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A46235 The idea of practical physick in twelve books ... / written in Latin by John Johnston ... ; and Englished by Nich. Culpeper, Gent. ... and W.R.; Idea universal medicinae practicae libris XII absoluta. English Jonstonus, Joannes, 1603-1675.; Culpeper, Nicholas, 1616-1654.; W. R. 1657 (1657) Wing J1018; ESTC R8913 546,688 377

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Breasts or Paps Wax hard and that the swelling so add hereunto the Thorax or Chest that without extream peril it may not be thence removed Another by Resolution in which the thinner part is dryed up by preposterous Medicaments and which Galen Cured by an Evaporation of the sharpest and sourest Vinegar poured forth upon the Pyrites stone we cal it the fire stone Red hot but this was after the use of liquid and moystening Medicaments In the Curing of them al we must be sure that we have a special regard unto the Spleen and the suppressed Courses and that Emollients and Resolvers succeed one the other and be interchangably applied 2. The Scirrhus not Exquisite is known by this that the swelling is bigger than in a Cancer of the color of Ashes with an hardness and the Veins thereof somwhat black and blewish in the outward parts and that it somtimes vexeth the Party especially upon the neer approching of the Menstrua or Courses It ariseth from Black Choler mingled together with Melancholly especially in such as are barren or such which soon ceased their Child-bearing or else lastly those that have altogether a suppression of their Termes or monthly Courses In the Curing hereof among the Repellers without astriction there is commended the Unguent of Frogs of which see further in Castrensis his first Book of the Diseases of Women Chapter 21. See likewise touching the Manual Operation in the Same Author IV. A Windy Tumor which is known by this that the pain is very acute especially in the left breast with an Excruciating and torture of the Arm the whol side the Ribs and the Shoulder blades It ariseth from an Exhalation that is thick and drawn up from the Menstrua or the Seed suppressed or else from some other Excrements and so extending the said Paps In the Cure hereof take notice that a Linnen Cloath soaked in Soapsuds or else wet in Water and then dryed is commended for dissipation and when there is occasion to disperse and Scatter and that the Pain is wel mitigated with bread taken hot out of the Oven and then moystened with the Oyl of Nard the shops cal it Oleum Nardinum and of Rue Article II. Of the Cancer and Greatness of the Paps I. The signs of the Cancer in the Breasts as also the Causes and the Cure may be known and sufficiently understood by what hath been already said in the Second Book touching a Cancer Let it suffice here only to add I. That the Cancer that is not Exulcerated may be rendered and made more milde and gentle if the Courses being recalled return to their pristine state and condition either by the Course and Vigor of Nature or else by the assistance of Art and the help of Medicaments or else if the Body be preserved free from a Cacochymy either by a good order of Diet or else by Medicaments There may likewise be applied unto it that Unguent that it compounded of Lithargyrum two ounces thereof in a Marble Mortar drawn about with a Leaden Pestle and incorporated with rose-Rose-water and the Oyl of Roses of each three ounces II. For the Cure of the Cancer Exulcerated see in Hartman who writeth that the said Cancer may be perfectly Cured with Aqua Fuliginis that hath in it a clensing Faculty and with the Oyl of Arsenick fixed and wel tempered in Plantane Water II. The Magnitude of the Paps unseemly as it is is exposed unto the sight It ariseth from the often handling and stroaking of them and especially from the great abundance of Flatulency and windiness the Retention of the Courses c. The Cure hereof ought therefore to be Endeavored because that by how much the greater and bigger they grow but so much the more easily they may be affected with the Cancer It is performed 1. By Meats that are Astringent but little or not at all flatulent or Windy 2. By Driving back the blood or other the Humors flowing unto them and here the Juyce of Hemlock and the Partridg Eggs anoynted upon the place are much approved of 3. By the Discussion of that that is already gotten unto the part affected for which purpose that Unguent that is compounded of the Dirt or Clay that is to be found in Barbers Mils two ounces thereof the Oyl of Myrtle one ounce and Vinegar half an ounce is much commended 4. By the Compression of them by Artificial ones of Lead anoynted on the inside with the Oyl of the Seed of Henbane c. Chap. 2. Of the Symptomes of the Breasts Article I. Of the want of Milk too great abundance thereof and its Coagulation or Curdling THe Symptomes of the Breasts are the Defect Redundence and Coagulation of the Milk I. The Defect of Milk according to the Nature of the Causes is twofold For one is from a Fau●● in the Blood which faileth by reason of Dis●●● that over dry the body from a distemper in the Liver from much rasting and spareness of Diet and lastly from extraordinary Evacuations of al which there must be care taken in the Cure Now to generate and breed Milk these things following are experimentally found to be good Namely Crystal prepared the leaves Roots and Seed of Fennel while they are fresh and green the ponder of Earth-worms prepared and taken in Wine the Electuary of Zacuthus in the Ninth Book of his Pract. Hist and last Chapter Another is from somthing amiss in the Lactificall or Milk breeding Faculty when it is so weak that it can neither attract the blood nor contract it either by reason of External refrigerating Causes and such as are likewise Astringent or else by reason of other Diseases unto which we ought to have due respect in the Cure II. The Redundance or over great store of Milk proceedeth from the abundance of blood and a strong Lactifical Faculty In the Cure the Luxury and prodigality of Nature in the breeding of Milk is to be restrained and the Milk that exceedeth and is over and above ought to be dissipated and dryed up For this purpose venesection in the first place is approved of and then driving back by Medicaments which ought to be put upon the Paps towards the Arms And also those Medicaments that wast away and lessen the Milk such as that they cal Muria a kind of brinish Liquor or Pickle with the pouder of Cummin and Hemlock Boyled in Chervil Water and Vinegar c. III. The Coagulation or Curdling of the Milk is then Caused when the more thin and subtile parts do by little little exhale the thicker remain behind from whence the Glandules or Kernels wax hard and swellings yea and also impostumes arise In this Case the Infant ought not to be suckled out of the Breasts affected and yet notwithstanding the Milk is to be suckt out lest that which is bred anew should be Curdled by that Milk that is already become as it were Cheese and that part of the Curdled Milk that begins
anointing of the belly with Oyle of Violets dil Chamomel a little butter in which a Snakes Skin ought first to be boyled 2. By mitigation of the pain by cataplasmes unctious fomentations baths of sweet water narcoticks also mixt with purgers c. II. The Pancreas doth chiefly labor of obstructions whence the stomach by reason of its neerness is affected pains and the sence of a weight are caused about the region of the stomach and pulsations in the back by the compression of the celiacal artery and also a difficulty of breathing molests them by the consent of the midriffe The cure is perfected by the same remedies as the obstructions of the spleen III. The Caule by twiggs from the spleen branch doth oftentimes receive feculent humors from the spleen in that part especially which is between the spleen the midrif and the stomach in its cavity in the left hypochondry under the diaphragma arising from the connexion of the stomach Caule colon and bowels and having no passage out Oftentimes from thence the belly in the left part towards the navel is raised up into a tumor oftentimes the belly being prest a sound and noyse is heard They cannot be emptyed unless they vanish by the continued drinking of bath or sharp waters If it putrefy or suffer an impostumation the cure is in vaine Titile VI. Of the affects of the Liver Chap. 1. Of the diseases of the Liver Article 1. Of the Distemper of the Liver THe diseases of the Liver are distemper obstruction inflamation a schirrus wounds and ulcers The distemper of the liver is a swarving of the same from its natural temperament by reason of external and internal causes The Signs are fetcht from the hurt of its action and others of which in the differences The Causes are either not natural and external or the neighbouring parts as the stomach heart and that either by contact or by communication of matter or the collection of matter in the vessels or parenchyma by reason of some fault of the liver either innate or acquired The Cure varies according to the nature of the differences Internal remedies because the liver is situate in a lower place ought to be the more efficacious 'T is performed by alteration and removing the matter offending As concerning the Differences the distemper is fourfold I. One is hot and that either simple or without matter which is known by this that there is a loathing of meat and most of al of flesh and nevertheless fastings doth hurt a vehement thirst troubles them the whole body is hot especially the palms of the hands and soles of the feet and either they are moist or dry the belly is somewhat dry by reason of the extraction of the moisture from the chyle It is cured by coolers amongst which the cheife are the roots of Dandelion and Strawberries the leaves of Succory Endive the seeds of Sorrel the greater and lesser cold seeds the wood of Saunders fruits of Cherries Currans Strawberries Of compounds syrupe of Corals Strawberries Sorrel Citrons Succory The Salt of Corralls Pouders Diatrion Santalon diarrhodon Abbatis Diamargartium Fridgidum Mynsichtus his mter vitriolate Amongst external things Saccarum Saturni a Cerote of Saunders oyle of green olives The mixture compounded of the Water Lillies henbane the flowers of white lillies plantane Red Roses each one ounce and an half Salt of Saturne Camphure dissolved in spirits of wine each one scruple Sal Prunella half a scruple adding a little of Tragacanth and applyed to the right hypochondry c. Or with matter which is known by this that a bitterness of the mouth a loathing of meat and a vehement thirst doth trouble them and a feaver either an intermitting tertian or a slow feaver or erratick doth vex them by which the body by degrees is dryed up That choler doth break forth by vomiting and stoole first of al thin and pale afterwards thick truly yellow and stinking It ariseth from choler either generated in it or sent from the bladder of gal laboring of obstruction or from some other part It is cured 1. By revulsion by opening a veine in the arme by scarifying or friction if the humors flow from some other part 2. By attraction by Succories cheifly if the humors be already flowed thither 3. By evacuation either by the stool where syrup of Roses of the Leaves of Rubarb and tamarinds take place or by urine where whey grass roots barley take place 4. By strengthening of the liver that it collect no more II. Another is cold and that either is simple and without matter which is known by this that there is a greater desire of meat no thirst a voiding of flegmatick crude and oftentimes of liquid matter there is generated a warry and crude blood 'T is hardly cured because 't is more repugnant to the nature and office of the liver and 't is cured by things that alter amongst which the cheife are The roots of burnet the true acorus The leaves of Wormwood Agrimony Centaury the less Betony Maidenhair Raisons Cloves Nutmeg Cinnamon Agallochus of compounds Mynsichtus his tincture of Cassia lignea treacle mithridate Mynsichtus his aromatical rowles Cratoes confection of Rhubarb The pouders of Diamargartium calidum Or with matter which is known from the foregoing of the like causes the white color of the face and whol body a soft habit of body flegmatick stools a heaviness in the right hypochondry The rise and cure do follow other distempers The essence of Mars is good the preparation of which see in Hartman III. Another is moist which is known by the soft pulse watry blood liquid excrement thick urine The cure is performed by dryers IV. Another is dry which possesses in a contrary manner neither is there any things singular concerning its cure for the most part it troubles in composition Article 2. Of the obstruction of the Liver The obstruction of the Liver is a narrowness of the vessels in the liver caused by a matter filling up their cavities and hindring the distribution of the nourishment The signs are heavy and obtuse pain in the right part of the hypochondries which after the taking of meat is increased especially if soon after meat some violent exercise be undertaken The excrements varying from their natural manner oftentimes more liquid and copious because the chyle is not received A change of the color especially in the face by reason that the sanguification and distribution are hurt c. But it is frequent that a veine from the porta dispersed through the substance of the liver in most fine branches is obliterated and it hath others no less smal from the Vena Cava through al which the nourishment ought to be produced and carried The Cause is the matter filling up the cavities of the vessels or also the very substance of the liver whether it be generated there its action being hurt either by a distemper or by some external error or whether it flow from elsewhere
Parts in Men. Chap. 1. Of their Diseases Article I. Of the Diseases of the Stones THe Diseases of the genital Parts in men have under them the Diseases of the stones Cods and Yard The principal Diseases of the Stones are which follow I. A Distemper and that either hot which is known by a proneness to Venery by too much and hot Seed by heat of the stones by swelling of the Veins about them with blood 'T is Cured by a contrary Diet and cooling Medicines of Littice Water Lillies Purslane but especially by those compounded of Sugar of Saturn and sallow Leaves Or Cold which is known by little and Watry seed by casting it forth with little or no Pleasure little desire to Venery cooling Causes went before or immoderate and unseasonable Venery 'T is Cured by a contrary Diet and taking of medicines inwardly Betony Calamint Marjoram Sage Nettles Nutmegs Diamoschum Outwardly Oyl of Costus Spike of Aunts Or moist which is known by this that the Seed is cast forth too soon Or dry which yeilds little and thick They are Cured by their contraries II. A Tumor which either is an Inflamation in whose Cure for of the rest I have nothing to say observe I. That whiles Medicines are applied to them the ligature ought alwaies to tend towards the upper parts that they may not hang down too much and the defluxion may be less 2. To intercept the flux a defensive must be laid on the side of the Pubes where the Veins and Arteries from the belly tend to the stones and Cod. 3. Other things being a like the Decoction of Agrimony with Wine and Vinegar is commended The Root of wild Cowcumber likewise boyled The Herb Paris green bruised and applied c. A Schirrus or another cold and hard Tumor which oftentimes ariseth from an Inflamation ill Cured 'T is taken away with a Cataplasme of Littice Roots boyled in sweet wine with the flowr of Flax Barley Faenugreek Onyons c. Which must be followed with a Liniment of the Balsom of Sulphur and the Plaister Diasulfuris Or an inflation for the Cure of which serve the Leaves of Henbane and a drauft of Juniper water one ounce weight every day with the Rowls of Diacyminum III. Vlcers which because they are in a moist place are dangerous and somtimes turn to a Cancer or Gangreen They ought to be washt with the decoction of Roses Leaves of Speedwel and Plantan they may be mundefied with the Oyntment of the Apostles IV. A Con●usion which is joyned with a great pain it corrupts their Oval Figure and oftentimes takes away the power of generation We must timely oppose the pain least a Defluxion be Caused Article II. Of the Diseases of the Cod. The Diseases of the Cod are Inflamation Excoriation Wounds Vlcers and Rupture Of them there is no need to say any thing An Excoriation is often Caused by the Urin the upper Skin being corroded and 't is Cured by sprinkling of Pompholyx or dryed Myrtle finely poudered searced and mixt with Frankincense or Myrrh A Rupture of the Cod is a Tumor of the same arising either from the cause falling down into it or from wind or water collected there or a masse of Flesh generated there The Species of it are four if you consider the Differences I. One is windy or a Pneumatocele which is known from hence that the Cod somtimes also the stones is very much distended without a weight heaviness the wind is felt if the Cod be prest with the hands and is removed from place to place w th a noise It ariseth from winds which are either collected there or transmitted from the neighbouring Guts and Belly and 't is most familiar with Children 'T is Cured premising universals by things discussing outwardly and inwardly applied A Cataplasm of Bay-berries the flower of Beans and Fenugreek with Bran the pouder of Cummin seed ammoniacum turpentine oxymel and oyl of bays mixt together is good II. Another is watry or a hydrocele which is known because there is perceived a waving the cod appeares as it were shining the tumor alwaies continues at the same bigness neither doth it go up into the belly by pressing it It ariseth from water which for the most part flows thither from the belly for those causes which are mentioned in the dropsy It is cured 1. By prohibition that the watery humor be not generated or flow thither of which see the differences 2. By emptying the water fallen thither either insensibly to which end the former cataplasme wil serve or sensibly by opening of the cod of which see Authors 'T is divided diversly 1. One is from water only distending the cod another also from wind joined with it in whose cure we must have regard to both another from flesh growing together about the stone whose cure must be warily handled that it turne not to a cancer 2. One is with a dropsy and then the cure must be directed against the dropsy Another without a Dropsy in which although there is not such great plenty of water that it can raise up the belly into a tumor that there is somwhat of it collected in the cavity of the belly by reason of the weakness of the parts especially an external cause being added as striking c. The tumor either possesses the whol cod or only one side and then the humor sticks in the erythroidal membrane that conteines the stone The right stone never alwaies the left swels Or the fault is in the left kidny through which when the serum cannot descend it fals through the seminal veine proceeding from the emulgent of the left kidny into the erythroidal coate from the cure of which we must either abstaine or the cod must be opened only in the lower part Or it is not and then the cod must be cut in the upper part neer the groin that both the humor may be emptyed and the afflux of more through the skar of the erythroidal coate be hindred See Frabricius his observations 3. One is when the water is conteined between the erythroidal coat and the darton in which the tumor is rounder like an egge the stone is hidden from the sight and touch the cod it self is more white and is distended little or nothing another is when 't is out of that betwixt it and the adjacent skins in which the stone is to be felt the cod is more distended Another when 't is in its proper skin or coate growing over it in which the tumor is every where globical resembles the draft of another stone III. Another is a fleshy rupture or a Sarcocele in which somthing fleshy is bred It is known by a hard tumor increased by little and little afflicting without a tumor of the groine by which it is distinguished from a rupture of the guts 't is for the most part in the right stone because nature doth most comodiously cast off the blood to the stones by the seminal veine issuing
and make them wider that the Vapors may be better transpired They are moderately hot of thin parts and not drying such as are among Herbs Marsh-mallows Mercury Flowers of Chamomel Melilot Elder Seeds of Fenugreek Line Oyl which is old and Butter II. Condensers are such things as contract and straighten the smal pores of the body but are not able to compact the whol part strongly and every where They are of a watry Nature as cold water of Herbs Purslane Housleek Flea-wort Mous-ear Duck-weed green Thistles Prick-madam the greater and the lesser III. Stoppers by their thickness do so stick externally upon the pores of the body that by their coldness and dryness they contract the part There are of this kind Astringents so called Such as are among Simples the Roots of Tormentil Plantane greater Comfry dry water Lillies Sorrel Curmallow Filipendula peony Avens Strawberry Bistort Rhaponticum Rhubarb tosted Leaves of plantane Knotgrass Gnaphalium Loof-strife Solomons Seal Horstail Shepherds-pouch Mous-ear Oak Flowers of Roses pomegranates Ivy. Seeds of plantane purslane Sorrel Roses Fruits Quinces Medlars Barberries Services Cornel-berries Galls Raison-stones Cypress nuts myrtle berries Shels and Rinds of pomegranates Frankincense tree myrobalans mulberries Gums of mastich Dragons blood Juyces of Hypocistis sour Grapes Acacia Minerals Terra sigillata Bole armeniack blood-stone Allum Coral Iron Of Animals Harts-horn prepared Stags pizzle c. Of Compounds are Water of Roses purslane plantane privet Syrup of red Roses Quinces Barberries marmalade of Quinces Diacodium narcoticum Crocus martis astringens pouder of mans bones calcined fresh made Treacle Juyce of pomegranates of Acacia old conserve of Red Roses The stronger sort of these medicaments are Balaustians myrtles Acacia Hypocistis Sumach pomegranate medlar c. IV. Anastomaticks are medicaments which open the mouths of the Vessels and are therefore by the Greeks so named because they ought to penetrate into the inner parts of the body and to attenuate gross humors and therfore they ought to be both hot in the second degree and endued with a more thick substance than ordinary that they may retain heat the longer Bitter things are most convenient Point VII Of Attenuating Aperient and incrassating Medicaments I. Attenuating medicaments are such as dissolve and make thin thick clammy and glewish humors so that either they vanish of their own accord or are easily dissipated by the operation of Drawers They must be of a thin substance hot in the third degree which is nevertheless not alwaies necessary For the juyce of Lemmons Vinegar Oxymel do attenuate and cut though they are cold See the Catalogue among Operatives II. Apperitive medicaments do open inward Obstructions of the Body They ought to be of a thin substance and therefore are reckoned among such things as appear hot and biting to the smel and tast which have a nitrous salt bitter and acid tast but seeing there is variety both of the matter obstructing and the bodies obstructed somtimes such as are of thin parts sometimes such as are not so qualified are given Now they are these Among Simples of Roots the five opening Roots so called viz. of Smallage Fennel Asparagus parsly and Holm of Grass Cicaory Eryngos Gentian Fern madder Rhaponticum Asarum Cappars Tamarisk Ash Herbs Fumitory Wormwood Agrimony maiden-hair Liver-wort ceterach chamepitys chamedrys Dodder Horehound calamint penyroyal scurvy-grass Brooklime Water-cresses Hops white Horehound Wormwood Seeds of Annis Fennel Ameos Agnus castus Vetches Lupines Fruits bitter Almonds Cappars Peach-kernels Apricock-kernels Spices Cinamon Cubebs Gums and juyces Ammoniacum Vinegar Juyce of Lemmons Of compounds are waters of the foresaid simples Oximel simple Scyllitick Syrupe of opening roots Trocbiscks of Rubarb Wormwood Egrimony Lacca-gum Tartar Vitriolated Creame thereof Christals and Tincture of Tartar Tincture of steele pouder aperient crocus and pils thereof III. Incrassaters or thickners do make the thin and liquid juices more thick They are cold or temperate without acrimonie and of thick substance such as Porslane Sorrel Poppy Rice Lentils Quinces Peares Starch Chalybeate milk and juice of Pomegranates Point VIII Of Obstructive And Deobstructive Medicaments I. Emplastick or obstructive medicaments are such as by their substance do daub stop and clam up the passages of the Body and being smeared thereon stick fast thereto being of a Consistence either dry and earthy but without any biting quality or ful of watry and aerie humor They are I. Among simples 1. Roots Of Marshmallowes White-Lillies Seeds Wheate Starch Pine-kernels steeped in water Fenugreek al Mucilages Fruits Figs Raisons Gums Arabick Tragant Dragons blood Earths Terra sigillata Bole-Armeniack Juyces Alum Stones Lapis Calaminaris Blood-stone Potters-clay Minerals litteridge of Gold and Silver Lead Oare of brass Pompholyx Cerus Animals Mumia fresh fats marrowes fresh butter Cheese whites of Eggs Wax II. Compounds of these Unguentum Album Nutritum II. Deobstructers do scoure away clammy glutinous humors which stick unto the body they are hot or cold salt bitter nitrous Such are I. Of Simples 1. Roots of birthwort Orice Gentian Solomons seale Tamarisk Leaves of Smallage Wormwood Centorie Southernwood Hysop Watercresses Horehound Agrimony Ground-Oake Tansey Harts-tongue Pimpernel Seeds of Lime Fenugreek barly Orobus Lupines and their meales Juyces Aloes and Sugar Gums myrrh Rosins Terpentine Mineralls verdigrise Vitriol Animals whey beasts-Gal III. Extergents differ only gradually Of this kind are Oxymel Alume water Unguentum Aegyptiacum c. Point VIII Of Anodynes and Narcoticks Anodyne Medicaments are those which by their moderate heate and soft substance do asswage paine by opening the pores of the body and entering thereinto by the tenuity of their substance and discuss the cause thereof by insensible transpration Such are I. Among Simples the Roots of Marsh-mallowes Lillies Leaves of Mallowes Elder Flowers of Chamemel Melilote Safron Seeds of Lime Fenugreek Animals Fat 's of Hogs Hens Geese Calves Man-fat Marrow of Oxen Calves Milke butter II. Of Compounds oiles of white lillies Chamomel Violets sweet almonds linseed worms and which is most commended sweet oile of Roses of a middle age II. Narcoticks stupifie the part so that it cannot feel that which pains This they do partly by their coldness partly by an hidden Quallity Of this kind are I. Simples the Roots of Mandrake Leaves of Henbane mandrake Seeds of white-poppey Juyces Opium II. Compounds oiles of Mandrake Vnguentum popeleon laudanum ossiatum Fernelius his narcotick lozenges Spirit of Darnel c. Article 2. Of Medicaments which cause motion Medicines which cause motion are either Drawers Repellers or Astringents I. Drawers are such as draw from the deepe parts of the Body into the surface thereof not only thin and wheyish humors but also such as are thick and fast rooted in the Parts of the Body They are either hot in the second degree which draw moderately or in the third degree which draw strongly or in the fourth degree which swel the skin Such are I. Of simple Roots of the two Birthworts Anemony bindweed Tragon Gentian Pellitory Crowfoot
Daffodilly Reeds Cuckow pintle Thapsia Garlick onions Leaves of Wild-Cresses Calamint Purple Anagallis Nex Thlaspi Ivie Seeds of Nettle Navew Water-cresses Gums Euphorbium Ammoniacum Galbanum Sagapenum Rosins Pitch Vulgar Rosin Annimals Dung of Pigeons Hens Cantharides II. Of Compounds Emplastrum Oxycroceum II. I cal them repellers which do either by their cold watryness prohibit the influx of humors into any part or drive back such as are already flowed in but are not fastened They are 1. Among simples the Roots of Plantane Barks of Mandrake roots Leaves of Housleek Purstane Duck-weed Endive Lettuce Nightshade Water-thistle Venus navil Lentisk Sumach Henbane Flowers of red roses Seeds of Fleawort Plantane Of compounds Waters of Roses Nightshade Plantane III. Astringents are such as consist of a thick and earthy substance stop the passages of the part force out the the thinner particles of the humor and consequently do also repel They are either Cold or Hot. Cold are among Simples the Roots of Sloes Cinquefoile bistort tormentil great Comfery Barks of myrobalans Pomegranates Frankincense tree Barbery-tree Leaves of Horse-taile smal daisie mouse-eare Knot-grass Shepards pouch Flowers of Roses balaustians Seeds of Sorrel porslane myrtils White-popy Fruits Services Quinces meddlers myrtle berries unripe mulberries Gums mastich Dragons-blood Earths Terra sigillata bolus Armenia Of compounds are Waters of Roses of Plantane of Privet flowers Syrups of red-red-roses of Quinces Conserves of dried-roses Quinces New made treacle Juice of Pomegranates trefoile Crabs sower Grapes Pouders Diacorallium Crocus martis Burnt harts horne mans-bones Spodium Ambar Pills de Cynoglossa Hot astringents are Cyperus Wormwood Calamus Aromaticus Schaenanth aloe Thus Myrrh Spike Barks of Frankincense-tree Cypress-nuts Alum Article 3. Of Medicaments which generate somewhat Point 1. Of Ripeners Quittor-breeders and Flesh restorers Medicaments which breed somewhat are in a six-fold difference 1. Ripeners or Quittor-breeders 2. Flesh-breeders 3. Glewers 4. Scarbringers 5. Milke-breeders 6. Seed-encreasers I. Ripeners and Quittor-breeders are such by whose helpe the Natural Heat turnes corrupt blood into Quittor They are moderately hot and moist and like in temperament to the part whereunto they are applied Also by shutting the pores they keep in the heate They are in a twofold difference Some are meerly of a temperate heate and clammy which we use in hot tumors such as are Mucilages of Lin-seed Fenugreek Mallowes Marshmallowes Water and oile Wheate-meale Milke Crum of wheaten breade Hogs-grease fresh-butter Unguentum Dialthea Others are hot which we use in cold tumors and parts such as the Gums Ammoniacum Bdellium Galbanum Rosins Terpentine Pitch Vulgar rosins Teares of Firr Birch and Pine-tree Oiles of Chamomel White-Lillies Ointments of Agrippa Basilicon Majus and minus Emplasters diachylon simple and cum gummi II. Sarcoticks or Flesh-breeders are such things as assist nature to change blood into flesh both by preserving the Heate of the Part and removeing such Excrements as hinder the work They do moderately heat and drie also they clense away filth without any biteing or astriction They are of a Three fold Rank In the first ranke or degree are placed meale of Barly of Fenugreek of beanes Franckincense Manna thuris In the Second Terpentiue rosin Larch-rosin Fir-rosin Clarified Honey hony of Roses Aloes meale of Lupines orobus and Pompholyx In the third degree meale of Orobus raw honey birthwort root orice roote myrrh Vitiol Point 2. Of Sodderers and Scar-bringers I. Glewing or soddering Medicaments are such as bring together the gaping lips of fresh wounds and binder any thing from flowing into or growing between them Of which kind are among Simples the Roots of Tormentil Cinque-foile Bistort Leaves of Mouse-eare plantaine Sr. Johns-wort Bugula Sanicle Pyrola Wal-Sage Rupture-wort Willow Vervaine Gumsz Myrch Frankincense Saccocolla Jucies thickned Aloes Hypocstis Rosins Pitch Terpenrine Of compounds Oyntment of Lituridge of Betony II. Scarbringers are Medicaments which consume both that which flowes to and that humor which is already in the flesh that the flesh may be changed into the similitude of Skin Thick are of thick substance vehemently drying astringent and contracting The cheife are Roots of tormentil Cinquesoil Herbes Comfry Thorough-waxe Horse-taile Plantane Flowers balaustians Juyces concrete Coral Aloes Juyce of dragon Earths Alum Ecle Armeniack Metelline substances Lead Cadmia Litteridg Brass-burnt and washed Antimony III. Hitherto belong Vulnerary Medicaments of which vulnerary potions are made And they are the roots of greate Comfry Bistort Tormentil Leaves of Ladymantile Shephards-pouch Golden-rod Balsaminum Vervaine Fluellin St. Johns-wort Millefoil Sanicle Hors-taile Elme Plantaine Betony Cypress Mouse-eare Flowers of red-roses St. Johns wort Balaustians Fruits Cypress nuts Gums Teares Frankincense Aloe Mastich Teares of the firr Terpentine pine and larch rosins Stone-pitch liquor of Elme-leaves Gum Elemi Gum of Juniper of Ivie of Tragant Tacamahaca caranna Sarcocolla Dragons-Blood c. Point III. Of Milke and Seed-breeders 1. Milk-breeding Medicaments in this place are such as both helpe to make good blood and moderately attenuate the same and bring it to the Duggs such as are these following green Fenel the seed thereof Green Dil Smalladge pouder of Christal Decoction of Colewort Butter taken with milke and fenel Smyrnium Polium Rocket c. II. Seed-breeding Medicaments both those which carrie matter to the spermatick vessels and they which provoke to the expulsion of seed whether they fil it with wind or ad a spir or provocation thereto The cheif are these Roots of Eryngos Satyrion Ginger Seeds of Rocket Mustard Nettles Pepper Fruits Pine-kernels Pistachios Hasel nuts the Pap of the Indian nut Parts of Animals Reins of the Scinci Braines of Sparrowes Stags-Pizzle Cocks-stones Article IV. Of corrupting Medicaments Corruptive Medicaments are 1. Rubisiers 2. Vesicatories 3. Such as induce a Grust 4. Burners 5. Corrosives 6. Putrefiers 7. Psilothra hair-grubbers 8. Milke-wasters 9. Seed-confounders 1. Rubifiers make the skin red and draw Humors from the inner parts of the Body into the skin such as are the Roots of Thapsia Seeds of Water-cresses Nettles Mustard II. Vesicatories raise bladders and by their Ardency draw forth humors The cheife are Roots of Bind-weed Pellitoty Squil Garlick Thapsia Herbs Doves-foot Flammula Crow-foot Seed Of water cresses Mustard Also Euphorbium Leaven Soap Pidgeons-dung Cantharides III. Crust-Creators do not only raise up the scarfe-skin but also burne the skin it self howbeit their operation goes no further IV. Burners or Causticks bring a thiker crust than the former and often work upon the flesh beneathe the cheife are White Hellebore ashes of vine-dregs ashes of the fig-tree Ashe and savine tree Brass-burnt flower of brass quick-lime Vitriol orpment Arfenick mercury sublimate Salt made of Lie of which soap is made V. Corroders take away proude flesh and do by little and little melt the upper surface thereof The milder are Roots of white vine black-hellebore Ashes of the Oake fig-tree Conchylium Aloe Alum burnt lead Ancimony calcined The stronger are Quick-lime Flower of Brass Brass-burnt Vitriol calcined
Quick-silver precipitate Sublimate Oyl of vitriol sulphur c. VI. Putrifiers do melt hard flesh Such are Arsenick Orpment Chrysocolla dryopteris Pityocampe aconitum Sandarach VII Hair-grubbers are such medicines as pluck up by the Roots the Haires of the Body so as to make the part where they are applied bald and smooth such as are strong lie quick-lime ants-egs sandarach arsenick orpment c. VIII Milke-wasters do either incrassate and thicken the blood by overcooleing it or they dry up and digest the same or finally they do by their whole substance destroy the Milke Such are Mints Sage Calamint Coriander Henbane Oyl of unripe Olives Vinigar Camphire IX Seed confounders do either coole thicken or discuss the same or consume it by an hidden property Such are Mint Rue Agnus Castus Dil Seeds of Hempe Fleawort Lettuce Purslaine Champhire c. Article V. Of Medicaments which take somewhat away Point 1. Of Purgeing Medicaments Medicaments which take something from the Body are 1. Purgers 2. Vomiters 3. Diureticks 4. Sweaters 5. Transpirers 6. Braine-purgers 7. Expectorators Purgers are such Medicaments as drive out by stool such humors as preternaturally nestle themselves in mans body And they are 1. Choler-purgers 2. Phlegm-purgers 3. Melancholly-purgers 4. Water-purgers 5. Purgers of all humors together 1. Choller-purgers are medicaments which drive out preternatural choler And they are 1. Mild as among simples Cassia fistularis which because it is hurtful to a moist slippery belly and to the stomach and is windy it is corrected with a graine or two of peper aniseed or Cinamon and is given in a bole commonly from sixe drams to two ounces to children two drams may be given Tamarins or Indian dates convenient for hot Constitutions which because of their coldness are corrected with Cinnamon and Mace and by reason of their lazyness they are quickned with whey of Goates-milk They are given in Pulpe from an ounce to two ounces or three and in the Infusion to five ounces Manna Calabrina which is safe in al cases excepting burning fevers t is quickned with syrup of Roses solutive It is taken in Prune-broath or the Broath of a Cock or Hen to the Quantity of three or four ounces Aloe Soccotrina which taken in too greate a Quantity inflames the Liver because it opens the orifices of the Veines t is not safe for women with child Nor is it good for hot and dry natures 'T is nourished or impredgnated with juice of damaske Roses 'T is corrected with mastich because of its Acrimonie It is given from halfe a dram to a dram more see thereof Solenander sect 3. Counsel 29. Rhubarb the soule of the Liver which must not be given alone because it is apt to fume and easily exhales but with endive water or syrup of Roses solutive it must not be given to such as are troubled with the strangury nor those that are subject to the Hemorrhoides 'T is corrected with Cinnamon Spicknard Schenanth 'T is given from one dram to two drams Damaskroses musked fragrant bitter and detergent Their Virtue is encreased if two ounces of whey be mixed with an ounce of their juyce a little spike and Cinnamon being added Violets which are of like vertue with roses exceeding good in diseases of the Brest and Head-ache Terpentine especially pistick which with pouder of Lycoris and Sugar is made into Boles and given to clense the kidnies Lemnius commends it in a potion Among compounds are Syrup of roses solutive hurtful for women with child because it opens the veines of the wombe from two ounces to four Rose-leaves must be gathered while the morning dew is upon them Their strength lasts hardly beyond six monthes Syrup of the flowers of Acacia de Manna Laxativus Horstius his syrupe of tamarinds with senna Pilulae Angelicae Benedicta Bejeri Hiera mellita from a dram to four drams II. The stronger are amonge simples Asarum which being long boiled loses its strength very wel beaten it moves vomit It is given with whey wine and honey sod together Scammonie which must never be given to such as are inclined to vomit feverish weak persons in the summer in broaths alone because its acrimonie disturbes the body inflames the spirits hurts the principal parts 'T is corrected with juice of Quinces mucilage of Gum Tragant spirit of sulphur or vitriol Being corrected t is called Diagrydium 'T is given from five graines to fifteen Of compounds are Pilulae Rhudji to a scruple Aureae which are most in use Extract of Scamonie The Magisterie thereof which see in Mynsichtus and Grulingius II. Phlegme-purging Medicaments are such as draw excrementitious flegm out of the Body And they are 1. More gentle among simples Myrobalans Chebulan and Emblican which are to be avoided in obstructions of the Gutts or Bowels they are steeped in Chick-broath to an ounce or boiled therein with muscadine Cnicus or Carthamus seeds which purge water and crude flegme and raise wind because they provoke vomit they are corrected with Anise Ginger and Mastich Mechoacan which is of subtile parts mingled with Earthy Of exquisite tertian Agues it makes double ones It works most happily in the forme of a pouder or if it be steeped a night in wine or broath and drunke in the Morning Amonge compounds are spices of Hiera picra simple Lozenges of Mechoacan described by Horstius II. Vehement Flegme-purgers are among simples Agarick which by a peculiar Faculty frees the Lungs from clammy thick and putrid humors 'T is ●afer in the Infusion than in the substance Jalop which is most proper where choler is mixt with flegme The Dose is from a scruple to two scruples with cream of Tartar ... It has in it somwhat of Acrimony Turpetum gummie and white which because it hurts the Stomach provokes Vomit is corrected with Ginger Pepper and Cinnamon By its dryness it brings the bodies of those that over use it into a Consumption It works best in a decoction Coliquintida which purges thick and clammy Humors from the remote parts and because it sticks to the fibres of the stomach it provokes vomiting It must not be corrected by astringents for they detain it being a violent medicine too long in the Body Hermodactyls which purge thick humors from the Joynts and are corrected by atenuaters Euphorbium which is hot and dry in the fourth degree because it inflames the Jaws and Throat vexes the Stomach and Liver raises cold sweat 't is corrected with cordials and Stomach strengtheners but best of al with Oyl of Roses It must not be used inwardy before it be a year old Sagapenum which brings out clammy and thick Humors Of compounds are Pils of Sagapena of Horstius and Camillus Syrup of Coloquintida and Lozenges of Jalap c. III. Melancholy purgers are such as drive excrementitious melancholy out of the Body And they are 1. Gentle Among simples Indian Myrobalans which are principally given in quartan Agues and purge adust choler Epithymum which by a
of Orice Bindweed Leaves of Bete purple Anagallis Marjerom Sage Betony Ivy. Juyces Elaterium which is the strongest and Juyce of Pulsatilla Also they may be made out of the foresaid roots and Leaves II. Ptarmica or Sneezers do by their Acrimony so provoke the Expulsive Faculty of the Brain as to cause it to cast them out and with them such excrements as stick in the Brain it self The cheif are the Roots of Ginger Pellitory Orice white Hellebore Leaves of sneezewort Tobacco Seeds Peper Mustard Staphisacre Nigella Gums Euphorbium whose smel alone is sufficient III. Apophlegmatizers Being either chewed or gargled or smeared upon the Palate bring down the Excrements from the Braine into the Palate and mouth They are made of rootes of Ginger Pellitory of spaine Seeds of peper watercresses Mustard Staphisacre Gum mastick Point V. Of Expectorators Expectorateing Medicaments are those which evacuate humors contained in the chest and Lungs They are made of Roots of Alecampane Birthwort Angelica Orice Cuckow-pintle Squills Lycorice Of the Leaves of Hyssop Maiden-haire Scabious Horehound Colts foot Seeds of Cotton Watercresses Erysimum Seseli Nettles Fruites reisons jujbes sebestens Almonds Figs Pistachios Hither also appertaines Sperma Ceti See more of these in the Chest-medicines Chap. 6. Of Medicaments denominated from the parts of the Body Article 1. Of Cephalik Medicaments Point 1. Of Cephalick Medicaments which are hot ANd so we have done with our Muster of such Medicaments as are denominated from their faculties those follow which receive their denomination from the parts of the Body with which they have an Agreement by reason of their whol substance and specifical properties Now they are these Caphalicks Ophthalmicks Thoracicks Cardiacks Stomachicks Hepaticks Spleneticks Nephriticks and Vterine Medicaments And al these are either Hot or Cold Internal or External I. Internal heating Cephalicks are 1. Of Simples Roots of Paeonie Caryophillata Birthwort Masterwort Calamus Aromaticus Leaves of Primrose Betony Rosemary Marjerom Centory Sage Flowers of the Linden-tree Stachados of Arabia Lilly-convally Peony Primrose Betony Seeds of Amomum Peonie Mountaine withie Coriander Fruits Kermes Berries Anacardia Bay and Juniper berries Spices Cubebs Nutmeg Cardamom Cloves Woods Miseltoe of the Oake and of the Hasel Tears Frankincense Storax Sea-commodities Amber Ambergreise From Animals Mosk Castoreum II Of compounds Water of black cherries of Lilly-convally Peony Linden Gilloflower Primrose Orange-flowers Treacle-water Tinctures Elixit proprietatis of Peony of Sassafras wood Distilled oiles Of Rosemary Marjerom Sage Rue Ambar Spike c. Syrups of stechados Betony Gilloflowers Peony Conserves of Betony Sage Rosemary flowers Lilly-convally Centorie Stechados Preserves Nutmegs preserved Indian Nut preserved Preserved wallnuts Electuaries Confectio Alkermes Treacle Mithridate Diacastoreum Spices of Diambra Dianthos Diamoschum dulce Diacastoreum II. External heateing Cephalicks are I. Among Simples al those wel nere before related Leaves of Rue Running betony upright vervaine are exceedingly commended II. Among compounds are Oyls of Sassafras wood Oyle of Rue Nard Oyle Oyle of Baies of Castorem Balsoms of Roses of Rosemary of Nutmeg Marjerom Sage Ambar Emplasters de Betonica de Mucilagnibus de Baccis Laury Point 2. Of cooleing Cephalick Medicaments Cephalick cooling Medicaments are likewise internal or external I. Internal are 1. Of Simples the Roots of Mandrake the Leaves of Lettuce Perslane Plantane Night-shade Water-lillies Henbane Flowers of Roses white popie Red-poppie purple violets water-lillies Seeds four greater and smaller coole-seeds Fruits of Gourd Cucumbers Woods of Sanders II. Of Compounds Waters of Roses Violets Lettuce Water-lilly Night-shade Juices Opium Vinegar of Roses Syprups of white poppie red popie Roses Water-lillies Conserves of Lettuce and of the flowers aforesaid Electuaries Diacodion simplex and compositum Diaolibanum opiatum Ladanum opiatum Speices Diatrion santalon de gemis frigidum Diacorallium II. External are I. Of Simples Leaves of Willow Vine Venus Navil Mandrake The rest may be taken from the foregoing II. Of compounds Waters of Henbane Lettice Water-lillies Plantaine Nightshade Elders Roses Juyces of the Birch-tree House-leeke c. Oyles of Poppeyes Violets Water-lillies Lettice-seed Mandrakes Frogs Ointments of Roses Alablaster Album camphoratum Refrigerans Galeni Populeum Article 2. Of Ophthalmick Medicaments Ophthamlick or Eye-medicaments are either Heating or Cooleing and they are both external and internal I. Internal Heateing Eye-medicaments are I. Of Simples Roots of valerian Fenel Celondine Navew Rapes Leaves of the greater Celondine Fumitory Eyebright Pimpernel Rosemary Flowers of Eybright Celondine Marygolds Seeds of Anis Rue Siler montanus Turnips Spices Safron Lignum-aloes II. Of Compounds Waters of Vervaine Celondine the greater Fenel Vervaine Rue Centaury the less Syrups of Betony Eye-bright Electuaries Treacle Mithridate Conserves of Eye-bright Rosemary-flowers Betony Sage Gillowflowers Extract of Lignum-Aloes II. External are I. Of simples the Roots of Vervaine Valerian The Leaves of which mention has been often-made Flowers of Hypericon Melilote consolida regalis Seeds of Clarie or Clear-Eie Line Fenugreek II. Of compounds Aqua Saccarata Calendule Mellis Mullein Elder Bread Ointments Pomatum Dialthea III. Internal coolers are I. Of Simples Roots of Cichory Straberry Rapes Leaves of Strawberry Cichory Plantane Flowers of white-roses Violets Water-lillies Seeds of Quinces white-poppie II. Of compounds Waters Of Strawberry Porslane Syrups Conserves Species c. See among the Cephalicks IV. External coolers are I. Among Simples the Leaves of Dandelion Oak c. The Flowers see above Seeds of Beanes Fleawort Quinces Fruits Pulpe of apples A sweet apple with Sugar Earths Bole Armeniack Terra Sigillata Metalline Substances Ceruss Litturidge of Silver Lapis calaminaris Saccharum Saturni Spodium II. Of compounds waters of Blew-bottles Beanes Goose-grease Strawberries Mucilages of fleawort seeds Mallow and Marsh-mallow seeds c. Article 3. Of Chest Medicaments Point 1. Of Heating Brest Medicaments Chest Medicaments are likewise either Heaters or Coolers internal or external Internal Heaters are I. Of simples Roots of Enula campane Squil round Birth-wort Colts-foot Pimpinel Scordium Scabious Dragon Soap-wort Leaves of the five capillary Herbes Horehound Clamint Scabious Fluellen Hedera terrestris Colts-foot Botrys spotted Lungwort Hyssop Scordium Two-penny grass Flowers of Scabious spoted lungwort Hysop colts foot spike sea-grass Seeds of wild rue and Garden rue of mountaine siler sesili or Marselles Chervil Carduus southern-wood Fruites fat-figgs Dates Paisons of the Sun Indian Nut. Spices Saffron Cassia Lignea Cinnamon Woods of Sassafrass Guajacum Orenge peels Earths Gums Bole-armeniack Gum Ammoniac Myrrh Terpentine Choise Frankincense II. Of Compounds Waters of Hysop Horehound Maidenhaire Fluellen Ground Ivie Scabious Carduus Orice Calves-grass Spirit of Turpentine Sulphur Ground Ivy. Distilled Oiles of Anise Fennel Mace Sage Creeping betony Tinctures Elixit proprietatis Tinctura Sulfuris Balsam of the same or with oile of fenel or of sweet almonds Extracts of Saffron Orice Fluellen Calamus Aromaticus Ground Ivy. Decoctions Decoctum pectorale of dried Rapes of an old Cock of Lignum Guajacum Syrups of Hyssop of Horehound of Maiden
Stomach medicines are also internal and external I. Internal I. Of Simples Roots of Cichory Sorrel Asparagus Water-lillies Leavs Endive Sorrel porslane mirtle Flowers of Roses Violets balaustians Seeds the four cool seeds barley Sorrel seeds Rose seeds Fruits Citrons Quinces Orenges Pomegranates myrtle berries medlars Tamarinds Corants melons and cowcombers Woods Sanders Stones Red corals II. Of Compounds waters of Roses Acacia Strawberries plantane porslane Quinces Juyces such as are mentioned among cooling Heart-medicines Syrups of corals Juyce of citrons Juyce of sowr Grapes of Quinces of Acacia of pomegranates Julep of Roses and of Violets Conservs of Roses vitriolated of Acacia Flowers Oak-tops citron-flowers Confects of Cichory Roots Quinces Spanish Lettuce Diacidonium simplex Species and Pouders Diatrion santalon Diarhodon Abbatis Diamargariti frigidi II. Externals are I. Of simples those we mentioned for inward medicaments II. Of compounds Oyl of Roses Violers Quinces Water-lillies unripe Olives Article 6. Of Epatick Medicaments Point 1. Of hot Liver Medicaments Liver medicaments are hot or cold and they are internal or external I. The Internal are 1. Of simples Roots the five opening greater and lesser of Pimpinel wild Radish Squills rhaponticum verum Rhubarb Leaves of Agrimony Eupatorium of Mesuae Kunigund is her herb Mountain Chamaedrys Centaury water-cresses Betony Liver-wort Ground-pine Flowers of Centauty Spike Squinanes Elder Liverwort Hops Seeds of Orenges Citrons Brooklime Seseli Fiuits Aurenges reisons Juniper berries Spices Cinnamon Saffron Acorus Zedoary Indian Spiknard Cassia lignea Woods Legnum aloes Guajacum Santalum citrinum II. Of Compounds Spirits of Elder Guajacum Wormwood Centory Waters of the Herbs aforesaid Oyls of Sage Orenges Wormwood Juniper berries Mace Nutmeges Tinctures Elixir proprietais of Lignum Sassafras Extract of Gentian Carduus Lignum aloes Wormwood Guaiacum Veronica Calamus aromaticus Syrups of Ground-Oak Byzantinus Syrupus so called of Hops of Wormwood Conservs of Chamaedrys Sage Wormwood Fumitory Rosemary Flowers Preservs of Acorus Citron pee●s Citrons Pimpinel roots Species and Pouders Diacurcumae Dialaccae Diaxyloasoes Diamargariti calidi II. The external are I. Of Simples those formerly alleadged II. Of Compounds Oyl of Roses Quinces Water lillies unripe Olives Ointments Unguentum Santalinum Refringerans Galeni Rosatum Mesues Plaisters Cerotum Santalinum Diaphaenicon frigidum Emplastrum de succo Ciculae Article 7 Of Splenetick Medicaments Point 1. Of hot Splenetick Medicaments Splenetick Medicaments are hot or cold and both are internal and external I. Internal hot Medicaments are 1. Of Simples the Roots of Fern which is counted an appropriate medicament of Scorzonera of Orice of Florence of Polipody of the Oak of Caryophy llata of wild Radish Leavs of Scolopendrium Harts-tongue Scurvy-grass Tamarisk Dodder Hops Fumitory Brook-●ime Chervil Galiopfis Ground Oak Flowers of Hops Broom Elder Chamaemel Fumitory Liver-wort Seeds of Ash Ammios Water-cresses Chervil Mustard Nettle wild Parsenip Scurvy-grass Spices Saffron Epithymum Woods of Sassafras Lignum aloes Barks of Cappar Roots middle rind of the Ash Tree of the Elder and Tamarisk Tree Gums of Ammoniacum dissolved in Vinegar of Squils II. Of Compounds Spirits of Wine tartarized of Centory of vitriol of Mars of Tartar simple and compound of Brook-Lime of Scurvy-grass of Guajacum of Juniper berries Waters of Dodder Melissa compound Hops Water-cresses Scurvy-grass Fumitory Tincture of Mars Extracts of the Spleen of Jove Scolopendrium Harts-Tongue Scordium Fumitory polypody Essences of Scurvy-grass of Epythymum of Chamaedrys Fumitory Dodder Cappars Syrups of Scolopendrium Fernelii of Broom Flowers of Epithimum of Scurvy-grass of Apples Forestus his Syrup against the scurvy Conservs of scurvy-grass scolopendria broom-flowers Fumitory Veronica Ground-Oak Pimpinel Species of Dialacca Diacurcuma Dicapparum of Hollerius Tartarus Vitriolatus II. External medicaments are I. Of simples those already reckoned and of Gums Ladanum Tacamahaca styrax II. Of compounds besides the forementioned there are Balsams of Peru of Romane Chamaemel of Mastich Vnguents Unguentum stomachale Martiatum magnum Plaisters and Cataplasmes Emplastrum stomachale de Crusta panis de Baccis Lauri de Mastichae Point 2. Of cooling Stomach-medicaments Also cooling stomach medicaments are either internal or external I. The Internal are I. Of Simples the Roots of Cychory sorrel Asparagus water-lillies Leavs al sorts of Endive sorrel porslane myrtle Flowers of Roses Violets Balaustians Seeds the four greater cool seeds barley sorrel and Rose seeds Fruits Citrons Quinces Orenges Pomegranates myrtils medlars Tamarinds red and white corants melons cucumbers Woods sanders Stones red-coral II. Of compounds waters of Roses Acacia strawberries Plantane porslane Quinces Juyces those which have been mentioned among the cooling Heart Medicaments Syrups of corals Juyce of citrons sour Grapes Quinces Acacia Pomegranates Julep of Roses and Violets Conservs of Roses Vitriolated Flowers of Acacia Tops of Oak citron flowers Preservs of Cichory roots of Quinces of Spanish Lettuce Diacydonium simplex Species and pouders Diatrion santalon Diarrhodon Abbatis Diamargaritum frigidum II. External are I. Of simples those already reckoned among the internal medicaments II. Of compounds oyl of Roses violets Quinces of unripe Olives Article 6. Of Liver-medicaments Point I. Of Heating Liver medicaments Liver medicaments are heating or cooling And the former are internal or external I. The Internal are 1. Of simples Roots The five opening roots greater lesses roots of pimpinel wild-redish squil Rhapontick Rhubarb Leaves of Agrimony of Eupatorium of Mesue of true mountaine groud oake Centory the less Water-Cresses Betony Liver wort ground pine Flowers of Centory the less spicknard Squinanth Elder Liver-wort Hops Seeds of orenges Citrons Brooklime Se●eli Fruits Orenges Raysons Juniper berries Spices Cinnamon Safron Acorus Zedoary Indian spike Cassialignia Woods Lignum Aloes Guajacum Santalum citrinum 2. Of compounds the Spirit of Elder berries Guajacum wormwood Centory the less Waters distilled of the foresaid Herbes Oyles of sage Orenge-peels wormwood Juniper Mace Nutmegs Tinctures Elixir proprietatis of Lignum Sassafras Extracts of Gentian Carduus Lignumaloes Wormwood Guajacum Veronica Calamus aromaticus Syrups of Ground oake Byzantinus Hops wormwood Conserves of Ground-oake Sage Wormwood Fumitory Rosemary Flowers Preserves of Acorus Orenge-peeles Citron peeles Citron pap pimpinel rootes Species and po●●ders Diacurcuma Dialacca Diaxuloaloes Diamargaritum calidum II. The Eternal are I. Of simples those before specified of which decoctions Bags and fomentations may be made Ointments are Unguentum Nardinum Martiatum Plasters Diaphaenicon calidum de Baccis Lauri Oxycroceum Point 2. Of Liver-coolers Liver coolers are either internal or external I. The internal are I. Of Simples Roots of Aspragus Grass Water lilies Strawberry Sorrel Cichory Leaves of Sorrel Strawberry Asparagus Sowthistle Garden Endive porslane Lettice Water lillie Flowers of Roses Cichory Bugloss Balaustians Water Lillies Acacia red-poppy Seeds the four great and smal coole seeds barley white popy violets Fruites Pomegranates c. which we have reckoned among stomach-coolers See Gums and precious stones in the same place From Animals shavings of Harts ho●ne and Ivory whey of Goates-milk II. Of compounds Spirit of
be cured from the simples Chap. 2. Of the diseases of Distemper with Matter A Material distemper is the irregularity of the natural temper of Mans Body by the presence of some morbifick matter The Signs wil be known from the following differences The Cause is a preternatural Humor and that is 1. Either collected by little and little either through weakness of the part or fault of the Nutriment 2. Or affluent either by attraction or by reason of transmission either from the whol body or from some certaine parts The Cure is perfected 1. By alteration with Contraries if we consider the disease 2. By evacuation if need be and that by blood-letting if a Plethory be offensive by Purgation if Cacochymia or badness of humors off end by sweat if the matter tend to the skin by vomit if to the upper parts by diureticks if to the Urinary passages III. By opposite diet 'T is divided into so many distempers as the material I. One sort springs from blood or a plethorick Constitution of Body when such humors as are fit to nourish the Body abound c. 'T is knowen by weatiness c. It arises from good Nutriment c. 'T is cured I. By Blood-letting II. By alteration with coolers and moistners especially such as are appropriate to the Liver 'T is divided two manner of waies 1. One sort is from an exquisite plethora to which al the precedent notes agree 2. Another is from a bastard plethora wherein the cure requires purging likewise 3. Another springs from a plethora ad vasa Another from a plethora ad vires of which we spake before II. Another kind springs from excrementitious choler which is hot and dry 'T is hardly cured if it proceed from the yellow choler Never almost if it proceed from leek colored eg-yolk-colored or verdigreise-colored choler c. The Cure is performed 1. By alteration with cooling and moistning medicaments and if it be very thin with thickness if thick by cutters Among the former the cheif are Stalks of Italian Lettices flowers of water lillie Porslain Plantain Tamarinds Jujubees red poppy among the latter the cheif are roots of Cichory Dandilion Sorrel such things as are made of these Spirit of vitriol Salt 2. By evacuation either by bloodletting when cholor is mingled with the blood or by purgation by stool with cholagogues The cheif cholagogues or choler purgers are Rhubarb which is neither to be given alone because it is subject to fume nor to such as are troubled with the strangury tamarinds aloes rosata which is taken only in pils Syrup of the flowers of Acacea of Roses solutive which must not be given to women with child Pils of Ruffi c. By a cooling and moistening diet III. Another is from preternatural flegm which is cold and moist 'T is cured I. By alteration with medicaments hot and dry attenuateing and cutting Where note that we must at first abstain from very hot things lest the matter being dissolved should swel with greater motion and that the thinner parts being consumed the thicker should remain We must avoid strong openers in a woman wth child The strongest of al are Lignum guaiacum China root Sassafras Salsaparilla and Oxymel Scylliticum Hot stomach medicaments are to be interposed because the stomach languishes through overmuch heat II. By evacuation with Phelgm purgers the chief among those indifferently strong are Mechoacanna of which Lozenges are made it works most effectually given in pouder Carthamus seeds and Agarick trochisked Among the stronger are jalap roote given with Cream of Tartar Syrup of Coloquintida and the Pils of Sagapenum of Horstius The Golden spirit of Rulandus III. By blood-letting provided the Heat be not dissipated being expressed with flegm and that there be a plethora IV. By an heating and drying diet let the Aire be hot and dry the meats seasoned with spices let strong wine be used the body being first purged Frequent use of Cappars with wine and raisins IV. Another sort comes from preternatural Melancholly whether thick or dilute or degenerating into black choler 'T is cured I By alteration with heaters and dryers provided it be not black choler The roots of Eryngos Lycorize the Herbes of Ceterach Baume Dodder Flowers of borrage tamarisk Cappars the cordial flowers Syrup of sweet smelling Apples c. Avoid Vinegar and if it must be used give oxymel and a decoction of Citron peels II. By evacuation with Melanagogues or melancholly purgers The cheif are Polipody sena Extract of black hellebore The diet must be heating moistning The Aire must be tempered with a decoction of Mallows and violets let the patients meates be boyled rather than rost Egs soft-boiled flesh of henns calves partriches corants a temperate bath of fresh water c. V. Another Sort comes from Serum or the wheyish humor which is a thin and Salt liquor by its aboundance and quality altering the body of man 'T is cured by evacuation with hydragogues sudorificks Diuriticks c. The cheif Hydragogues are among the indifferently strong the tope of elder when they first shoot forth dried with a gentle heat an emulsion of the stones of elder-berries Orice root Among the strongare Gambogia Jalap Extract of Elatery conserve of Esul● pils of Sagapenum The cheif sudorificks are Spirit of dwarfe elder and of elder Salt of Cen●ory of worm wood of Ash of Scabious Harts born prepared Antimony diaphoretick bezoardicum jovial Among diucitick are the diuretical liquor and syrup of Rivius in Renodeus his dispensatory Salt of Vrine Amber beanes Spirit of Salt liquor of tarrar Vitriolated half a scruple compounded with half an ounce of Cinnamon water and two ounces of julep of roses VI. Another is compound springing from some of these humors mingled together In the Cure we must so work that we resist cheifly those humors which most of al exercise their efficacy upon the body not neglecting the rest either within or without This wil be done when the veins are free from the obstruction al the passages of the body open the humors not being much distempered and the noble bowels of the Body not diseased Here panchymagoga or al-humor-purgers are to be used and the Imperial pils of Fernelius which may be seen in the London Dispensatory Chap. 3. Of Diseases springing from Hidden qualities DIseases from hidden Qualities are diseases springing from Causes which work by a malignant and venemous force which cannot be judged to spring from the manifest qualities of natural bodies The Signs are when a disease has rare symptoms great ones and such as are not to be seen in other sicknesses no not of the same kind When there has preceeded some suspition either of some great degree of putrifaction arisen in the body or of infected a●re or of contagion or of poison either taken in or communicated from without The Cause is various as shal be explained in the differences The Event of the cure is judged of from the
The Physitians care has two scopes I. Preservation which in persons of years is contrived by blood-letting purgation and taking heed of the Infection and in infants only by the last means of the three II. Curation which is Hopeful if they soon break forth and appear high above the skin great seperate white or red If the Heat abate after they are broken forth if large bleeding at the nose have proceded if no greivious symptoms attend them Doubtful if either they come flowly out or go in againe if they are of violet color green lead-color hard and touching one another If the feaver abate not after their breaking forth If the patient breaths not freely faint away and other symtoms be present 'T is performed I. By mittigation of the Ebullition or fermentation of the Blood least over Ebullition produce more greivious symptoms which is effected by blood-letting and light purgation in persons grown up by Clysters of the decoction of barly with fresh butter comon sugar in Infants or by giving them syrup of Citrons and syrup of violets mixed together or a bit of pomecitron II. By assisting nature in the expulsion where impediments are taken away by the foresaid remedies and the malignity is likewise resisted Expulsion is furthered by Pulvis Joelis in his 4 Tom Book 9. sect 5. of the seeds of Nasturtinm or water cresses and brooklime of each one dram pouder of Unicorns horn one scruple or of harts-horn half a dram Red coral pearls prepeared of each a scrupel Make al into a pouder The dose one dram or an half dram The decoction of figs of Mynsichtus in the 25. section of his Armamentarium Terra Sigillata of Silesia Seed of white turneps A decoction of lentils unhusked with fennel-seed and gum dragant c. III. By defence of the parts To which end the eyes must be rubbed with pure gold or nointed with plantane and eye bright water and a little camphire and saffron If they cannot be opened they must be fomented either with hot milk or a decoction of Barly To the Nostrils a nodule of sanders and camphire dipt in rose water must be applied If thut they must be nointed with oyle of sweet almonds The throat must either be smeared with diamorum or washed with a decoction of plantane and barly with Honey of roses The ripening of the poxs must be furthered with anointing the same with oyl of sweet almonds When they are ripe they must be opened with golden or silver pins that they may leave no warts behind them They must be washed with a water distiled of al manner of flowers and mans fat or with oyntment of Forestus IV. By removing the symptoms which appear with or folow the same now they are Epilepsy and convulsion when the membranes and nerves are beset with poxs and the palsy when they are thereby obstructed Hard swellings which must be dissipated by emollients without suppuration External Vlcers Dysentery where emollients are to be avoided and such things as dry and stop without acrimony are to be used Hearing impared where evacuation being premised either vesicatories or vapours received into the ears are useful Inflamation of the Eyes c. Of which see in their proper places Article II. Of the measels and such like Breakin gs forth The Morbilli or Measels are smal red pushes breaking forth upon the skin with a continual feaver caused by the expulsive faculty and a peculiar working or boiling of the Blood The Signs Causes Differences and Cure vary not much from those of the smal pocks of which we newly discoursed Like Breakin gs forth to the measels are I. Crystalli Cristals pushes about the bigness of Lupines breaking out upon the Body and shining like Christal out of which a watrish humor flows The Germans cal them Schafs-blattern II. Tubercula little risings not thick together with little moisture in them without any feaver and soone cured III. Rubeolae smal red Pimples which come somtimes a lone with heat and Cough sometimes they are sprinkeled among the smal poxe or measels and sometimes they happen to persons in Health IV. Rossalia red fiery spots which breake out at the begining of the disease al over the Body as it were certain smal Erysipela's though the tumor is hardly discernable sometimes they breake not forth til the fourth or fift day in the progrses of the disease they occupy the whole body so that it looks as it were al●on a red fire Which color is againe changed into spots as at the begining which vanish at last upon the seventh or eight day The Epidermis or scarf-skin faling off like scales The Cure of these requires nothing singular Article III. Of the spotted Feaver Febris pefechialis or the spotted feaver is a malignant Feaver in which certain spots like flea bitings of sundry colors but cheifly red appear upon the skin These spots are called puncticulae petechiae peticulae Whence the feavers are termed also puncticulares periculares and lenticulares The SIGNES are the same as in malignant feavers The sports are without any itching extuberance and exulceration They appeare in the back Armes Thighes Brest viz. places through which the most notable Arteries and veins doe passe Seldom in the face because the cold air repels the matter from thence There appears no prick in the middle of them and so they are distinguished from flea-bitings The CAUSE is the thinner part of the putrid humor which makes that they soone vanish 'T is driven forth by the expulsive faculty Seldom critically seeing they commonly shew themselves at the beginning without any remarkable evacuation alwaies for the most part Symptomatically and by how much they are more plentiful they do the more signifie the abundance of corrupt matter in the Body The CURE is Hazardous if the spots are many because they shew that there is much matter If they be few and accompained with sings of Natures weakness If they disappear because 't is a sign they strike in again If they come forth slowly because it argues grossness of matter or compactness of the Skin 'T is Performed 1. By withdrawing the matter effected by blood-letting which must be practised before the fourth day Lenitives being premised to loosen the Belly to which a little Camphire may be added if blood be drawn later the Patient wil be over weakened 2. By Expelling the same with Sudorificks resist malignity premisiug if you please such noyntings as may open the pores In this case Bezar stone is good and emulsions of Navew and Citron seeds with Carduus Water and Syrup of Citrons The Bones Blood horns and Skin of the Rhinocerote c. 3. By Roborating the Faculties with Emulsions of Corals and Pearles Confectio Alkermes c. 4. Somtimes also by Revelling the Humor to the external Parts by Vesicatories if the external parts are cold there be Head-ach ravings Convulsions c. If the Patient be loose bellyed we must not stop the loosness unless it be too excessive The
the sound and noise that it maketh wil soon discover Chap. 4. Of the Diseases of the Adnata Tunicle Article I. Of the Ophthalmie THe Parts Constituting the Eye either they are the Tunicles Viz. Adnata Cornea Vvea and Aranea or else they are the Humors thereof The Diseases of the Adnata are the Ophthalmy Pterygium Panniculus and Hyposphasma of the which two latter this is common to the Cornea Tunicle that unto the Eye-Lids The Ophthalmy is an inflamation of the Adnata Tunicle arising from a sharp blood distending the smal Veins thereof The SIGNS are redness of the Eyes a flowing forth of tears a pain c. The CAUSE is Blood which either alone or else castigated by other Humors sliding forth unto the part affected either by an afflux or else by congestion is dispersed thorow the Veins and so distendeth them The CURE is Difficult if it arise in cold Regions and in a cold time because then the Members are more than at other times streightened and confined if it infest and annoy little Children because that it continually followeth from a tender and weak Head if the pain presevere and long abide because it argueth a matter either corroding or vehemently distending or suppurating if it be by consent from the Membranes of the Brain and the parts contained within the Skin if there appear in the Eye smal grains of filth because these signifie a slowness of Maturation It is more easie if it be by Consent from the external parts if the tears be more abundant and more smarting because it cometh the sooner to an end if the belly be quick in regard that the loosness of the belly freeth the party from it It is to be accomplished according to the Method of other Inflamations It is to be noted in this that somtimes by Venesection the greatest Opthalmies are wholly taken away within the space of an hour 2. That Vesicatories applied behind the Ears do very wel draw back For this purpose there is much commended by Hartman the meat of the Herb Rocket in a quilted bag 3. Errhines and those not overstrong and violent are to be administred if the sick person hath bin wont to evacuate the excrements of the head by the Nostrils 4. Topicks are to be applied but yet not until the end of three whole days and these are to be actually some that warme without any the least mordacity or Carroding quality wel cleansed and purified and corrected by such repellers as are in their own propriety helpeful neither must they be too cool nor too astringent neither over dry and those may presently be put unto the forehead and the neck and they are to be followed with Anodynes which if there be any fear of a greater afflux are very fitly applied to the eye from the very beginning 2. the womens milk is every hour to be changed lest that after long continuance it contract a certain kind of acrimony from the heat of the eye 3. Opium and opiate medicaments are by no means to be admini●tred without great and urgent necessity 4. Great caution must be had lest that there should be any suppuration in the inward parts 5. In the diet wine and the use of baths in the declination of the disease may very wel and without danger be allowed and permitted unto the sick person A Cataplasme of the Crumbs of wheat bread and a rosted apple with the brest-milk of a woman together with a little saffron and sugar of saturn is exceedingly commended And so likewise is the water that is made of the juicy substance of Craw-fish distilled two pints thereof of Rose water one pint and Crocus metalorum half an ounce infused altogether as also of the waters of the eyebright and Fennel of each alike five ounces with metalorum one dram unto which there may be added a fit proportion of rose-rosewater Among the discussives Sarcocol wel washed and the true Tutty of the Arabians which drieth without any kind of biting obtain their place and use The Differences of the ophthalmy is threfold I. One is that we cal Taraxis or a perturbation which is known by this that the eyes only appear to be hotter with a certain redness in them and without any great abundance of tears It ariseth from external Causes to wit 1. the heat of the Sun or the fire and then the Cataplasme before mentioned may very si●ly be applied 2. from a pain of the head contracted from the suns scorching heat and then likewise the aforesaid Cataplasme hath its place unless happly general and Universal remedies ought altogether to preceed and take the the first place 3. from wind smoake and dust and the eyes are to be washed with milk luke warme and fleep to be taken thereupon 4. from a blow or a fal and then blood ought immediatly to be drawn forth by opening a vein 5. from the stinging of a Bee Wasp or Hornet and then Repellers of the white of an Egge the breast milk of a woman c. are to be imposed Another is the true and genuine ophthalmy which proceedeth either from hot or from cold causes and to this al that hath been before spoken doth properly and cheifly belong Another is that we cal Chemosis whenas the eye lids are as it were inverted and ●urned the inside outward neither can they be closed and then there appeareth a swelling of something that is white above the black of the eye and this needeth and requireth the stronger sort of remedies II. Another is Periodical which kepeth its intervals it is familiar unto hot moist heads at length it casteth the eyes into a consumption Another is that that keepeth not its periods Another is Contagious III. Another is Moist 〈◊〉 ●hich we have now most cheifly treated Another dry in the which there is but a very smal flux of tears and in the night-time the Eye-Lids contract an hardness It hath its original from a humor that is not much in quantity but very salt and nitrous And it is either with an itching attending it which if tears gently flow forth it is then called Psorophthalmia but if there be no tears at al and that the eyes are only red without any swelling it is then called Xerophthalmia or else without an itching and with a certain hardness of the Eye-lid and then it is-termed Sclerophthalmia The Cure hereof followeth the method of that before mentioned Article II. Of the Nail or little wing the web and the Hyposphagm of the Eye I. The Nail or little wing as they terme it of the eye or as some cal it the arrow is a little membrane that is nervous sibrous and somwhat white which proceedeth forth from the corners of the eyes the greater of them especially and cleaveth fast unto the Adnata tunicle and is somtimes drawn forth in length even unto the Cornea tunicle and very often if it so much increase covereth and over spreadeth the Pupilla or Bal of the Eye
the body be Plethorical if it be not directly on the side affected 2. That if the courses or the Hemorrhoids be suddenly suppressed then the evacuation is in the first place to be out of the ancle vein or that of the Ham but if the suppression hath been of long continuance out of the arm vein 3. That in derivation the blood is to be drawn forth so long as until the color of it be changed 4. That fomentations may be administred to moderate the pain in a body that is not Plethorical yea even before Phlebotomy but not so when the Body of the patient is Plethorical And for this end and purpose excellent good is the Unguent made of dialthea or of Marshmallows one ounce thereof and half an ounce of the oyl of sweet Almonds with the pained parts ought to be al over anointed and upon it the fine small pouder of Camomile flowers is to be lightly strewed and then the leaf of a Colwort or Cabbage anoynted with Butter or hogs fat is to be laid upon it very hot and this is to be continually done dureing the whol time of the cure adding likewise a little of the distilled oyl of dil Champhyre 5. That forthwith in the very first beginning a sweat may very fitly and properly be raysed and excited by exhibiting either of the water of the Poppy Roses three ounces there of with one dram of the pouder of Corral red Filberds the Jaws of the Luce-fish or Pike or else of the simple Mixture one dram with the water of Carduus Mariae or of the Spirit of Nitre with the spirit of Wine of each one scruple the spirit of Tarttar half a scruple in the water of Poppy Roses or else the simple water thereof c. 6. That pectoral decoctions together with their appropriates are continually to be administred after the premizing of universals that so the spitting may be facillitated 7. That these following have in them a Specifical propriety of operation to wit the flower of the wild poppy of the dry dock and of the white Eglentine or sweet Brier the seed of Carduus Muriae the Bulls pizzle or the pizzle of the Hart or Stagg the shavings of the Boars tooth c. see Petraeus Al which are to be made into a very fine pouder and then to be put upon bread that hath been wel dipt in Scabious water 8. That the impostume may best be broken with a Cataplasm of the herb kaly the roots of the White lily while they are new and fresh c. applied unto the side that is payned 9. That after al those aforesaid Chalybeated milk unless a Feaver hinder it is the best I. One is as we may term it Legitimate and exquisite unto the which only whatever was sayd before as to this poynt is to be referred and understood thereof which I. ariseth either from blood that is pure in which there is a bloody spittle an extension of the veins about the Temples and the forehead with a sence of heaviness neer about the hollow of the Eyes the fore parts of the head or else from a blood that is Cholerick in which the spittle is yellow and which if it suddenly vanish without any apparent cause the sick person is immediately surprised with dotage It is best and soonest of al cured by opening the salvatella vein or thirdly from a Phlegmatick blood in which the spittle is frothy more slow and as it were sweet the syrup of Zacutus in the Eight Book Chap. 3. of his History is very efficacious in this kind or else lastly from a Melancholy blood which very rarely happeneth by way of afflux II. It affecteth either the interior tunicle and then the sick person doth with the more ease lie and rest upon the grieved side in regard that now the tumor is not immediately under it neither doth it in this case distend the grieved part or else the Exterior about the bones and then the case is quite contrary unto the former or otherwise both of them and then the patient lying upon the back is the freer from pain III. It affecteth either the right or the left side or the superior part extending it self to the throat or else the inferior reaching even unto the Hypochondria II. Another is bastard and spurious which is distinguished according to the quality of the matter and the manner of its situation One is from Windiness in which the pain is not fixed but runneth from place to place it is mitigated and oftentimes wholly dispelled by fomentations there went before causes generating windiness the pouder of Cummin sprinkled and strewed upon a Cabbage leafe anointed or spread over with butter and outwardly applied unto the pained part is very successful in giving ease Another from a distilation which hath with it a sence and feeling of a defluxion or something at certain times falling down it is exasperated by being touched neither doth it any whit yield unto fomentations the cure is to proceed according to that of a thin catarth Another is externally when the blood thorow the branches from the Axillar is ramus is emptied forth into the External Muscles of the Thorax and then the pain waxeth very intolerable upon the pressure thereof lying down upon the grieved side is extreamly troublesome there is in this case nothing cast forth by spitting and the transition or passing over of it into that which above we termed Vera or the true and exquisite Pluresy is very facile and easy Chap. 3. Of Empyema EMpyema is the Constipation of the Cavity of the Thorax or Breast from an abundant purulent matter causing and producing a difficulty of breathing with a Cough and a purulent or rotten spitting The Subject is the Cavity and capacity of the Thorax being that void space betwixt the Thorax and the Lungs albeit the Lungs themselves and the vessells thereof may not here be altogether excluded But now indeed because that the Lungs by the Mediastine is divided into two parts the Pus is collected either in the one or the other part or else in both of them together The Signs are a difficulty of breathing with a spitting and a perpetual purulent Coughing a sense and feeling of a heavy and dul pain in the bottom of the Thorax and especially neer about the diaphragm a redness of the Cheeks and that chiefly about three or four hours after meals c. The Cause is that very purulent filth it self filling up the Thorax the abundance whereof together with its stinking smell and acrimony inflicteth very sad and grievous pain and mischief There is some hope of a cure if upon the opening or burning there flow forth a white Pus or corruption if it be rather on the right side than the left and that the Patient be strong and able No hopes if the whole Thorax be lifted up in the breathing if the whol cavity be possessed if the left side if upon the lancing or burning of it that
extinction of the native heat If with it there be other matter which from the corruption in the body hath contracted blackness it being by nature not black it relates to I. The urgent symptome it self which is to be stopped 1. By revellers whether they be strong and sharp Clysters or hot things applyed to the extream parts 2. By things that compress the motion of the expulsive faculty and strengthen the Stomach Inwardly are commended Zacutus his Pills lib. 9. hist prax cap. 1. num 4. Lignum aloes poudered and given with the syrup of the sharp juice of Citrons The crude juice of quinces taken a spooneful laudanum opiate a vomit Outwardly a plaister of treacle Zacutus his cataplasme an epithem of the decoction of wormwood mint made in smiths water The differences are taken chiefly from the causes I. One is from external causes as are meats either taken into great quantity or offensive by their hurtful qualities vomiting medicines then are comended new treacle spirits of wine imoderate drinking and drunkenness vehement motions after meat unaccustomed going to Sea violent coughing the phansie and beholding of things loathsom blows on the body a wound of the skul poyson taken c. Another is from internal causes either diseases or humors of which shal be treated in the following difference II. Another is from diseases infesting the stomach as are Vlcers tumors straitness and smallness the stoppage of the lower orifice which must be considerd in the cure Another is from humors which are either bred there and then there was some fault in the dyet with a continual nauseousness or flow from some other part and then there must be respect had to those parts or they lie in the cavity of the stomach and then they are cast up with a little straining there is a distension and anxiety after meat and vomitings when they have taken no meat or they adhere to the coats and then they vomit not unless upon taking of meat nauseousness is very troublesome These humors are 1. The Chyle which must be suddenly remedied lest an atrophy steale upon us this happens in an ulcer of the Stomach 2. Excrements which are cast upwards in the Iliaca passio as also Glysters 3. Blood which is cast up either by reason of the cutting of some member or after the suppression of some evacuation of blood where it must be dissolved lest it putrefy with oxymel in which a dane-wort root hath been boyled afterwards it must be emptied at last it must be stopped with two ounces of the water of the greater nettle spirit of vitriol as much as is sufficient for a gratful sharpness w th the essence of crocus Martis gelly of Quinces with the old conserve of roses given with gum tragacanth Or by reason of the opening of the vessels where the same means must be used Syrup of purslane with terra sigillata is powerful in astriction 4. Cholor sometimes comes theither if the channel of choler be inserted into the Stomach and then the nature of the humor cast up must be considered vomiting troubles them most when they are fasting 't is somtimes happily stayed by opening the Salvatella if we may credit Zacutus 5. Flegm melancholly matter worms stones c. which are best of all discovered by their proper signs Article X. Of Choler Choler whether it come apotes choles that is from yellow choler from which it most frequently ariseth or apo ton cholodon that is from the gutts is twofold moist and dry I. Moist choler which also is the true is a continuall and imoderate casting off of an evil humor with great perturbation and violence both through the upper and lower parts arising from the violent irritation of the expulsive faculty The signs are often voiding of cholerick humors a great paine in the belly and bowels paine at the heart thirst a pulse smal and frequent to which do oftentimes succeed faintings and coldness in the extreame parts The Cause is a sharp and corrupt matter whether arising from meats bad in themselves as the eggs of the barbel fish mushrums melons cowcumbers plums fat things herbs leeks onions c. or bred elsewhere and sent to the stomach as shal be said in the differences The cure must be bastend by reason of the acuteness of the disease yet there are some in whom this cholerick passion a lask at certain periods doth empty al the superfluities of their bodies It respects 1. The furthering of either of the evacuations if one be too much the other to little 2. Atempring of the humors 3. Astrengthning of the part 4. A restoring of the strength and spirits too which end wine is good if there be no feaver 5. A mitigation of the Symptomes of which in the differences As for the differences There is one when the matter that irritates is conteined in the Stomach which is known by this that there is present nauseousness a straitness knawing and pain of the stomach It ariseth from strong purging medicines Concerning the Cure observe 1. That the flux must not be stopped if the evacuation be plentiful and the strength be not impaired 2. Where the irritation is great and the evacuation smal vomiting must be furthered by gentle vomiters and purging by benigne purgers and laxatives 3. Where the evacuation is great and irritation smal we must use astringents and strengtheners together 4. If vomiting be excessive we must move by stoole if a loosness be too much we must act with vomits composed of whey with syrup of roses 5. Inwardly crocus martis rightly prepared doth stop it best of al. The decoction of Cloves Mastich and Red Roses made in red wine Laudanum opiate the spunge that is wont to grow on sawallows given four grains weight in red wine Outwardly a Sea spunge boy led strongly in vinegar and laid upon the stomach Another is when the matter flows from elsewhere as from the liver pancreas gutts mesentery into the stomach 'T is known by this that for the most part there is present a malignant feaver and convulsins trouble them the matter offending then is Choler like yolks of eggs yellow adust or salt nitrous and corrupt In the Cure 1. The course of the matter flowing thither is not presently to be stopped 2. If it flow too much it must be diverted by medicines either to the skin or to the passages of urine or it must be called to the outward parts by frictions ligatures and the like 3. It must be qualified and the parts strengthened Inwardly Christal is good given half a dram weight Outwardly epithems made of the juice of Endive Purslane with barly flower In course of diet bread dipt in the juice pomegranates is good c. II. Dry choler which also is the bastard is a voiding of a flatulent spirit through the upper and lower parts with a puffing up of the belly with noise and a pain of the loynes sides The SIGNS and immediate cause
hangs forth like a Taile The SIGNS and CAUSES are the same as in a Tentigo only that Women fear Copulation The CURE is also the same if it must be cut off it must be done either with a Horse Hair or a silken thred dipt in sublimate water or by Iron Article II. Of the straitness of the Neck of the womb The straitness of the Neck of the womb is either a stopping of the same or of the Orifice of the womb either by compression or a growing together The SIGNS are the Flux of the Courses denied in them in whom they were wont to flow through the Neck a sense of pain with a weight The CAUSE is either natural when it affects from the birth or accidental of which in the Differences The CURE varies according to the Nature of the Differences The Differences are taken from the Part and the Causes I. One is of the outward Orifice which is called of the Pudendum in which the Courses which flow both by the neck and by the womb are disappointed there can be neither Copulation nor Conception because neither the seed nor the man is received Another of the inward which is called the Orifice of the Womb in which the seed received presently flows forth again conception can in on wise be II. One is by way of Compression which is Caused 1. By a Fat Caule lying on the mouth of the womb 2. By a stradling of the Thighs 3. By a stone in the bladder 4. By a Tumor in the right Gut of which in their place Another is by way of growing which is caused 1. Either from the birth and then either flesh stops it which is red to sight soft to touch or a Membrane which is white to sight hard to the touch In the Cure 1. The Part being moistned with warm Fomentations it must be cut streight up taking Care that the Neck of the Bladder be not hurt 2. The humor must be drawn forth and a ten●must be applyed dipt in a suppurating Medicine 3. And astringent pouder must be had in readiness for fear of a Flux of blood 4. The following daies the place must be washt with honey water and we must act with things that Cicatrize 2. Or after the birth cheifly from an Vlcer and then either the sides of the Neck are grown together in which case we must use incision but very warily or there is a Callous substance which first must be cut off with a Pen Knife or a Spongy and Luxuriant flesh in which first of al we must use dryers and discussives as brithwort Frankincense Myrrh Mastick afterwards we must apply corrosives without pain at last we must cut it Article III. Of the pustles Condylomata and Hemorrhoids of the womb Pustles of the womb are little bunchings arising in the neck of the womb which by their Acrimony do Cause itching and pain The SIGNS are Itching Pain a folling down of Scales like flower to which we must add a Speculum Matricis that the affect may be the better discovered The Cause is cholerick sharp adust and thick humors which emptied into moist and loose places do insinuate and immerse themselves in them The CURE respects the causes universals being premised where amongst preparatives prevaile syrup of Fumitory of succory with the decoction of hops topicks discussing and mitigating the humor especially baths and halfe baths which must be followed with washing the part with wine and niter But these must be often repeated They are divided into benigne and malligne or venereal which are stuborn and contagious they ought to be washt with the water made of aloes the quantity of one vetch flower of brass the quantity of half a vetch flower of brass the quantity of half a vetch pouder'd and mixt with white wine one ounce plantane water and of rose heads each one ounce and kept in a wide mouthed glass II. Condylomata are swellings of wrinkles in the necke of the womb with heate and paine There is no need of Signes because they appeare to the eyes oftentimes if there be many they resemble a smal bunch of grapes The wrinkles hang forth like knobbs which appear in the fist clutched But they swel more when the courses flow The CAUSE is Thick and Adust humors The Cure in general respects the taking away of the causes and repercussion and drying As concerning the Differences Some are with an inflamation in which the pain and heat is greater the condylona is hard In the Cure we must act with anodyne half baths and perfusions Others without an inflamation which if they be new we must repel and dry if cold and inveterate we must first mollefie then disgest and dry Here take place the pouder of egg-shels burnt the oyntment of trochisks of steele one dram redeuced into pouder and mixt with oyl of roses and wax adding halfe an ounce of the juice of mulein The oyntment of the mad apple concerning which see a Castro l. 2. c. 25. de Morb. Mulier If the condiloma yeild not to these medecines it must be cut off by an instrument and astringent pouder strewed on III. The hemrods of the wombe are smal swellings like unto the hemrods of the anus raised in the necke of the wombe by an afflux of Feculent Blood The Subject is the neck of the womb for there they are where the veins doe end as in the hemrods of the anus and these are lift up by an afflux The Signs are manifest for they are discovered by the sight if a speculum matricis be applied the women looke pale and are troubled with a weariness The Cause is Feculent blood which when sometimes it flows to these veins not at its due time there stopping it becomes thicker that it cannot penetrate the orifices The Cure is order'd 1. By revulsion by opening a vein in the arme 2. By derivation by opening another in the ankle They are divided twofould I. Some are painful which by the paine it selfe are distinguisht from the courses and are cured by things that mitigate the same especially half baths and the Cataplasme of a Castro l. 2. c. 26. de Morb. Mulier And also with opium which notwithstanding is safer in the hemrods of the anus Other without pains to which what is and shal be said ought to be applied II. Some are open which flow either moderately and then the business ought to be comitted to nature Or too much so that the strength is dejected and there is feare least an evil habit of body be induced and then for revulsion blood must be taken from a vein of the arme at several times For purging myrobalanes tamarinds and rhubarb serve At last we must act with things that stop blood Others are blind from which no blood at al flowes forth The Cure is perfected by emptying of blood by emollition and fomentation of the part with mollefiers and things opening the mouthes of the veins and discussing the matter By artificially opening
either a too plentiful or more continued purgation of them than is convenient arising either from the fault of the blood or of the womb or of the veins There is not much need of signs especially if there follow a want of appitite crudety an evil color of the face a swelling of the feet and the rest of the body an atrophy cachexy c. The cause we have layd on the blood the womb or the veins but whence these are in fault shal be explained in the differences The cure is difficult if it be of long continuance None at al if it happen to a woman growing old It reqiures 1. A restraint of them by revulsion interception thickning of the blood stopping up the vessels by astringent means and other things Yet it must be stopt by degrees if there be a great plenty of blood and it happen by way of crisis the which falls out seldom Here take place Heurnius his pouder of the seed of white henbane white poppy each one dram of the bloodstone red coral each half a dram camphure half a scruple given half a dram weight The pouder of amber sanguis draconis the bloodstone red corral purslane seeds each one dram pomegranate flowers two scruples easterne bole armenick two drams given from one dram in three ounces of plantane water Asses milk with steel Ferdinandus his aqua mirabilis histor 33. The trochisks de carabe the benes of a man strongly calcined Zacutus his pills l. 9. prax histor p. 185. His plaister there The plaister of saxonia made of the sut of a chimney volatil floure c. a pessary made of heggs and asses dung with the juice of plantane and the mucilage of quinse seeds Specificks are inwardly Forestus his pouder of a turtil l. 28. obs 10. The salt of the ashes of the same the thin skin of geese feet dryed and given from one dram to two scrupels Outwardly a girdle of the leaves of bastard black hellebore bruised Of which Renealmus obser 21. The differences are divers which do cheifly respect the causes 1. One is from blood which 1. either is derived from the bottom of the womb in which the blood is blacker and for the most part clotted Or from the neck which is more ruddy and fluid 2. 'T is either plentiful or sharp or serous Of which in the following difference Another from the moistness of the womb of which see formerly Another from the fault of the Veins concerning which consult with the third difference One is from plenty of blood which is known by this that either the vessels are opened or broke in women especially whose courses have stopt a long while and afterwards do breake forth more plentifully There are signs of a plentitude the blood which comes forth doth easily concrete into clots In the Cure we must respect 1. Bleeding which if it be ordered for evacuation it concernes a vein in the arme the liver veine cheifly If the strength be feeble 't is ordered in the salvatella of each hand if it be for revulsion it must be done at several times because being repeated it revells more powerfully 2. Cupping-glasses which for evacuation may be applied to any part if you except the lower as to the back shoulders and that with scarification for revulsion they ought to be set to the breasts without scarification and upon a difficulty of breathing ensuing they must be removed 3. Ligatures frictions of the armes c. Another from sharp blood which is known by this that there is a corrosion of the vessels joyned with it there are signs of choler The blood is detained and corrupted in the womb it slides forth in greater quantity In the Cure let purging be administred by syrup of roses solutive and leaves of senny See things that thicken it above mentioned Another from serous and watery blood which is known by this that either the liver is faulty by its weakness or the kidnies by reason of their weakness do not attract the serum The blood flowes forth in lesse quantity and is not easily clotted that which is flowed forth if it be received on a linnin cloath and dryed in the shade discovers it self by the colour The Cure attends the diseases themselves III. One is from an Anastomosis in the cure of which observe that hot things ought to be mixt with cold least the veins be obstructed the ventilation of heat be prohibited and a feaver induced that pessaries may be applied if the opening be in the vessels of the neck where oake leaves and unguentum Commitissae are good that baths must not be used unless they be somwhat cold or whose astringent power overcomes their heat Another is from a Diapedis●s which happens very rare it presently requires astringent topicks Another from a Breaking which happens either from a plenitude or from causes that stir the blood especially from hard labor and premising the opening of a vein if ther be need 't is cured by conglutinating medicines Another from a corrosion which is known from hence that little blood flowes somtimes purulent somtimes serous It ariseth from a sharp and corrupt blood somtimes also from sharp medicines amongst Astringents is commended the root of dropwort or ' its decoction Article VIII Of the Womans flux and gonorrhaea The womans flux which otherwise is exprest by the name of the whites is an inordinate voiding from the womb of an excrementitious humor by its whole nature differing from blood collected by the fault either of the whole or of some part 'T is called the womans because it affects women and truly virgins also when as the causes take place in them and there are examples of it Yet more commonly those of riper age especially if they be indewed with a moist and cold constitution do lead a delicate and idle life and feed upon cold and moist nourishments old women also and that unto death by reason of the plenty of flegm and the weakness of the concocting faculty There is no need to enquire the Signs the affect is made known by the relation of the patient her self It differs from a gonorrhaea because in that the matter of the seed flows forth whiter thicker and at longer intervals and 't is voided in less quantity From a nocturnal polution because this is joyned with a phansie of a venereal business and happens only in the sleep From the discolored courses because they observe their periods though not alwaies exactly they do not happen to women with child and those troubled with the suppression of the courses they shew a red colour From matter out of the ulcers of the womb because then the signs of an ulcer stand forth the matter it self is thicker and whiter It it be sanious 't is besmeared with blood and voided with pain We have laid the Cause upon an Excrementitious Humor which Somtimes is raised by purging Medicines Nature being stirred up by their use to attempt excretions somtimes by Baths Nature casting off
that it cannot afterwards contract it self And in case the Reins do not draw unto themselves the Wheyish moisture remains mixed with the bood and being spread al over the Body it affords matter for the Dropsie and Cachexy III. Seed unseasonably retained causes heavyness of the whol body and if it be corrupted it Causes most greivous accidents being voided in too great a Quantity it dissipates the natural heat weekens the whole Body heaps up crudities hurts the Nerves brings the Palsie and weakness of the mind Title II. Of the Method of preserving Health Chap. I. Of preservation of Health in general THe Method of preserving Health is a Doctrine which prescribes rules how to use the Non-Natural things in such manner as to preserve the body in health The End thereof is therefore the Conservation of Health which consists in Preservation of the temper of the whol body and a I its parts and of their specifical proprieties and occult qualities and of the due shape of the Organick parts and of that unity which is common to hoth Those Precepts are either most General General or Special I. The most General are as it were common principles by which convenient diet is governed and they are these following I. That whatever is according to Nature must be preserved II. That we must alwaies aime at a Mediocrity For too much of any thing is an Enemy to nature which Phocylides excellently expressed Eate and drink and discourse with moderation Moderation is the best thing in the world and Excess is destructive III. That sudden changes are to be avoided For much at once or suddenly to empty or fil to heat or cool or any other waies to alter the body is dangerous as Hippocrates has it in his second book Aphorisme 51. IV. We must not lightly alter Custom For Custom is a new nature and things to which we have been long time accustomed though bad are not so troublesome as those to which we have not been used as Hippocrates in his 50. Aphorisme of the second Book instructs us Now after what manner Custome is a new Nature and what power it has over our actions natural vital and animal and over the parts of our bodies see in Renatus Moreau upon the 15. Chapter of Schola Salerni p. 215. and Senertus in his Paralipomena page 48. V. Bodies perfectly in health must be cherished with things like such as recede from the exact state of Health ought by little and little modrately to be reduced to a contrary condition VI. We must so far be careful to preserve occult proprieties as that the temper of the body may not be hurt VII The inbred Heat of al the parts must be preserved with things moderately hot and moderately astringent II. The General precepts concerning the nonnatural things wil be delivered best according to their order in which we reckoned them in the foregoing Title I. The Aire therefore 1. Must be chosen temperate pure not stinking free as being most healthful and that aire must be avoided which is ful of corrupt exhalations 2. We must by al means avoid●●●hopping out of an hot aire into a cold or 〈◊〉 ●f a cold into an hot 3. A cold aire must be altered by a fire by hangings by a stove an hot with cold water powred out of one vessel into another or sprinkled upon the floore by strewing of roses water lillyes boughs of willow and Agnus Castus A moist with a bright fire and perfumes a drie by sprinkling of water and with moistning herbs a pestilential with burning aromatick woods and franckincense 4. Those that have leisure must walk out into the fields to enjoy the open aire 5. In the the morning 't is good to walk about the mountaines in the evening about the fountaines and rivers both because the Aire is in those parts more pure and bright and about the fountaines and rivers 't is lightened and clarified by the fetting Sun also because in the morning we are not very hot by reason of the foregoing night in the Evening in regard of the heat of the Midday sun we may be delighted with the coole aire of the waters II. Touching meat we must observe some things in general and some in special I. In general observe 1. That we must choose such meats as are most temperate and familiar to our Natures such as wel bak't bread flesh of beasts and such things as they afford for food fishes c. Of bread the best is that which is wel leavened ful of eyes wel kneaded and wel baked in an oven not too hot seasned indifferently with salt and made of the best wheate 2. Also we must use a most simple diet and of several sorts to avoid satiety provided that it be not at the same meale of different substances and different qualities but of the same nature that it may be digested with the same heat in one and the same space of time and that we eat not over much 3. We must have a special Eye to custom by the power whereof some have fed on poyson without hurt 4. The worser but more pleasing meat and drink is to be preferred before that which is better and not so delightful For the Stomach greedily artracts straitly embraces and happily digests such kind of meats II. Particularly we must have an Eye to the Quantity Choyce Sawces Time and Order of which I shal treat when I handle the diet of persons of a middle Age. III. Of the rest there is nothing to be said in general only this may be added that we must according to the advice of Celsus take heed lest in health we consume that which should assist us in sickness It is better daily to use moderate exercise to prevent the collection of superfluours excrements than to use purgations or other medicaments Read more of this subject in the Guide to Physick and Chyrurgery Riverius Practice of Physick and his Observations and the London Dispensatory Al of the last Editions Englished by me Chap. 2. Of preservation of Health in Special and first of the good Habit. Article 1. Of preserving the Health of wel habited persons Point 1. Of preserving the Health of Infants Children and youths SO much shal suffice to have said of preservation of Health in general let us now see how health is to be preserved in several sorts of people And this preservation is either of wel constituted or Intemperate persons Wel habited or wel constituted persons are either Infants both such as are in the womb and such as are born or Children or Youth or Men of Middle Age or Old Men. I. Children in the Womb wil fare wel if the woman with child shal do some things and avoid other some Among things to be avoided are 1. Aire which is moist and southern the stink of candles put out and which arises from Castoreum brimstone and such like things 2. Also the smell of strong herbs as rue penneroial Mint and of sweet smelling
Roses Rue Elder Scorpions Storax Mullen Violets Boiled Oiles compound are these following of Capers Castoreum Costus St. Johns wort Lilies Marjorum Mandrake Nard Poppy Pepers Foxes The stillatitious oiles most in use are these Of Wormwood of dil of Angelica of Anis Orenge-peeles May-butter Benzoin Calamus aromaticus Camphire Cardamoms Caraway Cloves Waxe rectified Chamaemel Chervil Cinnamon Bark of Citron Cumin Cubebs Euphorbium Fenel Galbanum Guajacum Hyssop Juniper berries juniper wood of Tiles ph●losophick of Mace Marjerom Mastich Baum Mints Myrrhe rectified Of Nutmeg of Origanum of Peper of Peny-roial Rosemary of Roses of Sage of Savine Wildbettony Spike White amber yellow Amber Tartar Terpentine Zedoarie V. Epithemata Epithemes are applied to the external parts of the Body and are made of distilled waters juices infusions suitable to the part and disease To them belong Oxyrrhodina Rose-vinegred Epithemes which are peculia●ly applied to the forhead with frequent reiterations to coole and repel They were anciently made of Oile of Roses and vinegar now a daies distilled Oiles and waters as also juices and pouders are sometimes added VI. Pumping or pouring is when common water bathe water decoctions Milke Oile c. are pumped or poured down upon some part or suffered to dril upon the same out of a cock or spout of sisterne or Ewer They are applied cheifly to three places viz. the suture of the Crown of the Head the Beginning of the spinal Marrow and to warme the stomach VII Lotions are either of the whole Bodie and are called Baths or of the parts Head Hands Feet Belly c. They are made of the same things as fomentations are made of Point 2. Of external solid Medicaments External solid Medicaments are 1. Suppositories 2. Pesseries 3. Plaisters 4. Cerates 5. Caustick● Suppositories are sollid Medicaments which are put up into the fundament being formed round like a wax candel four or five fingers breadth longe They are made of Honey boiled so thick that it may be wrought and fashioned with a mans fingers into which other requisite materials are sprinkled They are used to loosen the Belly the patient being weak to clense and consolidate an ulcer in the Rectum Intestinum to stop paine draw back humors flowing upwards and kil worms in the Guts II. Pessaries are made of towzed wool or cotton wreathed into the forme of a mans finger impregnated with some juice or Liquor either alone or with pouders commixed or of beaten medicaments made up in a mortar with convenient liquors as Fat Oile waxe Ladanum Galbanum Honey and wrought into the forme of a pessarie or of green herbes a little bruised and bound with a string into the shape of a pessarie Or of pouders received in thin wool or Cotton and bound with a thrid into the forme of a Pessarie Or of pouders received in thin wool or Cotton and put into a round bag made of thin cloath which may be included in a round silver Instrument with holes on the sides made for that purpose III. Plaisters properly so called are Medicaments which being spred upon linnen Cloathes or leather do stick fast to the Skin of the body are the same with cerotes in respect of the matter save that metals and mineralls and litteridge for the most part are added which give it solidity of substance Al which are boiled to a just consistence and being cooled are made up into rowles Sometimes before the Mass is quite cold Cereclothes of old linnen are dipped in and taken forth Emplasters improperly so called which are of a middle consistence between a plaster and a Cataplasme are made without waxe pitch and those glewish materials or fire with honey mucilages and a certaine clammy creame or a little wax dissolved in Oile The cheife Plasters are Album coctum Apostolicum Arthriticum Basilicum and Lapide Calaminari Diachylon simplex Magnum Parbum cum Gummi Citrinum de Crusta panis de Baccis Lauri de Meliloto de Minio Mundificativum Nervinum Oxycroceum Diaphenicum calidum frigidum de ranis Vigonis de Rhabardaro Sparadrap Stichticum Paracelsi Tetrapharmacum Vesicatorium IV. Cerotes which consist much of wax and are not of so hard a consistence as Plasters are made either of wax Oile and Rosin only or of the same pouders being added besides so that the proportion of oiles to pouders is octuple to wax triple or sextuple to rosin twelve times as much Besides al these fats and gums are added juices roots fruits or seeds which must first be boiled and the colature is afterwards to be boiled with oile til the watrish liquor be consumed The Principle are Cerot of Betonie Diacalciteos Diapalma Infrigidans Galeni Oesypi Diapixer pro Hermosis Santalinum Sparadrappum Vigonis Stomachale V. Cauteria Cauteries are medicaments which have a power to burne the Body and to raise a crust and they are either Actual which consist of red hot metals of which in our discourse of Chirurgerie or potential which are made by burning medicaments and composed of Lie which soap is made of boiled into a consistence of Salt or of a stone almost which is vulgarly called Lapis corrosivus An Ulcer made by a Caustick or Cautery is commonly called a fontanel or issue Point 3. Of external medicaments of a middle consistence External medicaments of a middle Consistence are 1. Balsams 2. Liniments 3. Vnguents 4. Cataplasmes I. Balsams are made of oiles incorporated with white wax deparated or oile of Nutmegs by expression or the marrow of a Calfe washed or manna clarified Also the extracts of things whose balsom is desired may be mingled with them The most usual are these of Angelica of Anise An Apoplectick Balsom with musk and civet of Orenges of Cloves of Cinnamon of Citrons Cubebes of Lavendar of Mace of Marjorom of Mints of Nutmegs of Rose-mary of Roses of Rue of Amber Zedoary There are also distilled Balsomes which are nothing else but distilled spirits and a potion of oile proceeding from rosins gums spices and such like drawn out with spirit of wine The most usual are Balsamus vitae Nervinus Antiarthriticus c. II. Liniments are Medicaments of a middle consistency between an oile and an unguent and are made by adding to Oiles Butter Fat Suet Marrow juices pouders rosins teares of trees in this proportion for the most part that to one ounce of oiles two drams or three of fats be added one dram of spices somtimes though seldom a dram of wax is added Al are mixed either with fire or without fire or boiling sometimes they are set over the fire to melt the gums and fats and sometimes they are a little boiled to consume and wast away the juices added III. Ointments differ from Liniments by their thicker consistence and are made either without fire or with fire of fats oiles gums pouders usual ointments of herbes roots seeds macerated in water wine juices oiles and boiled to the Consumption of the liquor The most usual are of Agrippa
hair of the Juice of Ivy of Fleuellen of Scabious of Tobacco Oxymel simple of Squils Lohoch of Colts-foot of Fox-lungs Lohoch sanum and Expertum de Passulis de althea Conserves of Bortys Veronica Pulmonaria maculosa Hedera terrestris Electuaries Treacle Mithridate Speices diaireos simple Diatragacanthum frigidum Diapenidium Diathamarum Fecular Aronis Flowers of Brimstone of Benzoin Trochiscks Bechic●albi and nigri Diaireos II. External Heaters are I Of the simples al those in a manner which we formerly mustered II. Of compounds Oiles of Orice Rue Costus Cheiri Sweet almonds and bitter Lillies Line Fatts Goose-fat which most penetrates Deer-suer Hens-grease Mucilages of Lin-seed Fenigreek marshmallowes with Safron Ointments of Marsh-mallowes Pectoral ointment and Unguentum Resumptivum Point 2. Of cooling Chest-medicaments Cooling Chest medicat●●●s are internal or external I. The internal are I. Of simples Roots of Garden Endive Lamb-tongueplantane Polypody Leaves of porslane Water-lillys Colewort Flowers of Violets mallowes Water lillys Bugloss Cichory red poppy roses Seeds the four great and smal cool-seeds seeds of poppy mallowes quinces barly Fruits Hungarian spanish prunes mulberries Jujubes sebestens of water thistle of sweet briar dried Woods red sanders yellow sanders white Sanders Gum tragant Arabick Animals River crabs whey Goates-milk II. Of compounds Waters of a capon simple and compound of veale mallowes Violets water-lillies red popie Distilled oiles of purple violets sweet almonds Emulsions of white poppie porslane cold seeds Decoctions Decoctum pectorale in the London Dispensatory of a Capon Syrups of violets Jujubees Water-lillies Gourds red poppie porslane Dialth●ae Fernelij Lohoch de Psyllio of reisins of Cole stalkes of po●slane of marsh-mallowes Electuaries Diacodium of the Physitians of Augsburge new Treacle Conserves of roses violets with boile-Armeniack Spanish Lettuce Species Diatragacanthi frigidi Diapenidij Roules of diatragacanthum frigidum Diamargaritum frigidum diapenidium sugar of roses in Lozenges II. External are I. Of simples the Leaves before aleadged Animals fresh may butter not salted barrowes grease Mucilages of Fleawort seeds of Quince seeds of Fenigreek of marsh-mallowes Oiles of violets white lillies Article 4. Of Cardiac or Heart-Medicines Point 1. Of Heating Heart-Medicines Cardiack-medicaments are such as are good for the Heart whether given in or outwardly applied and they are also hot or cold Internal are I. Of simples Roots of Scordium Doronicum Angelica Devils-bit Master-wort Vince-toxicum Scorzonera Dictamnus Contrajerva Tormentil Leaves of Baum scordium sage Tormentil carduus Scabious Fluellen Cardiaca Goates Rue Garden and wild Cresses Flowers of the Gilloflower rosemary scabious Centaury Baum Tormentil Borrage Bugloss Seeds of Citrons Aurenges Carduus Rue Lovage Navew Spices Nutmeg Cassia lignea Safron Cloves Woods Lignum Aloes Gums myrrh Camphire Benzoin Mastich Sea-commodities Amber Ambar-greise Earths and stones Bole-Armeniack Terra sigillata Turcica and stringensis Perles Corals fragments of the five precious stones Animals Bezoar stone Harts-horne Rhinocerots Horn Bone out of the Heart of a Stag. II. Of compounds spirits of Elder and juniper berries baume Elixir of Citrons with spirit of muscadine Distilled waters Of Carduus baum Citron-flowers scabious marigolds scordium Carbuncles Cinnamon with Cordial flowers Bezoardica senerty Distilled oyls of Cinnamon Citron baum Ambar Cloves Nutmegs Tinctures of ambar Elixir proprietatis Extracts of Angelica Carduus Citron peeles Lignum aloes Vince toxicum Zedoary Safron Essences the magistery of Cinnamon Essence of Ambar of Citrons of Perles of Vervaine Juyces of Citrons with their barks of Pomgranates Gelly of Harts horne made with Vinegar of Harts horne and scordium Syrups of Citron peeles with and without musk and Ambar Scordium Carduus Orenges baum Gilloflowers Pomgranates veronica Borrage Bugloss Gallangal Conserves of Baum Citron-flowers Orenges Gillowflowers Marygolds Borrage Bugloss Preserves of Citron peeles Orenge peeles Indian Nut Scorzonera roots elecampane roots Electuaries Treacle Mithridate Confectio Alkermes Diascordium Fracastorij Species and pouders of Diamargartium calidum Diamoschi Diambrae Bezoardicus II. External are I. Of simples those which have been reckoned up before 1. The compounds likewise are the same viz. waters juices distilled oiles Of these Epithemes bags Fomentations and Linements are made Point 2. Of cooleing Heart-medicaments Cooleing Hart-medicaments are either Internal or External I. The Internal are I. Of simples Roots of Dandelyon Sorrel Leaves of Sorrel wood-sorrel Water-lillyes Flowers of violets Cichory Water-lillies Seeds the four cold seeds Fruits of Rasberry red Corants Barberries Citrons Aurenges Pomegranats Sweet briar berries dried Woods the three Sanders Earths and medicines from Animals are those before mentioned II. Of compounds Waters of Sorrel Straw-berries black Cherries Quinces Hart-Stones Juyces of Citrons Pomegranates Rasberries Vinegar of Roses Gelly of Harts-horn made with Elder-flower Vinegar Syrups of juyce of Citrons of Pomegranates of Wood sorrel of juyce of Red Corrants Strawberries Lorrals Violets Conservs of Citron flowers of Aurenges of the pulp of Citrons of Roses of Acacia Preservs of Red and White Corants Barberies Citron Meates Eglancine berries Species and Powders of Diamargaritum frigidum Diatrion santalon Magistery of Perles of Corals Article 5. Of Stomach Medicaments Point 1. Of hot Stomach Medicaments Stomach medicaments are such as heat the stomach or cool it and that either taken inwardly or outwardly applied Internal stomach-heaters are 1. Of simples Roots of Pimpinel Rhaponticum Galangal Zedoary Calamus Aromaticus Caryophyllata Leaves of Roman and common Wormwood red and garden Mint Cardiaca Cichory Agrimony Marjerom Seeds the four greater and lesser cool seeds Coriander prepared Fruits Juniper berries bay-berries Aurenges Indian Nut. Spices Nutmeg Ginger Mace Cloves Cinnamon Galangal Cubebs al sorts of Pepper Cassia Lignea Woods Lignum Aloes Guajacum Citron Peels Orenge Peels Gums of Mastich Sea-medicines Ambar Ambar-greise Of Compounds Spirits of Muscadine of Rhenish Wine of vitriol of Mastich of Wormwood of Rosemary of Cinnamon of bread Distilled Waters of Mints of Betony Sage of Cinnamon with and without Wine Elixir vitae of Baum with Wine of Zedoary with Wine Distilled Oyls of Peper Calamus Aromaticus Cloves Mace Cinnamon Caraway Fennel Wormwood Orenge Peels Tinctures Elixir Proprietatis of Amber of Corals of Sassafras Wood. Extracts of Lignum aloes Wormwood calamus aromaticus Essences of Rosemary Citrons Wormwood Aurenges whereunto belong Salt of Wormwood Juniper Syrups of Cinnamon Mints Wormwood Betony Mastich Oximel sciliticum Syrup of St. Johns-wort flowers Conservs of Wormwood Mints Betony Red Roses vitriolated Preservs of China Ginger true Acorus Galangal Citron Peels Orenge peels Nutmegs Indian Nut Myrobalans Species and Pouders Aromaticum Rosatum Diatrion pipereon Diaxyloaloes Imperial species Stomach-pouder of Brickmannus II. External are 1. Of simples such as have been already reckoned up and of Gums Ladanum Tacamahaca Styrax calamites 2. Of Compounds there are besides the aforesaid the Balsams of Peru Camemel Romane Oyntments Stomach Oyntment Martiatum magnum Emplasters and Cataplasmes Emplastrum Stomachle de Crusta panis de Baccis Lauri de mastiche Point 2. Of Stomach Cooling Midicaments Cooling
Vitriol a●●● spirit of Sulphur of salt Distilled waters of Cichory Sorrel Water Lillies Strawberries Syrups of the juyce of Cichory Endive Sorrel wood-sorrel juyce of Citrons and the rest reckoned among cooling stomach medicines Conserves Preserves and species see in the same place II. External are I. Of simples the same fore-cited II. Of compounds Oiles of Roses Quinces Water Lillies unripe olive Ointments of Sanders cooling Ointment of Galen Unguentum rosatum of Mesue Emplasters Cerotum santalinum Diaphenicon frig●●● 〈◊〉 pla●ster of the juice of Hemlock Article 7. Of Splenetick Medicaments Point 1. Of warming spleen medicaments Spleen medicaments are either heating or cooling each of them internal or external I. The internal Heating are I. Of simples Roots of Ferne which are appropriate of Scorzonera of Florentine orice of polypody of the Oake of Avens of wild radish Leaves of true scolopendrium Harts-tongue Scurvygrass Tamarisk Dodder Hops Fumitory Brooklime Chervil Galiposis ground oake Flowers of Hops Broome Elder Fumitory Liver-wort Seeds of Ash bishops-weed Watercresses Chervil mustard Nettle wild parsnip Scurvy grass Spices Safron Epithymum Woods Sassafrs Xyloaloes Barks of capar roots middle rind of ash-roots Elder roots Tamarisk roots Gum Amoniacum dissolved in Vinegar of squils II. Of compounds Spirits of wine tartarized of Centaury of vitriol of Mars of Tartar simple and compound of watercresses of Scurvy grass of Guajacum of juniper berries Waters of Dodder of barm compound of Hops of Water-cresses of Scurvy-grass of Fumitory Tinctures of Mars Extracts of Joves Spleen Scolopendrium Harts-tongue Scordium Fumitory Polypody Essences of Scurvy-grass Epithymun● Ground-oake Fumitory Dodder Capa●●● Syrupps of Ceterach or Scolopendrium or Fernelus of Epithymum of Scurvy-grass of Apples the Scotbutick Syrup of Forestus Conserves of Scurvy grass of Ceterach of Broom-flowers of Fumitory of Fluellen of Chamaedrys Pimpinel Species of Dialacca Diacurcuma Diacapparum of Hollerius Tartarus Vitriolatus II. External are I. Of simples those before mentioned II. Of compounds Oyls of Capars Orice Cheiri Rue Peach kernels Almonds Scorpions Ointments of dialthea Martiatum de Arthanita de Ammoniaco Spleneticum Emplasters of Melilote diachylum ireatum Emolliens Foresti diasulphuris Rulandi Point 3. Of cooling Spleen-Medicaments Cooling Spleen Medicaments are internal or external I. The internal are I. Of simples Roots Of Cichory-like plants and of which mention is made among liver Medicines Leaves Flowers Fruites Seeds may be also fetcht from thence To these you may ad the barks of willow roots II. Of compounds are the same likewise to which you may ad medicaments prepared of tartar and of steel Trochisks of Sanders spodium Carabe Barberries II. The external are I. Of simples Roots of Mandrake Leaves of white henbane Hemlock Willow Water-lillies II. Of compounds see those reckoned among cooling Liver-Remedies Article 8. Of Nephritick Medicaments Point 1. Of heating Nephriticks or kidny remedies Nephritick Medicaments are either heating or cooling both are internal or external I. Internal heaters are I. Of Simples Roots of restharrow Saxifrage Filipendula Pimpinel Lycoris Marsh-mallow Polypody Lovage Leaves of maiden haire Wal-rue Fluellen Chervil Nettle ground-ivy Pellitory of the wal Feverfew Restharow Flowers of Broome Spike Elder Betony the yellow of violets St. Johns-wort flowers Seeds the four greater and lesser hot seeds persly gromwel Saxifrage Cherry-stone-kernels Peach-stone-kernels Oake of Jeru●●lem Beanes Fruits Juniper berries Ivy-berries winter-cherries bitter Almonds Sweet-briar berries Corants Spices Cassia lignea Spica Indica Safron Woods Lignum Sanctum Nephriticum Tamarisk Gums Terpentine Myrrh Mastich Olibanum Minerals Lapis judaicus Lapis Nephriticus From animals the stones of Perches Crabs-eyes Earth-wormes Eggs-shels Jawes of a Pike II. Of compounds spirit of salt Terpentine Elder berries Strawberries Cherties Vitriol Feverfew Distilled Waters of Rest-harrow saxifrage Persley Hedera terrestris Alkekengy Matricaria Elder flowers Oyls of Orenges Juniper peach-kernels cherries bitter almonds Tinctures Elixir proprietatis of Ambar Extracts of veronica Ground-ivy Lycorice Syrups of Maiden hair of Fernelius Byzanrinus so called of dialthea Oxymel Conserves of Hedera terristris veronica Sweet briar-berry Spices and pounders Lithontripticon Tartarus Vitriolatus Restharrow-Salt salt of Beane ham chervil Nettles II. External are I. Of simples such as were before aleadged II. Of compounds Oiles of scorpions white lillyes Ointments Martiatum Agrippae Aregon dialthea Emplasters diachylon simple Oxycroceum Melilote Point 2. Of cooling Nephriticks Cooling Nephritcks are internal or external I. Internal are I. Of simples Roots of Grass Strawberries Water-Lillies Leaves of Porslane Willow Venus Basin Hearts-ease Lettuce Flowers of Water Lillies Violets Roses Beanes Seeds the fouer cold white poppy seed seed of purple violets Fruits see among the stomach and liver coolers Stones Christal II Of compounds Waters of Strawberries Violets barly porslane Lettuce Juyces of Citrons Strawberries porslane Syrups of Water Lillies Strawberries porslane syrup of the juyce of Cirrons Con●erves of Acacia violets porslane II. External are the same to which ad of the compounds Oyls of Roses water lillies sugar of Lead Vnguents The Ointment of Roses of Mesue Galens cooling Ointment Article IX Of Vterine Medicaments Point I. Of heating Vterine or Womb-Medicaments Vterine Medicaments are either Heating or Cooling and they are internal or external I. The internal are I. Of simples Roots of Peony Valerian Laserpitium Angelica Pimpinella Bryony Aristolochia rotunda Leaves of Mugwort Rue round Birthwort Mercury Fever-few Sabine Betony Flowers of Betony Chery Elder St. Johns-wort Stechados spikenard Seeds foure hot mountaine osier red vetched Rosemary peony Fruits Indian Nut Juniper Berries Orenges Spices Cinnamon Cassia lignea Nutmegs Cubebs Graines of Paradise Safron Woods Lignum aloes Ash Guajacum From Animals Castoreum II. Of compounds Waters of Mugwort Hysop Elder Cinnamon Zedoary yellow stock-gillo flowers betony with wine Oyls of Cinnamon Angellica Ambar Cloves Tinctures the Uterine Elixir of Crollius omitting salt of mother of perle Extracts Hystericum majus and minus of Quercetanus of the Liver and Splene of an Oxe of Baume of Lignum Aloes Syrups of Mugwort Feverfew Orenges Baume Cinnamon Conserves of Marjerom Betony Baum Rose-mary Mary golds Preserves of Acorus citron peeles Orenges Nutmegs Zedoary Pouders Diacalamint Diaxyloaloes diacinnamomum II. External are I. Of simples the greatest part of the foresaid to which may be added Gum Olibanum storax bdellium myrrh Ladanum Assafetida Galbanum Opopanax Sagapenum Ambar From Animals Castoreum civet Musk. II. Of compounds Oyls of cheiri Angelica Rue Castoreum Nard oile Scorpions Nutmegs Vnguents of Bay-berries Gum Caranns ceratum matricale or of Galbanum c. Point 2 Of wombe-cooling Medicaments Wombe cooling medicaments are also either internal or external I. The Internal are I. Of simples Roots of bistort comsery Leaves of Strawberry Shepherds-pouch Vinca pervinca Plantane Oake great comfry Porslane Nettles loosestrife Flowers of Roses Quinces Balaustians Water-Lillies Loose-strife St. Johns wort Comfery Willow Seeds of porselane Plantane Henbane white-poppy Fruits of Acacia Pomegranates Medlers Myrtils Woods Sanders Gums Dragons-blood Earths and miniralls Bole Armeniack Red
1. By Diet which must yeild very good nourishment 2. By the frequent Evacuation of the prepared Humors 3. By Removing the Contment Cause by Emollients and Discussers either mixed together or used alone one after another interchangably The milder sort in persons tender and soft fleshed and when the Tumor is new The stronger in harder bodies and where the Scirrhus is old Fabricius Hildanus his Plaister of Hemlock mentioned in the 25. Observation of his 3. Century A Cataplasme of Briony Roots Goats-dung and Vrin are very good 4. If it come to suppuration by cleansing away the quittor with the Plaister of Diachylon simplex omitting heaters and section or lancing least it turn to a Cancer It is divided into a true or Legitimate which is void of sense and in which hairs grow upon the part for which there is no Cure and a bastard which is contrarily disposed to the former Article II. Of a Cancer A Cancer is a round Tumor blue or blackish having Veins round about it ful and swelling resembling the feet of a Crab and springing from black Choller The SUBJECT are parts of the Body as wel external as internal especially the moister and upper parts as the Dugs of Women The SIGNS are drawn from the manner of its Rise At first it s hardly so big as a bean in the progress it exceeds a Wal-Nut and an Eg it is hard of a Leaden or livid color or Else blackish with heat pain and pulsation the veins round about swel with black blood and resemble the feet of a Crab. The CAUSE is adust and black Choler hanging in the veins and by its thickness unable to pass along which springs partly from Nutriment affording such an Humor which has not been drawn by the Spleen partly from an hot burning distemper The CURE is difficult in al both because it comes from a stubborne and Malignant Cause and because it lurks in the deep veins It is not to be undertaken if the Cancer be hidden If it be seated in a Cavity of the body in the palate Fundament or womb There is no Cure if it be confirmed and seated in some noble part of the body It is of some Hope if it be smal fresh and stick in the surface of the body How it is to be performed see in the differences As for what concernes the differences 1. One sort is Exulcerated which is easily known and is caused by a matter sharper than ordinary It has the appearance of corrupted flesh with stench filthy matter coming forth an horrid aspect Lips very hard and turned in There is a slow Feaver conjoyned Swowning black or yellow sains or Blood-water running out of blood c. It s Cure is either Palliative by gentle-dryers and coolers or true 1. By Incision to the quick after which the corrupt blood must be pressed forth the Ulcer concocted mundified see Hartmans ponder in his Chapter of a Cancer in the brest or Dug filled with flesh c. 2. By burning either actual or potential if the profounder and greater vessels be thereby occupied Another sort is not Vlcerated which arises from a milder matter Is Cured 1. By Diet Moystening and cooling 2. By Blood-letting 3. By repeated Purgations of the Humor with extract of Hellebore pills of Lapis Lazuli after it has been prepared with Fumitory Hops Juyce of Fragrant Apples c. 4. By Application of External Medicaments in which case gentle Repellers are useful as the compound of Frogs-spawn Discussers which have no biting quality as Pulvis Benedictus of Hartman the Magistery of Crabsshels c. See Agricola also T. 1. Page 145. II. Another springs from Suppression of the Courses Another of the Haemarrhoides The Cure must be applied to those Diseases Chap. 5. Of Tumors springing from Wheyish Salt and Cholerick Humors mingled together Article I. Of Scabbyness TUmors springing fom mixt Humors do arise either from salt Wheyish and Cholerick Humors or from Flegm Melancholy and Choler so that the conjunct cause is no longer an Humor but some other matter bred of Humors Hereunto belong Scabbyness the Grecian Leprosie Phlyctinae Sudamina Sirones Vari Epinyctides Alphus Leuce Impetigo and Gutta rosacea The Scab Is a Tumor arising from corrupted blood vexing the Patient with distemper and Exulceration of the skin The SIGNS are set down in the definition The CAUSE is corrupt blood mixt with black choler and salt Flegm which either comes from suitable Diet especially when the Liver is distempered with Heat or it is corrupted by contagion and being brought unto the skin it sticks therein and causes Exulceration The CURE is accomplished 1. With Diet which requires boyled meates 2. By Contemperation and Evacuation of the Humors and reducing the Liver to its due temper by the Syrup of Coral of Quercetanus It is divided three manner of waies I. One is Symptomatical to which what has been said ought to be applied Another is Critical which breaks forth after acute or long Diseases II. One sort is moist out of which much sains or blood-water Issues It is caused by Salt Flegm T is Cured more easily than the dry Scab and that 1. By Evacuation to which end whey of Goates-Milk and Fumitory are much commeded 2. By provoking Sweat either by half an ounce of Spirit of Dwarf-Elder and two ounces and an half of Fumitory Water or by Spirit of Guaiacum or Antimonium Diaphoreticum if it be more hard to be removed than ordinary 3. By Application of External Medicaments And here bathes of fresh water and brimstone stone bathes are useful Also to apply the Yellow middle bark of Frangula with Vinegar And Sinnertus his Oyntment Book 5. Page 1. Chap. 27. Another Dry in which nothing is voided or a little quantity of thick matter and the Ulcers are Lead colored T is Caused by an adust Humor Cured with difficulty after the same manner as the former having respect to the Causes Another sort is termed Volatica the Running Scab which infects al the skin in one night for the most part In this universal Remedies being premised t is good to wash the Scabs with the blood that comes from a Woman with the after-birth See Agricola T. Pape 280. III. There is another sort termed Malum mortuum which vexes the Patient with a Leaden and black color crusty pustles black Dry without sence or pain cheifly in the Legs It Springs from a Melancholick and Scorbutick Juyce T is Cured after the same manner having respect to the Difference Another sort is the Leprosie of the Greeks which differs only gradually from other Leprosies T is Known hereby because it Eates deeper into the Skin and scales as it were of Fishes fal of whether the Patient scratch or scratch not and the Scabs stink filthily T is Caused by black-Choler oftimes mingled with Salt Flegm Cured by the same kind of things as the Scab but stronger The distmper of the Liver must cheifly be redressed Sweat must be procured with a
arise Which is performed either by steeping the Member in hot water or by Application of a Linne Cloath wet in Lie or Application of Onions beaten in a Mortar with salt which nevertheless is not good for burns in the Eyes Exceeding Commendation is given to an Oyntment made of one part of Oyl-Olive and two parts of whites of Egs beaten together and frequently anointed on with the Feather of an Hen. 2. By opening the bladders the third day after their arising when the Scarf-skin begins to breed on fresh I. Another sort is indifferent great which is known hereby in that the part is forthwith swelled and inflamed Pustles arise wherein is contained a thin subtile water of a yellowish color the Patient complaines his skin is stretched T is Cured 1. By Cutting the Pustles that the hot and sharp Humor may flow out 2. By application of Defensatives least Humors and blood may flow to the part affected 3. By Application of tht Oyntment of Fabricius made of three ounces of fresh butter washed in rose-Rose-water Oyl of Violets Yolks of Egs and of sweet Almonds of each half an ounce Barley meal one ounce and half Saffron one scruple Mucilage of Quince seeds one ounce Wax as much as shal suffice III. Another is extream which is known hereby that in the very moment that the thing burning sticks to the body pustles arise but fal soon after the skin beneath is black or livid and Lead-colored If pricked it feels dully When the Crust fals off a putrid and profound Ulcer arises T is Cured 1. By cutting the pustles or bladders that the water which is contained in them may be dryed up 2. By Separation of the Escar the second or third day which if it cannot be effected it must in many places be cut with a Pen-knife See Fabricius his ●yntment 3. If a Gangraena begin the Cure must be applied thereunto 4. The Eschar being separated the Ulcer must be clensed filled with flesh and covered with a Skar IIII. Another is from Gunpouder in which the grains of the pouder must be taken out with a Needle or some ther Instrument If they cannot be taken out the pustles must be fuffered to arise If they arise not they must be riased by vesicatories and cut the pouder must be taken forth and the place must be washed with a Decoction of Fenugreek c. Another sort comes from thunder in which case sweat must be provoked by some Antidote The Arteries Lips Tongue Nostrils must be anointed with Treacle wine The Escar being removed Mundificatives and flesh-breeders corrected with Bezoarticks are to be applied If a bone be broken the Vulgar astringent Cataplasmes are to be avoided V. One sort is of the Face in which the Medicine of two Eg●whites Oyl of Roses two ounces Rose water one ounce has place Another is of the Eyes in which case warm brest Milk must be dropped on If a Crust be raised we must use Emollient fomentations lest the Eye lids be drawn back The skin must many times with both hands be drawn back Another is of the Joynts in which the afflux of Humors must be stopped Pain ass waging Topicks are to be applied least the Nerves be contracted or the joynt become crooked we must be very Vigilant c. But touching al these see Wilhebmus Fabricius Hildanus his Treatise of Burnings Title V. Of Luxations in Particular Chap. 1. Of Luxations of the Jaw-bone the Clavicula and the Vertebrae THe first kind of external Diseases are Luxations and they either of upper Limbes or of the Lower To the former belong the Luxation or Disjoynting of the Jaw-bone the Clavicula the Spine and Ribs the shoulder the Arms the Hands and finger joynts 1. The Luxation of the Jaw-bone is caused towards the fore part of the Face the foremost and sharp process like a beak being slipt beneath the Jugular T is known hereby both because the nether Jaw sticks out foremost and the process sticks out by the said jaw as also because the mouth continues alwaies open It arises from too much opening the mouth and gaping and stretching the Jaws whether it be by yawning or by taking some burthen by the teeth and lifting it high up yet is it hardly done because of the strength of the Muscles wherewith it is fastened to the upper parts The Cure is undertaken 1. By Reposition least the Belly void choler or vomiting be raised and it must be suddenly procured least the Brain be drawn to consent by reason of the Nerves inserted into the temporal Muscles touching which see Authors 2. By Praecaution of Inflamation and other Symptomes If the Patients neck be pained a vain must be opened in the Arme. 3. By Retention of the replaced Bone c. T is divided two manner of waies 1. Into that of one side of the Jaw and then the jaw with the Chin is bent towards one side the mouth is distorted the teeth answer not one to another And into that of both sides of the Jawes and then the whole with the chin hangs over towards the brest The temporol Muscles are stif A certain eminency is perceived in both parts 2. Into that which happens only to persons of ripe years and that has been here described and into that which betides Infants in whom because the Mandibula is divided into two parts and is joyned together in the middle of the Chin by a large gristle the said gristle being loosened by afflux of Humors or the bone being separated from the gristle which in grown persons turns to a bone it may be disjoyned towards the right or left side II. The Clavicula is disjoyned either towards the Breast-bone or contrary wise towards the top of the Shoulder-blade but seldom by reason of its firme connexion with both the bones T is known because the shoulder swels and in the place from whence the Clavicula is slipt there is a manifest Cavity T is Cured with difficulty and for the most part the Arme is deficient in some of its motions A strong binding must be used III. Luxation of the Vertebraes is either outwards or inwards T is easily Cured in Children hardly in persons grown up Chap. 2. Of Luxation of the Humerus Cubitus Radius and the Fingers TO the Laxation of the upper Limbs there likewise belongs Luxation of the Humerus Cubitus Radius and Fingers I The Luxation of the Humerus or Shoulder is when the Head thereof which is round inserted into a shallow Cavity and fenced with a very loose Ligament slips out of its proper place It arises for the most part from a violent cause stretching of the Arme c. T is divided into that which is caused under the Arm-pit and then somwhat round and hard is sensibly felt under the Arme the Cubitus suddenly becomes more distant from the Ribs It may be restored either by turning round the Head of the Humerus about the neck of the Scapula or by the Heel or
by reason of the extraordinary necessity of sending forth the fiery exhalations The Mouth is bitter because choler is soakt into the inner Coat of the stomach which is common to it and the mouth The Tongue is dry and furr'd and black because the burning heat consumes the moisture of the tongue and lodges its sooty vapours therein Raving by reason of the mounting of choler into the head which if it follow trembling t is a signe that the cholerick humor is transferred out of the veins into the Nerves out of the nerves into the Brain Sleep is somtimes profound especially when the fever is not exquisite but bastard because thick vapours carried into the Brain do stop the passages thereof The CAUSE is Blood putrifying through a peculiar propriety of the liver occasioned by meates of an over heating faculty or from crude cooling meats apt to be corrupted c. Which blood is either Cholerick and then the symptomes specified in the definition are more vehement and the feaver is termed Causus exquisitus an exquisit burning feaver or Flegmatick then the fymptoms are milder the fever is termed nothus a bastard burning feaver The CURE requires that we regard the Feaver Its cause and the patients strength The feaver is terminated by sundry excressions especially when the patient happens to shake upon a critical day the signes of Coction appearing and that not by reason of the shaking but because of the Excretion whose forerunner is the shaking fit T is performed 1. By blood-letting that the burning heat of the Blood may be repressed the plenty thereof diminished and its faltiness corrected It must be done at the beginning while the patient is yet pretty strong and because the violent motion of the Disease shews we must take time while we may It must not be done at al it the Feaver have its Rise from Evacuation fasting journeying in heat of Summer drying of the Veins and consumption of the blood-Blood-water Also when Age Sex or some other thing prohibits Then Scarrifications Cupping-glasses c. must supply its place 2. By Purgation with cooling choler purges or temperate ones as pulp of Cassia syrupe of damask Roses 3. By Vomiting if there be Stomach-sickness and the stomach be vexed with Cholerick Humors which is known by the Mouths Bitterness 4. By Alteration and preparation with cooling Medicaments where note that there is then need of External Medicaments when the feaverish burning is abated with internal coolers and the putrefying Humor is for the most part drawn forth 5. By Corroboration of the Patients strength with Electuaries Lozenges c. 6. By Mitigation of Symptomes of which see in the proper Chapter 7. By Diet of which see what was said before Chap. 2. Of a continual Periodick Feaver in general A Continual Feaver keeping its Periods or Courses is Generally or Specially considered Generally considered it is a Feaver arising from Excrementitious Humors putrefying in those Veins which are of a middle size betwixt the greatest and the smallest Capillary or Third Veins abating at certain Periods of time without any Total Intermission Its Signs are that it remits of its Violence and then grows again Exorbitant at certain Periods of time but never intermits so as to leave the Patient free from Feaverish distemper more or less Its Exacerbations or Exorbitancies are not usher'd in by any cold shivering or shaking nor does any sweat follow its Remissions or Abatements It is exasperated at certain set Periods of time both by the arrival of Morbifick matter to the Heart by uneven quantities because of distance of place if it do not exactly keep its times and also by communication of new matter from the Members subservient to the second Digestion if it hold punctually its times The Causes are Excrementitious Humors which are bred in the Spleen and Liver either by their fault or the fault of the Chylus yet they may be bred in the Meseraick Veins and brought to the Liver They are not only jumbled together with the blood but also perfectly mixed therewith Their place is the Veins not the greater for so it should be a Continent Feaver nor the lesser for then it should be an Intermittent Feaver or Ague but of a middle size betwixt the great Veins and the Capillary which are smal as the Hairs of ones Head See the Method of Cure in the Sorts Article I. Of a Primary Continual Feaver Point 1. Of a Continual Tertian Feaver A continual Feaver specially considered is either Primary or Symptomatical The Primary is that which has no other Disease preceding as the occasion thereof and it is either Tertian Quotidian or Quartan A Continual Tertian is a Feaver springing from Cholorick Blood putrefying in the Branches of Vena Cava which holds continually but afflicts the Patient most every third day Its Signs are the Symptomes of continual and burning Feavers its being exasperated every third day by reason of the Nature of Choler which is so moved The Cause of its Abatement is both the distance of the place where the offensive Vapors are bred and likewise their smal quantity by which means they are all dissipated before any more can be bred to succeed in their place It s Cause is Cholerick Blood and whatsoever is apt to encrease Cholerick bad Humors in the Veins and to make them putrefie when so encreased The Cure is performed 1 By Blood-letting a Clyster being premised because the Humor is mingled with Blood 2 By Alteration Lenitives being first used in which case a little Vinegar must alwaies be added to Syrup of Roses solutive that it may pierce more easily into the Veins and not be turned by the Stomachs heat into Vapors which will cause thirst Give them fasting that Concoction may not be disturbed With Moderation lest they cause Crudities Spirit of Nitre of Salt c. are commended Topicks must be applied unto the Heart which is chiefly affected but not before the state Not cold lest the Heat driven inward and gathering Head should burn more fiercely 3. By Evacuation downwards and that in the beginning if the matter provoke if it be plentirul and the Patient strong It must be performed by gentle Medicines and let Rhubarb and Myrobalans be given in their Infusions with cooling Waters rather than in substance After Concoction if Nature be lazy 4. By Sweating and provoking Vrin 5. By Dyet which must be contrary to the Disease and its Cause Such as are upon the mending hand if the Feaver be terminated with a perfect Critical Evacuation let them never eat to satiety Often and a little Let them abstain from al Evacuations save by stool Let them use the Electuary Diarrhodon Abbatis to strengthen their Bellies If by an Imperfect so that some reliques remain let them purge the said Reliques especially by Urine Let them keep a thin Dyet The Differences are taken from the Causes One sort is Cholerick from Cholerick blood pure and exquisite which the Liver being
peculiarly affected produces This sort afflicts with sharper Heat Thirst and Watchings They are subject to it who abound with choler The pulse is vehement swift hard The Urine flame-colord and thin 'T is finished in the compass of seven or of fourteen Exasperations It is not deadly unless either some remarkable Error be committed or some malignity attend the same Another is Flegmatick or Melancholick when Flegmatick or Melancholick blood is mixed with Cholerick where together with coolers things gently warming and cutting are to be mixed 'T is termed Notha or a bastard Continual Tertian Point 2. Of a Continual quotidian or every day Feaver A continual quotidian is a Feaver raised by the Phlegmatick Humor putrifying in the Branches of Vena Cava which is exasperated every day It s SIGN is a daily Exasperation which happens towards the Evening because of the natural motion of flegm about that time with heat which is at first feeling mild but afterwards more vehement by reason of the slow and uneven kindling thereof caused by the variety of the parts of Flegm With a light coldness of the extream parts of the Body which nevertheless is not found in al these Feavers The CAUSE is the Humor of Flegm putrifying which is proper to old Men because of their coldness to Children through their greedy eating It Causes so pertinacious and stubborne a Feaver that it lasts somtimes three score daies its beginning reaching to the twentieth day it vehemently weakens the Stomach whence arises a Cachexy and Dropsie The CURE ought to be thus mannaged 1. The first passages must be evacuated with Clysters or Lenitive Medicaments in which case Honey of Roses is effectual or the Stomach must be purged with Vomit 2. Let a Vein be opened if Nature be oppressed with overgreat plenty of Humors and the Urins be thicker and redder than ordinary 3. Purge by stool when signes of coction appear premising attenuators that heat not much first with a gentle then with a stronger Medicament Agarick trochisked Hicra picra Pils of Fumitory are good in this case 4. Procure Sweatings after the matter is lessened with Salt of Wormwood and of Carduus Benedictus and a little Treacle 5. Let strengtheners be given viz. Trochisks of Rhubarb of Wormwood and of Agrimony c. 6. Let the Diet be sparing for three daies if there be Crudities in the Stomach and in the first waies At first give Hydromel or smal Metheglin to drink instead of wine or beer and let no fish be Eaten in the whole course of the Disease This Feaver is divided three manner of waies I. One sort is Simple and Exquisite which arises only from flegm and has fits eighteen hours long Another is bastard when flegm is joyned with other Humors II. Another is termed Epiala in which in the smallest particles of the body understand to the sense both heat and cold are felt at one and the same time It arises either from flegm mingled with Choler or from Glassie flegm which in that part that is putrified is hot in that which is not putrified is cold T is Cured in the same manner that other putrid Feavers are but we must observe 1. That Blood-letting is hurtful 2. That spirit of Nitre in Juniper water is excellent to cut flegm 3. That vomiting must not be neglected which may be procured by six ounces of Juniper water distilled per Descensum 4. Care must be had of the Stomach which nine drops of Oyl of Vitriol with three spoonfuls of the best Canary wil strengthen and cut the flegm or two ounces of Aquae Vitae stilled out of Juniper berries by way of Descent III. Another is called Syncopalis by reason of the swoning fits which is either Minuta so called springing from a thin Humor little in quantity but venemous and corrupt or Humorous proceeding from plenty of Flegmatick and crude humors with weakness of the stomachs Mouth frequent faintings away The best way to proceed in the Cure is 1. By Rubbings in such whose skin is more than ordinarily hard 2. By loosing the belly with Manna and Cream of Tartar 3. By Digestion and Evacuation of Humors giving such things as are necessary for the Syncope 4. By a thin Diet in which wine may likewise have place Point 3. Of a continual Quartan Feaver A continual Quartan Feaver is a Feaver arising from Melancholy blood putrifying in the branches of Vena Cava whose heat alwaies endures but is Exasperated and Augmented every fourth day Its SIGNS are obtuse Heat but sharp and pricking by reason of the Density and dryness of the putrified Humor which causes the Feaver The Pulse at first smal slow and buryed as it were under the skin afterwards great ful and swifter than in an Ague Somtimes the Patient Spawles much which argues either the overgreat moisture of the Stomach or the Spleens fault in not separating the Melancholy Humor It s CAUSE is Melancholy blood putrefying in the middle sort of Veins and springing from its proper causes The CURE is altogether hard both because it lasts to the fortieth day and further unless peradventure it be a Summer Quartan and likewise because seeing that Humor is hard to putrifie it argues there is a great cause 'T is Performed 1. By opening the inner Vein of the left Arme. 2. Cy Preparation of the Humor which must tend much to moistening 3. by Purgation with Melanagogues frequently repeated as also the use of sweaters and piss-drivers 4. by strengthening the Patient with borrage bugloss Citron juyce c. 5. by Diet which ought to be cutting moistening and cooling c. Article 2. Of a continual Symptomatick Feaver Symptomatick Feavers are such as follow upon other Diseases which being removed the said Feavers Cease Their Signs Causes and Cures are to be drawn from those Disease which they wait upon Their Differences are sundry I. One sort is That which follows the Inflamation of some inward partespecially and which is neare the heart or has a consent and sympathy therewith the Vapors which arise out of the blood shed into the part inflamed and putrifying there being communicated to the heart and heating the same It is as many-fold as the Inflamation is The Cure respects the Inflamation II. Another sort there is termed Lipyrias in which during the whole course of the Disease the inner parts are as it were burning up with Heat and the outer parts meane while cold It arises from a vehement inflamation or Erysipelas of some internal part especially the Stomach the blood and spirits having recourse to the part inflamed Either the Cure is not to be undertaken or if it be undertaken resistance must be made inwardly against the putrefaction and extream heat external after the parts have been rubbed heaters and openers of the pores must be applied In which case Oyl of Dill and Oyl of Orice Root with oyl of Vitriol and strong spirit of Juniper berries are good III. Another is slow which is hereby
soon after grow cold Another in which the Putrefaction is remiss and the Malignity Vehement Then the Feaver is gentle and the Heart exceedingly hurt It kils the Patient while the Patient and Physician are secure of any danger III. One sort is beleeved to be an Ephemera another Humoral another Hectick But because the spirits are not only heated but also corrupted because the heart is not only affected in its temper but vitiated in its substance no Pestilential Feavers can be either Ephemera's or Hectick Howbeit because some difference appeares among them and now the heart it self at another time the spirits and another while the Humors are most affected by reason of the similitude it has with others properly so called it may receive such a Denomination A Single Chapter Of the Pestilence THe Pestilence is a Contagious Disease of the Heart bred of a Venemous and Contagious matter Suddainly and mortally afflicting al the Actions of the Heart with an Heap of al kind of Symptomes It is a Disease and that 1. Epidemick because of the common Cause and of the infection 2. Joyned with Putrefaction so as not to be judged of cheifly thereby for so a Pothists shal be more pestilent in putrid Feavers there should not be more heat than in the Venemous sort Antidotes were needless nor does it alwaies cause a feaver as appears by many instances 3. Venemous because it oppresses al the vital faculties and suddenly kils The SIGNES are either of it when coming as ' its being in neighboring places the proceding of such things as may infect the air such as filchy vapors issuing from the earth corruption of fruits Effectes of the aire enclining to corruption as are great abundance of toad-stools withering of plants multitude of Insects frighting of the Cattle mustiness and clamines of bread exposed to the nights Air soon stinking of flesh plenty of smal poxe and measels c. Or present a suspition whereof is when very many that are taken sick die if it creep from one sick person to another If the patients be suddenly extreamly weakned If Bubo's and carbuncles appear in a place the aire being infected If the spots called plage tokens be seen upon the dead bodies The CAUSE of the pestilence is a venemous contagious matter This proceeds I. From the Aire which is sometimes prepared to receive the pestelence by mutation of the first Qualities somtimes 't is corrupted without any mutation either by permission of sundry exhalations breaking forth of the earth and waters especially when Saturn passes through the signes of Aries Capricorn and sagitrius being after an accute manner and totally adverse to the Heart or by some hidden aspect or Influxe of the stars II. From Bad Diet where the saltiness of the Humors the sooner shewes it selfe if som occasion happen from the Aire III. From the witchcrafts of Necromancers living and infecting and of dead witches which are laide in their graves before their Heads are seperatted from their shoulders IV. From imagination and Terror which agitate the humors in the body stir up the pestilential seminary and plant it deep in the heart Touching the Contagion we have spoke in the first Book The Physitions Care respects three things Preservation cure and Removal of Symptoms As for the point of preservation I. The Causes which infer the pestilence must be removed II. The Bodies must be made less apt to receive the pestilence Let therefore the body be purged thrice a week with pil ruffi a scruple Let not the body be weakened by Blood-letting Let Meat be used of excellent Juyce sawsed with antidotes An Yssue may sometimes be made to give the Humors scope The Air must be kept pure with fier and perfumes Let the nostrils be nostrils be smeared with vinegar oyl of scorpions c. Le● Amulets be hanged about the neck of quick silver inclosed in a out-shel Arsnick c. Nor let any thing be mingled with the Arsnick to abate ' its Vertue Nor let these amulets be heated by motion least they penetrate through the pores into the Body Amongst Antidotes Treackle is comended Electuary de Ono Elixir proprietatis Bezoar stone Salt of vine branches and of Millefoile Extractum Junipernium c. Let Hot medicaments be tempered and first macerated in vinegar The CURE is absolved I. By Blood-letting which must be perforemed after the taking of an antidot if there be so much plenty of blood that a putrid feaver is feared in any side if there be no piane if there be on the Arme of that side where the pain is unless a Carbuncle shal cause great paine and inflamation in the space of twenty soure Houers II. By purgation after an antidote has bin given if il humors give suspition of a seaver to follow if the pestilence have risen from an inward corruption of Humors III By giving Sudorificks and Alexipharmaca among simples the Hereinian Vnicorne is commended The blood of a Rhinocerote five drops given in sorrel water A bit of his hide boyled in water of sorrel in which red hot-gold must be quenched The juyce of the Pap of the Brasiliah fruit called Muracujao Hasu The Berry of Mol●●●● poudered to the quantity of five graines in rose or sorel water The juyce of Galega or Ruta Capraria the quantity of three ounces c. Of compounds the syrup Melissa Fernelii Septalius his syrup or succo Galegae Quidiny of elder berries with Treakel Vinegar Crollius his Elixir pestilential Diascordium three drams especially in women with child and in children Pouder of smaragd stone prepared Bezar stone of each eight grains Hiacinth praepared three grains see Sennertus of Feavers towards the End In the Vse of these things observe Hot antidotes like treacle must be tempered with such as are of a colder nature That treacle and Methridate and other stronger medicaments must not be given to women with child nor to children Such as have weakness in their stomach and Head must abstaine from Camphorat Medicaments Some Medicament is to be given or other thrice every four and twenty houers At first the medicaments must be very often changed least nature growing accustomed come not to be moved thereby Waters Spirits and such other things as wil most easily penetrate must be given principally The patient must abstaine from sleep til he or shee have under gone two sweats While the sweating lasts refresh the Patient with the Juyce of Citrons Carduus water c. The sweat being finished cold Air must be avoided and the sick refreshed with meat Symptomes of the Pestilence are the Bubo the Carbuncle the Burning Feaver The Bubo imports less dnager if it be great and eminent if it breaks out at first and in the groins It is more deadly if it be lead colored and black If it lie lurking under the Skin If it breaks forth beneath the Neck or under the armpits on the third or fourth day Most dangeour if it vanish and leave the Patient weak When it
Strike in it must be called forth either by fixing a Cupping Glass or with a 0734 0 pultis of Radish Root and Scrophulary the great with a little of Salt Vinegar When it comes far out it must be drawn to the more ignoble parts from the Neck to the hollow of the hand from the Groins to the soles of the Feet To this purpose there is an useful Cataplasme made of two ounces of the greater Scrophulary Root Radishes one ounce beaten and with one ounce and half of the strongest Leaven and boyled in Wine Vinegar and so made into a pultis and applied to the Palm or hollow of the Hand or the Sole of the Foot or that side on which the bubo is It must be renewed three or four times in a night Being Fixed 1. it must be often drawn with a Cupping-Glass and store of flame without Scarrificatian 2. The Cupping-Glass being removed let it be covered with a ripening Cataplasme and drawing made of the Roots of Scrophularia Salt Black Sope and strong Leaven boyled in Vinegar 3. After six hours let a Cupping-Glass be again set on and let the Skin be cut with a Lancet or smal Knife 4. Let a Cataplasme ripening and drawing made either of a great Onion hollowed filled with Treacle and roasted in the Embers til it be soft or of the middle rind of Elder boyled in Cream and mixed with Leaven be laid on at Night and often renewed 5. Let the Tumor the following day be either cut or brok and the Blood water squeezed forth and let a mundifying or clensing plaster of Turpentine wash't in Scordium water and honey of Roses mixed therewith be applied Touching the Carbuncle and Feaver which is also entertained by certain symptomes see in their proper places See concerning the Plague Peter Salius Diversus Joel Tom. 5. Sect. 3. Septaliws in a peculiar Treatise and Valerius Martini And so much cancerning Feavers THE EIGHTH BOOK OF THE IDEA OF PRACTICAL PHYSICK Of the Diseases of the Head Title I. Of the Diseases of the Brain Chap. 1. Of the Distemper of the Brain without Matter HItherto we have treated of Diseases in the general the Particular now follow and these are either such as are not Venemous or such as are Venemous Unto those belong the Diseases of the Head the middle and the lowermost belly commonly called the three Regions The Diseases of the Head are either those of the Brain or of the Eyes or Ears or of the Nostrils or of the Tongue or of the Lips or of the Face or of the Mouth or of the Teeth or of the Gums or of the Cheeks or of the Wesand or Windpipe or lastly of the Jaws and Tonsils Unto the Diseases of the Brain are referred as thereunto belonging a distemper which the Latins cal Intemperies the straightness or stoppage of its passages Commotion Inflamation Hydrocephalius being a cold Disease thereof proceeding from water and Flegm Contusion wounds and Fractures The distemper or Intemperies either is without matter or else with matter The Distemper of the Brain without matter is the declining thereof from its due and right temper through some external causes For the Signs and Causes see of them in the differences The CURE is performed by Alteration and Purgation lest that the Body if it be either Plethorical or Cacochymical should attract more Vapors It is divided into four species or kinds I. the first of them is hot when the Brain declines unto an immoderate or overgreat heat It is dscerned and known by the beating of the Temples the agitation within the Cranium or Skul by the sleep which is either none at al or else very short and by the instability and mutabillity of the Imagination It ariseth from external hot causes to wit Aire meat drink exorbitant affections c. It is to be cured 1. By alteration and that by cooling mediacments as wel internal as external and these not over strong especiallly in children and women having in them a mean and indifferent astrictive quallity left that the humors should be either attracted or dissipated not too frequently applied and made use of lest that they should introduce and cause a kind of sencelessness or stupidity and then lastly they are to be mingled with dissolvers when the distemper is in 't is declination The cheif and principal of them are the leaves of Lettice and Purslan the flowers of Roses Waterlily white and Red Popy and Saunders wood together with those medicaments that are pre-prepared and made out of those such as are fomentations which are to be corrected with such things as penetrate by reason of the thinness of their substance as doth Vinegar c. These remedies are to be applied to the forehead Temples and Sutures So soon as they begin to wax hot they are to be changed neither are they to be tyed on or covered with thick clouts or linnen often doubled For Embrochations and washings of the Feet are most in request the Leaves of Sengreen vine Leaves and the Leaves of the Willow Tree The flowers aforesaide as also of the Elder Tree and the root Rhodia a cataplasm made of willow Leaves and Vine buds 2. By Evacuation for the cause before alledged 3. by a diet inclineing to coolness more than ordinary II. The second is Cold when the Braine declineth unto an excessive or over great coldness And this is known by the swelling of the eyes the palness of the face the heaviness of the head propension to sleep slothfulness and slugiggishness It proceedeth from things external that either are cold in themselves or at leastwise induce and cause cold It is cured 1. By Evacuation if the body be Cacochymical 2. by Alteration which is effected by the use of things External and internal that are hot and these must be taken after meat and never before The cheif of them are the Roots of Piony taken out of the earth at the waning of the Moon the root of round Aristolochia Castorium The flowers of staechas or cotten weed primrose pealings of the bark of the linden or tyle tree of flowers of lillyes of the vally of Rosemary Bettony Marjoram Black chery water the water of swallows Treackle water The Quintesence of Rue of Rosemary of Succinum or yellow amber Of condites the Indian met nutmeg treacle Mithredate the restorative Confection called Anacardina and Alpermes Distilled Oyls as of the Wood Guajacum and of sassafras taken either in waters or else in smal morsels The leaves of Rue Wild bettony and the right Verveyn Balsams of Lavender Rosemary yellow amber Cloves nutmeg c. 3. by a diet somewhat inclining to warmth where likewise suffumigations have their use and place III. The third is Moist when the brain inclineth unto an overgreat humidity or moistness It is known by the humidity that appeareth in the nostrils and the eyes by the Catarrhs that follow upon it and the propension unto sleep It ariseth from some external causes
There is here Good hope of a cure if there appear on the fourth day good and promising Signs if pus to wit snot or filth or water flow forth by the nostrils ears or eyes But is somewhat doubtful if there be present with it an acute feaver and that the ut in be white because then the choler is carried upwards and an inflamation is greatly to be feared if the Patient vomit up that which is Eruginous or in color like unto brass and that the Party be over long kept awake and deprived of his rest especially if a deafness accompany it in regard that by reason of the choler that is gotten together they suddenly fal into a violent and vehement madness if they be surprised with a Congelation or taking as we cal it together with a stoppage of the belly a fierce and wild countinance and that the face be extraordinarily red and fiery because then they are suddenly surprised with a crick in the neck that affect which we usually terme opisthotonos if likewise there happen together with it a sound or ringing in the ears without a Feaver if there accompony it a vertigo or giddiness in the head a hoarsness of the voice and a benummedness in the hands for then they sudenly become either appoplectical or Epileptical and Apoplexy and Epilepsie or falling sickness most commonly following thereupon But there is no hope at al or if any very little if where ●●it was very vehement it suddenly vannish away and conceal it selfe there following no alleviation by the crisis if the extream parts become exceeding cold because that the native heat being drawn back a Phlegmon may easily be excited if it happen to be with an acute feaver and that on the fourth day there appear some pernitious sign or other if a sound person so soon as he is surprised and taken herewith become instantly speechless and snort and yet is not afflicted with any strong feaver wherby probably he might be freed from the aforesaid distemper The Cure if there by any is performed I. By mettigation of the pain either by anodines of river craw-fish beaten wel together with rose vinegar vervain water and the root thereof wel bruised and imposed on the part affected the Allabastrine unguent before mentioned al which ought to be applied unto the su●ures and temples or else by narcotick remedies which may only be applied unto the forehead and layd thereon II. It is to be accomplished by removai of the Causes and strengthening the part touching which see further in the differences The Differnces of the Cephalalgy are many and those very various I. One difference hereof is symptomatical of which we here treat Another is Critical which beginneth not to afflict the patient from the first rise of the d●stemper but much about the time of the Crisis and then the breathing suddenly becometh short and very difficult the Hypecondria being drawn back the veins are swoln and the arteries beat in the Temples the cheeks wax red and tears flow forth of their accord the patient not being able to withstand it the sick party streacheth his nostrils with his hands and then most commonly there floweth a streaming forth of the blood II. Another is External which seizeth the pericranium is perceived in the very superficies reacheth unto the roots of the eye-lids is exasperated by the compression of the hairs and hands Another internal which becomes easy and moderate upon the very touch especially if it be without any distention and it extendeth it self even unto the roots of the eyes III. Another is from Causes External to wit 1. Ebriety with beer in which the herb Chamaepence is boiled easily and soon causeth And then the matter fluctuating in the stomach is to be cast forth thence by vomit The leaves either of the Colewort or Cabbage throughly moistened in warme water or else the leaves of Rue wel brused together with rose vinegar are to be applied The head is to be al over wet and besprinkled with the spirit of wine and the feet are chafed and rubbed with salt and vinegar 2. By a Contusion stroke wound in which case the cure is to be sought for above in and from their proper places 3. By the heat of the sun the heat of a Bath and of the soucherly winds And then the head is to be delt withal by cooling fomentations c. 4. By the use of other things offensive such as are dates walours chestnuts Filbirds toad-stools hempseed the seeds of Coriander not prepared Frankinsence styrax and Mirh if moderatly taken c. Another is from Internal causes to wit 1. From a distemper without matter which if it be hot the pain is vehement and the head becommeth hot if it ●e cold the pain lasteth so much the longer and the head is cold In this case the little rols or cakes of diam●scum dulce and a little bag of heating Cephalicks are very convenient If it be dry the pain is moderate dul and notacute and there went before causes that were extreamly efficating and drying 2. From a distemper with matter which is either from blood and then the paine is more gentle and moderate which cheifly seizeth the fore part of the head and increaseth before the time of repast The Cure is to be sought in its due and proper places Or else it hath its original from yellow choler and then the pain is extreamly pricking and corroding and for the most part fasteneth upon and seizeth the right side of the fore part of the head In the cure those things that are most fit and likely to effect it are Epithen●s of Opiat Laudanum with rose water vesicatories applied unto the neck the smelling of rose water with Camphire washing of the head with a decoction of agarick together with the flowers oscamomil scarification of the lips of the ears c. or else it procedeth from flegm and then a pain afflicteth the patient on the right side or the hinder part of the head rather then else where Medicaments good and sucessful against this malady are oxymel with squils the water of the flowers of the elder tree of penyroyal of rosma●y with cristal of nitre the shels of peaches beaten together with verveyn water the oyl of nutmeg pressed or drawn forth the Balsam against the Apoplexy that of yellow amber and the sacculus or little bag of Hartmannus Or else it ariseth from blak choller or melancholly and then the watchings are very extream greivous together with a pain of the left side of the hinder part of the head Let the cu●e be sought for in i●s proper place 3. from a wind and then the pain wandereth as it were and flyeth up and downe hi●her and thither it puffeth out and extendeth the part where it is often returning and running back again at some certain constant hours of the day It is discussed scattered if so be that the temples and the coronal suture be frequently anoynted and
of the Womb. The CAUSE is whatsoever impedes or hinders and prohibites the influx of the Animal spirits unto the Organs of the senses and withal Renders those spirits more unapt unto the Animal actions and operations The CURE is Doubtful if it follow upon the extream imbecillity of the Patients strength occasioned either from some most acute Disease or else from some deplorable and grievous affect of the brain if it chance in continual Feavers if it hath its original from some malignant cause There is almost no Cure to be expected if it take its rise from hot and dry Diseases for then by this means of necessity there must needs be an extraordinary cooling in the brain if the malady grow to be so sad and grievous that both the sense motion and the very breathing it self is taken away In what things the Cure cheifly consisteth and by what means it is to be wrought see further in the various differences thereof It is divided according to the variety and difference of the Causes I. There is one Species thereof that ariseth from the Humidity or the frigidity of the Brain And then the matter in the Head ought to be Evacuated and discussed in the former of them by the irrigation or the frequent washing of the Head with the sharpest sort of Vinegar throughly mixed together with Roses and Camomil Flowers but in the latter of them by anoynting the Head with Dil Oyl a little warmed And in both of them we must remember to put in practise the frequent use of Apophlegmatismes Errhines and sternutatories Another kind thereof there is from Narcotick Vapors inducing and bringing in a certain dulness and unaptness for any thing upon the Animal spirits which said Vapors either are from over much drink and then the drink yet remayning in the stomach Vomiting is to be excited and provoked Or for the greatest part they are conjoyned with Feavers Then 1. The Vapors are to be drawn back either by opening a Vein in the Thighs or by Clysters frictions Cupping-Glasses c. 2. The same Vapors are likewise to be repelled and driven back by Oxyrrhodines to wit Medicaments consisting of Vinegar and Roses actually hot and applyed to the Coronal suture unto which former remedy let the Vinegar that is added be in a plentiful measure or else which is yet better they are to be discussed with Rue Castoreum Vinegar c. 3. Great caution must be had lest that those Remedies that are exhibited and administred to expel sleep and drowsiness should any way augment the Feaver Or otherwise these Vapors afflict without those feavers And then they are elevated and drawn up from the stomach Womb or some other inferior part These are to be taken away by the very same remedies as the former were Those things that infringe weaken the strength of Narcoticks are Rew with Vinegar the balsam of Rice Castoreum Nightshade snuffing up the fume of Brimstone c. As for the Diet what it should be see and consult the Practitioners Chap. 3 Of the Symptomes of the Imagination A Single Article of the Vertigo or turning round of the Head THat Symptome of the Imagination which likewise very often hurts even the common sense also is called Vertigo which is nothing else than a false imagination of ones turning round dizzy reeling about arising from an inordinat and circular motion of the Animal spirit in the Forepart of the brain The SUBJECT hereof is the brain according to its anterior or forepart as it is an organical part as it containeth the Animal spirits and as it is endued with certain passages in which the said spirits are moved Of SIGNS there is no need at al. Un●o some of them al things seem to be turned about as in a Ring or Circle others of them have their very sight obscured and again in some of them there is sensibly perceived a sisling Noise and as it were a kind of singing in the Ears c. The CAUSE is whatever either suppeditateth and genera●e h Vapors of themselves and in their own Nature such as are garden Radishes Garlick Mustard Wine c. Or else 〈◊〉 as is wont to stir disturb and agitate the Humors and hitherto appertaineth purgation as being cheifly requisite in this case The CURE is very doubtful and scarcely to be hoped if this distemper happen to Old people because they have but a weak brain if it continue long because it is then the forerunner and indeed the foreteller likewise of the Epilepsie or the Apoplexy if in it the Head or the whol body seem to wheel and turn round The Cure is Performed I. By Discussion and then let the holes of the Nostrils be annoynted with the Oyl of Marjoram and the Oyl of Nutmeg or else together with the aforesaid let Rose water and Vinegar be put and applied thereunto let the Temples and the hand-wrists be anoynted with rose vinegar and Rose water mingled with a drop or two of the Oyl of Cinnamon or else let them be throughly wet and besmeared with the Juyce of the black beet let the pallate be annoynted with Treacle II. By opening a Vein if it be over powerful and violent III. by Revulsion if it proceed from the inferior parts IV. by a Diet in the which meats that are known to generate many Vapors beer brewed with much Hopps and such like hurtful things are carefully to be avoyded For a preservative Caraway seed macerated in Wine dryed and dayly taken about the time of going to bed is held to be very excellent The Differences are taken from the Causes I. One is from Causes that are Evident exagitating and exasperating the spirits and such are a turning round of the whol body a long while together looking much and steadily upon things while they are moved circularly and a prospect or looking downward to the earth from a place of an extraordinary height For so by this means the spirits by the beholding and looking upon any thing unto which it is not accustomed or that is dreadful and terrible are diffused and drawn back It is known by the relation of the sick party It is cured by rest and sleep If it yet be not altogether ceased then we are to conclude the Cure by frictions If it be from Hunger and fasting a piece of bread dipt in the Juyce of Pomegranates or in sharp sowr wine is first of al to be administred II. Another is from the narrowness or Streightness of the Passage of the Brain through which indeed the Animal spirits are moved but when they are thus impeded and hindered they then retreat back again It ariseth either from a partial obstruction which if it be caused by gross and thick Vapors it is soon dissolved if it hath its rise from serous and Phlegmatick Humors it is then of a long continuance and there is withal present a sense of fluctuation In the Cure there ought to be a respect had unto the Nature of the
Cause Or else it proceedeth from the compression of the brain and the fracture of the skul of which see further in their own propper places Or else it is from the Coalescence or knitting together of the Arteries from their first rise and their entering into the scalp or Skul by that general and common passage through the brain touching which there is hardly any thing to be certainly determinded while the Patient liveth III. Another is from a Vapor ful of windiness generated and bred in the brain which by an inordinate motion being poured forth into the Veins and Arteries doth so trouble and disturb the Animal spirits by driving to and fro that they thus become to be circularly moved and turned round and then they exhibite and represent unto the common sense or Phantasie this fals and feigned species and appearance of things otherwise than indeed they really are It is known by that vehement pain and dul heaviness of the head a long continued tinging and hissing Noise in the Ears and a certain kind of hurt and detriment of the external senses This Evil or Malady is very frequent and such as surpriseth a man upon a very smal and light occasion and yet it lasteth and as we use to say sticketh long by him It ariseth from causes that generate and breed winds and windiness and more especially if the wonted Evacuation be suppressed It is Cured either in the Paroxysm of which we have before spoken or out of the Paroxyim 1. By the Evacuation of the Matter that fomenteth and supplieth these Vapors and that as wel a general as a particuliar one Some there are that are a fraid to prescribe and there are others again as fearful to take those Medicaments that Practioners term Er●●●●es which are to be taken up into the Head by the Nostrils to open and purge the brain 2. by Revulsion or drawing back of the said matter as also by Derivation and Discussion of the same by Vesicatories Cauteries frictions and lotions of the Head 3. By Corroborating and strengthening the Brain both by external and internal Remedies Among the specifical and Appropriate Medicaments those that deserve the greatest commendation are the dung of the Peacock one dram thereof by weight macerated in Wine strained and so drunk up the extract of Scorzonera the Roots of Doronicum an excellent drug brought out of Mauritania eaten Bears Ear the fat of Does and land Snakes by annoynting the Temples therewithal the pouder of Silk-worms dryed and strowed upon the Crown of the Head Very effectual likewise for this purpose are the spirits of Rosemary the Chymical Oyl of Yellow Amber Hippocrates his Treacle the pouder of the Right mineral Cinnabar half an ounce thereof Margarites prepared and red Corals prepared of each two scruples Saffron one scruple and then add to the aforesaid ingredients the leaves of Gold in number ten and so let it be administred the dose is one scruple in the water of lillies of the Valley and lastly the electuary of Saxony It is divided into that which is from extream hot blood and then there is present a redness of the Face and a beating of the Arteries In the Cure especial regard is to be had unto the opening of a Vein and that cheifly and primarily of the Basilike if a Plethory accompany the distemper and then presently after of the Cephalick or head vein if the peccant matter abound most or only in the head It is not to be drawn forth al at once but by many Essaies at several times by intervals We ought not to be over rash in attemping the cutting or opening of an Artery and into that that is from a pituitous or Flegmy Humor Then the place where we have treated of the Flegmatick distemper is to be consulted An Evacuation after that a Clyster hath first of al been administred may very conveniently and successfully be expedited by the extract of the Pils called Cochiae from half a scruple to a scruple by a Lixivium and a Balsam See further hereof in Agricola in his first Book 38. Chap. IV. Another there is from an extream windy Vapor elevated from other parts It is known by this that there went before it no hurt or annoyance of the s●●ses and that the distemper afflicteth the pa●● frequently and by fits and withal there are present the signs of the part affected It ariseth either from the stomach either pirrocholick or ful of bitter choler or Pituitous and Flegmatick or else by reason of its imbecillity corrupting al the food that comes within it and then the Cure must cheifly respect and be directed unto the stomach And here take place as most requisit and proper a grain or two of Frankincense taken after meals the confection of Fennel of Coriander Sugar of Prunella Saccharum Rosatum or Sugar of Roses the electuary of the Conserve of old red Roses Diacydonium simplex that is an electuary of the conserve of Quinces the spirit of vitriol and the Syrup of mints For what remayneth to be done in this Cure see more in the diseases of the stomach Or else it ariseth from the Liver Spleen Womb whol Body as it usually happeneth in Feavers and then in this case there ought to be an especial Care and regard had unto the Nature and condition of the parts affected and the Various Symptomes Chap. 4. Of the Symptomes of the Imagination and the Ratiocination when they are hurt THe symptoms hurting the imagination and the Ratiocination or rational faculty are the hurt of the Memory dotage a Phrensie Melancholy madness and Raging or raving which we term Hydrophobia Article I. Of the hurt of the Memory The hurting of the Memory is a diminution or utter abolition of the same arising from Causes that hurt the dryness of the Brain conjoyned with a moderate heat and very necessary as to the memory and so by means rendring the Animal spirits either torpid that is over dul and sluggish or else which is as bad inordinately moveable There is no need of SIGNS for the very actions of the sick party discover the Symptomes The CAUSES that hurt the temperament of the brain that is absolutely necessary for the preservation of the memory either they weaken and diminish the Native heat and that likewise either Externally as do al things of a Poysonous Nature al Narcoticks applied to the fore part and likewise the hinder part of the Neck or else Internally as doth a temperament cold and moist which either affecteth Children and ancient people by reason of their Age or else it afflicteth others by reason of meat and drink that is of a cold and moist Nature or by reason of a Gross and thick Air sicknesses and other Causes of which we have already sufficently spoken in the cold distemper Or otherwise they dissolve the said Natural heat such as are externally al Philtra or amorous potions watchings excessive thought fulness Medicaments that are hot of quality Internally hot Diseases
This Affect needeth no SIGNS since that it is evidently exposed unto the view It is discerned from the Lachrymal flesh by its white shining brightness The CAUSE is Blood mingled together with thick viscid and clammy Humors flowing down from those parts that are contained betwixt the Skul and the Skin and bringing upon the place a certain kind of Scabbiness or scurfiness which while the nutritive faculty endevouereth to render and make equal it produceth an increase of the membrance beyond the ordinary course of nature The CURE Requireth I. The Premising of the general and universal remedies II. the extertion and extirpation of the nail after it hath been for a while fomented either with a decoction or some temperate distilled water Among the several sorts of medicaments there is commended the pouder that is made and prepared of Egg-shels and then cast upon the eyes the Medicinal stone of Crollius in the water of roses and Eye bright the specifick of ●artman of the fish Lucius we cal it the Luce or Pike the same Hartmans water of the whits of Eggs and other such like remedies which if they be sharp and piercing ought to be quallified and corrected with Tragacanth and the like and exceeding great Caution must be had that the tunicle Cornea be not touched III. It requireth Chyrurgery of which you may see further if you consult Authors upon this very subject IV. A Diet in which there ought to be an abstinence from wine and meats that generate store of vapours It is many wayes Divided I. One is that we cal Albicans or tending to whiteness Another there is that tendeth to a blackness which is not to be removed by any remedies whatsoever II. Another Recent or new which may soone and very easily be dispersed and quite taken away Another is Inveterated and old unto which if a thickness chance to accrew and be added thereto it ought then to be cut out yet sometimes notwithstanding it sticketh so close and pertinaciously unto the Adnata tunicle that it cannot be taken away thence no not by the Chirurgeon himselfe without manifest hazard and danger of hurting the eye III. Another is that which is produced only unto the Cornea tunicle and no further Another that is extended along even unto the very pupilla or Eye-bal and this if it be taken away it indeed wholly freeth the eye from fluxions but if a Cicatrix or star be left remaining it very much hindereth the sight of the eye IV. Another is Cancerous and Putrid which admitteth of no Cure at al Another that is not as the former II. The Pin or web of the Eye is a certain red substance like unto a smal piece of cloath arising from the exuberancy and over great abounding of blood in the Exterior veins of the Eye There is here no need of SIGNS There appeareth especially in the superficies of the tunicle Adnata as it were a fleshy web with an itching a pain an offending of the eyes by the light the sight obscured or quite and clean taken away The CAUSE is a blood derived unto the eyes either simple and alone or mixed either by the way of fluxion or of congestion and this either by the external vessels and then the forehead swelleth a little or otherwise by the internal vessels and then there is a certain pain extending it self even unto the very roots of the Eves The CURE is performed I. By the Vse of Vniversals or remedyes in general II. By Abstertion by those things above mentioned III. By Chirurgery touching which those Authors that are extant upon this Subject III. The Hyposphagm or Sugillation as they cal it is a blemish or spot reddish or black and blew arising from blood poured forth of the veins being opened and common to the tunicle Cornea There is no need of SIGNS forasmuch as the malady or Evil is easily discovered by the very beholding of it The CAUSE is whatsoever may open the veins whether it be External or internal as shal be further shewn in the differences The CURE is Easie in the beginning It is performed Universal or general remedies having gon before if the afflux be greater than is usual by discussives at first such as are more gentle and corrected by astringents but afterward those that are stronger and more forcible and yet withal such as are void of acrimony and tartness lest that there should more of the blood be enticed and drawn forth unto the part affected It is Divided three manner of waies I. One is from Causes External a blow clamour and sounding of trumpets in which we must presently have recourse unto Topical remedies to wit the decoction of the flowers of Melilote and of Roses Fenugreek seed Colliry composed of the blood of Pigeons taken out of their wings two drams thereof the breast milk of a temperate Woman half an ounce and frankincence one scruple Another is from internal Causes to wit either great store of blood where Venesection must by no means be ommitted or else from the extraordinary great heat thereof and then the spot or blemish tendeth unto a Citrine colour We must withstand and oppose the inflamation by the white of an Egg wel shaken together if there present any Pus or filthy purulent matter the same is to be lessened by a Collyry composed of the Muciluge of fenngreek with fennel water and honey of Roses II. Another is Recent and new beginning in which the blemish is of a red colour Besides the Topical rememdies above mentioned the tops of hissop boy led in ordinary and common water tyed up in a little bage and so applied is of singular use and bennifit in discussing the peccant matter Another is inveterate and of long standing in the which the spot or blemish is black and blew And for this we usually prescribe as most proper and convenient a Colliry composed of the Juyce of the greater Selandine and Carduus Benidictus of each halfe an ounce of the fat of the bird they cal Quoestula or Queist liquified and dissolved two drams and of mirrh half a scruple as also the Root of sigillum Solomonis or Solomons Seal well shaken together c. III. Another is When blood is cast forth either into the Adnata or the Cornea Tunicle And another When it is cast forth into both these Tunicles at once and together and then all the Objects that the Sick person looketh upon seem to be of a color tending to Redness Chap. 5. Of the Diseases of the Tunicle Cornea Article I. Of Crassities Nebula and Albugo THe Diseases of the Tunicle Cornea are Crassities or a certain kind of thickness Nebula or a little Cloud Albugo or a white spot in the Eye Pustules or Pushes Vlcers Wounds and Pain I. Crassities or thickness Is an extream drying of the substance thereof and therewithal there Joyned a certain Corrugation or winkling It is known by this that as it were in the superficies thereof there appeareth a little
bloud and the sick persons see as through smoak It ariseth either from the incautelons and careless Application of Cold Remedies and this especially after an Ophthalmy or else from Gross and thick humors that insinuate themselves In the Cure there is to be commended the Juyce of Salendine pressed forth and instilled into the Eyes drop by drop II. Nebula or the little cloud as the Color of the Tunicle Cornea altered and changed by a subtile Humor flowing forth That which is prevalent in this case is the powder of Margarites prepared in the water of Roses and Fenel and the Cataplasm of Platerus in his second Book and 19. Observation III. Albugo or as they cal it Lencoma is a white spot rendering the Cornea tunicle so thick that there is denied al manner of passage unto the visibl species It ariseth either from a Cicatrix or scar after a wound or an ulcer and then the Cure is difficult in those that are ancient but more easy in children and young people It is performed 1. By the appliing of emmollents or mollifiers 2. By abstersion where the watter of Rosemary flowers dropped into the eyes and the fat of the fish Mustela have their place and use Or else it procedeth from flegm gathered together betwixt its lapps and then the Cure is easy And to this end the purpose excellent good is the colyry that it prepared of Lapis Calaminaris thrice burnt and twice extingwished in wine vinegar one scruple hereof Myrrh lead burnt and washed of each half ascruple of Oriental Saffron five grains opium eleven grains of burnt brass four scruples the decoction af fenugreek one ounce al these throughly beaten together and incorporated upon a marble stone or Porphyry Article II. Of the Pustules and Vlcers of the tunicle Cornea Pustuls are little risings that are common to the Adnata and Cornea tunicles They are known by the very sight in magnitude equalling the grain or seed of a millet of a black color of an exact roundness and in that they exhibet not a white circle in the bottom by these they are distinguished from the falling forth of the Vvea the fourth Membrane or thin Skin of the Eye They arise from a Humor that is sharp and serous or Wheyish lifting up the tunicles They are Cured the more easily if they be in the Adnata Tunicle but with more Difficulty if they be nigh unto the Pupilla or Bal of the Eye and not at al by any means possible if the Cornea be broken into the internal part They are divided in a twofold manner Like as the Ophthalmy I. Some are with an inflamation which are Cured like as other inflamations Saccharum Saturni or the Sugar of Saturn with the water of Eye bright is here of al Remedies the best and cheifest Others from a waterish Humor which require Exsiccating and drying Remedies as for instance Tutia Lapis Calaminaris c. II. Others are Superficial called Epicaumata which appear in a darker color Others more deep under the second or the third film called Encaumata which by reason of the whitness of the Cornea Tunicle seem to be the whiter and are therefore dangerous because they can and often do eat through the whol Cornea Tunicle II. The Vlcers of the Cornea Tunicle arise somtimes from External and somtimes from things Internal or that flow in or that are heaped up together And they have various and different names given them by which they are sufficiently known and distinguished according to the variety of Circumstances That is called Bothrion that is hollow narrow and hard Roiloma that which is broader but not so deep Argemon that that arising in the External party colored circle of the Eye and being of somwhat a Red color round about the external part of this circle that is particoloured but white about the internal part thereof Comprehendeth likewise within it al things that surround and encompass it As touching the Cure it is to be wel observed that Medicaments are to be applied and put to the Forehead and also unto the Temples that so the influx may be impeded and that the said Medicaments ought to be gentle and temperate The Ophthalmick Water of Mynsichtus is here by some exceedingly extolled Article III. Of the Wounds of the Cornea Tunicle and the pain of the Eyes The Wounds of the Cornea in general require 1. Evacuation and that more especially by Venesection 2. Revulsion that so the inflamation may be prevented and hindered and the pain mitigated by Cataplasms imposed upon the Eye-Lids alone that so both the Eye and the Eye-Lids may be opened 3. By Consolidation And for this purpose there is very much commended that part of the white of an Egg which the Germans cal das Tuchen and the Italians Galatura wel beaten together as also the Red Oyl of Saturn If we consider the Differences 1. Somtimes the Cornea alone is wounded but then again somtimes together with it the Eye-Lids likewise where care must be taken that they be not glewed together with the Eye 2. Somtimes the wounds do not penetrate so deep Somtimes the Cornea is broken and then there flows forth a Watery Humor which likewise happeneth in Ulcers And then if the wound be Narrow it hath in it the less danger but if the Vvea Viz. The fourth Membrane or thin Skin of the Eye fall forth it is altogether incurable The Cure is one and the same with that of a wound and Ulcer of the Eyes II. The pain of the Eyes chanceth unto and befalleth the Eyes cheifly and especially by Reason of the External Tunicles It is known by the Relation of the sick party It ariseth from Causes that Excite and hasten the Solution of Unity It is Cured by taking away the Causes It is Mitigated by the Whites of Eggs the Pap of a rosted Apple with Sugar Camphire Saffron Rose-water and the Brest-Milk of a Woman We must here beware that we preseribe not the use of any Opiates whatsoever Chap. 6. Of the Diseases of the Uvea Article I. Of the falling forth of the Uvea and the Dilatation Widness and Narrowness of the Pupilla Viz. The Bal or Apple of the Eye THe Diseases of the Vvea one of the Tunicles in the Eye are the falling forth of the said Vvea the Dilatation of the Pupilla the Narrowing and contracting of the same as also the Suffusion thereof I. The Vvea falleth forth when the Vnity of the Cornea is Dissolved either by wounds or by Ulcers It is known and discerned from Pushes from hence that the part that falleth forth is either black or Skie-colored and in the bottom of it exhibiteth a white Incle which is from the Lips of the Cornea eaten through and the Pupilla or Eye-bal appeareth as if puld asunder in some one certain part thereof It is Cured by Medicaments that are Astringent without any asperity and if it be not removed by these then it is requisite that we make use
of the incision knife For the Differences see further in Aegin●la II. The Dilatation of the Pupilla called Mydriasis and Platucoria is when the Pupilla is inlarged above and besides the ordinary course of nature toward the it is or particoloured circie of the eye It is known by this that the sick persons either by reason of too much of the External light breaking in upon the eyes or else in regard that because of the falling of the Sun beames in an oblique manner upon them these oblique wayes being weaker than those that are perpendicular they are not able to see and discerne so clearly and acutly when they would look upon any object they then a little close their eyes and the one of them being shut the pupilla of the other cannot be dilated It ariseth from the Extension and stretching out of the Vvea of which this said Pupilla is the hole or inlet either by reason of external or else internal causes For the Cure hereof it must be sought for in the differences It is divided in a threefould manner I. One is native and such as is contracted from the very birth Another Adventitious and happening accidentally II. Another is from external Causes as a blow or a fal from on high c. which●●● it be altogether without any inflamation is easily and soon cured but not so if it be accompanied with a rupture of the Vvea Another from Causes internal which are particularly expressed in the following difference III. Another is from siccity or drynes extending the Vvea like as we see in skins or hides that are perforated and this is not to be cured without some difficulty The best remedy in this case is Goats milk if the eye be wel washed therewith and as it were drenched therein Another from humidity the cure whereof is so much the more easie if it chance not after an extream and Vehement pain of the Head It is performed universal and general Remedies being first premized by the drawing forth of blood out of the Temple Veins and the Veins in the corners of the Eyes and by the applying of Cupping-Glasses in the hinder part of the Head and Leeches behind the Eares and likewise by the Use of Resolving Medicaments among which salted Water is much commended that have in them but little of astriction Another from blasts blowings which happeneth unto Trumpeters these flaculencies or windinesses are to be discussed scattered as aforesaid in affects of the like Nature III. The straightness or narrowness of the Pupilla which they term Myosis is when it is rendered and made narrower than naturally it ought to be It is known by this that al objects whatsoever that the sick persons look upon seem bigger than indeed they are that the visible species being conveied in through a straight and narrow inlet may be and are dilated in that broader space neer unto the Crystaline humor It ariseth from the contraction of the Vvea It is Cured according to the Nature and quality of the differences It is Divided according to the diversity of the Causes One is from overmuch humidity contracting the Vvea from the Circumference towards the Center For the which those Medicaments that are exsiccating and drying such are Rew and Selandine are a very fit and propper Remedy Another is from a defect of the watery humor and then the Patient wil see and discerne better in the room that is obscure and dark because that the visible species are more aptly and speedily Conveyed unto the Crystaline humor In this case an aliment and supply is to be attracted and drawn unto the part by applying of milk and sweet water unto the head Another is from a more scant and spare afflux of the visive spirits unto the said Pupilla Article II. Of a Suffusion A Suffusion otherwise termed Hypochyma is an obstruction of the Pupilla bindering the sight and caused by a humor consisting in the eye and residing in that part thereof The SIGNS are divers according to the quality and Condition of the rise and original of the augmentation and of the perfection or Period thereof and they shal severally and apart be explained in the differences The CAUSE is a humor either sincere and single or else mingled whether it be there collected or transmitted thi●her by the veines of the tunicles the Vvea tunicle or the Nerves It is collected most especially in those eyes that are great and sticking out we term them Goggle eyes in regard that the visive virtue when it is diffused in a wide space is the more infirm and weak and the laxity of the waies or passages affordeth a very facile and easie entrance The CURE is difficult if it chiefly happen from a feave or some extraordinary vehement pain of the head if it chance unto yong childeren or old aged people and none at al if the suffusion be black if the sick person discern not the light It is wrought if at al I. By the drawing forth of the obstructing matter by purging Phlegmagogues and especially hiera and the electuary that they cal diacarthamus but before these we may premise and administer preparatives II. By revulsion of the same matter by Cupping-Glasses Vesicatories c. III By a discussion of the said matter by Topicks mingled with Emollints or mollifiers and the clearing and cleansing of the eyes And here for this purpose there is commended the water called aqua Joelis the remmedy of Bovius formed of the gal of a Cock half an ounce the blood of a mouce three drams and a half and so made up like unto a Colliry with the breast-milke of a woman or else water of mans dung known by the name of aqua stercoris humani Elambicata with the gal of a Weasel and likewise of a hare saccharo caudi rosato and margarites prepared IV. By Chirurgical operation of which we are for further satisfaction in this point to consult those Authors that have treated at large uppon this subject The Differences of a Suffusion are Various I. In regard of its Situation 1. One is in the Center of the Pupilla which Representeth the Objects as though they came and passed through the Windows and this ought not by any means to be attempted by the needles point lest that the whol Pupilla be filled with the peccant Humor flowing thereunto 2. Another resideth between the Vvea and the Cornea Tunicle and then the Pupilla is evidently seen to be extreamly obscured and darkned and the Pupilla is of necessity dilated by Reason of the Humor that distendeth it 3. Another resideth betwixt the Vvea and the Crystalline humor and then the opposite unto the former do manifestly appear 4 Another is seated in a deeper place and then the Pupilla is very narrow and much streightned Another is situate in a place less profound and deep and then the said Pupilla is larger and wider II. They differ in regard of the degrees for One
compounded and made of Crocus Martis beaten into a most smal pouder and Cr●cus Veneris of each two ounces these wel mingled together with the oyl commonly known by the name of Oleum Vici Pomarum Symplicium the water of the sperm of Frogs with a little Champhyre and sugar of Saturn put round about the neck Argilla furnace● that is to say Clay baked in an Oven and wel mingled together with strong vinegar like unto a pultise and applied after the same manner Asses dung or swines dung dissolved in Rose vinegar and then put up into the nostrils the shavings or Fragments of Fungus Betulinus the mushrom or toad stool of the Beech tree the Root of white Succory dig'd up about St. James tide at noon day when the sun is at ful south and chawed betwixt the teeth As for the Magnetical Curing hereof by Vitriol see further in Beccerus in his Medicus Mycrocosmus in the Chap. of the blood c. The Hemorrhage is divided in a threefold manner from the Causes from the blood and from the places from whence the said proceedeth I. One is from that we cal Anastomosis or an opening of the orifices of the veins which either is caused by the abundance of blood and then the face is red the veins strut and are distended and a ful feeding went before and here venesection hath its place the head is by no means to be washed or so much as wet with cold water lest that the blood being there deteined something that is worse follow upon it neither is there any linen cloth to be wet in cold water and at the first begining of it to be cast about the neck lest that the ways and pasges between the brain and the heart should by this means be shut up or else it is caused by the acrimony of the blood and the thinness thereof and then there ready at hand signs of a Cacochymy and in this case we are to do the work with those things that incrassate and thicken as Bole armonick Dragons blood in the shops termed Sanguis draconis and such like Orelse it is caused by the irritation of the facculty and then the very same things as before are present and ready at hand or else by the weakness of the said faculty and then there is blood issuing forth by intervals but it is not much and some disease weakening the liver went before and therfore the Cure ought likwise to be prosecuted with special regard had unto the same Another is from a diairesis as we term it or a division of the veins by some sharp corroding humor and like by other means and then the blood issueth forth in a far greater abundance or there went before some violent Cause or else lastly there are present certain signs of a Cholerick Cacochymy Another is from that we cal diapedesis or as we may to term it a passing through by leaping and then the blood that issueth forth is but very little c. See more hereof in the first Book II. One is of the Arterial blood which is hot somwhat red subtile leaping forth with a froth and with violence Another is of the vein blood and this is Thicker and Blacker III. One is of blood issuing and passing forth out of the veins of the Brain and then there went before a pain of the head and the flux is not easily stanched Another is of the same blood leaping or starting out of the nostril veins and then the contrary of what was said touching the former happeneth and appeareth Chap. 3. Of the Hindering and Hurting of the Smel Gravedo or Stuffing and Sternutition Or Sneezing THe principal burt of the sence of smelling is the abolition or the diminution thereof which differ only in degrees and in the greatness of their Causes And this is caused 1. Either from a distemper of the brain which either possesseth the fore part thereof and then the Tast likewise by reason of the branches of the third pair of nerves of the brain Forming the tongue is abolished the voice is loud and shril and no way to be found fault with the Cure here is to have an especial regard unto the distemper or else it possesseth and resideth in the process of those nerves that constitute and frame the organ of the smelling and then there is no hurt at al to be perceived in the brain or in the other senses Or else it is caused by the narrowness and streightness and that too either of the Brain and then there is present and sensibly to be felt a heaviness in the head and here we may operate by errhines and yet not toomany of them neither and here likewise sternutatories are exceeding useful and profitable or otherwise of the Processes of the brain or of the nose within and the Ethmoid Bone and then the voice and respiration are vitiated and the wonted excrements restrained and kept in The smelling is somtimes totally abolished if the Phlegm by heat be baked and hardened at the holes and enterances of the aforesaid bone which chanceth unto such as being troubled with the pose or distillation called coriza heedlesly and without any consideration go into baths In these cases that that cheifly deserveth commendation is the Root of Gentian fitly put up into the ●os●ils Castoreum wel soaked in vinegar and afterwards sweetned the Oyl of Nightshade the Errhin of Zacutus in his seventh Book 15. Chap. P. 517. c. touching which we have before spoken in the Chapter of Cactarrhs II. Gravedo or Coryza is a defluxion of the Excrements of the Brain being crude and thin like water unto the nostrils which is accompanied and attended with a frequent sternutation or sneezing This Malady is wel enough known and by it self discovered It ariseth from the distemper of the brain either hot or cold concerning which enough above III. Sternutation is a violent and involuntary expulsion by the nostrills of the flatulent windy spirits and sharp vapours offending the Brain It is done with a Loude voice as wel because the Windy spirit breaketh forth altogether at once as by reason that it forceth its passage through the streight narrow holes of the nostrils It ariseth either from external causes and then the nostrils are to be supled and gently stroked with the oyl of roses or milk or else from internal humors and vapours brought thither touching which see further in their proper Chapters but is wont for the most part and too commonly to be neglected by the Physitians unless in Plethorical bodies it happen to be accompanied with a distillation in the very first beginning of the disease The little veins in the greater angle of the eyes and that is nighest unto the nostrils being forcibly pressed together do forthwith stay and stop the frequency thereof Title VII Of the diseases of the Tongue and the Symptoms thereof THe Affects of the Tongue are a Tumor or swelling Ranula a blackness a Palsy a stammering an Aphony
the progress with discussion but by Discussion alone and Maturation if they incline and tend toward a suppuration and here Milk boyled or the Decoction of Raisons of the Sun is to be made use of and it is known to be of singular benefit They are divided after a various and Different manner I. Some of them are from an External Cause to wit an anoynting with Quick Silver Meats of a sharp quality corrupted in the Stomach the eating of Mushroms or Toadstools and the Retention of the Menstrua or monthly Courses c. Others from Internal Causes to wit 1. Ill Humors either generated and bred there or else transmitted thither from some other place and then they resemble in color those Humors they proceed from Those that take their original from Flegm are perceived to be less hot than the rest Those from Choler for the most part are inflamed Those in little Children if they be black and have a kind of crustiness over them are pernitious destructive and deadly These require Universal Remedies 2. Vapours that are sent forth either from the whol body or else from part thereof only and that more especially an over hot liver They easily by their Acrimony offend and hurt the uppermost parts of the Mouth by Reason of their softness and tenderness and in feavers they very frequently produce such a like Disease II. Some are Recent and new which are the more easily Cured and healed others old and Inveterate and these not without much difficulty and this as wel by Reason of the quick sense and apprehensiveness of the part which is further Irritated by sharp and piercing Medicaments as that the Medicaments are diluted and vitiated by the Spittle and lastly as by Reason of the speedy hastening of the Malady being in a place hot and moist unto a Rotteness and Putrefaction III. Some of them are Sordid and foul which may be washed with Sugared Water wel mingled with the Oyl of Vitriol Others leaving behind them their Sordid and filthy Vlcers and then the Green water of Platerus is fitly and properly to be administred and this is to be followed by the washing of the Mouth with Plantane Water IV. Some of them do only infest and annoy the uppermost Skin and from thence by degrees creep along into the gums pallat the sides and Root of the Tongue Others Penetrate and pierce more deeply and eat quite through the Palate and the flesh of the Tongue especially in infants in regard they have the softer and more tender bodies There is here to be commended the Decoction of Savory and Betony in Wine if the Mouth be throughly washed therewith as also the Water of Nuts destilled with Vinegar and a Spunge therein dipt and so applied V. Some are in Children which most usually proceed from the Breast-Milk when it is hot sharp and Salt and these are to be Cured with the Syrup of Mulberries together with Honey of Roses or Oxymel or honyed Vinegar Others in such as are Older and grown up to their perfect state and these require and cal for Universals Chap. 2. Of the Stinking of the Mouth THe Faetor or Stinking of the Mouth is the offensive Vnsavoriness of the Breathing proceeding and arising from a stinking Vapor passing out of the Mouth There is no need of Signs The Cheife and neerest Cause is a Vapor which proceedeth I. From Meats either stinking and unsavory in their own Nature as Garlike Onyons c. And the stink soon and of its own accord vanisheth or else such as are corrupted in the Stomack or the void places betwixt the Teeth II. From the Excrements of the intestines when the inferior Orifice of the Stomach by which it openeth it self into the Intestines is not closely shut which befalleth common drunkards and then in this case Cloves Nut-Meg Zedoary the Roots of the French flower-de-luce Rinds of Citron c. Are to be held and kept in the Mouth III. From stinking Humors either in the Stomach and then they are best of al Evacuated by Aloetick Remedies or else in the strainer bone if at any time corrupted or else in an Ulcer and wound of the Lungs the Gums or the intestines IV. From Worms having their residence in the Intestines c. Title XI Of the Diseases and Symptoms of the Teeth Chap. 1. Of the Diseases of the Teeth Article I. Of the Corrosion of the Teeth THe Diseases of the Teeth are Corrosion and Mobility The Corrosion of the Teeth is a diminution of their magnitude from Causes that Eat through them so that they are broken fal forth by piece-meal the said diminution or corrosion now and then producing Fistulaes The SIGNS are easily discovered both by the touch and by the sight thereof and for the most part those that have such Teeth when they are fasting send forth a stinking and Unsavoury breath or Vapor The CAUSES of Corrosion are either External Womens Fucusses or Face paintings made of Hydrarge c. Al sweet meats more especially Sugar as Experience testifieth food taken in too hot or else meats that are overcold taken in immediatly or in a very short while after the hot Food Or else they are Internal to wit 1. Sharp Humors which for the most part run down from out of the Head and then in the Cure we ought so to proceed that in the first place the Flux be stopt 2. That the putrid humidity be quite taken away by the Decoction of the Roots of Capars Bay Berries Gallia Moschata together with mastick put into the hollow Tooth 3. Corruption must be carefully prevented by cleansing of the Teeth with a Pen-knife from meats that stick betwixt them and likewise by washing of the Mouth with Wine And here are commended the Odontalgick Remedy of Crollius one grain thereof wrapt up in Cotton and so put upon the Tooth the little round Bals of Trallianus formed and made of Thebane Opium one scruple Mirrb Styrax Calamite of each a dram white Pepper Saffron Galbanum of each one scruple and so made up with Honey of Squils and then thrust into the Tooth II. Worms which are to be drawn forth by those little Pellets that are formed of the Henbane seed the Onion and Garlick with a sufficient quantity of Goats sewet and so imposed upon the Hollowness of the Teeth Touching the Fistula's of the Teeth these two things are to be noted I. That they destil almost insensibly and by little and little a Corrupt Humor and a kind of Rotten Filth which Somtimes floweth into the Mouth with a stinking Savor Somtimes it is leisurely derived and drawn forth unto the external parts along by the Roots of the Teeth and the passage holes of the Jaw-bone through which the Vessels glide down and slip into the said Jaws and so this Humor exciteh certain little risings and swellings in the Cheek or in the Chin and Somtimes the Ulcer remaineth ever more open II. That it is hardly ever to be Cured unless that the
interception of the said humor and for this purpose serveth wel the Emplaster of mastick Gum elemy and Taccamabaka throughly warmed and so applyed to the temples IV. By discussion with the playster of Melilote and other the like V. By the Application of such remedies as act and operate by their own specifical property among which the cheif are the tooth of a dead dog burnt in the furnace mingled with posset drink and so imposed the root of the sharp and sowr sorrel taken up in the spring before it blossom and bud forth wel dryed and so applied unto the pained tooth That we term senect a serpentis boyled in wine or vinegar Gum Hedera put into the teeth VI. By extraction and drawing it forth which wil be much facillitated if the tooth be first touched with the distilled water of Sal Armoniack take notice of this let the Cause be what it wil Take the Fern root and Cinquefoyl of each three drams Bistort two drams the leaves of Rew of Sage of Betony the Flowers of Roses of each half a handful boyl al these in a sufficient quantity of red wine that is most astringent and as much common water as you think fit until a third part be wasted for a Collution to wash the mouth withal The differences are taken from the original place and quality of the Humors I. For their rise and original they somtims flow together from the highest part or crown of the head and then the Revulsion ought to be by the Cephalick vein and likewise those things that we hinted before touching repellers are heedfully to be observed Somtimes they arise from the inferior parts and then the revulsion ought to be made by the Basilick vein II. For the place sometimes they stick and abide in the tooth and then the pain is not altogether so deep but is extended according to the latitude of the tooth For the most part it conteyneth within it a worm by the motion whereof the pain is exasperated Somtimes in the little nerve tending toward and into the roots of the tooth and the nervous membrain thereof and then the pain is the more vehement It extendeth it self in breadth al along the Gums and reacheth even unto the Ear the tooth being taken forth it is much eased in regard that by reason the way is opened the pain may the better be dispersed and blown abroad Somtimes it seateth it self in the very Jaw-bones themselves and then it floweth into the upper Jaw-bone along by the greater Angle of the Eye and into the lower by the Temple Veins We cannot attempt the Cure by Repellers without apparent danger in regard that the matter being brought unto the Jaws inevitably suffocateth and choaketh III. For the Qualities some are hot Serous or Wheysish Salt and Sharp which excite a most violent and intolerable pain but hot withal such as soon hath an end by Reason of the sudden changes It is very rare that they have adjoyned to them as a Concomitant the swelling of the Cheek They are removed and taken away by Repellers among which are Roots of the sour Sorrel boyled in hard and austere Wine and together with Wine held in the Mouth as long as need requireth the Roots of the Wild sloes the outward Rind being taken away and this indeed is one of the cheif Remedies al things else corresponding and answerable thereto Others are Cold and Flegmatick from the which that pain that proceedeth is indeed more remiss and gentle than the former but then it is of longer continuance these most commonly produce a swelling of the Cheeks This pain is to be taken away after that Universal and general Remedies have been made use of with Camphire half a scruple Spirit of Wine two ounces or of the Juniper Gum half an ounce boyled together with eight ounces of Rhenish Wine and for a while kept in the Mouth Or lastly of the Distilled Oyl of Cloves two drops thereof with a smal proportion of Camphire put upon the Tooth being first wrapt up in Cotton Article II. Of Stupor Stridor and Nigredo in the Teeth THe Stupor or if we may so term it the astonishment of the Teeth is Caused I. Somtimes from the Sowrness either of meats or of the Humors or else of the fumes and vapors which frequently befalleth those that are Hypochondriacal II. Somtimes from the imagination at the Noise that is made in filing of hard mettals or the Mastication and Chewing of sharp sowr fruits by one standing neer If the sound be very acute piercing and making a loud crashing then the imagination suffereth a kind of violence the Application of the said noise being made within an extream narrow compass and then next of al the Membrane of the sense of hearing being likewise as it were smitten is offended and thereupon is immediately contracted and together with it certain little Nerves also even unto the Root of the Teeth into which place a new Air suddently falling in and getting entrance causeth a certain kind of horrour about the Teeth It is Cured and taken away by Chewing of Wax hot bread Cloth c. The Stridor Grinding or Crashing noise of the Teeth proceedeth I. From the imbecillity of the Jaw-bone Muscles produced and caused by cold II. From Worms the brain being affected by Consent III. From the multitude of Vapors is in the beginnings of Paroxysmes It is wont to threaten the Apoplexy and likewise in Feavers the Deliry or Dotage in such especially as are not accustomed thereunto in case this doting went not before the Feaver III. Nigredo or blackness proceedeth from divers Causes as wel External as Internal And these external are a Carelessness and neglect in Rubbing and Cleansing them the use of sweet and hot things and the anoynting of the upper parts with Quick-Silver or as they commonly cal it Hydrarge These latter to wit the internal are 1. The Exspiration or breathing forth of Crudities by reason of surcharging the Stomach with meats or Drink 2. A fault of the Humors by reason of the impurity of the Bowels and cheifly of the Spleen left remayning behind after a Quartane Feaver It is taken away by the Dentifrice Compounded of Marsh-Mallow Roots and of the Illirian Flower-de-luce Boyled in Water with Salgem and Alum of each alike and as much as wil suffice and after that throughly dryed in a Furnace beaten together into a very smal powder and mingled wel together with some few grains of Musk. There are other dentifrices that are formed and made of the Jaw-bones of the Lucefish or Pike burned White Coral and Date Stones burned the Bones of the Sepia or Cuttle fish and Egg-shels burnt Harts horn burnt c. Title XII Of the Affects of the Gums THe principal Affects of the Gums are an Excrescence and a Purulis I. The Excrescence is somtimes so great by reason of the Spungy rarity and loosness of the Gums and the abundant afflux of Blood that the Teeth and
to be dissol●●d should putrefie For the Dissolving hereof excellent good is that broth that is made of the stalks of the Herbs following together with an Ablution or washing of the Paps with Water Wine and Vinegar mingled together a Fomentation of the Decoction of Marsh-Mallows Fenugreek and Melilote c. A Liniment laid thereupon of the Oyl of Roses Sweet Almonds the Juyce of Smallage and Parsly and Vinegar in which there hath been first dissolved the Curd or Runnet of a Hare The Water of Hemlock is thought to be good for both the foresaid Purposes And so much of the Diseases of the Chest or middle Region THE TENTH BOOK OF THE IDEA OF PRACTICAL PHYSICK Concerning the Diseases of the lower Belly Title I. Of the Affects of the Gullet Chap. 1. Of the Diseases of the Gullet THe Diseases of the lower venter comprehend under them the affects of the Gullet stomach Guts Anus Mesentery Liver Spleen Kidneys Bladder Genital Parts in Men and Women the Navel and Belly The Diseases of the Gullet are Distemper Tumor Straitness Wounds and Vlcers Article I. Of the Distemper and Tumor of the Gullet 1. The Distemper of the Gullet is a recession of it from its Native to a preternatural Temper it s known by the swallowing being hurt 'T is divided into a hot one which happens from without from fumes pouders c. from within from Vapors in burning Feavers a hot and dry Distemper of the Womb and then there is perceived a Redness and Roughness on the Tongue with thirst which is cured by cooling means somwhat clensing 2. into a cold one which either proceeds from too cold drink or otherwise and is taken away by things that heat 3. Into a moist one which issues from the Defluxions of catarrhes Salivation c. and Causeth a Relaxation of the Gullet so that the lower part of it and the upper mouth of the Stomach lie open 4. Into a dry one which ariseth from dry things and Causeth Roughness and is Cured by suppings of Chicken Broth or fresh butter II. A Tumor of the Gullet is its excess in its Magnitude 'T is known by the pain in swallowing most of al in the hinder part and back by the stoppage in swallowing so that if a great bit be to be swallowed somtimes the drink runs through the Nose it proceeds from the same Causes from which we said Tumors in general did arise 'T is often hard to cure because it endangers Suffocation but after the same manner as other tumors viz. In the beginning by replling means in the Augment by external and internal resolvers in the state by discusives let vomits be avoided for fear of suffocation unless when t is come to suppuration that the Tumor ought to be broke 'T is divided I. Into a hot one with which is Joynd a Feaver great thirst pain in the Cure of which bleeding takes place and into a cold one in which the pain is less and in the Cure of which the repellers ought to be gentle the resolvers and discussives stronger II. Into that which possesses the upper part of the Gullet and then meat cannot go down and into that which infects the lower part and then the Meat after it hath descended a little way stops there Article II. Of the Straitness wounds and Vlcers of the Gullet I. The Straitness of the Gullet is when its Passage is Contracted 't is known by this that liquids are easier swallowed than solid things 'T is divided according to its Causes for one is from external Causes as from astringent medicines or some things swallowed and then the business is known from the standers by or the Patient himself it must be cast up by vomiting or Coughing or furthered by moistning and Emollient means applied outwardly and inwardly or be thrust down with a Spunge Dipt in Oyl of sweet Almonds or taken out with that excellent Instrument of Fabricius Hildanus Another Cause is from a Tumor Worms ascending out of the Stomach and Guts from Scorbutical and Hypochondriacal Vapors distending the Gullet and compressing the rough Artery from the Luxation of the Vertebrae of the Neck and back which may be seen in their proper place Another is from thick Flegm kurdled milke c. Sticking in it where Oxymel of squils and vomits takes place II. The Wounds of the Gullet in respect of their Causes are twofold for either they are Caused by a weapon and then the situation of the wound shows it if vomiting happen somwhat is cast forth through it and t is hardly Cured Or from some smal bones swallowed and then t is easily manifest Medicines that are grateful to the Stomach ought to be administred III. An Ulcer of the Gullet is known by the pain when some sharp sour or Salt thing is swallowed though in little quantity by its biting and by the casting up of matter 'T is hard to be Cured because the parts wil scarce grow together in a Membranous body It hath its Differences from the Causes for one is from external corroding things as Aqua Fortis mercury Sublimate and then we must work with Lenient Vomits and such as are clammy as the Mucilage of quince Seeds Fat broths Another is from a wound Tumors imposthums another from the casting up of sharp Humors c. Chap. 2. Of the Symptomes of the Gullet AMongst the Symptomes of the Gullet the Principal one is the hurt of swallowing which is twofold for one is by Reason of the resolution of the Gullet the faculty being hurt by Reason of the Resolution of the Nerves of the sixth or seventh Conjugation it s known by this that solid things are easier swallowed than liquids as being thrust down with less labor for these require a greater force to make them yeeld to the impulsive Body It ariseth either from a Defluxion and then there is felt a heaviness in the Head a distension of the Neck and the Rheum it self or from some other Disease t is dangerous and ought to be cured by Medicines good against Palsies the Second is by Reason of Convulsions which ariseth also from a wound and t is most dangeous in old people There is another from the affects of the part of which we have treated formerly Title II. Of the affects of the Stomach Chap. 1. Of the Diseases of the Stomach THe Affects of the Stomach are either diseases or Symptoms to those belong distempers Tumors wounds and Vlcers the other see hereafter Article I. Of the Distemper of the Stomach in general The Distemper of the Stomach is a preternatural constitution of its similar Parts in the first qualities The SIGNS of that are the hurt appetite and concoction a change in the Excrements a heaviness in the Stomach and waving of it and distillations from the Head which most commonly happen The CAUSE is whatsoever can Internally or Externally alter it The CURE is performed I. By the alteration of the distemper by contraries then the Medicines ought
to be grateful to the Stomach rather solid than liquid rather meats that are Medicinal than exact Medecines mixt with astringent things that the Stomach be not Relaxed not sharp Salt corroding lest they offend the mouth of the Stomach if the Medicines be external they must be applied to the sword-like Cartilage towards the Navel and upon the back to the twelfth and thirteenth Vertebrae II. By taking away the Causes both External and Internal III. By Strengthening the Stomach where appropriate Medicines take place as the Magistral of red Coral the inward Coat of a Hens maw c. 'T is divided into a distemper without or with matter of which in the following Articles Article II. Of the Distemper of the Stomach without matter A Distemper of the Stomach without matter is a preternatural disposition of the similar Parts of the Stomach in its qualities produced by external and Internal Causes without the presence of any Humor Its SIGNS and Causes shal be explained in the differences the Cure relies only on alteration and removing the Causes 'T is divided according to the qualities I. One is Hot which is known from the want of appetite to meat indorous Belchings clamminess of Spittle dryness of the jaws and Tongue it ariseth externally from the six non Natural things encreasing its heat internally from internal Diseases burning Feavers Inflamation of the Liver Spleen c. 'T is Cured 1. With cooling things but lightly and not too long applied 2. With cooling Diet where Barley Water takes place and Emulsions of the four greater cold seeds II. Another is cold which it known from the greatness of appetite unless it be too cold by sour belchings if neither much nor cold meats have been eaten nor flegm do abound by wind and two much spitting It ariseth externally from the six non Natural things internally from the parts incumbent as the Liver Spleen and Muscls of the Belly which induce a coldness 'T is Cured 1. By appropriate heaters but not too much inwardly and outwardly moist lest driness be caused 2. By Diet where Wormwood Wine takes place it is distinguished into a positive of which we have now treated and a privative which is conjoined with driness It ariseth from the defect of innate heat which is Caused by things that heat too much as the frequent use of Wine the want of nourishment the heat and driness of the incumbent Parts as of the Liver of the muscles of the Belly and the Cal. III. Another moist which is known by want of thirst by abundance of spittle c. it ariseth from external Causes inducing moisture it is Cured 1. With dryers without eminent heat or cold as are the ashes of Hens Guts of Swallows burnt harts horn red Coral troschiskes of Vipers Galangal burnt Salt 2. By a contrary Diet. IV. Another dry which is known by the extenuation and Contraction of the Region of the Stomach which is accompanied with a slenderness of the whol body It ariseth externally from a drying Diet too much emptying and fumes of mettals internally from the dryness of the incumbent parts The cure is the more difficult because with the Feaverish heat it induceth a consumption if vomiting happen it argues a great want of innate heat the Cure is performed 1. By moistening which is best of al accomplisht by nourishments that are medicinal 2. by Diet where Milk takes place beginning with a smal dose new layed Eggs Almonds Raisons Pine Nuts c. There is another compound the Nature of which may be collected from the simple those that labor of a hot and dry distemper have little blood unfit for nourishment are lean bound in body with Veins eminent subject to the dry Scab Article III. Of the distemper of the stomach with matter A distemper of the stomach with matter is when the stomach fals from its temper by reason of some humor either generated there or falling thither from some other place The Signs and causes are put in the difinition in the differences they shal be more largely Explained The CURE is finisht 1. By the alteration and evacuation of the peccant humor 2. By strengthning of the part by appropriate external meats Looke into the differences The Differences of this Distemper are Divers One is from the matter generated in the stomach then the symptoms appeare continually the whole body and al the members are sound It is cured by emptying of the matter which is comodiously done by medicines of aloes hiera picra mechoacan and by corroborating the part Another is from matter falling from another part then that part which was periodically affected is no longer troubled some accustomary evacuation is supprest or the usual diet hath bin changed or somewhat stops in the whole body or in some particular part The symptomes are more remisse For the cure we must have respect to the parts that send the matter II. Another is from the matter sticking in the cavety of the stomach then there is a waving or nauseousness which is attended with vomitinge or a loosness Another from the matter impacted in the coates of the stomach then there is a nauseousness without vomiting oftentimes with the hickops III. There is another chollerick viz. hot and dry which besides the former signes is discovered by nauseousness bitterness of the mouth with a certain sence of knawing and sometimes by chollerick vomitings It ariseth from choller either sent thither from the bladder of gal or generated there from corrupt meats 'T is cured 1. By dyet wherein chicken broath seasoned with lettice and endive doth excel 2. By emptying of the matter both by vomits made of the pouder of the down or flower of walnuts dryed in the smoak and given a dram weight in honey and water and purgers compounded of hiera picra 3. By alteration and coolers and moisteners amongst which do excel succory and violet water syrup of pomegranates of coral of Quercetan of strawberries currans tincture of roses let●●ce and succory condite c. IV. There is another flegmatick to wit cold moist which is known both by the signs formerly reckoned up and by a sence of heaviness in the stomach especially some hours after meat by a waving sowr belching it proceeds from thin or thick flegm t is cured 1. By emptyers both by vomit to which in thick flegm we ought to premise things incisive given in a solid form amongst which excels diatrion pipereon diacalaminth the essence of balme penny-royal c. and by purging so that the purges be administred either alone or mixt with preparatives The vomiters are viz. of salt of vitriol given in broth oxymel with the decoction of radish Heurnius his vomiter of hellebor 2. By strengtheners amongst which excels inwardly taken the roots of callamus aromaticus and citron pills and of oranges with the phylosophical spirit of vitriol and the Elixir proprietatis outwardly ointments compounded of the distilled oyls of wormwood mint cudmin peneroyal mastick a
Clammy and Flegmatick whether generated out of the meats or flowing thither from some other part The Cure ought to be fetcht from the Chapter of distemper 3. by a defect and weakness of attraction Either by reason of a cold and moist distemper or by reason of the interception of the passages by the obstruction of the mesaraick and hollow part of the Liver in the Cure of which those parts must be respected 4 By hindrance of Evaporation either when the substance of the body is not emptyed either by reason of the constipation of the pores and thickness of the Skin which a Bath of sweet water wil take away or the weakness of Native heat whether acquired by a cold distemper or idlenss or by reason of the tenacity sixt and firme concretion of the substantifical moisture which doth not easily yeild to the gentle and pleasing heat that feeds upon it There is another from the not perceiving of the sucking which 1. by Diseases of the brain in which either the Nerves of the sixth pair are affected or the Animal spirits are not generated or their influx is hindred or which happens in acute Feavers they do languish or the faculty as in the Phrenitical c. is converted another way The Cure ought to respect those Diseases 2. by Diseases of the Stomach it self whether they be of distemper or of Composition or of solution of unity of which we treated before The appetite is raised by taking away the causes partly by cooling things if a hot Cause did precede partly by heating things if a cold Wormwood Wine is very much commended Article III. Of too great Appetite Too great Appetite is distinguished into two Species viz. A Dog-like Appetite and Bulimus I. A Dog-like Appetite is a continual insatiable desire of Eating arising from a Vehement sense of sucking in the mouth of the stomach afflicting somtimes with vomiting somtimes with a loosness There is no need of SIGNS whereas they are exprest in the definition The CAUSE is a Vehement sense of sucking and pricking in the Orifice of the stomach but whence it comes is explained in the Differences The CURE which is timely to be administred least the sick fal either into a custome of vomiting or into the Caeliacal passion or into a dropsie doth respect 1. The hunger it self which is allayed either with the Use of Fat things or with the Yolks of Egs hardened in Water or what is best with Wine 2. The Causes of which we wil treat in the Differences The Differences are taken from the Causes urging the Suckings I. One is from the too great want of nourishment in the Body or by Reason of worms feeding on the Child which shew themselves by biting and they are cast forth by the use of Hiera Picra or by reason of too great Evacuations both sensible and insensible by the habit of the Body by Reason of too great a heat of the moisture to which conduceth much the tenuity of the Humors and thinness of bodies Laxness of pores c. And then sweats do molest The Cure is to be turned to the Particular Diseases Or by reason of the long use of Detersive Nourishment as Pigs Lobsters c. II. There is another from cold acid and more austere Humors wrinkling the Orifice of the Stomach compressing and pulling it as are acid Flegm and Melancholly poured into the Stomach and then the signs of a cold distemper are present amongst purger Hiera Picra is good as also Zacutus his Wine Lib. Ult. Hist Prax. ca. 2. n. 9. II. Bulimus is a great Appetite Periodical which aftentimes ends in a Nauseousness with Faintings away and loss of strength The Signs are explained in the Definition The Cause is doubted of by Physitians yet most do hold that t is a cold distemper of the Stomach whereupon t is wont often to happen to those that make long Journeys through deep snow There is no Cure if it happen in Chronical Diseases somtimes after Feavers and other Diseases it threatens a relapse It respects 1. The time of the fit when the swouning happens in which we must use frictions and revivers as the smel of Wine Vinegar c. 2. The time out of the fit in which after the sick hath recollected himself meats of good juyces must be ministred bread dipt in Wine c. And by external means the heat must be restored to the Stomach Article IV. Of a Depraved Appetite or Pica Pica which is also Citta and Malacia is so called from the bird Pie which is sick of this disease it is an absurd appetite to a strange substance liquid or solid beside the ature or essence of nourishment from a sad sense of sucking and corrupt judgment not discerning things fit or unfit for eating from a Vitious Excrement imbibed in the coats by a peculiar propriety of substance molesting the mouth of the Stomach The SIGNS are manifest because they desire meats of Vitious qualities there preceded excess indigestion use of meats and drinks of evil qualities a suppression of the Courses c. The CAUSE is a sad sense of sucking Molesting which is Caused by the matter impacted in the Coats of the Stomach either acting by its whol substance or by a manifest quality arising from an evil Course of Diet or sent from some other part as from the womb whereupon t is familiar to Childing Women about the second and third Month but there is wont at the beginning while the Causes do alter to be raised a desire of contrary things but when by long custome there is a familiarity contracted things like are desired The CURE must be haistened left a Cacochymy or Dropsie be caused The peccant matter is most commodiously cast forth by vomit which in Childing Women must be Caused by those which are more gentle The Stomach may be strengthened with water of Cinnamon of Orange Pils magistral of Corals c. Article V. Of too great Thirst Too great thirst or Poludipsia is a greater and oftner desire of accustomary drink by reason of a sad sence of sucking in the Mouth of the stomach arising from the defect of moist nourishment and the alteration of its proper Humidity The SIGNS of the Symptom are manifest of themselves The CAUSE is a sad sense of sucking which the want of moisture and the plenty of heat have raised but whence that proceeds shal be explained in the Differences The CURE doth respect 1. The too urgent Symptom which is mitigated by Crystal or Coral held in the Mouth cold water corrected with a little Vinegar the iuyce of live Crabs with water of violets and Housleek sprinkled with a little Niter a Lohoc compounded of the Mucilage of the Seeds of fleawort and quinces of each half an ounce Sugar Candy of violets pouderd Starch Tragacanth of each one dram Syrup of violets as much as is sufficient With spring Water boyled with Sugar Candy adding a Pome Citron cut in two c. II.
distinguished from the paine of the stone in the kidnies because it pricks more possesses a greater space is increased after meat by reason of the compression of the stomach it doth less afflict the back and the thighes 't is wandering and there appeares no Gravil in the urine From that of the womb because this seizeth for the most part upon the stoppage of the courses is communicated only to the hipps and Groins The cure must be hastened because the pain dissolves the strength and spirits and draws the principal parts into consent There is little hope if they vomit often and cannot keep their drink and little or nothing is voided if it be changed into an impostumation of the Collick gut If the matter which was contained in the hypochondries be poured forth and carried to the spina and pass into pains of the back and by a malignity contracted doe produce a falling sickness 'T is performed 1. By taking away of the Causes of which we shal treat in the defference 2. By mittigating of the paine if it be too vehement where note that we act most commodiously with anodine glisters the frequent use of outward applications may be if some evacuation have preceded that narcoticks or stupefying means must not be used neither where the strength is dejected nor in a cold cause That Compounds are more safely used than simples and that the same are more securely cast up into the belly than taken by the mouth That we never be unmindful of things appropriate as are the guts of a wolfe dryed and poudered the stones of a horse Quercetans powder compounded of the inward coate of a hens mawe and the white dunge of the same each half an ounce the pouder of the inward skin which is found in eg-shels two drams and an half of rupture wort cinnamon each four scruples of medlar kernels two drams of an is and fennel seeds each one dram the dose is from half a dram to a dram at the most with white wine c. Crato prescribes for preservation 1. A glister made of one pound of the decoction of speedwel in hen broth adding half a pound of mallego wine and half a dram of mirrh 2. Outwardly oyl of mirrh 3. Three hours after supper one scruple of Zedoary sliced 4. Every month in the morning before meat one scruple of treacle See more in Practitioners The diffences are taken either from the part it self or from the causes I. One is of the whol gut in which the pain is about both the loyns and below the region of the stomach neer to the navel which is very dangerous Another is of part of the Gut in which if the beginning of it be opprest the pain afflicts in the right loyn If the middle of it the paine shows it self in the left If the end of it the region of the navel next to the left is pained There is less danger ariseth because glysters may have access but note that sometimes the loyn is affected with a pain above the navel in the hypochondries II. Another is from diseases as 1. Worms whose signs and cure see in its place 2. An inflamation of the Guts which was formerly described and is increased by meats and drinks that are hot 3. From Stones of the cure of which elsewhere Another is from humors I. Thick and viscous sticking between the coats of the gutts which is known by this that the pain is as if a stake were driven through them by reason of the violent distension of the coats in that place neither is it asswaged by belching or breaking of wind and the gut it selfe is corroded which proceeds from glassy flame They arise cheifly in them who are given to drunkenness and idleness and in whom choler which is the spurre of the expulsive faculty flows not to those places In the Cure observe 1. That strong glisters cast in at first and often repeated do more hurt than good because they stirre the matter but bring it not forth 2. That we use not for attenuation things eminently hot lest the matter being suddainly resolved wind be multiplyed 3. To attenuate and discuss the oyle of Zedoary often given from three grains to one scruple is good White whorebound the decoction of Speedwel the Oyl of Orange pills given four grains with wine 4. If the paine continue we must proceed to dry fomentations by which that which was melted and attenuated may be dryed up and discussed 5. We must abstaine from Agrick for feare of vomiting which at that time is in no wise safe 6. Where gentle purgers do not good the essence of the trochisks of alhandal extracted with distilled mallegoe sack and Rulandus his golden spirit of life must be given from half an ounce to an ounce half at the most 7. we must wholy abstaine from opiates II. From sharp and cholerick humors sticking in the coats and vessels which are knowen by the accute pain thirst bitterness of the mouth watchings though by the first glister some excrements be brought forth yet afterwards nothing almost is emptied There are oftentimes joined with it tertain Feavers double tertians bastard tertians In the Cure note 1. That the collick from those causes is of long continuance and is wont to afflict the patient with many relapses 2. That those humors transmitted to the joints do cause an arthritis to the back pains of the back to the nerves a palsey 3. That they are best of al cast forth with the extract of Rhubarb or Hiera picra mixt with cooling things lest they offend by their heat 4. If the pains continue after evacuation Mallego wine may wel be administred with oyle of sweet almonds 5. That warme milk may also be given in glysters with honey of mercury 6. In dyet the fruit of the guord by a certain natural propiety doth oppose the disease III. Another is from the retention of hard excrements of which formerly and in which we must at the beginning abstaine from giveing any purging medicines by the upward parts lest they move the excrements Another is from wind conteined in the cavity which cannot get passage which is known by the distension of the belly a rumbling murmuring which shew themselves in the bowing of the left side It ariseth cheifly from meats apt to produce a fermentation of the humors as are corruptible-fruits Grapes new wine new and thick drink c. In the Cure observe 1. That the cure must be begun with anodyne and emollient glysters 2. If these profit not Some laxative must be given in fat broth of manna Oyl of sweet almonds and other things 3. Afterwards we must use discussives Inwardly are commended a glister made of Mallego wine and oyl of Nuts each three ounces aqua vitae one ounce the distilled oyles of Juniper and Rue each two drams apply it very hot A mixiture of Spirits of wine and Spirits of niter each half a dram or two scrupels given in common water warme
One spoonful of the tincture of orange peels extracted with spirits of wine Sperma ceti with oyl of sweet almonds Outwardly gum taccamahac and Caranna applyed to the Navel The antiapoplectical balsome with one or two grains of Zivet c. IV. One is exquisite of which we have hitherto spoken Another Spurious whose cause sticks either in the peritoneum or in the membranes which are spred over the abdomen and parts of the belly 'T is known by this that the paine is most greivous and very lasting and cannot be mitigated neither by glysters nor medicines nor fomentations nor by those remedies by which the true collick pains are abated and yet it succeeds to long continued feavers and other cholerick diseases whose solution is difficult For nature endeavoring a crisis and the expulsion of the hurtful humor by the stoole when she can no where find a ready and cleare way to empty it doth often cast it out of the veins and bowels into the membranes whence do arise pains more grievous than the former disease 'T is observed by Fernelius that both continuall feavers and tertians and more frequently quartans are terminated with these pains which a long time had their exacerbations at certaine circuits and retained the like order of fits See concerning this Mattheus Martinus on the diseases of the Mesentery V. Another is which tends to a particular palsey which Palmarius was wont to cure with a syrup compounded of white wine six ounces Rose water two ounces pouder of Alarbazi or antimony prepared one dram choice cinnamon one dram and an half infused al night strained by gentle pouring it off adding of Sugar eight ounces The dose is from half an ounce to an ounce after a draft of chicken broath Article 3. Of Costiveness of body Costiveness of body is no casting forth of excrements or very little in proportion to the nourishment received There is no need of signs The causes shal be explained in the differences The cure is not to be neglected for from thence the head is assaulted with vapors the whole body grows heavy the concoction of the stomach is hindred the appetite destroyed the loines grow weak to wit the veines being burthend and a preternatural heat caused in them Sometimes the belly is moved by sneezing and coughing sometimes if the diseased walk on the ground bare sooted c. The difference is taken from the excrements and guts I. One is by default of the excrements which either are not by reason of fasting and the use of meats of good juice Or do not stimulate either by reason they are small in quantity or by reason of the want of choler which either is carried to other parts as in the jaundice or is not produced out of cold meats Or they are hard either by fasting and a hot habit of body or by a continued restraint there by which it comes to pass that they forthwith grow dry and the veins of the mesentery do suck forth somwhat of their juice Or by reason of gross tough astringent meat eaten at first and not moistned by reason of the too great heat of the liver and kidnies and then there must be care taken of those parts we must act by mollefyers Solenanders liniment is approved of if the navil be anointed therewith 't is compounded of new oyle of sweet almonds goose grease May butter dialthea each two drams Coloquintida sixteen grains Salt one scruple and half the pouder of Simple hiera one scruple diagridium four grains II. Another is by fault of the guts which either do not feel either by reason of their long custom or by their stupidity such as is caused by the drowsy disease palsy apoplexy or by reason of flegme adhering to their coats of which in the chollick Or do not cast it forth either by reason of the narrowness of the passages from the obstruction of the guts of which formerly or of some tumor of the mesentery or bowels pressing the guts or from the fault of the muscles of the belly or from the strength of the retentive faculty from the moderate dryness Article 4. Of a Looseness Point 1. Of a Lientery and Coeliaca Fluxes of the belly are A Lientery Coeliaca Diarrhy Dysentery and Hepatick flux A Lientery is too sudden a voiding by the stool the nourishment in that forme in which it was received proceeding from the fault of the retentive and expulsive faculty of the stomach and guts The SIGNES are evident whether you consider the consistence or the colour smel and other qualities of the aliments taken The CAVSE we have laid in the definition on the faults of the retentive and explusive faculty of which hereafter in the differences The CURE must be hastened because this symptome proceeds from a great prostration of the natural heat and a weakness of the tone of the stomach 'T is difficult if it be supervenient to acute and chronical diseases because the strength is impaired It respects 1. The cause which must be taken away 2. The symptome which must be stayed by astringent means and things that stregthen the stomach and guts The Diffence is taken from the causes One is by default of the retentive faculty which is hurt 1. By the refrigeration of the guts which is caused I. By immoderate drinking of cold water especially when the body is hot by a southerne wind over moist and excessive cold especially in bodies of a fine texture c. 2. A cold distemper which ariseth from flegm either generated there or sent from some other part covering over the wrinkles of the guts doth make them laxe and slippery duls their heat and closeth up the mouths of the mesaraick veins In this for the most part a Celiaca was precedent If sour belching which was not before be supervenient to this of long continuance it is a good signe The Cure requires a casting forth of the matter either by vomit or stoole to which end serve Myrobalans Chebul Citrini tamarinds Rbubarb A restraint of the same and strengthening of the stomach by the distilled oyles of masticke wormwood mint c. order of dyet in which wine takes place II. by a laxness from the continuall use of things oyly fat and emollient from whence is too great a mollification of the Mouth of the stomach whether also belongs the resolution of the nerve of the sixth payre that contracts the fibres of the inward coat III. By a strange quality inured and that either from an evil constitution of the aire as happens in a popular lientery or from the unseasonable eating of mushrums melons cowcumbers c. IV. By a thick and smooth scar such as is wont to follow a great disentery and a deep ulceration which by its thickness stopping the Mesaraicks hinders the distribution by its smoothness the Retention This must be rubbed off and wiped away as it were by eating of sharp things attenuating and strong abstersive as musterd Seed Onions Garlicks honey of
either by reason of its attraction or reception The Cure is difficult both by reason of the narrowness of the veins in the liver and because more diseases do follow upon this It is performed by things that open obstructions amongst which are commended Riverius his extract of pils of amoniacum made of gum amoniacum dissolved in Vineger of squills three drams the species of biera picra one dram and half crude aloes four scruples Myrrh one scruple Saffron six grains With Syrup of Wormwood Quercetans Pilulae tartareae reformed by Sennertus Tinctura Martis whose description is in Petreus from one ounce to two three and more Deodates pouder compounded of the species of diarrhodon Diatragacanth each two drams Agrimony Madder Roots Ferne poudred Sorrel Purslane seeds each one dram Magistral of pearles Corralls Crocus Martis made without corrosives Crocus Martis prepared by oyl of sulfer each foure scruples with sugar-candy as much as is sufficint given one dram the former tincture being drank after it Pils of steele The decoction of the whitest tartar mundefied and poudered one pound made with foure ounces of crude steel and two gallons of spring water and given two ounces in opening broth Penotus his opening spirit c. In the cure these things come worth observation 1. That universals must be premised before particulars and topicks 2. That medicines ought not to be given to drink but a long while after meat least they carry with them crude humors to the liver 3. Astringents must be added to mollifiers as spicknard burnt Ivory that the tone of the liver may be preserved 4. That things attenuating discussing and resolving ought to be moderate least the thinner parts discussed the thicker doth remaine 5. That we use sweet things not as meats but as sauces 6. The medicines must be given liquid or finely poudered 7. Topicks must never be applied actually cold 8. After the use of steel-medecines the body must be stirred unless black excrements do follow we must abstaine from them The Differences of this obstruction are various I. One is lately which is the easier cleared Another inveterate which causeth putrefaction and a Feaver and produceth a jaundice schirus and dropsie II. One is in the hollow part of the liver which is known from hence that nothing is perceived outwardly by reason that the part lurketh deep the stomach is drawn into consent from whence is loathing of meat nauseousness vomiting thirst liquid excrements It must be cured by things that empty by the stool Another in the gibbous part which is known from hence that the belly prest on that place doth resist the midrif especially because the liver is joyned to it the excrements of the belly appeare bloody by reason of the light change of the chyle into blood The Cure is the easier by reason of the penetration of medicines and the emptying of the obstructing matter by a larger passage we must act chiefly by things that move urine III. One is from Blood either pure which is remedyed only by the opening of the basilica in the right arme or cholerick hot and which is joyned with paine being a long time preternaturally imprisoned in the liver and not timely purged it grows wonderfully thick Or flegmatick viscous and thick which ariseth from gross meats viscous too much by baths or motion forced or carried into the smal veins sometimes it fals from the brain into the stomach by and by passing through by degrees it penetrates with the nourishment into the smal veins of the Liver Another from Winde that is grosse imprisoned under its coate or sticking in the veins which is known from hence that the paine is greater but not continual there is such a great tumor of the right hypochondry that it fils up the whole hypochondry so that the ends of the ribs cannot be perceived yet t is without heaviness and being prest it yeelds it makes no murmuring and gives no suspition of an impostumation lurking there It ariseth either from windy meats from which they must beware or from the weakness of the liver not able to overcome the matter then the matter prepared must be emptied or 't is sent from the neighboring parts and the whole body especially in flegmatick Feavers The Cure in general requires carminatives of which in the dropsie Article III. Of an inflamation of the Liver An inflamation of the liver is a hot tumor of the same arising from blood impacted and putrefying in the substance of the Liver afflicting with a continual feaver a heavy paine and sence of a weight in theright hypochondry The CIGNS are a sence of heaviness in the right hypochondry from the membranes with which the liver is joyned in some to the bastard ribbs A tumor in the same which appeares greater the sick lying on his left side less the body being bowed to the right and the liver sliding under the bastard ribbs A paine reaching from the throat to the bastard ribbs by reason of the heape of matter restrained which puls the membrane that lines the Breast A Feaver whose vehemency follows the greatness of the inflamation and at night is exasperated the inflamation growing hot A dry cough by intervals by reason of the vapors raised up to the lungs and afflicting the midriffe by compression A Difficulty of breathing because the feaver brings a greater necessity of cooling uneasie lying both on the right side because the liver is prest by the stomach and guts and on the left because the liver hanging the membranes are retcht A swift and unequal pulse by reason of the necessity of cooling increased by the hot distemper c. It is distinguished from an inflamation of the muscles of the belly and pleura by the signs mentioned there The CAUSE is blood impacted and putrefied which either is attracted or transmitted or flows thither either by default of its quallity viz. its thinness heat and accrimony or by reason of its quantity and abundance or by the impulse of external causes as while hot medicines are applied to the stomach The CURE is difficult because a principal part is affected and by occasion of it there is iminent the feare of a dropsie or consumption Of little or no hope if the hickops follow because it is a signe that the liver is come to the highest inflamation and so by communion of the nerves the mouth of the stomach is drawn into consent If a loosness follow because this voiding of crude matter proceeds from the weakness of the faculty If a burning and continual feaver accompany it because it signifies that bowel is exceedingly inflamed If it come to Superation which is known by this because that happens after the twentieth day if nature be not weake paines and feavers with other symptomes grow strong yet most by night shakings assail in no order and with no reason which are attended mith an exacerbation of heat because from the impostumation there ariseth a sordid ulcer because t is perpetually
contrary meats made use of amongst these are commended asparagus moderately boy led with Oyl of Vineger and Butter taken at first Course the fruit of Eglantine the stones of the same boy led in broths Chevil Radish Oyl of Olives and sweet Almonds 2. The matter collected must timely be emptyed that it do not concrete By vomits given every month twice or thrice by lenitive Medicines especially Cassia Turpentine and chose that purge water By things that break it if any thing be concreted amongst which are commended the Decoction of the Nephritical wood of Alehoof the Juyce of Speedwel with the Water and other things of which hereafter 3. The Peins must be reduced to their state and hert bleeding prevails if the Liver hath raised hot distemper in them the administration of Strawhetry Purslain Barley Water and anoynting with cold Unguents II. The taking away of the stone generated which is performed 1. By clensing of the first Passages by gentle Evacuaters corrected with things that discuss wind 2. By opening a Vein in the Arm if there be a plenitude in the whol body and the pain be great of the Anckle or Ham if it be fallen upon the affected Part. 3. By Relaxing and making slippery the Passages in wardly with the Syrup of Marsh-mallows Liquorish Violets Outwardly with an Oyntment Compounded of Oyntment of Dialthea two drams Hens Grease new Marrow of a Hart each one dram Oyl of White Lillies one dram of Scorpions two scruples Oyl of Wax distilled and spirits of Turpentine of each one scruple Wax and Saffron a liltle By a Bath of sweet Water in which may be taken Oyl of fresh Almonds two ounces Oyl of Turpentine six drops With a drauft or Warm wine 4. By Removing Breaking and expelling the Stone by Medicines that wil do that the more Excellent of simples are the magistral of Tartar Vitriolate of Crabs Eyes of the mandible of a Pike and the Jewish Stone Lapis Prunella the essence of Crystals the Nephritical Stone the Aqua Vitae of Juniper Horstius T. 1. P. 481. Of compounds Zacutus his Confection or conserve of the Nephritical Stone l. 8. c. 16. Mynsichutus his Nephritical liquor Armament P. 338. The mixture of magistral of Tartar Vitriolate dissolved Crabs Eyes Lapis prunella the volatil Salt of Amber and Vntzerus his Saxafrage Water The generous Wine of the same Author in which a sharp radish with the Rind taken off and cut into thin slices was steeped a whol day given with the magistral of Crabs Eyes and spirit of Salt The mixture of Muffet the English man Cistae Medicae p. 34. Of Libavius of white Saxifrage water with Sugar of Violets and Roses streined with a little Spirits of Vitriol Zuingerus his expeller of the Stone Cist Med. p. 35. 3. The removing of the pain which is performed by the Oyntments formerly prescribed for relaxing of the Passages with a half bath prepared of things anodine Cratoes Cataplasme of pellitory of the Wal Parsly Onions c. 4. The Discussion of wind if there be any See concerning the Stone the excellent most satisfying Treatises of Vntzerus Franciscus Collutius and Beverovicius Article IV. Of an Vlcer and Wound of the Kidneys Concerning an Vlcer of the Kidneys Let it suffice to have observed these things I. That it doth very seldom happen from an Impostumation of a phlegmon by the Acrimony of the matter flowing thither corroding the Kidney by a blow or fal breaking the Veins yet if it do happen the Cure doth require that the falling down of Humors be stopt by Diet by bleeding and purging they already fallen must be temperd with coolers nephritical means must be emptyed with turpentine reduced with the yolk of an Egg into a liquor or with the pouder of liquorish into a Bolus II. That it is alwaies truely Cause by a Stone restraineth within it which either by its weight doth bruise the Kidney or by fretting diminish and corrode it Then the Urin before it begins to be purulent becomes bloody especially after exercise and labor none or an obscure feaver troubles them If at any time the matter be stopt by the obstruction of the Head of the Ureter that by degrees either redounding by the emulgent into the greater veins will defile the blood and habit of the body or heaped up in that place wil distend the Loyns from which the Skin being opened it wilflow much and a long while III. In the Cure the Decoction of Parsly discribed by Doringius in his Mithridatotechina p. 150. Bears the Palm from al others Concerning a Wound of the Kidneys it shal suffice to have noted these things I. That it is known by the Situation suppression of Urin or difficulty of it by its bloodiness by a pain extending to the groins II. That it is divided into that which is in the Superficies and fleshy Part and then much blood flows forth the Urine goes not forth the stronger agglutinatives may presently be administred and into that which Penetrates even to its Cavity and then the blood goes forth with the Water In the Cure the blood must be stopt This stopping things agglutinating must be given inwardly and laid upon it and here is of force unguentum Sanctum of Andreas a Cruce which see in Sennertus c. Chap. 2. Of the Symptomes of the Kidneys COncerning the Symptomes of the Kidneys Viz. The Separation of the serum hurt and Pain few things present themselves I. The separation of the Serum is hurt by the fault of the emulgent Vessels and Kidneys which either labour of a cold distemper and then the Urine is not suddainly supprest Or of a streitness of which formerly In the Cure Diureticks must be given an hour or two before meat II. The Nature of the Pain may be fetcht from the Chapter of inflamation and stone of the Kidneys At the seat of the Kidney 't is fixt and firm on either side unless that somtimes 't is extended either to the Hip or to the Stone of the same side by the Course of the ureter They that are accustomed to it by reason of the dilatation of the ureters are not so easily affected unless perchance the stone be thick and rough but they who are not accustomed to it or have been seldome and gently troubled with nephritick pains are tormented with the least stone c. Title IX Of the Affects of the bladder Chap. 1. Of the Diseases of the Bladder Article 1. Of the Stone of the Bladder THe Diseases of the Bladder are The Stone Inflamation Vlcers to which ought to be added the streitness of the passage for Vrin What the Stone of the Bladder is may be perceived by the definition of the Stone of the Kidneys The SIGNES of it are an Itching and sharp pain in the Neck of the Bladder the Pubes and Perinaeum which by progression and distention of the Bladder torments with great tortures the Patients are wont to scratch their Privities and often to distend
them and make Water by drops with exceeding pain and that while the Stone is gathering together is thin and clear of somwhat whitish color but being concrete 't is wont to settle like unto Oyl with a gravelly sediment white like to scabs if the Stone be brittle The CAUSE and CURE must be fetcht from the Chapter of the stone of the Kidneys If it cannot be broken and expeled it must be cut out concerning which see Chirurgions For breaking of it serves the Composition of Salt of white Tartar one ounce and Parsty Water one pound mixt together and streined through streining paper dyed of a yellow color with Orange Pils also the Pouder of Palmer Worms concerning which consult with the peculiar treatise of Laurembergius And also the blood of a Goate nourisht with Plants that break the stone distilled taking at meat those stuffings which ought to be made of its Kidneys and other Bowels and Guts For mitigation of the Pain a Bath is good which must be followed with an unction of the Cod Pubis and perinaeum with the Compound Oyl made of Oyl of Scorpions bitter Almonds the Fat of a Cony and Hen of each one ounce and an half and the Juyce of Pellitory of the Wal two drams There meet us some Differences of the stone I. One is smal and light in which a vagous and wandering tickling afflicts about the pubes and perinaeum the which is easier broken Another a little bigger in which there is felt the weight of some heavy thing lying upon it so that going through uneven places is difficult and painful and dancing much more diffiult they piss often and the Urin can hardly be kept in which is white thick turbid with a purulent Sediment or like to the snivel of the Nose when they should piss the stone driven in the way the flux of Urin is intercepted there is a most sharp pain towards the latter end of pissing when the stone stirred up by the Course of the Urin as if it were comming forth doth more violently compress the Sphincter muscle at other times it affects the whol passage of the Privity somtimes the Nut. Striving to piss is accompanied with a desire to go to stool because the greatness of the stone from the perinaeum stimulates the right Gut as wel as the Neck of the Bladder This can hardly be Cured any other way than by cutting II. One is concrete which sends no gravel from it in the Urin. Another not concrete in which the Urin doth cast off some gravel and that either white or red which must be distinguished from that of the Kidneys by other signs of the stone of the Bladder III. One is which grows in the bladder it self to which that said before accords Another which descends from the Kidneys through the Vreters into it and then signs of the stone of the Kidneys went before there was a pain reacht from the Kidneys to the bladder according to the length of the Ureters the Nephritical pain is either ceased or troubles little This some do beleeve may be broke by the Indian Plant called by Manardus Payco and by other things IV. One is which doth not cleave to the Bladder and therefore may be taken forth more safely by cutting Another which cleaves to the top of the bladder and hangs down as it were from it and then al the symptomes reckoned formerly are more obscure there have been those seen who have carried it without any paine nay it can by no meanes almost be removed without injury to the patient Of which see Tulpius observat l. 2. c. 5. Article 2. Of an inflamation scab ulcer and fistula of the bladder An inflamation of the bladder doth not so much possess the substance of the bladder which is thin and bloudless as the sphincter muscle of the neck of it The signes of it are a bitter paine in the perinaeum with redness and heat a suppression of the urine with a great endeavoring to piss costiveness of the body because the right gut is streitned by the greatness of the inflamation a distension of the pubes and pecten to the navel by reason of the abundance of water The cause is the same as of other inflamations The cure is difficult because the affect is deadly for the most part about the seventh day especially a Feaver comming and the stoppage of urine and stools yet if it be gentler and the inflamation being changed into matter the impostumation break inwardly and is emptied by the urine there is better hopes and also an erysipelas arising about the superficies of the skin and plenty of water being made sometimes t is suddainly dissolved 'T is ordered after the manner of other inflamations Repellers must not be applyed long because the bladder is membranous and is easily bound up the urine supprest and the nerves hurt II. A Scab of the bladder is known by an itching in the pecten by the strong smel of the urine by a branny sediment residing at the bottom It ariseth from sharp and salt humors corroding the internal superficies of it 'T is cured in old folks hardly the humors are partly to be emptyed partly qualifyed by the four cold seeds violet flowers strawberries either taken inwardly or outwardly injected through the urethra III. There is no need to say what an ulcer of the bladder is it appears from the former The signs of it are scales and matter which flow forth only with the urine and sink in it and so 't is distinguisht from an exulceration of the urinary passage in which the matter and filth either goes before the urine or appeares presently at first comming forth or also flows forth without urine There is a continiual torment about the bladder pubes and perenaeum the urine also is thick and somtimes mixt with matter somtimes with blood c. The causes are divers of which in the differences The cure is of little hopes both because the bladder is membranous and because the urine which is biting by its continual running down hinders its consolidation 'T is ordered after the manner of other ulcers The differences are taken cheifly from the causes I. One is from cantharides and then if it be lately we must give milk plentifully by and by consolidate If it be inveterate it must be cured as other ulcers Another is from sharp urine which the use of pure wine and hot meats hath caused and then we must act with cooling diureticks Another from sharp or salt humors as it were knawing its internal superficies and then 1. We must empty with cassia and turpentine 2. We must temper them with water lillies lettice endive c. Another from the stone of which formerly II. One is in the bottom in which the pain is felt about the pubes Another by the urinary passage in which at the time of pissing the pain is felt more and especially when they begin and when they make an end to piss IV. The
by the various color of the faceone while red and as soon again pale and wane Now these wounds are Caused in a twofold manner For Somtimes it so chanseth nhat the fleshy substance of tee lungs may be hurt and then in regard that the blood destilled inthe Cavity of the Thorax and that neither a spitting of blood nor any Cough whatsoever urgeth the party the breathing thereupon is not without much difficulty ther appearreth a virlssitude or interchange of heat and cold by reason of the exhalations and fumes from out of the heart Sometimes the veins of the Lungs are affected and then there floweth forth in great abundance a blood somwhat red black and frothy the Cough likewise is perpetual unless perhaps there be present a prostration and decay of the Natural strenghth and vigour or an oppression of the Lungs from the blood They are Cured I. If the profuse flux of blood be stanched and the inflamation unto which the Lungs by this means becometh obnoxious be prevented and hindered by venesetion II. If the blood in him where it was poured forth into the Cavity subsist and abide there III. If when the sayd blood cannot flow forth by reason of the narrowness of the wound the said wound be widened with a penknife Among those Medicaments that stanch and stop the blood there are these viz. The Strawbery bush Betony Scabious the herb Ladies mantle sanicle Comfry c. without these are altogether void of any biting quality viz. Bole armeniack Frankincense c. Read more of this subject in the guide to Physick and Chyrurgery Riverius Practice of Physick and his Observations and the London dispensatory al the last Editions englished by me Chap. 5. Of the Ulcer of the Lungs or Phthisis PHthisis is an Exulceration of the Lungs from a sharp corroding matter with a gentle Fever a Ccough and a spittle that is both bloody and purulent by the which the whol body is sensibly and by little and little consumed and extenuated The Subject of this exulceration is the Lungs together with the parts thereof towit the fleshy substance the lappets the vessells and the Membranes in those especially that have their heads easily and soon filled and where the head sendeth many distillations unto the organs of breathing in those that from their very nativity have their Lungs of a vicious substance that is such as is tender soft and easily wasted as being most subject to corruption And hence it is that such as are descended of a tabid stock that is to say those that issue from parents affected as beforesayd do all of them at the length as it were by a right of inheritance necessarily wast away and consume in the aforesaid manner in those that naturally have a streightness and narrowness of the Chest and likwise a depression of the same a streight neck or narrow throat a lean and spare body and their shoulder blades sticking out behind them like as if they were wings The Signs are a Gentle and moderate Fever proceeding from vapors elevated and arising out of the Lungs and assaulting the heart by their sudeen and violent irruption therunto with which there are also joyned other feavers that are otherwise sometimes Erratick and fleeting and sometimes again invading the patient after the maner of a Tertian whilest that the humors within the veins by that heat as were kindled and set on fire corrupt and putrefy and this the truth is being by its continuance and without any the least intermission turned into the Hectick immediately after meales and in the night time like as do others increaseth and groweth more prevalent 2. A frequent Cough like unto that of foxes without any great pain which cheifly afflicteth and troubleth the party in the night time and it hath its existence from a matter that is sharp by reason of the irritation of the Lungs 3. A bloody and purulent spittle but this is not in al. Some there have been found who after their retching and the spitting up of a liquid and yellow humor being soon after seazed upon by a light and gentle fever have thereupon begun to fal away and wast and after som time have cast forth by retching a certain smal quantity of blood together with a kind of Pus or corrupt matter and many have been by sensible degrees taken away in whom throughout the whol course of their lives there appeared nothing at al of this bloody and purulent spittle But I must tel you that this Phthisis is incident unto those that are young rather than unto aged persons in regard that young persons most commonly abound with blood and consequently are affected with the heat and acrimony thereof with the laxity or loosness of the vessels and likewise the hardness of the same and in regard likewise that these excercise themselves in a more violent manner and have little regard to their diet This hath one thing singular as propperly and peculiarly belonging thereunto towit that it proceed from the very substance of the Lungs it is then frothy and if it be put into the fire it stinketh and is very offensive to the scent 4. The extenuation of the body which is from the aforesaid continual but gentle fever the which by its fiery heat dispersed throughout the whol body dissolving the Arterial blood the mingling whereof together with that of the Veins is altogether necessary unto Nutrition hindereth the Concoction of the Aliment in the whole body and by its preternatural heat wasteth and consumeth that which is Concocted and stored up The CAUSE is a sharp corroding matter fallen down thither of which we shall speak further in the differences The CURE is not to be despaired of no not though it be attended with an Ulcer already appearing For Galen sendeth such to Tabae a City in Cilicia and prescribeth milk for their Diet. Yet notwithstanding it is something Difficult as wel in regard that the filth and purulent matter sticking in that soft and Spungy flesh cannot without a Cough be purged forth by which the Lungs are from day to day more hurt and prejudiced as because that in this dayly motion of respiration or breathing unto which there is moreover added and adjoyned a violent cough there cannot possibly be any Consolidation made and also in the third place because that Medicaments in their ful strength and Virtue cannot penetrate so far and lastly because that Feavers require moistening Remedies which are altogethet hurtful to an Ulcer The Cure hath cheifly respect unto these six things in Particular I. The removal and taking away of the Catarrhe touching which more below in the Difference II. The Cure of the ulcer here there is commended Flores Sulphuris or the flower of Brimstone as we commonly cal it with a soft and rere egg syrup de Erysimo or water Cresses of Lobelius of the Juyce of Ground Ivy with the Flower of Brimstone of Marsh-Mallows of Fernelius of the Juyce of Mouse
Ear Milfoil and Citron Rinds Prepared the Decoction of Pimpernel Walwort Sugar of Roses Old with the Whey of Goats Milk the Secret of Freytagius of which you may see further in the same Author in his tract of Opium China Root Guajacum c. Let the Patient every hour lick in the Lohoch of Walwort with the Conserve of Red roses III. The Correction of the Blood that so that that floweth unto the part affected may be good And therefore in the Diet Milk is accounted wholsom because that by its serosity it clenseth the Ulcer and by its Caseosity if we may so term it or Cheesie part it Consolidates and then lastly by its Aereal and buttery Fatness it Humectates and moisteneth the wasted and extenuated Body And certain it is that Goats Milk ought to be taken at dinner time at least if there be present no great Feaver or pain of the head that so it may not sour in the stomach or Cause unsavory belchings At Supper the Emulsion of white Poppy Seed and of the greater cold Seeds of each one dram of the Milk of sweet Almonds one pint also milk Boyled with Rice If Milk be not thought convenient Barley Hulled and with the broth of a Cook reduced into a Cream Distilled Medicaments are not here approved of because that their Nutritive faculty doth not transcend the Alembick IV. The Removal of the Feaver by those things that cool and moisten V. The Depulsion of the Extenuation by those things that have in them a power restorative And here Pultises of Milk the Yolks of Eggs fresh Butter Sugar and the meal or flour of Barley and Rice have their place Then let a Bath of warm Milk be made for the sick person after which let a Rosted pullet that hath been fattened with Milk succeed and then the distilled liquor of Snails and the Aqua Mirabilis of which we may see more in Zacutus his Eight Book VI. The Nerfion of the whole Nocturnal Colliquation by Sudorificks or Sweats Then in the evening we must administer the Conserve of Red Roses with the Syrup of Poppy of Jujubes and Diacodium The Breast and the Back-bone are to be anoynted and a Liniment Resumptive as Practitioners cal it with the Oyl of Roses and Violets c. The Phthisis is divided in a twofold manner according to the quality and condition of the Causes and its Duration I. One is from Blood which being got forth into the Lungs there clotteth and putrefieth And in this if al things else be answerable Phlebotomy hath its due place in the very beginning thereof Another from a sharp Humor whether it be Serous or Cholerick which is either sent from the Head neither may it be cast forth by Coughing and then the Cure is to be ordered according to the Nature of the Catarrh or else it is poured forth from the Heart into the Lungs or else it regurgitates from the suppressed Courses or Hemorrhoids and then the Cure must be sought for in its own proper place Another but that is very rare from Sweet Flegm if in too great abundance it flow unto the lungs obstruct the lappits therof render the substance thereof over moist and there putrefie by reason of its long abode there and for want of Ventilation Another from Pus or corrupt stinking matter upon the breaking of the impostum of the Quinsie of the Uvula the Pleurisie c. And hence is that of Hippocrates those saith he that after a Pleurisie happen to be impostumated if in forty daies they be not freed thereof they then become Phtysical Another by Contagion from the breath of the Phthisical and hereunto belongeth that of the Sea hare corroding and eating through the Lungs by its specifical Poysonous quality and likewise the breath and stench of Cats and Dogs sent forth especially in the dissecting and opening of them II. One is Recent and but newly begun in which the Symptoms are not so strong and Violent Another such as is confirmed and of a long continuance in which the Cheeks wax black or of a Leaden color with a Paleness in the Face although I grant at somtimes the Cheeks by Reason of Vapors ascending from the Lungs may appear to be of somthing a red color The Breath by reason of the imbecillity of the breathing Faculty or the obstruction of the Bronchia we cal them the Lappets of the Lungs either from store of purulent matter sent thither or else from the many Excrements that in the weakned Lungs are gathered together and heaped up becometh very difficult and is hardly drawn The Pulses are one while languid and slow another while quick and swift one while hard by Reason of the dryness of the Body and another while soft in regard of the Humid matter moystening the Arteries Sweats in great abundance break forth in the time of sleep by reason of the debillity of the natural Faculty And at length the Malady having now gotten the upper hand certain smal parcels and portions of the putrefied lungs are cast forth with an intolerable strength The Hair of the Head sheddeth and falleth off by Reason of the defect and want of Aliment and the Corruption of that that is bred in the Body The Nails become Crooked that Flesh that was wont to be at the Fingers ends being consumed A Smal sort of Lice are generated in regard of the Corruption of the Aliment The Extream parts especially the Feet by reason of the extinction of the Native heat are much swollen And at length the Flux Diarrhoea together with a suppession of the Spittle followeth upon it from the weakness of the retentive Faculty of the Stomack and the Intestines See further in Freytagius touching the Phthisis Title V. Of the Diseases of the Thorax or Breast Chap. I. Of the Inflamation of the Mediastine or the Transverse Muscle and the Tumors of the Diaphragm THe Diseases of the Thorax or Chest are the Inflamation of the Mediastine the Swlling of the Diaphragme the Pleurisie the Empyema or Constipation the Consumption or wasting of the Back and the Worms of the Back I. The Inflamation of the Mediastin that disjoyneth the Lobes of the Lungs is known by the continual Feaver the frequent thick and swift breathing an extream and intense burning in the Breast a smal pain at the stern unto which the Mediastine is tyed and by the spitting and casting forth of that that is at first red and then afterward Yellow But the matter that is thus cast up because that it is gathered together betwixt a double Membrane as it were and is not easily Evacuated unless the said Membrane be eaten through is not in any great abundance It ariseth from the Blood and chiefly the Cholerick It is Cured after the manner of other Inflamations Where take notice that the Repressing Medicaments ought indeed to be cold but no way astringent and that in this Case the Oyl of Violets is cheifly approved of which must be made