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A34011 Choice and rare experiments in physick and chirurgery, or, A discovery of most approved medicines for the curing of most diseases incident to the body of men, women, and of children together with an antidotary of experiments never before published / found out by the studie and experience of Thomas Collins, student in physick neer the city of Gloucester. Collins, Thomas, Student in physick. 1658 (1658) Wing C5388; ESTC R20775 102,753 224

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diminishing the quantity of the said medicines it worketh not with the patient as it should it is convenient to give him a common Clyster Another remedy for the same pain Ye must lay thereon a linnen clothe moisted in rose-Rose-water plantaine-Plantaine-water morrel-Morrel-water Vinegar or else take the juice of Lettice and Roses and a little Vinegar and warm it together and dip therein a linnen cloth and lay it to the pain For an extream Heada●h Pound Euphorbium with Vinegar and if the grief be on the right side of the head then ●ay it on the left or on the right when the pain ●s on the left side for it mitigates all pain very excellently but we must suffer the same to continue thereon no longer then the space of saying a Pater Noster and then wash it off Another Take nine or ten pieces of Zeduaria being smal cut it in parcels or else pound it somewha● grossely infuse thereon clear water and the● put it into a glass and madesie clouts therei● of the breadth of two fingers and apply them on the forhead and temples of the same and the same being dryed moisten them again For burning Headach Take a handful of Houslick beat it with womans milk and with a little Rose-water ti'● it be like unto a poultis or pap and therewit● anoint your head For shooting in the Head Pound Poppy-seed with yelks of eggs till 〈◊〉 be like paste and lay it on the grief Against continual Headach and singing of the Ears Beat Elder leaves and Rose-leaves with o● of Ivy-leaves one amongst the other and depress the juice thereout tye these leaves o● the head and with the juice thereof anoint th● head For headach in the forepart Take Eldre leaves made hot between tw● stones and applied to the temples And for the better understanding of the sickness chancing in the head ye shall know that sometime it chanceth because of other diseased members as of the stomack or of the mother of the rheums of the Liver or of the Spleen and not of any cause of the head it self therefore ye ought to cure such sickness by helping of the same members as shall be shewed here following And ye may know that the headach c●m●th of diseases of the stomack when the patient hath great pain in the stomack of the Mother when the woman feeleth great pain in her belly of the reins when there is a great pain in the back of the Spleen when he feeleth pain and heaviness under the left side of the Liver when the pain is on the right side about the Liver which is beneath the ribs Remedies appropriate to the head of what cause soever the pain is Take a handful of Betony an handful of Camomil and an handful of Vervine leaves picked stamp them and seethe them in black wort or in Ale for lack of it and in the latter end of the seething put to it a little Cummin braid the powder of a Harts-horne and the yelks of two eggs and Saffron a little stir them well about and lay a plaister hot over all his forehead and temples This is an excellent remedy also for the Megrim it shall pi●rce the better if ye add a little Vinegar Another Make a plaister of Bean flower Lineseed and oyl of Camomile or in lack of it Goos● grease or Ducks gre●se and rub the place with Aqua vitae and after lay the plaister hot upon it Another Take Wormwood brayed well and boyled in water and binde it to his temple upon the grief It will mitigate the pain and cause him to have a pleasant sleep Another Take a sp●onful of M●stardseed and another of Bay berries make them in powder and stampe them with a handful of earth worm● split and scraped from their earth and a little oyle of Roses or of Camomile or Capc●s grease and lay it to the grief Also it is good to take the juice of Ivy-leaves mixt with oyl and Vinegar and so rub therewith your temples and your nostrils Pills for a●l pain of the head although inveterate Take Aloes epat washed three ounce Bryon M●stic elect ana one ounce Diagrv● h●ee drams Let it ●e consected with juice of Coleworts The dose from two Scruples even unto four It taketh away all pain of the head and rejoy●●th and comforteth the memory To remedy all manner of Headach and Megrim Camomile Betony Vervine leaves of each an handful stamp them seethe them in white Wine or Ale adding therto pounded Cummin-seed a little three spoonful of Vinegar the yelkes of two Eggs and a little Saffron fiat Emplastrum appona●ur fronti c. sanabis A remedy teaching that one shall never feel Headach Take Pills of Aloes succotrine made in powder and mixt with the juice of Colewort● the bigness of a Bean at a time For the Headach Take Wormwood and Camomile of each like much one handful and as much of Maiden-wort and a half penny w●rth of Cummin and make it into powder and cast it t●gether and put it into a cloth of the breadth of a span and warm it against the fire and then lay it to his head c. For the Headach or Megrim Take Rosemary Lavender flowers winter Savory Camomile Bayes and Lavender with both new and old Mintes and Fennil seethe all these together in runing water and put thereto a good handful of Bay Salt then take some of the same liquor herbs and all and wash your seet twice therewith every morn and even for the s●ace of four dayes and in so doing it will take away any pain of the head although it be never so extream or grievous This hath been proved Another Take Majerom-water and hold your nose over it and then draw your winde hard unto ●ou untill such time as the winde hath entred into your ●ose divers times and your head will cease aking speedily For Dizziness in the head Take Pilulae Cochiae one ounce● temper it with twenty drops of oyl of Anniseeds and make seven pills of it and swallow them and keep warm in your Chamber till it have done working then eat any warm broth made of Veal Mutton or Chicken and comfortable Herbs After this purge so used this Electua●y following Take Betony-flowers and Rosemary-flowers three ounces powder of Carduus benedictu● leaves powder of Marigold leaves one ounce boil them with one pound of beaten Sugar and half a pint of bugles-Bugles-water and marjerom-Marjerom-water and betony-Betony-water and balm-Balm-water of each two ounce boil together over a gentle fire to the thickness of honey and use thereof as much as a Nut morning and evening till it be spent Probat Chew every morning Cloves fasting or whole Mace and use Coriander Comsits or the seeds prepared and use after meat Marmalade of Quinces to cl●se the stomack and repress the vapors that fume up thence to the brain For the Headach and ●o stop the rheum Dry Wheat-bran and beaten Henbane seed and put them in a bag and lay them
leave off the trusse until three weeks a●ter he is perfectly whole For the Fundament coming out Take Aloes Mirrbe ana one ounce terend● terantur subtiliter and cribrentur And anoi●t the Fundament with the oil of Almonds and lay of t●is powder th●r●●p●n and wit● a skarlet ●●ot● hot put up the fun●ament this used will h●lp with Gods g●ace ●o a mans Fundament when it comes out ● true Medicine Take red nettles and stamp them well and put them into an ear●hen p●t and pu● to them a portion of wine and seethe it well and give it the patient to d●ink A special good Medicine proved to heal a rupture or broken man Probat First pu●ge him with easie purg●tions and let him keep good and straight diet ●●ll ●he matter be up within his body Then take the juice of Polypodie of the oak of daysies comp●ry Avens and Be●ony in the winter take the juice of the root● and all of each one handful stamp them and strain them without other Liqu●r And put the same juice into a quart of stale Ale and drink a quantitie thereof evening and morning blood warm for nine dayes keeping good diet and sure trussing you may put Sugar candy to it if you will Probat Against ruptures or burstings Take the Herb and root of Cranesbill dry it make it into very fine powd●r and give one spoonful every morning fasting every night when he goeth to bed in red wine or claret wine for xxi dayes together It cureth miraculously but in aged persons to mix with it the powder of red s●ails those that that are without shells dried in an oven This medicine never faileth although the rupture be great and of continuance It likewise profiteth much those that are wounded in their bodies The decoction of the herbs made with wine prevaileth mightily in healing inward wounds All this hath been well proved If ye know the pain of the belly cometh through winde apply upon it a great ventose without incision for by that means the pain will surely go away or diminish If not it sheweth that it is caused of some other humor as Phlegm or choler A purgation for Col●ck coming of Phlegm Take five drams of Diaphaenicon three ounces of Wormwood water and make a drink the which received fasting four or five hours before meat is very profitable For pain of the Colick coming of Choler If the said pain come of choler which is known by the application of hot things the pain increaseth ye must make a Clyster of violets or give him half an ounce of succo rosarum with Ptisan Endive water or wine And the next morning let him drink a Ptisan of the decoction of prunes and violet Flowers and anoint the belly with oil of violets or wet a linnen cloth in cold water and lay it thereupon and if the pain ●●me of cold ye must anoint his belly with of bayes and goose grease For the winde Colick ●t is good to drink the Syrup of Elecam●● to wear a plaister upon the belly made ●●ony Wormwood and Aloes Pilulae Co●● are very good for the said disease especi●●● when the Cl●ster doth not suffice to ●ge the cause of the same Also Diamuscum 〈◊〉 Diacinnamum are very good Electuaries if ●ake one of them a Lozenge fasting 2 hours ●ore meat Likewise it is good to take ●hridate with a little white wine or with decoction of Camomile four or five hours 〈◊〉 dinner if his belly be naturally lax or ● by some suppository or Clyster 〈◊〉 Back and Reins The Remedies of their distempers A purgation for Choler coming of Phlegm ●●ke five drams of Diaphaenicon three ounces Wormwood water and make a drink the ●●ch received fasting four or five hours afore ●t is very profitable ●scour c●eanse and cool the reins of the Back ●ake half a pound of brown Sugar candy and one pint of Endive water and anothe● pint of red rose water boil all th●se togethe● from a quart to a pint and until it come to thick Syrup which then put into a fair g●as● and keep it to thy use This Syrup cleanseth the Reins and cook●● the heat th●reof It must be taken fasti●● chiefly and last towa●ds bed yet it may be use as occasion s●rveth For a pain in the back Take a quart of w●ite wine and a quar● of running water Then take of the cr●p 〈◊〉 R●semary asmuch as both the ha●ds can cla●● seethe them till half be consu●ed t●en tak● Sugar g●ains as ye think good and drink 〈◊〉 first and last For ache in the back Take a good onion or two and rost the● in the Embers then stamp them and stra●● out the juice and mix it with asmuch Malme● as juice and drink th●reof blood warm fir●● and last Probat Another Take Egrimony and Mugwort both leav●● and roots and stamp them small then ming● them with good Dears su●t then smear 〈◊〉 anoint the place therewith very warm and ●●ter binde it up A good ointment for the back and restorative for the same Take the mosel of a Hart or Stagge and make powder of it and boil it in white wine with Bursa Pastoris knot grasse plantain and Comphry and when it s well boiled strain it and let it cool and it will be a Jelly And if you will eat of it put to it Sugar Cinnamon and Saffron for its a great restorative so eaten also with the Jelly aforesaid anoint a weak back on either side the back bone and chafe it well in but do not anoint the back bone with the hand use it thrice a week to bedward till you be well Probat For the weakness of the small of the back Take one handful of Baulme one handful of Clarie wash them not they must be gathered in the heat of the day dry them in an oven and make them into power the powder will be green if it be done right then lay a new layed egg into the fire Let it be not half rosted then put into it asmuch of the powder as will lie upon the point of a broad knife and so eat it A powder to knit and restore nature well proved Take the roots of Tormentil the best of them are red when they are broken take of the powder of these roots two parts and the third par● of fine Galingale in powder and of the powder of red mintes asmuch as of the Galingale and mingle them and use of this powder in your broths and meats and Sawces Pro Gonorrhaea Take Aqu. Calendulae extractae ex foljis florum et bibe singulis diebus Cochlearia tria sanus evades To restore a man that wasteth and for soreness of the reins Take sperma caeti and powder of mints and use to drink this with a spoonful of red rose● water and make it luke warm the sperma caeti will relent anon for this is a soveraign Medic●ne For heat in the back Take the white of an Egg a little red rose water and
dry which you shall distill fair and softly that it may not smell of th● smoke into some vessel of glass Then take two or three Radish roots cut into small pieces and put the radishes so cut into a vial and fill it with greek or good white wine or good strong Malmesey letting it stand in the sun close stopt all one day and one might And then take one part of that wine and two parts of the water of ox dung half a pinte of Strawberry water three or four drops of Lymons juice or Citrous juice and let there be of all half a glassful or somewhat more into the which you shall put a piece of Sugar to taste it withall which Medicine must be given in the morning and the patient must walk after it you must also incorporate inh●s water this powder following or else this Medicine is of small effect The powder for the stone Take the seeds of blew violets or march violets and the seeds of common Burrs with their ●ittle seed and all or ripe burrs put them to dry in a oven for else it will be hard to stamp them ●o powder then stamp them with their seed ●his done take a quick hare and strangle her ●hat no drop of blood be lost with a strong ●ord put him so whole or in pieces into an ●●arthen pot close stopped the feet head guts skin and all and so let the pot in a 〈◊〉 that the Hare may be burned to powder and then stamp your Hare with your other two powders of Burre and violets and dry oaken leaves well beaten to powder four ounces of dry Saxifrage or of Sampier one pound beaten to powder bay-berries five ounces Let all these things be well beaten to powder sisted and well mingled together Give unto the patient so much as will lie upon a groat making him to drink it to his breakfast in the morning fasting in white wine And let him do this o●t-times It s the most exquis●test thing in the world And although both new as ●ell as old Physicians have very well travelled for this disease of the stone and Strangury yet this is the best and soveraignest thing that can be given to a Christian man Both the water going before and this powder must be applyed as one medicine so it seemeth that this powder may be taken either in white wine or in the aforesaid water or in white wine mingled with the said water or in the said water without any white wine which is thought to be the best the said water being accounted so precious for this purpose and of purpose distilled for this use as appeareth in the end of the receipt of the said water Note Mr. Louth saith that the very blood 〈◊〉 the Hare dried to powder drunk with white wine is excellent for the stone and in red wine for womens diseases for the superflui●● of the flowers Probat For the stone in the back bladder Kidnies and stomack Take the roots of Philipendula that 's to say the round knots thereof gather them after Lamma● and grate them and take it in Ale or white wine The cold diureticks are the best for the stone when diureticks are to be used for it or f●r any other obstructions of the Kidnies which are the four cold seeds the greater Semen Alkakengi radix graminis acetosae And therefore is cited Valeseus who saith that nothing is more excellent for the stone then Vinum Alkakengi or the distilled water thereof and to use the wine in winter and the water in summer the branches and fruit of Alkakengi being in equal portions mixed and then bruised and then put into the wine which must be used when the effect cometh from a cold cause And the reason is that the hot diureticks which are wont to be used against the stone do increase the hot distemperature engendring the stone And therefore what good the said hot diureticks do one day they do hurt another And the cold diureticks are not onely good for the present evil but do also resist the efficient cause and do stay the generation of the said stone Thus much out of Valeseus as aforesaid Whereby I gather that in a hot cause the water of the said Alkakengi is best and fittest and to use the wine and ale for he prescribeth the win● when the effect proceedeth from ● cold cause and also the wine in winter and the water in summer which observe whether th● stone may proceed of a cold cause obstructions of slyme may th●refore for the stone the water is likely to do best the wine in winter may be good as he sai●h and for s●ime the wine may be good or better if cold slime wi●hout biting heat but it seemeth the coldness which he Commend●th i● the coldness of the diuerticks and if the ●ffect do pr●ce●d f●om a cold then the wine may do well ●r b●st wi●h it Als● Mr. ●ogan in his chap●e● of the p●eservati●● 〈◊〉 cu●● of the stone in the kidneys and bladder ●●th that the water of glamen or C●uchgras● with a little pure thin wine is a si●gula M●dicine for that purpose also he saith that win● of Alkakengi is a good preservative or the fruit condited with sugar Thus much for the stone The Womb its remedies For the flux of the w●mb In all fluxes of the belly cause the excrements to be duly searched for if the disease be such that the meat cometh forth as it was received or not half digested the said Flux is called Lienteria if great abundance of watery humours have their I●●●e below the said Flux is named Diarhaea which is as much to say as Flux humoral and if blood or matter appear with the excrements in the sickness then they call it dysenteria which is a great disease and dangerous fo● to cure Take the rindes of Mirabolane cirtin ba●e● ●●e dram Rubarb a little dryed half a dram ●rup of quinces one ounce water of plantain three ounces mingl● altogether let the pati●●t drink th●m ●our hour●s before meat and ●hen give him a Clyster Retentive made thus ●ake oyl of roses or quinces of mastick of ●ach ●e three ounces ●ole a●moniack in powder a ●●ains meddle alltogether give it as a Clyst●● here is to be noted that the Clyster that ●e given to stop a Flux must be very little in ●uantity Ye may heal the Flux dysenteria as the flux ●um●ral and take afore your re●ast two d●ams ●f conserves of quinces and he ought to drink ●●ter wherein hath been quenched gads of ●eel ye must avoyd diversitie of meats A purgation for the flux humora● Take two drams of Mirabolanes dryed on tile half a scruple ●f Agarick in trochisk half ● ounce of Syrup of Mintes or two ounces of ●●ater of bawm and make a potion to be re●ived three or four hours afore meat For the suffocation of the matrice The matrice in a woman oftentimes mounteth ●wa●ds the mid●●ffe and the stomack with
To destroy Rheum that it fall not into the eyes Take raw beef a fair slice as broad as your and and lay it in a pewter platter and put to asmuch aqua vitae as will cover the beef and ●t it on a chaffing dish of coles let it boil in ●qua vitae until it be ready as though it should ●e eaten then take it out of the Aqua vitae ●nd lay it to the neck of the grieved partie ●nd there let it remain and use it and it will ●ive the Rheum that doth offend the eyes ●roved Master Davies water for the clearing of the eye sight being much decayed Take two great handfuls of eye bright when is well sprunge up and in full flowring and ●●e handful of Balm and still them together ●nd scum the water nine dayes then use every morning to wash your eyes and eye-browes therewith and use so quarterly nine dayes tother and it will cause you in short space to read without spectacles if you have used spectacles before time Probat To draw a mote out of the eye Take white sope and scrape a little of it into a Sawcer and dry it by the fire very dry and then put it into a little fair water but make it not too thin put it into the sore eye with a feather and its good for man or beast Probat A cure for the sight decayed Take 3. pintes of barly flower finely boulted make paste thereof with fair water or with distilled water of Tormentil and make your paste stiff and roul it like venison pastie and fill it full of the leaves flowers and Wyers of Tormentil and put thereto one peny of life-hony and close it and bake it with Cakes and when it s baked break it in small pieces and put it in a steane pot of ale of three gallons and drink no other drink neither at meat nor any other times for the space of two moneths and this shall restore the sight if possible Pro●at A powder to clear ●he sight much decayed and near gone Take of the powder of eye-bright made of the leaves and Flowers stripped together and ●o fine powder four ounces of Mace one ●ince mingle them and take thereof the ●ight of three pence before meat water to preserve the eye-sight which hath been commended to be the best in the world Take Hepatis hircini sani recentis 4. ounces l●mi Aromatici melli one half ounce succi a one scr●ple Aquae Celidoniae six drams ue feniculi aquae Verbenae aquae Euphragiae of ch 4. drams Pi●eris longi Nucis Moschat iGario●orum of each grains fifteen Croci grains two ●is Rerismarini aliquantulum contusi Pugillum ●is Sarcocolle Aloes Hepatice one scruple of e gall of a Hen and of a Capon of each ●ee drams hony of roses one dram mingle em and distill them in a glass still first brui●g them and putting to them one quarter of ounce of the best refined Sugar Some three four drops in each eye at a time is thought ●ficient it s also a fine smelling water with a ●tle smell not very easily perceived nor ●elling far off It s not much matter whether 〈◊〉 Liver of the Kid be of a he Kid or a ●e Kid but of the two the he Kid is ●ought to be the better A preservative for the eye sight Make comfits of Turnepseeds and eat a ●re of them after dinner and supper as ●ny immediately after the said meats It was ●ected that nine or ten of the said Comfits ●ould be eaten after meales they are to be ●led in Sugar To purge the head and preserve the sight Drink beer every morning a good draugh●●asting wherein the roots of dog fennell o● Motherwood is steeped the roots somwhat bruis●d and it will presently work in your eye● and head Probat For all Infirmities in the eyes Take ground Jvy called Cill gee by the ground alias Ale-hoof Celendine and Daysies the Flowers leaves and roots of each one o● these herbs and a like quantity of the● stamped and strained and a little Sugar an● red rose water put thereto and dropped wit● a feather into the eyes it taketh away all ●●flamation and spots scabs scales Itch sma●●ing or any grief whatsoever in the eyes y●● although the sight were almost gone A g●od water for sore eyes Take a pint of running water half an ha●●ful of Singrene Leaves and a little of unico●● horn and boil it all together and pour out ● water and wash the eyes therewith Proved A precious Medicine for the eyes then which no better be for though a man had been ten years within eleven d●yes he shall be stored to his sight again of very truth Take smallach brown fennile vervi● 〈◊〉 ●etonie avence pimpernel strawbe●● wis● Filago Eufrace C●lendine Sage of e●● alike much and lay them all a night to sleep in a childs urine that is a virgin and after put ●t into a morter and put seven corns of pep●er and stamp it small and temper it with the s●me ●rine aforesaid and then strain it and keep it in boxes and anoint the eyes in the morning and Evening For sight of the eyes lost how to restore the same and to clear the eyes and to help the dimn●ss of t●em Take Eye-bright water made of all the whole Eye-bright and anoint the eyes ofte● and eat often the powder thereof and drink the water use it long sanat To cleanse the eyes and do away the pearl Take the red Roses and Maiden-●air and Rue Vervine Eusrace Endive and Sing●e●n Hill-worte red Fennel ●f each alike three ounces and wash them cl●an and lay ●hem in white wine all day and all night and a●●●r distil them And the first will be like gold and the second like silver and the third like Eawm this is for the eyes a worthy water and a good c. To restore their eyes that are as though they did see and yet see not The decoction of Tormentil daily drunk three Moneths and no other d●ink and the same Tormentil every night laid pla●ster wise on the eyes doth it pro certo To kill the pin or webbe in the eye Take leaves of Celendine and stamp the● well and strain them and with a feather 〈◊〉 one drop of the same Juice into the eye of the patient and it will presently help A very good Medicine to kill a pearl or web●e the eye Take a good quantity of three leaved gra●● that beareth the honey suckles and bruise● well in a Mortar or else in a wooden dish and then strain it let the party grieved put some of the same Juice into his eye and by using this twice or thrice a day for the space of si● or seven dayes together it will help him A good Medicine for eyes that be blood-shot and red Take Housleek and stamp it well then take a new laid egg and make a hole in the one end of it and draw out all the meat of it and put
Sugar beaten s●all as he weight of the receit amounteth unto till it thick like a Syrup then put to this Syrup as it cooleth all your powder well stir●ing and incorporating the same altogether and so keep it for your use P●ohatum est Take the lungs of a Fox dryed the juice of Liquerice Maidenhair Fennel-seed of ●ach ● like four ounces make it in Sugar sodden in water as much as will suffice some make it with the juice of Myrts and then it is comfortable for the stomack this is a present remedy for a Consumption For the Phlegm and Cough Take an handful of Coltfoot of Liquerice shaved and bruised two ounces an handful of Maidenhair of Anniseed three ounces L●t it be boiled in three pound of fou●tain ●r Spring water till half be consumed strain it and then put into it three ounces of white Sugar Give thereof five spoonfuls for the space of eight dayes warmed For a Consumption Take Syrup of Limons half dram Syrup of Coltsfoot Syrup of Hyssop alike one ounce Syrup of Liquerice one ounce Floris Sulphuris half a scruple Spirit of the seed of Fennel four drops and mix it all together For the Consumption Take a handful of Rosemary tops a handful of red Sage a handful of Horehound a handful of Plantaine leaves a handful of Hyssope a handful of winter Savory a pint of English hony a pint of runing water half a pound of blew Figs half a pound of Raisins of the Sun a stick of Liquerice boil all these in a new pipkin with a cover to it cut them small and put them into the pipkin and let it boil softly un●il it be half consumed then take and strain it through a cloth very well then give the party four spoonfuls morning and evening Another excellent for the same Take a quarter of pure red Rosewater put it in a pewter platter or bason set it over a Chasfing dish of coales take clean Anniseeds and bruise them a little in a Mortar put thereof into your Rosewater a good handful and put also of sliced Liquerice bruised and tore in 〈◊〉 three or four stick and as much of Par 〈◊〉 roots the pith taken out bruised and sliced 〈◊〉 put therein then last put in a good spoon●●● of the tender crops of Hys●ope so let them 〈◊〉 from a quart to a pint still bruising them 〈◊〉 a spoon as they boil and when it is ●●fficient boiled strain it into a glass and take ●●ereof warm in the evening a pretty draught 〈◊〉 two hours after and before meat fast two 〈◊〉 use this it hath done wonders c. ●he Sides Remedies for their distempers ●eu●isie A thing most certain to remedy the greatest pleurisie possible TAke the delicatest Apple that may be had make an hole therein pull out the 〈◊〉 if it may be not breaking the Apple 〈◊〉 which hole put in Olibanū of the best the ●●antity of three or four grains and cover the 〈◊〉 of the Apple then put the Apple into 〈◊〉 embers there to soken till it be tender but it must not burn then break the apple 〈◊〉 the Olibanum into four or five pieces and give it the patient to eat and forthwith 〈◊〉 Impostume of the pleurisie breaketh and 〈◊〉 patient recovereth Pro certo oyl of scor●ons anoynted often to the griefs vatet ●wrod● See that you apply withal thin Cakes made with the said oyl and the fleying 〈◊〉 dryest hot one after another one at once and anointing the grief before any cake 〈◊〉 laid on with the said oyl hot and thus the 〈◊〉 cakes oyl and hot ashes breaketh the Impostume of the Pleurisie For to cure an I●postume which groweth in the 〈◊〉 side of the ribes of the side when no other Me●ic●●● will cure the same Take Pipins and bruse them and stray● the juice thereof to the quantity of a prett● draught and put thereto a dram of the juice 〈◊〉 the herb called bearfoot and give it to th● grieved to drink and it shall presently hel● him Another good Medicine Take Aqua vitae and Capons grease of eac● of them a prety quantity and boil them together then take a little black wool and 〈◊〉 it therein and lay it hot as may be suffered to the stomack of the party grieved and it will ease him very spedily To destroy an Impostume and an● swelling Take the roots of Hollihock sod till they be very soft and the water halfe consumed and more then put into the same water the flower of Linseed fenugreck a like much seethe it until the water doe rope then put the said ●ollihock roots to it being well pounded and add a handfull of barly meal and fry them all ●ith boars grease and if you will you may ●dd sheepes suet apply it hot Probatum est A Cat●plasme Take the flowers of Camomil Melilote of ●ach one handful of the leaves of Rue Mar●row Nepthe of each one pugil of the seeds 〈◊〉 Annise two drams of the Laurel berries ●hree ounces boil it moderately pound it 〈◊〉 asmuch ho●y as is sufficient and apply it Another Stamp Mallowes roots well sodden then 〈◊〉 butter hony and pigeons dung very well ●ixt et fiet For the stitch Anoint the place with oil of Melilot and ap●ly Melilot plaister to the place upon a piece of Leather and change it once a week An experienced good Medicine for a pleurisie Take Brooklime sheeps suet and a little fair ●unning water and fry them together in a fry●ng pan and make a plaister thereof and lay it ●he side of the patient and it will draw forth ●ll the corruption This hath been proved The Heart Remedies for its Distempers Remedies for weakness and feebleness of the heart GIve him that hath a feeble heart and ready to saint either for fever or extream hea● the w●ight of a French crown of Trochisk of Camhire with wine of Pomegranates and lay upon his left side Limon dipped in water of roses and vineger In stead of these Tr●hisks ye may use a Electuary called Diamargariton frigidum every morning a lozenge And it is good to give him for the same feeblenes conserve of Roses violets water lilies mingled together and after to drink water of Sorrel and to smell Roses water lilies rose-water and vineger Other whiles and most often debility of heart chanceth of a cold and drie cause and is without fever with great fear and heaviness the remedy whereof is this Take an Electuary called Diamoschum and use every morning a Lozeng and drink after it a lit●le good wine or Bugloss water and anoint the brest with oil of Spikenard Moreover use once in a week before meat the weight of half a crown of good triackle or Mithridate so it be well tempered with a little white wine and with a few maces For beating or trembling of the heart If it be without offence Take two drams 〈◊〉 the third part of Elect. de gemmis then 〈◊〉 two or three ounces of Bugloss and ●awme mixed
together For the same It is good to drink every morning three ●●nces of water of Bugloss wherein hath ●een sodden cloves And it is good to drink in a Morning four ●unces of Julep made of half a pound of ●awm water and three ounces of Sugar For the same It it good to drink every morning 3. ounces 〈◊〉 water of Bugloss wherein hath been sodden ●oves And it is good to drink in a morning 〈◊〉 ounces of Ju●ep made of half a pound of ●arm water and three ounces of Sugar The ●onfection of Diajacinthy is singular and ex●●llent for trembling of the heart but it is for ●oble men not for poor folk ●or ach at the heart which are commonly a knot of worms Take unset leeks one handful chopped small ●●d frie it with butter and bay salt and lay it 〈◊〉 the stomack upon a napkin Take a pinte of white wine English liquerice 〈◊〉 sugar boil it together in a pot close stoped take it fasting● To help a mad body Take the Flowers of Rose-mary of Burrag● and of the roots of Buglosse of each a pound Sa●●ron two drams of Quinces four ounces 〈◊〉 the best white wine a quart mix them together let them stand a day put them over th● head fifteen days in an Horsmixon the mou●● of the glass not covered quite then distil it Then take of it first and last a dram at a tim● It is a precious secret it helpeth the tre●bling of the heart For them that swound or are faint-hearted Take Rosemary Sage Betony and Marjerom of each an handful seethe them in a gallo● of fair water till a quart be consumed the● take away the herbs and put to the said wate● a pinte of good hony then scum it well the● put in an ounce of Staechades tied in a fair linnen cloth Let it seethe a little then tak● out the Staechades and add an ounce of Cinnamon three quarters of an ounce of Nutmeggs and asmuch in Ginger in powder drink it warm thrice every day six or seven dayes ●●fiet A potion for sainting Take of the confection of Alchermes two drams of garden blew violet water and excellent red rose water of each two ounces and Syrup of violets two ounces and an half and Syrup of Lymons one ounce mingle them well together and take hereof four or five spoonfuls at a time when you see eause or when you please The Stomack Remedies for all pains of the stomack For weakness of the Stomack TAke Pilulae Stomachiae two or three hours before meat more or lesse according to 〈◊〉 quantitie of the fulness of the stomack 〈◊〉 after give him every morning two hours 〈◊〉 ore meat and one hour after supper at every me a Lozenge of an Electuary called Diaga 〈◊〉 ga or another called Diacinimum which 〈◊〉 consume ventosities and with their com●●●table heat drive away the cold and windy ●●mplexion of the stomack For windiness of the stomack Take in a morning two hours before meat a ●●zenge of Aromaticum rosat and if ye have 〈◊〉 aching stomack and cold take every morn 〈◊〉 a Lozenge of Dianis● or Diacinimum and drink after it a spoonful of wine A present remedy for pain and ach in the stomack Maiden-hair bruised plaistered and laid to 〈◊〉 stomack sanat To help the pains of the stomack a rare secret Take every night last three drams of 〈◊〉 For a windie and cold stomack Take Aromaticum Garyophillat one ounce Electuar de aromatibus one ounce● Et Diattrion piperion one ounce Mix it together and take it first and last ● the quantity of three Nut k●rnels For pain of the stomack Take two drams of Diacinna●on of Dianist 〈◊〉 Diagalanga and drink it with a little goo● wine an hour or two before meat drink a little Castor with good wine Another Drink two hours before meat three or 〈◊〉 ounces of the decoction of Mintes Anni●● seeds cummin and fine frankincense Also drink an Electuary ca●led Arcu●aticum whereof receive one Lozenge every m●rnin● fasting To comfort the stomack after vomiting It is good to give unto the patient ever● morning an ounce of Syrup of wormwood 〈◊〉 Mintes instead of which it is convenient 〈◊〉 take a Lozenge as Azromaticum rosatum or Di●galanga For the same Take evening and morning three hours before meat two Cloves in powder with a spoon●●l of the Juice of mintes or half a spoonful 〈◊〉 Rue dried with a little wine Also it is good to take powder of Cloves 〈◊〉 d lignum aloes to the weight of a crown with 〈◊〉 ine two hours before meat ●n excellent purgation to avoid choler for men of all ages Take half an ounce of Cassia newly drawn dram of good Rubarb infused a night in wa 〈◊〉 of Endive with a little spikenard an● an ●unce of Syrup of violets mix all these things ●ith three ounces of Ptisan or whay and ●●rink it warm A Medicine for winde in the stomack Take a spoonful of hony and two spoon●●ls of rosewater and set them upon a Chaffing 〈◊〉 sh of coales and as the scum ariseth take it ●ith a feather till be clear Then take it off ●●e fire then take a groa●s weight of long ●epper asmuch of white asmuch of black ●●d asmuch of cummin seed asmuch of ginger ●●d beat all together in a Mortar not very 〈◊〉 all and put them into a box Then put in 〈◊〉 ony and rose-rosewater unto them and mix them ●ogether with a knife and eat them after din●er asmuch as a pease and you may keep it as ●●ng as you will and ever as it dryeth put ●hereto more hony clarified with rose water To clear the stomack Take stale Ale and boil it and put it two branches of Hyssop to boil with it and drin● first and last A notable sauce to procure an appetite in them whic● be brought low to get them a stomack Take Vine leaves and stamp them a●● strain them and put in Sugar to the juice a●● Cinnamon powder with Sippets of manche● boil them as sorrel sops eat them with chicken or what you will It is excellent 〈◊〉 a fever or other sicknesses To make Pulvis ducis out of Master Cogans Caj 〈◊〉 of the we●kness of the stomack pag. 194. Pulvis Ducis as he saith is usually ●●de of on ounce of Sugar and one ounce of Cinnamo● finely powdred both and then mixed togegether And this Pulvis Ducis being mingled the quantitie of one dram with half a pint o● Aqua vitae well tempered together and thr●● pints of rosewater and so let run twice o● thrice through an Hyppocrates bagg an● thereof take oft-times in the week one spoonful in the morning fasting especially in winte● time is excellent good for a bad stomack of cold cause A drink for a bad stomack Brew Beer or Ale and when you tunne i● before it work take a pound of wormwood and asmuch of the roots of red docks the pi 〈◊〉 taken out and washed and put them in a bag● with a
stone to make it sink and hang the drink and drink it in the morning fast 〈◊〉 g and at four of the clock in the after●●on Probatum Another for the stomack ●●ke cakes like apple cakes or Pasties in 〈◊〉 or May and fill them full of wormwood 〈◊〉 bake them hard the paste must be of ●eat meal undrest and brew a stand of strong 〈◊〉 beer And when it 's turned and given 〈◊〉 e ●urging ●ak●●he ●akes when they be 〈◊〉 d and cut them into quarters and put ●●em into the barrel and stop it up close and ●hen it 's settled and clear drink a bowl full draught in the morning fasting and so use 〈◊〉 heat in the stomack which maketh the throa● sore ●●ke an handful of Columbine Leaves and a ●●ndfull of Cuarrnts boyl them in a pin●e of ●●w milk then take out the Currants and the ●eaves and shred them together And eat ●●e Currants and the leaves and then sup the ●ilk as hot as you can The Liver Remedies for its dis●empers Against stopping of the Liver called opila●i● DRink every morning the Syrup of Oxy●● sqyllitick wi●● half a d●augh● o● mo 〈◊〉 of the decoction of the roots of Small● Fennel and Parsely Another for stopping of the Liver Take Venice Turpentine to the quantity a bean and put it into a spoon until it doe m 〈◊〉 and then put there to a li●●le white sugar 〈◊〉 let them eat of it every day fasting Take a good ha●dful of iver wort t●● groweth upon stones and another of fumito●● with as much hearts tongue and drink the every day twice The liver of an hare dryed good for all diseases of the Liver also for t●● heat of the Liver seethe Barberries in whe●● and drink them Remedy If it come of gross blood give the patie● Medicins that do pierce and are su●til as is wi●● of Pome-granates Srup of Endive with t●● decoction of Cicers Then let him blood 〈◊〉 the Liver vein and everymorning eat a L●●zeng of Triasan●ali Sometime the said opilation cometh of ●●bundance of som● humour viscou● co●d and 〈◊〉 egmatick stopping the veins of the ●iver ●●d then the Urine as clear as water and then ●●e patient must use the Syrup above written ● viz. Oxymel scylliticum A Iulep for heat of the Liver Take half a pound of rose water one quar●●r of wa●er of Endive and five ounces of ●●gar make a Julep of which you shall drink ●●sting a good draught And if he will needs ●rink between meals Let it be mingled with ●●o parts of the wa●er of the w●ll and if ye ●●ill have it more cooling a●d unto it two ●unces of vin●ger or the juice of Pomegra●ate In stead of the said medicine too cost●● for poor folk you may make b●les of half ●n ounce of Cassia and three drams of the ●lectuary de succo rosarum and eat it three ●ours after midnight and steep it and so drink ●● mix the said boles with whay or E●dive ●ater and drink it at five in the morning but ●eep not after it A drink to cool the Liver Take an ounce of Sena Alexandrina a far●hing worth of Anniseeds and a sarthing worth ●f Liquerice and a dram of Rubarbe de Spain ●nd make a powder of the s●me with half an ●unce of Polypodie of the oak when the ●owder is fine boil it in three pints of white ●ine before you do put it in make ready ●hree roots that 's a Fennel root a parsly root a Mallow root washed fair and clean bruise these three roots and boil them in white wine from three pintes to a pinte upon a still fire and be s●re to stir it about and let not the flame nor smoak come to it This purgeth the Liver and spleen then strain it through a clean cloth and drink in the morning fasting in the second day of M or the first day of Sagittari●s And when ye drink it take a brown toste and wet it in vineger and sm●ll to it fiet A good r●c●ipt for the d●opsie Take the salt of Wormwood three daies i● a moneth a spoonful at a time and you shall feel the dropsie water fall into your leggs every time you may take it away by setting your leggs up to the knees in hot water To purge dropsie water abu●dantly for the shedding o● nature called Gonorrhaaea verbatim out of Master Cogan Pag. 5. in Flower deluce Take a new laid Egg pouring out the white put into the yelk so much of the root of Flower deluce as was of the white after set the same Egg into the Embers which being sufficiently warmed sup off fasting in the morning And the patient shall after send forth a●u●dance of water and so be eased of the dropsie Or else you may take a dram or two o● the dry root made into powder and drunk in w●ay clarified ●or its good also to p●r●e the dropsie water And if you put a little Cinna●on to the juice of Flowe●-deluce in the ●●g yelk its a very good medicine for the ●●dding of nature as hath been often proved For the Dropsie or Tympany Take the flower of Dane wort and of the ●●●ves and distill them in a stillatory and ●●●nk four or five spoonful at a time with the 〈◊〉 er of Herb grace in six or seven spoonfuls 〈◊〉 white wine one spoonful of the water of ●●●b grace will serve This is the excellentest ●●dicine one can give for this will void the 〈◊〉 er out of the belly by usage Prob●t by 〈◊〉 er for which propertie of daneworte Gerards Herball The Gall. Against diseases of the Gall. He gall is placed in the hollowness of the Liver to receive the superfluity of cho 〈◊〉 and to send it to the bowels to be avoid 〈◊〉 ●ith the grosse excrements to the intent to 〈◊〉 se the blood of the said choler To the 〈◊〉 ch cometh opilations in the parties about 〈◊〉 he liver or beneath it in it self n●xt the 〈◊〉 els causing great pain by reason whereof 〈◊〉 choler turneth again into the liver and 〈◊〉 e is mingled with the blood and spread 〈◊〉 ad into the veines of all the body and 〈◊〉 deth a disease named Iaundise Ictiritia If the Jaundise happen in an Ague befo 〈◊〉 the seventh day It is great danger of his li●e but if it app●ar on the sixth day being a da● judicial or critick of the ●gu o● after it is very good sign And th●n ye must succo● Nature with refreshing and di●●sting the ch●●ler with Syrup of violets given in the mor●●ing Syrup of Endive with wat●r of Cicho 〈◊〉 Aft●r this purge choler and then give hi● a Lozenge of Triasand●l with Ru●arbe ev●●● morning two hours before meat and d 〈◊〉 a little water of Endive and Cichory afore 〈◊〉 said Lozenge Moreover it is good to hath the Liver 〈◊〉 wash the patients eyes with vineger and 〈◊〉 mans milk an● drink a Ptisan made of b 〈◊〉 I querice prunes and roots of Fennel 〈◊〉
those Trochi●kes he may make a powder of Sanguis draconis Bole armony white amber and red coral drinking one dram with plantain water as is aforesaid Another Medicine to stanch the said flux Take two ounces of old conserve of Roses of the seed of plantain two drams Sanguis draconis Bole armony of every one a dram and a half white Cortal and red one dram make a confection with Syrup of Mirtles and give it to drink morning and evening two houres afore meat at every time ●he quantity ●● a mean chesnut An Irish Medicine to stay any flux Take a handful of Sage chop it small and put thereto the yelks of eggs and fry them with as little butter as may be and eat them as hot as you can and drink not of 4 hours and in four dayes after it helpeth For the b●oody flux Take ●owder of Comphry and make tosts of wheat bread and put them in red wine a●d powder of Cinnamon therewith and also eat it alone To cure the bloody flux Take of Rubard grated one ounce harts-horn burnt and made into powder half a dram mix them with Conserves of red Roses of the last year and make thereof two or three boles and let him take it at once this scoureth away the cause of the flux and bindeth him presently after To cu●e any dangerous flux which is ●f ●orce to bring a man in danger of a consumption Take fine wheat flour boulted finely and tye it in a linnen cloath of the bigness of two eggs and boyl it in a pottle of running water with a handful of mother of time wh●n it is half boyled away then take up the flour whhich will be hard and in looking upon the flour you must take of a skim which will be on it then take some of the said flour and thicken a quantity of new milk boyled as a thin flour meat and drink it as ye see cause until you have recovered strength This will recover a man of the bloody flux even when he is t●ought past help and also to rost an egge stone hard and ●lit it and lay it hot to the fundament stayeth any monstrous flux and to wear napkins hot and to keep them as hot as one can well endure to the navel and fundament shi●ting them as they grow cold is excellent in th●s case For the bloody flux Womans milk drunk nine dayes togethe●●●sting cureth the bloody flux in any Another for the same Note that the powder of Misselden of the oak given in red wine helpeth that Flux ●●hatum A sure experiment to cure the bloody flux when a man avoideth as it were black gobbets of flesh Take Cumphry Knotgrass sheppards purse Cinqufoil Plantain Ribwort strawberry leaves one handful the middle rinde of a black thorn of cinramon one half ounce broken in small pieces boyl all these in a pot of spring water with a wheat bread crust unto a quart and clarifie it and put nine spoonfuls of wine vinegar unto it with sugar and make a Iulep drink thereof morning and evening not drinking after of two hours Probatum The Bladder Remedies for its Distempers A medicine for the stone Take grommel seed pa●sley seed red nettle Seed and saxi●rage all these made in powder by even portions or else take the Juice of al● these Herbes and of Lettuce and endive of all juices alike much and strain it through a Cloath and set● it in a vessel on the fire And take halfe so much of honey as of the Juices and cast them all together and seeth them till they be thick and keep it safe as Treasure for this is a gracious Electuary for the stone Of the cure of the stone in the Reines and bladder To break the stone Take the kernells that are within sloes and drie them on a tilestone then make of them a powder by it selfe After that take the roots of Alisander parsly parietary and Hollihocke of every one alike much and seethe them all in white wine or in the broth of Chickens then strain them out into a clean vessel and when ye drink of it adde asmuch of the said powder as ye think convenient half a silver spoonful or more for without doubt it hath great effect in bringing out the gravel Another expert medicine There groweth in the galls of some open a certain yellow stone sometimes in bignes of a Wallnut somewhat long and brittle if ye take that stone and make of it a powder and eat it in your pot●age the weight of one scruple or more according to your strength It is a singular Medicine for them that cannot pi●s for stopping of the conduites Another singu●ar Medicine Take the seed of Smalledge parsly Lo●vage vage and Saxifrage the roots of Philipendula cherry stones gromel seed and broom seed of every one alike much make them in fine powder and when ye be diseased of the stone eat of this powder a spoonful at once in pottage or broth of Chickins and eat nothing after in two or three hours A goodly syrup to mundifie the reins Take the broth of a young chicken sodden till the bones fall assunder three pound Melon seed a little bruised an ounce parcely roots and Alisander roots three ounces Damask prunes Sebesten of each six in number great raisins half an ounce clean Liquerice ●o drams water of Borage endive and hops of each three drams and with sufficient white sugar boyl them all unto the consumption of half and mor● and afterward strain them and make a goodly syrup This is a thing of excellent operation and an high secret in mundifying the reins and keep right diet the dose of it is one Cyath or a little cupfull in the morning early and sleep after it a little if yee would have the foresaid Syrup to purge more choler then put in a dram of fine Rubarb with a liter cassia A powder for the stone and Colick or either of them Imprimis Carawayseeds two ounces Gromel seeds two ounces Anniseeds two ounces Rubarb two ounces Liquerice four ounces Parsl● seeds two ounces Fenn●l seeds two ounces dryed in an oven Elecampana roots dryed as the Rubarb else neither of them will beat to powder bruise all these very small and Put to them asmuch sugar as the quantity of them all and searce them through a sieve then every morning take an heaped spoonful and put in your broth or what you like best If you cannot away with the Gromel put the more into of the other seeds for that doth more prevail either against the stone or Colick This receipt hath often been proved to be good either for the stone or Colick Another for the stone and to break it Take ripe elder berries and distil then and drink the water with sugar and it shall break and come out in one night Probatum Some four ounces of the water will serve at a time For the stone which letteth a man to make water Take Southernwood stamp it small
forehead and temples with the milk of a woman oil of roses and vineger a little The Teeth To help the breeding of them IF it come of cold Rheum make a plaster o● Mastick Frankincense Mirrhe wine an● apply it to the former part of the head ●fume of the same received in flax and laid upon the childs head is wholsom To procure easie breeding of Teeth Anoint the gums with the brains of an har● mixt with asmuch capons grease and hone● or any of these things alone is exceeding goo● to supple the gums and the sinewes And when the pain is intolerable wi●● Ap●stume or Infl●mmation of the gums m●k● an ointment with oil of Roses with the ju●●● of Morrel otherwise called nightshade and in lack of it anoint the jawes within with a l●ttle fresh butter and hony For lack of th● har●s brain ye may take the conni●● for they be also of the kinde of hares wh●se Mawes are of the same effect in Medicine as the Mawes of Ha●es If the gums apostume or swell with so●t flesh full of matter and painful the best shall be to anoint the sore place with the brain of an ha●● and C●pons grease equally mixed together and after that ye have used this once or twice anoint the gums and apostumations with hony If this help not t●ke turpentine mixt with a little hony in equal portion And make a bath for the head of a childe in this manner following Take the flowers of Camomil dill of each an handful and seethe them in a quart of pure running water until they be tender and wash the head afore any meat every morning for it purgeth the superfluity of the brain the seames of the skull and withdraweth humours from the sore place finally comforteth the brain and all the vertues animal of the childe The mouth The Remedies of its Distempers in Chidren To cause easie breeding of Teeth TAke red Coral hanged about the neck where upon the childe should often labor his gums It helpeth children of the falling evil and is very good to be made in powder and drunken against all manner of bleeding of the nose or Fundament Remedies for the canker in the mouth of Children Take drie red roses and Violets of each a like qu●ntity make them in powder and mix them with a little hony this medicine is very good in a young sucking childe and many times healeth without any other thing at all But if there be great pain and heat in the sore ye shall make a juice of purcelaine lettuce and nightshade and wash the sore with a fine piece of silk this will abate the brenning asswage the pain and kill the venome of the ulcer but if ye see the Cank●r yet encrease with great corruption and matter ye shall make an ointment after this manner Take Mirrhe galias or in default of them open apples dried Frankincense of each a like much of the black berries growing on the bramble taken from the bush while they be green the third part of all the rest make them all in powder and mix them with asmuch hony and sa●fron as is sufficient and use it Another stronger Medicine for the Canker in the mouth of Children Take the root of Celidonie dried the rinde of Pomegranate dried red Coral in powder and the powder of an h●r●shorn of each alike ●och al●o●n a li●tle fi●st wash the place with wine or warm water a●d hony and afterward put on the aforesaid powder very fine and subtile The Neck the throat and breast Remedies for their Distempers in Children Another singular medicine for the Canker in the mouth of all ages TAke Hyssop Sage rue of each one good handful seethe them in wine and water to the third part then strain them out and put in it a little white Copper as according to the necessity that is to say when the sore is great put in the more when it is small ye make take the lesse then add to it a quantity of hony clarified and a spoonful or two of good Aqua vitae wash the place with it for it is a singular remedy to remove the malice in a short while which done ve shall make a water incarnative and healing thus Take Ribwort Betony and daisies of each a handful seethe them in wine and water and wash his mouth two or three times a day with the same juice Of Quinsie and swelling of the Thr●at The Quinsie is a dangerous sickness both in young and old It is an inflamation of the neck swelling and great pain sometime it lyeth in the very threat upon the Weasand pipe and then it is exceeding perillous for it stoppeth the breath and strangleth the patient an●n otherwhiles it breaketh out like a bouch on the one side of the neck and then also with very great difficulty of breathing but it choketh not so soon as the first doth and it is more obedient to receive Curation The signes are apparent to sight that the Childe cannot cry neither swallow down his meat and drink without pain Remedy It is good to anoint the grief with oil of Dill or oil of Camo●il and lilies and to lay upon the head hot clouts dipped in the waters of rosemary Lavender and Savory the chiefest remedy commended of Authors in this ●utragious sickn●ss is the powder of a swallow brent with feathers and all and mixt with hony wh●reof the patient might swallow down a little and the rest anointed upon the pain I●em another experiment for the quinsie and swelling under the ears Take the Mushrom that groweth upon an Elder Tree called in English Jews ears heat it against the ●fire and put it hot in any drink the same drink ●s good and wholsom for the Quinsie Some hold opinion that who so useth to drink with it shall never be troubled with this disease and therefore carry it about with them in journies Of the Cough Stamp blaunched Almonds and wring them out with the juice of Fennel or water of Fennel and give it the childe to feed with a little sugar First anoint his head over with hony and press his tongue with your finger holding down his head that the same may issue Against the great Cough and heat in the body Take heads of white poppie and gum D●agagan● of each alike much long Cucumer seeds asmuch as all seethe them in whey with raisins and Sugar and let the childe drink of it twice or thrice a day luke warm or cold The Stomack Its Remedies in Children For straitness of winde AGainst the straitness of winde which is no quinsie the consent of Authors do attribute a great effect to Linseed made in powder and tempered with hony for the Childe to swallow a little at once For vomiting It is very good to wash the stomack with warm water of roses wherein a little Musk hath been dissolved for that by the odour and natural heat giveth a comfort to all the spiritual Members And then it is good to r●st
a Quince tender and with a little powder of C●oves and Sugar and give it to the Childe To eat Conserve of Quinces wi●h a little Cinnamon and Cloves is singular good for the same intent also ye may make a juice of Quinces and give the Childe to drink with a little Sugar An ointment for the stomack Take Gallia Moschata at the Apothecaries xx g●ain weight mirrhe a very little make it up in ointment form with oil of Mastick and water of roses sufficient To recover an appetite lost Take a good quantitie of rank and lustie Rue and seethe it in a pint of vineger to the third part or lesse and make it very strong whereof if it be a childe ye may take a tost of brown bread and stamp it with the same vineger and lay it plaisterwise to the stomack and for a stronger age besides the plaster let him sup morning and evening of the same vineger This is also good to recover a stomack lost by coming to a fire after a long journey and hath a singular vertue to restore a man that swooneth For a yeaxing or hicket Make him vomit with a feather or by some other light means that done bring it asleep and use to anoint the stomack with oil of Castor Spike Camomil and Dill or two or three of them joyned together warm For Colick and rumbling in the guts Wash the childs belly with hot water wherein hath been sodden Cummin Dill and Fennil after that ●ake a plaster of oil and wax and clap it hot upon a cloth to the belly Remedy for the flux in a childe First make a bath of Herbs that do restrain as of plantain St. Iohns weed called Hypericon Knot-grasse Bursa pastoris and other such or some of them and use to bath him in it as hot as ye may well suffer them then wrap him in with clothes and lay him down to sleep And if in twice or thrice using the belly be ●o● stopped ye may take an eggs yelk hard rosted grinde it with a little S●ff●on Mirrhe and wine made a plaster and lay to the ●a●il hot if this succeed not Take powder of Knotgrass or the juice there of in a posset drink or a plaster of the same herb and of shepherds purse Bolea●mony and the juice of plantain with a little vineger and wheat slower is exceeding good in this case Another Take Sorrel seed and the kernels of great Raisins dried Aco●n cups and the seeds of white poppie of each two drams sa●fron a good quantity make them in powder and temper them with the juice of quinces or Syrup of red Roses this is a soveraign Medicine in all fluxes of the womb The pizzle of an hart or stagg dried in powder and drunk is of great effect in this case which is also approved in the Liver of a beast called in English an otter The stones of him drunk in powder a little at once thirty dayes together hath healed men for ever of the falling evil For stopping and hardness of the belly In this case ye must alway put a little hony in the childs meat and let the nurse give him hon● to su●k upon his fing●r and if this will not help then the next is to mixt a little fine and clear Turpentine with hony and so to r●solv● it in a sawcer and let the childe sup of it a little The gall of an ox or cow laid upon a clout on the ●avil causeth a childe to be loose bellied likewise an emplaster of a rost●d onyon the g●ll of an ox and butter laid upon the belly as hot as he may suff●r it If these will not help ye sha●l take a li●●l● Cotto● and dipped in the said gall put it in the Fundament And ●t ●s to be noted that a natu●al flux is nev●r to be feared a●o●e the seventh day and except there issue blood it ought not to be stopped afore that time Remedies for worms in Chi●dren The herb that is found growing upon oysters by the sea side is a singular remedy to d●stroy worms and is called ●herefore of the greeks Scolitabotani that is to say the herb that killeth worms It must be made in powder and given with sweet milk to the childe to drink The Physicians call the same herb Corallin● To kill worms in Children Take red currants and lay them in vinger of white wine and let them remain one night steeped in the vinger and take sugar and make it sweet and take two or three spoonfuls and give the patient to eat and this will make them come away For worms in the belly or Stomack a most excell●nt approved Medicine Take the green buds of Elme and fry them with fresh butter and lay it hot to the belly or stomack and it presently cur●th the grieved and will cause the worms to avoid For worms Take powder of Centory Carduus Bene●ictus and Lavender co●ton one ounce and towards the full of the M●on give one s●●uple with wort or pure Triacle to bedward and it helpeth also you may spread thereof on the rough side of Leather cut round like a trencher for fruit and lay it on the childs navil and warm clothes aloft To kill and avoid chest worms Take great raisins pick out the stones and fill them with powder of Mirrhe and give the childe fasting and he shall finde ease presently A singular receip● to kill worms If the childe be of age or of strong constitution ye may make a few pills of Aloes and the powder of wormseed then winde them in a piece of a singing loaf and anoint them over with a little butter and let them be swallowed down whole without chewing The N●vil It● Remedies For swelling of the Navil TAke Spike or Lavender half an ounce make it in powder and with three ounces of fine and clear Turpentine temper it in an ointment adding a portion of oil of sweet Almonds But if it come of crying take a little bean flower and the ashes of fine lin●en clouts bu●nt and temper with red wine and honey and lay to the sore A Plaster for swelling of the Navil Take Cowes dung and dry it in powder barly flower and bean flower of each a portion the juice of knot grasse a good quantity Cummin a little make a plaster of all and set it to the Navil Take Cowes dung and seethe it in the milk of the same Cow and lay it the grief This is also marvellous effectual to help a suddain ache or swelling in the Leggs For the stone in Children Though it be very hard to be cured yet in the beginning it is healed thus First let the nurse be well dieted or the childe if it be of age abstaining from all grosse meat and hard of digestion as is Beef and Bacon salt meats and cheese then make a powder of the root of Piony dried and minister it with asmuch hony as shal be sufficient or if the childe a●hor hony make it up with sugar molten
present help To keep the small pox out of the throat Take Diaprunis the quantity of a good Nut●●gg and dissolve it in broth and give it ●●●o the partie grieved in the morning fasting For chafing of the skin In the beginning ye shall anoint the places ●●th fresh Capons grease then if it will not ●●al make an ointment and lay to the place An ointment Take the root of Flower-deluce dried of 〈◊〉 roses dried Galingale and Mastick of each ●●ke quantity beat them into most subtil ●●wder then with oil of Roses or of Lin●●●d make a soft ointment Item bean flower barly flower and the ●●wer of fitches tempered with a little oil of ●es maketh a soveraign ointment for the ●●me intent Of small Pox and Measils The best and most help in this case is not 〈◊〉 meddle with any kinde of Medicines but 〈◊〉 nature ●ork her operation notwithstandin● if they be too slow in coming out it shall b● good for you to give the childe to drink s●●●den milk and saffron and so keep him close an● warm but in no case to administer any thin● that might represse the swelling of the skin 〈◊〉 to cool the heat that is within the Members If the wheales be outragious and great 〈◊〉 decoction of water Betony is approved go●● in the said disease Likewise the ointment made mention of in the cure of scabs is ●●●ceeding wholsome after the sores are rip●● moreover it is good to drop into the patien● eye five or six times a day a little rose Fennel water to comfort the sight left it hurt by continual running of the matter T●● water must be ministred in the Summer co●● and in the winter luke warm The same ro●●●water is good to gargle in the mouth if t●● childe be then pained in the throat And l●● the conduits of the nose should be stopped● is expedient to let him smell often to a spun wet in the juice of savory strong vineger an● little rose-water Fevers in Children their cure To take away the spots and scars of the small poxes and measils THe blood of a Bull or of a hare is much commended of Authors to be anointed ●ot upon the scars and also the liquour that ●●●eth out of sheepes clawes or goats clawes ●o● in the fire Fevers If the Fever use to take the childe with a ●●●at shaking and after hot whether it be ●●tidian or Tertian it shall be singular good ●o give it in drink the black seeds of Piony ●●de in fine powder searced and mingled with ● little sugar Also take plaintain fetherfew 〈◊〉 Vervine and bath the childe in it once or ●●ice a day binding to the pulses of the hand ●●d seet a plaster of the same Herbs stamped ●●d provoke the childe to sweat afore the fit ●ometh Some coun●el in a hot Fever if be a ●●ak patient to take dry roses and powder ●●em then temper the powder with the juice 〈◊〉 Endive or Purcelain rose water and barly ●●wer and make a plaster to the stomack Item an ointment for his temples arms and ●●ggs made of oil of roses and Populeon of ●●ch alike much A good Medicine f●r the ague in Children Take Plan●ain with the root wash it th● seeth it in fai● running water to a thi●d pa●● whereof ●e shall give it a d●aught if it be 〈◊〉 age to drink with suffi●ient Sugar and lay t●● s●dden Herbs as hot as may be suffered the pulses of the hands and feet this m●●● be d●ne a li●tle afore the fit after cover with clothes The oil of nettles is exceedi●● good to anoint the members in a cold shaki●● ague Codds The cure of their Di●●stempers in Children Of the swelling of the Codds TAke a quart of good Ale and set it on 〈◊〉 fire to seethe with the crums of bro● bread strongly leavened and a handful Cummin or more in powder make a plas●●● with all this and sufficient bean flower and ●●●ply it to the grief as hot as may be s●ffered Another Take Cowes dung and seethe it in mi●● then make a plaster and lay it meetly hot 〈◊〉 on the swelling Another Take Cummin Anniseeds and Fenugre●k of each a like portion seethe them in Ale and ●tamp them then temper th●m with fresh May ●utter or else oil olive and apply to the sore Another Take Camomil Holihock Linseed and Fenu●●reek seethe them in water and grinde all to●●●her then make a plaster with a handful of ●ean flower Another in the beginning of the grief If there be much inflammation or heat in the ●odds ye may make an ointment of plantain ●he white and yelk of an Egg and a portion of 〈◊〉 of Roses stir them well about and apply it 〈◊〉 the grief twice or thrice a day when the ●in is intolerable and the childe of age or of ●●rong complexion if the premisses will not ●elp ye shall make a plaster after this sort Take Henbane leaves a handful and an half ●●llow leaves an handful seethe them well in ●ear water then stamp and stirre them and ●ith a little of the broth bean flower barly ●ower oil of roses and Camomil sufficient ●ake it up and set it on the swelling luke ●arm Henbanes is exceeding good to resolve ●he hardness of the stones by a secret qua●●tie notwithstanding i● it come of winde it ●●all be better to use the said plasters that are ●ade of Cummin Shingles their Cure Of the Erisipelas or Shingles THe remedies for burning are also good in this case Take at the Apothecaries o● unguent Galeni an ounce and half oil of rose● two ounces unguent Populeon one ounce th● juice of plantain and nightshade one ounce o● more the whites of three Eggs beat them all together and ye shall have a good ointmen● for the same purpose Item the dung of a Swan or goose with the white and yelk of an Egg is good Item dove● dung stamped in salt oil or other is a singula● remedy for the same purpose Of burning and scalding When ye see a member burnt or scalded Take a good quantity of time which is mad● of water and salt not too exceeding eager o● strong but of a mean sharpness and with ● clout or spunge ●ath the member in it cold at least blood warm three or four hour● together the longer the better for it shal● asswage much of the pain open the pores cause also the fire to vapour and give a grea● comfort to the weak member then anoint th● place with one of these Med●cines Take oil of roses one part sweet cream tw● parts hony half a part make an ointment an● use it Item a soveraign Medicine for burnin● and scalding is thus made take a dozen or more of hard rosted Eggs and put the yelks in a pot on the fire by themselves without liquor stir them and bray them with a strong hand till there arise as it were a froth or spume of oil to the mouth of the vessel then presse the yelks and
in three pounds of white wine and one pound of red rose water boil it till come almost to a Syrup this Julep is so acceptable to nature that it supplyeth the use of meat and drink To make Triacle water Take three pints of Carduus water and put into it an ounce of hartshorn and boil it till it c●me to a quart then take gentian roots roots Elicampane roots Cyperus roots Rinde of Pomegranates of each a ounce beat them into grosse powder of the herbs o● Carduus and Angelica one ounce of the flowers of rosemary Marigold Bur rage Bugloss of each of them half an ounce also one pound of Venice Triacle dissolved into six pints of whi●e wine and three pints of red rose water infuse all these things xxiiii hours together this still in a glasse still or another still that stills with water The vertue of this Triac●e water Take a spoonful or two at a time upon finding the stomack ill or upon fears or to drive away any thing from the heart to restore the spirits and speech and sowning and ●ainting ten grains in a spoonful of posset drink made of Ale going to bed is good against fears For a Surfet Take the grounds of strong Ale two gallons of the Lees of Sack two quarts a quarter of a pound of Anniseeds bruise them and put them together and distill the water then put into the water an ounce of Cinnamon a dozen bruised Cloves one Race of sliced Ginger a quarter of a pound of prunes dried fair but not washed 2. quarts of thunder baggs or corn rose leaves with the bottoms cut off Then sun it a Moneth and if the water be not of a deep Crimson then renew the Leaves and sun them a while longer take of these a spoonful at a time an hour after a second and an hour after a third To make a drink for all manner of Fevers and Impostumes and for sickness in mans body Take Hyssop Rosemary Violet Leaves Vervine Herb Iohn Mouseare Plantain Avence Sage and fetherfew of each an handful and wash them clean and put them into a Mortar and bruise them a little and put them into an earthen pot that was never occupied And put therein a gallon of good white wine and so let it stand all night covered and in the morning boil it till it come to a pottle and let it run through a hair sieve put it into a clean vessel covered and let the sick use these first and last nine dayes at evening warm and at morning cold every day and night half a pint and he shall be whole by the grace o● God A note of a diet prescribed by three dutch Doct●rs fo● a man past cure so judged Take Hermodactils two ounces Sarsaparillae four of sassafras 2. ounces Sene Alexandriae four ounces Liquerice one ounce Anniseeds one ounce long pepper half an ounce of the leaves of Scabious one great handful of Egrimony half asmuch of Betonie half a handful of water Cresses and brook lime one great handful of scurvy grasse of the Sea two great handfuls of good N●timegs one ounce Let all the wood be sliced and cut small and the herbs shred and all put into a bagg and hanged in a barrel with six gallons of new Ale to work with it and when it hath wrought stop it up and let it stand and settle eight dayes then drink continually of it and no other drink so long as it la●●e●h your b●ead must be Bakers bread with Coriander and Anniseeds your breakfast of the bread and blaunched Almonds and raisins of the sun and your diet drink your dinner dry rosted Veal Hen Chicken Mutton or rabbet your supper as your breakfast or some small repast of dry rosted 〈◊〉 or Rabber continue this six weeks and beware of cold and if you keep your chamber have merry Company this Diet will cure any desperate disease in the body that is to be cured and many times indeed those which be past c●re Probat A Medicine for the sweat Take three pints of Ale one ounce of Sugar six Sage leaves boil all these together and scum them clean And put th●rein a cr●st of white bread or a few crums and seethe then a pen●worth of powder of Maces and keep it warm in an carthen pot or in a p●wter pot and drink nine or ten ●poonfuls at your pleasure the twenty four hours and sometime drink Ale blo●d warm with a penyw●ight of powder imperial at a time Use Manus Christi at your pleasure if you feel your self sick or faint at your heart Then take a great weight of the queens preservatives with a spoonful of the s●dden Ale aforesaid or else Ale blood warm or else on a knives point once in twenty four hours Also eat no manner of spices but Mace onely and drink no manner of wine in the said twenty four hours take no manner of cold nor take not too many o● clothes but competent To make the Queens preservative Take half an ounce of Triacle powder imperial two peny worth of powder Sedwall a peny worth mingle all these together and put it into a box and use it as aforesaid when need requireth and old people may eat the q●antity of a Nut to preserve them fasting in the morning For them that are poisoned a remedy Take the powder of Betony put in wine a ●poonf●l of powder to a draught of wine a 〈◊〉 boiled by the fire being drunk doth help them presently that have drunk poison before and whoso drink it in a morning fasting no poison can hurt him A Medicine diminishing all kinde of sickness if it be not unto death and prepareth the body for recovery of health Take of the best Triacle adding thereto a few drops of oleum Vitrioli and let it stand till thou use it then any lying sick not unto death give the weight of a French crown of the same Medicine and if he be not over weak give a little more Let him drink it hot with wine in the morning fasting four hours before he eat washing out of the cup also with wine which being also taken and well covered in his bed and wrapped about his bead and all covered onely his mouth there let him sweat four hours asmuch as its possible and not sleep in any wise these four hours Then change the sheetes and let them be very dry and warm then let him lie and not sweat before he rise or eat the space of three hours then let him eat some good thing and drink good old wine after his meat Then afterward the Physician may use either Medicine both purgative or corroborative as the necessity and occasion requireth This Medicine dim●nisheth the cause of all sickness and prepareth the body in the way of health speedily and never fails the Physitian See that he sweat plentifully without sudden cold and use good diet afterward An oil of the Philosophers drawn out of Turpent●ne Take of clear Turpentine eighteen ounces
with a mote 2● Eye with a pearl in it 2● Eye sight to restore ibid Eye with a pin or web in it 3● Ear that hath a noìse in it 31 4● Ear pained ibid Ear that hath an impostume in it 3● Falling sickness 11 12 13 1● Fainting 6● Feaver 81 82 83 8● Feaver to cool ibid. Fundament to cure 92 93 Flux 102 103 Flux humoral to stop ibid. 104 119 Flux cured by an Irish Medecine ibid. Flux that is desperate and bloody 105 106 Flowers to suppress 120 Flux red in women 123 Flux of the Matrix 120 118 French Pox 100 Gall diseased 75 76 Gonorrhoea 98 100 Green sickness 1●2 Gout 128 131 132 133 134 Head ach 1 3 5 6 7 8 9 Head ach extream ib. 4 Head ach for ever to cure 7 Head to purge 9 28 Head to expell cold out of it 9 Hearing hindered through pain of the head 33 Hearing 35 36 Hoarsness 50 Heart weak 64 Heart trembling 65 Heart beating ibid. Heart that hath an ach or troubled with worms ib. Impostume 62 Iaundies 77 Iaundies black ibid. Iulep for the Liver 73 ●tching to kill 17 Kings evil 50 51 Liver diseased 72 73 Lues Venera 100 Legs swoln 113 Megrims 7 Mouth 43 Madness 66 Melancholy 78 Matrice 119 120 Matrice to cleanse 126 Mother 120 124 125 Menstruus overflowing 121 Menstruus to provoke 122 Miscarrying to prevent 26 Murre and cough 50 Milk coagulating in the brest 56 Nose that stinketh 41 43 Nature to restore 97 Nature to preserve from wasting 99 Oyl for an ach 135 Oyl for the Palsey 10 Oyntment for an ach in the back 97 Palse● 10 Phegm 4● 58 59 Phtysick 57 58 61 63 Pox 100 Piss well 111 Powder to restore Nature and preserve it 97 Pl●ster for the Gout 131 Pulvis ducis for the stomach 70 Rheum 45 Rupture 92 93 Reines to restore that are sore 98 101 Running of the Rains 99 Rains to mundify 108 Sight to preserve 9 17 Sight dim 19 20 25 Sight decayed 26 Sight to get though blind 28 29 S●itch in the side 63 Swooning 66 Stomack that is weak 67 Stomack troubled with winde ib. 69 Stomack cold 68 70 Stomack pained ibid. Stomack to comfort after vomiting 68 Stomack to cleer 69 Stone 77 106 108 Ston● in the Reines 107 Stone to break 109 An oyntment for the back if the Stone come away painful 109 Stone to slip with a Pultis 110 113 114 Sir Traver Williams receit for the stone 114 Stone to prevent ibid. 115 S●one in the kidnies 117 Sciatica 134 135 Spee hiess with the Palsey 10 Tooth ach 39 37 40 Teeth rotten and stinking 38 Tooth ach never to vex you more 39 T●eth loose 40 Teeth to leave aching or fa●l out 40 Teats of a woman impostumed 57 Termes to bring down 122 Voice hoarse 44 Voice hoarse of long continuan●e ibid. Vein broken to knit 69 Vrin that is sharp 111 V●in that is hot and burning 112 Vrin that is foul or red 113 Vrin to prov●ke ibidem Vomiting 68 White and Weaknesse of nature 124 125 Wheesing in the Chest 48 Water for the sight 18 27 Water that is pretious for many sicknesses 10 Walnuts preserved for a cough a consumption 47 Windy Colick 91 Web in the eye 24 A Table of the Remedies for children● Diseases For the Diseases of the head 139 For the diseases of the eyes 143 For the diseases of the ears 145 For the diseases of the Teeth and Mouth 146 For the diseases of the neck throat and breast 149 For the diseases of the Stomach 151 For the diseases of the Navel 156 For the diseases of the reins and bladder 158 For ruptures 159 For the small pox and measels 162 For agues and feavers ibid. For the diseases of the Cods 166 For the Shingl●s 166 For burning and scalding 169 For to kill and destroy lice Also the manner how to make divers sorts of most pretious Waters Balsomes Oyles with other rare and excellent Medicines with their uses Vertues and wonderful Operation● page 175 to the end CHOICE and RARE EXPERIMENTS IN PHYSICK AND CHIRURGERY The Head the remedies for its distempers Head-ach Here followeth the brief description of inward and outward diseases of the body with the most wholsom and expert Remedies for the Cure thereof And first of the sickness of the Head ANd it is to be noted that the cure or remedy must be appropriated according to the nature and cause of the grief which if it be not rightly considered it would be but vain to apply any Medicine and therefore the right judgement of an expert Physician is very requisite needful in such cases as you may plainly conceive for the multipli●ity or diversity of causes in some diseases maketh the cure of more difficulty as also the methodical way of applying the same in observation of the circumstances of the Patients age constitution strength sex and the like which must of necessity be observed in the administring or prescribing of all medicines that should take effect perfectly to cure c. And now Headach chanceth oftentimes of divers and sundry causes as of blood choler flegm or melancholy or of ventosity and sometime of heat of the Sun or of too grea● cold of the air If it come of blood the Cephalick vain o● the right arm is to be cut or opened if the pai● continue on the vain of the forehead on tha● side the pain is then lay upon the place ●yl o● Roses Vineger and rose-Rose-water or a bagge wit● Roses sprinckled with Rose-water And it is to be noted aswell in this cause a● all other that if his belly be hard and bound first ye must give him an easie Clyster or else o● Cassi● newly drawn out of the Cane or some other easie Laxative to provoke the duty of th● Womb else all applications of medicines wil● be nothing worth at all If the Headach proceed of Choller there 〈◊〉 sharp pain and heat chiefly on the right side o● the Head Ye must give him morning and evening 〈◊〉 drink S●rup of Violets with a mean draught 〈◊〉 Endive Water in a glass or of Cummin wa●●● s●dden and cooled again And instead of the Syrups you may drink water of Endive Succ●ry Pu●slain and Nenup●ar mixed together 〈◊〉 one of them by himself two or three dayes at even and morn Then give a dram of Pilulae sine quibus at night to bedward or about midnight and the day following keep you i● your chamber Instead of these Pills it is good every morn to take an hour before Sun a medicine to drink that shall be made of half an ounce of Succo Rosarum mixt with two ounces of Endive water Instead of the said Succo Rosarum ye may take half an ounce of Dia prunis Laxative and ye must take heed in giving such purgations that the patient be strong for if he be weak ye may give him but half of the said pills or of the other Laxatives And if in
warm to the nape of the neck To dry up and draw rheum out of the head A quilt made with Bay-salt dry Sage and Cummin is good for the rheum to draw it out and waste the humors and in like case is the leaves and flowers of Mustard-seed bruised and so laid to the crown of the head To purge the head and preserve the sight Drink Beer every morning a good draught fasting wherein the roots of Dog fennel or Motherwort is steeped the roots somewhat bruised and it will presently work in your eyes and head To expel a cold stomack or head and to expel a Consumption or either of them Take a pint of white wine Vinegar and half a pound of the best fine hard Sugar mix them and a head of Garlick trimmed clean bruised to mash then put them altogether into a pipkin and boil them softly till half be wasted and take thereof morning and evening a small quantity It will help the cold and expel a consumption An oyl to cure the cold Palsie and shaking Palsie Take a young cub Fox case him and gut him and chop him in peices and boil him in three gallons of water with a great handful of Her be-grace bruised and ever as the first scum ariseth scum it of and cast it away and all the rest of the scum and fat which riseth scum into a fair glass as long as you can get any and cover the glass close and anoint the place with the said ointment where the Palsie beginneth and you shall be cured And to anoint the sha●ing Palsie cureth it in a short time For quaking hands Take Fennel Rue and Wheat-bran seethe them in water and wash th● hands therewith also to wash thy hands in Claret wine is excellent for the same being often proved For them which a●e speechles● with the Palsie Take sharp Mustard and give it to drink in Ale or Beer warm also Primrose roots cut in slices and a slice l●id under the tongue will help in the like case A precious water against many sicknesses Take Nutmeg Cloves Cresses-seed Cubeb● Maces Grains Ginger and Cinnamon of each alike much and beat th●m to powder and put them in white wine a Limbeck and distill them with a soft fire This water drunk fasting helpeth all cold sicknesses putteth away all diseases in the eyes and redness and watering It helpeth the Spleen the Liver the Fistu●a in the body the Palsie the cold Gou● the Palsie with many other diseases and much comforteth the stomack For the falling Sickness● Take a good handful of single Piony stamp them in a pottle of white wine having in it some Saffron within a cloth then give three spoonful of this three dayes before the change of the Moon and three dayes after the change the day of the change being not reckoned for one Take three spoonfuls of this three mor●ings and three nights press well the juice ou● of the roots Hang a Piony root as neer the heart as you can Another Take the weight of half a crown in silver or half an ounce of red Fox Gloves and the like weight of Southernwood let them lie twelve hours a steep in a pint of Ale then strain it and give it blood warm fi●st and last do so for three da●es together about the time of the Moon your fit com●th If it be for a chi●de ● pint may be given at four d●aughts it maketh the party sick but it cureth For the Falling sickness or disease neer unto it Take one once of Piony root dryed and finely beaten and put it in a pint of Ale ●r Beer or both boil it and drink it morn and evening an● it will help you It is proved For the Falling sickness Take three nails made in the Vigil of Saint Iohn Baptist commonly called Midsummer eve drive them in the ground so deep that they be not seen in the place where the sick party fell naming the parties name whiles it is in doing It will drive away the disease which Misaldus credibly reported A powder against the Falling sickness Take of Christal prepared one dram Of red Coral prepared two scruple● Of Pearl prepared one scruple Of O●iental Smaragd prepared half a dram The half part of which is one dose in the water of our Ladies thistle Cae●ar accounted this for a great secre● and with which men that were somewhat aged as also those which have been long subject to this disease after purgation were cured Zacutus Lufitanus wi●nesseth and reporteth de Prax. Med. adm lib. observat 20. that he hath seen many and also of great age having this disease of the Falling sickness having tryed many remedies as well of an hidden as manifest quality which nothing profited or availed them onely with the syrup made of the green leaves of Tobacco and hony to have been cured taking of the same three ounces three hours after supper for fourty dayes if gree● Tobacc● 〈◊〉 wanting dry of good note or the best may be used instead thereof Another excellent Remedy for the salling evil Take a good handfu● of Piony roots and a handful of Misselto that groweth upon a black●horn and a handful of Polypodium otherwise called in English Oakefearn and two good ●andful of Selendine if it be possible it may ●e had and stamp them very well and then ●et them to steep either in Ale or Beer for the ●pace of two hours or more and then put it in●o your earthen pot where it maybe kept close ●rom any air and let the party grieved drink a ●ood draught thereof every morning fasting ●nd last in the evening and let him use it for ●he space of fourteen or fifteen dayes and by Gods help it will cure him in short space Against the Epilepsie of Children Take Coriander prepared M●stard-seed Nutmegs of each half a dram Piony-seed seven ●rams Diptamni two drams make thereof a ●owder and let it be given in the morn with ●ot wine Another expert against the Epi●epsie Take red Co●al the forepart of the skull of a man of grains of Piony of each one ●ram mix it and make a powder thereof of which powder must be given at three times at morn noon and night with some broth or ●ome water appropriated and if it help not at once then renew it in the same manner and ●ose as before It is found that many things have a natural vertue against the fa●li●g evi● not of any quality elemental but by a si●gular property or rather an influence from heaven which almighty God hath given unto things here on earth as by these and other Saphi●es Smargdes red Co●al Piony Misseltoe of the Oak ●aken in the Moneth o● March and the Moon d●cr●asing Time Savin Dill and the stone found in t●e belly of ● young Swallow and others these or one o● them hang●d about the neck of the child saveth and pr●serveth it from the said sickness Take ●he root of Piony and make it in●o powder and ●ive it the
much a●d distil them as ye would distil Rose-water and use the●eof a little in your eyes ●oth in the morn and when ye go to bed A water proved to clarifie the dimness of sight Take the juice of Fennil of Celidony Rue ●nd Eye-bright of each two ounces hony an ●unce and hal● Aloes Tutiae and Sarcoc●lle of ●ach half an ounce the gall of a Capon Chick●n or Cock two drams Nutmegs Cloves and Saffron of each a dram Sugar candy six drams put all into a Limbeck of glass and distil it and of this water put in your eyes once in a day For the same Ye must use every day to eat Nutmegs and to take once in a week a Myrabolane condite Take green Walnuts liu●ks and all from the tree with a few Wallnut leaves and distill ther●of a water to drop into ●our eyes Pills good for the sight The pills sine quibus asswaged with Trochisk● of Agarick and Pi●ulae Lucis are excellent good to purge the brain and comfort the sight For swelling of the Eyes Take a Quince and seethe it in water till it b● soft then pare it and bruise it and mix i● with the yelk of an egg and the cru●s o● wheat or white bread steeped in the said water and put thereto a little womans milk and tw● penny weight of Saffron bray them altogethe● and l●y it over the forehead and the eyes To resolve gummy matter in the eyes y● shall use to wash your eyes oftentimes wit● th● juice of Hou●leek otherwise called Sen●green For great pain of the eyes Take an ounce and an half of oyl of Roses the yelk of an egg and a quarter of an ounce o● Barly flower and a little Saffron mix all togeher and put it between two linnen cloths ●nd lay it to the pain Another Take crums of wheaten bread or white an ●unce and seethe it in Nightshade or Morrel-●ater then mix with the said bread two yelks ●f eggs oyl of Roses and Camomile of each ●n ounce and a half Mucilage of Lineseed an unce and use it as aforesaid Another Take six leaves of Henbane and rost them hen beat them very well in a Morter and lay hem to the pain For redness of the Eyes In the beginning of the redness lay upon ●he eye Tow dipped in the white of eggs but et the whites be well beaten first with Rose-●ater or with plantaine-Plantaine-water Another Take red Roses and seethe them and let ●hem be set warm to your eye This taketh ●way spots of blood that sometime chanceth ●n the eyes also it is good for all diseases of ●he eyes and it is good for redness of the ●yes that cometh by striking or any such vio●ence If at any time there happen a spot or ●lemish in the eye by a stroke ye must by and ●y lay to it Tow wet in Rosewater and in whites of eggs and after the pain is mitigated ye must lay to it a Plaister upon the eye made of a raw egge Barly flower and the juice or Mucilage of Mallows and then if the eye be not holpen of the said blood ye must lay to it a plaister both dissolutive defensive and partly appeasing the pain which must be made of Wheat flower the juice of Mallows Mint●● and smallage and the yelk of an egge Of hardness that hath been long in the eye Take a scruple of Aloes succotrine and mel● it in water of Selendine at the fire then receive the fume of it and afterward wash the eye with fennel-Fennel-water Another Take the powder of Cummin mixt wit● wax like a plaist●r and lay it upon the eye Another Take Roses Sage Rue Celidony of eac● alike much with a little Salt and distill 〈◊〉 water and put thereof a drop or two in you● eye morning and evening instead of that w●ter it is good to take juice of Vervine Rue and a little Rosewater For all redness of the eyes Take the bigness of a Nut of white Copp●ris and a scruple of Ireos and powder it and mix it with a glassful of well water then put two o● three drops in your eyes For the same Water of strawberries made and put in the ye is good A singular powder that dryeth and take●h away the redness of the eyes Take Tutiae preparatae an ounce and Timonie ●alf an ounce pearles two drams red ●oral a dram and an half powder all these ●hings very fine and keep it in a box o● Tin ●nd use it For to stop watering of the eyes Take a plaister of powder of Mastick fine Frankincense Bole-armoniack and Gum ●ragagant with white of egg● mixt together ●nd lay to the forehead and Temples Also it ●s good to lay ventoses on the Nape of the ●eck Also ●t is good to make a Collyrie to put ●nto the eyes as ●olloweth Take Tutiae preparat and the stone called Lapis Hematites of each a dram Aloes half a dram Pearls and Camphire of each a scruple powder them all very fine and mix them in ●hree ounces of water distilled of the knops of Roses and thereof make a Collyrie Also for to stop all humours descending to the eyes these things aforesaid are good mixed w●h rain water wherein Olibanum or Frankincense hath been ●odden For webbes of the eye It may easie be holpen in young folk but 〈◊〉 aged pe●sons it is very hard And in the beginning ye must mollific them with a decoct● on of the fl●wers of Camomile Mellilote 〈◊〉 cool Leaves receiving the fume of the 〈◊〉 decoction within the eyes and th●n put there in a little powder made with Sugar candy Sa●gemme and egge shells brent and afte● distill into them womans milk with the decoction of Fenugreeke Another singular receipt for webbes in the eyes Take snayles with the shells on and 〈◊〉 them eight times and distill them in a co●mon Stillatory then take Hares galls 〈◊〉 Corall and Sugar-candy with the said wate● distill them again and put every morning a● evening a drop into your eyes Another This water is made of white Copperis S●gar candy and Rosewater with whites of egg sodden hard and strained through a Lin● Cloth and put into your eye after dinn● and at night to b●dward To stay the humours that fall in the eyes Take Mastick Sanguis draconis the whi● of an egge and Rosewater of every one a sm●● ●uantity mixt them altogether and make a ●la●ster thereof and spread it on a piece of ●elvet and lay it to the temple vain and let it ●ick ●here till it fall of it self To clear the eyes that be dim of sigh● Take the Juice of Caprifolium or wood●inde and dry it in the sun till it come to a ●●e powder after it is pounded strained and ●rought to fine powd●r blow some of it ●to the eyes and it will help God willing The Juice of Caprifolium is called at the ●pothecaries Lycium you ought not to wash ●he woodbinde before the straining especially ●hen you make Lycium for the eyes
the Juice of Housleek into it and set i● on the Embers and so distill it and scum it clean with a feather and at night when you go ●o bed Let a drop thereof fall into your eye with the feather lying upon your back and this will presently help you For eyes that runn● Take Occulus Christi and Celendine red fennil and daysies and stamp them together i● a Mortar and take the Juice and put it into the eye For the apple of the eye Take the juice of Terfylle the yelk of an egg a prettie portion of hony and the milk of a woman flour of wheat and make a plaister and l●y thereto till it be whole The Ears Remedies for all diseases in the ears For noise and sounding of the Ears TAke Pilulae Cochiae or fetidae because the sound is of ventosity or Phlegm and before ye take the said pills It is good to drink three ounces of Fennel water two hours before meat four or five dayes After the operation of the said pills ye must dip a tent in oil of Rue Castor or of salt with the juice of Leek● and often in the morning fasting to hold his ear over the decoction of Marjerom Rue Wormwood Camomil and Melilote For pain in the Ears Goose-grease with a little hony swageth the pains of the Ears Item oyl of Almonds especially of the bitter Almonds hot ●em If there be water in the Ears it shall be had out with a little Goose-grease and the juice of Onions sometimes there chance●● deafness by winde which is in the Ear the which causeth ●inckling in the Ear and then one must put a little Aloes in hot water or in white wine and distil into the Ear then put a little Euphorbium in powder into his Nose for to make him to neese and avoid asmuch humors as ye can Sometime deafness cometh 〈◊〉 Phlegm which when it is old it is uncurable but when it beginneth it must be purged a● ha●h been said in the remedy of the sound o● the Ears then take powder of Bay berries and s●ethe it in oyl of Lilies and put it warm into ●our Ear and a little black wool to stop the Ear with that no air ●nter An approved Medicine for Deasn●ss Take sweet Sallet oyl half a pound add to it Wormwood Sorrel Aniseed Perwinckle of each one dram dry all to powder the powder of old Roses one ounce as much of Coloquintida boiled in the said oyl strain and use it three drops into the Ear at a time warm To recover the lost hearing or deasness in the Ear. Take Civet a grain Musk one grain and good Tar one scruple mix all these together and put it into a fine linnen cloth or peice of silk and binde it fast with a thread and put it into the Ear cloth and all and binde the thread about the top of the Ear and so wear it in the ear and thou mayest take it forth when thou wilt it doth then help the h●ad and recover the hearing A sove●aign Medicine for the pain and buzzing in the head which hindreth the h●aring Take a Clove of Garlick and pill it clean ●nd make three or four holes in the midst of it ●nd dip in it a little English hony and put it ●nto your Ear and put a little black wooll in ●st●r it for that night let the patient lye up●n the contrary side and let the ea● that is ●topt be upright and the next night following ●et him use the other ear in like sort and lie ●n the other side as before and so let him al●r it every other night and use it for the ●ace of eight or nine dayes together and this ●ill expulse all ill humors out at his nose eale ●he pain and restore the hearing An experienced medicine for deafnes● in the head Take Bay leaves Bay berries Betony and ●ticades of each ●of them one handful and ●eethe them in white wine till one hal● be ●onsumed but if it be an aged person use Mal●esy instead of white wine and then put it ●●to a vessel that hath a narrow mouth and let ●he patient hold his ear upon it it being un●opped so that he may suff●r the same ●eing neither too hot nor too cold then take ●yl of bitter Almonds and put three or four ●ops into his ears and then stop it close with ● lock of sheeps wooll that groweth between ●he Sheeps Legs and if he put a little Musk 〈◊〉 Civet it will be the better This was pr●ved A present Remedy for one that cannot hear Take an Hedghog and flea him and ro●● him and let the patient put some of the grea●● into his ear and he shall recover his hearing in short space This hath holpen those that could not hear almost any thing at all and hath bee●●roubled with this impediment for the space of twenty years and yet were holpen with this Medicine An excellent good Medicine for deafness in the head Take a quart of Malmesy and a quarter 〈◊〉 pint of clear running water a pennyworth of Cummin and eight or nine leaves of Beton● and boil them altogether until half the liquor be consumed then take the pot wherein the Medicine is boiled and cover it close with ● Tunnel binde it close about the verge o● brim whereby the heat may not issue forth● then put a quill into the other end of the Tunnel and let the patient hold his ear close that the heat may ascend up into his head and when he is weary of holding the one ear let him turn the other to the same place and w●ilst the heat is ascending up into one of his ears let the other be well stopped with black wool and let him also apply hot cloths to keep in the heat on the other side of his head w●ilst the Medicine worketh and let both sides be used alike and let the patient use this three times a day that is to say at morn noon and night and so continue it for the spa●e of eight or nine dayes together and during all which space he must abstain from any open aire and doubtless this will help him for by experience it is known that it hath cured both men and women that were above fifty years of age For deafness or noise in the head an excellent remedy Take of the juice of a Radish root a pretty quantity of the oyl of bitter or sweet Almonds with a pretty deal of Colocynthis and warm all these together in a little white wine and when it is well mingled and bloodwarm then pour a drop of it warm into thine ear and this using the patient shall be remedied Good for the ●earing The juice of Betony cast into the ear luke-warm is very profitable against the pains of deafness or other impediments of the ears Item The fat of a Fox doth greatly cure the pain of the ears also the juice of Hyssope mix● with oyle and bloodwarm put into the ears taketh away the
said hereafter in the remedies ●f the stomack The Mouth Remedies for its diseases To destroy a stinking breath TAke three handfuls of Cummi● beat them in a mortar to powder then take a pottle 〈◊〉 wine and put the powder into it and let it ●ethe till it come to a quart then drink first ●nd last of this wine by the space of fifteen ●ayes as you may suffer it Probatum est To make a sweet breath Take the juice of Mintes or the wate● Rue Cummin Coliander Liquorice Cin●●mon alike four ounces seethe all these 〈◊〉 wine and give them to dr●nk that hath 〈◊〉 stinking breath and surely it shall be s●eet Another for the same Take the powder of Sage one ounce 〈◊〉 mary blossoms three ounces Cloves and Gil●● flowers five drams Cinnamon one dram and half Nutmegs one dram and a half Mus● little quantity then take as much as is su●●●cient to make the said Compositions into Corporation like unto Marmelade and ea●● this fasting and at night a little quantity a● time so shall your breath be sweet And you go into any suspicious place of the pe●●lence or any other corrupt air if you take ● this next your heart it shall defend you fro● the jeopardy thereof For stench in the mouth Take Pulial Mountain make powder thereof and eat it fasting Another Take Costmary drink it every day fastin● wash thy teeth every night when thou go● to bed with Vinegar Another Take the juice of Gladin with old wine and wash thy mouth every morning and evening Another Take Mastick and Incense and seethe it in sweet wine and drink thereof early and late Another for the stench in the Nose Take the juice of Mintes and put it into ●hy Nose Another Drink the juice of Rue and five leaved Grass Another Take the juice of Ivy mingled with wine ●nd oyle Olive Probat To take away stinking of the mouth Ye must wash his mouth with water and Vi●egar and chew Mastick a good while and then ●ash thy mouth with the decoction of Anni●eeds Mintes and Cloves sodden in wine Ye must wash your mouth before and after meat ●ith warm water for to cleanse the mouth ●nd to purge the humours from the Gums ●hich descend out of the head it is good ev●ry morning fasting to wash your mouth and to ●ub the Teeth with a Sage leave pills of Ci●ron or with powder made of Cloves and Nutmegs forbear Lettice Raw fruit all tart meats and the chewing of hard things Also ●ll meats of evil digestion and vomiting The Breast Remedies for distempers thereof Remedies for diseases of the breast And first for h●arsness of the voice ye 〈◊〉 avoid all eag●r salt and s●arp things an● sleeping by day too much watching grea● cold much speaking and too l●ud crying 〈◊〉 sweet things are good as apples sodden wi●● Sugar great raisins Figgs Almond milk whi●● pills Sugar candy and the juice of Liqueri●● For a hoarse voice Take the broth of red Coleworte a●● mingle it with s●ven or eight Penidies and a● ounce of Syrup of Maiden-hair and give un●● the patient wh●n he goeth to bed Another Take Diairis simple and eat a Lozenge o● the same at morning and at night For hoarsness of long continuance Take Raisins Figgs Sugar Cinnamon an● Cloves of every one a little seethe them i● good wine of the which ye shall give to drin● morning and evening two ounces at a ti●● ●xcept he have a fever It is good to take ●orning and evening a fpoonful of the Syrup of Ju●ubes mixt with a root of Liquerice in ●anner of a Lohoch A Syrup for Cough rheums Catarres and other like diseases Take Althaea leaves seven handfuls stamp them in a mortar then take a pot that will hold seven pints boil in it these ●hings follow●ng Liquerice two ounces Sage Rosemary Cardu●s benedictus figgs raisins barly flower of each a handful succory leaves and roots a handful let all these boil one hour and a half then let it cool so that you may strain it then take the water and put in two or three pounds of French Mallowes setting it to boil on the fire again three hours or more then strain it as you did before then take the decoction and set it on the fire with asmuch hony or little less taking off the scum when it hath boiled a good space ad● to it one ounce or as much as you wil● of Cinnamon Then take it immediately from the fire putting it forth and covering it close This secret is so excellent that if a man use it in winter warming it when he taketh it it is not possible for him to be vexed with C●ugh rh●um Catarrhes and like diseases A Medicine for the Cough Take the yelk of an Egg and put it into an emptie Egg shell and put to it five grains weight of the powder o● Saffron and roste the same very rear and to bedward sup it off warm being well stirred together it cureth the Cough or giveth much ease Against the Cough Take Anniseeds Licquerice of each an ounce● Hysop one handful sugar candy four ounces strong beer three pints boil altogether till half be consu●ed then strain forth the simples and give the patient every night when he goeth to bed four ounces warm For an old Cough Take Elicampane roots and boil them tender then pound it in a wooden mortar then rub it in through an hair sieve then take clarif●●d hony and lay a course in the bottom of a stean then a course of sliced wardens then a course of the Elicampane and so again as long as you please And then put the stean into a● oven and bake them two or three hours then take it two or three times a day a spoonful at a time Another for a Cough with a rheum Take Brown sugar candy and put it pounded into a calves bladder and lay it in spring water 24 hours then cut the bladder and eat t with a Liquerish stick as the Cough doth trouble you ●pre●erve Wallnuts for a cough or Consumption ●ake a pound of Walnuts before they be 〈◊〉 and pa●e them very thin then steep 〈◊〉 in water a night then boil them in run●● or standing water until they be so tender ●ou may put an hard rush through them 〈◊〉 stick in each end of every Walnut a 〈◊〉 Then lay them hot togeth●r in a ●●ney Bason then take a pound and a half ●ugar and strew upon them hot and cover 〈◊〉 and let them lie covered all night with●he warmth of the fire And the next day 〈◊〉 them up and put them into a pot A good Syrup for an old Cough and it mundi●eth the breast and the Lungs and for pain under ●he side coming of cold ●ake Liquerice scraped and bruised two ●ce● Maiden hair one ounce of Hysop dried 〈◊〉 an ounce put all this into four pint● of ●●ing water and let them stand in that wa●●● 〈◊〉 one day and one night and then seethe 〈◊〉 till
a little Nutmeg beat it well together and drink it mornings It s an admirable thing to cool it For feeble reins Take Burre roots and stamp them and boil th●m in stale Ale and drink thereof at evening hot and at morning cold To preserve nature from wasting Take acorns and steep them three dayes in wi●e vin●ger and dry them and let him drink the powder the cup is as good if not better then the Acorn its self so they may be both together For the running of the reins Take an handful of Cumphry a handful of Clary and so much of Mousear boil them in a quart of red wine with powder of Cinna●on Saund●rs and Sugar and drink a good ●raught of thi● fasting For the running of the Reins Take white wine rosewater Plantain ●ater of each alike much in Quantitie one ●●arter of a pint two Nutmegs grated two ●enny worth of Cinnamon pounded and as●uch of Bolearmony as a Nut beaten ●inal the ●hite of an Egg beaten to oil and put toge●●er and for three dayes use it not but every 〈◊〉 shake it together in a glass and then take ● morning and evening provided that you 〈◊〉 a Syring now and then either with white ●ne or else rose water together or several ●nd this is a special remedy for the running of 〈◊〉 reins often times proved To knit a broken Vein One Master Atkinson having a broken vein his back could not be cured by any Doctor 〈◊〉 home to die having a continued issue of 〈◊〉 The Person of the parish advised him take a spoonful of the juice of Pla●tain ●ing which he did three or four times and was cured and is well and verifies this in J●ly 1652. For the help of the disease called the French pox Take two peny worth of white wine and 〈◊〉 peny worth of honey one peny worth o● Ro●h a●lame these three sorts to be boiled to●●ther and the same to be placed where 〈◊〉 gri●f doth lie or most offend A Diet drink ●o cure Lues venerea or any desper●● disease in mans bodie Take seven gallons of spring water in ●rom p●t and put into it Sar●aparilla flic● and bruised three ounce● set it on the 〈◊〉 and let it infuse or boil very gently two hou●● th●n p●t into it f●ur ounces of chosen 〈◊〉 leaves and cods and half an ounce of 〈◊〉 beaten to powder and half an ounce Stychad●s and asmuch of Epithymum of cho●●● liqu●rice scraped sliced and bruised flat t● ou●ces of Camomile flowers one o●nce 〈◊〉 them into a pot and let them boil all together one hour or more then take it from the 〈◊〉 ●●d strain it into an earthen pot and 〈◊〉 and till it be cold then pure it and 〈◊〉 bottles and drink thereof morning and e●●ing a reasonable good draught A● morbum Gallihidropicum cetera Acci e vini albi pounds 96 alias gallons 〈◊〉 lib. ss gy●yrrhiz iib. 2. Sea● 〈◊〉 ●ib ● Cert●ci● guiaci lib. 2. Colo●●● one ounce coque in balneo Mariae per 24. horas i● non ●●aporet exprime Colaturae ad Mit●ridatum optimum one ounce per du●s dies bibat ●●antum potest nihil comedat per quatu●r 〈◊〉 postea comedat semel in die postea comedat 〈◊〉 in die Perficitur cura in duodecem diebus Pain of the reins is called Nephretica passio And cometh of some stone or gravel and it is most like unto the Colick in cu●e but in ●ourses they be clean contrary ●or the Colick beginneth of the lower pa●ts on the right s●de and goeth up to the higher parts on the 〈◊〉 side o● the belly and it lieth rather more ●●rward then backward but Ne●h●etica Passio beginneth contrariwise above descending downward and ever lieth more toward the back A●so Nephretica is pain●uller a sore meat and the Colick is more grievous after And ofte● the Colick chanceth suddenly but Neph●●tica contrary for commonly it cometh by little and little and evermore before one shall fe●l pain of the back with difficultie of urine Item there is more difference for the Colick sheweth dry●ess as it were coloured but Nephretica is clear and white like water afterward waxeth thick and then appeareth in the bottom of the v●ssel like red sand or gravel Remedy ●or pain of the reins You must use things aperitive to cause you to make water but afore ye ought to loose the belly in taking an ounce of Cassia an hour before meat but if your belly be hard or bou●d you must take a Clyster before you take the said Cassia In stead thereof you may take Cowes milk with two yelks of Eggs in manner of a Clyster the Clyster must be great in quantitie Drink water of Pellitory of Cresses or of roots aperitive the which waters are good to purge the gravel and stone Likewise a very good Electuary for the ●●me Philantropos or Lithontripon if one take ● dram or two after operation of a Clyster of Ca●sia or a pill of ante Cibum and after to drink one of the s●id waters or else a little white wine warmed If ye will make a Julep take water o●●intes and of Ba●m of each half a pound Sugar a quartern and make a Julep of the which one may drink evening and morning after mea● a dra●ght Every morning is good to take a Lozenge of the Elect. that followeth A nob●e E●ectuary for the fluxe Take powder of Diagalanga a dram and a half of red corall and Masticke of each a scruple Tr●chiskes of Terra s●gillata half a d●am the barkes of Citrons confite and quinces of each one three drames sugar dissolved in water of Mintes four ounces make an Electuary O●ls of Wormewood Mint and of Narde and Masticke are very holsom to anoynt withall the belly and the stomack for the said flux And the things declared of the flux Lienteria be very good in this case taking ever after meat a morsel of Marmalade Red wine is very good in this flux to drink at meat with the water of a smith and likewise all spices are good in this case Medicines to restrain the flux of what cause s●ever it be Take the Peisel of an hart and dry it into powder and drink it the water of Oakbuds or the very acorns dryed and made in powder and drunk in ●ed wine is very good Remedie f●r the flux humoral called Diarhaea The said flux ought not to be restrained a sore the fourteenth day i● nature be not v●ry much infe●●led And sometime it cometh of hot causes as of color and then the patient must drink be●ore his meat Syrup of Ribes Syrup of roses or syrup of Quinces and very smithes water After ye have purged the principal matter o● the disease the second Intention shall be by and by to stop the said Issue To stop the said flux Take trochiskes of white Amber and make them in powder and give a dram every morning and anon after drink an ounce or two o● plantain water Instead of
a box the dose to be given is one dram in a draught of white Wine bedward to sleep Probatum A plaster f●r all aches and pains in any part of the body Take a quarter of a pound of pure Rosen and unwrought wax Dears suet or sheepes suet of equal quantity melt them altogether three or four spoonfuls of Sallet oyl black sope of the bigness of a Wallnut stir all together take it from the fire put in your Linnen first made fi● for the place grieved then hang them on a string till it be cold It will take away the pain and disease use it to any par● of the body where th● pain is whether in the joints swellings Sciatica often proved upon my self I will not leave the use of it f●r gold Childrens Diseases The Head Remedie●●or the Distempers of their Heads For the apostume of the brain and swelling IN which cases the childe cannot rest and is ever loath to have his head touched cryeth and vexeth it self as it were in a Phrensie Remedy Make a bath of Mallowes Camomil and Lillies sodden with a sheepes head till the bones fall and with a spunge or soft clouts all to bath the head of the childe in a cold apostume with the broth hot as may be suffered but in a hot matter with the broth luke warm or in the cooling and after the bath set on a plaster thus Take Fenugreek Camomil wormwood of every one a handful seethe them in a close vessel till the third part be consumed then stamp them in a mortar and stir them to the which ye shall put of the same broth again enough to make a plaster wi●h a little bean flower yelks of Eggs and Saffron adding to them fresh butter or ducks grease sufficient and apply it in a cold matter let it lie a day but in a hot cause ye must remove it every six hours For swelling of the head Which cometh of a windie matter which is manif●st to the sight by the swelling or puffing up and pressed with the fing●r there remaineth a print which is a sign of winde and viscous humours ye shall heal it thus Take an hand●ul o● f●nnel Smallach and di●l and seethe them in water in a close vessel afterward stamp them and wi●h a little Cummin and oil of bitter Almonds make it up and lay it often to the child warm In default of oil of Almonds take goose grease adding a little vineger And it is good to bathe the place with a s●ft cloth or a spunge in the broth of these Herbs Rue Time Marioram Hyssop Fennel Dill Cummin Salintra Mints Radish roots rocket or some of them ever taking heed that there drop not the Medicines in the babes eys mouth or ears For scales and ulcers in the Head If ye see the scales like shells of oisters blac● and dry cleaving upon the ●kin one withi● another ye may make a fomentation of ho● and moist herbs as Fenugreck Holihock Bear● breech Linseed and such other sodden all 〈◊〉 some of them in the broth of neats feet an● so to bathe the scres And after that apply 〈◊〉 soft plaster of the same Herbs with goose grease or butter using this still till ye see th● scab removed and then wash it with the juic● of Horehound Smallach and Betony sodot● together in wine and after the washing pu● upon it powder of Mirrhe Aloes and Frankincense or hold his head over a chaffing dish 〈◊〉 coals wherein ye shall put frankincense an● Saunders in powder But if ye see the scab very sore and matterie with great pain an● burning of the h●ad ye shall make an ointmen● to cool the matter thus Take whi●e Lead and Litarge of each fiv● drams lie made of the ashes of a vine thre● drams oil of roses an ounce wax an ounce melt the wax first then put to the oil and li● with the rest and in the end two yelkes o● Eggs make an ointment and lay it to the head This is the composition of Rasis Another Take Betony groundsel plantain Fumitory and daysies of every one like much stamp them and mingle them with a pound of fresh swines grease and let them stand closed in a moist place eight dayes to putrifie then fry them in a pa● and s●●ain them in a clean vessel and ye shall have a green ointment of singular operation for the sa●d disease and to qu●nch all unkinde heats of the body also ye must use to shave the head whatsoever things ye do lay unto it If there do lack cleansing of the sores and the childe wounded ye shall do well to make ointment of a little Turp●ntine buls gall and hony and lay upon the sores The juice of morrel daysie leaves and groundsell fryed with grease and made in an ointment cooleth all unkinde heats and p●stules of the head Moreover the childs head may not be kept hot for that is sometimes the cause of this disease Sometimes there breedeth in childrens heads as it were little warts or Knobbes somewhat hard and cannot be resolved by the said Medicines An excellent remedy for warts or Knobbes of the head Take Litarge and white lead of each a like quantity of brimstone and quick silver quenched with spittle of each a less quantity twice asmuch oil of Roses and a spoonful or two of vineger mix them all together on a Marble till they be an oyntment and lay it on the head and when it hath been dry an hour or two wash it off with water wherein was sodden Marjerone Savory and Mintes use it thus twice a day morning and evening till ye see it whole This thing is also good in the other kinde o● scales Rhasis description Anoint the forehead and temples of th● childe with oil of vi●l●ts and vineger putting a drop or two into the Nostrils and if y●● can get any Syrup of Poppie give to the child● to lick and then mak● a plaster of oil o● Saffron lettuce and the juice of poppie o● we● cloutes in it and lay it overthwart th● temples Also the seed● a●d the heads of Poppie ca●led Ches●uls stamped with rose-R●sewa●er an● mixt with with womans milk and the whit● of an Eg● beaten altogether and made into ● plaster causeth the childe to receive his natural sleep Also an ointment made of the seed of poppie and the heads one ounce oil of Lettuc● and of Poppie of each two ounces make a● ointment and use it They that cannot get these oils may tak● the Herbs or juice of Lettuce purslane hous● leck and poppie and with womans milk make a plaster and lay it to the forehead Oil of Violets of roses of Nenuphar ar● good and oil of Populeon the broth of Mallowes sodden and the juice of water plantain The cure of a palsie in a childe is not like to that in elder age for the Sinnewes be very nesh and tender and they ought to have a much weaker medicine evermore regarding the power of the sickness and the
reserve the Liquour this is called oil of Eggs a very precious thing in the aforesaid cure Irem the juice of Lilies five parts and vineger one part hony a little maketh an excellent Medicine not onely for this intent but for all other kindes of hot and running Ulcers Whatsoever you use must be laid to bloodwarm Also for avoiding of a scar keep that place moist with medicine An approved Medicine for a burning or for a childe that falls into the fire and burns any part of it Take Hens dung or Capons dung and ground Ivy and stamp them together then take sheepes suet and fry the dung and Herbs withall and strain it and where the burning is ●noint it two or three times a day till it be whole and keep the Salve in a box to use it at ●eed Probat For a burn or a sca●d Take Mousear a good handful of Prim●ose leaves an handful Fearn roots an handful ●ound these together and boil them in thick ●ream till it come to a butter then strain it ●nd so anoint the place Another for the same Take the yellow Moss or scurse of an Ashbough and put into cream and boil it to butter Of consumption or leannesse When a child consumeth or waxeth lean without any cause apparant there is a bathe commended of Authors to wash the childe many tim●s is made thus Take the head and feet of a weather seethe them till the bones fall asand●r use to bath the childe in this Liquor after anoint him with this ointment following Take butter without salt oil of Roses and of Violets of each an ounce the fat of raw pork half an ounce wax a quarter of an ounce make an ointment wherewith the childe must be rubbed every day twice this shall with good feeding increase his strength by the grace of God Lice To destroy Lice MAke a Lavatory to wash scour the body twice a day thus take brine and strong ly● o● a●hes of each a like portion wormwood a h●n●ful ●eethe them a while and after wash the body with the same liquor A goodly Medicine to kill them Take the grounds or dregs of oil Aloes wormwood and the gall ●f a Bull or of an ox make an ointment which is singular good for the same purpose Item Stavisacre Brimstone and vinegar is exceeding good It is good to give the patient often in his drink powder of an hartshorn brent Stavisacre with oil is a marvellous wholsom thing in this case An expert Medicine to drive away Lice Take the grounds and dregs of oil or in lack of it fresh swines gr●ase a sufficient quantity wherein ye shall cha●e an ounce of quicksilver till it be all sunk into the grease then take powder of Stavisacre searce and mingle all together make a girdle of woollen list meet for the midle of the patient and all to anoint it over with the said Medicine then let him wear it continually next his skin for it is a sing●lar remedy to chas● away the vermin The onely odour of quicksilver killeth lice For scabbinesse and Itch. Take water of Betony two good handfuls daisie leaves Alehoof otherwise called Judmur or ground ivy of each one handful the red Dock roots two or three stamp them all together a●d g●inde them well then mingle them with fresh grease and again stamp them Let them so stand eight dayes to putrifie till it be hoar then f●y them and strain them out and keep for the same intent This ointment hath g●eat effect both in young and old and that without repercussion or driving back of the matter which should be a perilous thing for a young child● The water Betony alone is a g●eat Medicine to quench all unkindly heats without danger or the seething of it in clear well water to anoint the Members Another remedy for scabs and Itch. Take the roots of Docks and fry them in fresh g●ease then put to a quantity of Brimstone in powder and use to rub the places twice or thrice a day Brimstone powdred and supped in a rear Egg healeth the scabs which thing is also very good to destroy worms A g●odly sweet sope for scabs and itch Take white sope half a pound and steep it in sufficient rose-rosewater till it be well soked then ●ake two drams of Mercury sublimed disolve it in a little rose-rosewater labour the sope and the Rose water well together and afterward put in a little mu●k or civet and keep it T●is sope is exceeding good to ●ure a great scab or itch and without peril but in a Childe shall suffice to make it weaker of Mercury Ano●her approved Medicine for scabbiness and It●h Take Fumitory dock roots scabious and the roots of Walwort stamp them all and set them in fresh grease to putrifie th●n fry them and strain them in which Liquor you shall put turpentine a little quantity brimstone and f●ankincense very finely powdered and sifted a portion and with sufficient wax make an ointment on a soft fire this is a singular remedy for the same purpose And if need be to make a bath of Fumitory centaury Featherfew Tansie wormwood Sage alone if ye see the cause of the itch or the scab to be worms in the ●kin for a bitter decoction shall destroy them and d●y up the moisture of the sores Ad scabiem tam si●cum quam humidum praesens Auxilium Take the roots of Elecampane and of dock● ana and scrape them clean and wash the● cut them into small slices and seethe them in vineger until they be soft then pound th●m very small as is possible Then take th●reof a pound and of Barrowes grease of common Sivil oil ana three ounce Of new wax one ou●ce Of quicksilver mortified of Turpentine washed ana two ounces Of common salt half an ounce Melt your oil your ●arrowes grease and your wax together then put in your roots prepared and after your Qu●cksilver then strain it and in the end put in the Turp●ntine and salt made in powder but it were more safe to leave out the quicksilver and to pu● instead thereof three ounces of the juice of Limons both be good but the former more vehement A clear and white water that will heal in five dayes at the most all manner of scabs aswell inward as outward Take plantain water two glassful rose water one glassful of the water of the flowers of Citrons or O●anges half a glassful or less put all together into a clear pan or Vial of glass and put to it one ounce of Mercury sublimated beaten into fine powder and beat it well with fasting spittle and put to the aforesaid water● then let it boil fair and softly a qua●t●r of an hour take it from the fire and let it cool then put it into some Vial and wash the scabbie places at night with it and let it dry of it self And let them alone so the next day without washing them and wash them again the third day but not the
purgation as hath a propertie to attenuate the humours and draw down the belly which done you shall give the patient that is obstructed in the Liver of this oil the weight of one dram first mingling it with a prettie quantity of the water of Endive or Succory or Egrimony and if you seek to help the spleen take the like quantity of this oil and give it as before to drink with the water of Maiden hair ●r of Wal-fearn or of Tamariss which is an Herb so called this Medicine is of an approved truth An Antidote or confection called Theodoret● Anacardies taken out of Nicoia●s Myrepsus a Greek Author Take of spici nardi fol. which is a leaf of India Cloves Saffron Cinnam●n Epi●hymi which is a Herb like a round Lace growing in some Countries upon time the flowers of Mucus odora●us which the Apoth●caries call Squinantum Myrabolanorum which is a little hard fruit and somewhat long of each of these three drams of Aloes flavae twelve drams of Chestnuts Ginger Mastickes of each one dram of Ir●●s the best six drams Anacardij Agarici of each one dram of the roots of Asarabacca half a dram of the seeds of parcely one dram of Costus half a dram of pepper three drams of Fennel seed one ounce of the juice of Fennel one ounce pound ●he green Fennel in a mortar and then soak or infuse the same in vineger three dayes then seethe it well and strain it handsomly And let all the other things be well pounded and made in a powder and finely searced to the which add or put asmuch clarified hony or sugar as shall suffice and seethe all together unto a reasonable thickness that is until the Medicine be brought unto the thickness of hony or Triacle The effects of this medicine followeth This medicine is good for any strong disease as for the falling evil for those that be vexed with an evil spirit for the headach for the diseases of the brest for the plurifie shortness of winde the inflammation ●r Apostumation of the ●●ngs And those that have sowre bel●hing and also for ●hose that have an evil disease about their stomack or belly It is profitable also to those that have a languishing after a long disease and that have an ill colour It helpeth those that have the yellow Jaundise and that have the dropsie proceeding from the Lungs It helpeth the tissick and pain of the reins of the back And the continual grief of the colick it strengthneth them that be troubled in all their body it helpeth also the inordinate strange and long diseases and agues that cometh by course and with order if it be given between the courses It eas●th the gout of the feet if it be given before the accidents come● and in especial it profi●eth much for womens diseases in which number are acc●unted the Strangury or the purching that happeneth throug● the mother or the suffocation of the mother or troubles of the same And it profiteth also those women with childe that are in danger of abortion It looseth also the belly It healeth the stirring or rising of the mother the inflammation also and raging of it And to speak a●solutely and in ●ew words it is the gift of God for whos●ever shall use it to eat of it shall finde good successe And any shall use it once or twice in the spring time and harvest so he offend not over much in diet he shall not be subiect to diseases for taking fasting the quantity of a filberd nut it will soon dissolve all evil humours The making of a precious water called for the vertue Aqua mirabilis and Pre●iosa otherwise the admirable water of England Take Galingale Cloves Cubebs Ginger Meli●ote Cardamomum Macis Nutmegs Cinnamon of each of these a dram then take of the juice of Celendine half a pinte Mix all the spices being beaten together into the powder with the said juice of Celendine Then take a pint● of good Aqua vitae and three pintes of good white wine or sack and put all together into a stillatory of glass let it stand in●used a night and in the morrow distill it with a very sober fire the first pint that cometh is best the rest that runneth i● good but not so good as the first The vertue of this water This water hath a secret nature it dissolveth the swelling o● the Lungs without any grief and the Lungs being perished it presently cure●h it and it comforteth and suffereth not the Lungs to putrifie he shall not need to be let blood that useth it and suffereth not the heart to ●e hot neither melancholy or Flegm to be about it nor to have domination above nature It also expelleth the rheum and p●rfecteth the stomack and comforteth youth in its own estat● engend●eth a good colour and keepeth and comforteth the visage and memorie helpeth the palsie of the Limbs and tongue And this water to be given to any person in extremity one spoonful delivereth them Of all waters artificial it is the best in summer use fasting once a week the quantity of a spoonful and in the winter you may take two spoonful to prevent the diseases and sicknesses aforesaid A marvellous water to heal the leprosie and all spots of the face or elsewhere and to make one look young and to have a good colour Take the filing of gold silver iron brasse lead and the powder of Storax and put all together to sleep a whole day in the urine of a maid male child● being warm and as long in pure white wine and the third day in the juice of Fennel the fourth day in whi●es of Eggs then take all the liquour with the filings and powder and still it with a slow fire and keep the water in a glass and it shall have all the vertues before specified By a day is meant xxiiii hours A comfortable water or medicine for these diseases as followeth that is to say it cureth the sto●● in the bladder and the reins of the back It helpeth a stinking breath it comforteth and helpeth the spirits and inward diseases that cometh of cold It is good for the stomack and shaking palsie and cureth the contraction of the ●●ewe● and helpeth the conception of women that are barren It killeth worms in the body it helpeth the cold Cough it comforteth the stomack much it cureth the cold Dropsie whoso useth this Medicine every moneth and not too often it will make him seem young again Take a gallon of good and pure gascoin wine of the best you can get Ginger Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Galingale Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Cinnamon Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Nutmegs Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Grains Of
every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Cloves Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Maces Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Anniseeds Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Carrawayseeds Of every of them a like quantity that is to say a dram weight of each of them Then take Sage Mintes roses pellitory rosemary of every of them gather an handful and most of the roses rosemary wilde time Camomil Lavender p●nyroyal Then break the spice small and bruise the Herbs and put all the wine and let it stand twelve hours and stir it divers times together in the wine and still it by a Limbeck and keep the first water by it s●lf for it is the best and keep the s●cond by it self but not s● good as the first and use this as you have need thereof A water called the mother of the bawme Take Tu●pen●ine six pounds olibanum two ounce Aloes citrine cub●bs Mastick Cloves galingale Cinnamon Nutmegs of everich one ounce gum of the fig-●ree and of the juice of each three ounces then make the drugs in powder and put all into a Limbeck of glas● w●ich you must joyn to the capitel with hot flower ashes and whites of eggs so that no breath come out and let it still with a slow fire ●nd the first water will be white and clear the second like hony and the third like bawm which you shal receive into three receptories These be of vertue as they be in order they will burn in fire and a drop will turn a vessel of milk as Bawm it self will two drops thereof powred into the ears will take away the great noise that some have in their head● likewise in the eyes will heal all watrie and red eyes and other diseases of the face it c●reth any impostume green wounds and ulcers scabs and all other superfluous humours and the tooth-ach ye any fis●ula or canker in nine dayes also the no●i me tangerea the small pox if you wash the places therewith it is good for all old hurts and for dry blowes of staves or stones It heal●th strengtheneth and all other things rectifieth the ●i●ewes it is so hot and penetrative that it will run through your head without grief to you It healeth all pain● of the Leggs and joints with all other diseases that come of cold and it is as precious as bawm it self To make the water of life Take Balm leaves and stalkes Burnet leaves and flowers a handful of Rosemary tormentil Leaves and roots rosa solis a handful red roses a handful Carnations a handful Hyssop a handful and ●smuch of time red stringes t●at grow upon saverie one handful red Fennel Leaves and roots red mintes a handful p●t all these Herbs in a great pot of earth glassed And put thereto asmuch white wine as will cover the herbs and let them soak therein eight or nine dayes Then take an ounce of Cinnamon asmuch ginger asmuch of Nu●meggs Cloves and sa●iron a little a quantity of Anniseeds of great raisins one pound half a pound of dates the hinder part of a good old Conny a good fleshie running Capon the red flesh with the sinewes of a legg of mutton four young pigeons a dozen of Larkes the yelks of twelve Eggs a loafe of white bread cut in sops in Muskadel or bastard ●s much as sufficeth to distill all these things at once in a Limbeck and put thereto Mithridate two or three ounces or else asmuch perfect Triacle and distill it with a moderate fire And keep the first water by it self and the second alone and where there cometh no more water with strings then take away the Limbeck and put into the more wine upon the same stuff and still it again and you shall have another good water and 〈◊〉 shall remain good in the first ingredience of this water You must keep this wa●er in a double glass warily for it is restorative of principal Members and defendeth against all pestilential diseases and against the palsie dropsie spleen yellow or black Jaundise worms agues and sweatings and pestilential sorrowes melancholy and streng●hneth and forti●ieth the spirits and strings of the brain the heart and Stomack and the Liver taking a spoonful or two or three at a time by it self or with Ale or wine and Sugar it helpeth digestion and breaketh winde stoppeth lask and bindeth not To make water of Rosemary Take Rosemary flowers and in the midst of May ere the sun arise in the morning take the Rosemary and strip the Leaves from the stalks and take four or five great roots of Elecampane and an handful or two of Sage and beat the Rosemary the roots and Sage together in a stone mortar till they be very small ●h●n take it up and take three ounces of Cubebs and half a pound of Anniseeds and beat the spices in a mortar of brasse every spice by it self then take all the Herbs and all the spices and put them in four or six gallons of white wine then put all these spices herbs and wine in an earthen pot and stop the pot close so that no air come thereto with a cover made of earth and set the same pot in the ground by the space of fifteen dayes then take it and still it in a stillatory of tin otherwise called a Limbeck with a soft fire A notable water of great vertue Take Fennel Eyebright Endive Betony Silermontain Rosemary rue Maidenhair of each an handful and let all these steep in good white wine xxiiii hours and afterward distill all together and keep the first water as silver the second as gold and the third as bawm This will heal all swelling and running of the ears and falling of the hairs off the head and browes it healeth all diseases of the eyes and killeth the worms in the teeth and maketh the breath sweet It breaketh the impostume in the head if it be put into the ears with bumbast a cloth steeped therein and laid upon the stomack easeth the pains of the same and likewise mollifieth the hardness of the spleen Also it taketh away all spots of the face if you mingle a little thereof with white wine and put thereto a little Roch Allom. An excellent water against the Colick the mother and all pains in the belly Take Cinnamon two drams Cloves two drams galls one dram grains two drams Nutmeggs one dram beat all these to grosse pow●er and put them in a stillatory covered over ●ith Muscadel or good Malmesy and let it ●tand so xxiiii hours then still it with a slow f●re and you shall have a very sweet and wholsome water which you shall use thus Take ● cup of pleasant and strong wine and pour five or six drops of this water into it and let the patient drink
it first and last It is comparable to gold A Medicine for the Plague Take a fair onion make a hole in it and take out the Inner core then take Dragon water triacle and pepper and bruise them a little and put them into the onion and rost the onion in the Embers and after bruise the onion and strain it with Malmesey and give it to the patient to drink And if it be taken before the heart is infected it s a present Remedy Probat For the canker in the body Take the roots of Dragon and cut them in small pieces and dry them into powder and seethe it in white wine very well and let the ●ick drink thereof three dayes together fasting and he shall be whole For the Canker Take an handful of woodbind and an handful of Sage stamp and strain them and seethe them to the third part with hony and Allome till it be thick and wash the Canker therewith To cure a Canker in the mouth Take Rock allome and burn it and make it into fine powder and scrape some Bole-armoniake into i● and when you use it put drops of wine vineger unto it a●d anoint the place For the canker in the mouth the best way Take two ●ennyworth of pure coral asmuch as a wall-nut of roch allome and half asmuch of white Copperas and a pint of strong white wine vineger woodbind leaves and sage leaves of each ten one spoonful of bay-salt half a spoonful of English hony and a branch of Rosemary boil all together till half be wasted then strain and keep it in a glasse this water will remedy it in twice dressing When you wash your mouth put a little in a sawcer and ●ash the Canker therewith but let none go down A water to cure a Fistula Take Bolearmoniake Roman Vitriol allome of each two ounces boil these in eight pound of water till half be consumed with this you may wash any Fistula A diet drink for a Fistula Take Egrimony self●hea● sanicle Ladies Mantle Madder Hempe Mugwort Fetherfew wilde tansie brier tops one hand●ul Lignum gi●acum lib. 1. Corticis ejusdem two ounces In●use al in twelve pound of water twelve hours then boil them to the third part post concoctionem ad Mellis optimi lib. 1. or cola A Medicine most excellent for the spitting of blood Take a raw Eggshell and cast away the inner skin thereof th●n dry it in such order as may be finely powdered of which powder take two drams with three ounces of plantain water well mixed together Or if you will have this remedy more effectual then give it five days together in the morning two drams of the same powder diss●lved in this Syrup following Take Syrupi de rosis siccis Syrup de portulaca Syrup de Myrtis one ounce Misce. In like manner it s a fore Re●●edy aswell in the cure as in the preservation for the patient to chew in his mouth every morning fasting one scruple of Rubarbe torrified For any sore which is poisoned with a contrary and unproper salve Make a posset of white wine and ●ay th● curde thereof to the sore and it will take a● the malice away so that another salve ma● work Also take new milk from the Cow and wash the sore therewith and it will do the like For any that is wounded to keep it from ranckling Take the juice of parsly and drink it and it shall not ranckle Te heal an Impostume in the body Dioscorides saith that Mintes stamped and drunk with Ale destroyeth all Impostumes in the body An ale salve to cure most sores Take a quart of the first running of Alewort boil it to a pint then put into it two ounces of fresh unsalted butter and so boil them to the thickness of hony And if it chance the sore to have dead flesh put in the salve an half peny worth of Allome Probat To remove pain and exceeding dolour in an Impostume or wound Apply the whites of Eggs or the whites and yelks together being well wrought together with oil of roses or else take the crums of wheat bread steeped in hot water and pressed out one pound yelks of Eggs in number two For Hemerods that come forth Take Wormwood and drink it fasting and make a plaster thereof and mingle with burnt garlick to powder and the sick shall be whole by Gods grace FINIS
Wort Hypericon of every one half a handful shred them small and boil in the oil and wine to the consumption of the wine and then strain it and set it over the fire again putting Frankincense and Mir●he in fine powder alwayes stir●ing in putting in the powder And in the end put to it Turpentine and then strain it again into some glasse alwayes remembring for every pound of of oil one ounce of Turpentine This cureth wounds without tenting at all A medicine for all manner of ulcers and sores very pleasant called Lycion The making of virkin lycion is the juice of Capri foli Lycion cureth the canker in the Matrice and in the skin and bones Lycion is a principal medicine boiled with ho●y unto the thickness of hony It may be made thus Take the juice and set it in the sun for to dry that it may be powder and this powder of Lycion serveth dark eyes for it is called Luci●um ocu'o It profiteth also Chirurgery that is thus Take the juice of Caprisolij by it self and put thereto asmuch clarfied hony and seerhe it unto the wasting of the hony let it be kept unto the time of your use and this availeth unto all fraudulent ulcers of the Leggs in such time of the year if the herb be so dried that the juice will not be pressed out th●n may the Leaves be infused in good white wine or red and then may the juiee be pressed our for to know that Caprifolii ought not to be washed with water but with this white wine and especially when there ought to be made Licium for the c●re of the eyes Also Leaves of Caprifoli bruised by themselves with all his substance without medling of any other thing put it upon an ulcer of a Legg d●sperate and sti●king and puting out foul blood it cureth them marvellously and this was proved in the Legg of a great man having a pustule in cu●ing of which all Medicines failed and with this onely was cured For to make Mermale Take Camomile Betony Sage hey how sothernweed Mugwort wormwood water cresses Mallowes Holihock Hor●ound red nettle Laurel leaves of each a good handful and half and wash them and pick them clean and st●●p them small and put there to May butter and temper them well together then put thereto a pint of oil ol●ffe and m●ddle them well together and then put them in an ea●then pot and cover it well and set it in a moist place the space o● seven dayes then put it in a clean pan and set it over the fire and let it fry well and stir it well with a slice that it cleave not to the bottom and then strain it and set it over the fire again and put thereto two ounce of virgin wax and four of weathers tallow melted and boil them a little then put thereto four ounces of fine Frankincense fine powdred and stir it well together till it be well medled and take it down and strain it and let it cool then karn and let the water and turn and cleanse it on the oth●r side and warm it and a little skumme it with a feather and do it in boxes this ointment is precious for joints or for sinewes and for many other diseases Diaflosmus Diaflosmus is thus made Take juice of smallage and wormwood Mollein Walwort Speldearge crowfoot Melilote dowfoot Weybred Mugwort Avence Daisies Woodbind Burris hony suckles of every of the juice of these Herbs take two ounce● s●ve onely of woodbinde thereof take three ounces clarified hony two pound and four ounces then mix your hony your juice together and set it on an easie fire and boil and stir them so long till it be wel●●gh as thick as hony that is m●lting then take it from the fire and put it in an earthen pot and keep it to your use for now it is called Capsimel hony of Molloin But when ye will use of this most precious Medicine in Surgery Take of this Capsimel four ounces and of wheat meal three ounces put these together and set them upon an easie fire and all to stir it that it cleave not to the pans bottom And when it is through hot take it off then take oil of clare or of roses virgin wax of each three ounces and mix them together and then put all together and mix them well together and when it begins to cool then put to it 2. ounces of Turpentine and stir it very well together and then it is called Diaflosmus Idem est quod Flosmus anc Molleyn Take of this byster and spread on stupes of clean Linnen cloth without slyms or on carpe and lay it to a fistula in the Fundament or to a Canker marmole fester plague wolfe or noli me tangere and it healeth not only this but every most horrible sore as bruises rucomes swellings and all others A balm of great vertue Take of Turpentine four ounce of frankincense half an ounce of Lignum aloes two drams of Mastick of Cloves Galingale of Cinnamon Zedoaria of Nutmeggs and of Cubebs of each two drams of gum Elemie one ounce and a half This Baw● marvellously worketh In that it putteth away both wayes in applying of it both within and without the body and many other incurable diseases as the Canker and the fistula c. A very precious Aqua vitae Take Cinnamon half an ounce Lignum aloes five dram● Cubebs Cloves three drams and a half galingale three drams yellow Saunders three drams and a half red rose leaves dryed four drams and a half Nutmeg and Mace a dram Musk half a dram Amber greese ten grains Syrup of the bark of Citrons one pound Syrup of Quinces half an pound Aqu● vitae three pottles powder those things which are to be powdred and put all together into an earthen pot well leaded And let them stand and infuse the space of a Moneth stirring them twice or thrice a day then strain them and keep it close in a glasse well stopped This water restoreth Memory lost strengtheneth the senses and comforteth the stomack The Sublimated vine of Master Callus Physitian to the Emperour Charls the fifth is most admirrable for the use thereof caused him to live 129 years without any disease and is made thus Take Cubebs Cinnamon Cloves mace and Ginger Nutmeggs and Galingula one three ounces of Rhaberbe half an ounce Angelica two drams Mastick four ounces Sage lib. 1. two ounces first steep them in lib. two ounces six of Aqua vitae which was six times distilled then distill them all together This wine comforteth the brain and memory expelleth melancholy and breaketh the stone provoketh appetite and reviveth weak spirits and causeth a man to wax young and lustie It may be taken twice a week and not above one spoonful at a time A special Iulep made of white wine and sugar and rose-rosewater which comforteth and refresheth the body much causing the spirits to wax lively Put two pounds of Sugar