her selfe ill through all her bodie she feeles a paine in the ioints of her hands in her thigh 's and hips the places about her necke backe and groine are sore and there is a weaknesse in euery part She fals into a vomiting of fleame and also of bitter and sharpe matter and finally she is in danger to be lame and impotent of some of her members For the Matrice hath an affinitie and connexion with many parts of the bodie as with the head and stomacke And if this matter be transported and carried to the head breast and lungs and there make an abode
drops of oile of bitter Almonds with a little Honey of Roses a little warm'd And if there be any fretting or excoriation behind and about the eares then the nurse shal lay on them handsomely fine linnen plasters handsomely fine little plasters made with an ointment composed of white waxe and oyle of Nuts Towards the hinder part of the eares about the bottome of them there happens oftentimes swellings which the Ancients call Parotides and the French Orillons when these happen they must bee rub'd with oyle of sweet Almonds laying vppon it a little quilt made of carden cotten or fatty wooll basted betweene fine linnen clothes And the better to resolue the said swelling you may adde to it a little oyle of Chamomile and Lillies If these swellings come to suppuration they must be dressed as other impostumes be not vsing thereto any repercussiue medicines Of the soares and vlcers which happen in the childs mouth called Aphthae CHAP. XVI MOst commonly in the mouths of children there arise little pustules and vlcers which possesse not only the sides of the mouth the tongue and the gums but euen the very almonds pallet of the mouth and they were called of the Ancients Aphthae Of these vlcers there bee some that are malignant and creeping which spread abroad as the Herpes doth and according to the malignity of the humor which breeds them they are eyther the easier or harder to be cured those which come of some salt flegme which are neither deepe nor painfull nor of an ill colour nor placed at the bottome of the throat But are onely about the gums the tongue and the sides of the mouth which neyther grow bigger nor spread farther they are easie to be healed But those which creep farther are very painful blackish and which possesse the bottome of the throat hauing an Ague ioyned with them they as Hippocrates saith are malignant and hard to be cured I haue seene some that for all the care and diligence that could be vsed to them haue fallen into a Gangrene Which hath happened to diuers and of late to a Cutlers child who was looked vnto by Mons Habigot a Master Barber Chirurgion of Paris although hee had sought and vsed all the meanes both skilfully and faithfully that Art could require For the helping of them that are curable it is fit that the Nurse keepe a good dyet let the vlcers be gently rubbed a little with Hony of Roses and syrup of Violets But if they will not yeeld to this then the Chirurgion shall touch them with a little Aqua fortis but to euery drop of the said water he must adde twelue of Plantaine water according as he would haue it to be in strength then with a little clout tyed to the end of a sticke the vlcers shall be touched gently They may also vse this Gargarisme The vlcers must be dried vp ℞ Hord. integ Pug. j. Agrimon Plantag Rosar rub an m. j. Coquantur perfect in aqua commuri in colat ad ℥ vj. dissolue Mellis Rosat ℥ i s. Piamor ℥ s. Alumni ʒ s. fiat gargarismus vtatur vt dixi After they haue vsed this Gargarisine a while let there be added to it of Berberis flowers of pomgranats and a little of the iuice of the said pomgranates For the vlcers of the mouth require medicines to dry them vp which do their operation speedily But if you perceiue that they spread or creep farther abroad vse this medicine which I my selfe vse very often and find it to be very singular good which is to take halfe an ounce of Rosewater or Plantaine water adding thereto halfe a dragme of oyle of Vitroil and to touch the sores with it And this medicine did neuer deceiue mee but the Chirurgion ought to tast it first with his tongue to see that it be neither too strong nor too sharpe Of the Inflammation swelling and superfluous flesh which happens in the Gums called Paroulis and Epoules CHAP. XVII IT is seene oftentimes that the gummes of little Children are swolne and inflammed though their teeth bee not ready to come foorth which accident the Ancients called Paroulis and Epoulis The Paroulis is a little swelling red and angry which is either bred of a cholericke hot and adust bloud or else of some sharp and salt flegme which falleth out of the brain vpon the gums It may proceede also from some vapor that riseth out of the stomacke which causeth not onely the gums to be swolne and inflammed but oftentimes the iaw the cheeke and the necke to be also affected with it bringing also with it an Ague and paine which is the occasion that these tumors doe often suppurate and chiefly when there is any grosse bloud mingled therewithall otherwise it will resolue and be digested well enough For the Cure of it you must vse at the beginning gentle Lotions and Gargarismes that are cooling and not much repelling adding thereto towards the end some things that may resolue You may vse this Gargarisme ℞ Hord. integ m. j. Plantag Portulac Acetos Agrimon an m. i. Flor. violar p. i. fiat decoctio in colatura ad ℥ vj. dissolue syr violac ℥ j. syrup è Rosis siccis ℥ s. fiat Gargarisma Herewith shall you cause the child to wash and Gargarise his mouth if he be able if not then you must often rub his gummes therewith Or else you shall annoint his gummes with the Mucilage of Psyllium and Quince seeds drawne with Rose and Plantaine water adding thereto a little syrup of Iuiubes If the iaw bone cheekes and necke be inflamed the Ancients counsaile vs to rub them with a little oyle of Roses warmed adding thereto some iuice of Nightshade Mesues Ointment of Roses is also very good for it If the child bee any thing big let him take this drinke ℞ Rasur Eboris in nodulo inclus ʒ ij sem Portulac ℥ ss fiat decoctio ad lb. ij in colatura dissol syr Granat è Limonibus an ℥ j. vtatur If the tumor cannot bee resolued but rather grows to suppuration then you shall make him a Gargarisme with Figs Raisings Iuiubes Licorise and french barley well boyled Let him hold in his mouth a little warm milke and sometimes lay halfe a fat figge hot to the gummes When it is come to suppuration the tumor shal be lanced yet sometimes it breakes of it selfe then let it be mundified with Mil Rosatum syrup of dry Roses or Cherries or the like As for the Epoulis it is a little excrescence of flesh rising like a blister vpon the gums and most commonly betwixt the teeth but chiefly among the hindermost sometimes it is painfull and causeth an Ague The cause therof is almost the same as we haue said of the Paroulis For the cure at the beginning you must vse some such Gargarisme as followeth because it is needfull to vse more astringent medicines in this then in the Paroulis A Drinke A Gargarism for the Epoulis
℞ Rad. Buglos ℥ is Plantag Agrimon an m. i. Hord. integ p. i. Rosar Rub. m. s. Balaustior ʒ ij Dactilos n. iiij glycyrrhiz ʒ is fiat decoctio in Colatura dissolue syrup Granator è Rosis siccis an ℥ i. fiat Gargarismus After they haue vsed this let them touch the part often with the medicine following ℞ Succi Granator Cydonior an ℥ s. succi Berber Portulac an ʒ ij cum tantillo decoctionis lentium Rosarum Rubrarum fiat Medicamentum This medicine hath power to bind and strengthen the part and to make the tumor resolue Oftentimes the said Epoulis groweth so big that we are constrained to tye it not being able eyther to resolue it or bring it to suppuration Some of them also are of an ill malignant quality which must not bee touched or medled with but with great discretion Of the two strings or ligaments that a child hath vnder his tongue CHAP. XVIII IN Children that are newly borne there are commonlie found two strings the one comes from the bottome of the tongue and reacheth to the very tip and end therof This string is very slender and soft and it hindreth the childe from putting it out at length and from taking the nipple as they say that he cannot sucke well This string must be cut with a sizzer within a few daies after he is borne and then the nurse must thrust her finger vnder the childs tongue and lay there at the first a little chaw'd salt to keepe it from growing together againe There is also another string which is both harder bigger and more firme then the former which begins at the root of the tongue and stretcheth it selfe almost through the middle thereof the which string is oftentimes so short that it hinders the child from stretching it and putting it foorth of his mouth and also from turning and wagging it therby to bring backe the meat hee hath chaw'd that hee may swallow it This may easily be perceiued for if you bid the childe to put out his tongue hee cannot doe it for when he goes about to doe it it binds and folds double in his mouth hee not being able to make it come farther then his lips which much hindereth him in his speech and in the deliuery of his words making him commonly to stammer The cure of this is onely to bee done by the Chirurgian and that after two manners the first is thus you must cause the childes tongue to bee lifted vp and held stiffe on both sides as well by your owne finger as by some others which shall hold the other side of the tongue to keepe it stiffe and then let the string be cut with a sharpe instrument thrusting in the point as deepe as shall be fit The second way also is by lifting vp the tongue and holding it fast as hath beene already saide and then with a needle with a double thred in it you shall draw the thred crosse the said string or ligament to wit as farre as you would cut it and tye it hard cutting away the ends of the thred somwhat neere the knot and so let it stay there till it hath separated that part of the string or ligament thus tyed But this way in my opinion is more painfull then the former But whether it be cut or tyed it will leaue an vlcer which must be healed as wee haue shewed before taking care that the string grow not together againe Of the Cough which happeneth to little Children CHAP. XIX WE see that little Children are often troubled with a Cough which happens vnto them because their lungs are weake and tender which for euery little thing that troubleth them they endeuour to discharge and rid themselues of it with some striuing agitation They may also catch this disease by lying vncouered or by being carried abroad in the cold or in the euening which makes them to cough bringing vp little or nothing They may also cough with sucking too eagerly drawing the milke faster then they can swallow it and so some few drops by chance get into the Trachaea Arteria which makes them neuer leaue coughing till they haue brought it all vp againe The cough may likewise proceede from the distillation of some sharpe thin humor which commeth from the braine and falleth downe vpon the lungs by the Trachea Arteria There may also bee gathered some humor in the Pipes or Passages of the lungs which Nature at length striueth to expell and thrust foorth Of what occasion soeuer it proceede it is very dangerous especially if it be of long continuance For feare least through continuall reaching and coughing the child get a rupture or bursting or else an Ague by reason hee cannot sleepe nor take his rest onely some headach paine of the sides and stomacke and vomiting Concerning the cure of it we must haue a respect to the cause so accordingly it must be remedied If the Cough proceed of Cold let the little one bee kept reasonable warme and giue him a little oyle of sweet Almonds mingled with suger Candy let his breast be rub'd all ouer with fresh butter and oyle of sweet Almonds and then lay vpon it some warme cloth if his nose be stuffed let it be vnstopped with a little ointment of Roses or some of the liquor you boyle your meate in whereof you may put a little vp into his nose for that purpose If it proceed of some sharpe humor then it must be mitigated and thickned by giuing him a little syrup of Violets and of Iuiubes mingled together As also let him vse Iuice of Licorise Oile of sweete Almonds and suger Candy and Lozenges of Diatragacant hum frigidum If the childe bee any thing big you may giue Barley Cream with a few white Poppy seeds and let him drink a Ptisane made with Barley and Licorise Let all his brest and throat bee annointed with Oile of Violets washed in Barley water Apply to the nape of his necke a tost of bread hot or else halfe a loafe new out of the ouen If the Cough hinders him from sleeping you may giue him a little Sirup of Iuiubes and Violets with asmuch Diacodium sine speciebus mingled altogether Let him also vse Conserue of Roses If the Cough come by reason of some fleagme or grosse and slimie humour that is gather'd together in the breast You must giue the child a little Sirup of Maidenhaire with as much Sirup or Licorise and Hyssope or Hony of Narbone mingled together Rasis addeth in this case a little Fennell water Annoint his breast also with this Ointment An ointment for the breast ℞ Ol. Amygdal dulc ℥ j. Vnguent Resumpt ℥ ss axung Anseris Gallinae an ʒ ij liquesiant simul lento igne pro litu vt dictum est I haue already set downe diuers other medicines in my former booke speaking of the Cough which hapneth vnto women with child to which place I refer you for
your farther satisfaction Of the inflammation and swelling of the childs Nauill CHAP. XX. OFtentimes after the childs Nauell is tyed there commeth some inflammation swelling or vlcer and especially this hapneth when that which hath been tyed is diuided and fallen away it being not perfectly suppurated The same Nauell may swell also either through the childes eager crying or when he coughes much the tumor and swelling being full of wind and sometimes also of water The inflammation may be cur'd by the vse of Vnguentum Rosatum or with a little Vnguentum Refrigerans Galeni The bathing it also with Oile of Roses and a little Vnguentum Populeon may do verie much good As for the Vlcer if it be but small you may put vpon it some fine Flower or the powder of a rotten post or else a little plaster of Diapompholigos and Vnguentum desiccatiuum mingled together You may also sometimes touch it with a little Allome water and so cicatrize it As for the swelling you must haue a care that the Nauell stand not foorth too far and swell not more then it ought Now to hinder that you shall lay vpon it a cloth eight or ten times doubled and then swath it gently that the said Nauell stand not foorth too much which ought to be done if there be neither wind nor water contained within it But when either of them are there Auicen vseth this medicine Auicenus medicine ℞ Spicae Nard pul ℥ ss Terebinth ℥ iij. Ol. Amygdal dulc parum fiat vnguentum But mee thinkes to giue it a forme and consistence it were not amisse to adde vnto it a little waxe I vse commonly this plaster whether there be any wind or water which hath power to resolue consume and drie vp the said wind or water An approued medicine ℞ Vnguent Comitiss desiccat rubr an ℥ j. stercor Columb ʒ ij pul Irid. florent ʒ iij. Sulphur viui ʒ j. Ol. Nard ℥ ss Cerae Terebinth q. s. fiat Ceratum But the onely thing is to keep it downe with a boulster and swathing that it swell not or stand foorth the more Some vse Emplastrum contra Rupturum for it Of Gripings and Fretting in the belly which troubleth little Children CHAP. XXI THese gripings do trouble little children verie much the causes are two For either they come because the excrement called Meconium is retained in the guts This humour is black and slimy like melted pitch which pricketh and wringeth their guts and puts them to paine to void it Or else these Gripings are bred of the abundance of milke which the child taketh or of the ill qualitie thereof the which being not digested doth putrifie and corrupt and turnes either into choller or into sharpe and salt fleagme Or else there is bred some wind which causeth a distention of the stomacke and guts The cold aire and the wormes also may cause it which I leaue to be handled in another place Concerning the cure if the said excrement called Meconium be the cause of the said gripings it must be euacuated by little suppositaries made of the rib of a Beete leafe or of Sope and also by Clysters to draw away this humour and make it come foorth If too much milke be the cause then the Nurse shall not giue the child sucke so often nor in such plentie If it proceed from wind and that do cause the child to be thus troubled it shall be discussed with Fomentations applied to the belly and Nauell and with Carminatiue Clisters which shall be giuen him as this A Clister for the wind ℞ Malu Bismal Parietar an M. j. flor Chamaem Melilot summitat Aneth an p. j. semin Anis Foenicul an ij coquantur perfectè in iure pulli vel capitis veruec in colatum ad ℥ vj. dissolue Diacatholic Mellis Anthosat Saccar rubr an ℥ ss Ol. Chamaemel Aneth an ʒ vj. fiat Clyster Of the foresaid decoction you may also make a fomentation with fine spunges and then let his bellie be rub'd and annointed with oyle of Camomile Melilot and Dill mingled together Parietary of the wall with a few Camomile flowers and tops of Dill fryed with Oile of Lillies and Dill and then layd to the belly hot are very good If you perceiue that these gripings proceed of some sharpe biting or chollericke humor that gnaws and gripes the stomack and the guts which may be knowne both by feeling his belly which will be hotter then ordinary and also by the stooles which will be yellow and greenish then shall you giue him little Clisters of milke or else of the broth of Veale Capon or of a sheeps head wherein you shall dissolue two drams of Benedicta Lanatiua and as much Oyle of Violets and red suger Let his belly be rubbed with Oyle of Roses and Violets or else with Mesues Ointment of Roses You may giue him to take inwardly some Oyle of sweet Almonds newly drawne and mingled with Suger candy And if the child be any thing big it will be very fit to giue him an ounce of the compound sirup of Cichory with Rubarbe dissolued into Agrimony water or of Carduus Benedictus you may also mingle amongst his pappe or gruell a little Cassia drawne the better to make him take it Of the Wormes CHAP. XXII THe Wormes doe trouble little children very cruelly and therefore not without good reason did Hippocrates call them Theriodigastros as cruell beasts in the belly There be of them of diuers formes and bignes Some of them are round and long named Elminthes which breed in the small guts they ascend somtimes into the stomacke and come foorth at the mouth There be others that are long and flat called Teniae which are as it were a band couched and placed all along the great guts Some are little and slender as the point of a needle and are called Ascarides by reason of the itching which they cause in the great gut the fundament in which place they are bred and oftentimes they are inclosed as it were with a little purse I haue seene diuers that haue voided a million which haue bene al of them fastned together Touching their generation Hippocrates obserueth that little children doe bring the wormes euen from their Mothers belly but most commonly they are bred of putride corrupted flegm as also of other ill humors which lye in the guts When children are troubled with the wormes they waxe leane they haue no desire to eate their belly aketh swels and grows bigger they start in their sleepe and doe sometimes swoune and haue a little drye Cough the colour of their face is pale and wanne and their eies great they rub their nose commonly and when they are troubled with small wormes their fundament itcheth But the surest signe that a child hath the wormes of what nature soeuer they be is when hee voides them with his excrements by stoole or that they come vp by the mouth or through the
vse in France cleere water and also kept from eating so much raw fruite and moist meats and the like which prouoke Vrine You must also endeuour to keepe children alwaies loose bellied which will make them pisse the lesse as well in the night time as in the day And you must warne them to make water before they go to bed and somtimes also you may waken them out of their sleepe to put them in minde thereof You must also threaten them that you wil whip them and likewise make them ashamed of doing it But yet for all this you must not correct them too much for I haue knowne some children fearing to bee beaten if they pissed a bed that haue tyed their yard themselues whereof hath followed a Gangrene which hapned to Mons Paraeus when he was a child as he himselfe hath told me When the child is growne somwhat big let him eate rosted Chestnuts Filberds and A cornes and drinke stil'd water and a little Claret wine well allayed Auicen commendeth the braines of a hare boyled with thicke Wine Some hold that the inner skin of a Capons gizzard dryed and made into pouder is singular good Rhasis sets it downe for a secret that the combe of a Cocke dryed and made into powder as also the bladder of a Bull or a Goat is very good which Gordonius approoueth of You may giue him a little water of Mirtills with Conserue of Roses and sirup of drie Roses It wil be very fit to bath the part of the child called Perinaeum with astringent Fomentations such as we haue set downe for the Rupture or Hernia Of the Gallings and fretting of the skin which happens in the groine and betweene the thighs of little Children CHAP. XXX LIttle children by reason of the sharpnesse of their vrine and lying in their excrements are much troubled with galling and fretting which weares away the thinne skin called Epidermis and chiefly about their thighs and groyne which vnlesse the nurse take the better heede may grow to some foule and malignant vlcer Which that it may be the better helped it will bee very fit that the Nurse keepe the little one as cleane as shee can and that in making him cleane and shifting him she wash his buttocks and thighs gently with a little water of Plantaine Roses or Nightshade Some adde thereto a little wine Others make a decoction of Barley Roses and Plantaine I vse to prescribe a little Pomatum wherewith I mingle sometimes a little Lime well quenched and powdered Vnguentum Refrigerans Galeni wel washed in Plantaine and Rose water is much commended Both these medicines by reason of their oylines doe hinder the Vrine and excrements from making the place to smart Women doe commonly be sprinkle those parts with meale dust or with Barley or Beane flower Some vse the powder of a rotten post or else a little Ireos and Roses beaten into fine powder Rhasis vseth this medicine â„ž Amyl spoelij Rosar Mirtillor farin Hordei an fiat omnium pul subtiliss asperge excoriationes post Balneum Of the accidents which happen to the childs yard either before or after his birth CHAP. XXXI THere may happen seuen accidents about the top and end of the childs yard euen from his birth to witte three in the Praputium or foreskin and foure in the Glans or top thereof Touching those of the Praeputium the first is when it is so straight and the hole so little that the vrine beeing come foorth of the Glans cannot passe through the skinne but drop by drop by reason it is shut so close together which makes part of the Vrine remaine betwixt the top of the yard and the Preputium The second is when the passage of the Preputium is not altogether so narrow but yet it cannot be put backe neither can the Glans bee vncouered which the Ancients haue called Phimosis The third is when the Praeputium cannot couer the Glans because it is slipped ouer and drawne backward called by the Ancients Paraphimosis Concerning these of the Glans the first is when there is no passage at all in the end thereof the second is when there is a passage but the hole is too little The third is when the hole is not in the place where it ought to be which is at the end but is placed at the bottom or lower part of the Glans The fourth is when the top of the yard bendeth downward and makes the yard stand crooked and awry Aristotle hath obserued another kinde more strange then those where he saith that there haue beene some male children which naturally haue had no passage made at the end of the yard but the hole hath bene lower in the Perinaeum so that they were constrained to pisse as it were sitting when they held vp their Cods or Scrotum they seemed to be both man and woman I haue heeretofore for all the other accidents aboue named aduised the Nurse to haue a care and looke to them But because the cure of these belong properly to the Chirurgion to haue set it downe more at large and specified it more particularly in this place that they may the better helpe it considering the inconueniences that may follow as we will shew you For the first which is when the skin of the yard is so straight that the water cannot come foorth but drop by drop this imperfection causeth a great deale of filth to be gatherd betwixt the Praeputium and the Glans whereof proceedeth many troublesome and dangerous vlcers yea and sometimes a Gangrene I haue obserued it in some young children that the top of the yard hath become blacke and blew with pissing through the very paine they endured The best way to remedie it is to cut off the verie top and end of the Praeputium thereby to take away a piece of it as they doe in the Circumcision For the performance whereof there be diuers meanes but the safest and least painfull way is this First it is to be consider'd that the Praeputium is double so that when one thinks to cut both the skins he cuts but one for the second leaps away especially from betweene the Sizzers Besides in cutting them both together oftentimes you may cut more of the vppermost skin then of the nethermost which is next to the Glans which causeth it to remaine bare and vncouered whereof followeth great paine it being fitter for that occasion to cut away lesse of the first then of the second I haue learned this manner of practise of Mons de Maverne the Kings Physition in Ordinary who hath caused it to bee done after this fashion and it is the order and Methode which the Iewes at this day doe obserue in their circumcision If you haue not such an instrument you may take two little flat peeces of wood and tye them both together at one end and then put the
purgations with Diagredium or Coloquint and also from such as do much soften and moisten as Cassia Electuar Lenitiuum and the like because through their moisture they relaxe the stomacke and so consequently all the meanes which haue correspondence and traficke with the Matrice for the similitude of their neruous substance Their purges therefore must be of Rubart infusion and also in substance of the compound syrup of Cichory with Rubarbe which besides that they euacuate doe likewise coroborate and strengthen as also of the Syrup of Damaske Roses Ma●na and other which with drawing away the water doe dry withall But aboue all pills are very fit for them because they dry both for their forme and also for the drying ingredients whereof they are compounded as those of Rubarb and Sene made with a little conserue of roses adding thereto if there be any suspition of some maligne or bad quality a little of the confection of Hyacinthvs This rule must be obserued in the purging of women with child and hereof must be had the counsel of the learned Phisitian If some maligne vapour be the cause they must vse cordials as a little confection of Hyacinthe the electuary of Gemmis these cordiall Lozenges or the like Cordiall Lorenges ℞ Corali vtriusque ʒ s. lapid bezoard rasura vnic an ℈ s. pulu electuar diarrh abbat ℈ i. confect de Hiacintho ʒ s. saccar cum aqua card bened dissol ℥ ij fiant tabellae ponder ʒ i. capiat singulis dicbus vnam mane alteram à prandio longe à pastu While they shall vse the aforesaid remedies it will be very necessarie to comfort the stomacke as also if the vomiting proceed through some weakenesse the stomacke not being able to retaine and hold the meate the fore mentioned Lozenges are very good as also Lozenges of Diarrhodon if they should prooue distasteful let them vse Codigniack or some Citron pill condited They may likewise take some digestiue powder after meales Let there be prouided some such fomentation for their stomacke as this Fomentation ℞ Mentae Ab sinthij rosar rub an m. s balaust ʒ ij gariophilor santalor an ʒ s. carnis cidoniorum ℥ i. corticis citri ʒ i. fiat decoct in vino austero profotu Then let them haue this ointment Liniment ℞ Olei mastich cidonior an ℥ s. olei de absinthio ʒ ij pulueris coralli rub gariophil an ℈ i. croci parum fiat litus admoueatur praemisso fotu This Emplaster is very fit which must be applied after the ointment and remain there a good space ℞ crustae panis assati ℥ iiij macerent in vino rubro succo cidonior pul rosar rub absinthij an ʒ i. ligni aloes gariophilor an ʒ s. pul coralli rubri ℈ iiij olei de absinthio ℥ i. fiat cataplasma If all these forenamed medicines helpe not the patient Master Mercator doth set downe a remedy very easie to be practised and of incredible vertue as he saith which cannot bring hauing often tried it any danger nor cause the woman to be deliuered out of her time which is to let her blood in the Saluatella of the right hand CHAP. X. Of the paine of the sto acke stancks and belly which happens to a woman with child THere is great store of grosse winds bred not onely in the stomacke and guts but also about the Liuer Spleene Mesenterium and Nauell by meanes of a weake and feeble heat which is not able wholly to consume and scatter them from whence proceedeth a great distention of the belly and other parts neere and chiefly about the Nauell which in some oftentimes stands out and is as big as a goose egge The which winds being thus inclosed and not hauing free passage cause such intollerable paine that euen the breathing is thereby hindred and the pulse almost lost which at length might cause the woman to be deliuered Sometime also the wind is shut vp within the womb for I haue knowen some women that haue voided them with such a sound noise as though it had bene by the fondament and this must be remedied after this sort First shee must shunne all manner of moist and windy meats liue after the order before prescribed If it bee needfull to purge her let it be done as is already set down Then let there be applied some dry fomentations to the place affected as this Quilt ℞ flor camo anethi an m. ij rosar rub p. ij se minis annisi foenicul an ʒ ij baccar lauri ʒ i. fiat omnium puluis grossus de quibus fi aut sacculi duo irrorati cum vino rub tepide admoueantur parti affectae The same quilts may be boyled in wine and fomitations made of the said wine with soft spunges But you must obserue that the too long vse of moist fomentations oyles and fats is forbidden women with child for feare least by too much moisture and oylinesse the ligaments and vessels of the matrice bee made too loose and soft which at length may cause the woman to abort Apply vnto her belly and to me parts pained in forme of a Pultesse this that followeth Pultesse ℞ Vitell. ouorum n. iiij puluis anisi foeniculi dulcis an ʒ s. pul absinthii ʒ s. cum oleo anethino camomil q. s fiat fricatum Let them chaw Fennil or Anniseed or a little Cinamon and take a tost dipt in Hippocras Some haue tolde mee that the distilled water of Citron Pills drunke is very singular good And it will not be amisse sometimes to take a spoonfull or two of this water A Claret water ℞ Aquae vitae ℥ s. cinamo ʒ i. macerent spatio xiiij hor. deinde affunde aque rosar ℥ iii. saccari candi ℥ s. fiat aqua clareta capiat coclear vnum If ye perceiue that shee is much troubled with paine you may giue her a Clister as this A Glister ℞ Folior maluae matrica an m. i. flor camom meliloti et summitat aneti an M. ss seminis anisi foenic. an ʒ iii. bulliant in iure capit veruec vel vituli de quo accipe quart iij. in quibus dissolue Ol. Aneth Chamamel an ℥ ij Sachar eub. ℥ j. s Butyr recent ℥ j. Vitell. duor ouor fiat Clyster Neuerthelesse I am of opinion if it may be done possibly that they should abstaine from Clysters because I haue seene women sometimes through as small a Clyster as this fall into great torments yea and euen into throwes nature being thereto prepared and ready which turned to the Chirurgions disgrace Wherefore let her vse these Lozenges following Lozenges ℞ sem Anis foenic. dulc an ʒ s nucis Mosch ℈ j. spec Diacumin Diarrhod Abbat ana ℈ s sacchar in aq Cinamon dissolut ℥ ij fiant tabulae capiat vnam singulis auroris She may vse Sugar of Roses which to euery ounce hath two or three drops of the oile