Selected quad for the lemma: water_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
water_n cold_a hot_a moist_a 5,078 5 10.3751 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A72470 The bathes of Bathes ayde wonderfull and most excellent, agaynst very many sicknesses, approued by authoritie, confirmed by reason, and dayly tryed by experience: vvith the antiquitie, commoditie, propertie, knovvledge, vse, aphorismes, diet, medicine, and other thinges therto be considered and obserued. / Compendiously compiled by Iohn Iones phisition. Anno salutis. 1572. At Asple Hall besydes Nottingham. Jones, John, physician. 1572 (1572) STC 14724a.3; ESTC S107904 49,058 102

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

that we meane not for that wer absurd the those mineralles be melted commixed with the water But we affyrme that theyr qualities are through boyling of the fyre in●unded discussid cōmixed dispersed by the waters rūning forth as may be wel approued the which also D. Turner testifieth what néede many wordes The water tastles of his own nature absolutly cold moderatly moist as it is said shal be better in the Table of the things natural is in these Baths per accidens made hot sharp bitter harsh rough c. Therefore 1 Heating Warming the colde 2 Concocting Concocting the crude 3 Persinge Opening the stopped 4 Dissoluing Dissoluing the harde 5 Attracting Attracting the cloyde 6 Clensing Clensing the foule 7 Binding Binding the seuered 8 Drying Drying the moyst 9 Stopping Stopping the flowings 10 Consolidating Consolidating the broken Comforting the weake members euen as if therin nature had bestowed artificially hir highest cunning why say I not the God of Nature for truly passing great benefites are to bée looked for of passing great bountie By meanes whereof it helpeth not onely all the manifeste gréefes afore specified in the fyrst booke but also many other hidden and vnknowen sicknesses which be least vnnamed for if hidden sicknesses any where doo procéed it is necessary sayth Fernelius lib. de abditis rerum causis contrarie to them hidden remedies too consiste as it dooth appéere as well by authoritie and reason as by experience if you consider with aduisement and councell which is as Plato sayeth the very keye of wysedome the diuersities of qualities temperatures properties and naturs of the Bathes The which yet in them selues are varied aswell in heate as in nature For the Kinges bathe is hote betwene both the other and in curing most of the aforenamed sicknesses best But the hote for many colde sycknesses iointaches pockes rotten vlceres more auaylable then the fyrste But the crosse bathe is least hote and therefore for chollerique persons such as are easely disposed to feuers more commodiouse All the which differences may bée gathered by that which is already declared leauinge too speake any further of them to the learned and expert there acknowledging with Aristot that it is not possible for one man to know all things although euery man ought to know as much as hée might For Omnis homo nascitur vt sapiens fiat The ende of the second Booke ¶ The third Booke of Bathes ayde IN our first booke the antiquitie ayde and commodities procéeding of the Bathes are at large described with a confutation of all those as reproueth the drincking of it In the second the causes of the heate of the waters of bathes and also the properties are reasonablie and apparantly to the senses approued Now it resteth that in this thyrd booke be declared when the sicke come thither what ought to be considered and how and by what meanes it may them profit without which very litle could the former bookes benefyte First therefore afore any person doe repayre thither it is conuenient that hée bée purged if not afore hée come thither at the least wyse before hée enter the bathes according as 1 Sicknes 2 Cause 3 Accident shall require Sicknesse is an affecte but not euery affecte for this woorde with Galene is pronounced of many and dyuers thinges but contrarie too Nature by whom the action is fyrste hurte eyther depraued deminished or taken away libro de morborum caussis libro prim Therapentices libro secund comentariorum in libr. Hippo. de natura humana Cause of sicknesse is that vnto which any thing followeth which is named effecte as sayeth Galene libro de symptomatum differenciis Accident is that which the Gréekes call Symptonia and wée properly in English to fall and with fall is what so euer happeneth to the bodye sicknesse and cause excepted Of the which larger to entreate were but friuelouse for the sicknesses be already the chéefest shewed and the outward causes are to be sought in the Table of the things not naturall and the inwarde of the table of the things naturall the coniunct of them both and of the accidents notes of sicknesses which is the argument to knowe whether ye néede adding or empting and that thorowe the consultation with the wyse and learned in Phisicke the neglecting wherof hath caused many a one to come thence worse then they went Some with the Goute in euery ioynte which had it afore but in one or two Some other full of byles some of vlcers and scabs c. And therefore in the behalfe of my Countrie not without aduisement and censure to speak it what letteth but for such a one as so deserueth that there might not be a méete stipend appointed or some impropriat benefyce or parsonage or prebend at Salisbury Worcester Herforde Gloucester Bristowe Excester Wels Landathe c. the furthest of not past a dayes iourney as well for the poore as the ryche yea if in euery Cathedrall church in the lande there were a promocion for a graduate in Phisicke that hée might be there to gyue both councell medicine and ayde to the better setting forth of Gods glorie and the magnificence of the Maiestie séeinge the liuing onely prayse the Lord and not the dead and also the healthy serue best the princely dignitie in all cheualry considering further herewith that woorthy piller of Christian veritie S. Ambrose who sayeth that the bodye is the tabernacle of the soule and the condicions of the minde as sayth Galene in temp Hippo. Platonis c. doo followe the temperature of the body the which thing to be true daylye experience proueth as we knowe and you also that vse too visite the sicke a déed of charitie how some dote some bée frantique some starke madde some numme some loose some disioynted c. then vnfit for any kynde of seruice arte mistery facultie counsell or prowes much lesse refourmable by sermons to pitie and godlines vntill they bée restored agayne according to nature the scope of Physike if so bée Phisyke as the prince Hippo. defyneth lib. de flatibus and as all Vniuersities this 2000. yeares hath receyued it as well Gréekes Arabians as Latinistes is prothesis kai aphasesis an adding and taking away and addinge of that wanting in the Spirites humoures and membres according to nature and a taking away of that contrarie to nature in the members humours and spyrites According to Nature is 1 Health 2 The cause of Health 3 The effect of health 4 Strength 5 Custome and 6 Complexion Health is an affect according to nature apte to perfourme the actions of the same Now the Table of the .vii. things Naturall you may vnfoulde bearyng well all thinges in your memorie vnles you meane to perfourme the prouerbe In at the one eare and out at the other THE TABLE OF THE SEVEN THINGS NATVRAL OVT OF THE VVHICH THE ACTIONS according to Nature doe spring may be perceiued in this Table howbeit not so often deuided as
it might be done supposing these will serue to giue the wise and learned patient matter sufficient to consult with the Phisition of wherby that which is according to nature may be preserued and ayded and those things which be against Nature expelled the scope of Phisicke as is shewed Elementum is a simple and most pure bodie and the best parte of that wherein it is can not be deuided into any other kind and of it all things naturall haue their beginning without al generacion or corruptiō Howbeit of Fire made thicke commeth Ayre Of Aire made thick commeth vvater Of vvater made thick cōmeth Earth And yit here is neither corruptiō nor generation of the whole For this is but a mutation of the parts onely And the consent and agrement of them is the fyre with the Ayre in heate in drynes with the Earth in moisture the Aire with the water in heate with the fire in coldnes the water with the earth and in moisture with the ayre the earth in drines with the fyre and in coldnes with the water as the water to the fyre is extreme contrary so is the aire to the earth Elementes foure Fyre Absolutelie hot and moderately dry Ayre Absolutely moist and moderately hot vvater Absolutely cold moderatly moist Earth Absolutely dry and moderatly cold Temperamentum is a tēpering of diuers qualities of the foure Elements in one body Temperaments or complections .ix. Simple Hot. Actiue Cold. Actiue Moist Passiue Dry. Passiue Compound Hot and dry Hot and moist Cold and moist Cold and dry Tēperate Of all alike as it were by waight the very trew and iust complection but as hard to be found as Plato his Idea or Arist summum bonum or as the the prouerbe is a black Swan Neuertheles he that will iudge trew of complexions must alwayes haue in his imagination the aforesayd perfect temperament Humors which may be called the sonnes of Elements is a part contained subsisting the bodie Humors foure Naturall Blud Temperate norishing the body contained in the vains swetish raigning in the spring Flewme Cold and moist sowpling the drie and hard parts without proper mācion tastles raigning in winter Choler Hot and drie clensing and quickning conteined in the gall bitter raigning in sommer Melācholie Cold and dry staying and binding contained in the Splene sower raigning in haruest Vnnatural as Blud distempered with other humors Flewm waterie glassie slimie plastoie salt sower harsh rugh Choler Citrine yelkie like cankrie And eueri day they are thus moued as the blud betwen the ninth houre at night and iij. in the morning Choler betwen iiij ix afore none Melācolie betwen ix and .iij. Flewme betwen iij. ix at night Membres are bodies that are ingendred of the fyrst commixtion of humours Members Spermatike as Braine synewes Kells bones grissels c. Simple as Skin fatte flesh muscles fillets guts veins artires Synowes chords gristles bones tunicles c. Sanguine as Liuer hart kidnes Milt fatte flesh c. Compound as Hed. Armes Legs Principal as Hart braine Liuer stones Officiall as Synowes seruing the brain Artires seruing the hart Veins seruing the Liuer Vessels spermatike seruīg the stons Instrumētall as Stomake Rayns. Bowels Great synewes c. ¶ Herewith see that you consider the composition the complexion the substance the quantitie the number the figure the operation the vse the disease in part in all the mēbres Facultas facultie or power is the cause of doing thas which is don as the vvater is the cause of the while going about Faculties or power s. Animal Ordeineth discernith composith Mouith by voluntarie will. Sentith wherof procedeth the fiue wits Vital working delating and wraining the artires vvrought which is stirred by an exterior cause wherof com̄mith subtiltie prouidēce Natural Doth minister Apetite Retaineth Digestith Expelleth Is ministrid Ingendreth Norishith Feedeth Actio et opus doing working is that which by the power is don as the wheate conuerted to meale is the grist of the mill Action or operation Vital Mouith mirth sadnes hope trust feare dispaire loue hatred mercie enuie wrath wodnes wildnes stobernes humanitie Empire glorie victorie c. Natural Altereth Ioineth Formith Animal Aaprehendeth Fantasieth Imagineth Opinioneth Cōmonsenteth In the two former ventricles Iudgeth Estemeth Thinketh Disposith In the middle vētricle Remembrith Knoweth calleth to memory in the hinder part Spiritus is an ayrie substance subtile stirring the powers of the bodie to performe their operation euen as a prince doth his counsel and as the counsell doth the subiects euery one according to hys vocation and to that is limited by nature wherin was neuer sene rebellion but euery inferior redy to serue his superior a paterne of a heauenly common weale and for euery reasonable bodie to note obserue although he were an Ethemek how much rather then of Christians euery faithfull manne knoweth Spirits Natural From the Liuer taketh his beginning and by the veines which haue no pulse dispersith in to all the hole bodie Vital From the hart procedeth and by the artires or pulses is sent in to all the hole body Animal From the braine is ingendred and is sent by the sinewes throughout the body and maketh sence or feeling c. ¶ Now that you haue here in this Table noted vnto you the things wherof the Natural bodies is made with the powers and actions of the same so likewise folowith the things not naturall so called bycause they be in parcel of the natural body and yet by the temperance of them the body being in health so consisteth and yet by the distemperance of them sicknes is induced and the body dissolued THese things well waied being the things wherof we are framed the subiect of phisike as the frame of an house is the subiect of the Carpēter wyl vs to looke in the Table of the .vi. things not natural by what meanes we are héere cōtinued maintained as therin further is shewed for other wise what auailed a lump not of an howers life to be produced or so many good lawes and holsome precepts appointed for the good preseruacion educacion bothe of ould yong and auoyding of contagiouse infection aswell from princely mancion as from citie towne and Garrison prohibicion and admission of victualles fit and vnfyt for nouryshment the which if all were hab nab as fooles vse to comyn other ouerbould in abusing theyr eloquence to take from vs in indifferent thinges our frée election seing God nature to them that be framid according to nature not impedited in the actions of the partes to them belonging may as the wyse man sayth vse fyre and water at theyr discresion with eche other thing in this lyfe to them in euery sort méete and decent not forgetting to giue God chéefe prayse for all things yet not in such sort as the Puritanes but better we may terme them pinis precisians vse who would haue that no man deserueth be his acts euer so
the sonne of 28 Seth the sonne of 29 Adam and Eua. From Noe we haue followed the Septuaginta as wee did the most probable histories vntil Nos Concerning the noblenes genealogie of the founder antiquitie of the Brittaynes and origyne of these our Bathes of Bathe we haue spoken somewhat It resteth that in a word or two be declared theyr excellent properties worthie effects aydefull in déede to the most sort of infirmities accidents and gréefes which as saith Galen Lib. de symptomatum differencijs is the fealing of a thing cōtrary to nature and after Auicen in canonibus they be these Stryking Breaking Lewsing Ytching Smarting Pricking Shrinking Streatching Persing Beating Greauouse Heauy Byting Tyring Stunning or Sléeping And for these disseases following c. 1 Morphewes 2 Scales 3 Scabs 4 Scurfe 5 Wheales 6 Pustles 7 Byles 8 Apostemes or swellings 9 Vlcers 10 Letters 11 Ringwormes 12 Lepryes 13 Pockes 14 Goutes 15 Ioyntaches 16 Paulsye 17 Apoplexyes 18 Faulling sicknesses 19 Shakyngs 20 Numnes 21 Crampes 22 Destillacions 23 Rheumes 24 Poses 25 Whorsenes 26 Coughes 27 Running of the eyes 28 Running of the eares 29 Singing and ringing of thē 30 Dropping of the vryne 31 Diabetes which is the ouer making of water 32 Tenesmos which is a desire of going to the stole without doing of any thing or very lyttle with great paine 33 Collycke 34 Flyres 35 Hemorhoydes 36 Pyles 37 Feuers interpolate that come of melancholly or fleame entring the Bathe ii houres before the fit 38 Hardnes of the Splene swelling thereof 39 Swelling of the matrice or place of cōcepcion 40 Hardnes of the Liuer coldnes therof 41 Wyndines 42 Hardnes 43 Barenes 44 Ouer slipperines 45 Coldnes 46 Wasting of Seade 47 Gréene siknes 48 Hydropsyes 49 Coldnes of the brayne 50 Lack of memory 51 The sleapinge sicknes Now as you haue harde the disseases greafes which it helpeth So I think it not impertinent to shew the causes of the paynes before declared that you may the réedyer cōsult with your Phisicions thereof as of all other thinges heareafter to bée mencioned béefore ye séeke the ayde of the Bathes therfore that preordinate Phisicion by prouidence diuine Hippoc. the prince of Phisike saith that the way by which the sicknesse is vnderstanded is the perfect pathe to the curacion therof Galen lykewise the worthiest Doctour in Natures schole wylleth that before the cause be iuged no remedy be geuen whose councels herein I wysh you to follow 1 Ytching payne cōmeth of a tarte or salt humor 2 Smarting of an eger humor 3 Pricking of a sharpe humor 4 Stretching of windines that stretcheth out the Synewes and muscles contrary to nature 5 Compressyue cōmeth of matter or wyndines that maketh narrowe or constrayneth the membre or part 6 Concussiue or shaking paine procedeth of matter that is resolued betwene the muscles and panycles which by extending the panicle causeth solucion of continuitie 7 Wearyeng is cause of humors or wyndines enclosed betwene the panicle and the bone or of colde drawing the sayd panicle togither 8 Lewsyng paine is caused of matter stretching the flesh and the muscles and not the chordes 9 Persyng is caused of humors or grosse windines retained betwene the tunicles of an hard and grosse membre as in the gut Colon which without ceasing pearseth as it wer boring thorow with a gymlet 10 Actual is caused of humor retayned in a member when solucyon of continuitie is made 11 Stupefactiue is caused of vehement cold or hete and by stopping of the pores retayning the sensible Spyrites as by strong binding or ouerfilling of the wayes 12 Beating or quapping cōmeth of a hot Aposteme for a cold neuer causeth pain except it turne to heate neither is byting paine in hot Apostemes but when it procedeth of inflamacion sensibilitie of the place and multitude of beating vaines 13 Heauy or grauatiue paine is caused in an Aposteme in a membre not sensible as in the Lungs kydneys and in the splene or mylt 14 Tyring paine cometh of a laboryouse exercyse or thorough an humor vehemently stretching the membre 15 Biting payne is caused of sharpe and eger humor But now let vs returne again to the propreties of the Bathes the which in some anoye the stomache and in the most sorte byndeth very much the bodie if they drynke not of the water as in the last booke shal be handled The which water many suppose hath not ben accustomed to be appoynted to be dronke by the most auncient phisicions of the Greakes the reason is they saye for that Galen whose maner was to passe ouer nothing worthy to be entreated of hath so slightlie skypped ouer theyr aydes vertues vses effects which if they had ben effectuall to be accompted he would as sone haue wrytten a booke of it as of Tryacle or of the facultie of simple medicines c. This cōiecture I deny not may cause some to thinke so who haue not wel digested his mening in all his workes whose whole scope is to wryte of nothing at large but that wherein reason preuayleth with experyence But bicause these Bathes were the medicines of Empyrykes he left them at large howbeit in dyuers partes of his woorkes we fynde mencion made of Bathes and especially in his fourth booke De sanitate tuenda wher he hath these words ther be some waters in vse to be dronke for the purging of the body as the waters in which Nitre bitumen c. Againe he saith in his fyrst booke De sanitate tuenda that all waters representing the force of medicine as the waters of Allume Sulphur or Bitumen haue force of drying by the which it is more then manyfest that he commendeth them when as he calleth them medicinall Moreouer to proue that they were in vse to bée dronke both before Galen his tyme and since by the dyscourse following it may most euidently appeare Scribonius Largus who was Galens auncient appoynted to be dronk for the vlcers and swellings of the bladder water wherein Iron was quenched this he did as he affyrmeth to imitate the propreties of the Bathes of Ferraria as you may reade in his .146 ca. Archigenes also proueth as testifyeth Actius lib. 11. that waters of bathes were vsed to be appointed to be dronke for thaffects of the bladder of the most auncient Phisicions Oribasius lykewyse appoynteth the vse of drinking both of hot and cold bathes In collectaneis ad Iulianum imperatorem Pansanias doth shew how that the people Cynethensis vsed to drinke of the medicinable Wel called Alisson for the byting of madde dogges in Archadicis suis Vitruuius entreating of the waters of Bathes proueth that by reason of Bitumen and Nitre they were dronke for purging of the body plentifully lib. nono what néede many words In the tyme of Augustus Caesar the waters of bathes wer in great vse to be dronk at what tyme Phisicions flourished not onely in the hye courte of Rome but also ouer all as preciouse stones
set in goulden ouches Finally Plinie sheweth that the waters of bathes of Nitre and Allume were often dronk for the purging of the bodie lib. iii. hist nat The which Gabriel Fallopius most reasonably confirmeth lib. de mediatis aquis Howbeit none of all these writers nor any other that I can heare of do make any mencion of our bathes in England Brittaine or if any do it is vnknowen and also vnsufficient without probable reason why such vertues shold proceade from them consydering it wer thargument of blunt wits and also of féeble vnderstāding to iudge the nature of our Bathes for any cause that they haue vttered of theirs not knowing ours Seing Plato wylleth as may appeare by hys reasoning with Socrates that euery matter probable must be reasoned to and froe that so by our sences it may be knowen if for Philosophers we wyll be accounted not for rude Empirykes in phoedo the which thing also Tullie affyrmeth in these woordes Speculator vaenatorque naturae Physicus the Phisicyon is a viewer and sercher out of Nature Wherfore according to my capacitie desyrouse of the originall causes of things a louer of wysedome may not be so satisfyed but rather séeke further for the efficient causes ymediate mediate and material causes with the commixtions of myneralles qualities and temperatures faculties and degrées aswell by authoritie and reason as by experyence as in the next bookes shall appeare seing they be accounted most happy which do best attayne to the knowledge of the causes of things for Foelix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas otherwise myght phantasie stand for vnderstāding and wilful opinion for absolute reason ¶ The ende of the fyrst booke ¶ The second Booke of Bathes ayde FOR asmuch as in euery kynd of profession the vse benefyte and knowledge of the cause is so necessarie that without it knowen it is in a maner impossible that any Scyence may consist sure and certayne If so bée that science itself is nothing else but an intelligence habite knowinge things by their causes and effectes I thought it conuenient to speake in a worde or twoo of the efficient immediat mediate and materiall causes of the heate of Bathes that so the ende which is the vse or profit of the thing for which wée labour may more manifestly appeare and the abuse which is the improper ende of things may bée auoyded an argument as I suppose not impertinent to this our present purpose In describing the which diuers Philosophers haue bin of diuers mindes as hereafter shall more playnely appeare and certainely this disagréeing of so wyse men may present argumentes of most waighty questions to you very doubtefull vntill they be discussed Therfore that I may not séeme ouer tediouse nor yet ouer briefe I will alleage the chiefest aswell of the most auncient and of the midle sorte as of the later in our tyme. Mileus the Philosopher hath spoken in this case and hée said the cause through which the waters of Bathes be heated is none other then a winde heatinge in the depth of the earth and in the hollownesses which be in the bowels of the same Wherefore that heat reboundeth vpon the water so it commeth forth hot Rentiphilus and Thesmophilus in this point bée contrary to Mileus and the world folowed them who sayd the earth in those places is very thinne and not of coniuncte partes so that the heate of the sunne entring heateth the water in the hollownesse of the earth and in the caues and trenches which be in the depth by means wherof it cometh forth hot Democritus contrariwise sayd that the cause of the heate of hot Bathes is for that in the holownesses of the earth there be mountaines of Chalke and heapes of ashes which when the water doeth runne vpon it is heated and so the water passeth out hot vpon the face of the earth and of this mynd haue béen many that I haue consulted with concerning the hot welles at Buckstone which opinion is altogether vayne as hereafter shall appéere left vnhandled in our woorke dedicated thervnto wishing therfore all those that will knowe the reason at large why and how waters become hot to reade this our woorke where I doubt not they shall finde wherwith to content them Seneca and Albertus magnus affyrme that the imediate or efficient cause of the hot Bathes is for that they runne vpon a Myne of Brimstone and thorow it are heated And this opinion they and also Sauonarola wyth many other would father vpon Aristotle Howbéeit so great a Philosopher could not so much as thinke it the reason is bycause they had read in a certayne booke ascrybed to Aristotle de proprietatibus Elementorum that the waters of the Baths flow hot bycause they passe through a Mine of Brimstone which booke to haue béen none of his it may appéere by other places in his woorkes wherein hée fréely protesteth a contrary iudgment as in secundo meteore et in problematū 24 sectione 17 probl The last and truest is the opinion of Aristotle who supposed that the waters of Bathes were made hot of a most strong and seruent cause which hée supposed to bée none other then fyer included in places vnder the earth and that fyer is vnder the earth it may easely appéere at Eclam in the Isle of Iseland and at Varigazzo and Florence in Italy and also in Sicilie and betwéen the great seas also in Darbyshire with infinite other places beside Now that the truth falshode of the aforesayd opinions may more cléerely appéere the diuine godhed first called vpon we wil lay this foundation that all simple water essentially challengeth vnto it selfe especiall cold for it is of cold elements the chéefest as the prince of Philosophers declareth and as hereafter it shal be made manifest in the table of the things naturall in the third booke Moreouer let this be a principle that all water heated must be supposed to be by vertu essence cold for al such so demisse of nature returneth to cold as by experience we do proue for if it be takē in a vessell out of the spring it waxeth cold whereby it is inferred that the waters of Bathes by some other meanes become hot must be by proper essence and nature virtualiter cold accidentaliter hot Furthermore séeing water is so cold as in the last degrée the qualitie especially disproporcionated with so great a degrée of heat as is the degrée of feruent heat cannot be induced but by an especial heat So that likewise it is inferred that it is not so heated by a wind heating it as it pleased Milene nor by the heat of the Sun as it pleased Reutiphilus Thesmophilus nor yit bicause it runneth vpon a moūtayn of Chalk or ashes as Democritus supposed séeing these can bring nothing to passe beyonde their owne proper degrée while they work according to nature except it work vpon some subiect which is like to the worker so by affinity
receue the impression as the light by the brightnes cléernes of Diamonds Saphirs Cristal or such like strengthning the same but in these of thē afore aledged ther is no such aptnes of heating cooling moystning or drying or by any other meanes furthering the same as you may perceue by your own outward senses Beside these heat preserued becometh more mighty being ioyned to drynes then to moysture séeing drines doth whet sharpen heat contrariwise moisture doth dul it as you may also easely gather Lastly actuall fyre working vpon the water it self can not put into it a greater degrée of heat the water it self remayning then the degrée of feruent heate Experience doth verifye the supposition whereby it may be inferred that the waters of Bathes can not be brought to so great a degrée of heate by whot vapoures vnder the earth nor yit by their dashing from hyghe places and craggie for then the waters descendinge out of the cragged rockes in the hyghe hilles in Kayer Naruayne shyre there called VVithua and out of the rauen cragge in Cumbreland shuld through their longe course and violent tossinges become hote But experience proueth the contrarie therefore dashinge togyther and passage of the waters through stony places is not the immediate cause of the heate of the waters of Bathes Séeing that effecte lastly is fyre neyther be such vapours or dashinges matchable to fyre in heate so that from them such an heate can not procéede Wherefore it shal be shewed that if it be heated their heat shal bée by none other means but of fyre And séeing fire doth so heate it ensueth that in the bowels of the earth fire may be found Which as wée haue sayde shal be farther approued both by experience and reason Auicen and Auerhois do permit that Elements are formally in things mixed which thing we leaue worthy to bee graunted by their authoritie so that then thus wise we wil argue It is an harder thing for nature to be able to bringe forth in the bowels of the earth a thinge mingled perfyte then a thing simple perfecte when as a thing mingled thus wyse can not be produced without the simple séeinge it is presupposed but nature can do the first séeing it bringeth forth Golde Siluer Brimstone Salt peter Alume Iron and all other myneralles Ergo it can do the seconde ergo it can bring foorth fyre also And the cause of the beginninge of this fyre is none other then that which is assigned of Aristo in secundo meteo capite de terraemotu And it is an exhalacion hot and drye included in the concauities of the earth where it séeking a passage out and not fynding it is laboured being so laboured it is rarified and beinge rarifyed is kindled bycause great rarefaction standeth with great heate If therefore it happen that where such vapour is included and after the maner as is sayde inflamed if I say it happen that there be metal of Bitumen or Sulphur it is also kindled and the fyre is so longe preserued as the matter féeding it shal not fayle which matter féeding must now be searched out bycause it is not yit euident what it is and also many of those which doo followe the opinion of Aristo concerning the cause preseruing the fyre vnder the earth do disagrée although all do confesse that this fyre vnder the earth hath some subiect preseruing it and that thys fyre is the cause of the heate of the waters of Bathes hereafter shall appeare more euidently Iohannes de Dondis an excellent learned man and a pure Peripatetique hath made a very goodly treatice of the hot welles in the fielde of Padua and there amongst other questions hée moueth this Whence it is that the waters of Bathes doo springe hote hée aunswereth at the length with Arist and sayth that the cause is fyre vnder the earth and that such waters doo flowe perpetually hote bycause the fyre is perpetually preserued in those places vnder the earth after hée demaundeth what is the cause preseruing and aunswered wherevnto very ignorauntly Sanonarola cleaueth that it is heate excitated of the Starres in the face of the earth which heate hée affirmeth to bée not onely the cause preseruing but also the efficient as it were and the materiall and subiect of the fyre hée supposeth to bée an exhalation hote and drie that is wynde And bycause the wynde is still ministred therfore that especially fyre is perpetually preserued and perpetually heateth the waters Afterward he demaundeth of the place of that fyre vnder the earthe sayth that it is not nye the centre of the earth bicause then it would easily bée corrupted for the earth is ther most pure and therfore the vertue doth more florish so that it is most colde neither is the place of the fyre vnder the brimme of the Earth for if it were ther conteyned it would burne vp the plantes and whatsoeuer is in the face of the same and therfore he concludeth that it is in the middle hollownesses betwene these two extremes that is béetwene the centre and the face of the earthe he addeth that this place where the fyre lyeth is distant from the face of the earth .xxx. Myles whereby it appeareth that he woulde haue the Sunne to perse the earth by the space of .xxx. Myles But this opinion is false bicause if the beames of the Sunne should kéepe fyre vnder the earth it must fyrst passe thorough the face of the earth then passe part after part vntill it come to that especiall heate and so afore it come to that fyre it would burne whatsoeuer is found on the superficies of the earth But admit that this heauenly heate passing thorough the superficies of the earth do not burne all that it encountreth yet it wyll not preserue that fyre bycause seing it is .xxx. myles distant from the superficies of the earth as he sayth toward the centre before the heate excitated of the Sunne beames come thether it will bée so flacke that it wyll not bée warme therefore the opinion of Ioannes is false Againe if fyre vnder the earth that is this flame and especiall heate were perpetually preserued of the heauenly heate it would ensue that in colde Regions waters of Bathes wold not be hot but in hot Regions they would be most feruent hot bicause in colde regions ther is but small reflexion of the beames of the Sunne for which cause they be cold Therfore the heate of the Sunne in them can not bée so hot that it should minister too the fyre vnder the earth so strong an heate but in the hot Zone ther shold not only be so great an heate that those waters should bée most hot but also all things should bée burned But dayly experience proueth the contrary also the authoritie of Matten Curtesse in his booke of Nauigacion to Charles the fith Monarche If therefore the heauenly heate were the cause of heate vnder the earth in cold climates hot waters
to his own nature ministreth féeding to the flame long And that you may proue of Camphyre and such other things whence it is no maruayle if waters of Bathes bée alwayes hot séeing the fire thorowe which they ware hote hath for a féedinge and propre subiect plentie of bitumen conteyned in the places vnder the earth and longe preseruing the flame This opinion of Agricola although it bee very like to bée true yit it hath a difficultie agaynst it bicause both experience and also the authoritie of the most learned men is agaynst it For Vitruuius which was a great searcher out of thinges vnder the earth willeth that the fyre is vnder the conduyts and yit Agricola sayeth it is not necessarie It is also agaynst the experience of the olde Romaynes who as they were moste wealthie least nothing vnproued amongest other things of those which did séeme vnpossible they practised to make a well whose water might continually slow hot and the matter succéeding according to their desire for they framed brasen pypes which they rouled into many roūdnesses so that the pypes did resemble the Spyres of a Dragon and for this cause they called the pypes dragons these pypes so framed had in the one part an hole by which cold water entred in and by another hole which they had belowe the waters of the fountayne did enter in and afterward vnder the spyres of the pypes they made fyre by which the water of the first spyre was skarcely heated the second more the thyrde yit more and so in all the water was more hote and so continually the water of the wel flowed hote and would alwais haue broken out hote if they had kepte the fire still vnder those spyres which thinge also you may perceyue by stillinge therefore séeing both experience and also authoritie teacheth that water can onely ware hote through fyre vnder it without bitumen it is false which Agricola hathe sayde that it is not necessary that fyre should be vnder the conduytes which thing also is hence euident bicause in the Bathe of S. Bartholomewes in the fielde of Padua as testifieth Fallopius their is a certayne well into which cold water entreth yit as soone as it is ther it waxed hote and this is not done bicause bitumen is there as sayth Fallopius but bicause fire is vnder that place Also in the Valley of the same bath there are two places out of the which ther is drawen clay and in the place wher clay was drawen out there is found Glarea and most hote marble and that heat procéedeth not of bitumen but of fyre vnder that Glarea Furthermore if waters were hote of fyre nourished of bitumen béeing in the conduytes as Agricola sayeth it would followe that all waters in theyr passage shoulde haue in them selues some fattynesse and also smell and taste of Bitumen yet this is false bycause there bée many in which there are none of these as the waters of the Bathes of Buckstone And those waters which haue Bitumen in déed as ther are some found which haue in them fattines and smell and taste of bitumen and all things as is the clay of S. Bartho which in déed tasteth of bitumen iudaicum as affirmeth Fallopius bicause that in that Bathe Bitumen burneth and therefore representeth smell and taste and all things of bitumen But some man will saye note you that fattines is not in all waters bycause perchaunce the bitumen which they conteyne is sound so that it can not bée melted This I graunt yet both the smell and also the taste ought to bée perceyued if it were true besydes that in such waters ther ought to bée vapoures of bitumen Therefore the matter of bitumen is not necessary in all waters that by reason of it they should be hote Therefore let vs omit the opinion of Agricola and come vnto another which is true and it is the opinion of Aristot and of them which doo followe Arist which is that the matter preseruinge fyre is Brimstone and that this was his opinion it is euident of him selfe in the 24. section of his Problemes and the last Probleme for there hée demaundeth the cause why hote Bathes were called holly and aunswereth bycause they wer made of things most holly And things most holly hée calleth Brimstone lightening and hée called Brimstone moste holly after the maner of the auncient persons which vsed it to clense their sacrifices wherevpon in Gréeke it is called theion as it were diuine of this place therefore it is clearely gathered that the mind and opinion of Aristo is that the matter preseruing fyre heating water is sulphur which séeinge it is not méete to be burned out in the conduytes of the earth it is necessary that it be burned out elswhere Hée sayeth besyde that lighteninge is the cause engendring such fyre and by the worde fulmen you maye not vnderstande Bitumen as amisse Ioannes de Dondis did that he might cleaue to the common opinion but Aristo hath accustomed in hys Problemes first to assigne the cause naturall then some common and the common opinion was that lightening dyd heate waters But let vs omit this and let vs come to the naturall and it is that the matter féeding fyre vnder the earth is Sulphur as experience it selfe teacheth For at Bath sensibly it may be proued that brimstone boyleth in the water yet I not deny that Bitumen also is not the continuall féeding of fyre but I affirme that fire in some places is fedde by brimstone and in some places by Bitumen So that I will conclude howe that necessarily the waters which doo waxe hot through Sulphur haue smell and tast of Sulphur as the bathes of Bath hath of which folowing more largely shal be entreated and those of Bitumen haue smell and tast of Bitumen But when as al bathes haue not immediatly th one of these hence it is that some waters be found which doo represent neyther Sulphure nor Bitumen as at Buckstone And when they passe through stonie places they doo lose straight way if they haue Sulphure or Bitumen bicause some waters do not boyle in Sulphur do waxe hot in the iorney Therfore such waters tast not of Sulphur the same I say of Bitumen séeing there be some waters which doo waxe hote through it that they passe through places in which Bitumen burneth and those which doo waxe hote thus wise doo not of brimstone nor bitumen Howbée it these waters if not immediatly yet mediatly they wax hote by reason either of brimstone or Bitumen preseruing the heat as in my benefite of Buckstones bathes may appeere But here ariseth a doubt why these fiers goe not forth séeing fier consumeth all things this is true if it be not still fed but Sulphur or Bitumen be quickly regenerated again therfore it is no dout that fier hauing matter to burn on is preserued alwayes That it quickly ingendreth again Strabo testifieth so that the digging of it béeinge intermitted for the space
of fower yeares they shal finde agayne as great plenty as afore whereby it is sufficient to feede fyre continually when as continually it is engendred and by the same reason for euer preserueth the bathes Lastely if it be obiected that if so great fyre be preserued vnder the earth that it may cause the waters to come forth so hote it should followe that where such hote bathes were there should bée vomica and a chimney out of whiche that flame shuld bée expelled I say it is not néed to ymagine that this flame is equall in all places but in some places is great in some small and therefore where it is greatest there it bursteth out and where it is small the smoke passeth out togyther with the water as at bathe which smoke smelleth there of the nature of sulphur howbeit in other places it may bée of bitumen and that smoke is made bothe bicause the sulphur and bitumen haue in them a porcion of earth melted and hence it is that this fyre may be longe preserued bicause it is a sound matter I call it sounde bycause both brimstone and bitumē be it neuer so pure and myngled haue alwayes earth mingled withall wherevpon although in some places the fire bée not great bycause it is in a sounde subiect which with his soundnes doth long endure the flame also endureth longe Therefore the matter by which fyre is fed in places vnder the earth is sulphur eyther pure or else commixed with his owne earth or else bitumen or some kinde thereof as Fallopius moste reasonably affyrmeth where you that bee learned if this suffise you not may reade further to content you That the metalles of bitumen or Sulphur doo take the beginninge of their heate of wynde inflamed in the places vnder the earth it is shewed But howe the waters do waxe hote thorowe that heate receyued in the Metalles and where that flame is conteyned wée muste nowe séeke séeing it is not euydent enough Therefore there bée in this thinge two opinions one of Agricola that the waters waxe hote bicause there is in the same conduite with the waters both fyre and coles by which they do waxe hot and the opinion is most lyke to be true and partly true bicause we sée with the water passing forth that some of the metal passeth forth and remaineth on the froth in which the water boyleth at Bath and this could not be except the fyre and water wer contayned in one and the same conduite The other is the opinion of Empedocles propounded vnto vs of Seneca that the waters be hot not bicause they passe thorough the burning metall as Agricola supposed but bicause they passe thorough places vnder which there is fyre kyndled togither with the metalles Which opiniō séemeth good enough For we haue in the springes of Buckston certaine well springes into which water entreth cold bicause they come not of one conduite but when it is ther commixed it waxeth hot which thinge wée can not saye too bée done through brimstone or bitumen there kindled and burning séeinge there appeareth neyther any metal nor fyre but wée must suppose that this is only done bycause the metall burneth vnder those conduites the water there is altogyther putable and yet do breake out hote as you haue heard which thing should not be if they waxed hote through their passage through metalles fyred but they would necessarily haue the smell and taste and some substance of that metall which as I haue saide they altogyther lacke therfore wée must say that they be not only in vse too bée dronke and to make meats of but also they wash their finest linnen whit and be more whyter than with the Ryuer water harde by and yet they breake out whote bycause they gette heate of the Stones by which they passe vnder which Stones ther is fyre kindled in any of the mettalles aforesayd This opinion of Empedocles Vitruuius a man of greate experyence confyrmeth what then must we suppose in this thing I lay that the meane by which waters do wax hote is two foulde both already propounded one verily propounded of the mynde of Agricola and the other of Empedocles for some are heated bicause they passe thorough stonie places vnder which ther is fyre kindled and burning in the metall of brimstone or bitumen neyther are these stones therfore turned into chalke that one myght iudge or into ashes bicause they can not be disgested or bicause the heat is slack and lytle and so greate onely as may heale the stones and waters or bicause if it be much it is farre distāt from those stones And other doe waxe hot bicause they passe thorough the mettall it selfe fyred and burning as Agricola supposed you may gather of these two wayes by which waters doe waxe hot the cause why some of the waters of bathes break out most hote as the hote bath at Bath other meanly hot as the crosse bath other betwen both as the kings bath other warme as Buckstones other cold as at Halliwel in Flint shyre called in brittish Fannon Onen Freny which yit be bath waters and haue a medicinable force facultie Therfore the causes of these differences are two that is smalnesse and distance of the fyre for if heate being in the conduytes be much and strong and that water maketh his iourney not very long before it breake out of the earth it wyll flow most hote but if the fyre be lytle and the iourney long it wyll be warme If the fyre be much the iourney meanely long it wyll be meanely hot as contrarily if the fyre be lytle and the iourney most short bicause the water should keape the whole heate which it hath receaued And the contrary happeneth if it take a long iourney bicause in the passage some heate euaporateth continually After the same maner you may saye of water which doth not waxe hote thorow fyre béeing in the conduytes but by reason of hote stones vnder which there is fyre kindled in the metalles and that may be little or much and neare or farre of those stones and so the heate of the waters shal be varied by reason of the next situation or the flame farre of as also by reason of the smalnesse or muchnesse of the same to which you must adde the long or short iorney which the water it selfe maketh before it breake out of the earth for it may be that fyre to be much and neare the water flowing ouer and yit the water wil passe forth warme or lue warme or cold bicause the water hath lost all that heat in the long iourney as in Buckstones bathes benefyte you may reade Hitherto we haue shewed that Bathes be hote alwayes bicause the fire is continuall and that the fyre is continuall bicause new féeding may be ministred and that the féeding is alwayes ministred bicause in places vnder the earth there is matter of which it may be engendred Moreouer it hath appeared how that fyre hath bin
kindled what it is wher the heate heating the waters is contayned wée haue likewyse shewed the cause why some waters do breake oute hote some colde more or lesse and wée haue confuted the opinions of diuers Philosophers and haue shewed how they resulte c. Nowe it followeth that we shewe of what natures such waters be and after what sorte they be cōmixed I finde thrée maners of mixtions in waters of bathes for there be some which haue so farre commixed with thē those things which they containe that those things are made one body with the substāce of the water one forme hath resulted out of thē such things whether they be metallique or other cā not be seperated frō the substance of the water but in a very long tyme a most strong cōcoction or mutacion comming out such maner of mingling is that which doth giue gret integritie maketh thē durable this therfore is the first maner of mixtiō which may be cōsidered in the waters of bathes Another is that there are some waters which haue receiued metalles in the concauities of the earth as they flow yet those metalles are not wel commixed as we presuppose at Buckstons so that of the metalles and the water there resulteth one body by one forme as we haue said in the first maner of mixtion but they bée rather confounded with the waters The thirde is meane betwéene both for there are some waters which are partly mixed in déede with the waters which they do containe partly not commixed as S. Vincents but confounded as we haue sayd aboue But we haue not decréed to speake at large of the commixtions of al bathes but onely in a word or two of our baths of Bathe and what the mineralles be supposed there commixed or infunded in the course of those waters by the qualities wherof procéedeth their effectes medicinable which in my iudgement can in no way more certainly bée approued then by the properties and that the collour smell and taste best approueth The colloure of the waters of the bathes of bathe is swartie greene or marble yellowe the yellownes of the brimstone mingled with the water making a sussible couloure Albeit coulour maketh little or rather nothing to the knowledge of the facultie as Montan. hath most excellently shewed libro de componendorum facultatibus For many things of coulour whyte be found mere contrarie in operation as for example Snow is very cold and chalke is very hot yet eyther of them is most whyte The smell of the bathes of Bathe and S. Vincents is of brimstone as the artificiall bathes that bée made thereof howbeit neyther smell also maketh much to the knowledge of the propertie for it litle forceth whether they smel swetly or otherwise for of swéete smellinge and ill sauouringe things ye shall fynd many of diuers natures altogither neuerthelesse of these some coniecture may be made yet that is vncertayne and not perpetual of tast therefore shall wée entreat Theion chibur sulphur is sharpe and stinging of taste especially if you as the Chimistes do destill it into oyle or water of qualitie whit drie in the fourth degrée as partly by his quicke burning may appeare and of thynne essence And vnto this taste sayeth Montane we must onely trust for thorow it may be perceyued not only the temperaturs of simple medicines in heate colde moysture and dryenes hauing strength from the first faculties as Galen sheweth but also all other vertues as of wiping deuiding opening cutting expelling and such lyke the fittest instrument the truest touchestone of all properties trying both toucheable and tasteable qualities Taste I saye therefore aboue all other senses as all the learned Phisicions affyrmeth is too bée trusted of which so great occasion being gyuen wée can not but speake somwhat with that worthy scholler Melancton lib. de Anima First defyning what taste organ and obiect is Taste truely is a sense of féeling which in the tongue or ruffe of the mouth tryeth sauours Sauour or smacke is a perfect straining of the drie part of the humoure wrought by heate Instrument or organ is a skinne pellicle or philme stretched in the ouer part of the tongue vnder the roufe and hallowe fleshe full of holes like a sponge Obiect of taste is a qualitie in iuyce in which moysture ouercōmeth dryenes earthy heat digesting them both Of tastes ther be seuē simple iii. hote iii. cold the eight which the gréekes cal apoios tasteles without qualitie is rather a priuacion then that it might séeme to be taken any kinde of taste as for the wine fattie tastes they are applyed to the swéetest althogh Plinie in hist plant addeth vnto these suauē acutum albeit in my iudgement dulcis contayneth suauem and acris acutum of this iudgement is Theophrastus Montan. Mont. vi C. other truly they be in nūber these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dulcis calid 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acidus frigid 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salsus 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 austerus   2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amarus 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acerbus   3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acris 3.       gradu     4.         Swéet hote 1. degrée Sooner cold 1. degrée Salt in 2. in the 2. Bitter the 3. Rouge 3. Sharpe   4. Harshe 4. The swéete taste is sayeth Montane in comen de simpli medicament qualit that which is lightly gathered delighting and pleasing the sense of the instrument arguinge an earthy dryenes temperatly excocted and not parched sometime with an ayrie moysture sometime with a watery therfore moderately warming not much moysteninge or drying nay it shall easely be turned to nourishement and alwayes such kinde of strength or vertu shall procéed from the swéete taste if it be simple but if it bée ioyned with other tastes as to the bitter or sharpe it shall bringe foorth mingled vertues the scope of our purpose for the qualities of the Bathes The Salte taste is that which perseth and byteth the tonge bringing a certayne kinde of féeling of heate by reason of earthy dryenes in a watery moysture thorow much heate deminished and by such a qualitie you may haue the force of heating drying and persynge to the depth bicause of much watery moysture mingled therewith The bitter taste is that which séemeth to shunne away from the tongue something arguing a farre greater deminishing of earthy substāce thorow heate thā in the salt tast therfore it shall haue a greater force of heating drying The sharpe taste is that which not onely doth byte the tongue but also dryeth setteth on fire as it were burneth arguing an earthy drynes perfectly diminished by heat and almost turned into the nature of fyre therefore it heateth thinneth and dryeth exquisitely also burneth consumeth Now for example of the swéete taste Sugar honie clarified or destilled honie suckles c. Of the salt tast Salt salt péeter Sal
must be dryed and put on warme clothes Sléepe also after sweate is conuenient but in the bath abstaine from slumbring When ye arise out of your bedde moue with some light exercyse or walke in a closset or in a place frée from distemperature of the ayer especially the cold and from the blasts of wynde If you be either weake or haue the ioyntache vse a place of exercyse and fricacion of the outward partes If fricacion which heare shal be rubbing with a nettel clothe shall not bée made of which you may fynde more largely in my booke of Buckstones bathes benefyte wée must vse a suppositour of honie or of the roote of white lillie or larde or sope or els a fygge and that before meate of all which meanes to euacuate shall heareafter follow The head at your comming forth of the Bathe must be diligently dryed So much meate as is conuenient which wil bring vnto the stomache neyther heauines nor wambling may bée in due tyme receyued Repletion muste altogither be auoyded so muste the Bathes in pestilent seasons and that for two causes in speciall the one by reason it filleth the body with ouer muche euill ioyce by reason whereof it may enduce a spasme and many other euilles the other bycause it openeth the pores making it readie to receyue the ambient infection Such meates and drinkes must bée vsed as bée of light disgestion good nourishment not grosse not stopping not ouer cold nor vehemently hote Héere we might enter into a large and ample discourse of Diete if thorowly we should make mencion of all things nourishing but our intente is not so farre as reason reacheth to shewe how all thinges agréeing and disagréeing of the Gréekes called simpathia antepathia doth eyther assiste and strengthen our bodyes or that doo alter and corrupt our bodies séeing it would make the volume not onely ouer hughe but also burden the Readers that breuitie couete and therefore that we may bée rather pleasant and compendiouse then gréeuouse or tediouse with some little entrance that your senses may take some smacke of our méening shall suffice vntill an other place more méete considering also that in our Tables of thinges naturall such things are distinguished This truely I appoint with Fernelius lib. secundo de abditis rerum causis That nothinge at all can nourishe vs which is not it selfe nourished endued with lyfe for stones or metals ar no eliments or nourishments for vs but only either plantes lyuing creatures or such as haue procéeded from thē bycause our life health can not be sustained but by the lyf of other it heateth not the substance of our bodies but by the matter of them whatsoeuer of thē liueth most excellēt is most holsome for our nourishmēt for the bodies of birds foure foted beasts doth better nourish then fish them both better then frutes or herbes if ye referre like to like of which peraduēture it is comprehended that nourishment is familiar vnto vs first truly in spirit diuine heat afterwarde in matter which receiued preparation vnto these thinges these wée call the whole substance But if ye wil therfore séeme to say how that the Scorpion the Hemlocke bicause they both lyue be nourished with an ayrie substance heauenly heat nourisheth vs then ye are far deceyued for it foloweth not by by contrarily euery liuing thing to be a nourishment but it is beside necessary that the heat of the liuing thing be agréeable familiar vnto vs as in Buckstons bathes benefyt it is briefly shewed But the heat heauenly spirit of many is against ours altogither pestiferous deadly that substance which is of things expelling poyson things veneming is plased cōtrarie to the substance of nourishments for as the one is ioyned vnto vs in great familiaritie so is the other hurtfull pestilent wherfore in the kinds of the whole substance extréeme nourishmēts things expelling poyson be contrarie Betwene these as it wer purging medicine take place which neither nourish nor corrupt as after shall bée handled for now we will prosecute the Diete at bathe best to be obserued The bread shal be onely of wheat leauened and good neyther hote nor stale drink of cleane ale or rather béere cleanly brewed not ouer hopped and stale Fleash of Muttons Kiddes Rabbettes and of all clouen footed foules as well wild as tame Of fishes Trught Creuis de dulce Breane Barbill Pike Cheuan Perch Roche Bret Gurnet Whiting Smelt Cod Millers tumbe all the which bée good for chollerique persons But they muste be boyled not rosted nor fried or poudered eyther with spices or salt as Rolādus affirmeth in Hidri Pottage made with chickens or with the aforesaid flesh may be very well vsed poched egges but neither quayles stares pigeons sparrows nor any such bot filling meats Fruits as almondes raisons damaske prunes quinces baked or any waydressed be permitted After meat reste or sleepe an hower or more but not by and by If it shall be necessarie for the affect of any parte anoynt the place or emplastre it with the clay of the bathes where continually the water floweth but this shall moste auayle legges swollen thorow a colde and moyst cause vlcerated Before the entring into the bath at euentyde vse exercise for the strengthning of the partes of the which I wishe you to looke in Buckstones bathes benefyte The Bathe must bée dayly changed receyuing newe or fresh water Sée that altogither whyle ye be there and lenger yée auoyde copulation that is the vse of women In the euen tyde let them enter the bathes vi vii or viii howers after dinner the disgestion béeinge fulfilled as is sayde Tariatice in the Bathe in the morning may be longer in the euening shorter If in the fyrst daye the belly by the bathe be shronken togither toward the backe bone it is a good and wholesome signe But if the wombe be puffed vp or affected with ache or else on whyle it is hote and another whyle colde with other gréefes it is an euill signe If after certaine dayes the body beginneth to be better then afore and the naturall operacions shal be a signe of curation or not curation There bée .x. accidentes which vse to happen by bathes as Rolandus testifieth fainting comonlie called swowning immoderate watch thirste payne of the heade costifenes immoderate sweate burninge of vryne losse of appetite rheume and feuers The weaknes of the spirites which we ●al swowning is amended if vineger of Iuniper or that in which graines of Iuniper be macerated and applied to the mouth and nosethrilles Likewise confection of Buglosse or Borage or Corrall of perles or preciouse stones of the flouers of Rosemary of Roses or a sop in Gascoigne wine be taken We do attribute watche to the heate and dryenes of the Bathes bicause it drieth the humidities of the skume especially in chollerique heades which take awaye wyth things cold and moyst
wold not flow but alwaies cold in hot regions they wold burst out most hot yit the consequēt is false bicause ther are found hot Bathes in the cold countreyes as is shewed afore Also in the féeld of Lukes ther be most hot bathes although that place all the yeare for the most is couered with snow as testifieth Fallopius what néede we séeke examples so far of our countrey is colder then Italy and yit at Bathe S. Vincents and Buckestones alwaies they flow hot But if the heauēly heat wer ther so reflected snow would fyrst be melted But that is not so for the snow sometime continueth longer sometime shorter Let it bée that the Sunne beames may be hot in the face of the earth by Antyparistasis yit ther can not be so great Antyparistasis that so great heat should be excitated for that ther is not such Antiparistasis made in the sommer Agayne if the opinion of Ioannes should be true the discōmodities which are aforesayd should ensue of the opinions of thē which did say that the waters of Bathes were hot thorough the heate of the sunne and wynd Moreouer the opinion of Dondis appeareth false by that that he supposeth one thing very false that the heate of the sunne heateth vnder the earth xxx miles which thing is most false For at our being in Wookie hole besydes Wels and in Poole hole besyde Buckstones in the chéefe of sommer those places were ryght colde yet not half a myle from the Sodde or turphe of the earth Also Theophrast in his history of plantes affyrmeth that the rootes of trées or plants do stretch so far into the ground as the heate of the Sunne doth perse where also hée sheweth that some sayde that the rootes of trées did counteruayle the length of one foote and an halfe which opinion there also hée confuteth worthely for it is more then manifest that many trées do take deaper root as the oke trées pyne trées larnix trées fir trées ash trées plane trées with infinit others howbeit of the lēgth of the roots of the plane trées he reciteth for a miracle bicause it stretcheth direct dounward vnder the earth 33 foot which in other trées do not although they bee perhaps longer Therefore séeing the rootes of trées do descende no déeper then 33. foote and that also to be miraculouse it plainly proueth that the beames of the sunne can not perse déeper séeing the heat of the sunne vnder the earth hée would make the cause of their length and of the heat of the waters of Bathes which are proued to flowe out of déeper places Therefore the opinion of Iohannes de Dondis is altogither false Other some there bée followinge the Peripatetiques that would the cause of the fire to be a subiecte féeding such fyre perpetually which alwayes preserueth itself but afterward what that féeding should bée their is a discord betwéene them Some of them saye it is Allume and the reason with which they are moued is bicause the fyre is perpetuall and necessarely ther is required some sound nourishement which should last longe and that they saye is Allume bicause it is hard and compacte of substance It can not easely be consumed Vitruuius was the Authour of this opinion in his eight booke But this opinion is false for there is onely a double substance which may bée the nourishement of this fyre one truly oylie and fattie and the other thin ●orye replenished with much ayer but the one easly catcheth fyre long kepeth it the other although it be easly kindled yet it keepeth not the fyre long as it appeareth in styxes strawe chaffe kindled and like matter Let vs now sée whether Allume as some would haue it may bée reduced to the one or the other or noe truely I can not see how it may be reduced to the firste séeinge it hath no oylie thing in it nor fattie nor to the second because allume is of a stonie substance although it bée drie yit that dryenesse is earthy not ayery And if it should be in the fyre xx yeares it would neuer be inflamed as you may proue if you will not beleue mée Wherfore the opinion of Vitruuius is false Georgius Agricola in his booke which hée hath written De subterraneis which is truly a very fayre and most learned booke as be all the other which that learned man hath diuulgated sayeth that the subiect preseruing fyre vnder the earth is Bitumen for to this he sayeth some thing muste be subiect and the féeding of this fyre is required to be fattie that it may easely be taken with fyre and this is not desired in bitumen as it appeareth of Naphta wherof commeth our petrae oleum which is a kinde of bitumen and if it shall bée new it catcheth the flame from farre so that in the fields of Mutina sayeth Fallopius where it is gathered plentifully it is necessary for them which gather it to leaue their candle farre from the place wher they do gather it and they gather it in certayne places vnder the earth vnto which they goe downe by many steps and they be most darke places so that they are constrayned to carrie with them a light Therfore séeinge bitumen may easely be kindled and is plentifully found in places vnder the earth as plenty of Naphta gathered in the aforesayd place doth shewe it is very like that it is the subiect féeding such fyre Secondly Agricola addeth and this marke yée sayeth Fallopius that when the heate of waters of Bathes is so great and sometyme they burst out most plentifuly sayeth Agricola we can not saye that the fire which heateth them should be vnder the conduytes of those waters for they would not so waxe hote but it is necessary to saye that the fire is in the conduytes where the bitumen it selfe is Of which thing it is an argument that no matter can be found which may be kindled burne in water sauing bitumen which also if you powre on water burneth neuer the lesse you may also trye this with Camphyre which according to some is a kind of bitumen For if you kindle it and caste it kindled into the water you shall sée that it will burne no worse then if it were without water wherefore when Bitumen doth burne in water it séemeth to be sayde that fyre heating the waters is in the conduyts and not vnder them Likewise this opinion may bée confirmed of the propertie of bitumen bycause it doth not onely burne in the water but is also nourished of the water for it draweth a certayn humiditie of the water which it turneth into the nature of it selfe and it is the cause that it doth endure longe prooue you this I pray you taking a droppe of it and you shall sée the Naphta kindled and dure so longe that it may be maruaylouse which could not be except the féeding of that flame were encreased by the humiditie of the water which Naptha draweth and chaunging
or with this liniment in Latine for the Apotecaries in English for your better vnderstāding R. Vnguenti popul Olei Nemipharis Croci Opii ana s.d. ointmēt of popular buddes of water lilies of saffron of opium eche halfe an vnce eyther thrée graines analsr z. Mingle them and anoynt the foreheade but if that suffice not anoynt the wristes and the palmes of the féete an hower after supper take this drinke R. Serapii de papauere ana s.d. Nemipharae   Aquae lactucae one vnce Syrupe of Poppie of eche halfe Of water Lillies an vnce Of water of Lettuse one vnce Commixed take it going to sléepe milke warme Thyrst is thus remedied thrée partes of water one of wyne but better with Barlie water or with prunes boyled well in the water of Violettes The payne of the head is thus eased Assatae radicis Chamomillae   Bellidlis Ana. manip i d. Sweat Assa Chamomill   Dasis of eche halfe a handfull Those boyle in Lixiuium or lie and applie it eyther too the head or wash it therwith rouling with warme clothes your head suffering it to drie of it selfe To make the bodie soluble take the cleare whey of milke after the chease is made mingling therwith honie and suger or els decocte them and drink the quantitie of a Gill or a pinte fasting eschuing the bath for that daie pottage of the meate of Gromell Gotes mylke and wyne of mirtles doth meruailousely profet which is thus made Receaue the toppes or buddes of the leaues the fruite of mirtilles of eche an handefull brused boyled in Gascoigne wyne to the consumpcion of the thyrd parte being strayned drinke a draught so that the wether be not hot nor the partie chollerique nor apt to feuers But what purgeth euery humour chéefely by thée are to be ministred if to Hip. as we ought we giue best credit as appeareth in his booke De medicamentis purgantibus Bolus to purge choller is thus made R. Cassia newlie drawen Electuarium Lenitiuum of eyther z.v. drammes commixed with suger in the morning fasting aboute foure or fiue of the clocke not sleaping after nor entring the bathes for that day but kéeping your chamber and within one hower supping the broth of a chicken Bolus to purge fleame shall this wyse be compounded R. Of the Electuary of Dates of the apotecaries called Diaphaenicon halfe an ounce of the powder of Hiera simplex z.d. mingled with suger obseruinge all thinges aforesayde Bolus to purge melanchollie R. Electuarij indi a dram and an halfe of the confection of Hamech thrée or foure drams of luger as much as shal suffice taken as you know A Clister to clense the Chollerique R. Of Mercurie Mallowes Centorie Harts tongue violets Liuerwourt of euery one halfe a litle handful of the iiii great cold séedes of eyther .ii. drammes prepared shall be boyled in a pine and an halfe of running water vntoo a pinte then adde of Diaprunis Electuarie of the iuyce of Roses of eche half an ounce of oyle of Violets and fallet oyle of eche one ounce it first being strayned minister it not ouerhot nor ouercold A Clister to purge the Phlegmatique R. Of Mercury Margeram Minte Orgaine Byssope of euery one halfe a little handfull both brome rootes of the apotecaries called kneholme and polipoodie rootes of eyther one ounce séedes of persnéep and Dill of euery one half an ounce all prepared boyled and strayned adde of the electuarie of Dates .iii. drammes of powder of Sene prepared i. dramme and an halfe of the oyle of Chamomile oyle of Lillies of eyther .i. ounce and an halfe A Clister to purge Melanchullie R. Borage Bauhne Bassill Mawes Sauory Tyme of eche .i. handful Sene Lawry i. ounce Carret rootes .ii. ounces al as is aforesaid boiled in the broth of sheappes heads adde of Diasenue in electuarie i. ounce Syrupe of Epithimum foure ounces oyle of Iuniper swéete Coste of eche one ounce of honie and salt a little A Clister to mundifie the bloude R. Of hoppes fumitorie scabiose endiue cichorie of eche halfe an handfull rootes of perselie and fennell the inner pithe taken out of gourde séedes of eche the waighte of a Shilling Boyle all these in a quarte of wheye vnto almost a pinte all things ordered as afore is shewed adding therevnto Hiera piera the weighte of sixed Diacatholicon sixe drams honie and salte a pretie quantitie A Clister to breake wind and to clense all partes without daunger in any complexion therewith comforting R Floures of melilote of Chamomile and Hissope of eche a little handfull of maydens heare of dill of eche halfe a little handfull of the séedes of Anise and cumine eche one vnce raysons the stones piked oute a handfull boyle all these in a sufficient quantitie of the brothe of a cocke chickin euery thing first thus prepared the which I wishe you to note also in the reste the herbes chopped the rootes brused the séedes broken and boyled to a pinte adde of cassia two vnces of hiera picra iiii drams of the oyle of Dyll of the oyle of chamomile of eche an vnce and half ministred after this sorte so warme as you may suffer at the towell knéelinge the buttockes hygher then the reste of the bodye turninge after on the backe then on the bellie after on euery side For the burning of Vrine a perfect remedie R. Séedes of Purselane of Lettuce of Endiue of eyther one dramme white Poppie two drammes Henbane halfe a dram Sebestens thrée drams Saffron a penie waighte Licorishe foure drammes Pine ten drammes fountaine water thrée quartes boyle all vnto the consumpcion of the third part then straine it and take .vii. or .viii. sponefulles in the morning with one ounce of the syrupe of Violets and assure you before the fourth day you shall sée worthie effectes The Rheume or destillacion of the head is thus taken away R. Sene leaues .vi. drammes Rocket .iiii drammes long Pepper .ii. drammes make therof a powder of which morning and euening receaue a dramme eschuing the Bathe vntil the Rheume be slakened this is also good to kéepe you soluble taken in a thinne alebury fasting or in whit wine if the partie be flegmatique or hath the stone last going to bed The losse of the appetite is recouered with this medicine or with the ioyce of Pomegranates as saith Mesue R. Cardui benedicti .iii. handfuls clarret wyne fountaine water of eche a quarte boyled vnto the thyrd strayned vsed fyrst in the morning a Gill or two sweating after If a feuer happen auoyde the Bathes vntill you be amended But you may sweate if you be fat of bodie and drinke your Cardnus benedictus drinke or that which we haue appointed to quench thyrst Things strāger or of more force I would not medle with knowing how easilie the ignorant may erre and how bolde they bée to put in experience euery recepte without the aduice of them that can yéeld the reason and cau●es of eche thinge mencioned often to their great hurt