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A76231 Enchiridion medicum: containing the causes, signs, and cures of all those diseases, that do chiefly affect the body of man: divided into three books. With alphabetical tables of such matters as are therein contained. Whereunto is added a treatise, De facultatibus medicamentorum compositorum, & dosibus. / By Robert Bayfield. Bayfield, Robert, b. 1629. 1655 (1655) Wing B1462; Thomason E1563_1; ESTC R209177 205,016 466

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it cover all then can they see nothing at all but shadowes of visible bodies and that but confusedly and by conjecture He must abstaine from wine Curatio pease beanes turneps and especially from venery Let his bread be seasoned with some sweet fennel-seeds Venae sectio phlebotomy and purging if they be requisite shall be appointed Also masticatories to be used in the morning and frictions upon the eye-lids are commended Bright shining things as the Starres the Moon when it is at the full Looking-glasses Diamonds c. for the Patient to look earnestly upon them are said to dissipate a beginning cataract also for this purpose Collyrium take two ounces of Damask rose-rose-water warme it on the fire and half a dram of Aloes succotrine pulveris'd mix them with the juice of Cellendine as much as sufficeth drop three drops into the eye every night eight nights together I was taught this by a very good friend of mine that held it for a great secret or take Vigo's collyrium made ℞ Collyrium Hepatis hircini sani recentis lb. ij calami aromatici mellis an ℥ ss succi rutaeʒ iij. aq chelidoniae faeniculi verbeniae euphasiae an ℥ .iij. piperis longi nucis moschatae caryophyllorū anaʒ ij croci ℈ .j. storis rorismarini aliquantum contriti m. ss sarcocollae aloe hepaticae anaʒ iij fellis ratae leporis perdicis an ℥ .j. terantur omnia tritisque adde sacchari albi ℥ .ij. mellis rosatiʒ vj conjiciantur in alembicum vitreum distillentur in balneo mariae If you prevaile nothing by these ●edicines and that the humour do every day thicken more then other when it comes to be grown somewhat hard then let the expert Chyrurgion touch it with a needle according to art The powder of a mowshell put into the eye upon a web wasteth it CHAP. VII LIPPITVDO blear eyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or blood-shot eyes is nothing else but a certain white filth flowing from the eyes which oftentimes agglutinates or joynes together the eye-lids Sometimes it is hereditary Causa Rhasis and then not to be cured Rhasis saith that when the white of the eye is turned to rednesse it is caused of some salt humour or super-abundance of Rhume with corruption of blood Also excrementious flegme may be the cause Some commend Emplast contra rupturam Curatio Cucurbitulae to be applyed to the shaven crown frictions and cupping-glasses applyed to the hinder part of the head are good and a collyrium made with rose-water Collyrium and a little vitrial dissolved therein Lastly ℞ Decoctio Salviae betonicae hyssopi serpilli an m. j. flor stoechados m. v. rad faeniculi peoniae ana ℥ .j. sem anisi faeniculi ammi an ʒ j. nucis muschatae cinnam an ʒ j. misceantur coquantur usque ad consumptionem tertiae partis deinde coletur saccharoque dulcis reddatur potio cui denique addantur syrupi de bet●nica ℥ .iv. Let him drink thereof often Venae-sectio but first purge him and bleed him and an issue made in his neck cannot but be very effectual to turn the course of the humour unguentum tutiae cannot but be very good CHAP. VIII AEGILOPS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fistula lacrymosa or weeping fistula of the eye it is in the corner thereof near unto the nose where there is a glandule made for the receiving and retaining moysture for the humecting the eye lest it should drie by continual motion This glandule sometimes swells impostumates and ulcerates by reason of a sanguine Causa or pituitous defluxion falling violently from the brain and in time it rotteth the bone that lyeth under it There is for the most part a tumour of the bignesse of a pease Signa the which being pressed floweth with a sanious serous red or white and viscid matter In time they cause an Atrophia of the eye in some blindnesse Prognostic and a stinking breath Some chirurgions cut up the uppermost skin Curatio and wring or presse out the impostume which lieth lockt in a little bladder and cut it off as near as may be the rest they take away with an actual cautery The same swelling doth settle it self otherwhiles in the length of the eye-lids yet both are to be holpen with oat-meal wine and Tutiae tempered together in manner of a salve Anchylops Anchylops somewhat differs from Aegilops for that is a superfluous flesh in the corners of the eye whereto humours gather ℞ Thuris sarcocollae aloes sang dracon Collyrium balaust antimonii aluminis an ℈ .j. floris gr v. fiat pulvis cum aqua rutae f. collyrium Forestus CHAP. IX LAGOPHTHALMVS or the hare-eye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In this affect the Patient sleepeth with his eyes open because his eye-lids are so short that it will not cover them The cause is either internal or external Causa internal as by a carbuncle impostume or ulcer external as by a wound made by a sword fall burning or the like That which happens by burning and a carbuncle c. is held uncurable Curatio because much of the substance is lost you must use relaxing and mollient fomentations Ectropion is the turning up Ectropion or out of the eye-lid both their cures are properly performed by chyrurgery In this last purge twice or thrice with these pills following ℞ Pilulae Forestus Pilul sine quibus lucis major anaʒ ss diagridii gr ij fiant pilulae vij deinde ut oculum lavaret praecepi vino albo cui alumen de rocha in exigua quantitate semel bullitum erat Deinde palpebram linimento subsequenti inungeret jussi ℞ Linimentū Tutiae praeparatae ℥ ss axungiae porcinae colatae ℥ .i. ss camphorae ℈ j. boni ponderis lavetur novies in aqua ros somni tempore inungatur Forestus Forest Tom. 1. lib. 11. obs 41. CHAP. X. CHALAZION 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Hailstone of the eye-lid is a round and clear pimple which growes upon the upper eye-lid and is moveable The Latines call it grando There is another pimple called Hordeolum Hordeolū growing upon the verges of the eye-lids above the place of the hairs it resembles a barley corn At the first beginning it may be dissolved and discussed Curatio but if once it comes to be hard it 's scarce curable and is hardly brought to suppuration The best way is to open them and then to press forth the matter If the pimple be small thrust it through with a needle and thred and leave the thred therein of such length that you may fasten the ends thereof with a little Emplastrum gratia Dei to the forehead if it be on the upper eye-lid or to the cheeks if on the lower you must draw forth a fresh one every second day as is usually done in chyrurgical Setons Thus at
the stomack offending the brain The brain it self is evill-affected when as a grosse and tough humour is contained in it from whence a vaporous and windy spirit being resolved by weak heat is moved inordinately about the brain The mouth of the stomack doth affect the brain when through corrupt homours being gathered abundantly in it vaporous and windy exhalations are carried up to the brain and so turn about the animal spirits contained in it For the cure the first intention is Curatio to open a vein drawing away a little blood at a time Venae sectio if nothing forbid it then to purge with a dosse of head-pills as Pilularum cochiarum ʒ j f. pill 7. Pilulae when the body is well purged take this sternutament following as much as will lye upon a half-peny piece at a time in a morning fasting snuffe it up into your nostrils many have been perfectly cured with this Receipt onely ℞ Sternutamentum Pulvis Sem. Maioranae Betonicae ana ℥ ss Pyrethri ʒ.ss Hellebori alb ℥ ss Piperis nigri Euphorbii an ℈ .j. fiat pul Also foeniculi dulcis beaten to fine powder and taken in the pap of an apple in a morning fasting and to drink oximel is good If there be inflammation the opening decoction is very profitable Vomitus but if the cause come from the stomack then it must be cured by vomiting and stomack pills Lastly this electuary following is very good to strengthen the head and stomach ℞ Electuarium Hollerius Specierum aromatici rosati triasantali an ʒ.ss sacchari rosati q. s cum syr rosato fiat elect CHAP. IV. PHRENITIS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a disease wherein the mind is hurt onely and differs from madness which is called in Greek or Latin Melancholia aut Mania for that a fever is joyned with the phrensie and therefore the phrensie may be called a continual madnesse and fury joyned with a sharp fever The cause Cause Galenus as Galen saith is an inflammation of the braine or filmes thereof some Physicians are of opinion that this disease proceedes from a hot impostume of the braine and that it is in vain to undertake the cure and the reason is because it is confirmed in a principal member wherefore the intention of the Physician must be to hinder that it may not happen for having once taken a man it is in vain to enterprise any cure yet I will shew you a way under God to prevent it but first I will let you to know when the patient is inclined to a phrensie The signes of a phrensie to come Signa are the signes of a present Paraphrenisis as continual head-ache rednesse of the face over-much heat rednesse of the eyes with too much appearance of their veines staring thirst drinesse of the tongue unquietnesse different from wonted actions and some Alienation of mind whether these things happen by the force of some acute fever or some other cause by these you shall judge Paraphrenisis and a fear of a phrensie to come For the cure Curatio first consider whether there be fulnesse of the body or no if there be we may open the vein which is common or the vena nigra of the right arme Venae secti● and draw out five ounces of bloud let this be done in the morning and in the afternoon administer this clyster following ℞ Malvae violarum Mercurialis an M. j. Clyster Bulliant in sufficienti quantitate aquae usque ad consumptionem medietatis strain it and adde olei violati ℥ .iij. Cassiae Nov. ext ℥ ss Sacchar Rub. ℥ .ij. As much salt as will lye on a six-pence and this is to be considered that the oyle of Violets is most requisite in the phrensie because the patient is subject to watchfulness and Violets do procure sleepe but in sleepy diseases it must be avoyded as in Subeth Lethurgies Subeth and such like the next day following we may open the Cephalica veine in the right arm and draw forth the quantity of four ounces of blood which done about four of the clock in the afternoon let him take the foresaid clyster make him barly water Victus ratio nip the juice of Lemonds into his beer ale of chirmd-milk is good but no strong beer the next day which is the third day if the disease groweth worse the hemerodial vein must be opened out of which must be drawne three ounces of blood and if the disease do still remain then we are to doubt of an Impostume ingendred wherefore we must be bold to open the vena Recta of the fore-head and to draw the quantity of three ounces of blood for by this blood-letting all evill affects of the head for the most part are removed then to procure sleep take this Julep that followeth ℞ Julepus Syrupi de papavere err aquae lactucae ana ℥ .ij. If all this will not serve commend the sick to God and so much of the phrensie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peripneumonia si supervenerit phrenitis malum Hippocrat lib. 7. Aphor. 12. CHAP. V. EPILEPSIA 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Falling-sicknesse doth shew it self as a convulsion of all the parts of the body but not perpetually and it doth bring with it hurt of mind and sense There are three differences in this disease for either it happeneth when the brain is affected by it self which is when the original springeth from thence or else it springeth through the consent of the stomack being evil-affected from whence vapours arise to the brain or else through the consent of some other subject part from whence venemous vapours do arise and do creep into the brain by hidden passages for some say that they do feel the cause of the evil from that part of the body from whence it springeth as it was a vapour or cold ayr carried into the brain by the continuity of the parts The cause for the most part Causa happeneth from the abundance of a melancholy and flegmatick humour from whence venemous corrupt and virulent vapours do arise from which happen obstructions in the Meatus and passage of the brain As soon as this evill taketh them Signa the sick falleth down and they are plucked up together they snort and sometime they cry out many do tremble and turn round about but the peculiar sign is foming at the mouth For an infant take green pionie roots Curatio slice them length-ways and cut them so as they may be made fit to hang about the childs neck like a bracelet then make this Ecligma following ℞ Cranii humani pulveris paeoniae mellis opt misce omnes quant suf fiat Ecligma Ecligma Oximel is also very profitable anointing the neck behind with oyle of dil and exetor Oleism onely advise a diet for the nurse of meats of good juice Victus ratio if the child be not
heaviness and beating and if there be sound and noyse in the eares then it betokeneth windiness The signe of head-ache caused through the default of the stomack Signa it may be knowne through the biting and gnawing pain they feel moreover in this kind of head-ache if the sick fast and suffer hunger long the pain is the more vehement for through long abstenence the Mallice of the humour increaseth The signe of head-ache caused by fevers Signa is evident enough and the signe is all one to that of blood and choller Now I will go forward to the cures of these head-aches one by one The cure of Cephalaea Curatio Venae sectio is first to open the Cephalica vein on the same side if strength will suffer it and anoint the head with oyle or ointment of a cooling quality and this cooling clyster following is very proper in this head-ache ℞ Malvae violarum Mercurialis an M.j. Clyster Bulliant in sufficienti quantitate aquae usque ad consumptionem medietatis colatura adde butyri quantit ovi sactharum Rub. ℥ j. salis communisʒ ij fiat Enema Administer it about four of the clock in the afternoon and give cooling things The cure of Hemicrania Curatio if it proceed of a hot cause cure it as you do Cephalaea and abundance of humours onely purge twice in two dayes with the aforesaid clyster If it come of a cold cause purge strongly with this Recipe following ℞ Pilularum foetidarum pil cochiarum an ʒ ss Pilulae fiat pil 5. Anointing the head with oyles that have power to heat and dissolve for although here be many things which be excellent for head-aches yet nevertheless we have seen pain of the head and teeth proceeding of a cold cause with one only purgation hath been removed and so a hot cause with one only blood-letting The cure of head-ache Curatio Oleum caused through heat of the Sun Take oyle of Roses and a little vinegar being added to it it will pierce the faster and deeper and also besprinkle rose-Rose-water on the forepart of the head where the seam goeth overwhart for it is the thinnest part of the scull stupefactive things are to be avoyded such as juyce of Poppies Night-shade or of Mandrake The cure of head-ache Curatio caused by outward cold is to anoint the forepart of the head with with oyle of Rue or the like and if plethorick and somewhat costive Ol●umrutae Clyster Curatio Oleum you may give a sharp clyster that you think proper The cure for the head-ache caused of drines you may anoint the forepart of the head with oyle of sweet almonds or with oyle of violets and cammomel mixed together it is also good to drop some of these oyles into the nostrils The cure for the head-ache caused of moysture Curatio Oleum is to anoint the head with oyle of Rue Cammomel or Euforbium or oyle of Ireos this must be done if the cause be cold with moysture as you may in part judge by the water then use such things as are hot and drie if the cause be cold and moyst and use such things as are cold and drie if the cause be hot and moyst In this Chapter are remedies enough of all sorts The cure for the head-ache caused of blood is first to open the Cephalica veine Curatio Venae-sectio on that side the grief is on eschew strong beer wine hot-waters and spices but take all cooling things if much blood doth still abound you may open the vein in the forehead and it were fitting a cooling clyster were administred Clyster such a one as you shall think fit The cure for head-ache caused of choller Curatio Purgatio must be begun with purging of the chollerick humour straightway because choller is thin and moveable and will easily be purged out for digestion is nothing else but an alteration of the humour causing the disease therefore such medicines must be used each morning fasting before you do purge untill good concoction appear in the urine for by this means choller being concoct as it were tamed made mild becomes so obedient unto nature that it will soon without any grief be drawn out by purging therefore for a preparative use this or the like medicine syrup of violets or syrup of popies which of them you will ℥ j. Iulepus Syrup of water-lillies ℥ ss distilled waters of Indive Succory and Roses of either ℥ .j mixe them and let them drink of it in the morning fasting or you may give the decoction of saene and then you may purge with pil aurae make six or seven Pilulae also anoint the forepart of the head with oyle of lillies and popies If choller in the stomach do disturb the head vomit with Stibium Oleum Vomitus the infusion thereof 10 11 12 13 or 14. according as you shall see cause sometimes nine dragmes is sufficient The cure of head-ache caused of flegme Curatio is first to extenuate and make it thin fit for purging with oximel and Syr. de stoecade when that is done take this ℞ following ℞ Pilularum cochiarum Pilulae pilulae hiero cum agarico ana ʒ ss Sem. paeonia no. ʒ Syr. de stoecadae q. s fiat pil 7. But remember that you provoke vomit with Asaron Asaron if their body be loose and if choller be the cause as aforesaid vomit not with Stibium untill the body be loose either naturally or artificially If the head-ache be inveterate and abundance of flegme purge twice in four dayes with the aforesaid pills Sternutamentum sternutation is also good The cure for head-ache caused of windiness Curatio Oleum is to anoint the head with oyle of Cammomel but the best is oyle of Nutmegs Mace Rue and such things as have power to discuss windinesse neesing is also very good and a clyster made with Aniseeds Clyster Fennel-seeds Carraway-seeds and Commin-seeds boyle these of each alike with one large handful of Bettonie in a quart of water to a pinte straine it and ad Benedict lax ℥ ss diaphenicon ʒ ij this is for a lusty body The cure for head-ache caused through default of the stomach Curatio Vomitus is to vomit and if any humour fire the tunicles of the stomach purge with Hierapicra Hierapic which is a soveraign thing The cure for head-ache caused by fevers Curatio Venae-sectio is forthwith to bleed if nothing prohibit it eschew all hot things and take all cooling things anointing the head with oyle of Roses and juice of popies Lastly a cooling clyster will be wondrous proper such a one as you shall think fit and to procure rest bathe the temples of the head with a little of this liniment following Linimentum ℞ Olei Nenuph viol an ℥ j. unguen populei ℥ ss opii gr iij. Misce Hercules Saxonia lib.
medicines following are approved to be very good for cleansing the ulcer Hydromel alone and Mulsa remembring alwayes when we will deterge and cleanse the Ulcer we must give the honey cruide but to glutinate and joyn up the honey must be boyled but if you will have a medicine that shall both deterge and consolidate take this ℞ following ℞ Lohoch de pul vulpis lohoch sanum ana ℥ .j. Lohoch Syr. ros siccarum de glyzyrhyzoe de hyssopo capil vene tussila consarvae Rosarum ana ℥ ss misceantur And let the patient take thereof often with a stick of Liqueress also a fume of colts foot is very profitable and for the same purpose this Ecligma following is good ♃ Consar Ecligma consolida major Capil vene ana ℥ ss cons Rosarum ℥ .j. lohoch è pul vulpis .j. lohoch e. pino ʒ.ij pul diatragaganth frig ʒ.iij bolus arm ʒ.j.ss syr papa q. s.f misceo And in like manner this powder following is found by experience to be exceeding good in the Ptisick ℞ Sem. papaveris alb ʒ.i.ss gummi Arabici Pulvis amyli gum tragaganthae anaʒ i. ss Sem. Acetosae endiviae ana ʒ i. ss Sem. Citoniorum mundat ʒ.ij sem Melonum Cucurbitae Citruli Cucumuris ana ℥ i.ss Succi glyzyrrhizae ʒ ij pulmonis vulpis ʒ.i.ss penidiarum ad pondus omnium misce torrefiant levi torrefactione omnia deinde sub pulverizētur Then take of the same powder two dragmes Mixtura with syrrup of poppies and Injubes of either ℥ j. colts-foot water ℥ .iij. mixe it and give it to the patient lukewarm in the evening at his entrance into bed Asses milk is very profitable As Haustus lactis asinini recenter mulcti ℥ 6. sacchar alb ℥ ss misce CHAP. XIX PALPITATIO CORDIS is an immoderate elevation and depression of the heart against nature the new sorts of Physicians do wrongfully call it Cardiaca passio Cardiaca passio for that is an effect of the mouth of the stomack it self and not of the heart The cause is either a distemper Causa or the multitude of an humour contained in the outward skin that goeth about the heart or else swelling contrary to nature and such like The signe is knowne by the pulse Signa for in a hot distemper there cometh a fever and the pulse is swift and great and their urine very high coloured In a cold distemper the contrary If plenty of an humour contained in the upper skinne of the heart do cause beating thereof then the pulse is soft and feeble Indeed it is easily known by the words of the patient who doth feel the beating and panting The cure is performed according to the diversity Curatio of causes If it be caused of a cold cause or the multitude of a cold humour Purgatio then purge with such a purgation as you shall think proper by the water Decoctio and to administer the drink set down in the Chapter of the palsie And amongst simple medicines these be profitable Amber musk saffron wood of aloes styrax cloves and mace among compounds these are good Elect. diamber dianthos Species Aromaticum Rosarum diamargariton callidum Electuarium of these you may make Electuaries and lozinges and of the simple medicines use the oyles thereof as anoynt outwardly the region of the heart with oyle of saffron cloves mace O●●um amber and the like Those that be vexed with beating of the heart caused off a hot distemper they must have remedy by cold medicines which can correct the hot distemper and adde strength to the heart as those be among simples as Roses Violets Borage flowers of water-lillies Saunders Corall Camphere and such like amongst compounds be these Diamargariton frigidum diarrhod Abbat Conserve of Roses Violets Buglosse of all which may be made Potions Juleps or Electuaries Lastly this Epithema following is good to strengthen and comfort the heart ℞ Aq. meliss lavendul rorismar ℥ .iij. oinnam Epithema Hercules Saxonia seric crud incis caryoph nuc moschat an ʒ.j croci gr vj. m. cum panno serico f. Epithema Hercul Sax. lib. 2. cap. 8. CHAP. XX. CONCRETIO LACTIS is caused through abundance of milk Causa which is not drawne forth it is caused also of some hot distemper when through overmuch heat the thinner part of the milk is digested and dissolved and the rest groweth together and turneth into curds it may also be caused of cold which may cause the milk to congeale and turn to curds For the sign Signa there needs no tokens to know this evill for it is known by and by both by touch and the patients words For the cure Curatio Victus ratio the diet is divers according to the diversity of causes for in a hot distemper of the paps their diet must be of a cooling quality in a cold distemper contrary If it chance through grossenesse of the milk then there must be an extenuating diet If there be abundance of milk not being as yet curded it must by little and little be sucked out If heat cause the curding of the milk then anoynt them with juice of Nightshade also apply oyle of Roses and vinegar also a Lilly root rosted and stamped with oyle of Roses Cataplas ma. Oleum and applyed is good If it be a cold distemper anoynt the paps with oyle of cammomel dill and lillies beware you touch not the nipple also this Emplaster following is held to be excellent good Emplastrum Take honey half an ounce styrax callamite three dragms of oxes gall two dragms oyle of Cammomell ℥ .ij. Myrrh and Frankinsence of either two ounces make an Emplaster according to Art In a cold cause oyle of wormwood is good also women use linseed oyle and searge cloath thereof Oleum with good successe Also you may use this Liniment ℞ Pulv. fol. menthae sem coriandri anaʒ ij Linimentum Sennertus ol anethini unc j. cerae q. s fi Linimentnm Vel ℞ Fol. Cataplasma malvae caulium coctorum per setaceum trajectorum ana unc j. farinae lentium unc sem lini foenigr fabr ana unc ss pingued gallinae ol lil albor ana q. s fi Cataplasma Sennert Tom. 3. lib. 4. part 3. cap. 3. Sennertus Ad resolvendum autem lac concretum exhibeantur quae lac concretum dissolvunt ut ℞ Rad. foenic. eryngii ana unc j. fol. malvae M. Decoctio Sennertus j. foeniculi virid M. ss Sem. anisiʒ j. coq in q. s aq pro lb. j. Col. adde syr de duab radic oximel s ana unc ij M●sce CHAP. XXI INFLAMMATIO MAMMARVM Causa is caused of abundance of hot blood flowing to the paps sometimes through milk curded and turned to suppuration and matter the aforesaid causes are easie to discern asunder for the first cause of Inflammation chanceth
to them that be not with childe nor brought to bed the other chanceth only to such For the cure Curatio Venae-sectio it is good first to open a vein in the arme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the inner or internal vein unlesse the Menstruis be stopped for then it is better to cut the vein on the ham or ankle afterward if the body be costive losen it with a cooling clyster and if you see cause you may give this gentle Apozem that cools and quencheth the Inflammation and openeth obstructions in the brest as followeth ℞ Apozema Syrrup Rosarum pal ℥ j. Syrrupus de Rhabarbaro ℥ ss Decoctio senae quantum sufficit fiat Apozema Let it be given the one half over night warm and all the rest in the morning warm eat nothing untill noon but take three or four spoonfulls of broath between stooles also apply outwardly this Emplaster following Emplaster Barley-meal lin-seed bolus armeniae saunders Oleum Nimpheae oleum Rosarum oleum Camomeli misce fiat Emplasterum But first anoynt it with oyle of Roses Ol. Rosar vinegar and juyce of nightshade also crummes of bread and faire water applied like a poultis with vinegar is good let them beware that they drink no strong beer wine hot waters nor spices but altogether soopings of a cooling quality no fish nor flesh that is hard of digestion if the milk be curded turn back unto the foregoing Chapter and that will direct you what to do If there be much pain ℞ Epithema Weckerus Florum camomilae mellioti althoae saenigraeci seminis lini anethi ana M.j. coquantur in aqua cui adde olei rosacei anethini ana ℥ ij aceti ℥ j. Spongia in eo madefacta mammis apponatur Weckerus de curatione inflammationis mammislarum lib. 2. pag. 465. Lastly if the inflammation be great you may foment with Aquaspermatis ranarum and oyle of Roses CHAP. XXII IMBECILITAS STOMACHI is caused through distemper of the working qualities without any flowing of humours Causa sometimes it is caused of an humour contained in the bosome and large space of the stomach which hath power either to heat cool movsten or drie or two of these qualities mixed together and sometimes it is caused of an humour stuffed and drowned in the filmes or coats of the stomack For the signe Signa in a cold cause there is dull and difficult concoction the taste of the nourishment is felt long after there is sharp belchings and little or no thirst but contrary in a hot cause there is exceeding thirstinesse abhorring of meat and bitter belchings and this is certain that if the cause be heat the patient is cased by administring of cold things if it be a cold cause then he is eased by hot things if that choller cause it there is such bitter belchings that there is cast forth bitter choller with bitternesse of the mouth For the cure if it come of a cold caule Curatio Pilulae as of phlegme purge gently with stomachal pills if they have gone a day and have not had a stool then take one pill an hour before supper Then take this cordiall Electuary following which is said to be good ℞ Electuarium Conserv Caryophilorum ℥ i. ss pul Aromatici Ros. ʒ i. ss pul Cinnamomi Nucis Muscatae anaʒ ss Syr. absynthii de Hysopo q. s f. Elect. Molle If necessity do require Methriditum adde two dragms of Methridate and take of it every morning the quantity of a Walnut curnel then eat a piece of Lozing aromat Rosat and drink after it a draught of Wormwood wine for that will prepare the stomack to the next concoction and also bathe outwardly with oyle of wormwood Oleum nutmegs cinnamon or mastick or the best is to spread honey on bread tosted and cast thereon the powder of nutmegs cloves and cinnamon and for the richer sort take this ♃ made as followeth ℞ Pulvis Rosarum Rubrum Absinthii menthae maioran siccae an ʒ ij ligni aloes spicae nardi calami aromatici ana ℈ ij fiat pul qui accip iatur cotone involvatur duplici linteo And this must also be remembred that oyntments emplasters and cataplasms must not only be applied before but behind also about the thirteenth Vertebra In a hot cause purge with Cassia Apozema and Rhubarb or else an Apozem and open a vein if you see cause Venae sectio and then this Electuary is said to be very good ℞ Electuarium Cons Rosarum ℥ j. Diarrhodon alb ʒ i. ss Syr. assato lymonum q. s f. Elect. Also direct Lozenges of Diarrhodon alb Triasandali and make him broath with cooling herbs currents and damask pruins also bread dipped in Posca is wondrous proper to be eaten Posca as for outward applications use oyle of Roses Oleum Quinses or the like but take heed of things that cool too much yet give him no strong beer no wine hot waters spices nor milk c. If chollar do abound with costivenesse of body purge with an Apozem made with Cassia Rhubarb Apozema Vomitus or the like If temperate provoke vomits with Stybium the infusion thereof CHAP. XXIII CANINA APPETENTIA 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an immoderate or dog-like appetite or desire of meat and when they cannot refrain their appetite they devoure in meat without measure then being heavy with the multitude of meats and the stomack being not able to bear the same they turn to vomiting then afterwards they fill themselves and turn again to vomiting like dogs the part affected is the mouth of the stomack The cause is a perpetual gnawing or biting of the mouth of the stomack Causa like unto a sucking sometimes it happeneth through a cold distemper of the mouth of the stomack sometimes through cold sharp and vitious humours sometimes it proceedeth through certain kinds of worms which do devour the meat that is taken into the stomack as fast as it is received sometimes through dissipation of whole body For the sign Signa if it be a cold distemper it is known by windinesse and rumbling sharp humours are known by four belchings dissipation is known by the excrements for they be scorched and lesse in quantity than before For the cure Curatio Pilulae in a cold cause it is good first to take stomacal pills also Hierapicra Galeniʒ 6. with wine infused with water or given in oximel fasting is good and to drink muscadell is good he must abstain from all soure and restrictive meats but let his meat● be meats of good juyce if a child laboureth in this disease the body being bound Syr. de Rhubarb and a doubt of worms give it one ounce of Syrrup of Rhubarb or more according to the age and strength of the childe the one half over night and the other half in the morning warm either in
exercise of the former life let passe for a time 2. The second is when watery blood like the water wherein new killed flesh have been washed or soaked which chanceth through weakness of the liver is sent forth 3. The third is when there is sent forth an humour more shining and blacker than that which is natural being commixt of blood and Melancholy 4. The fourth kind in which by little and little and between whiles is cast out pure blood yet sometimes clodded and shavings of the bowels cometh out with pure blood and many times thick dung sprinkled with drops of blood of this fourth kind I shall treat at this time and let passe the other three The cause of this last kind is through exulceration of the bowels Causa caused many times through outward cold heat and moystnesse sometimes through pernicious medicines as scammomy eating of fruit or sharp and soure meates crudity and rawness or through sharp and gnawing humours flowing from the whole body to the belly or ingendred in the belly it selfe and this doth sometimes begin after Tenasmus the excrements are cholerick diverse and fatty because the fat that cleaveth within the bowels is melted so that when the Superficies of the bowels are bare and the exulceration abiding about it then the excrements be dreggy and bloody but when the ulcer is pierced deeper then there is sent forth filthinesse having as it were little pieces of parchment commixed with it so that if it be not stopped it eateth the places nigh unto it and sendeth forth such excrements as are wont to runne from dead bodies 1. Signa When the small guts are exulcerate there is pain about the Navill the excrements are chollerick the patient feeleth grief and frettings and gnawings so that the patient is not farre from fainting they are not thirsty and feverous the excrements are cruid and raw and the bowel Jejunium is exulcerate sometimes though seldom and sometimes they vomit and abhorre meats 2. But if the exulceration be ingendred in the great bowels there the ordour is pure and much heaped together coming out with windinesse and frothinesse mixed with fatnesse blood swimming aloft the knowledge of this greatly helpeth to the cure 1. Curatio If the exulceration be in the upper or small bowels you must cure it by medicines given at the mouth If in the great or lower bowels it must be done by clysters be the cause what it will endeavour to procure rest and give them little meat milk is good and Rice with milk if there be no fever marmalad of Quinces Plantin boyled in the juyce of French pruins with balaustia no flesh except Birds or Rabbits c. Chalybs steel quenched in running-water is good If the stomach be weak give restringent wine not very old amongst syrrups take plantin knotgrasse purslain sharp mulberries Balaustia Frankincense Terra lemnia and grape curnels all these restrain the tallow of goats swine geese and hens these asswage the acrimony which should be first looked to that thereby the patient may be eased Hares creem Harts-horn burnt the shells of Crabs running water and sage these drie up This clyster following is good for Dysenteria though the cause resteth in the great bowels as well as in the small and better ℞ Fol. Ros Rub. Plantag Centinodium Clyster Consol Maior prim veris ana M. ss Balaustiaʒj Rad. Consol Maior ℥ ss Rice burnt one ounce seethe them all in running water wherein hath been quenched steel strain it and adde the juice of plantin ʒ ij Bolus arm ʒj goats tallow ℥ .j. oyles of Roses Myrtills Quinces of either ℥ .j. make a Clyster now though this Clyster be set down at large yet you may direct one for a poor body not so costly with some of the Engredients This clyster is most proper for the Dysenteria in the great bowels 2. If the exulceration be in the small bowels then give unto them such things as you shall find proper in Diarrhaea use syrrup of dried Roses Myrtils and Quinces apply this Cerate outwardly ℞ Ceratum Ol. Mastic Rosarum Myrti Cidoniorum an ℥ .j. fol. Ros Rub. Plantag anaʒ j Balaustiaʒ j Bolus arm ʒ.j Mastic ʒ ij Barley meal ʒ ij wax and Rosin as much as suffi●eth to make a Cerate some medicines you may find in the Chap. of Colerica passio The infusion of Rhubarb is of some praised Infusio Oleum vitrtoli and of others suspected but oyle of vitrial is much commended in plantin water the distilled water of the spawn of frogs is an excellent Remedy Aqsperm ranarum if it be well made if the patient be weak make him broath with chickins with a little cinamon 1. Clyster If there be deep excoriation make a clyster with the decoction of brann and ℥ ij of deer suet clysters of milk is good for either of them 2. Purgatio If it happens through contagion of Ayre at the first give a strong potion of Rhubarb infused in plant in water with a little cinamon and then a little treakle or methridate in cinamon or treakle water is excellent But after purging endeavour next to procure rest either with Laudanum or something else and then give a scruple of treakle or methridate in c. Theriaca mithridat as aforesaid forbare bleeding or purging except with Rhubarb many have been cured with Harts-horn burnt others take hard bones of Beef or Pork calcined or burned untill they be white made into powder and so drunk in ordinary drinks continually with some few drops of cinamon water and cinamon and nutmegs in powder are good This unguent following is wondrous proper to procure rest ℞ Olei nymphaeae Vnguentū violarum unguenti populeonis an ℥ ss Opii gr iij. Croci gr iv fiat unguentum quo nares tempora inungantur Rauzonius Rauzonius Lastly let this chyster be administred for it is effectual in Dysenteria ℞ Succi plantaginis arnoglossae portulacae an Clyster Gorraeus ℥ iij. boli armeni sanguinis draconis amili an ʒ i. ss seni hircini vel capriniʒ j velʒ i. ss vel ℥ ij fiat Clyster Gorraeus pag. 153. CHAP. XLII TENASMVS is a continual desire to go to stoole 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with extension and straining out of the right gut called Intestivum rectum being stopped avoyding nothing except it be a little blood or filthy matter like snivel or snot 1. Causa The cause is sometimes through outward cold 2. Sometimes through sharp chollerick humours 3. Sometimes through salt flegme 4. Sometime through impostumation 5. Sometimes through inflammation ingendred in the streight gut 6. Sometimes the blind gut is stopped with hard dung 1. Signa The sign is as various if it be caused of cold it is known by the tale of the sick whether he hath set on any cold stone c. 2. If chollerick it is known by the colour
arb Lupines Pistatium bitter Almonds Spicknard Stoecades Gentian root of Plantin the seed and leaves dried juyce of Anagallis the female succorie Alkekendgi Endive and Bruscus especially the decoction of these Curcum also Curcuma is good If the disease be inveterate use purging with Rhubarb pills and bleeding Venae sectio is good when the hollow part of the liver is vexed purge by the belly If the embossed part of the liver be vexed purge by urine but this Electuary following is good ℞ Electuari●●on Rad. Ireos Camoepiteos sem anisi Apium anaʒ ij Asaronʒ ij.ss Cinnamomi zingiberis cammomeli Carawayseeds of either one dram Stoecades gentian and horehound of either two drams with oximel Scilliticium make an Electuary it purgeth vehemently by urine or ℞ Conservae fol. absinthii capill ven flor Opiata Riverius tamarisci an ℥ j conser rad enulae camp cortic citri conditi an ℥ ss myrabolan condit n. j. nucis moschat condit ʒ.iij confect alkerm. ʒ.ij pulver elect diarrhod abbatisʒ j salis absinthii Et tamarisci ana ℈ .ij. croci ℈ .j. ambrae griseae ℈ ss cum syrrupo conditurae citri fiat opiata River lib. 6. cap. 3. Lastly steel is an excellent opener CHAP. XLVIII HEPATIS INFLAMMATIO there is Causa as well as in other members and through the same causes that they be ingengred of If the liver be vexed with inflammation S●gna there is felt pain and heavinesse all over the right side with swelling in the place he hath a sharp fever a small and drie cough insatiable thirst abhorring of meats difficulty of breathing the tongue is first red and after that black vomiting pure choller the body is costive the colour of the body is changed like Icterus they have the hicket In their fit they rave voyding forth sharp urine The inflammation that chanceth through causes in the crooked and hollow parts of the liver have the foregoing symptoms but if ingendred in the outward and round part of the liver it causeth greater pain in drawing breath and a greater cough than the other And sometime the Muscles leaning upon the liver be inflamed causing the skin round about to be stretched with swelling sometimes a swelling fashioned like the liver which is a true signe In the beginning open the liver vein Curatio Venae sectio which hath society with vena causa draw out a large quantity Clyster if nothing forbid the next intention must be to administer a cooling clyster foment with oyle of Quinces and Roses putting to it odoriferous wine Ceratum Ceratum Santalinum is good remember that restrictive things do exceed those that mollifle and loosen when the heat is vehement on the contrary when it decreases let those that mollify exceed the other beware you do not apply things cold but warm them a little Fomentatio foment with the decoction of wormwood mellilot red roses cammomel dill plantin endive and in vehement pain juyce of liqueris in hot water or juyce of endive with honey Vietus ratio for their diet Ptisan and chicken broath in the first boyle Apium in the second parsley also barley broath is good If the inflammation change to suppuration the aforesaid signes will increase as paines fever Decoctio Cataplasma ravings c. for this boyle figges in water and give him of it to drink Also take the root of Althaeaʒ i. ss fenegreek and linseed ana ʒ ij leaves of Althaea and mallows ana M. ij dry figges No. vj. boyle them in water untill they wax soft bruise them and make a cataplasme you may adde root of white lillies flowers of cammomel and mellilot to help break it so we use doves dung and mustard seed c. that draw to the superficies some with the decoction of polya sumitory roots of Camedrios c. when it s broken minister water of honey or decoction of Cicers If the matter avoyd by the veines provoke urine If by the belly purge gently with Goats whey and Cassia fistularis and clysters after that glutinate and joyn up Outwardly apply this Cataplasme ℞ Farinae hordei ℥ .iv. rosa rubr santal Cataplasma Fontanus omnium seminis endiviae scariolae absynth mino an ʒ.ij succi endiviae q. s fiat cataplasma Vt artis est applicandum regioni jecoris Vel ℞ Oleirosati myrthill an ℥ .ij. olei anethi ℥ j. Fomentatio Fontanus aceti parum foveatur pars tepide Vel ℞ Succi endiviae aut cichorii Linimentum vel utriusque ℥ i.ss nenupharini ℥ .iij. cerae albae aceti parum fiat linimentum Fonta lib. 3. cap. 15. CHAP. XLIX LIENIS INFLAMMATIO Causa the spleen is nexed with inflammation as oft as hot blood flowes thither unnaturally It is known by heavinesse Signa and swelling of the left side which will not give place to the feeling also it 's known by pain stretching out of the place by burning heat and fevers and if abundance of humours rush in thither it is known by the greatnesse and swiftnesse of the ingendring the inflammation For the diet look Curatio into the foregoing Chapter First open the Salvatella vein Venae-sectio between the little and ring-singer wash the belly often with Clysters if he may not bleed this fomentation is good Fomentatio ℞ ol rosarum Cydoniorum an ℥ ij ol cammomeli ℥ .j. Aceti op ℥ ss misce beware of applying any thing that is not first warmed the liver and spleen require one kind of medicine but the spleen the strongest Alwayes commix vinegar with something that is acceptable to the spleen If the spleen tendeth to suppuration and rotting you shall find plenty of remedies in the foregoing Chapter Lastly ℞ Linimentum Platerus Ol. Rosacei ℥ .ij. ol de absynthio vel nardini ℥ j. ol Chamom vel de meliloto ℥ ss Satal omniumʒ j Spicae ℥ ss cerae q. s fiat linimentum CHAP. L. LIENIS SCIRRHVS Inflammation of the spleen not rightly cured draweth together a hard swelling of the spleen Causa The cause is a certain humour cleaving stubbornly to the spleen but it is when hardnesse ingendreth without inflammation in over-much swelling It is easily known by touching Signa of what cause soever it be His diet must be easie of digestion Curatio Victus ratio Exercitium he may drink pure wine being without all restriction exercise before meat is excellent strong potions are good root of capers are good Harts-tongue the root and herb of Tamariscus sodden in vinegar or oximel juyce of centory drunk the decoction of bitter lupines rew and pepper Iron often quenched in wine is a convenient remedy if a fever quench it in Posca steele is commended also wormwood Cassia Chalybs Aniseeds c. you may make a fomentation with the symples above mentioned oyle of capers lillies and ireos are good Vng
haunches also gnawing in the bowels a wrinkled stomach the body is lean with consuming If there be fulness of blood bleed in the arm Curatio Venae-sectio Victus ratio if nothing forbid it Let his pot-herbs be endive lettice and purslain pomegranets also are good wine that is red and thick being well allayed with water is good Rob. de ribis or barberries and juyce of knot-grass syrrup of Myrtils and juyce of pomegranets are good and sweating is very excellent This opiate following is very good Opiata ℞ Conservae ros Antiquae ℥ iv Boli armeni coralli praepar cornu cervi usti ana ℈ .j. cum miva cydonior fiat opiat Look into the chapter of the flux Dysenteria and there you shall be furnished with simples and compounds of the same temperature and vertue as are those aforesaid This electuary following is very much commended ℞ Electuariū Weckerus Carnis citoniorum conservae consol majoris ana ℥ .j. mucilaginis gummi tragacanthi sem citoniorum extractae cum aqua rosan ℥ ss Amyliʒ iij Boli armeni sanguinis draconis an ʒ.j misce cum syrrupo de papavere myrthino fiat electuarium de quo capiat bis in die semul noctu Vel ℞ Emplastrū Weckerus succi plantaginis succi virgae pastoris an ℥ .ij. Pulveris myrthiʒ iij. Pastillorum de spodioʒ ij misce Wecker lib. 2. part 2. pag. 563. Ex diabete forti vehementi sequitur hectica ergo cito est curanda CHAP. LXI VLCERIS RENVM To an inflammation suppurated there doth succeed a great and hollow ulcer which is seldom or never cured for the continual passage of urine hinders the consolidation of the ulcer the cure consists in exsiccation and drying It is caused through breaking of the veine in the reines Causa through sharp and gnawing humours carried into the reines There is pain in the loynes Signa with heavinesse and matter is commixed with the urine with lttle pieces of flesh or haires swimming in it Hippocrates saith lib. 4. Aphor. 75. Hippocrates Si sanguis pus cum urina reddatur exulceratae vesicae aut renum significationem praebet also ubi dolor ibi morbus For the cure barley water is good Curatio Phlebotomia clysters with Cassia open a vein if nothing forbid it Asses milk is good to scoure the ulcer goates milk to replenish and incarnate the ulcer also an emulction made with sweet Almonds Emulsic and the four greater cold seeds with barley water this emplaster following is good ℞ Pul. rosar rub boli armen Emplastrū sanguinis draconis an ʒ.ij mastichis carnis cidoniori an ℥ .j. With oyle of myrtils make an emplaster Ewes milk is good to consolidate the ulcer let him eschew crudities much thirst abstinence hunger labour wrath solitarinesse exercise Vicius ratio watching and immoderate riding let his diet be tender and easie of digestion for pot-herbs mallowes endive sorrel purselain and lettice almond milk is good with honey also goates whey and pul contra gonorr is good If you want more look into the former Chapter and also into the Chapter of ulcers of the bladder Ex sententia Rhasis nihil melius est in ulceribus renum vesicae aliorum locorum urinallium Rhasis quam aqua lactis quia mundificat lavat abstergit choleram ad intestina derivando CHAP. LXII CALCVLVS VESICAE stones in the bladder ingender oftner in children than in elder folk It is caused through grosse and thick urine Causa that is carried into the bladder and setleth there and through the heat that is in children breedeth into a stone The sign is Signa often itching with handling their members which are swollen and making water continually being vexed with a strangury their urine is cruid and waterish with white sand to be certain the chirurgian may use the Catheter yet many have been deceived because the stone is sometimes wrapped in a coat of clammy flegme so that it yeilds no sound The cure is much alike to the stone in the reines Curatio only if possible use stronger diureticks excellent authours affirm Sectio the safest way is to cure it by section and not to strive so long with saxifrage because it wasteth the spirits so in the end they are not able to indure to cure To inject oyle of scorpions is much commended Ol. Scorpienum and to anoynt the perinaeum with it also the powder of the stone that is found in the gall of an oxe the stones of spunges in powder and goats blood being warm Pulv. sem gemistae and injected with a syringe also broom-seed in powder and drunk in white-wine also this ℞ following is much commended Infusio Take parietary of the wall and parsley of either a handfull a good great red onion bruise them grosly then put them into a quart or three pintes of white-wine let them stand all night in the morning straine them and adde ℥ 4. of syrrup of marsh mallowes you may infuse Juniper berries with it Bacc. Juniperi in this drink will be fit to take any diuretick powder Raphanus Rusticanus also horse-radish roots are much commended Lapis vesicae si confirmatus jam sit ad aliquam magnitudinem jam pervenit vix alia ratione curari potest quàm sectione Hartmannus de vesic affec pag. 263. Hartmannus Lapis in vesic a indiget fortiori medicamento quàm renalis quia longior via CHAP. LXIII IN FLAMMA VESICAE Hippocrates according to Hippocrates it is for the most part deadly he saith Si vesica sit dura dolore vexetur Funestum eoque magis si accedat Febris continua They are vexed with a sharp fever Signa they watch rave and speak they wot not what they vomit pure choller and they cannot make water the share is hard with vehement pain and have a desire to the stoole as in Tenasmus the order is thin and sometimes the wombe is costive For the cure bleeding first in the arm Curatio Phlebotomiae Clyster and afterward in the foot is much commended but first a cooling clyster to ease pain nourish the bladder with oyle wherein is sodden dill linseed rew or fenegreek or Althaea and remember the bladder is full of sinewes and therefore cold things are hurtfull I conceive that Aq. Mixtura sperm ran with syrrup dialtheae given warm must needs be proper If there be necessity use a syringe to draw out the urine but beware of strong diureticks wine sharp things and spices Victus ratio and let their diet be thin and of a cooling quality In inflammatione vesicae valent cadem quae in inflammatione renum Hartmannus CHAP. LXIV VLCERIS VESICAE Causa It is caused either through some byle or botch or swelling which hath been before or through
fulness is known by vehement paine about the loynes and privie members with swollen veines 1. For a cold distemper turn back to lib. 1. Curatio Sabina chap. 25. pag. 52. for a poor body let the leaves of savine be boyled in wine and drunk or receive the fume of savine it will force them It doth also expell the dead child 2. In a hot cause bleed on the feet Venae sectio coole and moysten and give syrrup of steel And when the distemper is over then observe the former directions for fulness make a purgation with Diaphaenicon Hierapicra and benedicta laxativa Purgatio Amongst simples that provoke the terms are roots of parslay sperage seeds of smallege and fennel Anniseed nettles Also calamint Catalogus simplicium wormwood origan sothernwood mugwort peniroyal hyssop hore-hound rew motherwort Ireos laurel berries madder sage cummin-seed Enula campana root of Aristolochia and Savine of these may be made decoctions into which may be put a little sugar to drink 4. Also Castoreum Storax Galbanum frankincense Fumigatio Bdelium and Benzoine of these may be made suffumigations Also if you turn back to the eighth Chapter of this book Vin. Cha● lyb and the ninth page you shall find an excellent thing for this purpose even the steel wine to give the Patient of it evening and morning with the syrrup of the same and exercise This potion following is commended by Montanus in his Treatise Deaffectionibus uteri Montanus Consilium 308. pag. 749. ℞ Potio purgans Agarici praeparatiʒ ij Rhabarbariʒ j infundantur in aqua betonicae per horas 24 fiat expressio fortis ℞ Diacatholiconisʒ ij ss Misce fiat potio brevis The same author praiseth Confect diacimini vel Diatrion pipereon vel aromat rosa and lastly Mithridate in white-wine CHAP. XIX MENLIV M fluxus immodici The Menstruis do chance to flow out of measure Causa through great or small vessels opened wide or broken also immoderate purgations and grievous travel in child-birth may be the cause If the greater vessels be broken Signa or open'd the bloodfloweth out gushing on heaps If the lesser it floweth out by little little If through eating or gnawing it floweth with great pain moreover there followeth a filthy colour the feet are puffed up with a light swelling having a weak body wlth their digestion and appetite corrupted First they must give themselves rest Curatio Venae-sectio Catalogus simplicium secondly if nothing forbid open a vein in the arm Amongst restrictives are Balaustia Aypocischis Acatia knot-grass both the consolidaes plantin barberries roses myrtills harts-tongue burnt quinces of these may be made decoctions for juleps in a hot cause they may be boyled in the waters of some of the simples adding thereto in the streining Syrrupus myrthinus and de rosis siccis In a cold cause boyle them in pure red wine The juyce of plantin or knot-grasse injected Injectio Galenus is much commended by Galen This electuary following is good ℞ Conservae ros antiquae ℥ ss symphiti ℥ j. Electuarium boli armeniʒ ij sanguinis draconis ambrae citrinae corallorum rubrorum ana ℈ j. cum syrrupo myrthino fiat elect Also the powder following is excellent ℞ Cornu cervini usti boli armeni terra sigillata Pulvis diamarfrigidi pul margaritarum lapidis hematitis ana ℈ i. ss misce fiat pulvis detur cum aqua plantaginis If you want more look into the Chapter of Dysenteria and other fluxes of blood as Sputum sanguinis c. Lastly these pills following are to be taken before meat to strengthen the stomach ℞ Aloes optimaeʒ x. mastiches chiae Ros Pilulae Fontanus Rubrarum anaʒ ij cum syrrupo Absynthites cogantur in Massam Nic. Fontanus lib. institut Phar. Sect. 9. cap. 11. CHAP. XX. FLVXVS MVLIEBRIS aut uteri fluor Causa This flux of the matrice is a continual distillation and flowing out for a long time the body purging its self The humour is red like putrefied blood Signa yet sometimes pure which noteth erosion or gnawing mattery white and sometimes watery the secret part is continually moyst with the humours being of divers colours She is ill coloured abhorreth meat her eyes are swollen and she breatheth difficult●y 1. Curatio Venae sectio For the red fluxe open a vein in the arm often drawing a little blood at a time and let her diet be restrictive 2. For the white flux if it have taken her but newly do not stop it If it have continued long let her give her self rest usinga drie diet what else is wanting may be supplyed out of the Chapter of Gonorrhaea 3. If sharp humours have ulcerated those parts look uteri exulceratio and Gonorrhaea virulenta in the Chapter of Lues venerea 4. For a pale and chollerick flux purge with the infusion of Rhubarb If melancholy abound Infusio purgans Potio purgans take Decoctio com ℥ .vj. Syr. de fumaria epithimo ana ℥ .j. Cassiae re extracta ℥ ss fiat potio and let him use restrictive medicines as aforesaid in Chapter 19. c. Lastly ℞ Forestus Cons ros antiq ℥ .i. ss diacydon sine spec ℥ ss cons flor cichor ℥ .j. pul triumsan corall Mixtura rub usti loti an ʒ.i.ss cum syr cotoneor fiat mixtura CHAP. XXI VTERI STRANGVLATIO seu suffocatio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 otherwise called Hysterica passio It is a drawing of the womb to the upper parts as it were by a convulsive motion It is caused through the defluction either of seed being sometimes corrupted Causae or the flowers which causeth the womb to be swelled and the vessels and ligaments to be distended with fulnesse and pressing the Diaphragma causeth shortnesse of breathing Also the whites or some other humour or a tumour or a rotten impostume or some ill juyce putrefying and resolving into gross vapours may be the cause The womb removeth out of his seat and doth one while fall towards the liver another while towards the milt another while towards the midriffe stomach and downwards towards the bladder sometimes the child is very great that it press the midriff and so cause the fits When the fit is nigh Signa there is heavinesse of mind slowness paleness and sorrowfulness Being present there is a drowsiness also doting and a withholding of the instruments of breathing they wax dumb and draw up their legges and a moyst humour floweth out of the womb 1. If it assaile the guts the bowels make a noyse 2. If it trouble the stomach there is vomiting 3. If it assaile the brest and throat there is choaking 4. If the brain there is madnesse 5. If the heart there is swouning some sleep sound others talk foolishly others they breath so little that they seem dead 1. If you would know whether
Electuarium one ounce and an halfe of conserve of Roses or of Bugloss and three dragmes of Bolearmenick prepared Mithridates Mithridates highly commendeth Walnuts take two in number those that be very dry two figges Mixturae twenty leaves of Rue and three graines of salt beat and incorporate them together and take the quantity of a Hasel nut at a time fasting and drink a little wormwood-wine after it Also pomanders are good and it will be very convenient to apply to the region of the heart a bagge filled with yellow sanders Saculus mace cloves cinnamon saffron and treakle shaken together and incorporated and sprinkled over with strong vinegar and rosewater in summer and with strong wine in winter Thus much for prevention 1. Now so soon as one is blasted with the pestiferous ayre after he hath taken some preservative against the malignity thereof he must withdraw himself into some wholesome Ayre And it were good to hang the chamber and also the bed with thick or course brown linnen cloaths moystened in vinegar and water of roses And sweet fires may be made of Juniper Ash Benzoin c. 2. Victus ratio Their diet must be cooling and drying And first of all begin the cure with an Antidote because by its specifick property it defends the heart from poyson and drives and expels it out of all the body by sweat vomiting scouring and other kinds of evacuation The Antidote I would have you make choyce of Theriaca Mithridatum is Treakle or Mithridate that is three or four years old which excell all other Antidotes for by strengthening the noblest part and the mansion of life they repaire and recreate the wasted spirits and overcome the poyson not only being taken inwardly but also applyed outwardly to the Region of the heart botches and carbuncles for by an hidden property they draw the poysons unto them If there be great heat Mixtura mix with Treakle or Mithridate the juyce of limmons in sorrel water The Patient ought to walk presently after he hath taken his Antidote but yet as moderate as he can After that he must be put warm to bed and covered with many cloaths and apply swines bladders filled full of Carduus water to the groines and arm-holes to procure sweat for sweating in this disease is a most excellent remedy When he hath sweat sufficiently according to the strength of his body let the sweat be wiped with warm cloathes and dried Let him be kept from sleep if possible untill the third or fourth day yet if necessity require he may sleep but not above three or four houres on a day and a night but not at all on the first day After sweating let him take the rind of a preserved citron conserve of roses bread tosted and steeped in wine the meat of preserved myrabolane or the like then let him eat of some cordial confection And you may make Epithemes after the following formes ℞ Aquar rosar melissae ana ℥ iv Epithemae aceti ros ℥ iij. sant rub ʒ j. caryophil ʒ ss croci ℈ ij caphurae ℈ j. boli arm terra sigill zedoar an ʒ.j fiat Epithema Vel. ℞ Aceti ros aquae ros ana lb. ss Epithema caphuraeʒ ss theriac mithrid anaʒ j. fiat epithema When you intend to use them take some portion of them in a vessel by its selfe wherewith let the affected bowel be fomented warm many will not allow either of purging or bleeding in this disease I confesse in weak bodies it ought to be neglected but in strong bodies that abound with corrupt humours both are necessary to be done Hippocrat Sec. 2. Aphor. 22. for Hippocrates saith Morbos ex repletione ut curat evacuatio sic eos qui ex evacuatione fiunt repletio c. The best way if purging be fit is to take six or ten graines of scammonie Purgatio Pilulae beaten into powder with one dragme of Mithridate or Treakle Ruffus his pills may be profitably given half a dragm at a time every morning two or three houres before meat they ate to be had at the Apothecaries Agaricus The ancient Physicians have greatly commended Agarick for this disease because it doth draw the noysome humours out of all the members let it be elected and prepared truly into Trochisces Also Antimonium is highly praised by the experience of many Antimoniū So is mugwort and the pickle of Anchovis Vide Rond elet lib. 7. de pis c 3. for some have taken eight ounces at a draught and have been freed from this disease so that it hath been counted a most certain and approved remedy against the pestilence 1. Cucurbitulae So soon as the Bubo appears if nothing forbid apply a cupping-glasse with a great flame unto it and let it stick to the part for the space of a quarter of an hour and be renewed again every three quarters of an hour Then apply this liniment Linimet● take Vnguentum dialthaea one ounce and an halfe oyle of scorpions half an ounce of mithridate dissolved in aqua vitae halfe a dragm After it is fomented Cataplas fill a great onion being hollowed with Treakle and the leaves of Rew then rost it under the hot embers beat it with a little leven and a little swines grease and so apply it warm unto the Abscess or sore let it be changed every six houres until it be growne unto its full ripenesse and bignesse If the inflammation be great Cataplas make a Cataplasme with the roots of marsh mallowes and lillies of each half a pound Of line sorrel and fenugreek of each half an ounce of Treakle one dragme ten Figs and as much hogs-grease as shall suffice make a Cataplasme according to art When the Bubo is come to perfect suppuration it must be opened with an incision-knife or with a potential cauterie the rest of the cure is easily performed 2. So soon as the carbuncle appears Fomentatio Let it be fomented with water and oyle mixed together wherein a little treakle hath been dissolved The day following Cataplas take the leaves of sorrel and henbane rost them under the hot ashes afterwards beat them with four yelks of egs two dragmes of treakle oyle of lillies three ounces barly meale as much as may suffice make thereof a Cataplasme and apply it And round about the carbuncle Medicaementune lay the salve of fine Bolus made with vinegar and rose-rose-water for to defend the parts adjacent from heat Also Scabions brayed between two stones Aliud and mixed with hogs-grease the yelks of egs and a little salt is much commended by the Ancicients Rapbanus rustican And a radish root cut in slices and so the slices laid one after one unto a carbuncle or pestilent tumor doth mightilie draw out the poyson In the beginning the point or head of the carbuncle must be burned if