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A11278 The sicke vvomans private looking-glasse wherein methodically are handled all uterine affects, or diseases arising from the wombe; enabling women to informe the physician about the cause of their griefeĀ· By Iohn Sadler, Doctor in Physicke at Norwich. Sadler, John, 1615-1674.; Droeshout, John, d. 1652, engraver. 1636 (1636) STC 21544; ESTC S116338 43,151 302

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it comes by cold then are the signes contrary to those even now recited If through an evill quality in the wombe Make a suffumigation of red storax myrrhe cassia wood nutmeg cinnamon and let her receive the sume of it into the wombe covering her very close and if the odour so received passeth through the body up into the mouth and nostrills of herselfe shee is fruitfull but if shee feeles not the fume in her mouth and nose it argues barrennesse one of these wayes that the spirit of the seed is either through cold extinguisht or through heat dissipated If any woman bee suspected to bee unfruitfull cast naturall brimstone such as is digged out of the mine into her urine and if wormes breed therein of herselfe she is not barren Prognosticks Barrennesse maketh women looke young because they are free from those paynes and sorrowes which other women are accustomed to bring forth withall Yet they have not that full perfection of health which fruitfull women doe injoy because they are not rightly purged of the menstruous blood and superfluous seed the retayning of which two are the principall cause of most uterine diseases Cure First the cause shall be removed and then the wombe strengthened and the spirits of the seed enlived If the wombe bee over-hot take sirrup of succhorie with rhubarbe sirrup of violets endive roses cassia purselaine ℞ Ofendive water lillies borage flowers ana m. anaʒiii with water make a decoction adde to the strayning of the sirrup laxative of violets ℥ i. sirrup of cassia ℥ s. mannaʒiii make a potion ℞ Of the sirrup of mugwort ℥ i. sirrup of maiden haire ℥ ii water of succhorie borage feuell ana ℥ iii. pul● elect tri●sand ʒi anaʒiii rhubarbe ℈ i. make a bolus Apply to the reynes and privities fomentations of the juce of lettice violets roses mallowes vine leaves and nightshade Anoint the secret parts with the cooling unguent of Galen If the power of the seed bee extinguisht by cold Take every morning two spoonfulls of cinnamon water with ℈ i. of mithridate ℞ Sirrup of calamint mugwort beto●y ana ℥ i. water of penny royall feverfew hysope sage ana ℥ ii make a julep ℞ Oyle of anice seed ℈ is anaʒi sugar ℥ iiii themʒis twice a day two houres before meales East●n cupping-glasses to the hipps and bellie ℞ of stira●● calamint ana ℥ i. masticke cloves cinnamon nut●●g lig aloes frankincen●● ana ℥ s. muske gr 10. ambergrise ℈ s. with rose-water make a confection divide it into foure equall parts Of one part make a pomum odoratum to smell on if shee bee not hystericall Of the second make a masse of pills and let her take three every night Of the third make a pessarie dippe it in oyle of spikenard and put it up Of the fourth make a suffumigation for the wombe If the faculties of the wombe be weakened and the life of the seed suffocated by over much humidity flowing to those parts ℞ Of betonie marierom mugwort penny royall bawme ana m.i. anaʒii anaʒi with sugar and water s. q. make a sirrup take of ℥ iii. every other morning Purge with these pills following ℞ Of digridion gr.ii. specierum dacastorei ℈ i. pil faetid ℈ ii with sirrup of mugwort make vi anaʒi cinnamonʒis anaʒs sugar ℥ vi with water of feverfew make lozenges to bee taken of every morning Take of the decoction of sarsaparilla and virga aurea not forgetting sage which Agrippa wondering at the operation of hath honour'd it with the name of a holy hearbe And it is recorded that after so many of the Egiptians were dead the surviving women that they might multiply the faster were commanded to drinke the juce of sage Anoynt the genitalls with oyle of aniceseed and anaʒi anaʒs turpentine q s. ●●●ke trochis●ks to smother the ●●ombe ℞ Of the roots of Va●●rian ellecampane ana lb. i. ●●ulangale ℥ ii origan laven●●r marjerom betonie mug●ort bay-leaves calamint ana 〈◊〉 iii. with water make an ●●osession in which she shall 〈◊〉 after shee hath had her ●●ources If barrennesse proceeds ●●om drynesse consuming ●●e matter of the seed Take very day of Almond milke ●●d Goates milke extracted ●ith hony Eate often of ●●e roots Satyrion condited ●●nd of the electuary diasaty●on Take three weathers ●●ds boyle them untill the flesh comes from the bones then take of melilote violets chammomill mercury orchi● with their roots ana m.i. faengrecke li●es●ed vale●an roots ana li. i Let all these bee decocted in the foresaid broth then let the woman fit in the decoction up to the navill ℞ Of Decres suet ℥ ● anaʒii oyle of sweet almōds ℥ ii with silke cotton make a pessarie Make injections only of fresh butter and oyle of sweet almonds If barrennesse bee caused by any proper affect of the wombe the cure is set down in the foregoing chapters Sometimes the woman proves barren when there is no impediment of either side except onely in the manner of the act as when in the emission of the seed the man is quicke and the woman too slow whereby there is not a concurse of both seeds at the same instant as the rules of conception require Wherefore to take away this inconvenience Muller praeparari ac disponi debet molli complexu lascivis verbis osculu lasciviora miscenda If this doth not suffice before the act of coition foment the private parts with the decoction of betony-sage hysope and calamint Annoint the mouth and necke of the wombe with Muske and Civet The cause of barrennesse being removed the wombe shall be corroborated as followes ℞ Of bay berries masticke Nutmegge Frankincense Cypresse nuts Ladani Galbani ana ʒi Styracis liquid ℈ ii Cloves ℈ s. Amber grise gr ij Muske gr vi with Oyle of Spiknard make a pessary ℞ of red Roses Lapidis hematitis white Frankincense ana ℥ s. anaʒii anaʒi Spicknard ℈ s. with oyle of Wormewood make a playster for the lower part of the belly Let her eate often of Eringo roots condited Make an injection onely of the juce of the roots of Satyrion The aptest time for conception is instantly after the monthes be ceast because then the wombe is thirsty and dry apt to draw the seed and also to retaine it by the roughnesse of the inward superficies And besides in some the mouth of the wombe is turned unto the backe or side and is not place right untill the last day of the courses Excesse in all things is to be avoyded lay aside all passions of the minde Shun study and care as adverse to conception for if a woman doth conceive the wise parents being otherwise addicted of ten beget but foolish children because the animall faculties of the parents viz. The understanding and the rest from whence the childe hath his reason are as it were confused through the multiplicity of cares and cogitations Examples hereof we have in learned men who
combates are neglected the urine is crude watrish and much in quantity the excrements of the guts usually are retained If of heat the signes are contrary to those even now recited If the retention be naturall and come of conception this may be known by drinking of Hydromell that is water and honey after supper going to bed and by the effect which it worketh for after the taking of it if shee feeles a beating paine about the navell and lower parts of the belly it is asigne she hath conceived and that the suppression is naturall If not that is it vitious and ought medicinally to be taken away Prognosticks With the evill quality of the wombe the whole body stands charged but especially the Heart the Liver and the Braine and betwixt the wombe and these three principall parts there is a singular consent First the wombe communicates to the heart by the mediation of those Arteries which come from Aorta hence the termes being supprest will ensue faintings swoonings intermission of pulse cessation of breath Secondly it communicates to the Liver by the veines derived from the hollow veine hence will follow obstructions cachexies jaundise dropsies hardnesse of the spleene Thirdly it communicates unto the braine by the nerves and membranes of the backe hence will arise Epilepsies Apoplexies Frensies melancholy passions paine in the after parts of the head fearfulnesse inability of speaking Well therefore may I conclude with Hyppocrates if the moneths be supprest many dangerons diseases will follow Cure In the cure of this and of all the other following effects I will observe this order The cure shall bee taken from Chirurgicall Pharmaceuticall and Diaeteticall meanes This suppression is a plethoricke affect and must be taken away by evacuation and therefore first we will beginne with Phlebotomie In the middest of the menstruall period open the Liver veine and for the reversion of the humour two dayes before the wonted evacution open the Saphena on both feet If the repletion be not great apply cupping glasses to the legges and thighs And although there be no hope to remove the suppression as in some the Cotyledones are so closed up that nothing but copulation will open them yet it will be convenient as much as may be to ease nature of her burden by opening the Hemerhoid veines with a Leech After Phlebotomie let the humours bee prepared and made fluxile with syrrupe of Staechas Calamint Betonie Hysop Mugwort Horehound Fumeterre Maiden-haire Bathe with m.j. make a decoction take thereof ℥ iij. syrrupe of Maiden-haire Mugwort Succory ana ℥ s. Misce After she comes out of the Bath let her drinke it off Purge with Pil. de Agarico Elephang Coch. Foetid Galen in this cause commends pil de Hiera cum Colocyutide for as they bee proper to purge the humour offending so also they doe open the passages of the wombe and strengthen the faculty by their Aromaticall quality If the stomacke be overcharged let her take a vomit yet such a one as may worke both wayes lest working onely upward it should too much turne backe the humour ℞ Trochisks of Agrick ʒij infuse them i● ℥ iij. of Oximel in which dissolve of the Electuary Diasarum ℈ is Ben●dic La●●t ℥ s Take this after the manner of a purge After the humour hath beene purged proceed to more proper and forceable remedies ℞ trochiscks of myrrhe ʒis persly-seed castor rindes of cassia ana ℈ i. of the extract of mugwort ℈ is muske gr.x. with the juce of smallage make 12 pils tak 2 every morning or after supper going to bed ℞ of cinnamō ℥ s. roots of smirnium valerian aristolochia ana ʒii roots of Asrum ʒi castor saffron ana ℈ ii specdiambrae ʒii trochisks of myrrhe ℈ iiii tartari vitriolati ℈ ii make all into a powder with mugwort water and suger qs make lozenges take ʒi of them every morning or mingle ʒi of the powder with ʒi of sugar and take it in white wine ℞ of prepared steele specierum hierae ana ʒii borace species of myrrhe ana ℈ i. with the juce of savine make 38. take three every other day immediatly before dinner ℞ of castor ℈ i. wilde carret seed ʒs with syrrupe of mugwort make 4 pils take them in the morning fasting and so for three dayes together before the wonted time of the purgations ℞ of Agaricke aristolochia juce of horehound ana ʒv rhubarb spicknard anice-seed galbanum assafaetida smallage roots gentiane of the three peppers laccae ana ʒvi with honie make an electuarie take of it ʒiii for a dosis In flegmaticall bodies nothing better can bee given then the decoction of the wood guaiacum with a little Dictam taken in the morning fasting and so for 12 dayes together without provokeing of sweate Administer to the lower parts by suffumigations pessaries unctions injections insessions Make suffumigations of cinnamon nutmeg cloves bayberries mugwort galbanum melanthium Amber c. Make pessaryes of figgs and the leaves of mercury brused and rowled up with lint If you desire a stronger make one of myrrhe bdelium opopanax Ammoniacum galbanum sagapenum mithridate agarick coloquintida c. Make injections of the decoction of origane mugwort mercurie betonie and figgs powring the same into the wombe by a metrenchyta ℞ oyle of sweet and bitter almonds lillies capers chammomill ana ℥ s. ladani oyle of myrrhe ana ʒii with wax make an unguent with which let the places bee anointed Make insessions of faengreeke chammomill melilote dill marjerom pennyroyall feverfew juniper berries and calamynt But if the suppression comes by a defect of matter then ought not the cources to be provoked untill the spirits bee animated and the blood againe encreased Or if by proper affects of the wombe as dropsies inflammations and the like then must a particular cure bee used the which I will not insist upon here but of them as they lie in order If the retention comes from repletion or fulnesse let the aire bee hote and drie use moderate exercise before meales Let your sleep bee shorter then ordinary and your meat and drinke attenuating Seeth with your meat garden savorie time origan and ciche peason If of emptinesse or defect of matter let the ayre bee moyst and moderately hote Shun excercise and watchings let your meate bee nourishing and of a light digestion as reare eggs lambe chickens almond milke and the like CHAP. III. Of the overflowing of the cources THE Scholearium saith by comparing of contraries truth is made manifest Having therefore spoken of the suppression of the terms order requires now that I should insist upon the overflowing of them an effect no lesse dangerous then the former And this immoderate flux of the months is defined to be a sanguineous excrement proceeding from the wombe exceeding both in quantity and time First it is said to be sanguineous the matter of the flux being only blood wherein it differs from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
cleare yet it is not a necessary consequence that shee is destitute of life for the motion of the lungs by which the respiration is made may bee taken away that shee cannot breath yet the internall transpiration of the heate may rem●ine which is not manifested by the motion of the br●st or lungs but lies occult in the heart and inward arteries Examples hereof wee may have in the flie and swallow which in the cold of winter to the ocular aspect seeme dead inanimate and breath not at all yet they live by the transpiration of that heat which is reserved in the heart and inward arteries therefore when the summer approcheth the internall heat being revocated to the outward parts they are then againe revived out of their sleepie extasie Those women therefore that seeme to die suddainly and upon no evident cause let them not bee committed unto the earth untill the end of three dayes lest the living be buried for the dead Cause The part affected is the wombe of which there is a twofold motion naturall and Symptomaticall The naturall motion is when the wombe attracteth the humane seed or excludeth the infant or secundine The Symptomaticall motion of which we are here to speak is a convulsive drawing upward of the wombe The cause usually is in the retention of the seed or in the suppression of the monthes causing a repletion of corrupt humours in the wombe from whence proceeds a flatulent refrigeration causing a convulsion of the ligaments of the wombe And as it may come from humidity or repletion being a convulsion it may bee caused by emptinesse or drinesse and lastly by Abortion or difficult childe-birth Signes At the approaching of the suffocation there is a palenesse of the face weaknesse of the legges shortnesse of breath frigidity of the whole body with a working up into the throat and then shee falls down as one voyd both of sence and motion The mouth of the wombe is closed up and being touched with the finger feels hard The paroxisme of the fit once past shee openeth her eyes and feeling her stomacke opprest shee offers to vomit And least that any should bee deceived in taking one disease for another I will shew how it may bee distinguisht from those diseases which have the neerest affinity with its selfe It differs from the Apoplexie being it comes without shreeking out also in the hystericall passion the sence of feeling is not altogether so destroyed and lost as it is in the Apoplecticall disease It differs from the Epilepsie in that the eyes are not wrested neither doe any spumy froth come from the mouth and that convulsive motion which sometime is joyned to the suffocation is not so universall as it is in the epilepsie onely this or that member is convulst and that without any vehement agitation In the Sincope both respiration and pulse is taken away the countinance waxeth pale she swounds away suddainly but in the histericall passion commonly there is both respiration and pulse though it cannot well bee perceived her face looks red and shee hath a forewarning of her fit Yet it is not denied but that a Sincope may be joyned with this suffocation Lastly it is distinguisht from the Lethargie by the pulse which in the one is great in the other little Prognosticks If disease hath its being from the corruption of the seed it foretells more danger then if it proceeded frō the suppression of the cources because the seed is concocted and of a purer quality than the menstruous blood and the more pure being corrupted becomes the more foule and filthie as appeares in egges the purrest nourishment which vitiated yeeld the noysomest savour If it be accompained with a Sincope it shewes nature is but weake and that the spirits are almost exhaust But if neezing followes it shewes that the heat which was almost extinct doth now begin to returne and that nature will subdue the disease Cure In the cure of this affect two things must bee observed first that during the time of the pararoxisme nature be provoked to expel those malignant vapours which binds up the sences that shee may be recalled out of that sleepie extasie Secondly that in the intermission of the fit propper medicines bee applied to take away the cause To stirre up nature fasten cupping-glasses to the hipps and navell Apply ligatures to the thighs Rubbe the extreame parts with salt vineger musturd Cause lowd clamours and thundrings in her eares Apply to the nose Assa faetida castor and saga penum steeped in vineger Provoke her to neeze by blowing up into her nose the powder of castor white pepper pellitory of Spaine and white Hellebore Hold under her nose Partridge feathers haire and old shoes burnt and all other stinking things for evill odours are an enemie to nature hence the Animall spirits doe so contest and strive against them that the naturall heate is thereby restored The braine is so opprest sometimes that wee are compeld to burne the outward skin of the head with hot oyle or with a hot iron Sharp clysters and suppositories are available ℞ m.i. anice seed ℥ s. anaʒii boyle these in lib. ii of water to the halfe adde to the straining oyle of castor ℥ ii picraeʒii make a clyster Or ℞ of hony boyled ℥ ii euphorbii ℈ s. Coloqnintida gr iiii white hellebore gr ii saltʒi make a suppositorie Hippocrates writeth of a hystericall woman which could not bee freed from the paroxisme but by powring cold water on her yet this cure is particular and ought to be administred in the middest of summer when the Sun is in the Tropicke of Cancer If it bee caused by the retention and corruption of the seed at the instant of the paroxisme let the Midwife tak oyle of lillies marjerom and bayes dissolving in the same of Civet and Muske ana gr ii Let her dippe her finger therein and put it up into the neck of the wombe tickling and rubbing the same The fit being over proceed to the curing of the cause If it ariseth from the suppression of the months looke the cure page 25 If from the retention of the seed a good husband will administer cure But those which cannot honestly purchase that cure must use such things as will drie up and diminish the seed as Diacyminum diacalaminthes c. Amongst Botanicks the seed of Agnus Castus is well esteemed of whether taken inwardly applied outwardly or received as a suffumigation It was held in great honour amongst the Athenians for by it they did remaine as pure Vestales and preserved their chastity only by strowing it in the b●d whereon they lay hence the name Agnus Castus is taken from the effect Make an issue on the inside of each legge a handfull bredth below the knee ℞ Trochisks of agaricke ℈ ii wilde carrotseed ligni aloes ana ℈ s. turpentineʒiii with conserve of Anthos make a bolus The
use of castor is worthily commended ʒi of it being taken in white wine Or you may make pills of it with mithridate and take them going to bed ℞ Of white brionie root dried and cut after the manner of carrots ℥ i. Put it into a draught of wine placing it by the fire and when it is warme drinke it of Quercitane draweth a faecula out of the root the substance of which is to be taken in white wine or peonie water ℞ Of myrrhe castor Assafaetida ana ℈ i. saffron rue seed ana gr iiii make 8 pills take every night 2. at your entrance into bed Galen by his owne example commends unto us Agaricke pulveriz'd of which he gave frequently ℈ i. in white wine ℞ anaʒs ligni aloes citron pills dried ana ℈ i. sugar ℥ iii. with feverfew water make lozenges ℞ Of tryphera magna Nic. ʒi mugwort water ℥ iiii Take this every other day for the space of 12 dayes Hang about her necke little tabulets of Vngula Alces ℞ Of bdellium ammoniacum and ℥ ii Agnus castus Centorie Cassia-wood feverfew marjerom ana ʒis turpentine q. s. make two plasters applie one before and the other behind Lay to the navill at bed-time a head of garlicke brused fastening it with a sweathing bande Make a girdle of galbanum for the wast and also a plaster for the belly placeing in one part of it both civet and muske which must be layd upon the navill ℞ anaʒii mithridate q. s. make a pessarie It purgeth the matrice of winde and flegme foment the naturall parts with sallade oyle in which hath beene boyled rue feverfew and chammomill ℞ Of rose leaves m.i. cloves ℈ ii twilt them up in a little cloth and boyle them in malmsie the eight part of an houre and then applie them close to the mouth of the wombe as hote as may bee indured Let her be covered well that the smell passeth not to the nose A drieing diet must bee observed the moderate use of Venus is commended Let her bread bee Anice seed bisket and her flesh meate rather rosted then boyled CHAP. VII Of the descending or falling downe of the Mother THE falling down of the wombe is a relaxation of the ligatures wherby the matrice is carried backward and in some hangs out in the bignesse of an egge Of this there bee two kindes distinguisht of Fernelius by Descensus and Prolapsus by a descending and a precipitation The descending of the wombe is when it sinketh downe to the entrance of the privities and appeares to the eye either not at al or very little The precipitation is when the wombe like a purse is turned the inside outward and hangs bewixt the thighes in the bignesse of a cupping-glasse Cause The cause is externall or internall The externall cause is difficult child birth violent pulling away of the secondine rashnesse and inexperience in drawing away of the child violent coughing neezing falls blowes carrying of heavie burdens The internall cause in generall is overmuch humiditie flowing unto those parts hindring the operations of the wombe whereby the ligaments by which the wombe is supported are relaxt The cause in particular is refer'd to bee in the retention of the seed or in the suppressions of the courses Signes The Arsgut and the bladder oftentimes are so crushed that the passage of both the excrements is hindered If the urine doth flow forth it is white and thick the proecordia are molested the loynes be grieved the privities payned the womb sinkes down to the entrance of the private parts or else comes cleane out Prognosticks This griefe possessing an old woman is cured with great difficultie because it weakens the faculties of the wombe and therefore though it bee reduced into his propper place yet uppon every occurrance it is subject to the like danger it was in before So is it with the younger sort if the disease be inveterate If it bee caused by putrifaction in the nerves it is incurable Cure The wombe naturally being placed betweene the streight gut and the bladder and now fallen down ought not to be put up againe untill the facultie both of the guts and bladder bee stirred up Nature being unloded of her burden let the woman be placed on her backe in such sort that her legs may be higher then her head let her feet be drawne up to her hinder parts with her knees spread abroad Then mollifie the swelling with oyle of Lillies and sweet Almonds or with the decoction of m●llows beetes faengreck and lineseed When the inflation is dissiputed let the midwife annoint her hand with oyle of Mastick and reduce the wombe into its place The matrice being put up the situation of the patient must bee changed Let her legs bee out at length and layd together Set cuppingglasses to the brests and navill Boyle Mugwort Feverfew red Roses and Comferie in red Wine and foment the places therewith Make a suffumigation for the matrice of Castor assa faetida Frankincence and Mastick ℞ anaʒiii Masticke Styrax Franck in●ence ana ℥ i. boleʒi with oyle of myrtles and wax make two plasters apply one before and the other behinde ℞ Of red roses Pomgranate pills Accorne cups Myrtle berries ana ℥ ii Medler leaues Sage Rue Origan Comferie wormewood ana mis. boyle all these in water and make an insessiō Move sweet odours to the nose And at the comming out of the Bath give her of sirrup of Feverfew ℥ i. with ʒi of anaʒiii Galbani ℥ s. Styracisʒ ii make a plaster for the navill Make pessaries of Assafaetida Saffron Comfery masticke adding there to a little Castor The practice of Paraeus in this cause was to make them only of corke in figure like a little egge covering them over with wax and masticke dissolved together fastning to it a thred and so to put it up into the wombe The present danger being new taken away and the matrice seared in its naturall abode the remote cause must bee remooved If the body bee plethoricke open a veyne Prepare with sirrup of betonie calamint hysope and feverfew Purge with pil de hier a cum agarico pil de colocynthide If the stomacke bee opprest by crudities unburden it by vomiting Sudorifficall decoctiōs of Lignum sanctum and sassifras taken twenty daies together dries up the superfluous moister and consequently suppresseth the cause of the disease Let the aire bee hote and drie and your diet hote and attenuating Abstaine from dancing leaping neezing and from all motion both of body and minde Eate sparingly drinke not much sleepe moderately CHAP. VIII Of the Inflammation of the wombe THE Phlegmon or inflammation of the matrice is a tumour possessing the whole wombe or part of it accompanied with unnaturall heate by obstructions and gathering together of corrupt blood Cause The cause of this affect is suppression of the months repletion of the whole body immoderate use of Venus often handling of the
genitalls difficult childe-birth vehement agitation of the body falls blowes to which also may bee added the use of sharp pessaries whereby not seldome the wombe is inflamed Cupping-glasses also fastened to the pubes and hypogastrium draw the humours to the wombe Signes The signes are aguish horrours paines in the head and stomacke vomitting coldnesse of the knees convulsions of the necke doting trembling of the heart sometimes there is a Dyspnaea or streightnes of breath by reason of the heat which is communicated to the diaphragme The brests symphathizing with the wombe are payned and swelled Particular signes If the forepart of the matrice be inflamed the privities are grieved the urine is supprest or flowes forth with difficutie If the after part the loynes and backe suffer the excrements are retained If the right side the right hip suffers the right legge is heavy slow to to motion in so much that sometimes shee seemes to hault And so if the left side of the wombe be inflamed the left hip is payned and the left legge is weaker then the right If the necke of the wombe bee affected the midwife putting up her finger shall feele the mouth of it retracted and closed up with a hardnesse about it Prognosticks All inflammations of the wombe are dangerous if not deadly and especially if the totall substance of the matrice bee inflamed Yet lesse perilous are they if they bee in the necke of the wombe A flux of the belly foretells health if it bee naturall for nature works best by the use of her owne instruments Cure In the cure first let the humours flowing to the wombe be repell'd for effecting of which after the bellie hath beene loosened by cooling clysters phlebotomie will bee needfull Open therefore a veine on the arme and if shee be not with childe the day after strike the Saphena on both feet Fasten ligatures and Cupping glasses to the armes rubbe the upper parts Purge lightly with Seneʒii Anice seed ℈ i. myrobolanes ℥ s. Barly water s.q. make a decoction dissolve in it sirrup of Succorie with Rhubarbe ℥ ii pulp of Cassia ℥ s. oyle of Anice seed gut ii make a potion At the beginning of the disease anoint the privities and reynes with oyle of roses and quinces Make plasters of Plantaine Lineseed Barley meale Melilote Fengrecke whites of egges and if the paine be vehement adde a little opium Foment the genitalls with the decoction of Poppieheads purcelaine knotgrasse and water-lillies Make injections of Goates-milke rose water clarified whey with hony of roses In the declining of the disease use insessions of Sage Lineseed Mugwort Penny-royall horehound faengrecke Anoint the lower parts of the belly with oyle of chammomill and violets ℞ Of lilly roots mallow roots ana ℥ iiii mercurie m.i. Mugwort feverfew ana m.s. Chammomill flowers melilote ana p.i. bruse the hearbes and the rootes and boyle them in a sufficient quantity of milke then adde of fresh butter oyle of chammomill lillies ana ℥ ii bean meale s.q. make two plasters apply one before and the other behinde If the tumour cannot bee removed but tends to suppuration ℞ Of faengrecke mallow roots decocted figgs line seed barley meale doves dung turpentine ana ʒiii suetʒs opium ℈ s. with wax make a plaster ℞ Of bay leaves sage hysope chammomill mugwort with water make an insession ℞ Of wormewood betonie ana ms white wine milke ana lib. s. boyle them untill one part bee consumed then take of this decoction ℥ iiii hony of roses ℥ ii make an injection Yet beware the humours bee not brought downe unto the wombe ℞ anaʒiii anaʒi opium gr ii with wax make a pessarie The aire must bee cold All motion of the body especially of the lower parts is forbidden Vigilancie is commended for by sleepe the humours are carried inward whereby the inflammation is increased eate sparingly Let your drinke bee barley water or clarified whey and your meate chickens and chicken broth boyled with endive succhorie sorrell buglosse and mallowes CHAP. IX Of the Schirrositie or hardnesse of the wombe OF a Phlegmon neglected or not perfectly cured is generated a Schirrus of the matrice which is a hard unnaturall swelling insensible hindering the operations of the wombe and disposing the whole body to slouthfulnesse Cause One cause of this disease may bee as●i●ed to want of judgement in the Physitian as many Empirickes administring to an inflammation of the wombe doe over much refrigerate astring the humour that it can neither passe forward no backward hence the matter being condenst degenerates as it were into lapidious or hard substance Other causes may bee suppression of the menstrualls retention of the Lochia commonly called the after-purgings eating of corrupt meates as in the disordinate longing called Pica unto which breeding women are often subject It may proceed also from obstructions and ulcers in the Matrix or from evill affects in the Liver and Spleene Signes If the bottome of the wombe bee affected shee feeles as it were a heavy burden representing a mole yet differing in that the brests are attenuated and the whole body waxeth lesse If the necke of the wombe bee hardned no outward humour will appeare the mouth of it is retracted and being toucht with the finger feeles hard that shee cannot have the company of a man without great payne and prickings Prognosticks A Schirrus confirmed is incurable and will turne into a Canker or a Dropsie and ending in a Canker proves deadly because the native heat in those parts being almost smothred can hardly againe be restored Cure Where there is a replection phlebotomy by our master Galen is both commended and commanded Wherefore open the mediana on both armes and then the Saphena on both feet especially if the termes bee supprest Prepare the humour with Sirrup of Borage Succhory Epithimum and clarified Whey Then take of these Pills following according to the strength of the patient ℞ picraeʒvj anaʒiis anaʒis misce make Pills The body being purged proceed to molifie the hardnesse as followeth Anoynt the privities and the necke of the wombe with Vnguentum dialtheae and agrippae Or ℞ Myrrhaeʒij Saffronʒ9 Dissolve the gumms in Oyle of Lillies and sweet Almonds with Wax and Turpentine make an Vnguent Apply below the navill the playster of Melilot and Diachylon Fernelij Make insessions of Figges Mugwort Mallowes Pennyroyall Althea Fenell roots Meliote Foengrecke Line seed boyled in water Make injections of Calamint Line seed Melilote Foengrecke and the foure mollifying hearbs with oyle of Dill Chammomile and Lillies dissolving the same ʒiij of the gumme Bdellium Cast the stone Pyrites on the coales and let her receive the fume of it into her wombe Foment the secret parts with the decoction of the leaves and roots of Danewort ℞ anaʒi Iu●e of Danewort Mucilage of Fengrecke anna ℥ s. Calves marrow ℥ i. q.s. make a pessary Or make a pessary onely of Lead dipping it in the aforesayd things
from the urine from the infant and from experiment Signes collected from the woman are these The first day after conception shee feeles a light quivering or chillinesse running through the whole body a tickling in the wombe and a little paine in the lower parts of the bellie Ten or twelve dayes after the head is affected with giddinesse the eyes with a dimnesse of sight then followes red pimples in the face with a blue circle about the eyes the brests swell and grow hard with some paine and pricking in them the belly suddainly sinketh and riseth againe by degrees with a hardnesse about the navill The nipples of the brests wax red the heart beats inordinately the naturall appetite is dejected yet shee hath a longing desire after strange meates The necke of the wombe is retracted that it can hardly bee felt with the finger being put up and this is an infallible signe She is suddainly merrie and as soone melancholie her monthly courses are stayed without any evident cause the excrements of the guts are unaccustomedly retained by the wombe pressing the great gut and her desire to Venus is abated The surest signe is taken from the infant which begins to move in the wombe the third or fourth month and that not in the manner of a mole from one side to another rushing like a stone but mildely as may bee perceived by applying the hand hot on the bellie Signes taken from the urine The best clerks doe affirme that the urine of a woman with child is white and hath little motes like those in the Sunne beames ascending and descending in it and a clowd swimming aloft of an opall colour the sediment being devided by shaking of the urine appeares like carded wooll In the middle of her time the urine turneth yellow next red and lastly blacke with a red cloud Signes taken from experiment At night going to bed let her drinke water and hony afterward if shee feeles a beating paine in her bellie and about her navill shee hath conceived Or let her take the juce of Card●us and if she vomiteth it up it is a signe of conception Cast a cleane needle into the womans urine put in a brasen bason let it stand all night and in the morning if it bee coloured with red spotts shee hath conceived but if it bee blacke or rustie shee hath not Signes taken from the Sex to shew whether it bee male or female Being with childe of a male the right brest swells first the right eye is more lively then the left her face well coloured because such as the blood is such is the colour and the male is conceived of purer blood and of more perfect seede then the female Red motes in the urine setling downe to the sediment foretell that a male is conceived but if they be white a female Put the womans urine which is with childe into a glassen bottle let it stand close stopt three dayes then straine it through a fine cloth and you shall finde little living creatures if they be red it is a male if white a female To conclude the most certaine signe to give credit unto is the motion of the infant for the male moves in the third moneth and the female in the fourth CHAP. XV. Of untimely birth WHen the fruite of the womb comes forth before the seventh moneth that is before it comes to maturity it is said to bee abortive And in effect the child proves abortive I meane not to live if it bee borne in the eight moneth And why children borne in the seventh and ninth moneth may live and not in the eight moneth may seeme strange yet it is true The cause hereof by some is ascribed unto the Planet under which the childe is borne for every moneth from the conception to the birth is governed by his proper planet and in the eight moneth Saturne doth predominate which is cold and dry and coldnesse being an enemy unto li●e destroys the nature of the childe Hypocrates gives a better reason The infant being every way perfect and compleate in the seventh moneth desires more aire and nutriment than it had before which because hee cannot obtaine hee labours for a passage to goe out and if his spirits bee weake and faynt and have not strength sufficient to break the membrances and come forth it is decreed by nature that he should continue in the womb untill the 9th month that in that time his wearied spirits might be againe strengthned and refreshed but if he returnes to strive againe in the eight moneth and bee borne hee cannot live because the day of his birth is eyther past or to come for in the eight moneth sayth Avicen hee is weake and infirme and therefore b●ing then cast into cold ayre his spirits cannot but sinke Cause Vntimely birth may bee caused by cold for as it maketh the fruit of the tree to wither and fall downe before it be ripe so doth it nip the fruit of the wombe before it comes to full perfection and make it to be abortive Sometimes by humidity weakening the faculty that the fruit cannot be retain'd untill the due time by drinesse or emptinesse defrauding the childe of his nourishment by one of the three alvine fluxes by phlebotomy and other evacuations by inflammations of the wombe and by other sharpe diseases Sometimes it is caused by joy laughter anger and especially by feare for in all but in that especially the heate forsakes the wombe and runnes to the heart to helpe there and so the cold strikes into matrice whereby the ligaments are relaxt and abortion follows Wherefore Plato in his time commanded that the woemen should shunne all temptations of great joy and pleasure and likewise avoyd all occasions of feare and griefe Abortion also may bee caused by the corruption of the ayre by filthy odours and especially by the smell of the snuffe of a Candle also by falls blowes violent exercise leaping dancing c. Signes Signes of future abortion are extenuation of the brests with a flux of watrish milke payne in the womb heavinesse in the head unaccustomed wearinesse in the hippes and thighes flowing of the courses Signes foretelling the fruit to bee dead in the wombe are hollownesse of the eyes griefe in the head aguish horrours palenesse of the face and lippes gnawing of the stomacke no motion of the infant coldnesse and loosenesse of the mouth of the wombe the thicknesse of the belly which was above is fallen downe waterish and bloody excrements comes from the matrice A regiment or rule for breeding women THe prevention of untimely birth consists in the taking away of the forementioned causes which must bee effected both before and after conception Before conception if the body bee ever hot cold dry or moyst correct it with the contraries if cacochimiall purge it if plethoricall open the liver veine if too grosse extenuate