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A01831 The regiment of life, whereunto is added a treatise of the pestilence, with the boke of children, newly corrected and enlarged by T. Phayre; Sommaire et entretènement de vie. English Goeurot, Jean.; Phayer, Thomas, 1510?-1560.; Houssemaine, Nicolas de, d. 1523. Régime contre la peste. 1550 (1550) STC 11970; ESTC S109504 120,493 394

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pacient a smalle draught .ii or .iii. houres afore meate The fourth Chapiter of the weakenes of the harte WEakenesse or feblenes of harte is caused when the bodye fayleth his vertue vital wythout anye euidēt cause ▪ or whē the bodye is consumed waxeth out of coloure and that the operacions vitall are weake wythoute sensible hurtynge of any other mēbre but the harte And it maye chaunce of an aposteme for the whyche there is no maner remedy for al apostemacion ●f the harte is mortal And debilitye ●f the hart may come of heat accedental which one may knowe when there is great heat in the breast vehemēte thirst is quēched better in drawing cold ayre thē in drinking cold water Remedye Geue hym y t hath a feble hert redy to faint ether for feuer or for extreme heate the weyght of a frenche crowne of trosciske of cāphore with wyne of pomegranades laye vpon his breast towarde the lefte syde a sendal or linnen water of roses purcelane succorye sorelle Moreouer the paciēt ought to smel thynges colde and swete as dryed roses water lilies violettes and vinegre of roses Also it is good to take an infusion or laxe of rubarbe ordeyned of som good phisicion after the whyche it shall be good to applye vpon the lefte pappe a lynnen cloth dipped in plātaine water roses sorell and a lytle vinegre For tremblyng of the hart wythout a feuer a remedye The paciente muste take .ii. drammes of the electuary of diamargariton calidum and the thyrde part of electuarium de gemmis then drinke .ii. or .iii ounces of water of buglosse bawme mixt togyther An other remedye Take mastyke lignum aloes cloues cinamome nutmigges and cubebes of eche a scruple pilles of citrons halfe a dramme doronici romani and perles of ech .xv. graynes basile seede ten graynes amber grece and muske of ech two graines with cōserued buglosse or colewoorts and sucket of citrons of eche halfe an ounce make an electuarye wyth .iiii. ounces of suger dissolued in white wyne and buglosse water and vse of thesame euery mornyng .ii. drammes and drynke a lytle good wyne after it ¶ Another remedy Take water of buglosse bawme and borage of all three together a pounde of white wine halfe a pounde pouder of cinamome cloues and nutmigges of eche two drammes mingle them al wel together and then heate it a litle and dippe a linnen cloth in it or elles a scarlet and laye it to the left pappe ¶ Another remedye Ye muste make a bagge of sendalle of the sayde swete spices or other cordyall pouders and laye it hoote vpon the left pappe ¶ Another remedye Take pomaunders made of lapdanum lignum atoes and citron pilles maces cloues borage floures storax calamite amber of grece and a lytle waxe and lette the pacient beare that and smell it often ¶ An other medicine The mawe of an olde cocke dried and made in pouder is excedyng good to drinke in red wyne or swete wine with a litle saffron For thesame It is good to drinke euery morning thre oūces of water of buglosse wherin hath bene sodden cloues And it is good to drynke in a mornyng .iii. oūces of iulep made of halfe a pounde of bawme water and thre oūces of suger The confection of diaiacincthi is singuler and excellent for tremblinge of the hearte but it is for noble men not for poore folke ¶ For swownyng SWownyng is a takyng awaye of the feelyng and mouing of the body by weakenes of the heart thorough to much auoidans of y e spirites ¶ Remedye In somer for sownyng sodainelye ye oughte to caste into hys face colde water myngled with rosewater or vinegre And yf ye stoppe hys mouthe and nose and bowe hys face vnto hys knees so long as ye stoppe your wynd your selfe ye shall foorthwith recouer hym But yf the sayde swownynge come of the mother ye muste laye to the nose all stynkyng thynges and abhominable sauours as partriches fethers brente castor and assafetida or the snuffes of candelles Moreouer ye ought to geue the pacient a litle good wyne whiche is the chiefe thyng that quicklyest restoreth hym as sayeth Auerrois in his seuenth colliget Afterwarde rubbe hys armes and legges and bynde them harde then prouoke hym to nese puttynge a litle pouder of longe pepper euphorbium or castor into hys nose And yf by the saide medicines the pacient dothe not amende this disease is vncurable And here ye maye note that yf swowning come by great resoluciō of spirites as after great euacuaciō other by swette fluxe of bloud or laxe ye ought not to caste cold water on his face nor to bind his mēbers for y t shoulde do hī hurt but kepe him in a place withoute mouing and geue him to drinke a litle good wyne nourishe him with good light metes as pullettes chickins capons partriches veale mutton kid Whereof ye may make him good porrege coleyses or restoratiues distilled or otherwise as ye shal thīke cōueniēt ¶ The .v. Chapter of remedies for dyseases of the stomake THe cheste of the body doth receiue the meate necessarye for all the mēbers in the stomake whiche is situate in the myddes of the bodye for to digeste thesame meat into al y e members to the which chaūceth debilitie or hīderaūce of appetite sometimes by error of y e eater in qualitie or quantitye sometimes by reasō of the fleume that descendeth from the heade like a reume ¶ Remedye Keepe abstinence and eate soberlye light meates and drinke good wine and but litle Purge the stomake ī takynge pylles of symple hyera beefore meate .iii. or foure of the said pilles at foure of the clocke in the mornyng If the repletion be greate slepyng in the nyght he muste laye hys hande on hys stomake or els laye a litle pillowe of fethers on it or a bagge of wormwod margerim Sometimes ther chaunceth suche debilitye not for reume or meate or drinke but by viscouse slymy fleume ī the mouth of y e stomake which causeth to engender aboūdaūce of ventositye and maketh the meat to swymme with litle thirste And sometimes with sour belchinges and inflations such debilitye maye not perfectlye bee cured but for a tyme mended wyth the remedies that folowe ¶ Remedyes for weakenes of the stomake Fyrst ye must take pillule stomatice ii or .iii. houres afore meate more or lesse accordyng to y e quantitye of the fulnes of the stomake after geue him euery mornyng .ii. houres afore meat and one houre after supper at euerye tyme a lozenge of a lectuary called diagalāga or an other called diaciminō whiche lectuaries do consume ventosities and with theyr cōfortable heat driue away the colde and the windye complexion of the stomake ¶ For the same Grene ginger is verye good taken as is sayd afore of electuaries And it is holesome to eate afore your meate anyse sedes and fenel and when ye begin to eate take a tost
warme water vp to y e hanches yf the peyne come of cold ye must annoīt his belly with oyle of bayes and gosegrese For the wyndy colyke If it be winde make a glister of new milke wyth a lytle oyle and the yolke of an egge for it is very good Also it is good to lette him drynke a dramme of hiera picra simplex wyth .ii. ounces of water of cardo benedictus or purcelane or wormewood and to make a plaister of leeke leaues fryed in oile vinegre and layed vpon the bellye Lyke warde the backe Also nephretica is paynefuller afore meat the colicke is euer more greuous after And often y e colicke chaūceth sodenlie but nephretica cōtrarie for commonlye it commeth by litle litle for euermore before one shal fele paine of the backe with difficultie of vrine Item there is more difference for the colicke sheweth vrynes as it were coloured but nephretica in the begynning is cleare and whyte like water and after waxeth thycke and then appeareth in the botome of the vessel lyke red sande or grauel Remedie for peyne of the reynes YE muste vse thynges aperitiue to cause you make water but afore ye ought to loce y e belly in taking an ounce of cassia an houre before meate ▪ but yf your bellie he hard bound ye must take a glister made as hereafter foloweth ▪ before ye take th● sayde c●ssi● A glister for nephretica passio Take of march mallowe rootes two ounces mallowes violettes beetes march mallowe leaues floures of camomylle and mellilote of eche a hādfull melon seede and anyse seede of eche halfe an ounce wheat branne an handful and decocte it and take therof halfe a pounde and distemper in it an ounce of cassia an ounce of course suger .ii. ounces of oyle of violettes an ounce of oyle of lilies make a glyster In stede thereof ye maye take cowes mylke wyth two egge yolkes in maner of a glyster And it is to be noted that in suche a disease the glystre muste be greate in quantitie or els ye shulde make wrestynge and roumblyng in the bellye whiche shulde be an occasion of more ●aine After this operaciō if the paine be not apeased ye must gyue another glister after the operaciō of which the patiēt ought to go into some bath vp● to the nauyl wherein muste be sodden mallowes marche mallowes beetes pellitary lyneseed fenugreke floures of camomil with mellilote al put in a bagge in the sayd water ●ubbe hym wyth it and at hys goyng out of the sayd bath ye must take two oūces of sirupe of mayden heare radishe with iii. ounces of the decoccion of lyquirice Moreouer after the sayde bath ye muste ●aye vpon the paine a ●ultes made of herbes and floures with one of almondes being in y e said bagge .ii or iii. mornīges take ▪ v. or ●i ounces of y e broth of cicers sodden wyth lycorice or els drinke water of ●itory of ●esses or of rotes aperi● the which waters are very good for to purge the grauel and the stone ▪ 〈…〉 a verye good electuary for the skins ▪ ●alled electuarium ducis or iustinum philantropos or liontripon yf one take a drāme or two after opera●ion of a glister or o● cassia or a pille 〈◊〉 ante cib● and after to drinke o●e of the sayde waters or elles a litle white wyne warmed ¶ Regiment aswel for the colyke as for the reynes of the backe HE muste flye frō al euil qualities of the ayre as wynde raine great heate and greate colde speciallye to kepe him from warming the r●nes agaynst the fyre nor to heate it by any other meanes Also he muste abstaine from great repletion at one meale and to long abstinence from meate for all these ●ille the body ful of yl humours Also sleape not on the daye specially after meate nor lye not on the romes when ye are aslepe And ye ought to eate no ●alt●ysh no● no b●efe nor other grosse meates Lik● wise one ought for to beware 〈…〉 ●o●les bredde vp in the water spice●● pastrye and bread not very wel leuen●d ▪ specially tartes cakes other pasti● made of floure But aboue al ye muste bewar of white meates as milke chese rawe frutes hard egges as moch as is possible kepe your selfe frō yre enuye melancoly other lyke affecciōs For the fluxe of the wombe IN al fluxes of the ●elly cause y e excremētes to be dulye serched for yf the disease be suche that the meat commeth out euen as it was receiued or not half digested y e sayde fluxe is called lienteria Yf great aboundaūce of watery humours haue theyr issue by lowe the sayde fluxe is named diarthea which is as moch to saye as fluxe humorall And yf bloode or matter appeare with the excrementes in the syckenesse then they call it dissenteria which is a gret disease and a daungerous for to cure Remedy for the fluxe lienteria ▪ FOorasmuch as this flux commeth for y e most part of great debilitie of vertue retētiue of y e stomacke for y e great moistnes of y e same it is good to gyue y e sirupe of wormwood honye of roses takīg of it with a spone or drynke th● wyth the water of betonye fenel and wormewood and yf it so be the paciente doe desyre to vomyte it wold be good for hym or let him take halfe an ounce of hiera simple wyth two ounces of water of wormwood and yf the pacient be strong ynough adde therto two drammes of diafinicon And after thys ye muste comforte the stomake wyth oyle of mastyke spike mynt wormwood or nardine or with a playster called cerotū Galeni spred vpon lether and after layed vpon the stomake or make a bagge of wormewood myntes and maiorim dried laye it vpon the stomake In the mornyng take a lozenge of aromaticum rosatum and a lytle rinde of citron cōfit and before euery meale take a morsel of conserua quynces Remedy for the fluxe humoral called diarthea THe sayde fluxe oughte not to be restrayned afore the .xiiii. daie yf nature be not very moch enfebled And somtyme it cōmeth of hote causes as of cholere and then one ought to giue vnto the pacient to drynke afore hys meate syrupe of ribes syrupe of roses or syrupe of quinces wyth smythes water and in y e stede of those sirupes ▪ ye maye make a iulep thus A iulep for the fluxe humorall Take rose-rosewater buglosse and plantayne euerye one halfe a pounde of al the saunders two drammes and with a quartrō and an halfe of sugre make a iulep In the mornīg two houres afore meat it is good to giue the paciēt olde conserue of roses or a dramme of trociskes of roses after he hath dronke one of the sayde syrupes or of iulep of roses wyth a lytle of smythes water wherof the pacient ought to drynke at euery tyme when he is a thyrst Yf in the
a halfe of oyle of roses the yolke of an egge and a quarter of an ounce of barly floure a litle saffron mixe all together put it betwene two linnen clothes and lay it to the peyne An other Take of crōmes of wheaten breade whyte an ounce and seeth it in nyght shade or morel water then myxe with the said bread .ii yolkes of egges oile of roses and camomil of eche an oūce and an halfe muscilage of lineseede an ounce and vse it as is aforesayd An other Take syxe leaues of henbane roste them then beate them verye wel in a morter and laye them to the peyne For rednes of the eyes In the begynnyng of the rednes laye vpō the eyes towe dypped in y e white of egges but let y e whites be wel beaten fyrste wyth rose-rosewater or with plātayne water An other Take redde roses and seeth them and let them be set warme to your eie Thys taketh awaye spottes of bloud that sometyme chaunceth in the eyes Also it is good for al diseases of the eyes And it is good for rednes of the eies that commeth by stryking or any suche vyolence If at any time there happen a spot or blemishe in the eye by a stroke ye muste lay to it by by towe wet in rosewater and in whytes of egges and after that the peine be mitigate ye muste lay a playstre vpon the eye made of a rawe egge barlye floure and the iuyce or muscilage of mallowes and then yf the eye be not holpen of the sayd bloud ye must laye to it a plaster both dissolutiue defensiue and partlye appeysyng the peine which must be made of whete floure y e iuice of mallowes mintes smalach and the yolke of an egge Of hardenesse that hath bene long in the eye Take a scruple of aloes succotrine melt it in water of celydony at y e fyre then receyue the fume of it and afterwarde wash the eie with fenel water An other Take poudre of cumyne myxt wyth waxe lyke a plaistre and laye it vpon the eye An other Take red roses sage rue celedonie of eche a lyke muche with a lytle salte and distill a water and putte therof a drop or two in your eye euenyng and mornynge In steade of that water it is good to take iuyce of verueine rue and a lytle rosewater For all rednesse of the eyes Take the bygnesse of a nut of white copperose and a scruple of yeros and poudre it and mixt it with a glasse ful of well water then putte two or thre droppes in your eyes For the same Water of strawburies made and put in the eye is good A singuler poudre that dryeth and taketh awaye rednesse of the eyes TAke tutie preparat an oūce and timonie halfe an ounce perles two drammes red coral a dram and an halfe pouldre al these thinges verye fyne and kepe them in a box of tynne and vse it For to stoppe wateryng of the eyes MAke a plaister of poudre of mastike fyne frankensence boole armoniake and gūme dragagante with whites of egges myxte together layde to the foreheade tēples Also it is good to set ventoses on the nape of the necke Also it is good to make a co●rie to put into the eyes as foloweth Take tutie preparat the stone called lapis hematites of ech a drāme aloes halfe a drām perles and camphore of eche a scruple pouder them all very fine and myxe them in thre oūces of water distilled of the knoppes of rooses and thereof make a collirie Also for to stoppe al humoures descendyng to the eyes these thynges aforesayde are verye good myxte wyth rayne water wherin olibanum or frākenscence hath bene sodden ¶ For webbes of the eye IT maye bee casylye holpen in younge folkes but in aged persons it is veraye harde And in the begynnyng ye muste mollifye them with a decoction of the floures of camomyl mellilote cole leaues receiuyng the fume of the said decoction within the eyes and then put therin a litle pouder made with sugercandye sall gemme and egges shelles burnt and afterward distyl into them womans mylke with the decoction of fenugreke ¶ An other singuler receate for webbes in the eyes Take snayles with the shelles on and wash them eyght tymes and distil them ī a commune stillatory then take hares galles redde corall and sugercandye with the saide water dystylle them agayne and put euery mornyng and euenyng a droppe in your eye ¶ An other water This water is made of white coperose suger candy and rosewater with whites of egges that are sodden hard all streyned through a linnen cloth put into your eye after diner and all nyght to bedwarde Regiment for them that haue any sore eyes Ye must alwaye kepe youre belly lose and abstayne from fyre smoke wynde dust and ouer hote or colde ayre frō wepyng and longe readyng of a small letter from ouer long watchyng ouer muche drinkyng of wyne and eatinge late for al these are very noisome to y e eyes and syghte Also all euaporatiue thinges as onions lekes garlike mustard pease and beanes are very daūgerous Ye must kepe your fete cleane and forbeare the daye sleape Beholde grene thynges cleare water precious stones and to kepe you from lōg holdyng downe youre face socoureth the syghte very muche and is verye good for the eyes Likewise vse meates of good quicke digestion as to eat senel often and after meat take coriander comfites prepa●ated and drinke not after them But aboue al kepe awai your handes for the rubbing of them maketh them worse and worse ¶ Remedie for dyseases of the eares TAke oyle of roses a litle vineger and put it into the eare thē make a bagge of camomill and mellilote and laye it thereunto ¶ For noyse and soundyng of the eares Take pullule cochie ▪ or fetide because the sounde procedeth of ventositye or of phlegme and before ye take the sayde pylles it is good to drynke thre ounces of fenell water .ii. houres before meat .iiii. or .v. dayes After the operacion of the sayd pylles ye muste dippe a tente in oyle of rue castor or of salte with the iuice of lekes and often in the mornyng fastynge to holde hys eare ouer the warme decoction of maiorim rue wormewood camomil and mellilote ¶ For peyne in the eares Gose grece wyth a lytle honye swageth the paynes of the eares ¶ Also the chestwormes sodden in oyle of roses vpon hoate asshes in the rynde of a pomegranate and dropped in the eares ¶ Item oyle of almondes specially of the bitter almondes hoate ¶ Item if there be water in the eares it shall bee hadde out with a litle gose grece and the iuyce of onyons ¶ Also earth wormes with gose grece soden is good for payne in the eares Item an adders haine sodden in wine and y e eare bathed in it a litle thereof put into the payne is good to take
Take diayris symple eat a lozeng of thesame at morne and also at night An other remedye for horcenesse of a long continuaunce Take raysons fygges suger cinamome and cloues of euery one a litle Seeth them in good wine of the which ye shal geue to drinke morning and eueninge .ii. ounces at a tyme except he hath a feuer For the same It is good to take morning and euenyng a sponeful of the syrupe of iu●bes myxte with a roote of liquirice in maner of aloc If with the sayd horcenes there descend aboundaūce of water to y e mouth it is good to make an electuarye of halfe diayris and halfe diadragantum and to vse it firste and last after perfumyng wyth stoupes of flaxe fumed with frankinsēce mastike sandrake and storax calamite laide vpon the head warme Remedye for the cough Take ysope great raysins and fygges of eche a litle handefull licorice one ounce boyle them in water til the thyrd part be wasted then geue it him for to drinke twyse a day in the morning two houres before meate and at nyghte one houre beefore supper and immediatlye after it is good to eate a lozenge of diayris or diapenidion If ye wil haue it stronger put to them in the decoction a lytle coole woortes anyse and fenell with the sedes of nettelles of eche two drammes An other remedie Take sugercandy white pilles dyayris diadragagant of euerye one .i. ounce licorice .ii. drāmes make a pou●er and let hym eate therof a sponful mornyng and euening and drinke after it three ounces of water of Isope or of scabious with suger or without suger In stede of those waters ye may take the broth of redde colewoortes wythout salte An other remedye Take sirupe of liquirice and of ysope and drinke it euen and morne wyth a ptisane or one of y e same sirupes with a sponefull of ptisane is good An other Take pouder of diayris simple and liquirice of eche a dramme weighte with foure ounces of suger make an electuarye to be eaten fyrste and laste and after meate An other It is good to take loc sanum with a stycke of liquirice at the coughynge and after meate And there is an other loc called loc de pino as good at all times as y e other is And it is good to annoynt the breast mornyng and euenynge wyth oyle of lylyes swete almons and maye butter without salt Here is to be noted that commonly y e coughe procedeth of colde humours that greueth the longes and for that cause all thynges the whiche be hote swete and do poruoke spittel are very good and holsome for thesame as bee the thynges afore rehearsed And sometyme it procedeth of heat thē it is knowē by the great alteration or feuer then ye must forbyd the pacient drinkyng of all wines and to vse the thinges y t hereafter foloweth Remedy against the coughe comming of a hote cause Take syrupe of violettes and of iuiubes and drynke thereof morninge eueninge with a litle ptisane sodden For thesame It is good to take fyrste and laste a lozenge of diadragagant afterward to drynke a draught of good ptisane A good receite agaynst the coughe Take the rote of Enula campana horehounde holihock of eche a lyke moch seeth them altogyther in white wyne wyth a dosen of fatte fygges a litle liquirice drinke of it a draught euerye daye twyse ¶ Regiment or dyet for them that haue the cough Ye must abstaine frō vinegre veriuce all salte meates frutes and rawe herbes fyshe lymons grosse meates and to muche repletion Also ye maye drinke no wyne betwene meales and beware of daye slepe and specially after meate The wynde the colde and much talkynge are verye vnnaturall for y e coughe and so is all laboure aswell of the bodye as of the mynde and some tyme it is good to holde your wynde● lytle and let it go agayne ¶ Remedyes agaynste shortnes of the wynde SHortnes of the winde procedeth often tymes of fleume that is coughe and clāmishe hangyng vpon y e longes or stopping the condites of y e same being in the holowenes of the breste or of catarrous humours y t droppeth downe into the longes and therby cōmeth straitnesse in drawing of the breth which is called of phisicions dispnoca or asthma when y e pacient can not bend his necke down for drede of suffocaciō it is called orthopnoca For euery one of these diseases ther be very holsome medicines declared here afore ¶ The receyte for Asthma Take an ounce of great raisins picked frō the kernelles two figges the meat of a date dry isope maydenhere licorice and the longes of a foxe wasshed in wyne water of scabiouse of euery one a dramme penidies .ii. oūces with sirup of licorice let al be ī corporated make a loc to eat a good while after meate wyth a sticke of lycorice ¶ An other receyte Take horehounde maydenhere and ysope of euery one a hādful liquirice dates fygges seed of smalache and of fenel of euery one half an ounce boile them in a pinte of water and an halfe tyl the thyrde parte be consumed After gyue hym the sayde decoccion to drinke a good draught euery morning two houres afore meat And before it or incōtinently after it it is good to take asmoche as a chesnut of conserue of colewortes or a lozeng of diaysopi or diairis Salomōis Also loc de pulmone vulpis is excedynge good for the sayde disease ¶ An ointmēt for shortnes of breath Take .ii. ounces of oile of swete almōdes one of maye butter vnsalted a lytle saffron and of newe waxe make an oyntment wherewyth ye shall annoynte the brest morne and euen ¶ Regiment Considering y e sayde disease commeth of to greate aboundaunce of fleume in the lōges it is good to obserue the thinges that are shewed in y e remedyes of the cough And to dwell in a dry place farre from water pooles or marishes and to slepe in a moyste chābre in the whyche ye muste haue a fyre of wood without smoke The bread must be light and pleasaunt for sour bread browne bread and crustes are to be auoided Also ye may eate no pease benes nuttes chestnuttes nor any thing that stoppeth or engendreth wynde Fysshe rosted vpon the grydyron may well be suffred for they be not so euil Hulled barly ryse broth of colewoortes and broth of an old cocke with Isope saffron are speciall good meate for the longes and so are fatte figges raysins of alican dates graynes of y e pyne pignolate and swete almondes Greate mouinges and chafynges and sodaine laboure is verye euyl yet moderat exercise afore meate is good and profytable Rennynge anger and such other passions that enflame y e hert are in thys case vtterly to be auoyded ¶ Remedyes for the pthisycke PThisis is an vlceration of the longes by the which al the body falleth into consūption in suche wyse that it wasteth al saue
the skyn Ye maye knowe him that hath a pthisicke for from day to day he waxeth euer leaner and drier and his hear falleth and hath euer a cough and spitteth somtime matter and bloody strīges wythall And yf y e whych he spytteth be put into a basī of water it falleth to the bottome for it is so heauye Galene speaking of thys disease sayeth it is vncurable But when he was in Rome he gaue coūsaile to thē that had the pthisickes to dwel in the mountaynes and hye places far from waters watry groūdes and so theyr life shulde be prolonged but at the last they dyed of the same disease Neuerthelesse it is good to release the paine and to helpe thē as much as it is possible And the thyng that is most holsome for the same is to drynke euerye mornyng a draught of asses milke iii● houres afore meat in the place whe● of one maie take the milke of a goate newlye milked and mixe them euery tyme wyth a sponeful of poudre made of sugre of roses And it is good euery tyme to vse cōserue of roses pignolat diadragagantum and annoīt the brest before and behind wyth oile of swete almondes maye butter and salte An other remedy proued by a religious man Take two ounces of pimpernell in poudre and therof make an electuary with sugre vse it euery morning .ii. drammes with pimpernell water .iii. ounces Water of snailes distilled is proued good to them that be pthisike euerye morning in drinke for all thē that are drye and leane An other Take the .iiii. colde seedes seede of ●uinces of eche .iii. drāmes a halfe ▪ whyte popye seed .v. drāmes the iuce of liquirise ysope amidum gūme arabike and dragante of eche a dramme and an halfe penidies the weyghte of them all make a poudre and vse euery morninge .ii. drammes and after take two sponefulles of syrupe of iuiubes or ī stede of it drinke y e ptisan of water of vngula caballina otherwise called horsehofe The poudre wherof is good for y e pthisike wherwith Haly saith y t he healed a mōke of y e same sicknesse Regiment for pthisyke Ye oughte to doe as hath ben sayde in regimente of Asthma and to abstayne from all spices saue saffron Ye muste likewise abstayne from al sowre thinges sharpe thinges tarte nor be not hungry nor drye but cherysh you wel with meates of easie digestion good norishment suche as is coleys of capons hulled barlye almon mylke egges yolkes veale kidde lambe shepes fete and small birdes liuing in wodes and bushes creauises fyshe of swete runnyng water hauing scales Snayles in the shelles sodde with fenel and ysope is very good Ye must lyue merilie playe at some pastime for pleasure wythout labouringe He oughte to abstayne from laxatiue medicines bycause that it is sayd Cum ●uor excedit mors intrat vita recedit whiche is contrarye to asthma for therin it is good euer to be lose bellyed ¶ For the pleuresye Hereafter shalbe spoken of medicynes for diseases of the ribbes And for plainer knowledge of the same ye shal vnderstande that somtime in the skinnes that couer the rybbes ther gathereth to gether bloud and cholerike humours which engēdre apostemes called pleuresie it maye be knowen by iiii maner of signes Fyrst the pacient hath a great burnyng feuer Secondly the ribbes are so sore within as if thei wer pricked cōtinually with nedilles Thyrdly the pacient hath a short breathe The .iiii. signe is a strong cough wherewyth the sycke is vexed and by these sygnes maye ye surelye knowe a right pleuresie that is ī the skin vnder the rybbes within the bodye But there is an other kynde of pleuresie wythout vpon the rybbes aposteined but in that is nothyng so greatte daunger nor the fyeuer is not so strōg as is the other afore rehearsed Remedye The pacient oughte to be let bloud on the liuer veyne in y e contrary arme from y e syde that is diseased After the begynnyng of the sore tyll the thyrde daye and after that if the pacyente be not feble let hym bloud agayne vpō y e same syde that the sore is Moreouer the pacient ought to laye vpon y e sore syde euery daye an earthen bottel ful of warme water and to annoynte his ribbes with oile of camomyl warme And he ought to take a glister of chickynes brothe milke cassia oile of violettes and hony of roses yf his bellye be harde And in stede of that glister it is good to take an ounce of cassia .i. houre before diner in a lozenge or destempered with a ptisane or els wyth water of scabiouse An other remedy Take of brome floures of scabiouse and the great thistle called cardo benedictus of euery one a like porciō meddle them togyther and let him euerye morning and euening receyue a good draught and annoynt the ribbes with oile of bromfloures it shal be good An other singuler remedye Take .iii. ounces of water of our ladye thystle one sponefull of whyte wyne and sixe inner whytes of egges well brayed myngle all togither and laye them playsterwyse vpon the ribbes as hote as ye maye suffre An other experte remedye Take .ii. good hādfulles of horsedong two racis of ginger in pouder and thē wrappe wel the donge the ginger togither in a clene linnen cloth thē putte them in a newe potte to boyle with i● pintes of whyte wyne vntyl y e thyrde parte be consumed drinke a draught of the sayde drynke euery mornyng after ye haue dronke the said wine couer ye aswel as is possible and sweate Regyment for the pleuresy The paciēt ought not to drinke wyne ▪ nor eate flesshe but muste be cōtent to drinke ptisane barly water weake drynke to eate barly hulled milke of almons clarified rosted apples and great raisins as long as y e feuer dothe last And for to helpe hym to spit it is good to vse often white pilles diadragagantū suger candye and other thinges sayde in the remedy of the cough For diseases in the ribbes whiche is not pleuresie There chaunceth often tymes a dysease in the rybbes whyche they call a bunch whych commeth of ventositie wherefore it is good to apply thereto hote thīges as a tost of bread very hot a litle bagge of otes baye salt fried togyther or of hony whyche is better Also it shall be good to put there a sponeful of hote asshes and herbes of horehounde rue wormewode margerym ysope bayes and camomylle Another remedy for the same Take the rotes of colewort hoppes of eche an ounce verueyne mugworte sage myntes wormewood tāsay and motherworte of eche a handful put al in a commen styll and disti● them Kepe that water to drinke euery● morninge .ii. or .iii. ounces whyle th● peyne doth laste Another remedye Take the sayd herbes and rootes beate thē wyth whyte wyne str●ine them thorow a linnen clothe and giue vnto the
good to take euery morning before meat a lozenge of triasandaly and to drinke after it endiue water .iii ounces Regiment for heate in the liuer The pacient must abstayne frō flesh salt fish strong wine garlike onyons mustarde and such other hote meates It is good to vse broth of pease and veriuce lettuce popie spinage and borage and sometyme a litle vinegre yf he be not greued in the stomacke This regimente is good also in tyme of pestilence and of to great heate A Iulep for the heate of the liuer TAke halfe a .li. of rose-rosewater one quarter of water of endiue and v. ounces of sugre make a iulep of which ye shal drynke fasting a good draught And yf ye wyl nedes drynke for thyrst betwene meales let it be myngled wyth .ii. partes of water of the well And yf ye wyll haue it more colynge adde vnto it two ounces of vinegre or the iuce of a pomegranade Yf the lyuer be colde for the phlegmatike matter that is in it the person hath his water white out of colour the face pale and his mouth watry litle bloode and feleth heuynesse about hys lyuer ¶ Remedye He oughte to drynke in the mornynge earlye .iii. or .iiii. times a sirupe called oximell diureticum wyth the decocciō of smalache and perselye or with waters of smalache and fenell and after he must take to purg the fleume a medicine made as foloweth Take syxe drammes of diafinicon if the persō be strōg or halfe an ounce if he be weake and distemper it in .iiii. ounces of the decoccion of the rootes of smalache percely fenell drinke it luke warme v. or .vi. houres afore meate In steade of the sayde medicine one maye gyue .ii. drammes of agaryke in trosciskes wyth water of smalache or els good fenel An other medicine laxatiue Take halfe an ounce of diacarthami or halfe an oūce of diaprunis laxatiue or asmuche of electuarium dulce with thre oūces of percely water smallach ysope or fenell take it fyue houres afore meate Regiment The pacient must drinke good wyne and vse ginger cinamome graynes of paradyse anyse and fenelle and hote herbes in pottage as sage ysope time maiorym and auoide all rawe frutes and also rawe herbes Moreouer it is verye good to make a playster of smallache wormewoode spikenarde in pouder with oile of dil myngle it and laye it vpon the lyuer Agaynst stoppyng of the lyuer called oppilacion OPpilation or stopping commeth sometyme in the holownesse of the lyuer and it is knowē by cōpassion and payne of the stomake and is healed by medicines laxatiue as it is declared before And sometyme the oppilacion is in the veines of the holowe parte of the lyuer and is perceiued thē by y e griefe which the pacient feleth in his backe and in his reines And it is healed by thynges that opē as by sirupes of the three rootes sirupes of bisantius syrupes of maydenheere and by drynking y e decoction of raysins fenel percely smallache cicory or waters stilled of thesame herbes Also rootes of alisaunder is good for the same c. Sometimes the said oppilacion commeth of grosse bloude earthy and melancholike whiche the members send vnto the liuer and beecause that suche engendred bloud can haue no issue nor hath any way to departe to any other mēbers therfore be y e veines of the liuer stopped vp by the grossenes of the saide bloude And it is knowen by the water y t is very hie coloured cleare ¶ Remedie Geue the paciēt medicines that perce subtile as is wine of pomegranat●s syrupe of endiue wyth the decoctiō of cicers Thē let him bloud on the liuer veine and eueri morning eat a lozenge of triasandaly Sometime y e said oppilacion cōmeth of aboundaūce of some humoure viscouse cold and flegmatike stoppyng the veines of the liuer and thē y e vrine is as clere as clere water Remedy The pacient must drynke euery mornyng the sirupe of oximel squilityke with half a draught or more of the decoctyon of rootes of smallache fenel percely Sometimes vnto women cōmeth oppilacions of y e lyuer by reteynyng of their pu●gaciōs Wherfore it is good to let them bloud on the veine called saphe● whiche is aboue on the hyer syde of the ●steppe And let them take after the chaunge of the ●one seuen or eight morninges any p●ate called Trifera magna eueri tyme an ounce And after drynke thre oūces of waters of mugwort hysope and fenell or the decoction of these ●erbes or elles the rootes aperityue which be smallache percely fenel alisaunder and asperage boyled in water wyth the thirde parte of odoryferous whyte wyne ¶ Medicines for the lyuer that may be easely had at al times Take a good handeful of liuerworte that groweth vpon the stones and an other of fumetorye wyth as muche of hartestonge and seeth them in whaye clarefyed and drinke them euery daye twyse The liuer of an hare dried and made in pouder is good for all diseases of y e liuer as affirmeth Auicenne and other of the Arabians Also for heate in the liuer seeth barberies in whey and drinke them ¶ The .vij chapter againste the dyseases of the gall THe gal is placed in the holownesse of the lyuer to receyue the superfluitye of cholere and to sende it to the bowels to be auoided with the grosser excrementes to thintente to clense the bloud of the saide cholere To the which there commeth oftentymes oppilacions in the parties about by the liuer or beneth in it selfe next the bowels causyng great paine by reason whereof the cholere turneth agayn vnto the lyuer and there is mēgled with y e bloud and spred abrod into all the veines of the body and bredeth a dysease named iaundis ictericia in latin wherof be thre kyndes ▪ y t is to saye yelowe iaundis that procedeth of cholere called citrine or yelow grene iaūdis which procedeth of grene cholere and blacke iaundis that proceth of blacke choler whiche is called melancholy and commonly commeth of the oppilacion of the splene Remedye for iaundis Yf the iaundis happen in an ague before the seuenth daye the pacient is in great daunger of his lyfe as Hipocrates sayth But yf it appeare in the sixth daye being a day iudicial or cretike of the ague or after it is a verye good sygne And then ye must succoure nature in refreshyng and digesting the choler with sirupe of violettes geuen in the morning wyth water of morel or syrupe of endiue with water of cicorye After this purge the cholere as is sayd in remedies of the liuer And thā geue him a lozenge of triasādali with reubarbe euerye morning two houres before meat and drinke a litle waters of endiue and cicorye afore the sayde lozenge Moreuer it is good to bathe the liuer as it is saide afore and washe the pacientes eyes with vinegre and womans mylke drinke a ptisane made of barly liquirice prunes and y e rootes of
sayd fluxe ther be egre matter and the strength of the paciēt any thyng constaunt ye maye minister the ●a●atorie that hereafter ensueth Take redde roses barly plantayne of euery one a handful seth them and in the streynyng adde .ii. ounces of oyle of roses one ounce of honey of roses and the yolke of an egge and giue it in the maner of a glister Sometyme it is expedient to take a medicine by the mouth and it is made as thus A medicine for the fluxe Take the ryndes of myrabolane citrine bakē one dramme reubarbe a litle dryed vpon a tile halfe a dramme syrupe of quinces one ounce water of plantaine .iii. ounces myngle al togyther and lette the pacient drynke thē foure houres before meate thā giue him a glister retentiue made as thus A glyster for the fluxe Take oyle of roses of quinces of mastike of euerye one thre ounces bo●e armoniak in pouder .ii. drāmes meddle al togither giue it as a glyster Another Take the iuce of plantayne of popye of bursa pastoris and oyle of quinces of euery one .iii. ounces myngle them togyther and giue it for a glister And if the bowels be excoriat ye shal giue thys peculiar remedy Take halfe one pounde of mylke the water wherein gaddes of steale hath ben quenched y e iuce of plantaine and oile of quinces of euery one .ii. ounces bole armenye one drāme goates tallowe one oūce and make them in a glister but without vpon the stomake ye muste laye thys oyntmente that here foloweth An oyntment for the fluxe Take oyles of roses quinces mirtilles of eche an ounce oyle of mastik halfe an ounce pouder of coral nuttes of cipresse of euery one a dramme myngle all wyth waxe and make an oyntmēt Here is to be noted that the glisters that are gyuen for to stoppe a fluxe must be very litle in quantitie Ye maye heale the fluxe of dis●enteria wyth gyuyng thynges before declared for the fluxe humorall and take afore your repast .ii. drammes of cōserue of quinces or of marmelade of quinces And he ought to drinke water wherin hath bene quenched gaddes of stele ye must auoyde diuersitie of meates and geue your selfe to ease and to quiet and sleape a greate while And it is good to vse grewel clene barlye almon mylke with a litle amidum ▪ and set ventoses vpon the bellye withoute cutting whiche thynge is also good in al fluxes of the body If the saide fluxe humorall procedeth of fleume it shall appeare of the excrementes y t are watry and flegmatike and than ye ought to geue .iii. or .iiii. morninges sirupe of wormewood or of mint after purgacion as is here folowyng A purgacion for the fluxe humoral Take .ii. drāmes of mirabolanes dried on a tile halfe a scrupule of agarike in trociske halfe an ounce of sirupe of mynt or .ii. oūces of water of bawme and make a pocion that shal be receyued .iii. or foure dayes afore meate If ye wyll make a iulep take water of mynte and of bawme of euery one halfe a pounde suger a quarterne and make a iulep of the whiche one maye drynke euenynge and mornynge after meat euerye tyme a draughte Euerye mornyng it is good to take a lozenge of the electuary that foloweth ¶ A noble electuary for the fluxe Take pouder of diagalanga a dramme and a halfe of redde coral and mastik of euery one a scruple trociskes of terra sigiliata halfe a dramme the barkes of citrons comfit and quinces of euery one thre drammes suger dissolued in water of mintes .iiii. ounces make an electuarye Oyles of wormewood minte and of narde and mastike are verye holsome to annoynt withal the bellye and the stomake for the saide fluxe And the thynges declared of the flux lienteria be very good in this case t●king euer after meat a morsel of marmalade Redde wyne is verye good in this fluxe to drinke at meate with the water of a smyth and likewyse a● spyces are good for thesame purpose ¶ Medicines to restraine the fluxe of whatsoeuer cause it be TAke the peysil of an harte and drie it into pouder drinke it The water of oken buddes or the verye acornes dried and made in pouder and dronken in redde wine is very good Item the mawe of a yonge leuerette with the iuyce of plantaine is excedinge profytable ¶ The tenth chapter of diseases of the matrice FYrst againste superfluous flux of y e mother in the which ye must consyder whether it do come of to greate quantitye of bloud and then it is good for to open the veine saphena abstaine from al thinges that multiplye the bloude as egges wine and fleshe Or whether it commeth of cholere then ye muste receiue a litle sirupe of roses pomegranates or ribes with water of plantain Than purge y e choler y t geueth such sharpnes to y e bloud by .x. drammes of trifera sarracenica wyth two ounces of plantayn water or the medicine of reubarbe wrytten in the treatise of the fluxe humorall After purgacion ye maye geue euery morning a lozenge of triasandaly or a dramme of trosciskes of roses in pouder after drinke twoo ounces of plantayne water And yf suche fluxe of the matrice happen of the watrinesse of bloude geue her to drinke foure or .v. morninges hony of roses with a litle water of wormwod afterward purge her with a dramme and a half of agarike in trosciskes and halfe an ounce of trifera sarasenica myxte with water of minte and of wormewood Ye may know the causes of the sayd fluxe by annointing a threde or cloute in the saide bloud for if it hath the coloure of vermilon it sygnifyeth that the flux commeth of to much bloud If it appere a litle yelowe it sygnyfyeth that the disease commeth of y e subtilytye and sharpenes of the bloude ouercome with choler And if it hath a coloure like the water in whiche newe flesshe is wasshed it betokeneth the bloude is much watrye And after ye haue purged the principal cause of the dysease youre seconde intencion shalbe by and by to staunche the saide issue Wherin also one thyng is to be noted y t yf nature be accustomed to auoid any superfluites by continual course of the saide flux it would perchaūce be inconuenient for to stop it wherefore yf ye see no ieopardye ye maye restrayne the said flux this wise ¶ Remedy for to stoppe the sayde flux Take trociskes of white amber and make them in pouder geue a drāme euery morning and anon after drinke an ounce or .ii. of water of plantayne In stedde of these trociskes ye maye make a pouder of sanguis draconis bole armeni white amber and red corall drinkynge one dramme thereof with plantaine water as is aforesaid ¶ An other medicine to staunche the sayde fluxe Take two ounces of olde conserue of roses of the seede of plantaine twoo drammes sāguinis draconis bole armeny of euerye one a dramme and
the pacient or els of smal effecte For the whiche cause it is very necessarye that the pacient kepe a sober dyet And for the better vnderstandyng ye shal know that all wynes whether they be swete or sharpe grosse or subtyl white or redde are in this case vtterly re●ected Pulses also of what kinde soeuer they be as pease beanes and such and al grosse fleshe and water foules and foules of greate bodies as bustardes cranes and suche lyke are in this case very daungerous and noysome Also ye may eat no kynd of fruites except it be a few melons ripe prunes in smal quantitie and pomegranades with a litle suger and coriandres Of herbes ye maye eat borage buglosse percely lettuse mintes ▪ spinach and succorye in broth of veale or of a yonge chicken Nepes also and rapes and radyshe in a smal quantitye maye be wel inough permitted Potched egges are verye good in this case with a litle vergeous but in anye wyse beware of hard chese for that is oftentimes the onely cause of the sayd stone All shell fishes are to be auoided excepte it be a creuyshe or a shrympe measurably taken Ye muste also take hede that ye eat no pepper nor hote spices ▪ nor no meates that are salte soure or heauye of dygestion and that ye lye not on youre backe on nightes when ye are aslepe And ye ought to kepe your raines cold and moyst and to let youre backe bee vntrussed in the sommer After ye haue vsed this regiment or dyet by a certain season it shalbe good for you to take an ounce of cassia newlye drawen out of the cane and eate it with a litle suger in the morning This ye muste vse euery seconde weke til in time your reines be metely wel cleansed of the same and euerie daye eate a litle cassia vpon a knifes poynte to kepe your bellye moyst for that is one of the thynges that are moste required in the sayd cure And at diuers other times when ye be disposed ye may take a litle of this receite hereafter whiche hathe greate vertue to mundifye the raines and to bring the humours to equalitye with releasyng of the payne and bringynge out the grauell ¶ A goodly sirupe to mundifie the reynes Take the broth of a yonge chicken sodden tyl the bones fal a sondre thre pounde melon seedes a litle brused an ounce percelye rootes and alisaundre rotes .iii. ounces damaske prunes sepesten of eche .vi. in nombre greate raysyns halfe an ounce cleane licorice x. drāmes waters of borage endiue and hoppes of eche .iii. drammes and wyth sufficient white suger boyle thē al vnto the consumpcion of the halfe and more and afterwarde streine thē and make a goodly sirupe This is a thyng of excellent operation and an hye secrete in mundifying of the reines if ye kepe the diete as is afore described The dose of it is one cyath or a lytle cupful in the morning earlye and slepe after it a lytle If ye wold haue the forsayd sirupe to purge more choler then put in it a dramme of fyne reubarbe with a lytle cassia ¶ Hereafter foloweth a pouder of excellent operacion in breakynge of the stone ▪ TAke the kernels that are within sloes drye thē on a tyle stone then make of them a pouder by it selfe after that take the rotes of alisāder percely parietarie and hollihocke of euerye one a like moch and seeth thē al in whyte wyne or els in y e broth of a yonge chicken then streine them out into a cleane vessel and whē ye drynke of it adde as moch of the said pouder as ye thynke conuenyent halfe a syluer spoonefull or more for wythout doute it hath great effecte in bryngyng out the grauell ¶ An other experte medicine for them that haue the stone There groweth in the galles of some oxen a certayne yelowe stone some tymes in bygnesse of a walnut somewhat longe bryttle Yf ye take that stone make of it a pouder eate it in your pottage the weyght of one scrupule or more accordīg to your strēgth it is a singuler medicine to them y t can not pisse for stopping of y e conduites ¶ An other singuler medicine for the stone Take the seedes of smallache percely louage and saxifrage the rotes of philipendula chery stones gromell seede and brome seede of euerye one a lyke moche make them in fine pouder and when ye be diseased with y e stone eate of this pouder a sponefull at ones in pottage or in brothe of a chycken and eate nothyng after .ii. or .iii. houres ¶ The .xii. chapter of remedyes for the goute THe paine in y e ioītes of a mans body as in y e handes feete is generally called arthritis or goute which procedeth som time of debility of y e synowes being lasshe vnable to cōsume the humours that continually do flowe vnto them And for the mooste parte they are all deriued from the membre mandant y t is to saye the brayne for he is verye grosse and engendreth euer humours in him selfe by reason wherof moche of the sayde humours are deriued into the nuke and muscles of the backe fro thence they descende into y e feete and then it is called podagra or to the huckle boone and thē it is sciatica or els into y e hādes ther it is chiragra ¶ Remedy Forasmuch as all the sayd kyndes commeth of one begynnyng as is shewed afore and for the better expediciō in that we wyll be brefe ye shal fyrste take awaye the superfluous moysture of the brayne whiche is the roote and fountayne of al the sayd diseases and that ye may do foure maner of waies The fyrst is obseruaunce of dyete inclynyng towarde drynesse to auoide all fulnesse of meate and drynke and not to slepe in any wyse shortlye after meate And ye muste beware y t ye eate no vaporous meates nor thyn wyne nor drynke moch after supper And yf perchaunce y e peyne be very sharpe it shalbe moche holsome to the pacient to abstaine from all kyndes of wine to vse hym selfe to smal drinke which thyng yf he can not do then let hym drinke claret wine mixed with a good quantitye of water The second is to purge the brayne ones a moneth wyth the one halfe of pilles of cochies and an other halfe of pylles assagareth And in tyme of haruest of somer with pilles sine quibus and pilles imperiall whereof ye shal gyue one dramme y e night before the full moone and the daye folowing ye may gyue hym to eate a litle broth of cicers with a litle quantitie of raisins of the sunne The thyrde is to represse the fumes that ascend into y e brayne after meate which thyng may wel be done by eatynge of a lyttle dredge ▪ made of anis seed and coriander The fourth is to perfume the braine with certeyne thynges confortatyue as for example thus ¶ A good perfume agaynst moistures
vehement as well after meat as afore he maye wel drinke a draughte of sodden water with the iuyce of orenges limons citrons or of sowre apples wel mīgled together to quēch y e venimous fumes that might ryse vp to the brayne And yf the paciente be younge and stronge hauyng a good stomake hole winded hoate of complexion and in tyme of heate not subiecte to the colike nor to none hydropsye nor apostomes in the bowelles he maye drynke a good draughte or twoo of cleare and colde water commynge out of a rocke or of a runnynge water or of a faire spring For when nothynge elles can mytygate the thyrste yet wyll cleare water by lytle and lytle dymynishe all the heate But ye must beware ye take no greate excesse Aptisane with suger of roses is verye good to drinke betwene meales The pacient oughte not for to sleape duringe the fyrste .xxiiii. houres and in the time y t he receiueth his medicines Afterward he mai slepe a litle at once to comforte the weakenesse of the spirites and he ought euery daye to go to syege once And aboue al other thynges let him not dispayre but bidde him be of good comfort and doubt not of his health so he take no thought but as much as is possible make him to reioise as wel by communicacion as by musike and bringyng in vnto hym good and holesome herbes fruites boughes and other thynges of coumforte but yet notwithstanding see that he remember God and notforget his own cōscience for in this sickenesse the worst is euer to be feared ¶ The thyrde Chapter of the cure of pestilence by the waye of medicine AS soone as euer ye fele your self infect take of y e poudre of bole armoniake in maner and forme afore declared or of y e blacke receite the weyghte of halfe a crown more or lesse according to the vertue of the pacient myngled with the water of roses and a litle vineger as is sayde afore and drinke it all at one draught And if ye can not get the foresaid pouder or paraduenture ye wil abhorre to take it thē drink a litle pocion of y e receit folowing which is very excellēt ¶ A receit against the pestilence TAke y e rote of turmētile dryed in the shadowe of saffron and of mustarde sede asmuch of one as of an other make of them a pouder and incorporate it with the thyrde part of mithridatum or of fyne triacle wyth a lytle stronge venyger ī maner of an opiate kepe it in an earthen vessell close and in tyme of nede vse it The weighte of it at once is frō halfe a dramme vpwarde ▪ This receite woorketh more vpon the venime then it doth vpō the feuer And euery daye folowing it is good to take a litle sirupe of limons with water of sorell or of matfelo● or of oure lady thistle And he that hathe none of the sayde sirupes let hym vse the waters of the same herbes or the good water that I haue discribed in the chapter of medicines preseruatiues Auicenne sayeth that whosoeuer taketh an onyon drynketh it in mylke fastyng in a mornyng he shal bee safe that daye from all infeccyons of the pestilence Therfore some are wont to rost two or thre onions and to eat thē with vineger and browne bread nexte their heart afore they enter into anye suspecte ayre And haue founde health in their so doinge IOhannes Manardus ● man of hye knowlage in the arte of medicine and of greate auctorytye amonges al learned men describeth in his boke of Epistles a very good receit aswel preseruatiue as curatiue deuised by himself for lacke of good triacle and is of merueilous operacion as well in this disease as in healing all maner venymous woūdes both of adders snakes and other kinde of serpentes The receit of this noble medicine is this ¶ Manardus medicine for the pestilence TAke the dried bloud of a drake and of a ducke of a gose and of a kid rue fenell seede the seede of cumine dylle and of wylde nepes or gardē nepes or rapes of euery one .iii. drammes the roote of gētiane trifoile squinantum frankēsence roses dried of ech .iiii drammes White pepper and long cost valerian anyse cinamome of eche .ii. drammes myrrhe nard of eche .vi. drāmes beniamin assarum gumme armoniake of eche thre drammes aloes agarike of eche two drammes carpobalsami .xx. graynes ireos saffron reubarbe and reupontike gynger mastike of ech one dramme sticados fiue drammes Make a fyne pouder of these and with foure times asmuche of claryfied honye mingle all together and kepe it in a siluer vestel or a glasse stopped for it is an hie treasure ī such a case The dose of it is two drammes in wine or water of sorel ¶ Here foloweth an electuarye of a wonderful vertue in the tyme of pestilence THis electuarye is of so great vertue in thē that do receiue it once in .xxiiii. houres that they maye be sure from all euil infeccions of corrupte ayres and contagious all the daye after But in them that are infecte alreadye and are taken with the pestilence yf they drynke of it but one sponefull as shal bee sayde hereafter speciallye after letting bloude yf it bee conuenyent to the pacient and laye him down and sweat vpon thesame yf the venim hath not vtterly ouercome the hearte he shal vndoubtedly recouer It hath bene lately proued that after drinkynge of thesame medicine whan y e pacient made his water in an vrinal the glasse hath bruste in pieces by reason of the venime that it purged out ¶ This is the makyng of the sayde electuarye Take cinamome electe one ounce terra sigillata .vi. drāmes fine mirrhe iii. drāmes vnicornes horne .i drāme the sede and rinde of citron rootes of diptany burnet turmentille zedoary redde corall and drammes .ii. yelowe saunders .iiii. scrupules red saunders ii scruples white ben and red floures of marigoldes ana one dramme iuerye raced scabiouse beronici tunici anyse cinamome of eche .ii. drammes myrrhe nard of eche .vi. drāmes beniamin assarum gumme armoniake of eche thre drammes aloes agarike of eche two drammes carpoba●sami .xx. graynes ireos saffron reubarbe and reupontike gynger mastike of ech one dramme sticados fiue drammes Make a fyne pouder of these and with foure times asmuche of claryfied honye mingle all together and kepe it in a siluer vestel or a glasse stopped for it is an hie treasure i such a case The dose of it is two drammes in wine or water of sorel ¶ Here foloweth an electuarye of a wonderful vertue in the tyme of pestilence THis electuarye is of so great vertue in thē that do receiue it once in .xxiiii. houres that they maye be sure from all euil infeccions of corrupte ayres and contagious all the daye after But in them that are infecte alreadye and are taken with the pestilence yf they drynke of it but one sponefull as shal bee sayde hereafter speciallye after letting bloude yf it bee
wheles rennyng with much corrupcion and matter and with great peine of the face and throte drines of the toungue horcenes of voyce and in some quiuerynge of the hearte with swownyng The causes of these euil affeccions are rehersed of authours to be chiefly .iiii. Fyrst of the superfluities which might be corrupt in the womb of the mother the chylde there beyng and receiuinge thesame into the poores the whiche at that tyme for debility of nature could not be expelled but y e chyld encresyng afterward in strength bee dryuen out of the veines into the vpper skynne Secondarilye it maye come of a corrupt generacion that is to saye whan it was engendred in an euyll season y e mother being sycke of her naturall infyrmitye for such as are begotten that tyme verye seldome escape the disease of leprye The thyrde cause maye bee an euyll dyete of the nourse or of the chylde it self whan they fede vpon meates that encrease rotten humours as mylke and fyshe both at one meale lykewyse excesse of eating and drinking and surfitte Fourthly this disease commeth by the waye of contagion whan a sycke person infecteth an other and in that case it hath great affinitie with the pestilence ¶ Remedy The beste and most sure help in this case is not to meddle with anye kynde of medicines but to let nature worke her operacion notwythstandynge yf they be to slowe in commyng oute it shal be good for you to geue the childe to drinke sodden mylke and saffron so kepe hym close and warme wherby they may the soner issue foorth but in no case to administer any thynge that myght eyther represse the swelling of the skinne or to coole the heate that is within the members For yf this dysease which should be expelled by a natural accion of y e body to y e long health afterward of the pacient wer by force of medicine cowched in againe it wer euē inough to destroy the child Therfore abide y e ful breaking out of y e said wheales and then if they be not ripe ease the childes peyne by makynge a bath of holihock dyl camomil fenel if thei be ripe matter thē take fenel wormewood and sage and seeth them in water to the thirde part wherin ye maye bathe him with a fine cloth or a sponge Alwaies prouided y t he take no cold duryng the time of his sickenesse The wyne wherein fygges haue bene sod is singuler good in thesame case may be wel vsed in all times causes Yf the wheales bee outragious and great with much corrosiō and venime some make a decoction of roses plātaine in the water of oke and dissolue in it a litle englishe hony camphore The decoction of water betonye is approued good in the sayed diseases Likewise y e ointment of herbes wherof I made menciō ī y e cure of scabbes is exceding holsome after the sores are rype Moreouer it is good to droppe in the pacientes eyes .v. or vi tymes a daye a litle rose or fenell water to coumforte the syght leste it be hurte by continual rennīg of matter This water must be ministred in the sommer colde in the wīter ye ought to apply it luke warm Thesame rose water is also good to gargle in his mouth yf the chylde bee then payned in the throte And lest the condites of y e nose should be stopped it shalbe very expedient to let him smel often to a sponge wete in the iuce of sauerye strong vineger and a litle rose water To take away the spottes scarres of the smal pockes and measels The bloude of a bull or of an hare is much commēded of authours to be annointed hote vpon the scarres also y e licour y e issueth out of shepes clawes or goates clawes het in the fier Item the dripping of a cignet or swanne laid vpon the places oftentimes hote Feuers YF the feuer vse to take the chylde with a great shakyng and afterwarde hote whether it be cotidian or tercian it shall be singuler good to geue it in drinke the blacke seedes of Peony made in fine pouder searced and mingled with a litle suger Also take plantain fetherfew and verneine and bath the chyld in it once or twyse a daye binding to the pulces of the handes and fete a plaister of y e same herbes stamped and prouoke the child to sweate afore the fitte commeth Some geue counsell in a hote feuer to applye a colde plaister to the breast made in this wyse Take the iuyce of wormewood plantain mallowes and housleke and temper in them asmuche barly floure as shal bee sufficiente and vse it Or thus and more better in a weake paciente Take drye roses and pouder them then temper the pouder with the iuice of endiue or purcelane rose water and barly floure and make a plaister to the stomake Item an ointmente for hys temples armes and legges made of oyle of roses and populeon of eche like muche A good medicine for the ague in children Take plantaine with the roote and wash it then seeth it in fayre runnyng water to the thirde parte whereof ye shal geue it a draught yf it bee of age to drinke with sufficiente suger laye the sodden herbes as hote as maye be suffred to the pulses of the handes and fete Thys must be done a litle afore y e fit afterward couer it with clothes The oyle of nettles wherof I spake in the title of stifnes of limmes is exceding good to annointe the members in a colde shaking ague of the griefe Yf there be muche inflāmacion or heate in the coddes ye may make an oyntment of plantaine the whyte and yolke of an egge and a porcion of oyle of roses styrre them wel aboute applye it to y e grefe twise or thrise a day When the paine is intollerable and the child of age or of strong complexion yf the premisses wil not helpe ye shal make a plaister after this sorte Take henbane leaues an handful and an halfe mallowe leaues an handfull seeth them well in cleare water then stampe them and styrre them and with a litle of the brothe beane floure barly floure oyle of roses and camomyl sufficient make it vp and set on the swelling luke warme Henbane as Auicēne sayth is excedynge good to resolue the hardnes of the stones by a secret qualitye Notwithstandyng yf it come of winde it shalbe better to vse the sayde plaisters y t are made with comine for that is of a singuler operaciō in dissoluyng winde as affirmeth Dioscorides writyng of the qualities of cumine Of sacer ignis or chingles IN Greke herisipelas and of the Latines Sacer ignis oure Englishe women call it the fyre of Saynt Anthony or chingles it is an inflammacion of members wyth exceding burnynge and rednesse harde in the feelyng and for the moste parte crepeth aboue the skynne or but a lytle depe within the fleshe It is a grieuous paine may be likened
Melancholye whych humours are called y e sonnes of the Elementes because they be complexioned lyke the four elementes For lyke as the ayre is hote and moyste so is the bloud hote and moyst And as fyer is hote and dry so is choler hote drye And as water is colde and moist so is phlegme colde and moiste And as the yearth is colde and dry so melācholy is colde and dry Whereby it apereth that there be nyne complexions Whereof .iiii be symple y t is to wete hote colde moyst and dry and .iiii. cōplexions compounde that is hote and moyst which is the complexion of the ayre and of blood Hote dry whiche is the complexion of the fyre and of cholere Colde and moist which is the cōplexcion of the water of phlegme and colde and dry that is the complexion of earth and of melancholie The nynth complexion is temperate neyther to hote nor to colde nor to moyst nor to drye whych yet is a thing very seldome sene amonge men After the phisicions the sayde foure humours gouerne rule euery one in his place and enduce mē to be of the complexions folowyng ¶ The complexion of the phlegmatyke Phlegme enclyneth a man to be well fourmed a sleper dul of vnderstandyng full of spattle full of coloure ¶ The cōplexcions of the sanguyne Blood causeth one to be full of fleshe liberall amyable curtyse merye inuentyue bolde lecherous of red coloure ¶ The cōplexcions of the cholerike Cholere causeth a mā to be hastye enuyous couetous subtyle cruell a watcher prodigall leane and of yelowe coloure ¶ The complexions of the melancholyke Melancholy maketh one Solytarye Soft spirited Fearfull Heauye Curyous Enuious Couetous Blacke of coloure ¶ These be the foure humours wherof the bodyes are compounded euery one of them hath a special dominiō in respect of al the other according to the age that is to say from a mannes natiuitie til he come to .xxv. yeres the bloud hath most power and from that time to the yeare of his age .xxxv. raygneth the Choler for then commethe heate into the vaynes and the choler begynneth to aryse and be strong Then cōmeth myddle age and bryngeth forthe melancholye an humoure colde and dry and hath his enduraūce tyl fyfty yeres or ther about at which tyme all the humours of the body begynne to diminyshe and the naturall heate by lytle and lytle dothe abate And thē succedeth olde age vnto deth in the which age phlegme hath y e prīcipal power and dominion Wherfore it shalbe necessarye for al that be of y e age to cōfort their bodyes with some natural heate and meates of good noryshyng as yolkes of egges potched good and yonge fleshe wheate bread good wyne and all suche thynges as engendre good bloud and spirites whereof we entende by the sufferaunce of God to declare more aboundauntly hereafter ¶ Here followeth the descripcion of inwarde and outwarde diseases wyth the moste holsome and expert remedies for the cure therof appropriat to euery membre thoroughout the body The fyrste chapter of the sickenesse and remedyes of the heed HEad ache chaunceth often times of diuers and sondry causes as of bloud cholere fle●●e or melancholy or of ventositye and sometimes of heat of the sunne or of to great cold of y e aire Ye maye knowe heade ache when it commeth of bloude for in the face and eyes there appeareth a darke redenes prickyng and heauines with heat Remedye Ye must let hym bloude on the head veine on that side that the peine is on then laye vpon the place oyle of roses vineger and rose water or a bag with roses sprinkeled with rose water And here is to be noted as wel ī this cause as all other that yf his belly be harde and bounde fyrst ye must geue him an easye glister or elles halfe an ounce of Cassia newly drawen out of the cane or some other easye laxatyue to prouoke the duety of the womb els al applicacions of medicines wyll bee nothyng worth at all One maie know heade ache that procedeth of cholere when in the face ther is a clere rednes enclining somewhat towarde yelowe holownesse of y e iyes the mouth drye and hote And sometymes bytternesse small reste greate heate with sharpe paine chief●y on the ryght syde of the head ¶ Remedye Ye muste geue hym morne and euen to drinke sirupe of violettes or pomegranades with a meane draught of endiue water in a glasse or of comin water sodden and cooled agayne And in stead of these sirupes ye maye drynke water of endiue succorye purcelane nenuphar myngled together or one of them by them self two or .iii. daies at euenyng and morning Then geue a drāme of pillule sine quibus at night to bedwarde or about midnight the day folowing kepe you ī your chāber In stede of those pilles it is good euery mornīg to take an houre afore sūne a medicine to drynke y t shall be made of halfe an ounce of Succo rosarum mixt with two ounces of water of endiue In steade of the saied succo rosarum ye may take halfe an ounce of diaprunis laxatiue ye must take hede in gyuyng suche purgacions that the pacient be strōg for if he be weake ye may gyue hym but the halfe of y e sayd pylles or of the other laxatyues And yf in diminishyng the quantitie of the sayde medicines it worketh not with the pacient as it shuld it is conueniēt to gyue hym a common glister ¶ An other remedy for the same peyne Ye must laye theron a lynnen clothe moysted in rose water plantayne water morel water and vinegre or elles take the iuyce of lettuce and roses a litle vineger and warme it together and dippe therin a linnen clothe and laye it to the payne An other Ye must take the whytes of .ii. egges wyth rose water and beate it well togyther and wyth towe or flaxe lay it to y e greued place Also ye must shaue his heed and mylke thereon womans mylke that nourysheth a wenche or wasshe hys heed wyth warme water wherein haue bene sodde vine leaues sage floures of water lilies roses Also it is necessary to wash his feete legges wyth the sayde water so that the pacient haue no reume for if there be reumatike matters ye oughte nether to shaue his heed wash his legges nor to lay any colde thing or moist to his heed Ye maye knowe that fleume is cause of the peine in the heed when ye fele coldnesse with great heuinesse speciallye in the hyndre parte when one spytteth often and hath his face lyke sunne brent ¶ Remedye Ye must drynke .iii. or .iiii. morninges sirupe of sticados with water of fenel or sirupe of wormewood with a decoction of sauge and maiorym Then ye must pourge the heade from the sayde fleume wyth pillule cochie and wyth pilles of agarici or pillule auree made with one of the sayde sirupes fyue in a dramme and
said hicket take an ounce of hierapicra with water of wormwod or els pilles āte cibū .3 or 4 houres before meat eueri mornīg folowīg y e operaciō of y e said hierapicra take a lozenge of dianisi or diaciminū ▪ or els a few anise sedes carawaies ¶ Regiment for al maner hicket It is good to kepe longe and often hys breath to nese to trauayle muche to endure greate thyrste and also to sleape longe And it is good to caste cold water in the face of him that hath the hicket and to threaten him and so put him in feare and to anger hym or els to prouoke hym to heauynesse for by these thinges the naturall heat is reuoked and fortified within and causeth the hicket to cease For vomityng Vomiting commeth sometimes without great violence thereby one getteth health wherfore ye nede not geue him any remedy for it is a good acciō of the naturall vertue of the stomake Sometime vometinge commeth by a great violēt mouinge of the vertue expulsiue of the stomake for the euyll thynges conteined in thesame ¶ Remedye One maye well helpe a man to vomite geuyng hym warme water with a litle oyle to drinke or els to put the finger in his mouth very lowe or a fether wetre in oile the better to vomit and mundifye the stomake yf so be the persone haue a wide throte and that vomityng do not hurte him muche as be they that haue but smal and strayte throtes and long neckes and leane he that hath an euyl syght for al these it is euyll to vomite Sometymes vometing commeth by weakenes of the stomake caused of a hote and euil complexion ye shal heale it after this maner Remedy Take sirupe of roses quynces myrtylles wyth water sodden and colde againe or elles water of purcelane for to refresshe and quench the thirst that chaunceth commonly in suche a case And it is good to anoynt the stomake before dynner supper with an ointment made of oyle of roses and quinces wyth iuce of myntes ▪ and a lytle waxe or els to make a plaistre of mintes roses wormewood oile of roses and laye it to the stomake An other Take frakensence mastike of eche half an ounce made ī pouder and mēgle them togyther with the whyte of an egge and a lytle barlye floure then sprede it on a lytle towe and laye it to the mouth of the stomake At y e latter ende of diner it is good to take a morsell of marmalade wythout drynke Somtyme vometyng procedeth of eiul colde complexion of y e stomake ¶ Remedye Anoint the stomake with oyle of spikenarde mastike or els make an ointmente of the sayde oyles wyth a lytle mastyke corall and waxe and anoynt the stomake morning and euenynge ¶ An other medicine Make a bagge of wormewood maiorym and drye myntes of eche a litle handful cloues galingale and nutmiges of eche halfe a dramme the sayde thynges poudred and put betwyxt .ii. linen clothes with cotten enterbasted and applied vpon the stomake are of wonderful operacion In stede of this ye maye take the sayd herbes dried on an hote tilestone and put them in two linnen cloutes vpon the stomake ¶ An other maner Ye maye take a toste of breed stepe it in the iuce of myntes and cast vpon it pouder of mastyke then lay it vpon the stomacke and from thre houres to thre houres let it be renewed Otherwyse Take two handfulles of myntes and a handfull of roses sodde in wyne thā take two ounces of tosted breed and moyste it in wyne and incorporate it wyth pouder of mastike and the sayde roses myntes and make a playster wherof one parte must be layed to the stomake when the pacient would eate any meate The sayde playster is also good in all hote causes yf for the said wyne ye seeth the myntes and roses and stepe the toste in vinegre ¶ To comforte the stomake after vomytynge It is good to gyue vnto the pacient euery mornynge an ounce of sirupe of wormewood or myntes in steade of whych it is cōuenient to take a lozēge of aromaticū rosatum or diagalanga For the same Take euening and mornyng .iii. houres before meate .ii. cloues in pouder with a sponefull of the iuce of mintes or halfe a sponefull of rue dryed with a lytle wyne Also it is good to take poudre of cloues and lignum aloes the weyght of a crowne wyth wyne .ii. houres before meate ¶ A glystre for the same And here ye muste note that in all vomiting yf the pacient be harde bellied it is good to take a lēitiue glistre made of the decoccion of marche mallowes mallowes violettes and barly wyth oile of violettes home of roses and a litle cassia And yf the vomiting come of coldnes of the stomake or of cold water cōteined in it adde vnto y e saide glister wormwood ysope rue cammomylle in the sethyng And for oile of violettes take oile of camomil or of lylyes and geue the pacient a pil of mastyke before meate And ye shall vnderstande that myntes brayed and myngled wyth oyle of roses and applyed vpon the stomake is verie good for all vomiting ¶ For peyne of the stomake Ache or peyne of the stomake commeth somtymes of wynde it is called dolour extensiue the which is holpen with applyīg therto a sponge wet ī wine wherin hath ben soddē wormwood rue and camomyll Also ye maye helpe it as hath ben said in the remedy of hycket or yeaskynge and as shalbe sayd hereafter in the remedy for all peynes of the stomake Sometymes the sayde payne commeth of repletiō of humours and it is called dolor aggrauatiuus Whyche ought to be cured by purgacion in giuing of cassia newly drawen out hiera picra or pylles stomaticas or of hiera simple takyng some syrupe before the purgaciō as is shewed in the remedy of debilitie of stomake Somtymes payne of the stomake cōmeth of cholere or salte fleume verye sharpe and y e pacient hath bytter taste or salt with great thirst and he fealeth heate and mordycatiō Wherfore it is good to drynke sirupe of roses or occisaccarū simple with soddē water and coled In stede whereof ye maye take endiue water succory and purcelane with one part of wormwood water then take an euacuatyue that purgeth cholere as is sayd in the remedies for peyne of the head cōmyng of cholere or let the pacient vomite in geuing a sharpe syrupe of sorelle wyth warme water thā put his finger in his mouth so that he maye vomyt Sicke folkes often diseased in the stomake demaunde nothing elles but to take awaye the peyne not regardinge y e time while the matter may be purged by vomitīg glister or other laxes Also there caunceth sometyme so greate payne sharpe that for debilytie of vertu it is good to leaue y e cause and sticke to the swaging of the paine ▪ wherefore it behoueth to procede in maner
folowyng ¶ Remedye for all paynes of the stomake TAke camomil melilote wormwoode mallowes with theyr rootes leaues of bayes parietary and peyryalle of eche a handful lineseed a pounde fenugreke halfe a pound anees and fenel seed of eche halfe an ounce The sayde thynges brused and well sodden in water wet therin ▪ sponges and the licour wel pressed out and applied vnto y e stomake one after an other and warmyng them againe whē they begynne to cole swage all maner paynes of y e stomacke And afterward ye must annoīt the stomake with oyle of dylle and camomylle ¶ An other remedye Take an hogges bladder and fyl it of the sayde decoction and lappe it in a linnen cloth and lay it to the stomake and warme it agayne when it is cold But after ye haue made dyuerse suche applicacions Ye muste annoynte the stomake wyth the oyle aforesayde Yf the payne be remouing from place to place it signifieth it commeth of ventositi Therfore lay vnto it a bagfull of meale salte and commin dried togyther ¶ An other remedye Take a sponeful of hote asshes dewe them wyth good wyne and couer thē wyth a linnen cloth that it goe round aboute the spoone and laye it to the stomake ¶ An other remedye Take a sheue of breed metely thycke toste it and wete it in hote oyle of camomyl as hote as it commeth from y e ouen or in oyle of spyke and wrappe it in a linnen and lay it vpon y e paine ¶ An other remedye Put a great boxyng glasse vpon the nauyll and let it be there .i. houre ¶ An other remedye for payne of the stomake Take two drammes of diaciminon of dianisi of diagalanga drynke it with a litle good wyne an houre or .ii before meat To drinke two oūces of maluesye with a litle of one of y e sayd electuaries is very good for such paines as procede of coldnesse or vētosite ¶ An other remedye Take a drāme of galingale in pouder and giue it to drinke with a litle hote wyne and aboue al thynges for paine of ventositie a singuler remedye is to drinke a litle Castor with good wine ¶ An other Lykewise to drynke two houres before meate thre or foure ounces of the decoction of mītes anneis seedes comyne and fyne frankensence Also it is good to drynke an electuarye called aromaticum whereof ye maye receiue one lozenge euery mornyng fastyng ¶ An other speciall medicyne Take halfe an ounce of iuce of mintes two drāmes of y e iuice of wormwoode lignum aloes and cloues and xilo balsamum of eche in poudre half a scruple all myxt togyther dronke warme .ii. or thre houres before meat are excedyng profytable ¶ The syxt Chapter of remedyes for diseases of the liuer THe liuer is one of y e principall mēbres chefe instrumente of generacion of blood of other mēbres it lyeth on the ryght syde vnder the short rybbes y e whyche is ordeined to digest the meate the secōd tyme and thereof to make humours that nourysheth al y e membres of mānes body by his natural heat cōforted by heat of the hert But somtymes it is greued by blood in to much aboundaūce or by cholerik humours which cause to greate heate or els by fleume that doth diminysh the same ▪ A remedie for an hote lyuer Yf the lyuer be to hote bycause of to moch blood the person hath red vrine hasty pulse his veines great ful and he feleth his spattle mouth and tonge sweter then it was wont to be wherfore it is good to be let blood of the liuer veine on the right arme and to vse letuse sorelle purcelane hoppes in pottage and sometymes to drynke of y e waters of the said herbes fasting or els endiue water to refreshe y e liuer Regiment for disease of the liuer comming of blood YE muste abstaine frō drinkyng wine and eatynge of flesh and yf at meat or drīk ye muste otherwyse y e wine ought to be watred and the fleshe boiled with lettuse and sorel It is better to drinke ptysan or stale cydre eate brothe of peason almon mylke hulled barlye or rosted apples and damaske prunes whiles y e heat be diminysshed And ye ought euery daye to prouoke the duty of y e womb either by meanes of suppositorie or els other wyse Yf the liuer be ouer hote by cholere the pacient hath hys vryne cleare and yelowe wythout measure great thirst wythout appetyte feleth great burnyng in hys bodye and cōmonly hath his bellye bounde and hath the face yelowe This disease of the liuer chaunceth mooste in somer for it ye muste take twyse a daie an ounce of syrupe of endiue or violettes with a good draught of ptisane drynke it two or thre houres before meate and also at nyght to bedwarde and so continue thre or foure dayes In stede of the sayd syrupes ye may take thre oūces of ptisane or thre oūces of water of endiue cicorye and sorell meddled togyther for eche tyme. Then the fyfth daye in the morninge early it is good to drynke a purgaciō that pourgeth cholere whiche shal be made as foloweth An excellente purgacion for to auoyde cholere and may be gyuen to men of al ages TAke half an oūce of cassia newly drawen a drāme of good rubarbe infused a night in water of endiue wyth a lytle spikenard and an ounce of syrupe of violettes mixe all the sayd thynges with thre ounces of ptisane or whaye and drynke it warme as afore is said in the other Boles for the same In stede of the said medicine which is to costlye for poore folkes ye maye make boles of halfe an ounce of cassia and thre drammes of electuarium de succo rosarum and eate them thre houres after mydnyght and slepe after it but al the day ye must kepe y e chāber yf ye had rather drynke it thā eate it mixt the said boles with whay or endiue water drīke it at v. of the clock in y e mornyng but sleape not after it Other medicines laxatyue Take halfe an ounce of diaprunis laxatyue mixt with .iii. ounces of decocciō of french prunes water of succorie and drinke it warme at fiue of y e clocke in the mornyng or els sixe houres afore meate In steade of the sayde diaprunis ye maye take halfe an oūce of electuarium de succo rosarum and make a laxe as afore is sayde And it is to be noted yf the pacyente be very weake or easye to worke vpō ye maye take away a drāme both of y e diaprunis also of succo rosarū After the sayd purgaciō it is good to refresh the liuer with laying to without on the right side vnder the nether ribbes a playster of cerotum scandalinū spred vpon a linnen clothe of the bygnesse of .iiii. fyngers or bath the sayde place with a lynnen cloth wet ī water of endyue plantayne and roses warmed togyther Moreouer it is
is good to vse capars asparage hoppes brothe of dryed peason wyth perselye or his rootes smal byrdes of the fielde kyddes fleshe yong mutton lambe chickins feysauntes snytes partriches scaled fyshe of swete runnyng water with percelye and vynegre Newe layd egges potched in water are very holsome ye may drynke white wine or claret onely at meales Also it is good to vse cresses sage isope mintes fenell and percelye succorry scariole and beetes and singulerly to take fastyng halfe a sponefull of redde colewortes sodden and to eat often anyse seedes and fenel The nynth Chapter for diseases of the bowelles IN a persō be sixe guttes three small whiche are situate ouer y e nauil and three greate whiche are placed vnder the nauil The fyrst is called dudenum because it is .xii. inches long The seconde is called iei●num for that nothing remaineth in it The thyrde is called ylis because it is longe and small The fourth which is the fyrst of the greate ones is called monoculus beecause it is like a sacke hathe but one mouth in that same sometymes are wormes engendred or ventositye that causeth peyne of the belly on the right syde whiche is not the very colicke The .v. thei cal colon because it hath many holowe places and it procedeth from the right syde vnder the lyuer it maketh his reuolucion vnto the left syde wherein is engendred the colyke whiche is despersed by all the bellye more then any other dysease The .vi. is called rectum because it is nye vnto the left kydney and goeth euen right doun into the foundament Hipocrates calleth the thre bowels that are nexte the stomake ilia that is to say smal guttes and the peyn of one of them is called yliaca passio a verye sharpe peyne Rasis calleth it domine miserere Lykewyse also colica passio is called of the gutte colon whiche .ii. dyseases are sisters forasmuch as they come oftentimes bothe of one cause y t is to say of y e oppilacion of y e bowels Remedye for the collike and of yliaca passio FOrasmuche as those diseases are exc●dynge egre sharp and almoste importable of peyne whereof many times foloweth defeccion of the strength with varietie of medicines ye ought in continently for to helpe them Fyrste when the sayde peynes come by the stoppyng of the belly ye muste geue hym a glister mollificatiue made of the decoctiō of mallowes violetes beetes anyse seed and fenugreke with cassia and common hony oyle oliue and afterwarde the herbes of the sayd glister brused and fried laid hote betwixt .ii. linins applied to the belly And yf by this meanes the peine cease not let the pacient sit vnto the buttockes in the sayd decoction and after with dialthea ▪ butter annoint the nauyl And if the said glister do not worke sufficiently make another of thesame or els geue hym a suppositorie which is long ynough made of pure hony and ●al gemme ¶ For the wyndy collyke Thorow wyndines oftentymes cōmeth the colica passio or iliaca then it appereth that the peyne is chaūgeable and mouyng from place to place and is knowen also by the romblynge which is a noise in the bowelles with grypynges and great peyne Remedye Take mallowes beetes mercury of eche a good handful margerim rue bayes and camomyll of eche a lytle handeful anyse seedes comyn ▪ of eche an ounce make a decoccion and take therof a pynt and a halfe and dissolue in it an ounce of cassia halfe an oūce of triacle and .iii. ounces of oile oliue or of camomyl and make a glister the which must be gyuen warme vnto the pacient long before or after meate In stede of the sayde glyster ye maye giue him a poūde of oyle of lineseede whych is a synguler thynge to take away al diseases of the belly Also it is good to make a myxture with oile of hempe seed ¶ For to appease the peyne caused of wynde Fyrste make a glyster of maiuesaye oile of camomyl or dyl If for the said glysters the peyne cease not or els the pacient wyl not take thē take a great spong or els a felt of a hatte and stepe it in wine of y e decoccion of rue camomyl maiorym anyse seedes and commyn And afterwarde laye it vpon the peyne as hote as y e pacient can suffre and .iiii. tymes in y e daye it is good to let him drynke wyne wherin hath ben sodden rue seedes careawayes comyne Drynke at euery tyme a lytle draught eche daye kepe abstinence from eatynge and drynkyng moch of other thynges til ye be perfectly hole ¶ A supppsitorye for the wyndye colyke Take a dramme of rue in fyne pouder and halfe a drāme of comyne dried and poudred and with honye skūmed make a suppository ¶ A playster for wyndye colycke Take two handfulles of rue in fyne pouder myrre and comine poudred of eche half an oūce foure egges yolkes and make two playsters with honye and lay on the one at night and the other in the mornyng vpon the belly Water of camomyl or a decoccion of the same dronken is good for them that haue suche diseases Also a dryed acorne in pouder and gyuen to drinke wyth whyte wyne is very good If ye knowe that the peyne of the bellye commeth thorough wynde applye vpon it a greate ventose without incisyon for by that meanes the sayd peyne wyl surely go awaye or dymynyshe If not it sheweth that there is some humours that causeth the sayde peyne as fleume or cholere If by fleume it commeth ye muste make a glister of a pint of the decoctiō of camomyll rue wormwood maiorim mellilote centaurie anise seedes ▪ and fenell and in the same decoccion put halfe an ounce of hiera picra or halfe an ounce of diafinicon and .iii. ounces of oyle of dil or of lillies Also ye ought to giue to the pacient sirupe of wormwood and to make applicacion vpon his bellie as hath bene sayde afore or to laye vnto it gromyll seed baye salt dryed togither which laied vpon the bellie is likewyse good for the wyndye collicke If after the sayde thinges the sayde peine continueth ye must make a purgacion as foloweth ¶ A purgacion for colike commynge of fleume Take .v. drammes of diafinicon .iii. ounces of wormewood wat●r make a drynke the whych receyued fasting iiii or .v. houres afore meate is verye profitable For peyne of the colicke commynge of choler If the sayde peyne cometh of choler which is knowen when by the applicacion of hote thynges y e peine encreaseth ye must make a glister of violets or giue him halfe an oūce of succorosarum with ptisan endiue water or wine And the next mornyng let hym drynke a ptisane of the decoction of prunes and violet floures and anoint y e belly with oile of violettes or wete a lynnen cloth in colde water and lay it therupon If it do continew stil the patient must be sette in
a● halfe white corall and redde ana one dramme make a confeccion with syrupe of myrtilles geue it to drinke mornyng and euenyng two houres afore meate at euery tyme the quantity of a meane chesnutte ¶ For thesame Applye ventoses vnder the breastes twyse a daye beefore dinner and supper and vse to beare about your necke or hold alwaies in your hande red coral ●aspis or a stone called hematites which is a singuler remedy for to stop euery kynde of bloudy fluxes yf it bee borne or tempered in wyne dronke or make thereof a pouder and vse of it euery mornyng with a litle wyne ¶ For reteyning of the floures Sometimes ther chaunceth vnto women when they can not haue their due purgacions to fall in greuous kindes of sickenesses for y e auoydaunce wherof it is good to helpe thē and prouoke the saide purgacions by suche thynges as open whiche must be geuen at such time of the moone as the sayd women were wont to haue thesame And yf ye see the womans bloud to bee to grosse and thicke so that she can not haue any suche purgacion ye must euerye monethe geue her the syrupe of fumetorye with the decoction of borage and buglosse and lette her bathe her selfe with freshe water hoat And when she goeth out of the bath in to the bedde she must receiue the foresayd syrupe and decoction of the herbe called rubea tinctorū or madder sodden in cleare water In steade of syrupes ye maye take the verye iuyce or decoction of the herbes And if the womans bloud be slimye colde and flegmatike then she muste drinke sirupe of sticados and of oxyniel diuretike and afterward take the pilles called setide and of agarik And euery mornynge after that she muste take a drāme of trosciskes de mir●ha ▪ with two ounces of y e decoction of Iuniper beries or two drammes of trifera magna and thervpon drynke two ounces of water of Mugworte And yf perchaunce ye can not haue these thinges at nede ye maye take .iii ounces of the decoction of alisaunders the roote of smallache cinamome and a litle saffron and let her drinke therof two tymes a daye and eat no meate thereafter duryng foure houres Moreouer it is a proued and expert medicine to geue the first day of y e new mone a dramme of pouder made of borax which the goldsmithes do occupy wyth asmuche cinamome and a lytle water of smallache Also it is verye good to haue the veine opened whych is called saphena that lyeth outwarde betwene the insteppe and the heele And yf case so be that the saide retention come of superfluitye or to muche aboundaunce of fat then the chiefe remedye is to suffer much hunger and to eate verye litle muche exercise and labour to prouoke sweate and to sleape as litle as maye be possible But if it come of great debility and weakenes of the body when the natural strengthe is ouercome by reason of some sickenes or after a longe ague in this case ye maye not go about to prouoke the sayde purgacion but with al your endeuoure seke to restore nature and geue the pacient thynges of much nourishmente as potched egges good fleshe and good wyne with other lyke Sometime the saide retencion commeth of the excessiue heate of nature in some women specially suche as bee valiaunt and strong as men and those that are wont to much labour by reason wherof the heate of theyr bodyes is so strong that they nede none of the sayde purgacions for the superfluities of theyr bodyes are sufficientelye consumed of the heate alone therfore thei haue no nede of the saide remedyes ¶ For chokyng or suffocacion of the matrice THe matrice or mother in a woman oftentimes mounteth vp towarde the midrefe and the stomake with intollerable paines and is called suffoca●ion because that it is choked or ouercharged with some euyll and superfluous matter as by stoppyng of the due purgacions or to muche abstinence of Venus whereby is often chaunced shortnes of breath payne of the head swownynge tremblinge of the hearte contraccion of members and otherwhyles death without remedy ¶ A medicine for the sayde dysease Ye must rubbe the legges and wrestes of the armes vehementlye and bynde them with cordes or with garters tyl thei waxe sore then set ventoses vpon the legges and al to chafe the stomak● specially beneth round about y e nauill And then ye muste constraine her to smell stinkyng thynges as assa fetida galbanum pertriche fethers brent and the quenchyng out of candels with other suche but beneth ye muste applye thinges of swet odour as gylofloures maiorim lignum aloes amber ciue● and a trociske of gallia muscata and let her drinke a draught of this receyt that foloweth ¶ A drynke for payne of the mother Take one dramme of mithridatum and dissolue it in an ounce and an half of water of wormewod and geue it to her to drinke afore she go to meat .iiii houres Diuers goodly medicines for diseases of the mother whatsoeuer be the cause Take the rasing of iuery and the rasing of an hartes horne with the heare of an hare dryed and made in pouder and asmuche of goates clawes brente and poudred yf they may be gotten or in stede of it shepes clawes take all these and vse to eate them in your potage or otherwyse to stoppe the fluxes of the matrice An other to prouoke them Seeth marigoldes nept and sauyne in good ale and drinke it with a good quaintitye of saffron and a lytle honie or suger Item .xv. blacke seedes of pionie dronken in wine with saffron purgeth the matrice of humors and other .xv. of the red seedes stauncheth it agayn or any other fluxe of the mother An other These herbes are good to purge the matrice Rue peony sauyne betonye nept vale●ian maidenheere horehounde sauery percely gromel alisaunder marygoldes smallache and tyme. ¶ The .xi. Chapter of the cure of the stone in the reines and in the bladder PAine of y e stone is one of y e most enormous paines that the bodye of man is vexed with for by it many times y e natural vertues are distroied womē lose their fruit afore y e time cruel perillous accidentes cōmōly do encrease yea oftētimes death without remedy Wherfore it shalbe expedient to the comfort of the poore folkes and other that be greued to write some good and holsome medicines for auoydynge of the stone ¶ And seeyng that all authours doe affyrme the stone to bee engendred by reason of the great heat that is about the reines streitnes of the condites aboundaunce of grosse slimy fleume or of brent choler whiche by the sayde excesse of heate is as one woulde saye baken or dryed as claye is in the furneis and so at last becommeth an hard stone therefore it is chiefly to be noted that without amendyng of the forsaid causes all that ye dooe minister for to breake the stone is eyther hurtefull to
pestilence yf ye haue none other impedimēt to let you to receiue it ye may correct it accordyng to the nature of y e cause in suche wyse as may be cōfortable to the vital sprites of the harte Borage and buglosse are very good preseruatyues in this case and so is a lytle quantitie of saffron orenges lymons pomgranades citrons prunes of damaske other such in good conueniente quantitie addyng to them a lytle suger and cynamone for correccion A nutte is called the triacle of fishe shaled sugered with a lytle rose water and as sayth Isaac a nut a figge drye taken afore dynner preserueth a man from al maner of poisons The thyrde Chapter of slepynge and watchyng TO moche slepe engendreth many humoures in the body specially yf it be in the daye tyme it dulleth the memorye and maketh a man vnlusty and apte to receiue the pestilence Therefore ▪ created almighty god y e night wherin we shulde rest the daye for to kepe vs waking that we fal not into synne and slouth Surely to slepe on the day time is exceadyng hurtfull for when the sunne ryseth he openeth y e poores of the body and bryngeth the humors and spirites from within to the outwarde partyes whiche prouoketh a man to watching and excercyse or workes And contrary wise when the sunne goeth downe al thinges are closed coacted whiche naturally prouoketh a man to reste Moreouer the stomake by the vehemēt heat of the day is naturally dilated and spredde abrode so euer against ¶ The .v. Chapter of emptinesse and fulnes IT is holsome for you euery day once to procure the duety of the womb yf ye can not naturally yet at y e least waies seke some other meanes as by a glister or suppository for the long witholding of anye superfluities is in this tyme very daungerous and hurtfull And all the time the sayde disease endureth they that haue any fistules ought not to be cured And they that haue anye yssues by theyr hemoroides may not be restrained without the fluxe be sore excessiue they that had y e foresayd hemoroides and wer cured afore let them open thē agayne for feare of further daunger Also thei that are disposed to be scabbye hauyng great ytche and such dyseases of the skinne ought to bring the matter out by rubbyng and vehement clawing with their nales Excesse of women is exceadyng perillous but yf ye can not rule youre selfe take good hede ye do nothinge afore the firste digestion and tyl nature doeth prouoke you for euery such excesse weakeneth more y e body thē if ye should be let bloud .xl. times somuche as witnesseth Auicenna and is cause many times of pestilence of death ¶ The .vi. Chapter of accidentes of the minde YE must beware of a● thinges that should make you to be pensife heauy thoughtful angry or melancholike for all suche thinges are inoughe to enfecte a manne alone Passe the time ioyfully ī good thinges honest and decent euery manne according to his owne heart and the estate that God hath called hym vnto ¶ The .vii. Chapter of medicines preseruatiues ALl they that are of good complexiō and of holesome dyete neede not to be purged For an hole bodye and voyde of all humours is not lyghtly taken of the pestilence as the other are But yf it be a bodye ful of humors or a greate eater without any exercise or trauayle suche ought to lette themselues be purged and thei that haue to much quantity of bloud or if y e bloude be anye thing corrupte they oughte to aske counsayle of some good experte phisicions and not to put theyr truste in any vayne bosters that detracte other which in al cases and at al times geue them mercury precipitant and other medicines corrosiue whiche for y e moste parte are venime of themselues and vnder coulor of an other medicine do disceyue the pacient a wōder to beholde how craftely they couer it some time in sirupe sometimes in suger otherwhiles in figges lozenges or raisins leste it should appeare as it is in dede that thei geue the pacientes very quickesiluer Some other affirme that the mercury is quenched or throughly mortified worketh none otherwyse but by secrete quality againste all dyseases in the bodie of manne for the excesse of elementes saye they is clerely corrected in precipitacion and adustiō of the fier How commeth it to passe if this be true that when a litle of it is set vpon a cole and a pece of fine gold adioyned to it we maie se plainely the verie quicksiluer cleuing to the golde and wil make it as brittle as if it had lien in verye raw mercurye Yea how chaunceth it that when it is mingled with hote creame it will bee crude agayne as it was afore And to saye the trueth the quicke siluer raw is better to be dronken then suche as is sublymed for y t hath bene permitted bothe of Dioscorides of diuers other But we neuer read of anye good phisicion y t euer gaue counsell to take the precipitate because of the copporose other venimous ingredience being with it And although that for the time peraduenture some escape fele not their effect in dede as mani other do that is to saye debility of the vertue radycall of the stomake other membres principal purging of the good humors and leauynge the euyll wythin the bodye wherof ensueth many times death yet they leaue a certaine euill qualitye or impression of the bodyes in al that do receiue them and so they make worke for good phisicions to the great hurte of them that haue beleued them Such galauntes should go proue their pouder made of quicksiluer amonge y e Turkes and Sarisins and not vpon theyr euen christen and theyr neyghbours But nowe to our entente The pylles called pylluse communes aboue other pylles preseruatiues are allowed to bee of hyest operacion by reason of a certayne propertye that they haue within them as Rufus the composer of them sayeth that he neuer sawe any manne that vsed them but he was preserued from the pestilence There goeth into their composicion ▪ myrre aloes whiche haue great vertue to kepe the bodye from putrefaction and are made thus Take of aloes epatik wel washed ▪ it drammes myrre washed and saffron of eche a dramme make them vp with white wine or the iuyce of lymons or of orenges and suger Some take them euery third day the weight of halfe a dramme in the mornyng .iii. pylles and euery daye one afore supper Let eueri mā do according to his nede and as his body is replete with humors but it is good to drinke after thē a good draught of wine tempered in a litle water of roses or of wormewoode and yf they be to hard let them be resolued in the sirupe of limons or a litle wine Some doctours ioyne vnto them other spyces after the complexion of y e person and the humour that they
nede to purge And thei wash the aloes and the myrre in an hote season and for hym that hath an hote liuer in water of roses and of endiue but in that let euery manne be his owne iudge yet I woulde counsayl them to sticke rather to the good experymentes that haue bene accustomed than the fantasies of theyr owne imaginacions The Apoticaries ought to haue in store bothe the twoo sortes and to see that they be sufficiently leuened and that the foresaid aloes be elect pure They which haue the hemoroydes and woulde vse the foresayde pylles lette them adde a litle mastike or the gumme that is called bdellium Yf any haue a bloudye fluxe or excoriacion of the bowels lette hym not receyue thē without a better counsel Women also greate with chylde and they that are subiect to any fluxe of bloud ought not to receyue them Amonge other thynges it is a good preseruatiue and a thynge wel experte and commended to eat in the morning fastyng one drye fygge one walnutte and foure or .v. leaues of rue chopped all together and afterwarde to drynke a draught of good wyne But it shalbe sufficient for them that are with child to take the sayde thynges leuyng oute the rue In an hote season it is good to temper the sayd wine with a litle rosewater or of violettes Some other take .v houres afore diner thre times a weke the weight of half a crowne of mithridatum or of fine treacle tempered in a litle good wine But in time of heat and for hote complexions it is good to put in it a litle conserua roses to mingle them with water of sorell or of borage or of buglosse Mithridatum is a greate medicine against al kind of venime for we reade that the founder of it kynge Mythrydates who dydde vse to eate thereof coulde neuer be hurt by anye kinde of poison Thesame Mithridates beyng ouercome in battayle of y e Romaines woulde haue killed himselfe with the moste swyftest poyson that coulde bee deuysed but when he hadde dronken manye sortes of suche and neuer a one wroughte anye thynge to purpose he caused hymselfe to bee slayne of hys seruauntes after whose death Pompeius the graund captain of the hoost founde in hys secrete coffers a certain byll written of hys owne hande in effecte thus Twenty leaues of rue .ii. fatte figges two walnuttes and a litle salte whosoeuer eateth of this shal be sure from al kynde of venime that daye The good triacle also hath a greate vertue but there ought to be a punishment of them that dooe abuse it wyth counterfaicted stuffe which deceiueth many people and causeth them to dye that put theyr truste in it Some other take in tyme of colde a cloue or .ii. of garlike which is called y e housebandmans triacle after drinke a draughte of good wine and in hote time take and eate a few leaues of sorell and drynke a draughte of the water therof distilled for it is excellent good in all complexions tymes and ages Also it is good to drynke euerye mornynge a draughte against the pestilence that is thus made ¶ A drinke for the pestilence Take in the moneth of Iune or at any other conueniēt time our lady thistle burnet scabious gētiane sorel of euery one a like much floures of buglosse red roses herbe dragons and matfelon or marsus diaboli twise as much as all the other stepe them al in white wine rosewater during one nyghte then set them al in a cōmon stillatory waying in for euery pound of herbes half an ounce of bole armeny poudred augmentynge the proporcion accordynge to the quantitye of the herbes then styl a water and for euerye pynte of it take the weighte of a crowne of saffron half an ounce of yelowe saunders finelye poudred and put them all in a violle with the foresayde water stopped and set them in the sunne one moneth This is a noble water for a manne whiche hath the pestylence to drynke And he that wil maye put a litle suger and pouder of cinamome in it that it maye be more pleasaunt in the taste He that can not fynde the sayde herbe called matfelon or morsus diaboli in latine let him take the double weight of dragons It hath a roote as it were halfe eaten of by the myddes and it is so called because the fable is the deuil bit it of for thenuy he hath to mā lest we shoulde obtayne the great vertues of the same The horne of an vnicorne put in the drinke whole or ī pouder hath a great effecte against the said dysease and againste all kyndes of poyson ¶ Here foloweth a very good preseruatiue for the common people ready at al tymes and of smal coste Take an ounce of leaues of rue half an ounce of good figges one ounce of Ienuper buries twoo ounces of walnuttes piked .iiii. ounces of vineger a good quantitye of saffron stampe all the foresaide thynges together and reserue them in an earthen cuppe or a glasse faste stopped that no ayre yssue whereof yf ye receyue in the mornyng vpon a knifes poynte the quaintity of a beane or more ye shalbe sure by the grace of god not to be infected in four and twenty houres after ¶ An other pouder for the same Take pure and electe bole armonyacke not counterfaict but suche as is without grauel smoth somewhat shinynge and to the eye a farre of moste like a very stone not to brittle nor to hye coulored for such is commonly sophisticate Take I saye the sayde bole armoniake grynde it vnto fine pouder than washe it in white wyne or in rosewater or water of buglosse sorell or wormewoode or scabious afterwarde drye it and pouder it agayn and doe so .v. or .vi. tymes euer washinge drying and pouderyng the same and at laste set it vp in a cleane vessell tyll ye nede to vse it Men of hote complexion yf they wil receiue it muste take of it a sponefull with vineger or water of sorel And they that be of colde complexion maye take it in a litle wyne or scabiouse water in the mornynge For it preserueth the bodye from all corrupcion consumeth the superf●uous humours and driueth awaye the venym from the herte An other singuler remedy preseruatiue for ryche men and delicate of complexion TAke zedoarie lignum aloes agrimoni saffron aristologia rotunda yf it maye bee gotten whyte dyptanye gentian the rinde of a citron the sede of citron of euery one a scruple corianders preparate turmentil red saūders red coral red roses iuori mirabolanes emblike of eueri one a dramme terra sigillata two drammes bole armonyake three drammes pouder all these and wyth fyne suger and sirupe of acetositate citri make a noble electuarye and kepe it as a treasure of mans health in the tyme of pestilence An other soueraine and goodly receite bothe preseruatiue and curatyue TAke a hēnes egge newly laid and make a hole in the crown by the
nature For yf it bee once settled at the hert I affirme plainely ther is no hope at al. Yet there be some fooles that tarye tyl the twelueth houre or the foure twentye after the infeccion and they boost them selues that they wil heale the pacient but that is a manifest a a shameful errour for yf any by chaūce is so recouered it commeth of God not of any medicine for where as one so escapeth an hundred other perisshe Notwithstandyng yf the case so be that ye be not called or can gette no remedy afore the said time caste not your selfe into dispayre or put not the paciēt in discomfort take or giue your medicine in y e name of God and yf ye can not brooke it take asmuch agayn and do so many tymes til ye maye retayne it thē lay ye downe to sweate and lyft vp your hert to God callinge vpon hym without whom there is no helth and by the grace of Iesu ye nede not to be feareful of death for that y e is impossible to man is easye ynough with God yea many times nature worketh it selfe aboue al natural expectaciō But I counsaill at the firste begynnyng to receyue the medicines when any of the forsayde signes appeareth or when ye fele your selfe diseased for the venyme perceth soner to the herte of the cholerike thē either of the sanguyne or the melancholyke although the sanguynes are apter to infeccion then the other are chefelye yf the sycknesse be in somer They that are of melancholy be not lyghtly taken but in case they be thē the cure is very daūgerouse and hard Therefore I saye take heede at the beginnyng as the prouerbe is Prīcipiis obsta sero medicina paratur Lū mala per longas inualuere moras Take the medicine quickely and let thy selfe bloud and remember god the phisicion of thy soule and withoute doubt thou shalt well inough recouer Nowe we haue declared the signes by whiche ye maye easily know whan a person is infected and wee sayde it was conueniente to take the medicyne as soone as anye of them appeareth without any longer tarying afore the venime commeth to the hearte here wee wyll enfourme you howe ye shall perceiue whether the saide venime bee setled in the hearte or no. Take a dramme of bole armeny made in pouder accordyng to the doctrine of y e last chapter in the first part and if ye can not get it take some other excellēt medicine against y e pestilence namely one of the receites that shall bee sayde hereafter and geue it to y e pacient but there can nothyng be better then the foresaide pouder yf ye haue it at hand Take I saye thereof one dramme an ounce of white wyne and odoriferous with two ounces of water of roses mingle them and geue them to the pacient The blacke receit declared in the Chapter of preseruatiues maye be wel vsed in stede of the bole And yf he maye retayne the drynke within his stomake it is a good signe that the venime was not at the hearte afore he toke the medicine and therefore he may be let bloude wel inough But yf the pacient cannot broke the saide drinke but cast it vp and vomite then ye maye be sure that the venyme hath bene at y e heart afore y e medicine Therfore by and by wash his mouth with wine or with water of scabious of sorel or of roses and it ought to be very wel mundified and clensed Then geue hym an other dose of the said drinke and heat a cruste of bread and holde it to his nose that he maye the better kepe the foresayd pocion ▪ And if the seconde tyme he caste it vp againe and is not able to reteine it wash his mouth as is saide before and geue it him the thyrde tyme with a litle vineger that it may perce the better and so .vi. or .vii. times if he do not holde it geue it hym agayne and then whether he retayneth it or retayneth it not by and by ye ought to lette hym bloude But in case the paciente were infected xxiiii houres afore ye geue the drinke neuer let him bloud for y e can nothing helpe him but rather make him feble but administer a medicine ordeyned for the pestilence as is sayde afore or such as shalbe spoken of hereafter and that done prouoke hym to sweate Nowe to oure purpose as concernyng dyet ¶ The seconde Chapter of the cure of pestilence by the waye of dyet FYrst as soone as euer the paciēt feleth himselfe infected it is verye good to auoid y e corruptaire by chaunginge into some other place or els if he can not so let him rectifye the ayre of his own house or of his chamber with water of roses and vineger or els with fumigacions as is spoken of before according to the quality of y e time the cōplexion of his own body Moreouer it is good for him to shiften his bedde out of one chamber into another and from that to the fyrste agayne the nexte daye euer rectifying the ayre of them both as is aforesaid And as touchynge meat and drinke he ought not to abstaine or yet to take anye superfluities for to eate good meates measurablye thoughe it be against his stomake yet in this disease it shall doe him muche good Let him eate the brothe of chickens capons or coleyses of rabbettes and suche lyke meates with a litle sorell sauce or vyneger rose-rosewater or wine of pomegranades yf they maye be gotten or wyne of barberyes and suche other If ye wyl haue other kynde of sauces or a pouder to strowe vpon youre meate ye may make it after this sort Take graynes of paradise whyte dyptanye of eche an ounce fine poudre of cinamome and cloues of eche halfe an ounce make them al in pouder and mingle it with suger In this disease ye maye eate no quesye meates as eles gese duckes and other suche as bee euyll I call them euyll meates whych accordyng vnto Galene De differentiis febrium are eyther euil of theyr owne nature or els if thei be naturallye good yet by reason of some putrefaction are as muche or more vnholsome as the other are partelye so because of longe kepynge vncleane and naughty dressyng or when thei be laied vp in a filthye or stinking place and partly by some yl infeccion when thei were aliue for he that vseth such kind of meates is oftentimes accoumbred with manye naughtye sycknesses as corrupte pestilencial feuers scabbes pustles lepries and other euyll infirmytyes All fyshe in this case are to be auoided Brothe or gruell made with borage buglosse endiue succorye sorell purcelane and other like herbes with a litle saffron and cleane wheat floure or the crommes of breade in a broth of chickyns or without a broth maye be wel administred Potched egges also with sorell sauce and cinamome vineger rosewater are meruelous good in this case And yf the heate be very
mans bodye .ii. hyndes of veines general and speciall Generall or commune veynes are iii. which appeare in the middest of euery mannes arme on the inner syde of them the highest is called of learned mē cephalica or the head beine and the lowest of al three is called commonly basilica or regia in the righte arme by an other name epatica or the veine of the liuer but in the left arme it is called pulmatica the veine of the longes The .iii. common veine lieth betwene the other .ii. in the middes and is named cordiaca or the veine of the heart The fyrst that we dyd speake of that is to saie cephalica is a veine most apt to be letten bloude in al y e hyer partes of mannes body and is opened for the head ache and the eyes This veine yf by chaunce ye touche it and yf it blede not at the fyrst stroke ye may be bold to strike it once again for there is no ieopardye of cutting of anye muscle And yf ye cannot finde it out take hys hraunche that is aboute the thombes ende The veine epatica emptyeth from the middle partes of al the body and it is euer opened against diseases of the stomake and y e splene but ye ought therin to be very dilygent that there be no muscule perced If ye can not spie it in the arme seke the braunche of it betwen the litle finger and the fourth The cordiaca veine draweth bloud as wel from beneth as from aboue for it is cōpouned of cephalica and epatica If any feleth a weakenes at his heart he ought to take good hede that he bee not opened in y t veine cordiaca but yf necessitye be of bleding let him blede in the cephalica or els mediana So likewise of the other .ii. The cordiaca is good to cure the passions of al the hole bodye whan they doe procede of heate specially of the hearte and of the longes But in the percing of it ye muste excedyngly beware for vnder it is a certain muscle which if it bee very depelye cutte the pacient is in ieopardy of his lyfe When ye entend to let a person bloud in any veine ye muste bathe the arme wherin ye perce in good hote water draw y e hole abrod y t the grosse bloude may the more easily passe And here is to be noted that in all sickenesses and times except only infeccion of y e pestilence ye muste take the same veyne of the .iii. that doth appeare fuller bigger thā y e other are for by that ye may perceiue that the members which belonge vnto it are full of superfluityes of to hote bloud and this shal be suffycient of the foresayde veynes general now we wil reherce y e veines speciall ¶ The veine in the higher parte of the forehead is good to be opened ī al diseases of the heade of the braine specially yf they be of long continuaunce and it cureth the newe begonne lepry ¶ The .ii. veines that are behinde the eares are opened to preserue y e memory mundify the face and to take away rumes and distillacions from y e head and are good generallye in all diseases of the mouth and of the gummes ¶ The .ii. veines of the temples of the head are good to voide humours from the eyes and they serue also for al diseases of the eares The .ii. veines in the corners of the iyes are opened in the cure of webbes spottes cloudes mistes perles rednes cornes and other infirmityes and weakenesse of the syght The .ii. veines in the holownesse of the eares serue to heale the shaking of the heade swymminge of the eyes dosines sounding of the eares new deafnes and vnclennes of the mouth The veine in the tippe of the nose is good againste apostemes of the heade reumes and fluxes of the iyes it pourgeth the brain and comforteth the memorye This veine must bee soughte verye wysely for it lyeth depe therfore he y t wyl be sure of it shall fynde it euen in the verye middes betwene the twoo sides of the nose ende The two veines within the nosethrilles are opened against the heauynes of the head The veine of the lippes is good to take in al diseases of the mouth The .ii. veines within the mouth are opened ī diseases of y e head toth ache payne of the iawes mouth and throte and agaynst frecles of the face The foure veines in the palate of the mouth are good to bee opened in the toth ache reuines and catarres of the heade The two veines in the hynder part of the head are good against the phrenesye swimming astonying and al other paines of the heade The .ii. veines vnderneth the tong are opened against the fluxes of the heade palsies quincies scrophules apoplexia cough paines of the mouth teeth gummes against impedimentes of the speche and generally in all diseases of the breast hearte longes and arteries The veyne that is betwene the chyn and the nether lip is good to open in curyng of a stynkyng breath The veine that lieth ryght vnderneth the chynne is good agaynste thesame disease and also in diseases of the head of the breaste polipus in y e nose paines of the chekes stinking of the nosethriles scrophules and spottes aboute the face The .ii veines of y e necke one afore another behynde are excedynge good against the pleuresie newe lepry shakynge of the members humours and distillacions of the heade and to muche styfnesse of lymmes The .ii. veines vnder the arme holes serue against y e straitnes of the breast payne of the mydryfe and the longes and agaynst difficultye of breathyng called asthma The two veynes aboue the elbowes are taken in all diseases of the breast swymmyng of the heade spasme and epilepsia commonly called the falling euyll Vena purpurea or the purple veine liyng in the ryght arme nexte epatica toward the hande is opened against diseases of spirituall members and of the bowels The veyne illiaca nexte vnto the purple veyne yf it bee well taken is good to heale the paines of all the inwarde members Vena pulsatilis or the beatyng veine is good against the tremblynge of the heart swowning and cardiaca passio The .ii. veines of the thumbes are opened in diseases of the head bleared eyes and agaynst the moste part of all feuers The veyne betwene the forefinger and the thombe is good for stoppyng● of the head and to purge the super●tuitye of choiere is good in agues and in all diseases of the eyes The veine that is betwene the ring● finger and the litle yf it bee opened taketh awaye diseases of the head th● longes and of the splene The veine called saluatella in y e rygh● hand betwene the litle finger and th● next adioyninge is opened in opilac●ons of the breast against the gummy matter of the eyes perbraking yelo● iaundis paynes colikes in the ryg● syde of the belly And in the left hande it is
thinges oughte to be cōsidred of euery wyse person that wyll set theyr children out to nource Moreouer it is good to loke vpon the milke and to se whether it be thicke grosse or to moch thinne and watrye blackysshe or blewe or enclynyng to rednesse or yelowe for all suche are vnnaturall and euyll Likewise whē ye taste it in your mouthe yf it be eyther bytter salte or soure ye may we● perceyue it is vnholsome That mylke is good that is whyte and sweete and when ye droppe it on your nayle and do moue your finger neyther ●eteth abrod at euery stering nor wyll hange faste vpon your naile whē ye turne it downeward but that whyche is betwene bothe is beste Somtime it chaunceth that the milke wasteth so that y e nource can not haue sufficiente to susteine the child for the which I wil declare remedies leauing out the causes for breuitie of time ¶ Remedies appropriate to y e encreasyng of mylke in the brestes PAsneppe rootes and fenelle rootes soddē in broth of chickens afterward eaten with a litle fresshe butter maketh encrease of mylke within the brestes ¶ An other The pouder of earth wormes dryed and dronken in the broth of a neates tonge is a singuler experiment for y e s●me intent Also the broth of an olde cocke with myntes cynamome and maces Ryce also sodden in cowes mylke with the cromes of white breed fenell seede in pouder and a litle sugre is excedyng good ¶ An other good medicine for the same Take Cristall and make it in fyne pouder and myxe it with asmoche fenell seede and suger and vse to drinke it warme with a litle wyne A playster for the encrease of milke Take fenell and hoorehounde of euery one two handefulles ●ys seede foure drammes Saffron a scruple in poudre swete butter thre ounces seeth them in water and make a playster to be layed vpon the nurces brestes These thynges haue propertie to augment the mylke dylle anyse seede fenelle cristal horehounde fresh chese honye lettuse beetes myntes carette rootes parsneppes the dugges or ydder of a cowe or a shepe gootes milke blaunched almondes ryce porrigge a cowes toung dryed and made in pouder poched egges saffron and the iuce of rosted veale dronken Thus moche of the nource and of the mylke nowe wil I declare the infirmities of children Althoughe as affirmeth Plinie there be innumerable passions diseases wherunto the bodye of man is subiecte and as well maye chaunce in the yonge as in the olde Yet for most commonly the tender age of children is chefely vexed greued with these diseases folowyng Aposteme of the brayne Swellyng of the heed Scalles of the heed Watchyng out of measure Terrible dreames The fallyng euill The palseye Crampe Styfuesse of lymmes Bloodsho●en eyes Watryng eyes Scabbynesse and ytche Diseases in the eares Nesyng out of measure Bredyng of teeth Canker in the mouth Duynsye or swellyng of throte Coughe Sreaytnesse of wynde Feblenesse of the stomake vomiting Yeaxyng or hycket Colyke and rumblyng in the guttes Fluxe of the belly Stoppyng of the bellye Wormes Swellyng of the nauill The stone Pyssyng in bedde Bruslynge Fallyng of the skynne Chafyng of the skynne Small pockes and measels Feuers Swellyng of the coddes Sacer ignis or chingles Burnyng and scaldyng Rybbes Consumpcion Leanenesse Gogle eyes ¶ Of apostemes of the brayne IN the fylme that couereth the brayne chaunceth often tymes apostemacion swellynge eyther of to moche crying of y e chylde or by reason of the mylke immoderatelye hote or excesse of heate in the bloode or of colde ●teume and is knowen by these sygnes Yf it be of hote matter the heed of the chylde is vnnaturally swollen redde and hote in the ●eelyng if it come of colde matter it is somwhat swollen pale and colde in the touchyng but in bothe cases the chylde can not reste and is euer lothe to haue hys heed touched cryeth and vexeth it selfe as it were in a frenesye ¶ Remedye Make a bath of mallowes camomylle and lyllyes sodden with a shepes heed tyll the bones fall and with a spong or soft cloutes al to bath the head of the childe in a colde aposteme with the broth hote as maye be suffered but in a hote matter wete the broth luke warme or in the cooling after the bathe set on a playster thus A playstre Take fenugreke camomill wormwood of euery one an handfull seethe them in a close vessell till the thyrde parte be consumed then stampe thē in a mortar and stirre them to the which ye shall put of the same brothe againe ynough to make a plaister with a litle beane floure yolkes of egges saffrō adding to them fresh butter or duckes grese sufficiente applye it In a cold matter lette it lye a day but in a hote cause ye muste remoue it euery syxe houres Of swellyng of the heed TNstation or swellynge of the heed cōmeth of a wyndye matter gathered betwene the skynne and the fleshe and sometyme betwene the fleshe and the boones of the sculle the tokens wherof are manifest ynoughe to the syght by the swellyng or puffinge vp and pressed with y e finger there remayneth a prynte whyche is a sygne of wynde and viscous humours ye shall heale it thus ¶ Remedye Fyrst let the nourse auoide al thynges that engendre wynd salt or slymy humours as beanes peasō eles sammon saltfysshe and lyke then make a playster to the chyldes heed after this fashion Take an handful of fenel smallache and dylle and seeth them in water in a close vessel afterwarde stampe them and with a lytle cumyne and oyle of bytter almondes make it vp and laye it often to the childes heed warme In defaulte of oyle of almons take gosegrese adding a litle vinegre And it is good to bathe the place with a softe cloute or a sponge in the broth of these herbes Rue tyme maiorym hysope fenell dylle comyne sal●itre myntes radysh rotes rocke● or some of them euer takyng heede that there droppe no porcion of the medicines in the babes eyes mouthe or eares ¶ Scalles of the head THe heades of chyldrē are oftētymes vlcered scalled aswel when they sucke and thē most commonly by reason of sharpe milke as also when they haue bene weaned can go aloone Sometimes it happeneth of an euil complexion of humours by eatyng of rawe frute or other euill meates and somtyme by longe continuynge in the sonne many tymes by dropping of restye bacon or of salte beefe on theyr bare heades Other whyles they be so borne out o● theyr mothers wombe and in al the● is no greate difficultie til the heere b● growen but after that they requyre greater cure and a conning hand not withstandynge as God shall gyue m● grace here shal be sayde remedyes for the cure of them such as haue ben of●tentymes approued wherin I haue entended to omyt the disputacions o● the dyfference of scalles and the humours whereof they do
it is more easye I fynde that manye thynges haue a natural vertue against y e falling euill not of any qualitye elementall but by a singuler propertye or rather an influence of heauen whiche almyghtye god hathe geuen vnto thynges here in earth as be these and other Saphires smaragdes redde coral piony mystletow of the oke takē in the moneth of March and the moone decreasynge tyme sauein dylle and the stone that is founde in the bellye of a yong swallow being the first brood of the dame These or one of them hanged about the necke of the child saueth and preserueth it from the sayd sickenes Now wil I describe some good holsome medicines to be takē inward for thesame disease If the chylde be not very young the mawe of a leueret dronke with water and honye cureth thesame ¶ A medicine for the fallinge syckenesse Take the roote of pionye and make it into pouder and geue it to the childe to lycke in a litle pappe and suger They that are of age maye eate of it a good quantity at once and likewise of the blacke sedes of the same piony Item the purple violettes that creapeth on the ground in gardeines with a longe stalke and is called in englishe and fryed meates but abstaine from mylke and al maner fyshe And it shall be good for her to eat a lectuary made after this sorte Take nuntis cinamone cumine rose leaues dryed mastike fenugreke valerian ameos doronisi zedoarye cloues saunders and lignum aloes of euerye one a dramme muske half one drāme make an electuary with clarified hony and let her eat of it and geue the chylde as muche as halfe a nut euerye daye to swallow A plaister Take an ounce of waxe and a dramme of euphorbium at the potecaries and temper it with oyle olyue on the fyer and make a serecloth to coumforte the backe bone and the sinewes ¶ A goodly lauatorye for the same purpose Take lye of ashes and seeth therein baye buryes and asmuch piony sedes in a close vessel to the thyrde parte and washe the childe often with thesame Item a bathe of sauerye maiorym tyme sage nepte smallage mintes or some of them is verye good and holesome Also to rubbe the backe of the chylde and the limmes with oyles of roses and spyke myxte together warme and in stede of it ye mai take oyle of baies ¶ Of the crampe or spasmus THis disease is often sene amōg chyldren and commeth verye lyghtely as of debilytye of the nerues and cordes or elles of grosse humors that suffocate thesame the cure of y t whiche is declared of authours to bee doone by friccions and oyntmentes that comfort the sinowes dissolue the matter as oile of floure-deluyce with a litle anyse saffron and the rootes of pionie Item oyle of camomil fenugreke and mellilot● or the herbes soddē betony wormewood verueyne and tyme are exceding good to washe the chylde in Item the plaister of exphorbium written in the cure of palsey Of the stifnes or starknes of limmes SOmetime it happeneth ● the lymmes are starke ● can not well come together withoute the greater peyne whiche thyng● procedeth mani times of cold as whan a chylde is found in the frost or in the streete caste awaye by ● wycked mother or by som● other chaunce although I am not ignoraun● that it maye procede of manye other causes as it is sayde of Rasis and o● Arnolde de villa noua in his boke of the cure of infantes And here is to bee noted a wonderfull secret of nature manye tymes approued written of Auicenne in hy● fyrste Canon and of Celius Antiquarium electionū libro .xiii. capit .xxxvii ▪ that whan a mēber is vtterly benum 〈◊〉 and taken thorough colde so tha● the paciente cannot feele hys lymmes nor moue them accordynge to nature by reason of the vehement congelaciō of y e bloud in such case y e chiefest hel● or remedy is not to set them to the fyer to receiue heat for by that meanes lightly we se that eueri one swowneth and manye dye outeryghte but to sette the feete legges and armes in a payle of clere colde water whiche immediatly shal dissolue the congelaciō and restore the bloude to the former passage and fredome after that ye ma● lay the pacient in a bed to sweate and geue him hote drinke and caudels or a coleis of a capon hote with a litle cinamome saffrō to cōfort the hart An argument of this cure ye may se thus When an apple or a pere is frosen in the winter sette it to the fyer and it is destroyed but yf ye putte it into colde water it shall as well endure as it did afore whereby it doth appere that the water resolueth colde better with hi● moysture than the fyer can do by reason of his heate for the water relenteth and the fyer draweth and dryeth as affyrmeth Galene in hys booke o● elementes Hitherto haue I declined by occasion but I trust not in vayne to the reader now to my purpose When a yonge childe is so taken with a colde I esteme it best for to bath th● bodye in luke warme water wherei● hath bene sodden maiorim and time ● sope sage mintes suche other goo● and comfortable herbes thē to relieu● it with meates of good nourishment accordyng to the age and necessity and yf neede be when ye se the limmes y● to be starke make an oyntmente after this fourme ¶ An oyntment for styffe and stoyned limmes Take a good handefull of nettles and stampe them then seth them in oyle ● the thirde part in a double vessel kep● that oyntmēt in a drye place for it w● last a great while and is a singuler r●medy for the styfnes that commeth of cold whoso anoynteth hys handes fete with it in the morning shal not be grieued with colde al the daye after The sedes of nettles gathered in harueste and kepte for thesame entente is excedyng good sodden in oyle or fryed with swines grece which thing also is verye good to heale the kybes of heeles called in latin Perniones The vrine of a goate with the donge stamped and layed to the place resolueth the stifnes of limmes When the cause commeth not by extreme cold but of some other affeccion of the sinowes and cordes it is best to make a bath or a fomētaciō of herbes that resolue and comfort the sinowes with relaxacion of the grosse humors to open the pores as by exāple thus Take malowes holyhocke and dyl of eche a handful or two seth them in the water of netes fete or in broth of flesh without salt with a handful of branne ●nd comine in the which ye shall bath the chyld as warme as he may suffe● and yf ye see necessitie make a plaist● with the same herbes and lay it to th● griefe with a litle gosegrece or duck● grece or if it may be gotten oyle of c●momil of lylyes and of dyll
Clout● wette in the sayde decoccion and la● about the members helpeth Of bloude shotten eyes and other infyrmityes SOmetyme the eyes a● bloudeshotten and oth● whiles encreasing a fil● and white humour cou●ring the sight the cause● often of to much crying for the whi● it is good to drop in the eyes a litle the iuyce of nighteshade other w● called morel and to annoint the for head with the same and if the iye sw● to wette a cloute in the i●ice and 〈◊〉 white of egges and lay it to the gre● If the humoure bee clammyshe a● tough and cleueth to the corners o● eyes so that the chylde can not open them after his slepe it shalbe remoued with the iuyce of housleke dropped on the eye with a fether When the eye is bloudeshotten and ●edde it is a singuler remedye to putte in it the bloude of a yonge pigion or a doue or a partriche eyther hoate from the bird or els dried and made in pouder as subtyl as maye be possible A playster for swellyng and payne of the eyes Take quinces and cromes of white head and seeth them in water tyl thei be softe then stampe them and with a litle saffron and the yolkes of twoo egges make a playster to the childes ●yes and forehead Ye may let him al● receiue the fume of that decoction It is also good in the meigrim yf ye ●il haue further loke in the regiment of lyfe in the declaracion of paynes of ●he heade Of watryng eyes IF the chyldes eyes water ouermuche without● crying by reason of a distillacion comming from the head Manardus teacheth a goodlye playster to restrayne the reumes and is made thus Hartes horne brent to pouder and washed twise guaiacū otherwise called lignum sanctum corticum thuris antimonie of eche one part muske the iii. part of one parte make a fine pouder and vse it with the iuyce or water of fenel These thinges haue vertue to staunche the running of the eyes Th● shelles of snayles brent the ticke tha● is found in the dugges of kyne phily● pendula frankensence the white o● an egge laied vpon y e forehead flewor● or the water wherin it is steped tutie y e water of duddes of oke stilled bea● floure finely sisted and with the gūm● of a cheritree steped in vineger lay● ouer al the temples ¶ Of scabbynesse and ytche SOmetyme by reason of excesse of heate or sharpenesse in the milke throughe the nourses eatyng of salt eygre meates it happenethe that a chylde is sene full of ytche by rubbing fretyng and chafyng of it selfe encresyng a scabbe called of the Grekes Psora whyche thynge also chaunceth vnto many after they be weaned procedinge of salte and aduste humoures the cure wherof dyfferethe in none other but according to the difference of age for in a sucking babe y e medicines may not be so sharpe as it may be suffered in one that is alredye weaned Against suche vnkinde ytche ye maye make an oyntment thus Take water of betony .ii. good handfulles daysye leaues alehofe otherwyse called tūnour or ground yuye of eche one handfull the red docke rotes two or thre stampe them al togyther and grinde them wel then mingle thē with fresshe grese and againe stampe them Let them so stande .viii. daies to putrifye tyll it be hore then frye them out and strayne them and kepe it for the same entent Thys oyntment hath a greate effecte both in yong and olde and that without repercussion or dryuing backe of the matter whyche shoulde be a peryllouse thyng for a yong chld The herbe water betonye alone is a greate medicyne to quenche al vnkind heates without daūger or the sething of it in cleare well water to annoynte the membres It is a commen herbe groweth by ryuers sydes smal renning waters and wette places arysīg many tymes the heygth of a mā out of the grounde where he reioyseth with a stalke foure square and many braūches on euery syde and also it beareth a whytysh blewe flowre very smal in haruest it hath innumerable seedes blacke and as fyne as the seed of tutsone or lesse the leues bygge and lōg accordyng to the ground ful of iuyce iagged on the sides lyke a sawe euen as other betonye to whom it approcheth in figure obtemeth his name of water betony The sauoure of the leafe is somwhat heauye moste lyke to y e sauoure of elders or walwort but when it is brused it is more pleasaūt whych thyng induceth me to vary frō the myndes of them that thynke this herbe to be Galiopsis in Dioscorides wrytten of hym that it shulde stynke when it is stamped but the more this herbe is stamped the more swete and herbelyke it sauoureth therfore it can not be galeopsis and besides that it is neuer founde in drye and stony groūd as the Galiopsis is Neyther is thys herbe mencyoned of the newe or olde authours as farre as I can see but of only Vigo y e famous surgion of oure tyme in Italye whych wryteth on it that this herbe exceadeth al other in a malo mortuo so calleth he a kynde of ●eprye elephantyk or an vniuersal fylthy scabbe of all the body and in lyke maner he sayeth it is good for to cure a canker in the breastes Ye maye reade these thīges in his second boke Capitul .iii. and his fifte booke of the Frenche pockes in the thyrd chapter where he doth describe thys aforesaid herbe with so manyfeste tokens that no mā wil doubt it to be water betony conferryng the boke and the herbe duly togither Moreouer he nameth in Italye a brydge where it growethe in the water in greate aboundaunce and is called of y t nacion Alabeueratore which in dede the Italtons that come hyther and knowe both the place and the herbe doe affyrme playnely it is our water betony And where as he allegeth Dioscorides in climeno which by cōtemplaciō of both hath but smal affiniti or none with this herbe it was for nothinge els but lack of the tōges which faute is not to be so highly rebuked in a mā of his study applying him selfe more in the practyse of surgery to handye operaciō wherin in dede he was nere incomparable then he did to search y e variaūce of tonges rather regarded to declare y e operaciō of thinges with truthe then to dispute vpon the propertyes or names with eloquence Thus haue I declyned agayne from my matter partly to shewe y e descripcion of thys holesome herbe partelye to satisfie the mindes of y e surgions in Vigo whiche haue hitherto redde the sayd places in vayne and furthermore bicause ther is yet none that declareth manyfestly the same herbe ¶ An other remedye for scabbes and ytche Take the rootes of dockes and frye thē in fresh grese then put to it a quātitie of brimstone in pouder and vse to rubbe the places twise or thrise a day Brimstone poudred souped in a rere
eares for it is in dede croncled and ●at muche lyke an eare heat it agaynst the fyer and put it hote in anye drinke thesame drinke is good holesome for the quinsye Some hold opinion that whoso vseth to drinke with it shall neuer bee troubled with this disease and therefore carye it about with them in iorneys ¶ Of the cough THe cough in children for y e most part procedeth either of a cold or by reason of reumes descending from the head into y e pipes of the longes or the breaste and that is most commonly by ouermuche aboundaunce of milke corruptyng the stomake and brayne therefore in that case it is good to fede the chylde wyth a more slender dyete and to annoynte the head ouer with hony and now and than to presse his toungue wyth youre fynger holdyng downe hys heade that the reumes may issue for by y t meanes the cause of the cough shall runne oute of his mouthe and auoyde the chylde of many noughty and slimy humours whiche done many tymes the paciente am endeth wythout any further helpe of medicine ¶ For the cough in a chylde Take gumme arabike gumme dragagant quince sedes liquirice and peridies at the pothecaries break them al together and geue the childe to suppe a litle at once with a draught of milke newli warme as it commeth from the cowe Also stampe blaunched almons and wringe them out with the iuyce of fenell or water of fenell and geue it to the chylde to fede with a litle suger ¶ Against the great cough and heate in the bodye The heades of whyte poppye and gumme dragagant of eche a litle much long cucumer seedes as muche as al seth them in whaye wyth raysons and suger and lette the chylde drynke of it twyse or thryse a daye luke warme or colde ¶ Of straytnesse of wynde AGainst the straitnesse of breathyng whiche is no quinsie the consente of authours do attribute a great effecte to lyuesede made in pouder tempered with hony for the chylde to swallowe downe a lytle at once I find also y t the mylke of a mare newly receiued of y e chyld with suger is a siguler remedy for y e same purpose Which thing moreouer is excedynge holesome to make the belly laxe without trouble ¶ Of weakenes of the stomake and vomitynge MAni times the stomake of the child is so feble that it cānot retain eyther meat or drinke in which case and for al debilitye therof it is verye good to washe the stomake with warme water of roses wherein a litle muske hathe beene dissolued for that by the odour and natural heate geueth a comfort to all the spirituall members And then it is good to rost a quince tender with a litle pouder of cloues and suger to geue it to the child to eat cōserua quīces with a litle cinamome and cloues is synguler good for thesame entent Also ye may make a iuice of quinces and geue it to the chylde to drinke with a litle suger ¶ An oyntmente for the stomake Take gallia muscata at the pothecaries .xx. graine weight myrrhe a verye litle make it vp in oyntment fourine with oyle of mastike and water of roses sufficient this is a very good ointment for the stomake ¶ An other singuler receit Take mastike frankinsence and drye redde roses as muche as is sufficient make them in pouder and temper thē vp with the iuyce of mintes and a sponful of vineger and vse it ¶ An other Take wheat floure and parche it on a panne tyll it begynne to brenne and waxe redde than stampe it with vineger and adde to it the yolkes of two● egges harde rosted mastike gumme frankinsence sufficient make a plaister and laye it to the stomake To recouer an appetite lost Take a good handfull of ranke and lustye rewe and seth it in a pint of vyneger to the thyrde parte or lesse and make it very stronge wherof yf it be a chylde ye may take a tooste of brown bread and stampe it with the same vyneger and laye it plaisterwyse to the stomake and for a stronger age besides the plaister lette hym suppe morning and euenyng of thesame vineger This is also good to recouer a stomak lost by comming to a fyer after a long iourneye and hath also a singuler vertue to restore a man that swowneth ¶ An experiment often approued of Rasis for the vomite of chyldren Rasis a solemne practicioner amonge phisicions affyrmeth that he healed a great multitude of this disease onelye with the practise folowinge whiche he taketh to bee of great effect in all lyke eases Fyrst he maketh as it were an electuarye of pothecarye stuffe that is to saye lignum aloes mastike of euerye one half a dramme galles half a scruple make a lectuary with syrupe of roses and gallia muscata and suger Of this he gaue the children to eat a very litle at once often Afterwarde he made a plaister thus ℞ mastike aloes sloes galles frankensence and brent bread of ech a like porcion make a plaister with oile and sirupe of roses to be laid to the childes stomake ho●e ¶ An other oyntment for the stomake described of Wilhel Placentino Take oyle of mastike or of wormewood .ii. ounces waxe .iii. ounces cloues macis and cinamome of eche thre drammes make an oyntment adding in the ende a litle vineger The yolke of an egge hard rosted mastyke frankinsence and gumme made in a playster with oyle of quinces is excedyng good for the same purpose Of yeaxing or hicket IT chaunceth oftētymes that a chyld yeaxeth out of measure Wherfore it is expedient to make the stomake eigre afore it be fed not to replenish it wyth to much at once for this dysease cōmonly procedeth of fuines for yf it come of emptines or of sharp humors in the mouth of the stomake which is seldome sene the cure is then very di●ficill and daungerous Remedye When it commeth of fulnesse that chylde yeaxeth incessauntlye without measure and that by a long custome i● is good to make him vomit with a fe●ther or by some other lighte meanes y t the matter which causeth y e yeaxynge mai issue and vncomber the stomake y t done brynge it a slepe and vse to annointe the stomake with oyles of castor spike camomyll and dyll or twoo or iii. of them ioined together warme Of colike and rumblyng in the guttes PEine in the belly is a common disease of children it commeth either of wormes or of taking cold or of euyl mylke y t signes thereof are to well knowen for the chylde cannot rest but cryeth and fretteth it selfe and manye tymes cannot make theyr vryne by reason of winde that oppresseth the necke of the bladder and is knowen also by the member in a manne chylde which in thys case is alwaye stiffe pricking moreouer the noyse and rumblinge in the guttes hither and thyther declareth y e chylde to be greued with winde in the
conuenyent to the pacient and laye him down and sweat vpon the same yf the venim hath not vtterly ouercome the hearte he shal vndoubtedly recouer It hath bene lately proued that after drinkynge of the same medicine whan y e pacient made his water in an vrinal the glasse hath bruste in pieces by reason of the venime that it purged out ¶ This is the makyng of the sayde electuarye Take cinamome electe one ounce terra sigillata .vi. drāmes fine mirrhe iii. drāmes vnicornes horne .i drāme the sede and rinde of citron rootes of diptany burnet turmentille zedoary redde corall ana drammes .ii. yelowe saunders .iiii. scrupules red saunders ii scruples white ben and red floures of marigoldes ana one dramme iuerye raced scabiouse beronici tunici sede of basile y e bone of a stagges heart saffron ana .ii. scruples make a fyne pouder and adde vnto it of bole armoniake preparate two ounces white suger thre pounde and with a sirupe of acetositate citri make a goodlye electuary and kepe it in a glasse If the pestilence commeth with great excesse of heat drinke it vpon rosewater and vineger but yf ye fele it colde take it in a draught of wyne and couer ye with clothes so that ye may sweate as longe as is possible for wythoute dout it is a presente remedye as I my selfe haue oftentimes proued ¶ An other deuine medicine in a liquide fourme TAke rue wormewood bawme the herbe of ech a like porcion of celidony both herbe rote asmuche as al the other so that ye haue of them iii● a good bigge handful wash the rote of celidony very clene purely in wine or in fayre clere water than put them all into a new pot of earth neled within and poure vpon the herbes halfe a pounde of the moste strongest vineger ye can gettte couer them iust and lute the mouth of the potte with luto sapiencie which is made of wheate floure and y e white of an egge that no breath maye issue and seeth it eyghte or .ix. houres with a softe fyer than lette it ●ole by litle and litle and after straine the herbe and sette the licoure in the sonne to rectifye ¶ Whan a person is infected with the pestilence First as I sayde afore lette hym bleede in a due vayne than geue hym a sponefull of this lycoure with as muche as a nutte of triacle yf so be ye haue any luke warme by and by let a cruste of breade all hote be dipped in vineger and holden to his mouth that he may the better broke the medicine And yf he chaunce to vomite incontinente washe his mouth with wine and cause hym to receiue againe an other sponful and so if nede be .v. or .vi. times til ye se that he reteine it which is a very good signe yf he so doe After this set hym in a warme bed couered that he may sweate out y e resydue of the venime and by the grace of God he shall escape the daunger This is a medicine of infinite vertue But if the pacient haue a greate heate geue hym no triacle or els very litle ¶ The .iiii. chapter of the cure of pestilence by lettyng of bloud ventoses and purgacions ALthough phlebotomy or lettyng of bloud be one of the chief thinges that are requyred to the cure of the pestilence yet for lacke of vnderstandyng and letting bloud otherwyse than behoueth manye one is cast awaye and therefore euerye good barboure ought for to take heed y t he hurt not them whiche come vnto hym for helpe for that were a greatte shame whiche he shal neuer do yf he ponder wel y e thinges y t shal be said herafter ¶ Thys is a general rule IN the time of pestilence whā a body is infect ye maye not haue respecte either to y e signe y e daye or y e houre but whether the mone be there or not or what aspectes so euer be in y e planettes lette him blede forth with in the name of God Younge men and sanguine and they that haue aboundaunce of ●●e● and of blood mingled with other ●ors ought to blede somwhat more in quātitie but alwayes kepe a moderacion that ye take not out to gre●● quātitye at once It is better to let hym blood twyse leauynge the wonde of the fyrst stroke open and annoynt it with a litle oile and after foure or fiue houres let him blede in the same wound agayne but wythout strykyng yf it be possible But alwayes gyue an eye to the strength of the paciente that it be not enfebled and agayne beware that ye haue taken awaye the rankest and the strōgest venime wherin yf ye be doutful take the counsaile of some good expert phisicion Also ye must note that ye may not let blood to any children within the age of .xiiii. yere nor to olde men aboue fyftye yere olde nor to women great with childe specially nere vnto theyr tyme nor when theyr due purgacions is vpon thē nor to thē that are newly brought to bed or within a wekeor ii after she is purified generally to none whiche is weake feble in hys body Ye shal also note that there are some olde menne of better strength complexion than many yong are of agayne dyuers young children often or twelue yeres olde are of higher corage and of as good strengthe as they that are many yeres elder In suche cases a litle euentaciō of the enfected blood may be y e sauing of theyr liues so that all thinges be done with good discretion It is wisdome also to let them blood liyng vpō theyr backes whō ye thinke would fainte in stāding or in syttyng And yf the case do requyre the letting of blood and the paciente be not able to beare it for any of the causes afore rehersed it is good to apply ventoses in maner and fourme as I shall declare hereafter And here we shulde saye somwhat of the greate errour that many do commyt in taking one veyne for an other for by such errours is the venym drawen many tymes vnto the herte and so procureth deathe vnto the pacient Wherefore that ye may not be dis●eyued euer in the pestilence lette him blood on that syde that the sore is on and not on the contrarye syde in anye wyse for that shulde drawe the venim ouerthwarte the membres spirytuall and so destroye the man But or euer ye lette him blood it is good to gyue some good and holsome medicine agaynst the venyme such as is declared in the chapters herbefore If the botche appeare vnderneth the eares let him blood in the hed veyne of y e same arme or els in the braunche of the same veyne which is vpon the hand betwene the myddle fynger and the nexte that is adioynynge If it appeare vnder the throte take the same veyne and within a whyle after it is good to open the .ii. veynes vnderneth the tongue If the sore be sette within the arme-holes take the veyne
to the fyre in consuming Wherefore the remedies y t are good for burning are also very holesome here ī this case And fyrste the grene ointment of herbes described in y e chapter of itche is of good effect also in this cure more ouer y e medicines y t are here described Take at the pothecaries of vnguentū Galeni an ounce and an halfe oyle of roses two ounces vnguenti populeon one ounce y e iuce of plantain nightshade one ounce or more the whites of iii. egges heat thē altogether ye shal haue a good ointmēt for the same purpose An other Take earthwormes and stampe them in vineger then annoint the grefe euery two houres Item y e donge of a swan or in lacke of it the donge of a gose stamped with the whyte and yolke of an egge is good Item doues donge stamped in salet oyle or other is a singuler remedy for the same purpose Of burnyng and scalding FOr burning and scalding whether it be with fier water oile leade pytch lime or any suche infortune Ye must beware ye set no repercussiue at y e fyrst that is to saye no medicine of extreme colde for that might chaunce to driue the feruēt heat into the sinowes and so stoppethe poores that it could not issue whereof should happen much inconuenience in a great burnyng but in smal it coulde not be so daungerous wherfore y e best is when ye see a member eyther brent or scalded as is sayde afore Take a good quantitie of brine which is made of water and salt not to excedyng eyger or stronge but of a meane sharpnes and with a clout or a sponge bathe the member in it colde or at the least bloud warm thre or foure houres together the longer the better For it shall asswage muche of the peine open the pores cause also the fyer to vapour and geue a great comfort to the weake member Thē annoint the place with one of these medicines Take oyle of roses one parte swete creme two partes hony halfe a parte make an oyntment and vse it Item all the medicines described in the last chapter are of greate effecte in this case likewyse the grene ointment made of water betonye Item a soueraine medicine for burnynge and scaldynge and all vnkynde heates is thus made Take a dosen or more of hard rosted egges and put the yolkes in a pot on the fyer by thē self without licour styrre them and braye them with a strong hand tyll there aryse as it wer a froth or spume of oyle to the mouth of the vessell then presse the yolkes and reserue the licour this is called oile of egges a very precious thyng in the foresayde cure Moreouer ther is an oyntment made of sheepes dounge fryed in oyle or in swines grece than putte to it a litle waxe and vse it Also take quicke lime and washe it in veriuce .ix. or .x. tymes than mingle it with oile kepe it for thesame entent Item the iuyce of the leaues of lylyes v. partes and vineger one parte hony a lytle maketh an excellent medicine not onely for this entent but for al other kynd of h● and runnyng vlcers Note that w●●tsoeuer ye vse in thys case it must be laid vnto bloud warm Also for auoydyng of a scarre kepe the sore alwaye moyste with medicine ¶ Of kybes The kybes of y e heeles are called in latyne perniones they procede of cold are healed with these subscribed remedies A rape rote rosted wyth a litle fresh butter is good for the same gryefe Item a dosen figges sodden stamped with a lytle goosegrece is good Earth wormes sodden in oyle hath the same effecte Item the skinne of a mouse clapped a● hote vpon y e kibe with the heare outwarde and it shoulde not be remoued durynge ●ii dayes ¶ A playster for a kybed heele Take newe butter oyle of roses hennes grece of ech an oūce put the butter and the grece in a bygge rape rote or in lacke of it in a greate apple or onion whan it is rosted softe braye it with the oyle laye it playsterwyse vpon the kybe ¶ An oth● Take the 〈◊〉 of apples and rapes rosted on the coses of eche .iii. ounces freshe butter .ii. ounces duckes grese or swannes grece an ounce stamp thē all in a morter of leade yf it maye be had or els grynde them on a fayre marble and vse it ¶ Of consumpcion or leanesse WHan a child cōsumeth or waxeth leane withoute anye cause apparaunt there is a bathe cōmended of authours to wasshe y e childe many times is made thus Take the head and feete of a wether seeth thē til the bones fal a sunder vse to bath y e child in this licour and after annointe hym wyth thys ointmente folowing Take butter without salt oile of roses and of violettes of eche .i ounce the fat of rawe porke halfe an ounce waxe a quarteron of an ounce make an ointmēt wherwith the child must be rubbed euery daye twyse this with good fedinge shall encrease his strength by the grace of God ¶ Of gogle eyes THis impedimēt is neuer healed but in a very yong child euen at the beginning whervnto there is appointed no manner kind of medicine but only an order of kepyng that is to saye to laye the chylde so in his cradelle that he maye beholde directe agaynste the light not to turne his eies on either of bothe sydes If yet he beginne to gogle than set the cradell after suche a fourme that the light maye be on the contrary side that is on the same syde frō whence he turneth his eies so that for desyre of light he may dyrect them to the same part so by custome bring them to y e due fashion and in the night there ought to be a candel set in lykewyse to cause him to behold vpon it remoue his eies from y e euil custome Also grene clothes yelowe or purple are very good in this case to be set as is said afore Furthermore a coyfe or a biggē stonding out besides his eies to constraine the sight to beholde directe forwarde Of lyce SOmtimes not only chyldrē but also other ages are annoyed with lyce they procede of a corrupt humour and are engendred within y e skynne crepīg out alyue thorough the poores which yf they beginne to swarme in exceding numbre that disease is called of the grekes Phthiryasys whereof Herode dyed as is writtē in the actes of apostles among the Romaines Scilla which was a great tyraunt and many other haue ben eaten of lice to deathe whiche thing whā it happeneth of the plage of god it is past remedy but yf at procedeth of a natural cause ye may wel cure it by the meanes folowynge Fyrste let the paciente abstayne from al kynde of corrupt meates or y e brede fleume and among other ●ygges and dates must in this case be vtterly abhorred Thā make a lauatory to wash and
scoure the body twise a day thus Take water of the sea or els bryne strong lye of asshes of eche a lyke porcion wormwood a handfull seth them a whyle and after wasshe the bodye with the same licour ¶ A goodly medicine for to kyl lyce Take the groūdes or dregges of oyle aloes wormwood the gal of a bull or of an oxe make an ointment which is singuler good for the same purpose ¶ An other Take musterde and dissolue it in vinegre with a litle salte peter and annoynt the places where as the lice are wont to breed Item an herbe at the pothecaries called stauisacre brimstone and vinegre is excedyng good It is good to giue the pacient often in his drincke pouder of an hartes horne brente Stauisacre with oile is a marueilouse holsome thyng in thys case ¶ An experte medicine to dryue away lyce Take the groūdes or dregges of oile or in lacke of it fresh swines grece a sufficiēt quātitie wherin ye shal chase an oūce of quicksiluer til it be al sōken into the grece than take pouder of ●a●●sacre serced and myngle al togither make a gyrdyll of a wollen list meete for the middle of y e patient al to annoynte it ouer with the said medicine than let him were it contynually next his skinne for it is a singuler remedy to chase awaye the vermyn The only odour of quyckesiluer killeth lyce These shall be suffycient to declare at this time in this litle treatise of the cure of children which yf I may know to be thankefully receiued I will by gods grace supplye more hereafter neyther desyre I any lenger to liue than I will employ my studyes to the honour of god and profit of the weale publike ¶ Thus endeth y e boke of childerne composed by Thomas Phayer studiouse in Philosophie and Phisicke ¶ The contentes of the regiment of lyfe Of diseases and remedyes of the heed Payne commyng of choler Payne caused of fleume Payne caused of melancholye Regiment for all heedache Remedye for heedache of all causes Of diseases in the face To passifye a face vncurable For rednesse of the face For cākers vlcers Noli me tāgere For wormes in the face A purgacion for the same Dyete for the same sycknesse For the eyes and to quicken y e sighte For payne in the eyes For bloodshoten eyes For swellyng of the eyes For sore eyes For great payne in the eyes For rednesse in the eyes For hardnesse in the eyes For al rednesse of eyes To drye the eyes For webbes in the eyes Regiment for diseases in the eyes For infirmities of the eares For stynkyng of the nose For nosebleadyng Remedye for tothache To make teeth whyte Remedyes for diseases in the breest For a horce voyce For the cough For shortnesse of wynde For asthma An oyntment for the breath Regiment for the same Remedies for phthysyke For the pleauresye For diseases in the rybbes Weakenesse of the hert and the cure Swownyng For diseases of the stomake For weakenes therof For abhorryng of meate For belchyng For wyndinesse therof For the hicket Regiment for hicket For vomytyng To comforte the stomake Peyne in the stomake Remedies for diseases of the lyuer A singuler purgacion for colere Other medicines laxatyue For heate in the lyuer For stopping of the lyuer Remedie for diseases of the galle For Iaundies For diseases in the splene A goodly purgacion for melancholy For the blacke Iaundies For all oppilacions Diseases of the bowels For colyke and yliaca passio For the wyndye colyke A supposytorye A purgacion for collike of fleume A glyster for all colyke Payne of the raynes and remedye Diete for colike paine of the reines Fluxes of the bellye Remedie for the fluxe lienteria For the fluxe diarthea and other Lectuaries for the fluxe For fluxe of all causes Diseases of the matrice To staunche the fluxe of women For strangling of the matrice For all paines of the mother Of the stone ī the raines and bladder with the perfect cure and diete for the same Of the goute with the causes and remedyes ¶ Finis The contentes of the treatyse of the pestilence In the first parte A preface of the authore What is signified by this worde pestilence The first roote or cause superior of the pestilence The seconde roote superior The thyrde roote inferiour The fourth roote or cause intersor Of eleccion of the ayre Of eatyng and drynkyng Of slepyng and waking Of exercise Of emptines and fulnes Of accidentes of the mynde Of medicines preseruatyues A drynke for the pestilence A good preseruatiue for y e cōmō people A pouder for the same An other singuler remedie for rich mē An other soueraigne and goodly receit bothe preseruatiue and curatiue Of swete waters Perfumes against the pestilence Pomaunders for pestilence ¶ In the seconde parte Howe to knowe a person infected Of the cure of pestilence by the way of diete Of the cure of pestilence by the way of medicines A receite agaynst the pestilence Manardus medicine A lectuary of great vertue An other medicine liquide Of letting bloud vētoses purgaciōs Of applicaciō of outward medicines A plaister to ripe a botche comming of the pestilence An other for the same The vse of surgerye for hym that hath no botche Of the cure of carbūcles and anthrax A good defenciue A declaraciō of y e vtilitie of veines cōmōly to be let bloud in y e body of mā Finis ¶ Imprinted at Lōdon in Fletestrete at the signe of the Sunne ouer against the condite by Edwarde whitchurche i. 5.50 ¶ Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum