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A64765 A Hermeticall banquet, drest by a spagiricall cook for the better preservation of the microcosme. Howell, James, 1594?-1666.; Vaughan, Thomas, 1622-1666. 1652 (1652) Wing V149; ESTC R6717 65,920 196

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Elixir which is the Stomacks proper Balsamum ℞ Cinamomi Zedoariae Cardamom Maceris an. ℥ j. Garyophyl Nuc. Mosch. Cubeb an. ℥ j. ss. Galanoae ʒiij Piper long ʒvj Garyoph hortens Ros. Rub. Flor. Buglos Flor. Menthae Rom. an. M. j. Folior Menth Rom. Absinthii an. M. ss. Bruse them small in a Mortar and adde thereto ten ounces of the Crum of white Bread Put all into a Glass Cucurbita and powre thereto of the best Sack as much as they can drink with two fingers depth advantage close your Glass according to art then give it 8. dayes Fermentation which done adjoyn this Emulsion ℞ Amygd dulc. excort lb. ss. Aqu. Rosar Buglos an. lb. ij Sacchar albis ℥ iij Fiat emulsio Then destill all in Balneo secund. attem The Dose is two spoonfulls an hour before and after meat Here follows an other more excellent ℞ Spir. Vini cum Spirito Sem. Anisii animato lb.j. Theriacae ℥ j. Confect Alcher ℥ ss. Specier Diarrhod Ab. Zinzib Maceris Cinamom an.ʒj. Cort. Citri ʒiij The Ginger Mace Cinamon and Citron-peeles being all grosly beaten mix all together and in Balneo by a gentle heat extract the Tincture To which you shall adde these Tinctur Succini Tinctur Corallor an. ℈ j. Tinctur Auri. Essent Perlar. an. gut xx Spir. Menthar Spir. Faenic Spir. Melissae an. ℥ ss. Spir. Rosar ℥ j. Essentiae Sacci ℥ ij Tinctur Croci gut xij Who please may proceed farther in this Preparation by separating the Spirits from the first Theriacall Tincture in Balneo vaporoso which Spirits being Sublimated he shall find at the bottom of his Cucu●bita an Extract or coagulated Tincture admirable in Corroborating the Principle Parts specially the Heart and Stomack and far surpassing the Common Theriaca against all pestilential and infectious Aer Then to those Spirits thus separated from their Tinctures you may adde the other forementioned Tinctures And who ever can attain to this believe me he enjoyes a Treasure worthy of a Princes Cabinet whose vertues are so infinite that they would lose themselves in Expression It asswageth all inward dolours of the Stomack Heart Liver Bowels c. And that on an Instant 'T is a Panacaea in all Pestilentiall Fevers both Prophylactick and Therapeutick It corroborates all the Vitall Parts and renovates the Oyl of Ages decaying Lamp To conclude it recalls a departing Soul by rendring the Annuall Tribute which weak Natures exhausted Treasury could no longer disburse Hippocras and Artificiall Aromaticall Wines are much in use with us in England not without Cause since they have a peculiar Efficacy in repairing Cold weak and decaying Stomacks That those therefore which honour my Feast may at all hours and on any occasion prepare a Quart of Hippocras for their Friends in an Instant I will favour them with this insuing Hippocraticall Extract ℞ Cinamom ℥ ij vel iij Garyophyl ℥ ss. Zinzib Macropip Cardamom Gran. Parad. Galaneae an. ʒij Nuc. Mosch. ʒj.ss Being all grosly powdred put them into a Glass Violl and powre thereon of the Spir. of Wine to the eminence of 4. fingers Stop your Glass close and set it in Balneo or in Summer in the Sun for the Space of three or four Dayes untill the Spirits have rob'd the Aromaticks of their Tinctures this done separate it from the Faeces and reserve it for your use When any of you therefore desire a Cup of Hippocras mix but ʒ ss. of this Tincture with a Pint or more of Sack adding what Quantity of Sugar you please or which is better the Essence of Sugar and your desire is answered a Glass of which with a Toast before meat gives no small Check to a cold distemper Here likewise I present a Tast of Spagiricall Cla●et to your weak Stomacks by the often use of which neither Crudities or Ventosities shall impaire your Digestion ℞ Cinamom ℥ ij Maceris ℥ ss. Dactyllor num 20. Myccbal num 4. Uvar. passul ℥ v. vel 6. Sem. Anisi Coriand prae an. ℥ j. Faenicul ℥ ss. With the Spirits of Wine and Canary Sack of each lb iij being mixt set them in some cool Cellar to ferment the space of four or five Dayes Of this you may take one or two spoonfulls in a morning If I mistake not I heard some of you call for a glass of Wormwood Wine I have none ready prepared but here is a little Violl of the Spirits of Wormwood with which who please to make a Triall and put ●ut some few drops in a glass of ordinary white Wine he shall find his desire satisfied with a Cup of exquisite Wormwood Wine far more effectuall then any Galenicall macerati●n or Infusion And that your defect may be supplied when this small quantity shall be exhausted I ●ere lend you the receit whereby you may ●ereafter furnish your self and pleasure a friend ℞ Summitat Absint q.s. affunde aq com s.q. stent in digestione per dies aliquot potest quid ad fermentandum adjici Destilletur per Vesicam exibit aquam oleum quippiam continens Oleum per Seperatorium separetur Aqua tota Cucurbitae vitreae indatur atque in Balneo semel atque iterum rectificetur saltem pars spirituosior absirahatur quae odorem saporem Absinthit retinet This hath a singlar Vertue in corrobora●ing both Stomack and Liver it resists putri●action and deopilates obstructions and is a ●pecifical Preservative against all Stomattical ●nd Intestinall Vermine Spirit of Mints is ●ikewise an excellent and peculiar prophylactick of a Weak and cold Stomack some few drops thereof put into a Cup of Sac● with a Toast adjoyning a drop of the Essence of Cinamon and taken an hour before meat To think to please every Mans Palate may well inlarge the List of Impossibilities yet Despair shall not interrupt my Carving and where one Dish likes not variety shall presently bring in another So that at length ●● presume the major part shall satisfie the variability of Fancy and give Appetite a Delight in the Stomacks preservation Who then please may tast of this Spagiricall Stomaticall Syrupe which in delicacy and Vertue excelleth all your ordinary cinamon-Cinamon-Waters ℞ Cinam gros mod pulv ℥ iiij Vini Hispam● lb. ij Let them infuse in Balneo three dayes then separate the Tincture from his Faeces and adding thereto lb● ss. of pure white Sugar put all into a Glass Cucurbita and with a boiling Balneo distill it untill it remain at the Bottom in consistence of a Syrup So in one Operation you injoy both a Syrup and an excellent Cinamon Water both of which for Corroborating a Weak Stomack and expelling Melancholy from a pensive Heart may take possessi●n among your Secrets But to make it more perfect in place of Sack you shall use Spir. of Wine In the same manner you shall make Syrup of Nutmegs the which is a little more Spe●ificall for the Stomack For windiness of the Stomack and Bowels you may
doubt not but when you have tasted of it you will gladly inrich your Cooks with the ℞ I will not bid you fall to whil'st 't is hot for 't is to be eaten cold Bianco mangiare ℞ Of the flower of Rice lb. ss. dissolve it in Milk q.s. Then take the Pulpe of a young Capon tender boyld sweet Almonds numb. xxiiij beat these well in a Mortar then mix them with the Milk and Rice pass all through a Course Cloath adding thereto what quantity of Sugar you please Then boil it on a soft fire still stirring it untill it coagulate into the consistence of a strong Gelly when it begins to cool adde thereto of Amber and musk dissolv'd in Rose water as much as shall render it a gratefull odour But for those which are brought so low that Nature is almost desperate of ever giving another flesh Livery to such I present this insuing Restorative or Consummada which above all other manifests his effects in a most momentary Operation replenishing the Veins faster with bloud than assimilation can dispence of it The Prime way for Consummadoes ℞ An old Capon exenterated his neck wings and feet cast away and the rest cut into small pieces Then take one or two Partridges the flesh of a leg of Veal all cut smal then macerate all 24. hours in white Wine Then put the Wine and flesh into a great glass Phialam with ℥ ss of Cinamon and two nut-megs grosly beaten prepared Pearls and Corall of each ʒiij Flowers of Borage Bugloss an. P. j. All being well mixt together and the Orifice of your Glass exactly stopt set it ●n Balneo bulliente where let it boil well for eight or nine hours without Intermission Then strain all through a Coarse Canvas separating the fat which swims on the superficies and if there yet appear any signe of Crudity reboil it again between two dishes untill it's whiteness manifests a perfect decoction Of which you are to take but three or four spoonfulls warm reiterating the same every three hours and thus in little time you may promise your bones a Winter Coat Here is Don Consummadoes Cosin German Signior Geladino who petitionates as a well-wisher to your State and desires to enter into pay pray Sirs judge him not at first sight to be a Coward because he trembles when any Man toucheth him for upon my Word he is hearty enough and deserves to be your Corporall Geladina ℞ A Capon of two years old the flesh of a leg of Veal four Calves feet White Wine Fair water an. lb vj Boil all in a new earthen vessell scuming of all the fat when 't is well boild strein it separating all the fat Then put this broth into a new vessell with lbj ss. of Sugar Cinamon unbeaten ℥ ss. Cloves num 12. boil it again a little then adde thereto the whites of two eggs then rebo●l it again and pass it per manic Hip. s.a. before it cool mix a little Musk and Amber dissolv'd in Rosewater with it These Hepaticall Dishes which you have hitherto fed upon do onely restore here I will close up your Stomacks with a Therapeutick Dish An Hepaticall Antidote ℞ Agrimon Fol. Eupator Avi● Absinth Salviae an. M.j. Faenic Rad. Petrosel Aspar Helenii an. ℥ j. Spicae Flor. Salviae Tunicis an. P.j. Faeniculi Sem. Anisi Carui an. ℥ ss. Calam. arom Cinamom Cassiae lig Sassafras Rad. Chinae an. ℥ ij With the rectified Spirits of Wine draw their Tincture to which Tincture you shall adde Extract santal Extract Chelid an. ℥ ss. 🜿 ri 🜖 lati ʒiij Tinctur croci ♂ cum 🝆 🜍 ris praep. ʒij Salis Corallor ℥ ss. Essentiae ♂ ʒj Circulate them all in Balneo the space of twenty four hours then in B. Vaporoso separate the Spirits from the Tincture untill it coagulate to an Extract which you shall reserve a part The Spirits you shal animate with the Soul of his Vegetables The Vertues 'T is a Universall Antidote against all Hepaticall debilitations proceeding from a cold Distemper It corroborates the Liver and all the Naturall Facultyes returning them their proper strength and temper So that for all such Persons as by reason of a weak Liver are proclive to Dropsies Cachexies Jaundice c. Art never lent us a more absolute Preservative Dosis You are to take the Quantity of a scruple either alone or in Wine Broth or some Specificall Water THE FOURTH AND LAST COURSE CARDIACALL BEing well recover'd from my great weakness brought by Disorders in my late Hepatick travells that I may finish my discovery of this Microcosmicall Globe and from my observations compose an Anthropographicall Map for a light to such young Travellers as hereafter the devotion of Curiosity shall fall into this Pilgrimage I am now resolved to set on towards the Cardiacall Territoryes My Mistris Sanitas dares not undertake this Voyage for she tells me we must Imbark again in the Red-Sea from whence we shall sail into a bloudy gulf which hurries us down into a hollow vein of that Earth where we uncomfortably go many Leagues under ground before we can arrive to the Viceroyes Court Spiritus Vitalis Besides quoth she 't is to passionate a Land for our weaker Sex to abide in there abounding so many Discontents Treacheryes Rebellions Dissimulations Flatteries Inconstancies Vain desires Desperations Arrogancies mixt with Envy Hatred Avarice Pride Ambition Vain glory with a thousand such like Fanatick Spirits in the Hearts of those Inhabitants that 't is too difficult a Task either for young or Old to live there without infection especially for her to whom they were all professed Enimies Asking of her why she called those {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Fanatick Spirits She answered because the Princess Phantasia of the Cephalick Peninsula first in a depraved humor gave them their entertainment Where they grew to such a head that Spiritus Animalis began to be jealous of his Princess Phantasia fearing they might corrupt her Therefore he commanded Intell●ctus his Favorite whom it did likewise much concern to banish them his Peninsula and to confine them to the Center of the Microcosme Where said she they have now incroached into the Cardiacall Court and so blinded the Viceroy Spiritus Vitalis that they now command and rule his Court I could not but laugh here at Sanitas to ●ere how like a Woman she talked and then ●urning to her I asked if she thought those mo●ives sufficient to divert the resolutions of a Traveller Or if she took me for one of those Milk-sops which durst not pass the Sea because it roard and would defer his Voyage into France untill the French-men had learn'd the English tongue I told her I feared no Bug-Beares My Nature was better pleas'd with horrid and forrain Monsters than with the yealping Beauties of Domestick Puppy dogs And though she were my Mistris she had not yet drawn me into the Predicament of slavery to oblidge me never
compose the like Waters and Syrups of Annise and Caraway seeds But there are many whose Natures so Antipathize with Wine that both smell and tast ●hereof is offensive to them Such persons may make the above said Syrups as followeth ℞ Cinam pulveriz ℥ iij vel iiij aqu commun. q.s. Set them in some cold place the space of three or four Dayes then distill it Then take of that distild water lb j. Sugar lb. ss. Fiat Syrrup s.a. This retains the fragant Odour of Cinamon and this for the Summer is more proper to which you may adde an ounce or two of Rose-water Gentlemen you are too modest Because my Cook to follow Court Fashion sends in his Dishes in Duplicates every man expects that I should make the Discovery This Lady-like nicety had almost let a good Dish here scape for the serving men 'T is a meat which you have already tasted of the difference is only in the dressing the which is rare and exquisite Take the above mentioned Spirits seperated from the first Cinamon Syrupe adde to it ℥ iij or iiij of gross beaten Cinamon then being exquisitely stop'd set in a cold place untill the water have the perfect Tincture of the Cinamon the which you shall separate and to every ℥ x. adde ℥ iij or 4. of Sugar Then in Balneo separate those Spirits from the Tincture and you have the best sort of Cinamon Water together with an admirable Syrup If you will make one yet more excellent 't is but adding fresh Cinamon to these last rectified Spirits proceeding as before and reiterating this Operation three or four times so that the last will render you an Essence of Cinamon whose Vertues will repay your Labour with Interest We have in our Spagiricall Kitchin certain Stomatticall Balsams whose descriptions I must here forbear as Frutta nova and not yet for every mans Table Such as are Balsamum Iunip Balsamum Nuc. mosc Bals Cinamom Balsam Rosmar c. These as they are rare and Princely so are they Singular in Corroborating both the Stomack and the rest of the Vitall Parts either Intrinsicall or Extrinsically applyed And for such over-nice and delicate Persons which either through Coyness will not or through Weakners cannot receive any Internall remedy let them morning and evening Externally annoint the Stomack with this Hermeticall Balsam ℞ Butyr Gelsomini ℥ j. Essent Rosmar ℈ ss. Essent Cinamom Essent Nuc. mosc an. ℈ .j. Essent Masticis ʒj Moschi Ambrae an. g. iiij Zibet g. ij Cum Cero virgin decies in aq Rosar lavat. q.s. fiat Balsam s.a. That no man may complain for want of Bread to his Meat you shall tast of our Spa●iricall Biscuit which I recommend to all weak and moist Stomacks especially to those who after some Chronicall Disease cannot digest ordinary Bread Take lb. j. of the purest Wheat-flower of the best refined Sugar ℥ xvj Fresh Eggs numb. xij The Cream of Almonds extracted with the best Rosewater ℥ iiij Essence of Annise Cinamon and Nutmeggs an. ℈ j. more or less according to the humor of your Palate Spirit of Roses q.s. mix them according to Art and thereof make your Biscuits There are many other sorts of Biscuits which every good Wife knows how to prepare as Regal● Biscuit S●anish Biscuit French Biscuit Lorain Biscuit Italian Biscuit c. Therefore as too Vulgar for our Table I omit them Yet if any one desire a Tast let them call to our Cook Now presuming upon the Phlegme of your Cold Distempers I will call in for a Dish or two to refocillate our younger and more Sulphureous Stomacks whose extra vagant disorders hath brought the Stomack so far in Choler with the Microcosme that he refuseth to supply it with his expected Nourishment This Quarrell must not grow too hot but t is necessary a speedy reconciliation be made before the Stomack grow too Obstinate in his Humor In this Case I know no better Aparater tha● our Panchymagogon let him bring him up to the Court of Conscience there he will be so qualified that you may turn him to any conditions of Peace When you have him at this Advantage injoyn him for Penance every morning to take three drops of the Spirits of Sulphur or Vitriol with as many of the Spirit of Roses mixt with a glass of Spring Water edulcorated with the Essence of Sugar Or this ℞ Sal. Christalli ℈ ss. Spir. Vitrioli gut iij Spir. Rosar gut 5. Essent Sacch q.s. Aq. fontan distillat ℥ iiij Misce Before meat half an hour or an hour let him use this ℞ Rob. de Ribes Rob. de Berber an. ℥ j. Spir. 🜍 g. iij Salis perlar ℈ .j. Misce After Meals this ℞ Conser. Corneol Diacydon simp. an. ℥ ij Salis coralor ʒj Spir. Salis gut vj Spir. Rosar gut x. Misce You which are thus distemperd I desire you to entertain Appetite with Patience until the Third Course enter where you may pick out Variety of Hepaticall Dishes proper to your Indisposition In the mean time if any Insolent Stomack-Worms quarrel for a breakfast before their Master be served you shall do wel to cut off their allowance and then turn them out of your Doors with a Powder ℞ Corn Cer. praep. Coral rub praep. an. ℈ j. Aquilae Celestis ℈ j.ss Verm terrest prae Cinamom an. ℈ .j. Scammon cum 🜍 praep. ʒj Misce Dos ℈ .j. The Furyes of Appetite being laid now your Patience may dispence with a little Idle Table Talk to renovate the dull'd edge of your Apetites that they may be the livelier at the Second encounter THE SECOND COURSE CEPHALICALL HEre Dogmaticall Discipline bids me be more Compendious and collect my Method unto Heads But we are Travellers and must not be limitted We are now landed on the Coast of the Cephalick Peninsula a place whose Fame elevates it above all other parts of the World and where both Tongue and Eyes of all Men sleep in Admiration Here that great Monarck of the Microcosme hath his residence Who is an Emperiall King and full of Divinity his Head being alwayes Crown'd as a Type of his absolute and peaceable reign even to the Worlds end That his more Celestiall Thoughts may not be interrupted with State Affairs he hath resigned the government of his Microcosme which he hath divided into three Monarchies unto three of his ablest Subjects Spiritus Vitalis Spiritus Animalis and Spiritus Naturalis To Spiritus Animalis he hath given the Cephalick Peninsula placing him neer unto himself as his Wisest Counseller for which consideration he hath made him likewise {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Lord Secretary To Spiritus Vitalis and Spiritus Naturalis he hath resigned the Government of Terra firma an equall Division being made the one taking the Cardiacall the other the Hepaticall Parts Spiritus Vitalis likewise being his Lord Treasurer and Spiritus Naturalis Lord of the Cinque-Ports Other Information of this King the Soul I dare not
Diet and prescrib you this Opthalmick water and this is for such as prefer their ease before their Eyes who rather than suffer a little smart will sooner be at the charge of some well Tutor'd Mungrell to follow his Dogged Humor ℞ Euphrag Chelidon an. M.ij. Card. Ben. Betonec an. M.j. Rutae P.j. Salviae Fenic an. M.j. Enul camp Rad. Valerian an. ℥ j. Faenic Sem. Anisi Coriand praep. Siler mont an. ℥ ss. Bac. Iunip ℥ j. Ros. alb Flor. Rosmarin Calondul Lavend. Staeched an. P.j. Nuc. Mosch. Zinzib Cardamom Macropip Calam. arom Cinamum an.ʒj. Infuse all in lb. iiij of the Spir. of Wine animated with the Spirits of Sage for the space of four Days in Balneo from whence accord●ng to art you shall extract the Spirits and Tincture from the Faeces by Calcination Solution Filtration and coagulation you shall resuscitate the Soul of those Vegetables with which you are to Animate the Spirits and Phlegma Which Phlegma dissolving therein {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} li with a little crocus metallorum makes an excellent externall Opthalmick water The Spirits are to be inhibited the quantity of a Spoonfull or but half The coagulated Tincture ℈ ss. vel ℈ j. ss. Who will prie far into other mens matters though he smart for it let him use this Externall Opthalmicall Water ℞ Suc Chelidon Euphrag an. lb. ss. Lact. Caprin lb. j. Zinzib Maceris an. ℥ j. Aloes ℥ ss. Vitriol alb. ℥ iij Give all four Dayes Infusion and then distill them in Balneo To this distilled water take little peeces of Tutia heat them red hot in a new Iron spoon and extinguish them in this water with nine Repetitions leaving your Tutia at the last extinction in the water and so reserve it for your use A blind man may see the Vertues of this water a drop thereof being often put into his Eys It cures all Opthalmies Gumms salt Tears Pearles c. In your first Stomaticall Course I told you of a new Hermeticall method in curing Diseases which I have often practiz'd on Infants and extream feeble Patients only by externall remedies without any Internall praesidio Whereby I will undertake and maintain that any Disease either Acute Chronical or Astralis where no Malignity praedominates may be perfectly and with far less expence to Nature eradicated And that all exteriour affects as Ulcers Wounds c. may be brought to an exact sanation without any locall application but meerly by a Magneticall Sympathy This Opinion I know will be better than a Gig to our modern Methodists to provoke Laughter But let them beware in their Laughter they revive not the Example of Z●uxis that famous Painter who imitating the Deformity of an Old Tripefac'd Beldam whose arch'd Chin supported the fall of her Nose and the want of teeth gave her Tongue Liberty to drown her mumping Eloquence with dribling Oratory every Eye likewise being so retir'd that their Gravity eclypsed all suspect of Lightness When he had finish'd this Master-peece and wrought it so neer to the Life that Art had almost lost her Interest in it he was so overcome with the extravagancy of his Pensills perfection that bursting into a violent Laughter he let out his soul to animate his Pourtraict Thus perchance the Extravagancy of our Art mixt with perfection may draw some of them to a Violent Laughter But I fear t will be Sardinian Faith if they laugh I must do as Fools do and laugh for Company Yet with a more hearty laughter as was of that of Chrysippus when he saw an Ass forsake sweet Grass and fall to Thistles Apply who will Here Purpose bringing me upon it to make this new Art more Speculative and my Opinion more apparent I will give you an Ocular Instance In all Opthalmies where a Plethora doth indicate evacuation we have an Hermeticall Opthalmick water whereof three drops put into the Eye hath these three Properties First per {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} it causeth a Universall Revulsion of the humor peccant which flows to the part affected Secondly by a repulsion it resists the flux of humors Lastly per {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} it makes an insensible discussion of those humors already compacted and coagulated in the Eye Now they will not only laugh but conclude I am Mad to say that the dropping water in the Eyes can purge per {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} If this seeme so strange to them perchance I may shortly present them with a Monster yet no {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} whose smell only shall excite Intestin●ll evacuations To shew that I am not in choller therefore with Methodicall Obstinacy which Jeeres at Truth to blinde their Ignorance ● will drink to them in a Cup of our Hermeticall Claret ℞ Caryoph Nuc. Mosch. M●ceris an. ℥ j. ss. Zinzib Cardamom an. ℥ ss. Coriand praep. Anisi Faenicul an. ʒiij Diptamni Zedoariae rad Angel an. ʒij Flor. Rosmarin Bugloss an. P.ij. Tabel arom ros. ℥ j. Sacchar alb. lb. j. All grosly beaten put them into a glass vessell with lbiiij or five of the best Wine of Candia or good Canary set them the space of two or three dayes in Balneo tepido Then pass it two or three times through a Hippocras Bag Which done mix therewith of the Spirits of Roses essentiated with Musk and Amber then put it up into Vessells for your use One or two spoonfulls taken of this in a morning corroborates all the Animall Vitall and Naturall Faculties Hence it conduceth to all Cephalicall affects as also to all Cardialgiae Lipothimiae Sincopi c. 'T is excellent in all weakness Crudityes and ventosities of the Stomack It corroborates the Liver and Spleen and cures all Cachexies Hypochondriacall Melanchollies and Hystericall Passions It preserves from the Pestilence Worms and all sorts of putrifactions I must not here omit the recreating of your Sences by some externall perfumes accept therefore of these Pomanders ℞ Styrac calam Landan an. ʒj.ss Benzoesʒj Garyoph Macis Lig. Aloes Flor. Lavend. an. ℈ ss. Moschi Ambrae an. g. iiij Gum Tragac. in aq Ros. dissolut q.s. Terebint parum In a hot Mortar make them up into a Pomander according to art If that please not make use of this ℞ Ladaniʒij Styrac cal ʒj.ss Benzoes Thuris Succin alb. Lig. Aloes Ros. rub Lig. Cypres Cinamom Garyophil an. ℈ .ij. Ambrae Moschi an. g.v. With Gum Tragacanth dissolved in Spir. of Roses q.s. make them up into small Trochisks one of which cast upon the Coals fills your Chamber with a gratefull Odour Or this ℞ Thuris Lig. Aloes Styr Cal. an. ℥ ss. Styr liq ʒvj Laudan ℥ j. ss. Ambrae Moschi an. g. vij Carbonum Tiliae vel Salicis ℥ j. Tragacant ℥ ss. Your Gum dissolved in Spirit of Roses with a little S. of W. make them up into little Roles like small Candles Or use this Water ℞ Aq. Rosar
without a Calenture Considering therefore how many strong and well-fleshed bodies are brought low in the Torrid-Zone of this Hepatick land I have altogether laboured in this third Course to feed you as Venus fed me onely with Restoratives that you may travell more cheerfully with me unto the Cardiacall Court But first that you may examine the honesty of our Splenditore I shall desire you here to over-see what Hepaticall Ingredients he hath brought out of Galens Market before he deliver them to the Cook and his Lardery that so if the Cook and he should afterwards play false you may find it in your Dishes Hepaticall Ingredients which Heat and Corroborate a colde weak Liver Agrimon Absinth Capill ♀ Salvia Cuscuta Asarum Schaenant Spica Agerat Faenicul Apium Asparag Eupator Avicen Helenicum Flos Tunicis Vvae pas Pistachia Sem. calida Cal. aromat. Cassia lig Cinamom Aromata omnia Nucl Persic Lig. Indic Sassafras Rad. Chinae Sassaparill Such as Cool and strengthen a hot Liver Endivia Cichoria Scariota Dens Leon Portulac Rosae Violae Nimphaea Acetosa Fragaria Sem. frig. Hordeum Santal Camphor Pom. gran Ribes Berberis Melones Cerasa Acetum Serum Capr Now that our liquid Restoratives may run down with a better relish we will first fall to our Biscuit And for this purpose our Cook here presents you with a French Biscuit which he hath borrow'd from a French Cook and to make it the more Sympaticall with your Diet he gives it here another heat ℞ Of the purest flower lb. ss. Of the whitest Sugar ℥ iiij Cream of Pinioli Cream of Pistacks Cream of Almonds an. ℥ j. Oil of Annise an. g. x. Oil of Cinamon an. g. x. With four or five fresh Eggs beaten together in Almond milk made with Rosewater mix all together s.a. Of which make your Biscuit in what shape you please and then recommend it to the Oven Next comes in play a Martiall bread Panis Martius which the French Character stamps into Maquaron whose composition is thus ℞ Sweet Almonds blanched lb j. beat them exquisitely in a mortar moisten them with rose-Rosewater then incorporate therewith of the best white Sugar lb j. Gum Dragant dissolved in Rosewater with three or four whites of Egges beat all to a perfect mixture and make your Maquarons and dry them only with a temperate heat These give a speedy nourishment and are therefore necessary in all Consumptions of the Liver and Lungs From Biscuit we will fall to our diet d●ink presuming every man to wax dry after a Crust That we may remember therefore our merry Dayes past le ts drink our own Healths ●n this Hepaticall Cup and if the last Man quarrell because there 's no body to pledge him let him call his Mistris Sanitas in play and then all will go well The first Hepaticall Diet drink ℞ Agrimon Fol. Salviae Cochlear Eupator Avic an. M. j. Flor. Rosmarin Spicae an. P. j. Sem. Faenic Anis an. ℥ ss. Rad. Asparag Petrosel Faenicul an. ℥ j. Cinamom Zinzib Calam. arom an. ℥ iij Sassafras ℥ vj Passularum lb. ss. All prepared according to art and put up in a Canvass Bag Cast it into a little Barrell of White Wine or new Wort. Then have you a diet drink both Therapeutick and Prophylactick in all cold Distempers of the Liver preserving likewise every Part from Obstructions the Originall of most Diseases The Second Hepat Diet drink ℞ Rad. Chinae Santalor om. an. ℥ vj Rad. Cichor Endiv. Nymph Liqu●rit an. ℥ j. Flor. Rosar rub Violar Nymphae an. P.j. Sem. Portulac Lact. Papav. alb. an. ʒiij With these proceed as with the former but taking small Wort and you shall finde it a Singular Cooler after your Travells in the Hepatick Torrid Zone And who ever loves Coursing and is at the charge of a Runing Nag he shall find this his best watering The third Hepat Diet drink ℞ Lig. Guaiac Sassaparil Sassafras Rad. Chinae an. ℥ ij Sem. Anisi Faenic an. ℥ j. Rad. Glycyrrhys Cichoriae Endiviae an. ℥ ss. Cinamom Nuc. mosch. Galangae an. ʒij Inclose all in a Barrell of White wine and ●●serve it to your use which is an Excellent ●●yer of all superfluous humidityes of this ●epatick soil corroborates and califies a ●●ld distempered Liver Evacuates all maligne ●apours per Diaphorisin and restores it to his ●aturall temper Therefore I recommend it ●●all Philogynists Before you drink any more Healths give our Palate a little dry Gust and tast of these ●egall Pastes which in all Consumptions ex●●ustion of Spirits lost forces bring you in ●●e Field again and make you Combatant The first Regall Paste ℞ Amygdal dulc. decort. Nucleor Pineor Pistachior an. ℥ iii.j. Sem. Cucum Cucurb Melon an. ℥ j. ss. All beaten in a Mortar irrigate them with Rosewater then adde Sacch alb. ℥ xij Peni●●dii ℥ ij Gum Arab. ℥ iij Amyli ℥ j. Fiat● past Regal s.a. The which is an excellent restoring cooler The Second Regall Paste ℞ Pulp Capon assi. Perdic assatar Carnium Testud Cancror fluviat inVin alb. lot Et in aq hord decoctar an. ℥ iiij Pinearum recent mund. in aq rosar tepid per 4. horas infusar ℥ iij 4. sem. frig. major mund. Amygdal dulc. decort. an. ℥ ij Penidiorum ℥ j. ss. All beat in a Marble Mortar pass them through a Scive with Rosewater to which you shall adde Sacchar alb. in aq rosar dissolut lb. j. Sacchar cand. ℥ ij gum Tragaeant ʒiij Boil them all with a gentle fire unto a convenient conglutination which when it cools you shall adorn with these Jewells Salis Perlar. Salis Coral an. ʒij Then make it up into little Cakes of what form your Fancy falls into and dry them in a tepid Oven This for Restoring exceedes all and is able to incarnate a {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} repairing Nature so fully her losses that she will run Mad to be gaming again The third Regall Past ℞ Rad. Satyr in jure Capon ebullit Et postea cum aq ros. cribat ℥ iiij Amygdal dulc. decortic Pistach mund. Pinear mund. an. ℥ iij Pulp rad. fring. per crib passat Pulp rad. Pastinac cribr an. ℥ ij Farin Cicerum ℥ ij.ss. Scinci marini ℥ ss. Galangae Zinzib condit an. ʒiij Vitel. ovor. recent num x. Sacchar alb. lb. j.ss Fiat Past Reg. s.a. I did very Ill I did not reserve this third Regall Past untill the end of my Banquet for I fear 't will make some of you rise before the last Course enter You hotter Livers shall use for a Cooler this insuing Amygdaline Milk which in Summer heats and after other calefying excercises you shall find inflam'd Nature repay your Charity in cooler terms Lae Amygdalinum ℞ Amygdal decort. ℥ iiij Sem. Cucum Papav. alb. Lactuc Melon an ℥ j. Macerate all four hours in rose-Rosewater then with Sugar q.s. fiat lac Amygd Here is an Italian Dish for you Gentlemen very substantiall and pleasant and I