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

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folowyng ¶ Remedye for all paynes of the stomake TAke camomil melilote wormwoode mallowes with theyr rootes leaues of bayes parietary and peyryalle of eche a handful lineseed a pounde fenugreke halfe a pound anees and fenel seed of eche halfe an ounce The sayde thynges brused and well sodden in water wet therin ▪ sponges and the licour wel pressed out and applied vnto y e stomake one after an other and warmyng them againe whē they begynne to cole swage all maner paynes of y e stomacke And afterward ye must annoīt the stomake with oyle of dylle and camomylle ¶ An other remedye Take an hogges bladder and fyl it of the sayde decoction and lappe it in a linnen cloth and lay it to the stomake and warme it agayne when it is cold But after ye haue made dyuerse suche applicacions Ye muste annoynte the stomake wyth the oyle aforesayde Yf the payne be remouing from place to place it signifieth it commeth of ventositi Therfore lay vnto it a bagfull of meale salte and commin dried togyther ¶ An other remedye Take a sponeful of hote asshes dewe them wyth good wyne and couer thē wyth a linnen cloth that it goe round aboute the spoone and laye it to the stomake ¶ An other remedye Take a sheue of breed metely thycke toste it and wete it in hote oyle of camomyl as hote as it commeth from y e ouen or in oyle of spyke and wrappe it in a linnen and lay it vpon y e paine ¶ An other remedye Put a great boxyng glasse vpon the nauyll and let it be there .i. houre ¶ An other remedye for payne of the stomake Take two drammes of diaciminon of dianisi of diagalanga drynke it with a litle good wyne an houre or .ii before meat To drinke two oūces of maluesye with a litle of one of y e sayd electuaries is very good for such paines as procede of coldnesse or vētosite ¶ An other remedye Take a drāme of galingale in pouder and giue it to drinke with a litle hote wyne and aboue al thynges for paine of ventositie a singuler remedye is to drinke a litle Castor with good wine ¶ An other Lykewise to drynke two houres before meate thre or foure ounces of the decoction of mītes anneis seedes comyne and fyne frankensence Also it is good to drynke an electuarye called aromaticum whereof ye maye receiue one lozenge euery mornyng fastyng ¶ An other speciall medicyne Take halfe an ounce of iuce of mintes two drāmes of y e iuice of wormwoode lignum aloes and cloues and xilo balsamum of eche in poudre half a scruple all myxt togyther dronke warme .ii. or thre houres before meat are excedyng profytable ¶ The syxt Chapter of remedyes for diseases of the liuer THe liuer is one of y e principall mēbres chefe instrumente of generacion of blood of other mēbres it lyeth on the ryght syde vnder the short rybbes y e whyche is ordeined to digest the meate the secōd tyme and thereof to make humours that nourysheth al y e membres of mānes body by his natural heat cōforted by heat of the hert But somtymes it is greued by blood in to much aboundaūce or by cholerik humours which cause to greate heate or els by fleume that doth diminysh the same ▪ A remedie for an hote lyuer Yf the lyuer be to hote bycause of to moch blood the person hath red vrine hasty pulse his veines great ful and he feleth his spattle mouth and tonge sweter then it was wont to be wherfore it is good to be let blood of the liuer veine on the right arme and to vse letuse sorelle purcelane hoppes in pottage and sometymes to drynke of y e waters of the said herbes fasting or els endiue water to refreshe y e liuer Regiment for disease of the liuer comming of blood YE muste abstaine frō drinkyng wine and eatynge of flesh and yf at meat or drīk ye muste otherwyse y e wine ought to be watred and the fleshe boiled with lettuse and sorel It is better to drinke ptysan or stale cydre eate brothe of peason almon mylke hulled barlye or rosted apples and damaske prunes whiles y e heat be diminysshed And ye ought euery daye to prouoke the duty of y e womb either by meanes of suppositorie or els other wyse Yf the liuer be ouer hote by cholere the pacient hath hys vryne cleare and yelowe wythout measure great thirst wythout appetyte feleth great burnyng in hys bodye and cōmonly hath his bellye bounde and hath the face yelowe This disease of the liuer chaunceth mooste in somer for it ye muste take twyse a daie an ounce of syrupe of endiue or violettes with a good draught of ptisane drynke it two or thre houres before meate and also at nyght to bedwarde and so continue thre or foure dayes In stede of the sayd syrupes ye may take thre oūces of ptisane or thre oūces of water of endiue cicorye and sorell meddled togyther for eche tyme. Then the fyfth daye in the morninge early it is good to drynke a purgaciō that pourgeth cholere whiche shal be made as foloweth An excellente purgacion for to auoyde cholere and may be gyuen to men of al ages TAke half an oūce of cassia newly drawen a drāme of good rubarbe infused a night in water of endiue wyth a lytle spikenard and an ounce of syrupe of violettes mixe all the sayd thynges with thre ounces of ptisane or whaye and drynke it warme as afore is said in the other Boles for the same In stede of the said medicine which is to costlye for poore folkes ye maye make boles of halfe an ounce of cassia and thre drammes of electuarium de succo rosarum and eate them thre houres after mydnyght and slepe after it but al the day ye must kepe y e chāber yf ye had rather drynke it thā eate it mixt the said boles with whay or endiue water drīke it at v. of the clock in y e mornyng but sleape not after it Other medicines laxatyue Take halfe an ounce of diaprunis laxatyue mixt with .iii. ounces of decocciō of french prunes water of succorie and drinke it warme at fiue of y e clocke in the mornyng or els sixe houres afore meate In steade of the sayde diaprunis ye maye take halfe an oūce of electuarium de succo rosarum and make a laxe as afore is sayde And it is to be noted yf the pacyente be very weake or easye to worke vpō ye maye take away a drāme both of y e diaprunis also of succo rosarū After the sayd purgaciō it is good to refresh the liuer with laying to without on the right side vnder the nether ribbes a playster of cerotum scandalinū spred vpon a linnen clothe of the bygnesse of .iiii. fyngers or bath the sayde place with a lynnen cloth wet ī water of endyue plantayne and roses warmed togyther Moreouer it is
take .iiii. or .v. at nyght to bedwardes or about midnight Or in stead of those pylles ye maye take a pocion in the morning .v houres afore meat made of half an ounce of diacartami dissolued i. ii or iii. ounces of betonye After that ye ought to comfort the head by wering of a coife made of double linnen cloth and sowed lyke a cotten quilt wherin ye must put floures of camomil maiorim cloues nutmygges maces graines of Paradyse and synamome in pouder for suche thinges digest y e fleume so that a purgacion be geuen of the sayde pilles or of pilles assagareth or pilles of hierapicra which are not so laxatyue as the other are After the saide purgacion ye muste put in the nose of the paciente pouder of pellitorye of Spayne or other to make hī to nese Also it is good to gargarise his mouthe with water wherein sage hathe bene sodden and then to annoynte his head with oyle of lilies camomil or of rue Beside this it is good to geue the pacient euerye morning to drinke sage-wine with water to cōsume y e fleume and to coumfort the braine and the synowes The sayd wine is thus made Put a litle bagge full of good sage brused in a quart of newe wyne let it stande so a nyght then wring it out and vse it Suche wyne of sage the inhabiters of Parise and Fraunce vse to drinke after harueste all the winter longe When peine of the head procedeth of melancholie the paciēt feleth heuines of y e heed and hath terrible dreames with great care thoughte or feare his peine is specially vpon y e left side ¶ Remedye Take sirupe of borage heartes toūge or fumytorye with water of buglosse and hartestonge or with the decocciō of sage or time for by these sirupes ye shal digest and correct the said melancholyke humours and within a while the peyne wyll be released And yf it ceasse not for these medicines after ye haue vsed .ii. or .iii. dayes one of y e said sirupes or two or thre of thē togither take a dramme of pylles halfe auree halfe sine quibus or elles halfe of hiera halfe of pilles of fumytory or in stede of pylles ye may take in y e morning fyue houres afore meate .iii drammes and an half of diasene tempered in water of borage or hoppes or in the decoccion of sage licorice great reysins and cordiall floures frutes Heed ache cōmeth of winde or ventositie when the paciente thinketh that he heareth sound or noyse in his heed and the peyne is flytteryng from one place to an other wythout heuynesse or descendyng humoure ¶ Remedye Lay vnto his head hote lynnen clothes make a bagge of Gromel sedes bay salte dryed togyther in a panne so procede wyth stronger thynges yf nede require as is bagges made of maiorym rosemarye rue barberies iuniper beries laid to y e pained place or wyth the decoccion of the foresayd thinges make fomentaciō or embrocacion vpon his heed ¶ An other remedy Ye must take oile of Camomil oyle of Dyll or Lylies and annoynte the hed wyth one of thē or wyth .ii. or .iii. or all togyther Yf that helpe not take oile of Rue Spike and of Castor anoynt it therwyth and adde therto alytle Pepper and mustard seede yf ye would haue it sore chafed or hette Also it is good to drawe vp by the nose water of Hony the iuice of Maiorim and of Fenell aromatised wyth a Nutmygge and lignum aloes Rasis a great practicioner among phisicions saythe y t whosoeuer often tymes putteth into hys nose the iuice of maiorim shal neuer be diseased in y e head I thinke he meaneth of the great maiorim Yf peyne of the heade come of heat of the sunne ye must applie to the places diseased as it is saide in the remedyes of cholere But yf the saide paine procede of coldenesse of the ayre then vse as it is said afore in the remedies of fleume ¶ Here foloweth a regimente againste all dyseases of the head THe pacient that is diseased ī y e head whether it be of bloud or of cholere may not drīke wine nor eat much flesh whitmetes nor thinges that geue anye great nourishement But must bee contented to drinke p●isane barly water or iulep o● roses to eate rosted apples damaske prunes almon mylke hulled barely and pottage made with lettuse sorell purcelane in broth of peason or with a chicken or veale yf the paciente bee feble When payne procedeth of a colde humour the pacient ought to drynke no wyne in thre of the fyrst dayes but to drinke onelye peniale or suche smale drinke for although the wyne bee very comfortable as concerning natural heate yet it is contrarye and hurteful vnto the spirites animal of the brain and also of the sinnowes And the paciente ought what payne soeuer it be of the head to forbeare all vaporous meates as garlyke onions leekes pease beanes nuttes milke-meates spyces mustard greate colewortes salt meates and meates of yll dygestion Also he must abstayne from slepe of the daye and after supper by the space of two houres Trauayle of the minde is very cōtrary because of y e cōmocion that happeneth vnto y e liuely spirites whiche are instrumētes of vnderstāding as Auicē that noble phisicien sayth in the chapiter de soda temporali Nihil est adeo conueniēs sode temporali sicut tranquilitas et dimissio totius quod commouet sicut sūt fortes cogitatiōes c. Ther is nothyng that is so conueniēt for the meygrym as tranquillitie and rest let all thynges passe that moue the vertue animal as great musinges and all laboure of the spyrites And chefely one ought after dinner to kepe him from al thynges that trouble the memorie as studyinge readyng wrytyng and other lyke And for the better vnderstanding of the sicknesse chauncing in the heed ye shall knowe that sometyme it chaunceth because of other diseased mēbres as of the stomacke or of the mother of the reines of the liuer or of the splene not of any cause in the heed it selfe Therefore ye ought to cure such sicknesse by helpyng of thesame mēbres as it shall be shewed in the chapiters folowynge And ye maye knowe that the head ache cōmeth of diseases of y e stomake when the pacient hath greate paine at the stomake Of the mother when the woman feleth great payne in her belly Of the reynes whē their is a great paine in the backe Of the splene whē he feleth paine heuinesse therabout vnder the lyfte syde Of the liuer whē the payne is in the ryght syde aboute the lyuer which is beneth the rybbes ▪ ¶ Remedies appropriate to the head of what cause soeuer the payne be TAke an handfull of Betony an handfull of Camomyle and a handful of veruayne leaues piked stampe them and seeth them in blacke worte or in ale for lacke of it and in the later ende of
Melancholye whych humours are called y e sonnes of the Elementes because they be complexioned lyke the four elementes For lyke as the ayre is hote and moyste so is the bloud hote and moyst And as fyer is hote and dry so is choler hote drye And as water is colde and moist so is phlegme colde and moiste And as the yearth is colde and dry so melācholy is colde and dry Whereby it apereth that there be nyne complexions Whereof .iiii be symple y t is to wete hote colde moyst and dry and .iiii. cōplexions compounde that is hote and moyst which is the complexion of the ayre and of blood Hote dry whiche is the complexion of the fyre and of cholere Colde and moist which is the cōplexcion of the water of phlegme and colde and dry that is the complexion of earth and of melancholie The nynth complexion is temperate neyther to hote nor to colde nor to moyst nor to drye whych yet is a thing very seldome sene amonge men After the phisicions the sayde foure humours gouerne rule euery one in his place and enduce mē to be of the complexions folowyng ¶ The complexion of the phlegmatyke Phlegme enclyneth a man to be well fourmed a sleper dul of vnderstandyng full of spattle full of coloure ¶ The cōplexcions of the sanguyne Blood causeth one to be full of fleshe liberall amyable curtyse merye inuentyue bolde lecherous of red coloure ¶ The cōplexcions of the cholerike Cholere causeth a mā to be hastye enuyous couetous subtyle cruell a watcher prodigall leane and of yelowe coloure ¶ The complexions of the melancholyke Melancholy maketh one Solytarye Soft spirited Fearfull Heauye Curyous Enuious Couetous Blacke of coloure ¶ These be the foure humours wherof the bodyes are compounded euery one of them hath a special dominiō in respect of al the other according to the age that is to say from a mannes natiuitie til he come to .xxv. yeres the bloud hath most power and from that time to the yeare of his age .xxxv. raygneth the Choler for then commethe heate into the vaynes and the choler begynneth to aryse and be strong Then cōmeth myddle age and bryngeth forthe melancholye an humoure colde and dry and hath his enduraūce tyl fyfty yeres or ther about at which tyme all the humours of the body begynne to diminyshe and the naturall heate by lytle and lytle dothe abate And thē succedeth olde age vnto deth in the which age phlegme hath y e prīcipal power and dominion Wherfore it shalbe necessarye for al that be of y e age to cōfort their bodyes with some natural heate and meates of good noryshyng as yolkes of egges potched good and yonge fleshe wheate bread good wyne and all suche thynges as engendre good bloud and spirites whereof we entende by the sufferaunce of God to declare more aboundauntly hereafter ¶ Here followeth the descripcion of inwarde and outwarde diseases wyth the moste holsome and expert remedies for the cure therof appropriat to euery membre thoroughout the body The fyrste chapter of the sickenesse and remedyes of the heed HEad ache chaunceth often times of diuers and sondry causes as of bloud cholere fle●●e or melancholy or of ventositye and sometimes of heat of the sunne or of to great cold of y e aire Ye maye knowe heade ache when it commeth of bloude for in the face and eyes there appeareth a darke redenes prickyng and heauines with heat Remedye Ye must let hym bloude on the head veine on that side that the peine is on then laye vpon the place oyle of roses vineger and rose water or a bag with roses sprinkeled with rose water And here is to be noted as wel ī this cause as all other that yf his belly be harde and bounde fyrst ye must geue him an easye glister or elles halfe an ounce of Cassia newly drawen out of the cane or some other easye laxatyue to prouoke the duety of the womb els al applicacions of medicines wyll bee nothyng worth at all One maie know heade ache that procedeth of cholere when in the face ther is a clere rednes enclining somewhat towarde yelowe holownesse of y e iyes the mouth drye and hote And sometymes bytternesse small reste greate heate with sharpe paine chief●y on the ryght syde of the head ¶ Remedye Ye muste geue hym morne and euen to drinke sirupe of violettes or pomegranades with a meane draught of endiue water in a glasse or of comin water sodden and cooled agayne And in stead of these sirupes ye maye drynke water of endiue succorye purcelane nenuphar myngled together or one of them by them self two or .iii. daies at euenyng and morning Then geue a drāme of pillule sine quibus at night to bedwarde or about midnight the day folowing kepe you ī your chāber In stede of those pilles it is good euery mornīg to take an houre afore sūne a medicine to drynke y t shall be made of halfe an ounce of Succo rosarum mixt with two ounces of water of endiue In steade of the saied succo rosarum ye may take halfe an ounce of diaprunis laxatiue ye must take hede in gyuyng suche purgacions that the pacient be strōg for if he be weake ye may gyue hym but the halfe of y e sayd pylles or of the other laxatyues And yf in diminishyng the quantitie of the sayde medicines it worketh not with the pacient as it shuld it is conueniēt to gyue hym a common glister ¶ An other remedy for the same peyne Ye must laye theron a lynnen clothe moysted in rose water plantayne water morel water and vinegre or elles take the iuyce of lettuce and roses a litle vineger and warme it together and dippe therin a linnen clothe and laye it to the payne An other Ye must take the whytes of .ii. egges wyth rose water and beate it well togyther and wyth towe or flaxe lay it to y e greued place Also ye must shaue his heed and mylke thereon womans mylke that nourysheth a wenche or wasshe hys heed wyth warme water wherein haue bene sodde vine leaues sage floures of water lilies roses Also it is necessary to wash his feete legges wyth the sayde water so that the pacient haue no reume for if there be reumatike matters ye oughte nether to shaue his heed wash his legges nor to lay any colde thing or moist to his heed Ye maye knowe that fleume is cause of the peine in the heed when ye fele coldnesse with great heuinesse speciallye in the hyndre parte when one spytteth often and hath his face lyke sunne brent ¶ Remedye Ye must drynke .iii. or .iiii. morninges sirupe of sticados with water of fenel or sirupe of wormewood with a decoction of sauge and maiorym Then ye must pourge the heade from the sayde fleume wyth pillule cochie and wyth pilles of agarici or pillule auree made with one of the sayde sirupes fyue in a dramme and
fenel And yf when the feuer is paste the iaundis tarieth styll the paciente must drynke water of fenel and morelle with the syrupe of occisaccarum compost and it is good to laye a quicke tenche vpon the liuer Iaundis sometime commeth without feuer and maye bee healed by the thinges that I declared here beefore or thus ¶ An other Remedie for the Iaundis Take foure ounces of radisshe and geue it the sicke to drynke fyue morninges .iii. houres afore meat In stede wherof it is good to drinke eueri mornyng foure ounces of the decoction of horehounde made in white wine or as muche of the decoction of celidonie and barberies with a litle honye and saffron An other remedy Take wormes of the earth called angle twitches and washe them in white wine then drye them and drinke them a sponful at a time with white wine An other Ye maye let hym drynke .vii. or viii dayes together in the mornynges a good draught of the decoccion of politrichon or of maydenheare The decoction also of woodbynd or y e wa●es of it distelled in a commune styll is a soueraine medicine for y e saide disease An other synguler remedye Take cowes milke and white wine of eche a pinte and distil them in a stil ▪ kepe that water a monethe and then geue it to the paciente three ounces in the morning two houres afore meate and lykewyse after supper ▪ when he goeth to bedde The eyght Chapter for diseases of the splene THe splene is a mēberlōg● soft and spongy being in the left side ioyned vnto the holownesse of the stomake and to the thycke endes of the ribbes to y e backe y e which is ordeined for to receiue the melancholy humours and to cleanse the bloud of thesame for by y e meane y e bloud remaneth pure nette Wherfore it is good nourishyng for al the membres and is y e cause that maketh a bodye merye but oftentymes there happeneth oppilaciō or debilitie wherof commeth the blacke iaundys And sometymes it is greater fuller or grosser then it ought to be by ouermuch melancholie that is not natural caused of the dregges of the bloud engendred in the liuer doth hindre generacion of good bloud wherthrough the members become drye for defaute of good nourishyng And therefore the pacient is called splenetike whiche ye maye knowe by that that after meate they haue payne in theyr left syde and are alwayes heauy and hath theyr faces somwhat enclining vnto blaknes ¶ Remedye In oppilacions and apostemes of the splene whether it be of hote humours or of colde he ought to be let bloud on y e splene veine called saluatella which is in thee left hande betwene the litle finger and the next fynger which they call medicus And ye muste drawe out but a litle bloude And if the pacient fele a burning on the left syde and hath a drye tonge without appetite it signifieth that suche disease of the splene is caused of an hote humoure Wherefore ye must geue the pacient four or .v. morninges fastinge syrupe of endiue water and hartestong then a purgacion made as foloweth thus ¶ A goodlye purgacion to auoyde melancholy Talke halfe an ounce of succorosarū and thre ounces of the decoctiō of the rootes of capparus and hartestonge make a drinke the whiche ye may mynister in a good daye to take purgacyons syxe houres afore meate An other In stede of that drynke ye may temper halfe an ounce of cassia and three drammes of diaseny in thre ounces of whey or hartestong water and drynke it as is aforesaide After the sayd purgacion ye ought to annoynt the splene with oyle of violettes or oyle of lyneseed or to make a playster of the s●de oyle and lineseede and the rootes of capparis and laye vpon the splene Also after the saide purgacion it shall be good to laye vpon the splene nyghtshade purcelane seede and pouder of plantaine myxte with vineger lyke a plaister and if the pacient haue more appetite then he can digeste and that he haue belchinges of the stomak sometimes sowre in the mouth it signifieth y t the passion splenetike commeth by a colde humor melancholike ¶ Remedie Ye must drinke sirupe of sticados or hartestong or oximel diureticum with water of the decoction of hartestonge epithime smallache rootes percelye rotes tameriscus and mintes or els only with the decoction of hartestong and rootes of cappars And then after purge it frō suche melancholy humor with an ounce of diacatholicon two drammes of dia●ene dissolued in thre ounces of the sayd decoction or water of wormewood or hartestonge And after this ye must annoynte the syde of the splene with oyle of lilies oyle of dyll freshe butter marye of an oxe and hennes grece or of a dogge medled together or annoynt the sayde syde with dialthea And the paciēt ought to drinke whyte wine and the decoction of hartestong euening and morninge takynge twoo fygges with pouder of ysope peppe● or ginger but he may put no water in his wyne and oftentimes he must ea● cap●ars with a litle oyle and vineger If for the oppilacions of the splene the paciēt hath a pale coloure or leady in the face and a whitenes of eies takyng awaye of appetite payne in the left syde with hardnesse and hathe his excrementes blacke it is a signe of the blacke iaundys An expert medicine for all diseases of the splene Take the leaues and coddes of ●eny● the barke of an ashe tre skraped cut maydenheere hartstong and liquirice seth them all in clere whaye and after they be strayned drynke of it twyse or thrise a daye tyl ye be amended ¶ Remedye for the blacke iaundis Ye must geue sirupes and purgacions as afore is sayd and to be let bloud of the veine saluatella and afterwarde dyuers tymes euening and mornyng to applie vētoses vpon the splene with out scaryfyinge Afterwarde ye muste lay on it a lyst wette in good veniger and kepe it there so longe as the heate remaineth in the sayd liste and warme it thre or foure times Afterward annoynt the splene with dialthea so continue fower or fyue dayes and other foure or fyue dayes laye vpon it a playster made of twoo ounces of gumme armoniake dyssolued in veniger and spred vpon lether And yf by the foresayde thynges the paciente bee not eased the doctours of phisicke saye that he muste receiue the medicines agayne at the least once in euery moneth for half a yere togither ¶ Regiment for all oppilacions The pacient oughte to vse thynges of easye digestion and in smal quantyty and ought to absteine from breade to litle leuened cakes tartes pasties pies hogges fleshe beafe and poudred meates and fumishe Fishe limmons peason beanes milke chese ryse and firmentie all fryed meates drinke after supper wyne and apples whiche with al other lyke trouble the bodye Also ye must absteine from much mouyng or exercise by and by after meat It
sayd fluxe ther be egre matter and the strength of the paciēt any thyng constaunt ye maye minister the ●a●atorie that hereafter ensueth Take redde roses barly plantayne of euery one a handful seth them and in the streynyng adde .ii. ounces of oyle of roses one ounce of honey of roses and the yolke of an egge and giue it in the maner of a glister Sometyme it is expedient to take a medicine by the mouth and it is made as thus A medicine for the fluxe Take the ryndes of myrabolane citrine bakē one dramme reubarbe a litle dryed vpon a tile halfe a dramme syrupe of quinces one ounce water of plantaine .iii. ounces myngle al togyther and lette the pacient drynke thē foure houres before meate thā giue him a glister retentiue made as thus A glyster for the fluxe Take oyle of roses of quinces of mastike of euerye one thre ounces bo●e armoniak in pouder .ii. drāmes meddle al togither giue it as a glyster Another Take the iuce of plantayne of popye of bursa pastoris and oyle of quinces of euery one .iii. ounces myngle them togyther and giue it for a glister And if the bowels be excoriat ye shal giue thys peculiar remedy Take halfe one pounde of mylke the water wherein gaddes of steale hath ben quenched y e iuce of plantaine and oile of quinces of euery one .ii. ounces bole armenye one drāme goates tallowe one oūce and make them in a glister but without vpon the stomake ye muste laye thys oyntmente that here foloweth An oyntment for the fluxe Take oyles of roses quinces mirtilles of eche an ounce oyle of mastik halfe an ounce pouder of coral nuttes of cipresse of euery one a dramme myngle all wyth waxe and make an oyntmēt Here is to be noted that the glisters that are gyuen for to stoppe a fluxe must be very litle in quantitie Ye maye heale the fluxe of dis●enteria wyth gyuyng thynges before declared for the fluxe humorall and take afore your repast .ii. drammes of cōserue of quinces or of marmelade of quinces And he ought to drinke water wherin hath bene quenched gaddes of stele ye must auoyde diuersitie of meates and geue your selfe to ease and to quiet and sleape a greate while And it is good to vse grewel clene barlye almon mylke with a litle amidum ▪ and set ventoses vpon the bellye withoute cutting whiche thynge is also good in al fluxes of the body If the saide fluxe humorall procedeth of fleume it shall appeare of the excrementes y t are watry and flegmatike and than ye ought to geue .iii. or .iiii. morninges sirupe of wormewood or of mint after purgacion as is here folowyng A purgacion for the fluxe humoral Take .ii. drāmes of mirabolanes dried on a tile halfe a scrupule of agarike in trociske halfe an ounce of sirupe of mynt or .ii. oūces of water of bawme and make a pocion that shal be receyued .iii. or foure dayes afore meate If ye wyll make a iulep take water of mynte and of bawme of euery one halfe a pounde suger a quarterne and make a iulep of the whiche one maye drynke euenynge and mornynge after meat euerye tyme a draughte Euerye mornyng it is good to take a lozenge of the electuary that foloweth ¶ A noble electuary for the fluxe Take pouder of diagalanga a dramme and a halfe of redde coral and mastik of euery one a scruple trociskes of terra sigiliata halfe a dramme the barkes of citrons comfit and quinces of euery one thre drammes suger dissolued in water of mintes .iiii. ounces make an electuarye Oyles of wormewood minte and of narde and mastike are verye holsome to annoynt withal the bellye and the stomake for the saide fluxe And the thynges declared of the flux lienteria be very good in this case t●king euer after meat a morsel of marmalade Redde wyne is verye good in this fluxe to drinke at meate with the water of a smyth and likewyse a● spyces are good for thesame purpose ¶ Medicines to restraine the fluxe of whatsoeuer cause it be TAke the peysil of an harte and drie it into pouder drinke it The water of oken buddes or the verye acornes dried and made in pouder and dronken in redde wine is very good Item the mawe of a yonge leuerette with the iuyce of plantaine is excedinge profytable ¶ The tenth chapter of diseases of the matrice FYrst againste superfluous flux of y e mother in the which ye must consyder whether it do come of to greate quantitye of bloud and then it is good for to open the veine saphena abstaine from al thinges that multiplye the bloude as egges wine and fleshe Or whether it commeth of cholere then ye muste receiue a litle sirupe of roses pomegranates or ribes with water of plantain Than purge y e choler y t geueth such sharpnes to y e bloud by .x. drammes of trifera sarracenica wyth two ounces of plantayn water or the medicine of reubarbe wrytten in the treatise of the fluxe humorall After purgacion ye maye geue euery morning a lozenge of triasandaly or a dramme of trosciskes of roses in pouder after drinke twoo ounces of plantayne water And yf suche fluxe of the matrice happen of the watrinesse of bloude geue her to drinke foure or .v. morninges hony of roses with a litle water of wormwod afterward purge her with a dramme and a half of agarike in trosciskes and halfe an ounce of trifera sarasenica myxte with water of minte and of wormewood Ye may know the causes of the sayd fluxe by annointing a threde or cloute in the saide bloud for if it hath the coloure of vermilon it sygnifyeth that the flux commeth of to much bloud If it appere a litle yelowe it sygnyfyeth that the disease commeth of y e subtilytye and sharpenes of the bloude ouercome with choler And if it hath a coloure like the water in whiche newe flesshe is wasshed it betokeneth the bloude is much watrye And after ye haue purged the principal cause of the dysease youre seconde intencion shalbe by and by to staunche the saide issue Wherin also one thyng is to be noted y t yf nature be accustomed to auoid any superfluites by continual course of the saide flux it would perchaūce be inconuenient for to stop it wherefore yf ye see no ieopardye ye maye restrayne the said flux this wise ¶ Remedy for to stoppe the sayde flux Take trociskes of white amber and make them in pouder geue a drāme euery morning and anon after drinke an ounce or .ii. of water of plantayne In stedde of these trociskes ye maye make a pouder of sanguis draconis bole armeni white amber and red corall drinkynge one dramme thereof with plantaine water as is aforesaid ¶ An other medicine to staunche the sayde fluxe Take two ounces of olde conserue of roses of the seede of plantaine twoo drammes sāguinis draconis bole armeny of euerye one a dramme and
nature For yf it bee once settled at the hert I affirme plainely ther is no hope at al. Yet there be some fooles that tarye tyl the twelueth houre or the foure twentye after the infeccion and they boost them selues that they wil heale the pacient but that is a manifest a a shameful errour for yf any by chaūce is so recouered it commeth of God not of any medicine for where as one so escapeth an hundred other perisshe Notwithstandyng yf the case so be that ye be not called or can gette no remedy afore the said time caste not your selfe into dispayre or put not the paciēt in discomfort take or giue your medicine in y e name of God and yf ye can not brooke it take asmuch agayn and do so many tymes til ye maye retayne it thē lay ye downe to sweate and lyft vp your hert to God callinge vpon hym without whom there is no helth and by the grace of Iesu ye nede not to be feareful of death for that y e is impossible to man is easye ynough with God yea many times nature worketh it selfe aboue al natural expectaciō But I counsaill at the firste begynnyng to receyue the medicines when any of the forsayde signes appeareth or when ye fele your selfe diseased for the venyme perceth soner to the herte of the cholerike thē either of the sanguyne or the melancholyke although the sanguynes are apter to infeccion then the other are chefelye yf the sycknesse be in somer They that are of melancholy be not lyghtly taken but in case they be thē the cure is very daūgerouse and hard Therefore I saye take heede at the beginnyng as the prouerbe is Prīcipiis obsta sero medicina paratur Lū mala per longas inualuere moras Take the medicine quickely and let thy selfe bloud and remember god the phisicion of thy soule and withoute doubt thou shalt well inough recouer Nowe we haue declared the signes by whiche ye maye easily know whan a person is infected and wee sayde it was conueniente to take the medicyne as soone as anye of them appeareth without any longer tarying afore the venime commeth to the hearte here wee wyll enfourme you howe ye shall perceiue whether the saide venime bee setled in the hearte or no. Take a dramme of bole armeny made in pouder accordyng to the doctrine of y e last chapter in the first part and if ye can not get it take some other excellēt medicine against y e pestilence namely one of the receites that shall bee sayde hereafter and geue it to y e pacient but there can nothyng be better then the foresaide pouder yf ye haue it at hand Take I saye thereof one dramme an ounce of white wyne and odoriferous with two ounces of water of roses mingle them and geue them to the pacient The blacke receit declared in the Chapter of preseruatiues maye be wel vsed in stede of the bole And yf he maye retayne the drynke within his stomake it is a good signe that the venime was not at the hearte afore he toke the medicine and therefore he may be let bloude wel inough But yf the pacient cannot broke the saide drinke but cast it vp and vomite then ye maye be sure that the venyme hath bene at y e heart afore y e medicine Therfore by and by wash his mouth with wine or with water of scabious of sorel or of roses and it ought to be very wel mundified and clensed Then geue hym an other dose of the said drinke and heat a cruste of bread and holde it to his nose that he maye the better kepe the foresayd pocion ▪ And if the seconde tyme he caste it vp againe and is not able to reteine it wash his mouth as is saide before and geue it him the thyrde tyme with a litle vineger that it may perce the better and so .vi. or .vii. times if he do not holde it geue it hym agayne and then whether he retayneth it or retayneth it not by and by ye ought to lette hym bloude But in case the paciente were infected xxiiii houres afore ye geue the drinke neuer let him bloud for y e can nothing helpe him but rather make him feble but administer a medicine ordeyned for the pestilence as is sayde afore or such as shalbe spoken of hereafter and that done prouoke hym to sweate Nowe to oure purpose as concernyng dyet ¶ The seconde Chapter of the cure of pestilence by the waye of dyet FYrst as soone as euer the paciēt feleth himselfe infected it is verye good to auoid y e corruptaire by chaunginge into some other place or els if he can not so let him rectifye the ayre of his own house or of his chamber with water of roses and vineger or els with fumigacions as is spoken of before according to the quality of y e time the cōplexion of his own body Moreouer it is good for him to shiften his bedde out of one chamber into another and from that to the fyrste agayne the nexte daye euer rectifying the ayre of them both as is aforesaid And as touchynge meat and drinke he ought not to abstaine or yet to take anye superfluities for to eate good meates measurablye thoughe it be against his stomake yet in this disease it shall doe him muche good Let him eate the brothe of chickens capons or coleyses of rabbettes and suche lyke meates with a litle sorell sauce or vyneger rosewater or wine of pomegranades yf they maye be gotten or wyne of barberyes and suche other If ye wyl haue other kynde of sauces or a pouder to strowe vpon youre meate ye may make it after this sort Take graynes of paradise whyte dyptanye of eche an ounce fine poudre of cinamome and cloues of eche halfe an ounce make them al in pouder and mingle it with suger In this disease ye maye eate no quesye meates as eles gese duckes and other suche as bee euyll I call them euyll meates whych accordyng vnto Galene De differentiis febrium are eyther euil of theyr owne nature or els if thei be naturallye good yet by reason of some putrefaction are as muche or more vnholsome as the other are partelye so because of longe kepynge vncleane and naughty dressyng or when thei be laied vp in a filthye or stinking place and partly by some yl infeccion when thei were aliue for he that vseth such kind of meates is oftentimes accoumbred with manye naughtye sycknesses as corrupte pestilencial feuers scabbes pustles lepries and other euyll infirmytyes All fyshe in this case are to be auoided Brothe or gruell made with borage buglosse endiue succorye sorell purcelane and other like herbes with a litle saffron and cleane wheat floure or the crommes of breade in a broth of chickyns or without a broth maye be wel administred Potched egges also with sorell sauce and cinamome vineger rosewater are meruelous good in this case And yf the heate be very