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A43019 Little Venus unmask'd, or, A perfect discovery of the French pox comprising the opinions of most ancient and modern physicians, with the author's judgement and observations upon the rise, nature, subject, causes, kinds, signs, and prognosticks of the said disease : together, with several nice questions, and twelve different ways and methods of curing that disease, and the running of the reins by Gideon Harvey. Harvey, Gideon, 1640?-1700? 1670 (1670) Wing H1068; ESTC R15361 39,466 169

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the Liver Spleen c. which are proclaimed by m●st Authors to be harths or springs of Pockie steems and yet themselves remain free for a long time from those Pockie accidents A. Because the Pox first seising the Body from without doth the easier injure the outward parts being weaker than the inward ones which are furnisht with strong spirits to keep out the Infection 26. What part is apt to receive the strongest Infection A. The secret parts which consisting of a loose open thin flesh do easily admit infectious steems 27. How many ways doth the Pox distribute its Infection A. By kissing fucking lying in the same Bed and copulation that is thus if ones Mouth or Breast be set with pocky pimples or Ulcers then they are capable of infecting but not if sound though the Body were never so Pocky in the other parts 28. To what distance is the Pox infectious A. As far as the Pocky steems can be transmitted hot which at farthest is not above a Hand bredth or two 29. Two three or more successively mounting a pocky Saddle why should sometimes the first alone come off galled or why other-times the second only and the rest come off clear A. Because in some Women of a cold complexion the venom lies deep and therefore the first not heating his Whore enough to extract the venom comes off clear leaving the second to keep the Iron hot who carries away the pocky prize But if the pocky Wench be of a hot complexion then the first is only in danger of a blast leaving her in a colder temper to deal with his comrads who therefore come off without any dammage 30. When i●'t that a Man disgraced with an inveterate Pox his Wife is nevertheless guarded from the Infection A. It 's possible for a Man to have had the Pox in his lower parts and be cured of it though notwithstunding may have a relick in other parts of his body and therefore may converse with his Wife without doing her the least wrong 31. Whether is Man-kind only subject to this Pockie infection A. The Disease is also common to Dogs for my self have seen a little Curr in Holland that had a virulent Running of the Reins with several crusty Ulcers upon his body Likewise in It●● many refrain eating Turkeys because a great number of 'em are infected with the Pox. 32. Whether a Man that 's troubled with a venereal Running of the Reins doth not render his accident worse by conversing with comm●n W●men A. Doubtless he must for heating himself in so high a degree and thereby opening the pores must necessarily let in the venom deeper into his body 33. Whether a Wom●n tyed to a P●k●e Husband can escape the Infection her self and yet give it to another A. It 's possible and it hath happened though it be a chance among a million 34. Whether over-frequent embraces between a married couple can produce the least spice of the P●x A. It 's vulgarly believed it may many having contracted a yellow or greenish Running of the Reins by being too liberal to their Wives but this is a clear mistake the foresaid running being in no wise virulent neither is' t possible it can ever grow such being only occasioned by weakning the spermatick Vissels and thereby disposed to receive sharp humors that cause the foresaid running by irritation 35. Whether one that 's clapt doth diminish his infection by conversing with a sound Curtiz●n A. On the contrary he rather increases his accident the reason extract out of Par. 30. 36. Whether it be p●ssible for a Man to enjoy his health perfectly so as to eat drink and sleep well and yet carry a hidden Pox about him A. It 's common for Men to look better and have a sharper appetite than ever for six eight t●● somtimes twelve months yet walk about with a green virulent Gonorrhee that being instead of an issue serving to evacuate and drain all the superfluous humours of the body whereby the complexion must needs for a time be render'd clearer and the appetite edged 2 l● I have known some that vaunted to have run the greatest Pocky hazards imaginable without perceiving the least hurt for some Years who notwithstanding after so long a time of perfect health have unexpectly sneezed several small pieces of bone out at their Nose being parts of the Os Ethm●eldes or Crista galli that was insensibly cariated or rotted by subtil pocky steems flying up to the head 3. About a twelve-month since I cured a Gentleman that had a most violent pain on one small part of the Bregma excurring no farther than the bredth of a six-pence being that kind of Head-ach which Physicians usually call Clavus a species of a Cephalaea though Galen as I remember lib de occul terms ●lavus a disease of the eye This torturing head-ach my Patient had patiently endured for three Months without having received the least benefit from any Physician he had applyed himself unto But at last fortune having conducted him to me did make a narrow search and found a small rising on his head not unlike a Node wh●reupon I strictly enquired whether he had not lately or within a Year or two conversed with some suspicious Woman he answered that about four Years ago he had contracted a Running of the Reins but had been so well cured of it that from that time until the arrival of this pain he had possest his health better than ever In short having caused my Chyrurgeon to open the part affected with a po●e●tial cau●ery found the Cranium carīated ruggid and blackish which having ordered to be plained with a Scalprum cured him with my Antivenereal Whence it appears he carried this hidden Pox almost four years about him 4. I have had several Women patients that had cherished a hidden Pox for five or six Years without discovering any sensible Disease all that time ARTICLE X. Touching the Preparative Cure 37. A Venereal Patient in whatever degree if his body be either full or foul first requires bleeding and purging because of making way for other specifick Medicines 2. Before the Patient may be purged it 's requisite his humours should be prepared with a Pocki● Digestiu● as this following which I have oft prescribed with great success Take shavings of Guaiac wood lb ss spring-Spring-water 3. qts Burdeaux Wine s●arpened withʒ ij of Sal Tart. 2. qts Boyl it to the consumption of half adding thereunto Polyp q. Cartham seedsʒ ij E●ithym ʒ ss Liq●orish and Fennil Seeds of each an Ounce Raisins ℥ ij boyl it a little longer and strain it The Dose is from ℥ iv to viij Mornings and Evenings for three dayes This is also a Decoction of excellent vertue against a catarrhous Consumption as you may read in my Anatomy o● English Consumptions The Body being thus prepared you may proceed with any of the following Methods ART XI The Primitive Cure 38. THe Primitive or the first invented Method of Curing the
records of several Treatises my self can produce some instances of Pockie Hecticks restored to their health it 's a sufficient argument to encourage Physicians to attempt some course or other to recover their disastered patients or at least to advise something to palliate and prolong their dayes In this case the generality of Authors frame two indications the one and which in the cure is preferred is to moisten the wither'd and tabefied parts the other is to expel and extinguish the virulent venom of the Pox. The for●●ost of these is accomplisht or at least endeavoured by a nutritive and humecting diet and other medicines of the same faculty namely by Cock-broath wherein is boiled French B●rley Bugloss or Borrage roots liquorish the four cordial flowers Dates Jujubees Sebesten Currants the four greater cold Seeds and sometimes a small proportion of Poppie-seeds all which besides the liquorish is to be sweetned with Rose sugar if the partie be Rhumatick or if not with sugar of Marsh-mallows From a fortnights continuance hereof three or four times a day it 's expected the Patient should be somewhat incarn'd moistned and strengthned which commemorates the Physician of his latter indication of resisting and oppugning the venom to which purpose he prescrib●s a proportion of C●ina r●ot and Sa● to be added to the broath forementioned I● upon another fortnights use of this the Patient seems to mend and appears less cadaverous in his aspect he begins to think of steering another course and so either wholy casts off the broth or at least diminishes the use of it and prescribes a formal decoction of Gu●●●acum Salsa and Chini others omit the former of these three being suspicious it's too h●t and drying and so might precipitate the Gallican to his form●r emaciated habit This is to be diligently drunk for six weeks or two months the length of time being supposed to recompence the omission of those violent sweats which are ordinarily enjoyned upon an antivenereal decoction though in this method some short gentle sweats are advised That the r●sult of this sort of cure hath been a perfect recovery of confirmed pockie Hecticks many Autho●s do confidently assert in their Volumes as Poterius R●verius F●nseca and others though I am more than certain that their patients were onely emacerated but not Hectically However it 's apparent by the testimonies of these so reputed Physicians C●in● root obtains a most energick vertue for restoring Emaciated pocky Hecticks which the Reader possibly may observe I have more than once contradicted in this Treatize Besides that its vertue is not exhaled though transported through such hot climes and kept seven eight or ten years before it 's called into use seems evidently demonstrated by the sanguine tincture it contributes to the liquor in a decoction or broath which doubtless must be derived from a potent Sulphur that is deeply latent in the ro●t and by a long continuated ●bullition is only extracted and consequently is not exposed to exhalation Moreover it might be argued that the chief energy of oppugning this virulent venom is not inherent in the volatile parts of antivenereal drugs but rather in their fixt salts which a long ebullition doth melt and extract as may be instanced in Guaiacum which its age is universally imagined doth render fitter for use and exalted to a more puissant faculty as if length of time were requisite to concoct its parts and perduce its l●t●nt Sulphur to maturity My answer to th●se objections imports that the antivener●●l vertue which is attributed to C●in● and Sa●s● is chiefly lodged in its volatile saline particles the I●di●ns sca●ce reposing any confidence of vertue in the former unless fresh taken out of the ground experience convincing them that few owe their cure to it after it hath been exposed ● or 10 dais to the air Moreover the evident manner which is conceived that drug doth exert its activity through against the Pox is by sweat which I could never detect in a sole decoction of Chin● Neither can any manifest qualities be discovered in its fixt particles which by a long dec●ction are aimed to be extracted whereby it should melt attenuate humours and so profuse a sweat and with it the venomous miasms if so there is little certainty of its antigallick vertue unless reposed in its hidden powers which few now a daies can confide in On the other hand Guaiacum declares its vertue by its manifest qualities residing in its fixt salin and sulphurous particles or an acid salt and a potent expansive su●phur as the Anatomy of 〈◊〉 parts by sire doth evidently represent to you by the acid spirit and a strong sulphurous oil it yeilds through the former attenuating and penetrating into those humors that harbour the infection and through the latter deterging colliquating diffusing and propelling the said humors out at the pores together with the virulent miasms Moreover it must not be doubted but the oldest and longest cut G●●acum is most prevalent for a podkie purpose time seeming to concoct its ● póur and exalt its particles to a greater energie or rather time opening the pores of that hard wood disuniting the sulphurous parts from the salin whose ●idum and close connexion is the cause of the hardness of the said wood whereby it afterwards results more apt and capable of rendring its sulphurous and salin particles to any liquor by a far shorter ebullition than if the said wood were ●●wer That time doth so considerably exalt and sublime the vertues of bodies will be plainly attested to you by the volatization of the spirit of Vitriol which I imagine few can shew besides my self having the possession of a spirit so volatil that it diffuses it self to a very great distance not without a pleasant scent to the olfactive organ and a most subtil insinuation into the remotest effuges of the brain and being dropt into a liquor proves diaphoretick which is accounted an excellent vertu when accompanying an acidity The manner it 's prepared is thus calcine your Vitriol to a Colcother and place it in a Garret leaving it there 2 or 3 years afterwards distil it after the usual way and you shal● collect a deep yellow volatil spir● of Vitriol as is here described Which confirms my assertion tha● time doth maturate volatilize an● exalt the sulphurous particles an● renders them apt for sequestration● from its more drossie and feculen● parts This by the way And re●turning to my former subject I 〈◊〉 once more assert Guaiacum the only certain and manifest vegetabl● for curing the Pox. The metho● I have sometimes prescribed is th● following Take a young Co●● and bruise it well add to it thre● ounces of the shavings of old Guaiacum wood four handfuls of Mallow leaves two ounces of the fo● greater cold seeds one ounce ● sweet Almonds blanched 20 Dates and two ounces of blew Currant● spring water four quarts boil i● gently two hours in a diet potstrain keep it 〈◊〉 glass cl●s● stopt Hereof let the Patient drink a quarter of a pint four times a day In stead of water in some cases I have ordained the same quantity of Whey or water distild of Milk or Mallow water After ten daies continuance of this Anti-hectick broath it 's requisite to add two ounces of excellent new Sarsaparil or if such is scarce to be procur'd the like quantitie of Burdock roots If upon twenty daies use hereof the Patient seem'd somewhat incarn'd I judged it convenient to purge him gently with Di●sen●● and Mercur. subl ●ulc and so exhort him to two or three small sweats a week By degrees I detracted those moistning ingredients until I arrived to the use of of my two Magisteria Furthermore I have now and then observed some Gallicks surprized with particular A 〈◊〉 of some o● their members in that case I a● vised three ounces of Red worm● taken out of a horses dunghil an● well-washt in white Wine to b● added to the nutritive decoction● Likewise I perceived that a score of well cleansed Vineyard Snails added to the broath aforesaid di● very much contribute to its nutritive faculty After that the Patient being reduced to a more florid aspect and somewhat impinguated you may proceed with such a method as his present symptoms may indicate according to those observations I have lately communicated to you FINIS